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Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH Point Pleasant, wv

Page-DB-Sunday nme&amp;-Sentlnel ·

Meigs County
agent's corner

..

Getting ready for spring .
.

Joba C. Rice:·
Co. Ext. Agent;
AarJculture
POMEROY- Getting Ready for
t"'· thought l·s almost
Sp .
nng ... '"'
scary. Still trying to get through the
winter and already talking about
spring. Here are some things I bet
you are already thinlcing about...
Lawn Fertilization :.. don't fertilize too ,early. May or early June
is soon enough. Fertilizing lawns
too early can cause many problems
unless you i11tend to fertilize 3-4
times per year. It might be wise to
use a fawn fertilizer because it usually has a slower release nitrogen.
An analysis of 23-7-7 is ideal but a

• MYSTERY FARM ·This week's mystery
farm, featured by the Gallia Soil and Water
Coaservation District, is located somewhere in
GaUia County. Individuals wishing to participate in the weekly contest may do so by guessing .
the farm's owner. Just mail, or drop off your
1uess off to tile Daily Seutinel, 111 Court St.,
l'omeroy, Ohio, 45769, or the Gallipolis Daily
Tribune, 825 third Ave~ GaiUpolis, Ohio, 45631,

lllld you may will a $5 prize from the Ohio VII·
· ley Publillllal Co. Leave your name, address

lllld telepb- n01HI' with your card or letter.
No telepae calls will be accepted. All contest
eatries sbHIII be turned in to the newspaper
office by 4 p.a. eadl Wednesday .In case of a ·tie,
the wllluer w11 be diOII!II by lottery. 1\!ext week,
a Melp CoutJ farm will. be featured by tile
Melp Soil 1M Water Conservation District. .

March 10, 1991

dollars in I 991. More detailed
numbers will be qvailable around
Agriculture &amp; CNRD
March 22 when the 1991 Tobaa:o
GALLIPOLIS • A special notices are~ be JDai1c?d by ASCS.
thanks to everyone who made this
The tradillonal spnng beef cattle
week's Tobaa:o Producer Meeting calving season usually .starts on
at Hannan Trace a-success. An esti- .March I . Near ideal weather a
mated 200 people attended the edu- week ago followed by a mud-nightcationa1 meeting.
. mare this week P.Ut the exlreJI!~S
Ga]Jia County Tobacco Produc- back: to back. Improvec,t profillbiliers increased their production in ty the last couple years and the
!990 by about 576,000 pounds or prospect for a good ):Car in 1~1
·ust over one million dollars in sale are expected to result m expansiOn
~alue. The estimated value for the of the nation's cattle herd. .
Tommy Beall, resean:h director
total sold (2,065,103 pounds)
would be about $3 65 million dol- for "Cattle-Fax" rocently wrote that
Jars.
•
it doesn't take as big a hcrd now 10
Gallia County farmers will have pr~J!!uce more ton~ of beef~
the opportunity to Jll:oduce over 3 in years past. He eSilmates ~ l;hia
million pounds w1th a potential . year's herd of aroun~ 100 million
value of between 5 and 6 million head could produce JUSt abo~t. as
·
much beef as a heid of 120 mdjulll
Dontinl}ed from D-1
•••._,;-...::::~~~__:__,.
B Edward M Vollbom

C~tJ Exteusiou Agent,

'

.

'lbisincrcasewasduetomorerestaurants in operation, improved profit
margins.in the sausage segment and
improved profit margins in comparable restaurants over a year ago.
Keyactivitiesduringthequarter
include: ·In December 1990, a fire
nearly destroyed the company's sauSllfle !llod!Xtion plant in Gallipolis,
OH. the loss was insured, and as a
result, the complny reported an 8f.
ter·tax estimated gain of$1,500,000
or $.05 per share, in its thir~ quarter,
based upon the expecled msurance
settlcment The building and equipmcnt were insured at replacement
cost
The company will rebuild in
Gallia County, OH although the specific site has nlit been determined.
The new plant, which will take at
least one year to consuuct, will be a
food processing plant, concentrating
on fully cooked items, such as the
new burritos, and other convenience
products. Products for foodservice
sales will al$o be apriority at the new
plaoL
During the third quarter, two new
Bob Evans Restaurants opened, one
in Lancasler, PA., and one in Joplin,
MO. A 10ta1 of 249 restaurants were
operating at the end of the Quarter
'compared with 232 a year ago. During this fiscal year, the company
e~ts to'open a total of 14, restaurants.
This sprint! in Indianapolis, a
second generallon Bob Evans ResUiurant prototype will open, designed
to more efficiently serve customers
and ensure lheir comfon by relocating the resbOOms, enlarging the foyer
and nonsmoking seating area, and
streamlining kitchen operations and
carryout.
.
In April, the fust Bob Evans
General Store and Restaurant is

opening near Kings Island Amuse·.
mentParkinMason,Ohio(justnorlh
of Cincinnati). The General Store
and Restaurant will feature several
items not found on the traditional
Bob Evans menu. Decorated in a
rustic style, the 171-seat restaurant
will have a bakery, a general store
wilhcountryitemsandadiningroom
wilh more than half of the seating
dedicaled to nonsmoking.
Also during the q~r. 1he
company decided to discontinue its ·
two retail sales routes in the Memphis, Tenn. market becauSe of low
sales. The company ente!lld 'that
market in September 1986 and sales
were consistently lower than the
company average. Owens Country
Sausage will sliD be available in the
Memphis area through warehouses.
Early in the fourth quarter, 12
Toledo, Ohio. area Bob Evans Restaurants started testing a. new sau-

.

e

'
By Constance
S. White
GaUiaSWCD

ne

{

.

Farming gets a checkup
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) .....: researchers. " .Past federal funding
The nation's deadliest occupation went to studying other dangerous
- farming - will 90011 receive a occupations, such as mining, but
complete checkup in Ohio.
detailed studies of agriculture are
- The agriculture industry il the rare.••
focus of a five-year IIUdy llarting
This is also the first chance in
this fall across the IIIII.
Ohio to document the scope of
It's a joint effurt of fecknl and ICCidents, pesticide exposure, resstate agencies led by tile Depan- pbMU1 disease and hearing loss in
ment of Agricultural Engineering .,Oculture, Wilkins says.
and the Department of Preventive
"And by examining health and
Medicine at Ohio State Univcnity.
safety measures farmers take, we
"This study marts the federal have another opportunity to make
government's fust detailed look at agriculture safer," says Tom Bean,
the health and safety aspects of safety specialist at Ohio State and
agriculture," says Jay Wilkins, the study's other principal
associate professor of preventive re~her. Health and safety issues
medicine at Ohio State and one of on the farm are complex because iq
the study's two principal · IIMitlt cases the horne and workplacC
1re the same, he says.
,
"In farming, families are regu_;_Co.:...n.;..:tin_ue_;_d....:"om:.:;;.. ::.D. .;;;.-1_ __ larly exposed to a host of hazards,''
-,
&amp;.! 11ys. "Plus, if you live on a
337 among the 991 issues traded.
farm, whether you're )'Oung or
Amex
volume
totaled elderly, you end up working on the
89,775,290 shares, compared with farm . So a wbole range of people
82,69 I ,565 traded a week earlier !"'~nd up in a~rjculture death and
and 76,147,995 traded in the 111111e ID.JUfY figures. •
.week a year ago. '
In 1989, the combined accidenHillhaven Corp. led the Amex . ~ death rate for U.S. industry was
actives, increasing 3,18 to 2 518.
nine deaths per 100,000 workers.
The National Aasociatioh of Deaths in agriculture numbered 42
Securities Dealers composite index per -IOO,IXXl. That year, agriculture
rose 18.3 7 to end the week 11 il:cidents caused I,300 deaths and
475.10.
120,000 injuries natioowide.

LET OUR FAMILY

-'FIGHTING THE BL_AZE- Galllpolls
Firefighter Roger Brandeberry stands atop the
arlal ladder and attempts to extinguish a fire
that roared through a structure at 45 Court

ar~~

HOMECAIE MEDICAL

ALBANY - The following
employees from Meigs County are
being recognized for their 15. years
of service at Southern Ohio Coal
Company's Meigs Division:
Francis P. Broderick, belt
repairman at the Meigs No. 2 mine.
Broderick resides in Pomeroy with
his wife, Linda. and son, Ivan.
David K. Gardner, bellman at
the Meigs No. 3I mine. Gardner
resides in Langsville with his wife,
Wanda, son·, Scott, and daughter,
Amber.
Dennis J. Gilmore, senior clerk
at the Meigs No. 31 mine. Gilmore
resides at 108 Union Avenue,
Pomeroy.
Eldon L. Vining, roof bolter at
the Meigs No. 31 mine. Vining
resides in Rutland with his wife;
Wanda.
Donald E. Yoho, special clerk at
the Meigs No. 31 mine. Yoho
resides in Pomeroy with his wife,
Erma.

EQUIPMENT • SALES • RENTALS • REPAIRS ' •Comptetl Uldk:ll Equ/pmlllt For Honlf u..•

By MELINDA POWERS
OVP News Stair
A five-alarm fire that did
$135,000 damage to a Court Street
business Sunday eveniQg is being
labeled suspicious by Gallipolis
ftre officials.
Firefighters from the Gl!llipolis
Volunteer Fire Department, along
with four other fire departments,
fought the blaze at DANTAX on
Court Street between Second and
Third Avenues for two hours

•
fllillfl-'fl

• HOME OXYGEN

• AOUL TDIAPERS

• WHEELCHAIRS

• UNOERPADS (CHUXSI

•'HOSi'ITAI. BEDS
• SHOWER STOOlS

• BEOSI~'COMMOIIES
• ~ATIEHT LIFTS

• LifT CHAIRS

• WALKERS

• DlA8ETIC SUPPUES
• OSTOMY

WE Bill MEDICA/IE &amp;01liEII...,IIAHCE faA YOU
l '' I i . I I.
'
'I 1 iI .
THIRD &amp; PINE ST.
GALLIPOt.IS

Street Sunday evenluc, Tile fire is being labeled
suspicious by Gallipolis fire officials. (OVP
photo by Kris Cochran)

.;

before getting the fire under control.

According to a GVFD report,
the fire had spread to the structure
from trash that had deliberately
been set ort ftre in an alley around 8
p.m.
"There were some grocery carts
filled with waste behind the building and they were set on fire by
persons unknown," GVFD Chief
Ray Bush said Monday.
The ftre spread from the alley to
the business on the ground floor,
and then to a second-floor apart-

ment, occupied by

I{I• (; :--;'II Til ~ \\ ~:
Get Reudy For Our "NCAA FINAl FOUR" Contest.
'~'f'•'•'''•"'
•.•.•.•.·,·· Pick The "fiNAL FOUR'' Teums anti You Mov Win
' ..
(I

'

: ;:; $1 00°° CASH I

~o[)n -

Wt1flh Our AD·.

Oreal Seleetlon of 1991 New Care in Stoek!

BUICK

'

PONTIAC

2-Regals
3-Park Avenues
5-Centurys
8-Skylarks
16-Buick LeSabres

·1-Bonneville
3~Firebirds 1 GTA .
4-Grand Prix's
7-Grand Ams
8-Pontiac Sunbirds

fighting a blaze tbat roared tbrougb the busl·
ness. The Middleport Fire Department supplied
air tanks for tile tlreftglltlng efforts. (OVP photo
by Kris Cochran)

EXTINGVISfDNG THE FLAMES - Firefighter&amp; lrom the Gallipolis and Vinton Volun·
teer Fire Departments take a break outside of
DANTAX on Court Street Sunday evening after

Maxwell, News deadline
JOIN OUR WINNING TEAM .
FOR SERVICE, SEI.EcrtON, AND LOW PRICES!

Hotzaca•c
FAMiY PIAmcE
MJ·J111

-'

I

-

.
Maxwell has demanded that the day.
NEW YORK (UPI) - RepreUnion leaders said ~well had
sentatives of British publisher unions agree ~o the equivalent of
Robert Maxwell and striking 800 job cuts - which would substantially altered his initial
unions at the Daily News raced include ending some guaranteed demand for the disputed "manageagainst a Monday morning dead- overtime - among the 2,300 ment ri~hts" clause that had been
tbe rnam sticking point in the 4line for a deal to end the bitter unionized workers at the paper.
walkout and save the 71-year-old
The British publisher, who has month-old strike. That proposed
tabloid.
agreed 10 buy the tabloid .if.he can clause would have given manageWith the 10 a.m. deadline just reach agreements with the unions ment sole authority over workpllce
hours away, union leaders huddled . to end ihe strike, set the deadline issues without collective bargainwith Maxwell's negotiators on the tllks. Without a sale, the ing.
..A
.
Union leaders expres ..... optiovernight to iron out terms of the paper's current owner, the Tribune
deal.
Co., said it will close the News Fri- mism that a dell would be reached.
~~

Continued on page 10

•

to 'invest water. fund montes
.. .

The decision to invest water
fund monies was rnade at last
week's regular meeting of Racine
Village Council.
Tbe council authorized the village clerk to invest some of the
water fund money into a one year
Certificate of Deposit at the Home
National Bank. It was noted that
the money being invested is in an
appropriation item that cannot be
used except for extreme emergency
and thus qualifies to be invested.
The CD
yield an interest rate
of seven percenL
Council authorized the Mayor to
attend the Mayor's Court Seminar
at Ohio University Inn sponsored
by the Ohio Municipal League.
Council approved payment of the
application fee.
Council gave the third reading
to an ordinance authortzmg the
Board of Public Affairs to expend
an amount over $1,000 for cleaning

Two more die
in Columbus
shootings

'

• 0-·t(llll

·

will

1

Earlier, at Andrews Air Force

-RaGine -Council authorizes clerk

apartment adjacent to DANTAX,
and subsequently to Haskins
Lounge, which sustained water
damage.
There were no injuries to the
occupants of the building, and only
minor injuries to a few ftrefighters.
The 38 G VFD firefighters
received aid from the Guyan
Township, Vinton, Rio Grande and
Middleport Fire Departments. The.
incident is undet investigation.

446-728

•·····•

glad to be home. We salute the

Peg~Mont-

f~::.e~r~a~~got~csa;~~ond·t=

courageous leadership of President Base, Cheney helped greet the
Bush ... and our theater comman- POWs as they descended the stairs
ders, without which someday of the Boeing 707 jet, carpeted in
would still be a dream in our red in their honor.
cells."
"Welcome home," Cheney
.
Bush did not attend the cere- said. "Every American, every man
· monies for the POWs, but he said and woman who cares about freelater that he and his wife, Barbara, dom, owes you a very special mea· watched the event on television sure of gratitude."
·'with tears running down our
"Americans in evecy part of this
faces."
land have been so proud of your
The president poured out his heroism, professionalism and your
emotions at a Ford's Theater fund- skill," he said. "Your courage was
raising gala allended by dignataries brought home to us in every victory
including Vice President Dan you won, in the bravery and deterQuayle, Defense Secretary Dick mination you showed while endurCheney and Gen. Colin Powell, ing captivity." .
.
chai·rman of the Joint Chiefs of
The defense chief said, "Our
· Staff.
"
enemy thought he could use you to
" I'm going to give them the weaken America's resolve and
biggest welcome home party this · undennine our nation's will to see
country has ever seen,'' B!!Sh this .war to its end . His judgment
vowed to cheers and applause from could not have been more wrong.
the black tie audience. .
"The president and the AmenThere was no immediate word can people could not rest until yo 4
on when or where the celebration and the entire Kuwaiti nation were
would take place, but it would be free," Cheney said.
reminiscent of a similar event host"You've also faced fear in soli-

sai:~e~~ed~·~sg~~/Ja~~
e
c
w
a
m
d
h
:
n
e
y
h
t
h
e
o
m
P
r
~
e
s
.
i
~~:,
:~~~~
~;~o~
~.c~~~~~i~et~:rr~::::cto'Ws
someday finally came and we're
"for a job well done." He added,

'J

YOUR FAMILY.

446-5137

WASHINGTON (UP!) Twenty-one former prisoners of
war returned from Iraq. to a hero's
welcome, and Pres1dent Bush
announced plans to toss ."the
biggest welcome home. party this
country has ever seen" for the Persian Gulfveterans.
The -former POWs returned to
the nation's &lt;;,apitll Sundar. aboard
a sleek blue.' white and sdvcr Air
Force jet christened "Freedom
One," with "United States of
America" emblazoned on its fuse!age.
The first former POW to set foot
on American soil was Air Force
Col. David Eberly, 43, of Brazil,
Ind. A wounded former POW had
arrived earlier, but he remained on
a stretcher.
·
"We're glad to be home,' ~
Eberly said. "God saved us, our
families' love and your prayers
sustained us, and for many of us
the camaraderie of our flying
squadrons brought us home to fly
again."

s.unda\1 fiire does $135,000
.t!~m,age,. labele4--~~~p~~.i.l!YS

SUPPLY INC.

.recognized for"service

.

. '

.President Bush plans
biggest party ever for
Persian Gulf veterans_

Pines, Spruces,
wildflower
seed, andOaks,
groundMaples,
covers. . , .. .• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • - -. .
are still available through the conservation tree seedling program.
Contact the Gallia SWCD office at

Meigs employees

1 Section, 10 P.g• 25 c.nte
A MutUrnedla Inc. Newapal*

Pomeroy·Middleport, Ohio, Monday, March 11, 1991

A

sage product, Hotz, a smoked ·sausage Unk with bits of jalapeno
throughout. A similar product is
available in convenience stores
through Owens in the Southwest.
The board of directors declared
a six-and-one-half cents ($.065) per
share quarterly dividend on Jan. 18,
1991, payable March 4, 1991, to
stockholders of record at the close Of
business Feb. II, 1991.
Bob Evans Farms Inc. currently
owns and operates 250 restaurants in
14 states, including nine Owens
Family Restaurants in the Dallas/Ft.
Worth metroplex. The company
produces and distributes a variety of
fresh pork sausage products under
the Bob Evans and Owens names in
23 states and the District of Columbia.
.
(Mr. Evans is an Investment
Broker for The Ohio Company
in their Gallipolis off'K:e.)

Low tonight near 30,
Tuesday, high near 50.
Chance of rain 70 percent.

..

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•

•

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•

Page3

...

StOCk market. ••_·_
which has become a resistance
level. A second highlight was the
continued heavy volume and
.volatility."
He said the market also showed
strong activity in technology
stocks.
On lhe trading floor this week,
RJR Nabisco when-issued stock
again was the most active issue,
advancing 7/8 to 10 3/4.
Philip Morris was next, up I 1/8
to 67 1/8. American Express finished third, increasing I I /8 to 26
I fl.
The Boeing Co., which has
sparked growth in the Pacific
Northwest, was also active,
increasing 1/4 to 49 1(1..
Among other blue chips, IBM
1/4 to 131 1/4. Ford Motor
Co. increased 3/4 to 34. Cjticorp,
wlllc:ll completed a $600 million
·uJe in preferred stock to a broad
JIOIIP of in~estors, went up 1/8 to
15 3tt.
ATAT, which pressed its bid to
1111re eMil' NCR Corp., dropped 1(1.
ro 33. Unisys jumped 2 1/4 to 6
1/4.
company introduced a
lqll 411d mainframe computer.
Oa tbe American Stock
BadllniD. the Amex Market Value
Index rote 8.17 to close Friday at
356.31. AdviJK:es led declines 466-

Cards : 2-H, 7-C;
6-D; K·S
Super Lotto:
1-4-14-28-33-46
Kicker: 610477

GALLIPOLIS • The Red
Wealthy and Northern Spy are ~------~------------~--~__,~.
·•.
varieties that are familiar to most or
-' ·
Family Insurance Check Up
the public. These old standards are
a good choice for many reasons.
.•"
_,.
-These are semi-dwarf and
approximately three feet in height.
·The semi-dwarf is a more workable
. size for the backyard garden as it
Who do you
does not get too large and take up
in the late 1970's.
call fCJ a
.
.,This is mostly due to targer ani- too much space.
When
plailting
semi-dwarf
trees
free Family
1ftals and more lean meat per car..
. CIIS.II, as well as more rap1d growth allow about 14-16 feet between
Insurance
,.
and qu1cker feedlot tumov~r: The varieties. The semi-dwarf will also
,.
U.S. beef ~efd rcac_hed therr peak bear at an earlier age which should
,·
· be between 4-5 years.
,.
of 132 million head m 1975.
.
The Red Wealthy is well-suited
Reminder of the fourth se~1on
,.••
-,.
or. th~ Winter 'Beef School will be: for cold climates because the t;ree is
thiS Monday, March 11, 7:30 p.m. very hardy and the fruit ripens .
·'
. at the Columbus Soothe"! Power early. The Northern Spy is ready to
Meetin¥. Roo_m. The Oh10 Beef pick "about three to four week after
Expo wlll be m Columbus March the Wealthy.
Both of these varieties are excel14-17.
.
lent
fur pies, sauce and eating. The
A te.~tatlVe program.has ~n set
Nonhero
Spy is one of the finest
., lhinl
for April 4 on the topic of 'Comold-time
varieties
with
delicious
An.
&amp;
Stato
SJ.
posting F~ and Yard Waste~. '!'e
llAn ,,. • •
tart
flavor~
Gallpolls,
Oh.
are ~orki_ng toward a 12:30 p.m.
..
It does not self pollinate and
sess1on Wl'!J Semor Cmzens and a
"""'' 446·4290
Homo
446·4511
there
fore
requires
two
of
lhe
same
~p.m. sess1on for.the general pubSlate FalllllllSIIrnnce Companies Hllllll Ofllces: Bloom&lt;~&lt;rl IU1n&lt;JS
variety to bear fruit. The packet
he. Watch for detads.
contains two Red Wealthy and two
Northern Spy.
·

_____

Bob Evans

Pick 3: 250
Pick 4: 8818

• M arc h 18
Deadl IDe
. e seedlings
ord ering t re

Gallia tobacco producers
--_- .hope to top 1990 figures
, h
F arm F ,as es.

Ohio Lottery

NCAA cage
pairings are
anounced

soil tesfis recommcmded. Speaking serviced also. Preventive maintance, :
· ·
Ia to take 1S aGraded
must. Bull and Calf Sale ... ;
0 f .soil tests, It
IS not too te
soli tests for lawn, garden, or field. G ernsey County is having 8 Grad- , ·
Are .you a gardener? If so, are edu Bull and Cow/Calf Sale on May ;
)'OU gol!'g to plan your garden or 4 1991 I have consignment forms :
JUSt let It happen?_Go through the c'
. ' d···'ls
. .;
garden catllogs and decide what
ontact m~ .or """ ·
. ·
you want to plant and then choose
Rat PoiSons • Be Careful W1th • ·
. .
fuU S
. These ... Over the past
y~ur vanebes care Y· .orne van2 months, veterinarians and pest
eues are good for freezmg, ;nme control operators have reported · ·
for camng, ~d some. for frcs ~se. "increased" number of suspected .
We do have l~formauon on vanety and confirmed rodenticides or rat
recoml)lendations.
poisonings, especially in dogs.
G~l t.he_lawn mower _out and
In the past, most of the common _
chec_k: 11 over. Does ll need rodenticides available were relarepaired?. Are the blades Sh¥JJ7 lively non-toxic to pets: Usually, it
Has the alr cl~er been serviced required the ingestion of large
and has the 01l been changed? amounts of rat poison over an
Tractors _and equipment need to be · extended period of time to cause
~Or
any harmful effects. However,
II
today with the ad-:ent of m~re :
_
•
potent ~nd and ~ird generation _
rodenllCldeS, tOXlClly can be :
achieved with exposure.to much ::..
smaller amounts and wnh more
446.8687 to receive an order form. devastating effects.
Deadline for ordering is March
(Many modern rodenticides will -:::;
18. Trees are to be distributed on kill rats and mice in one single :::
March 28 &amp; 29.
feeding.)
..-.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) -A
shopkeeper and an off-duty poli9e
officer shot two men to death m
separate incidents during the weekend to bring to 42 the number or
killings in Ohio's capital city so far
this year.
Ali Malkieh shot and killed a
man who attempted to hit him with
a tire iron during a robbery attempt
at Malldeh's convenience store.
Sgt. Alan Mann, a Franklin
County sheriff's deputy, shot a man
who was a guest at a Red Roof Inn,
which is just west of a motel w~
- three men wac shot and killed last
Thursday.
.
. . .
Malldeh said he had been 1U and
planned to stay at home Sunday b,U!
decided to go to work and when nc
artived at the store, he noticed a
man ~alking across the parking Jot
"I felt so sick:, and £was walk·
in~ very slowly to-the store," he
said. "I saw him watching me as I
unlocked the door.''
Ma1kleh ~ his mother called
and while he was talking to her,
two men came into the store)
One made a purchase and left.
Malkieh said he was ringinl up a
slle for the other man· when the
man pulled a tire iron out ·o f his
jacket.
\, 1 • •
"He just started swmgmg at
· me, " Sll'd ............. "He waa call·
ing me dirty names and swinging
hard and wild but he missed me.

u........

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and recoating the interior of the
water system storage tank. The
Leary Company will do the work
and thus extend the tank warranty.
Council approved an ordinance
under emergency measure to establish a refuse collection fund and a
debt service fund. Both of these
funds were suggested by the Ohio Auditor's office. It. was noted that
the funds were in the annual appropriations .measure passed earlier
this year, ·
·
· Council rejected Dale Hart's
request that the village construct a
street on his property off Yellowbush Road. Mr, Hart was going to
deed the strip of land to the village
for a street
Council was of the opinion that
the developer is to construct the
streets and roadways and if they
meet specifications, the legislative
authority can accept them as a public street with responsibility for
maintaining them.
It was reported that Councilman
Jeff Thorn toll is going to donate
$50 worth or wildflower seeds to
the village.
The roof at the firehouse and
firehouse annex were discussed,
with suggestions and estimateS for
repairs to be obtained and action
taken at the next meetinJI;.

It was reported that Ric bards
and Son, Inc. will be using the
annex for a safety training meeting.
Dravo will be using the annex on
the 14th for their annual safety
meeting. ,
May.0 r Cleland reported to
council that he has been in discus·sion with Kinder Insurance regarding ·a breakdown of insurance costs
so that the costs could be charged
to the various funds, but to date no
infonnation has-been received.
Glenn Rizer reported that he
woultt be mstalling a new culven
on the alley and Second Street. He
also requested and was granted per.
mission to purchase items needed
to get the lawnmowers ready for
use. .
Scott Hill, representing the fire
department, adviSed that the Chief
had received word that the tanker
truck should be delivered ncar the
end of July.
Ernie Sission met wilh council
to explain the implications of the
Clean Air AcL
.
Attending the meeting were
council members Robert Beegle,
Henry Bentz, Ronald Clark, Carrolt
Teaford, Jeff Thornton, and Larry
Wolfe. Also attending were Mayor
Cleland, Clerk Jane Beegle, Marshal David Huddleston and Rizer.

REED HONORED • Bruce Reed, left, receiftl a H-ltarla1
Award from Melp ConutJ Clulmber of Commerce Vkll! l'relldent
Chuck Kltebeu at Saturday eveain1'1 Clulmber Dinner and Dace.
Reed was presented with the award for ·•Ill many yean of aervlce
to the chamber. Reed wu tile nnt President of tile Melp CoantJ
Cbamber. (Seallnel Photo by David L: Harrla)
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Mon., March 11, 1111
c

Commentary
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
, DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
A~

~m~ ~._
_,.... .rT"E!!d·~

. ~v
CHARLENE HOEFLICH '
General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assllllllllt Publisher/ Controller
A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Datly Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association,
LETIERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be.less than'!!OO
words long, All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personalities.

Desert Storm's
political fallout
By ARNOLD.SAWISLAK
UPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON - Gen. Norman Schwarzlcopf, in a totally pardonable boast, predicted that the Desen Storm ground campaign would be
studied in the future as a cl115sic example of brilliant military planning and
execution.
President Bush has said no such thing about the Gulf War as a political
exercise, but it may achieve an even higher status.
·
It will be a while before the complete picture of the political outcome
of the gulf victory can be seen, but some early returns are in and they are
good news for the president and his administration.
To begin, politics in this situation has several levels of meaning. First,
it involves whatever influence Bush was able to gain by leading the coalition that whipped Iraq.
If he can actually get Israel and more of her Arab neighbors than Egypt
-notably Saudi Arabia and even Syria- to sit down to talk civilly and
seriously about a solution to Middle East conflicts, he will be on the track
of a Nobel-dass accomplishment
• This will not be easy. By refraining from retaliating agaiJISt Iraqi missile attacks to avoid straining the Western-Arab alliance, Israel feels it has
a new 1111d sttonger claim to U.S. suppon on regional issues. If Bush can
get Israel to talk about giving up territory to the Palestinians now, it will
be the modem equivalent of parting the Red Sea.
Next, if Bush can use whatever he has added to an already hefty public
approval rating for his presidency to get the Democratic Congress to act
on his programs, he will become the first Republican since Dwight Eisenhower to dominate a legislative branch totally controlled by the political
opposition~ (Ronald Reagan got a lot from Congress I0 years ago, but his
GOP did conttol the Senate then.)
The question here is whether Bush is really preP.8fed to exploit a huge
boost in public esteem -one poll had him at 91 percent a few days after
the cease·fli'C. One of the lcnocks on Bush before the invasion of Kuwait
shifted attention away from domestic issues was that his administration
was drifting, with no centerpiece ideology or programs for supporters 10
rally around.
.
This should get a quick test. The problems of 1989 and 1990- failing
and fragile banks and thrifts, a limping economy, a failing educational
system, fallin¥ down bridges and freeways and many other headaches are still there m 1991.
Finally, partisan politics. Right now, Bush looks unbeatable in 1992that same poll showed hin\ with 72 percent of the vote had the election
been on the firSt Tuesday of March 1991. No Democrat with any sense
will attaCk Bush now or until this new honeymoon has faded. If Bush.can
keep it going, he may just produce the mother of all landslides next year.

11111 ., r
Mn1130

Page 2-The Dally ·BenUnel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, Marc.h 11, 1991 .

CAIRO, Egypt • Egypt's Presi·
dent Hosni Mub&amp;rak is the closest
partner George Bush has in planning a post-war blitzkrieg, with the
two of them aiming to win the
peace as defisively as the allies
won the war.
Sources in · this
ancient Arab capital say that
Muliarak and Bush share a vision,
and have become much closer personally and diplomatically than
Bush and Israeli Prime Minister
Yitzbak Sllamir. Bush has decided
Shamir is stubborn, combative and
inflexible.
But Mubarak is a different story.
He comes from a country with a
lcnack for diplomacy. He is secure
in his job and confident enough to
take on the task of achieving a stable peace in the Middle East. As
the area's largest Arab country,
Egypt has a mandate to do it too.
Knowledgeable sources told us
that these are .the post-war points
on which Bush and Mubatak agree:
- The bulk of U.S. forces must
be out of the region within six
rr'lnths with most of the ground

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revenge; top.
-Duke, 96~74
By TOM WITHERS
UPI Sparta Writer
On the strength of their thrashing of Dulce, North Carolina
·became No. 1 .in the ACC and a
No. 1 in the NCAA tournament.
Rick Fox scored 25 points. and
Hubert Davis added 17 to lead the
Tar Heels to a 96-74 rout of the
fifth-ranked Blue Devils in the
championship game of the Atlantic
Coast Conference Tournament.
The victory was the most lopsided in an ACC title game since
1968 when North Carolina blasted
North Carolina State 87-50, and the
pasting seemed to have an impact
on the NCAA selection committee.
·A few hours later, the Tar Heels
were named the top seed in the
East Regional of the NCAA tournament.
"This was our best basketball
game of the year for 40 minutes,"
said North Carolina Coach Dean
'Smith, who will be making a
record 21st NCAA appearance.
"I was verr happy with our
team today. We re ecstatic.''
The Tar Heels, 25-5, received
12 points from King Rice and dominated the boards to win their 12th
ACC tide in the 38-year history of
the conference.
No. 8· North Carolina made 56
percent of its field-goal attempts
and shut down Duke with an
aggressive defense, holding the
Blue Devils to 41 percent shooting,
North Carolina controlled the
inside game as well. holding a 37·

Cia~

N.C.

-21&amp;23

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Boston Celtics ·topple fading Portland ..:irs:~~:~~~~~~~~:
By Unit~ Press International,
team die caliber of Ponland," said
Apparently a week off wasn t Boston Coach Chris Ford. "This
what the doctor ordered for the had nothing to do with last weekPortland Trail Blazers.
no kind of revenge. It was just a
A quirk ill the scheduling gave chance to show ourselves that we
the Blazers a seven-day rest, but cbuoil!ldin!~gbe_.~t a great team in their
" the vacation was of little help. The
Blazers started off slowly and then
Larry Bird led the way for
faltered at the end Sunday night Boston with 27 points, but reserve
against the Boston Celtics. The guard Dee Brown may have been
result was a Ill-109 overtime vic- the key for the Celtics in overtime.
tory fir the Celtics.
Brown played excellent defense
It was Portland's fifth loss in · against Terry Porter and hit two
their last six games and second free throws with 1'6.6 seconds left
straight setback at home.
thal put Boston ahead 110.107.
For the Celtics, the victory
Brown made only four of 13
avenged a 116-1071oss to Portland field goal attempts and scored only
a week ago in the Boston Garden.
10 points, but added 11 assists to
"We wanted to ~e we could lead all players in th!l' eateJWry.
win a game on the road against a
"Dec Brown played an o~t-

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Big East
Seton HaD 74, Georgetown 62
At New York, Terry Dehere ;
sank 10· foul shots in the second •
half and finished with 16 points, :
giving the No. 23 Pirates their firSt ' •
Big East Tournament champi·
onship. The Pirates, 22·8, held off
the Hoy as down the stretch by
making 13 of 16 free throws in the
final 4: 15 and controlling the
defensive boards. For the game,
Seton Hall was 34 of 41 from the
line.
Oliver Taylor, the tournament's
MVP, scored 15 points, one of five
Pirates in double figures. Alonzo
Mourning scored 22 points and had
13 rebounds for the Hoyas.
Big Eight
MISsouri 90, Nebraska 8Z
At Kansas City, Mo ., Doug . ·
Smith scored 31 points and Mis- •
souri to help the Tigers upset the :
No . 13 .Cornhuskers in the Big
Eight Tournament The Tigers, 20- .
10, are barred from the NCAA ·
Tournament after being placed on ·.
probation for rules violations. The
Cornhuskers, who were making
their first appearance in the title
game, dropped to 26-7. Anthony
Peeler added 18 for the Tigers
while the Comhuskers were paced
Rich King's 20 points and IS from·
Beau Reid.
Big West
Nevada-Las Vegas 98, Fresno St . ··
74
At Long Beach, Calif., Ander- ·•
son Hunt scored 20 of his 23 points ..

~~~~g;~~:!{~~L

"\
ki whose team rece1ved the No 2 son to win their 41st straight game.
standing game," Foril said. "His
~n other NBA games on Sunday, ..s~ed in the Midwest Regi~ri. UNLV trailed by 10 in the first _
defense on Porter in the ovenime Ch1ca$o routed At~anta 122-87; , "They are really good, and they half, but Hunt nailed 6 of his 7 , .
was magnificent
Phoemx stopped Mmncsota 123~ were better than that today, It was·a · three- pointers after halftime to lift ...
"I would love to have a situa- 109; Denver l)owned Dallas 124- terrific performance led by their the Rebels to 30-0 with their· 14th
tion in which we play Portland · 110; Golden State disposed of upperclassmen."
straight victory over the Bulldogs. · .
again this year. That would mean Sacramento 97-87; Miarn1 defeated'
Krzyzewski and center Christian The score was tied 44-44 with 16 ,
we'd both be in ihe fmals. I would New Jersey, 101-88; the LA Lakers Lacttner were assessed technical minutes to play before UNLV .
Jove it to happen."
dispatched Orlando 115-101; and
fouls in
first five minutes of the pulled away to its seventh tourna- ..~ •
The defensive play of the $arne
Bulls Ul, Hawks 87
game and the Tar Heels raced to an ment title m nine years. Toumacame when Brown forced a Jump
At Atlanta, Michael Jordan 11-2Iead. The 'Far Heels continued ment MVP Larry Johnson scored·. •
ball with Porter with 20 seconds totaled 25 poirits, nine rebound$, ~ dO'jlUII away-and took a 49-31 on a 22for UNL V.
· .,
left in overtime and Boston ahead and nine assists to help .the Bulls _, -~baSket by Fox with 1:52 left in the Southeastern Confereace·ebam· , ·
108-107. The Celtics conttolled the hand the Hawks tl\eir worst defea£ • d'U'SI half.
pionship
: ,~tap and Brown added his decisive of the season. Atlanta, which · · Fox, one of North Carolina's Alabama 88, Tennessee 69
free throws moments later.
trailed by at least 30 throughout the three seniors and the tournament's
At Nashville, Tenn., Melvin
· "I played Terry a bit to the right foruth quatter, has lost its last twQ ,.. Most Valuable Player, said a loss Cheatum scored 23 points and·._,
and he carne there," Brown said, home games after 22 consecutive to Duke last week fired up his Gary Waites had 22 to lift 21st- ,
"I thought he was ~~~to get the wins at The Omni. The Hawks team.
ranked Alabama and end Ten- , .
ball to Clyde. I just r
ed out and were led by Spud Webb 's 18
"We were disappointed in our nesce's suing of upsets in the SEC . •
grabbed it."
wints.
.
effort against Duke in Chapel Tournament. The Crimson Tide, ·.
· Suns 113, Timberwnlves 109
Hill," Fox said. "We Icnew we had 21 -9, pulle(j away in the second
At Minneapolis, Minn .. Tom to play better and we knew we half to become the second team in ··
Chambers scored 28 points and could play better."
.
league history to win three straight : .'
Phoenix extended its winning
tournament titles. Tennessee, the , .
streak to six games. The Suns have
Laetmer scored 22 points and· tournament's ninth seed, beat Mississippi, top-s~eded Mississippi.- :·
Charlton changed his off-season won all seven games against the Oreg Koubek 21 for.Duke, 26· 7. ·
Timberwolves.
Tony
Campbell
There
were
six
other
conference
State
and Georg1a to get to the finak .,
workout regimen to improve his
scored
27
points
and
became
the
tournament
finals
played
Sunday:
and
finished
12-22. Allan Houston. •.
endurance and leg strength. Instead
led the Vats with 22 points.
·
of throwing 15 to 20 piu:hes every first Minnesota player to surpass
other day, he'd throw 60 to 70 3,000 career points m the Wolves'
every third or fourth day.
no
•
"I wanted to get my body used
••
to really gassing it, taxing it," he
At Denver, Michael Adams and
lOW A CITY, Iowa (UPI) Hawkeyes closed out, the game by '
said. ''Relieving c!oesn 't really take Orlando Woolridge each scored 31
points as the Nuggets ended a . Rodell Davis scored 19 points and making 9 of their final 12 free
that much out of you.''
The speed guns behind home- three-game losing streak. Denver, Acie Earl 17 Sunday, leading Iowa throws.
Iowa outrebounded the Buckplate at Plant City Stadium are which.never1railed, led by as mariy to an 80-69 u,pset of No. 2 Ohio
as 24 points in the third quarter. State, thwarting the Buckeyes'· bid eyes 41-30 for the game, while
buzzing these days.
·
"You look: at our piu:hing staff Herb Williams paced Dallas' to win the Big Ten crown outright. Ohio State committed 17 turnovers. , ,,
Ohio State, 25-3 overall and IS- Brown added 15 points for the, . ,
and we have quality pitchers who offense with 25 points and Rolando
Blackman added 21.
3 in the conference after dropping Buckeyes.
..
throw 90 miles an hour plus , "
Charlton said. ' ·You've got (Jose)
Warrlon 97, Sacramento 87
its final two regular-season games,
Earl and Chris Street each had; :
Rijo, you've got (Jack) Armsttong, . At Oakland, Calif., Chris Mullin winds up tied with Indiana for the eight rebounds for Iowa, while Earl :.
you've got myself, you've got scored 34 points and the Kings lost Big Ten crown . Indiana, beaten recorded three blocked ~hots l
(Scott) Scudder, you've got Dibble, their 27th consecutive road game twice by the Buckeyes this year, Moses finished with 12 points ana '·;
you've got Myers. That's not 100 - one short of the NBA record. knocked off lllinois 70·58 earlier Kevin Smith I I.
.\ 1
bad.''
Tim Hardaway scored 25 points for Sunday to also fmish up 15-3.
Speaking of bad, Charlton is the Warriors, who won for the firSt
Iowa, on the proverbial bubble
still a Nasty Boy even if the only time this season without scoring at for the NCAA Tournament heading
time he spends in the bullpen is least 100 points. For the Kings, into ·the contest, Jed the entire way
SPRING VAllEY CINEMA
-,_'
Anthony Frederick scored a career· '•iio improve to 20. IO.ovClllll and 9-9
warming up before a start:
446 4514
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"They're still keeping me in the best 22 points.
· in the conference, locking up an at1
club. I'm still in the T-shin," he
Heat 101, Nets 88
'large bid.
said. "I don't know if there were
At Miami, Sherman Douglas
The Hawkeyes, who also upset
any rules really. We included scored 28 points and Rony Seikaly Jndiana on the road this season,
everybody in the bullpen.''
.
totaled 21 points and 21 rebounds .. scored the first four .poigts of the
Soon to become foreign territo- to lead the Hea~ who limited New game and kept on running, building
ry.
Jersey to 32 points in the second · .a 14- point lead in the fli'St half on
half.
·
a James Moses layin that made it
34-20 with 6:51 to go.
Iowa led 47-39 at the intermission and held off every Ohio State
eharge in the second half. The
Buckeyes,
led by Jim Jackson's 24
signed autographs on the other side should' get elected. It would be a
')loints,
managed
to close within
of the ballroom, with Rod Carew big injustice to baseball if he
four,
at
69-65
with
4:03 remaining
and Johnny Bench scheduled to doesn't get in."
·
on
a
Jamaal
Brown
follow. But the
sign Sunday.
Several Qf the collectors, bank·
The other tbree are Hall of ing on Rose malting it 1;0 Cooper·
Famers, while nobody is sure if stown, N.Y., had Rose stgn bats ·or
Rose ever will get in because of his other items that had been signed
. suspension for gambling.
only by Hall of Pamers. Others said
John Wolf, of Kearny, NJ., says although he p obably would not get
he attends shows about 48 week- in the HaD, they wen: still interestends a year, and makes it a point to ed because be is baseball's all-time
show up first. To make sure, he hits Iader. Some grapplcd,witb the
arrived at the hotel 5:30 LDI. SIIUr- issue of paying a felon 111111 admitday to get autographs on several ted ~la' for his autograph.
..
items, including a Spans Dlusnted
• For his' accomplishments in
cover.
baseball, he deserves to be in,"
''
"Pete Rose, as far as I'm con- said Curtis Fulso, of Eatontown,
'
cerned, is innocent," said Wolf, NJ ., who had Rose sign a 3,000-hit
'•
who paid more than $200 for his' ball. "For his moral activity, he
POIJUSY
autographs. "The only reason he doesn't. If you let Rose in while
•
(Dining 1 - Only)
got caught wiih the income tax is he's on the ineUgible list, how do
Served with whfpped pOIIton, chicken
•'
because of the baseball stuff and you ~Y Shoeless Joe Jackson?
.. gr1vy. cole ellw, hot roll end l&gt;uJter.
they started looking at his taxes.''
Sonv. no"1ubetllut11 1xcept -er•ae
' If you put him up 111 a pinnl-•
. "He'll get in (lhe HaD of Fame) cle, bow do you justify his ather
with edditlonel prlce1.
•
in ma~be folD' or five years." said ICIIYities?"
'
NOW FEATURING HOMEMADE DINNER ROLL
·
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Wolf s friend Charles Dietz of
Michael Fuchs of Queeru
~
Queens. "Ferguson Jenkins (con- brouabt his 12-year-old son David
'
victed in 1980 for pcmrsion) was and 10- year-old dauahter Jean- .
''
PH. 992-StSI
POTIIOY, ON.
on drugs, he got elected to thjl Halt IICitte, oaeh with a ~tme of Rose
••'
Featuring hlltudty Frltd Chide•
of Fame. He (Rose) sot cauaht, Iaten at a show a year JISO·
•
that's all. I feel he paid his debt, he
•

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me

One bad pitch costs Charlton
PLANT CITY, Fla. (UPI)Norm Charlton likes the idea of
being able to fish at his leisure during summer. That's one reason why
he W!JDted to be starting pitcher for
the Cincinnati Reds.
Another could be the potential
for a big pay raise. And Charlton
likes the idea of owning two World
Series rings.
,
The 27-year-old left-bander is
one of three sure starters in the
Reds' hard-throwing rotation, joining Jose Rijo and Tom Browning.
Charlton made his fllSI start of the
spring in Sunday's 3-1 Grapefruit
League loss to the Chicago White
Sox, serving up a three-run homer
in the second inning to Steve
Lyons.
Charlton gave up only two hits
over two innings, striking out two
and walli:ing one.
· "There's advantages and disadvantages to both Q( them," Charl-ton said when asked about starting
vs. relieving. ''The advantages to
relieving, you come to the ballpark

War protesters' scare tactics failed .
William A. Rusher

sis of War Project at the University rule in the computer game:
of Colorado. He hit on the idea of "Garbage in, garbage out."
getting a computer to tell him "how
Pat Buchanan did get into the
many soldiers, of all. nationalities, numbers game, but only just: drawing on painful recollections of
will die in the battlefields of "Before we send thousands of Vietnam 1&lt;1 try to terrorize the
Kuwait and Iraq." (Computers American soldiers to their deaths, American people into opposing
let's make damn sure America's future military operations of any
don 'tlie, see?)
type, anywhere.
.
With a warfare mOdel based on vital interests are threatened."
Perhaps the most important sinThe actual total of American
the patterns of 118 wars fought
since 1816, "the computer's fore- war dead over the entire six weeks, gle lesson of the Gulf war is that
cast was relentless," reported Deb· as we now lcnow, was 98 - and that the American people aren't that
orah Blum of McClatchy News includes not only those killed by easy to scare. The great majority of
Service: "Hundreds of thousands enemy action but those lcilled BCCI· them know that in this dirty world
dead, with the possibility of final dentally as a result of "friendly it is sometimes going to be necesfire" and those who died in plane sary for Uncle Sam to use force.
totals creeping over 1 million."
crashes,
unrelated to enemy action, That doesn't mean that, if Brazil
Most of these would be Iraqi,
that
might
have occurred nght here attacks Argentina or vice versa, we
but "the Colorado group- and other
experts in war-fatality estimates - at home and killed just as many or have to rush half a million soldiers
down there to stop the war. On the
think U.S. military deaths are likely more.
When President Bush rejoiced contrary, I'd gladly sell tickets - or
to top out at 40,000 to 50,000.
Most agree that the Pentagon's that "we have kicked the Vietnam just curl up on the sofa and wau:h
casualty estimates, projecting syndrome,'' a large part of the rea- CNN cover it
But, as George M. Coham sang,
10.000 to 20,000 U.S. deaths, are son can be found in the quotations ·
too low."
above and thousands of others like "When, auld acquaintance is forgot,
Which just confirms the oldest them. The opponents of the Gulf keep your eye on that grand old
war wildly overplayed their hand, flag,"

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The Daily Sentinel

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A Dlvllloa of lhdll-la, loc.

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Telling secrets is dangerous business
A wise person once said, "No
one tells a secret to only one per,

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MAC\'\\NE

lllgiDT II

MIRh 30

road."

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you.
Now, don't get me wrong: I
son."
·
love to hear secrets as much as
.
~.~--"
..;..
"""":.:,
I guess that makes the word anyone. I love them from the first
"secret" son of a non-word, doesn't sweaty anticipation of knowing
it? A word that, by. definition, can- something no one else knows,
cels itself out. Any "secret" I ever through the rapture of actually
told, even when accompanied by . hearing them, to the self-satisfied 1strict instruCtions not to pass it on know-something-you-don't-know
'
or else I would soon sleep with the gloat that follows. But it just isn't a
•
fishes and have every trace of my safe thing to do.
existence wiped away by a secret
The real problem isn't in the
government intelligence team, was moral intent to keep a secret, but .in
passed on to at least 10 other peo- the function of the brain once the
ple before 48 hours had elapsed.
secret is told. Secrets are like
Personally, I think telling important items you pursomesecrets is not only foolhardy, it's where, then forget where you put
downright dangerous. Let's say them, While someone is telling us a
your friend tells you a secret she secret, we think we 'II never forget
swears she is only telling to you. exactly how we're supposed to
Even though she may swear you're treat the information. And regardthe only person privileged enough ing the most titillating parts of it,
to hear this life-changing informa- ,the brain will continue to function
tion, chances are, she will tell it to . ' perfectly. If foreign spies were to
someone else, maybe several some- tonure us and force us to repeat
one else, maybe several someone that which we promised not to, we
elses, before the urge to confess would be able to spew forth every
passes. So even if you don't tell it, lurid derail, word-for-word.
one of those other people probably
The brain, however, will have
•
wiD, and the lcnow ledge will even- misfiled the peripheral details,
• /.l .. _ _
tually get back to her. And when it . especially the key sentence, "Don't
~'~
does (and you can lake this to the tell this to anyone." The gray mat(l) tHt by NEA, 1ne.
., ~
' bank), the only person she will ter will not compute whether this
L-------:--------~~-,----...1 remember having told it to will be ~nformation is the kind one is not

COLt) WAR

-r , r

-21&amp;2S

Published every afternoon, MonCiay

through Friday, 111 Court St., Po.
meroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Put&gt;

Berry's World__

......... ,

---·

.

Arab partners to settl~ future dis- ,
agreements with violence.
.
One front-line soldier expreSsed . ·
it this way in a letter home as he
waited for the ground war to begin:
"If this war ends with the Iraqis
surrendering (en masse), it could
increase our propensity for getting.
into these things. 'Nothing succeeds like success.' And the more
relaii vely inexpensive successes we
have are likely 10 reinforce the idea
that military mtervention is a good
way to h111dle things • rather than
as a last-ditch solution, which is
what it ought to be.
"It could become easier and cas- . '
ier to intervene, making us more ,
and more 'complacent and self-con- ' ·
fident, until we're suddenly con- . '
fronted with our comeuppance
some time, some place down the

"

The appointment of George Collins

~-eid_s~_o.u~-t~oc_f!~n_i~~----Fred_w._cro--,w

Jack Anderson
and Dale VanAtta

·NAT

The Gulf war zipped by so fast
thai .the predictions of a long war
anaheavy death tolls are only a
few weeks old, and we can conveniendy compare the forecasts to the
reali.ty.
' Most of the protesters put the,
tor route from US 33 to the
likely
U.S. death toll in the "tens of
Ravenswood Bridge and in addi- ,
thousands,"
and added a litde color
tion four lanes of Route 1133 from
to
the
statistic
by depictin·g the
Darwin to Athens would be built.
dead
as
being
"brought
home in
The connector route to the
body-bags."
This
image
so
excited
Ravenswood Bridge is long overcertain
television
producers
that
due since it will be te!l years this
they
actually
sued
the
Pentagon
to
fall since G'overnor Rhodes
force
it
to
allow
them
to
televise
promised to build this highway. It
is very evident that the connector the scene at the Dover (Del.) Air
route will auract new industry and Force Base where the dead were
also expediate the building of a expected to arrive for routing to
new power plant by Columbus their hometowns, Alas, the war was
over before these Emmy aspiranls
Southern Electric.
I am cenain that both Governor could find a liberal judge to rule in
Voinovich and ,Jack Dowler will their favor.
The grand prize for sheer intelwork together on these Jiighways
lectual
terrorism, however, must
and they will be given priority.
surely
go
to Claudio Cioffi-Revilla,
Both Governor Voinovich and Jack
director
of
the Long Range AnalyDowler are honorable men,
Carry on,

r-ll:_mJ:e_d

force leaving much sooner than military exercises conducted by the
that. AU along, Bush has promised United States and its Gulf allies.
Mubarak and Saudi King Fahd and
- No borders would be redrawn
Syrian President Hafez al Assad in the Middle East. Mubarak is
that U.S. troops would not loiter in adamant about that. It has been
thedesen.
exactly 70 years since the British
A swift pullout would rut the carved up the post-Ottoman borUnited Slates in the role o "good ders and while the.e may have been
g'uy" - willing to butt in when i~ " some inequity then, Mubarak
allies have a problem, and then thinks it's time to live with the
willing to butt out when the prob- existing lines. ,
.
lem is solved.
- An economic arrangement will
- A regional security force will have to be forged between the Arab.
be set up m Kuwait and Saudi Ara- "haves" and "have nots." Egypt
bia, maybe under a United Nations and Jordan are among the "have
banner. The Saudis will have to nots" because what they have not is
develop a significant armed force oil. Mubarak knows that greater.
to provide the bulli: of the uoops, cooperation must exist between the
but Egypt wiD provide its military rich oil producers and the -starving
as filler.
,
populations in the other Arab
The United States, at the request nations.
of King Fahd and ]'vlubarak, would . If Bush and Mubarak can pull
supply Navy, Marine and Air Force all of this off - or even some of it ;
power at a respectable distance. they might win the peace. ll!at is
Saudi Arabia and Kuwait would always more difficult than winning
stockpile the ammunition, equip- a war.
ment and other supplies that rapidIf they can't, the temptation will
ly deployed U.S. troops would remain for the United States and its
need. And there would be frequent

R~ORhiD

Letters to the editor
The appointment of George
Collins as administrative assistant
to Deputy Director Jack Dowler in
Division 10 ODOT was a fine thing
for both Meigs and Gallia Counties. This appointment was a long
time in coming. George is the fli'St
Meigs Countian to hold this high
post in ODOT. George will do an
excellent job and the writer hereby
congratulates him.
George will be working for Jack
Dowler who has the tide of Deputy
Director of Division 10 of ODOT.
Jacic is a very capable engineer and
together they should make a fine
team for the construction of new
highways in the South eastern part
of Ohio.
Governor Voinovich, in his
campaign in Southern Ohio

Tar.Heels get

1991 NCAA MEN'S BASKETBALL CHAMPIONSHIP

Murbarak and Bu-sh see·the s·ame future

The Daily Sentinel

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

.

The Dally Sentinel-Pig! 3

supposed to tell anyone under any
circumstances, or if it was passed
along with qualifiers. Was one not
supposed to tell this to anyone, or
just not to a few key people? Is
there a statute of Jimitabons on this
secret, or does one have to keep it
forever'!
Search as it might, the brain will
ot
11 retrieve these vital, protective
elements of the secret. All of the
brain cells carryin~t these little
annoying details will have
sloughed themselves off just as if
they were so many dead scalp cells
falling onto the shoulder of one's
navy blue suit

.

.

lllhlng Company/Multlmedla, Inc.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 4~76!l. Ph. 992·21!16. Se-

Sarah Overstreet

cond class poatqe &amp;Nid at Pomeroy,

Ohio.

Member: VnJted Pre.. Jnternatlonal,

My abstinence from secrettelling has not come at small cost;
no one wants ro tell me their
secrets if I don't have anything to
trade. But better safe than sorry. If
I beg you to tell me something
nasty and scandalous, tell me to
watch "Days of Our Lives." Or
make something up that won't hurt
you when I slip up and pass it on to
someone else. Just don't tell me
your secrets, please.
I won't remember that you said,
"Don't teU this to anyone, but ..."

Today in history.

Inland OaUy Press A.u~auon and th~

Ohio Newspaper Alloclatlon. N attonal
Advertblnl RePreteDtaUve, Branbam

Newspaper Safes, 733 Third

Ave~ue.

NPN York, New York 10017,

POSTMASTER: Send addreoa ch..,..
to Tile Dolly 'Sentinel, Ill Court St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio t5TIIl.

'

8VII8CIIIPftON BATD
•1 c.nter o r - Hoole
One Woek ... ............... .. .. ,,.,,,.,.,,, IJ,IO
One Month .......................... .. ...... . 11!1

&lt;&gt;no Yeor .............. .. .. .. ............. ~. 20
BINOU:COPY

PRICIC
Dolly ..... " ........... ......... ....... 2S C.nll
Su....,rtlleraiHIIIINirtnr topoy thecar-

'

'

rler may remit In adv.ance direct to
The Dally Sellttnel on a3, tor II IIKIIth
bull, Credit will be
~arrter Mch

'

I

'

........

By United Press Iliternational
Today is Moqday, March 11, the 70th day of 1991 with 295 to follow.
Tbe moon is'Waning, moving toward its new phase.
Tbe morning stars are Me~tury, Venus, Mars and Saturn.
Tbe evening star is J~ter.
., ~
Those bern on this date 111e under the sign of Pisces. They include film
•
director Raoul Walsh in 1887; silent movie actress Dorothy Gisb in 1898; :
newspaper publisher Don:ithy Schiff in 1903; bandleader Lawreace Welk i
in 1903 (a~ 88); former Britisll Prime Minister Harold Wilson in 1916
(age 75); ctvil rights leader The Rev. Ralph Abernathy in 1926; newspa- l
per publisher Rupen Murdoch in 1931 (age 60); and televisi newsman
Sam Donaldson in 1934 (age 57).
.I
w

II•••

No aubocrlpl- by mall pmnltled tn
area where hol'ne carrl• HI'VIee ll
avatlable.
'

-~----···c..q.
- ......... c..q.

13 W................................ ,,.. ,, UUC
1111 W- ............................ ...... MU6

MW...................................... IIUI

., u w................. ..................... nuo

1111 W........... .. ............ ........ ., ,,,MUO

112 w...................................... l88.40

and you get to play or you have a
chance to play every day.
"The disadvantages of relieving
- you don't get paid nearly as
well. You don't know when you're
going to~tch. You can't plan to do
things w1th your family. If I'm in
the bullpen, I can't go fishing in the
morning for two or three hours.''
Charlton was Mr. Everything
for the Reds last season, finishing
with'a 12-9 record and 2.74 ERA in
56 games. Primarily a set-up man
for Randy Myers and Rob Dib~le,
Charlton recorded his first majorleague save May 6 and was 6-1
with two saves by the end of June.
. He made his first sturt since
1988 on July IS against the New
York Mets, piU:hing six innings of
two-hit shutout ball for a 2·1 victory. In 16 starts, he was 6-5 with a
2.60ERA.
"I like them both," Charlton
said when asked to pick a favorite.
"Financially and career-wise, start-.
ing seemed the best place for me.
Starting is better for my arm. I
asked Lou (Piniella, the manager)
before I went home last season,
'Where·am I going to be next year?
Am I going to be in the rotation?'
He said yes.''

tw'N~:e:i~avericks

Buckeyes lose final to I owa

I
I

Rose still a big draw for card shows
NEW YORK (UPI) - Even
though he might never become a
Hall of Farner, Pete Rose is treated
like one by lllitogr8ph collectors.
Rose S'aturday attended his firSt
autograph session since he was
released from prison Jan. 7 after
serving a five-month sentence for
filing false income tax returns. He
signed for three hours at a show
sponsored by National Pastime at
the Roosevelt Hotel. National Pas.tilDe charged collectors $50 per
autograph on a bat 111111 $20 for one
on other items, and Rose signed an
estimated 800. to 1,000 autoRrallhs.
He was paid between $1,200 ·and
$1,500. .
.
Rose, who was banned from
baseball for gambling Aug. 23.
1989, is ineli&amp;ible for the Hall of
Fame unle11 he is reinstated by
Commissioner Fay Vinc:enL He has
not yet applied for ~einJtatement
Rose showed up several minutes
past bis scheduled 10:30 a.m.
arrival to polite applause from
tho$C on line for autosraphs. He
shook bancll w.ith 1 few but llid
nothing as be climbed to lhe front
to begin signina. Willie Mays

TUESDAY

NIGHT
SPECIAL

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CRGW'S FAMILY RISTAUIAIT

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�. Page 4 The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, March 11, 1991

·Armstrong misses first start; Reds lose 3-1 .battle
By United Press 1Dtel'1)8tional
Jack Annstrong missed his first
SUitt of the spring Sunday, while
his manager and teammates wondered if he will return from sea in
time for Opening Day.
Anns1r0ng is being fined $500 a
day for his absence, and missed his
stan against the Chicago White
Sox at Plant City, Fla.
."I th inlc he 's back in Neptune,
N.J., ready to board the tuna fleet. "
Cincinnati Manager Lou Piniella
said.
,
The 26-year-old right-hander,
• · who was 12-9 last season with a
;. • 3.42 ERA in his f~rst full majot• league season, walked out of the
·Reds spring camp Thursday after
his contract was renewed at
: $230,000.
•
"I'd rather make $30,000 on a
· • tuna boat and have peace of mind
than continue to Lake insults on top ·
of injury," Annstrong said. "My

teammates mi~t not have ,figured. second· inning homer off Charlton.
this out, but this is going to cost me Chicago's Melido Perez gave up
a lot of money. Maybe $1 million one hit over three innin~s. and six
down the road, but I will not go White Sox relievers hmited the
back on principle.··
Reds to five more hits. Cincinnati
"Jack's gomg to have to cau:h a · scored in the iourth on Paul
500-pound UIDa to pay his fines," O'Neill's double and Chris Saho's
Piniella said.
single.
A wire fiShing pole with a cardIn"other exhibition games:
board tu!la was da!lgling from
At Vero Beach, Fla., Darren
Annstrong's locker Sunday with a Reed hit a three-run homer in a sixsign saying " Wanted Tuna Boat run seventh inning to lift the New
Captain. Experience: ·Baseball YorkMets to a 10:.3 rout of the Los
Pitcher." A pair of muddy, black Angeles Dodgers. Darryl Stmwberboots were next to Armstrong's ry, who signed with the _Doda~ 1!5
cleats, along llllith a map for a a free agent over the wmer, lut hiS
''Tuna Tracker. •~
second homer of the spring against
"Jack will be back sooner or his former team - a three-run
later," said Norm Charlton, who shot. Mets starter Dwight Gooden
started Sunday instead. ' 'I can't see pitched three scoreless inpings.
him sitting out the whole year and I
At Yuma, Calif., Craig Lefferts,
can ' t see the Reds letting him sit John Costello, Candy Sierra and
out the whole year."
Calvin Schiraldi combined on a
The White Sox defeated the · three-hitter to lift the San Diego
Reds 3·1 on Steve Lyons' three-run Padres to a 4-0 victory over the

'

California Angels. San Diego 's
Tony Gwynn had !Wo hits and is 7·
for- 7 this spring. Fred McGriff
tripled and -drove in three runs fcx
the Padres.
.•
At Oearwater, Fla., von Hayes
and Wes Chamberlain drove in two
runs each and Jim Lindeman sin·
gled home the 11o-ahead run in the
sixth inning, gtving the Philadel·
phia Phillies a 9-5 victory over the
Tpronto Blue Jays. Phillies starter
Jason Grimsley pitChed three hitless innings. Rob Ducey hit a solo
homer and Joe Caner had a tworun single for Toronto.
At Winter Haven, Fla., Mike
Greenwell hit two doubles and
drove in three runs and Tom
Brunansky went 3•for-3 with an
RBI to lift the Boston Red Sox 10 a
13-7 rout of the Detroit Tigers.
Tony Phillips and Scott Lusader hit
solo hornets for Detroit

in the lOth inning to give the Baltimore Orioles a 6-3 uiumph over
the New York Yankees. Mike
Flanagan, trying a comeback at 39,
pitched three scoreless innings for
the Orioles.
·
At Port Charlotte, Fla., Pat
Howell's two-run single in the
ninth rallied the Minnesota Twins
to a 6·5 decision over the Texas
Rangers. Chili Davis had two hits
for Minnesota. The Rangers' Nolan ·
Ryan pitched five shutout innings.
At Tucson, Ariz., the Oeveland
Indians said first baseman Keith
Hernandez will undergo surgery for
a herniated disk in his lower back.
Hernandez last week was examined
by two doctors in New York, who
allteed with the original diagnosis
of the team's onhopedic surgeon.
Hernandez, 37, batted .200 with I
homer and 8 RBI in 43games last
season.

At Bradenton, Fla., Bryn Smith
and three relievers combined on a
five-hitter and Smith slugged a
two-run single to lift the St. Louis
Cardinals to an 11·0 rout of the
Pittsburgh Pirates. Tom Pagnozzi
went 3-for-3 to lead the Cardinals'
19-hit attack.
At West Palm Beach, Fla.,
Andres Galarmga hit a solo homer
and catcher Ron Hassey stole home
to help the Montreal Expost to a 62 victory over the Atlanta Braves.
Deion Sanders had a triple and single for the Braves.
At Kissimee, Fla., Ken Caminiti
had two hits and three RBI and
Carl Nichols. drove in two runs to
lift the Houston Astros to a 9-S victory over the Kansas City Royals.
Bnan McRae had two hits and
three RBI for Kansas City.
At Fort Lauderdale, Fla., Chris
Hailes hit a three-run pinch homer

.

The RivervieW' Garden Club
held its February meeting at the
home of Phyllis Larkins with Janice Young as co-hostess.
Devotions were given by Nancy
Wachter with "Valen.tine Food for
Thought" and "Love." Roll call
was answered with members hav·
ing a Valentine exchange.
Nola Young and Marlene Put·
man are to secure material for East·
er favors for · Arcadia Nursing
Home patients. These will be made
at ihe March meeting at the home
of Marilyn Hannum.
For the program an auction was
held with Mary Alice Bise as auctioneer.
Games were played with prizes

'

scores of 17-15, 28-27, and 5Q-_39
hitting five of seven thr~ pOmt
goals. Greg Ca~, a 6-8 ~tor, led
the winners wuh _IS p01~1s a~d
seven rebounds wtth semor Bill
Dolley scoring 16 points, including
four uifectas.
.
The Quakers bo_w out with _an
11-12 record assentor guard Brum .
Celce swished four three point
goals enroute to a game high 22
point effort. .
PORTSMOUTII73 GREEN·
. FIELD 53
. .
~ Tf!&gt;J8hS notc~ed ~err thu:tY·
fmt distnct champtonship_behind
D'Amond ~?n~s 19 pomts and
12 from Phil_Whitehead. , .
Coach Rick VanMatre s Tigers
played about as well as they could,

but Simply could _not match the
fire,power and qutckness of the
TroJanS.
.
·
Portsmouth led by. ~arter
scores of 17:9, 38-28, 80~ ·37
they· run thelf season rec
to 2 •
2.
.
.. Semor. Marcus ~Ieman led the
Tigers wt!h 15 pomts be~ore. fouling out wtth .6;56 reiD8ln~g m the
contest, and hts team trailing PHS
by-a 54·37 SCQI1l.
•
. Greenfield goes to the Sl(l~es
with a 15·8 record. as they shot Just
34 _percent on 14 ~f 41 attempts
V.:hi1e Portsmouth hit 27 of 47for a
mfty 57.4 percent .
..
FAIRLAND 64 MIAMI TRACE
61
In the nightcl!p game the Dragons and Panthers exchanged leads
13 times and saw the score tied II
times before Nathan Hughes nailed
a pair of free throws in the final
seconds 10 preserve the victory.
The smaller, but quicker, Miami
Trace Panthers never quit as they
lrailed many times but as much as
six points, but clawed back to tie or
take the lead be_hind greauho&lt;,.ing
by Todd Henry, who fmished with
19 pomts.
. ,
Coach Jack Harris of Fairland
had to pau:h up. his team after los_ing three key players to season·
ending injuries but saw his junior
. twin-towers, Hughes and Ryan
Ramey hold the team together.
Ramey took game scoring hon-ors with 23 points and. Hughes fin·
ished with 16, and even moved out
to a guard position after sophomore
Brent Snyder fouled out late in the
contest. Ramey is ~-S illld Hughes
is 6-3.'
· ·
Fairland will mau:h 21-2 records
with the Portsmouth Trojans on
Tuesday at 6:15 in the regional
. semi-fmal game. MT bowed out at
18-S.
.

Ten free Colorado blue spruce
trees will be given to each person
who joins the National Arbor Day
· Foundation during March. •
The free trees are pan of the
nonprofit Foundation's Trees for
,. Anlerica 'campaign.
''Colorado blue spruces were
selected for this campaign because
of their many uses in the home
. landscaJ.Ie•" John Rosenow, the
' Foundauon's executive director,
: •said. "They lend beauty to their
•· surroundings with their silver blue·
green color and compact conical
shape. They can be used as individ·
ual ornamentals, an energy,saving

Pittsburgh_'s offense shines fn_
win over New York Islanders

l

(or

Sabatini defeats Graf

the Whalers 0-6.3 in the last nine
games.
.
_
Canu~ks 7, Sabres S
At Buffalo, N.Y .• Sergio
Momesso scored two goals and
added an assist to lead Vancouver
past Buffalo and to within one
point of Winnipeg in the race for
the final Smythe Division playoff
spot. The Canucks outscored the
Sabres, who are 0-7-5 at home
since Jan. 22, 4-2 in the third peri·
od.
North Stars 7, Flames 3
At Bloomington, Minn., Mike
Modano scored a power-play goal
to snap a tie and ignite a four-goal
second period that propelled .Minnesota past Calgary, snapping its
six-game winning streak.

Salisbury Pack 246 honored the
61st year of scouting at Rock
Springs Methodist Church with a
Blue and Gold Banquet. Blue represents truth, spirituality and loyalty, and the gold represents sunlight,
cheer and inspiration.
Sixty parents and cubs took pan
in the celebration, with guest
speakers, skits, songs and award
presentations highlighting the
activities.
Rev. Katherine Riley gave the
invocation and welcome prior to
the banquet :whose theme was "We
the People." ·
Songs paying tribute tO the soldiers in the PerSian Gulf were sung
and included ''God Bless America"
and "God Bless the U.S.A." District director Dan White, read an
essay on "Old Glory."
Awards included Den Chief
Cords to Joe Hill; Kiashuta Hiking
.. Patch to Erron Aldridge; citizen·
ship badges to Mick Barr, Erron
Aldridge, Vincent Broderick, Evan

conscience go back."
Armstrong was impressive in
camp, showing no Ill .effects of a
sore right elbow tluit placed him on
the disabled list from Aug. 25 to
Sept 9. He pitched 4 2-3 innings
over three games in relief to close
the season.
Projected as the fourth starter in
the rotation, Armstrong's departure
may force the Reds to make a
trade. The Cincinnati starters now
are Tom Browning, Jose Rijo,
Norm Charlton and either Scott
Scudder or Chris H8mmond.
"We're thin pitching," Piniella
said. "We've got good quality in
our pitching staff, but we don't
have the quantity that we had in the
past With Arms1r0ng out of camp,
we have eight pitchers on our
major league roster who have had
any time of experience in the major
Ieafues...
f the Reds want to repeat,
they'll need a few more arms:
"Early in camp, he (Armstrong)
was throwing the ball as well as
any pitcher here," Piniella said.
"He was really popping the ball
and had good rhythm. Jack's hurting himself, there's no question.
"'First of all, we all know the
system is unfair," Piniella said of
the salary structure. "Bw, my God,
if you put together two or three
years in baseball you're going to
get compensated handsomely. If I
were Jack I wouldn't be looking at
sucH a -short-term situation. I'd be
looking at it. 'Well, you win another 12, 15 ballgames this year or
more, put two or three of those seasons
the money will Lake
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. . . . . ..
GUY L. PRIDDY

Priddy. birthday

'

Guy L. Priddy celebrated his
90th birthday recently at Overbrook Center.
. Cards and gifts were presented
and cake and punch were served to
Jaines and Ruth Priddy , Tracey
Michaei,J .R., April and Cory Priddy; Dave, Brenda, Ryan and Missy
Jeffers, Dale and Tim Priddy,
Jeanie Buckley, Ed, Becky and
Talan Roush, Sherry and Angie
Teaford, Margie and Ronnie Rife,
Shannon McComas, .Melanie Van
Meter and other friends at Overbrook.
.
Sending cards were Jack and
Hope Priddy, Valdosta. Ga.; and
Mitzie Rife, Dexter.

TOPS meeting held

.
Simmons birthday

..

MONDAY
BEDFORD TOWNSIUP • The
Bedford Township Trustees will
meet Monday at 7 p.m. at the townhall.
REEDSVILLE • Riverview
PTO meets on Monday at 7 p.m. A
babysitter and movie will be provided for children.

I

SYRACUSE • The Meigs
County Holiness Association annu. al spring in door camp meetil)g
Monday through Sunday at the
Syracuse Church of the Nazarene
·· at 7 p.m. nightly and 6 p.m on Sun·
day. Special mQsic and speaker
'with Rev. !hurl and Mary Kay
Mann. Public invited.

TUESDAY
REEDSVILLE • The Eastern
Band Bi&gt;osters will meet Tuesday
at 7 p.m. in the high school band

room.
SYRACUSE - The Syracuse
Youth League will hold an organizational meeting for baseball on
Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the Syracuse
grade school.
HARRiSONVILLE - The Harrisonville Senior Citizens will hold
a blood pressure clinic on Tuesday
from 10 a.m. to noon at the townhouse. After clinic members will
meet for a St. Patrick's Day
potluck dinner and three month
birthdays will be observed. All
members urged 10 attend.
MIDDLEPORT - The Meigs
County Chamber of Commerce
will meet Tuesday at noon at Overbrook Center. Elizabeth Schaad
will be the speaker.

HOBSON • Hobson Church of
Christ and Christian Union will
hold revival Monday through Saturday at 7 p.m. nightly with Nor·
man Taylor. Rev. Theron Durham
invites the public.

RUTLAND - The Leading
Creek Watershed will meet Tuesday at 10 a.m. at the office.

POMEROY • The DAV and
Auxiliary will meet Monday at 7
p.m. and junior vice commander
will be elected. Refreshments will
be served.

SCIPIO TOWNSHIP • The
Scipio Township Trustees will
fl)eet Tuesday at the Pageville
Townhouse for their regular meeting.

POMEROY • The Meigs Coun·
cy Tuberculoais Office will be conducting a community skin testing
clinic at the Pomeroy Fire Station
· on Butternut Avenue on Monday
from 4:30 to 6:30p.m. All area res•identa, including boosters clubs,
· PTO's, chureh groups and other
residenta who are in food service
are urged bJ take advantaae of this
tiee aervice. Squad members will
· be conducting a blood pressure

POMEROY - Pomeroy Flame
Fellowship will meet Tuesday at 7
p.m. at the senior citizens center.
Marge Hanlon, Letart. W. Va.;l will
be the speaker. Public is invited.

·

.I

clinic during !he same hours. For
further information call 992-3722.

WEDNESDAY
NELSONVILLE • Hocking
Valley Community Residential
Center Board meets Wednesday,
11 a.m. to I p.m ., Quality Inn
Hocking Valley, Nelsonville.
,

Dear Ann Laoders: I am 87 years
AI this moment. he has checlced
old. My wife is 81. We have been out of vet another rehab center and
married 60 years. When our Meth- we expect him to 'show Up at any
odist minister said, "Till death do time. We Changed the locks.and put
·you part," we knew exactly what he his belongings on the porch but it
meant and we took him seriously. won't solve the problem. He aliYllyS
• ANN LANDERS
. It's 100 bad more couples don't think fmds a way 10 get back in the house.
.. 1989, Lo. An.,...,. .
this way today. ·
We are ar the end of our rope with
Tim,. Svftdinlt' •nd
tN-.. or. S,. ndlf' . .
But what 1 am writing about has this guy. He has cost -us a fonune
nothing to do with our marriage. I and caused endless trouble. If you
want to complain about the way they can conic up with a solution, you're
a magician. •: OHIO
they ask no questions. You will meet
make men's clothing these days.
DEAR OHIO: You have no legal other teen"agers at Alatecn who have
I. The tiny buuons on men's shins
are ridiculous. If a person has even obligation to a 28-year-old Your son the same problem. They will make
a little bit of arthritis, it is impos- has been an adult for several years. you feel less alone. I want you to
sible to do a darned thing with those There comes.a time in life when ypu write back and tell me how you feel
must accept the fact that you have after you have attended three
QUttons.
2. Why do !hey put collars on exhausted . every possibility, meetings. Get going and good luck.
Dear Ami Landers: Your answer
men's pajamas, for heaven's sake? extended yourself over .and beyond
It's a waste of material and they don't the call of duty and there is nothing · to "King" in Coral Springs, Fla.,
serve any purpose whatsoever. more you can do. So, sign off, call it . drove me tO do something I thought
I would never do -- write to Ann
What's wrong with the'old V-neck? a day and get on with your lives.
3. Pants pockets are way too small.
Dear Ann Land.e rs: I am a Landers.
The whole thing staned with the
The average wallet will fit in only 17-year-old girl and plain fed up
one way and it's a struggle to get it with my fathe(s drinlcing. 1 thinlc I man whose daughter and son-in-law
need to see some kind of psycholo- named their dog after him. He dido't
out
4. Undershins are never long gist, but it won't do much good like the idea. When they call the
enough and they come three in a unless my father gets some help, too. dog, the man thinks they mean him
package. Why? What if a person Both my parents are in a world of so he answers. The dog also comes
their ·own and pretend there is no running. The man.was embarrassed
wants only one?
when this happened in front of
5. Shoelaces come in such .short problem.
It's gotten 10 the point where 1 . cOI"pany. There's a lot of confusion
lengths that a person cannot tie a
decent bow knot And th.e quality is hate the sight of my father. If he in that house.
You said he should be flattered
awfully poor these days. PeOple died tomorrow it wouldn't bother me
one
bit.
aM
then went on to sax there's a
would be happy to pay·a little more
1 need someone to listen to me heifer_in Wisconsin named after you,
for a shoelace that didn't break so
and l can't talk 10 any member of as well aS' a horse in Florida and a
fast.
I am too old to lose my temper my family. I have a 25-year-old dog in Minneapolis. You said you
every time I get dressed, so please, brother who lives at home, but he's didn't mind a bit. Well, of course
Ann, see what you can do to get the not around very much and we have you don't mind Why should you?
manufacturers to be sensible. What never ~n close or had a serious You live in Chicago. You are not
even remotely involved with any of
you say packs a bigger wallop than conversation.
I 1\)ve my mom. She's like my best these animals who have your name.
any paid ad ... LONG-TIME
friend, but she defends my dad How would you like it if you lived.
READER IN VIRGINIA
whenever
1 mention his drinking. on the premises with the hound and
DEAR L.T.R.: I loved your lett,er.
She
makes
it sound as if it's all in every time someone yelled, "Ann,"
It made a lot of sense to me. I hope
the manufacturers will pay auention my head, like maybe I'm insane. you answered and they said, "Not
to what you have written. You've · Why doesn't Mom see any of this? you -- we are calling the dog."
It's bad enough when there are
provided them with a million The man gets bombed every night
and
she's
right
there.
three
generations in the family with
dollll!'s' worth of consumer research
My
father
and
1
don't
get
along
at
the
same
name. This we can't do
and it didn't cost them a cent.
all.
We
never
have.
He
is
always
anything
about,
but for heavens'
Dear Ann Landers: Is there a
puuing
me
down
and
making
me
sake,
leave
family
members out of
legal way to divorce or disown a
child? If not, I would like to be a feel like I'm nothing. Please, Ann, I the lineup when you go to select a
need your help -- and soon. No name for your pet.·· D.H.R., TROY,
pioneer and stan a new movement.
While I was in the hospital suf- name, please. Just-- "BOXED IN" N.Y.
DEAR TROY: I was amazed at
fering like a dog, with a bleeding ' IN SACRAMENTO
DEAR
BOXED
IN:
Your
mother
the
number of readers who nruled
ulce~;, and hoping I'd die, I suddenly
thought of another way out of my probably doesn't see any of this meonthisone.Someofthemwrote
dilemma -· child divorce. Our because she's too afraid to aclcnowl · letters thai were pretty darned funny,
28-year-old son is on drugs. He is a edge the truth. It might require her but yours was definitely the best
Feeling pressured to have sex?
college graduate, divorced, and lives to make some changes' in her life
that
she
cannot
face.
How
we/1-infor~d are you? Write
with my husband and me when he
There's an organization called for Ann Landers' booklet "Sex and
is not wallowing in the gutter, in jail
Alateen with chapters all over the the Teen-ager." Send a self-ador "recovering" in a rehab center.
Our savings are depleted and we country. If you cannot find a phone dressed, long, business-size envelope
can't afford to throw away any more listing, call the AJ-Anon toll-free and a check or mo~y ortkr for
money on our son. All we've learned line, J.8()()..344-2666(inNew Yprlc, $3.65 (this includes postage and
from this nightmare is that we have 1·800-245-4656; in Canada, handling) to: Tuns, c/o Ann Lan·
done everything possible 10 help him 1-800-443-4525). Find out the time ders. P.O. Box 11562, Chicago, /II.
and that we arc n01 to blame for his and place for the next meeting near- 60611-0562 . (1n Canada, send
est your home. GO. It is free and $4.45.)
failures in life.

Ann
Landers

windbreak, a privacy screen, or as
living Christmas trees."
The trees will be shipped postpaid at the right time for planting
between March I and May 31 with
enclosed planting instructions, The
6-12 inch trees are guaranteed to
grow, or they will be replaced free ·
of charge.
To become a member of,the
Foundatioq and to receive the free
trees, send a $10 membership conOfficers will be elected at the
tribution to Ten Blue Spruces,
next
meeting of Ohio TOPS No.
National Arbor Day Foundation,
570
on
Tuesday.
100 Arbor Avenue, Nebraska City,
Division
winners will be bon·
Neb. 68410 by March 31.
ored at the March 19 meeting and
officers will be installed on March
26.
Win nets of previous contests
· were Linnie Aleshire, KOPS, and .
Shirley Wolfe, TOPS.
A new contest has been started
in which eggs will be decorated.
Best losers were Bernice Durst
Struble, Jon Hill and Billy Young; _and Ola St. Clair. Runner-up is
Handiman Activity badge to Vin- Trimi Faulk. Mary Roush won the
cent Broderick; naturalist badges to surprise gift and Bernice Durst the
Jon Hill and Billy Young; aquanaut fruit basket.
badges to Vince Broderick and
Billy Young; sportsman to Pete
Sisson, Vincent Broderick, Mick
Barr, Erron Aldridge and Evan
· Struble; fitness 10 Pete Sisson, Vincent Broderick, Mick Barr, Erron
Aldridge, Evan Struble and Billy
Young.
·
A plaque for dedication and ser·
vice was given to Jack and Janet
Peavley.
Dan and Kathy Riggs, district
representatives, presented a sustami.ng membership enrollment
during the meeting.
Assisting with the banquet were ,
den leaders Jeanie Witherell and
Adelle White; assistant den leaders
Pam Milhoan and Lenore Leifheit;
and cub master Bill Young.
TRISTA A. SIMMONS
The Cub Scout Promise was
recited for the closing.

Community Calendar
Community Calendar items
' appear two days berore an event
and tbe day of tbat event. Items
must be received well in advance
to 1111ure publication in tbe cal·
endar.

Monday; March 11, 1991

A few complaints with the
garment industry _from men

Salisbury Cub Pack has
Blue and Gold banquet

Cincinnati's Armstrong
reportedly 'gone fishing'
PLANT CITY, Fla. (UPI)Cincinnati pitcher Jack Ann strong
continued his $500-a-day holdout
Sunday for the fourth day, leaving
the defending champion Reds in a
quandary over how to ftll the void
in the rotation.
"I thinlc he's back in Neptune,
N.J., ready 10 boatd the tuna fleet,"
Cincinnati Manager Lou Piniella
said Sunday.
·
The fishing reference was in
response to Armstrong's salary
comparison. The 26-year-old righthander, who was 12-9 last season
with a 3.42 ERA in his first full
major league season, walked out of
the Reds spring camp Thursday
after his contract was renewed at
$230,000.
Instead of making his first
spring start Sunday against the
Chicago White Sox, Armstrong
was nowhere near Plant City Stadium. ·
"I'd rather make $30,000 on a
tuna boat and have peace of mind
than continue to take insults on top
of injury," Armstrong said. "My
teammate~ millht not have figured
this out. but this is going to cost me
a lot of money. Maybe SI million
down the road, but I will not go
back on principle."
. Anns1r0ng met with Piniella and
Reds owner Marge Schott Satur·
day, but no resolution was reached.
"It (discussion with Schott) '
ranged from Navy hats, U.S. flags, ·
patriotic ribbons," Arms1r0ng said.
"Then she said she dido 'I know
anything about contracts and
agents. That told me an I needed 10
know about her. 1 cannot in good

awarded to Janice ·Young, Nancy
Wachter and Maxine Whitehead.
The dOor prize was awarded to
Gladys Thomas.
Refreshments of cherry pie,
sandwiches, punch and coffee were
served during the social hour to
Margaret Nesselroad, a guest, and
Opal Harris, Pauline Myers, Nola
Young, Mary Alice Bise, Betty
Boggs, Janet Connolly, Delores
Frank, Margaret Grossnickle, Marilyn Hannum, Ella Osborne, Marlene Putman, Gladys Thoma,
Nancy Wachter, Grace Weber.
Maxine Whitehead and Ruth Ann
Balderson.
Fruit baskets were fixed for several sick and elderly.

Trees available for
national Arbor Day

f

The Daily Sentinel
Page 5

Riverview Garden Club
meeting held recently

Sports. . scoreboard District champions ·crowned at 9onvo ·

Four Dis)rict basketball champi- Green Saturday the cagers of
ons
were crowned Saturday at Ohio . Coach Mike Jenkins become the
.,
..
.
UniversitY's Convocation Center in fitSt Gallia Count)' team to earn a
Regional Finals
NCAA cage pa1rmgs
berth in regional competition since
Southeast - March 21 &amp; 23 at three different divisions.
In
Division
IV
Hannan
Trace
the 1954-55 Rio Grande team of
NCAA Tournament
Charlotte,.N.C.
defeated
Franklin
Furnace
Green
Coach
John Wickline.
By United Press Inlematlonal
West - March 21 &amp; 23 at Seat66-51 and will meet Cincinnati
Details of this Wildcat victory
~~~~~~ in parantheses)
tie East - March 22 &amp; 24 at East Lockland at Wright State Universi- a~ in the Sunday Times-Senty's Nutier Center on Thursday in unel with other information fonhThursday
Rutherford, NJ.
coming this week.
East Regional at College Park,
Midwest - March 22 &amp; 24 at the regional semi-finals.
In
the
big
school
Division
I
the
LANCASTER 74 NEW
Md.
Pontiac, Mich.
L~ncaster
Golden
Gales
downed
PHILADELPHIA 60
North Carolina State (6) vs. . Final Four .
the
Quakers
from
New
Philadel·
More
than 2,000 fans wiblessed
Southern Mississippi (II)
At Indianapolis
phia
74-(i()
to
earn
a
regional
berth
some
fine
shooting by these two
Oklahoma State {3) vs. New
Semifinals, March 30 - East
at
the
State
Fairgrounds
Coliseum
Division
I
teams as the Golden
Mexico (14) ·
winner vs. Southeast winner; Midin
Columbus
Tuesday.
Gales
connected
on 2 7 of 44
Purdue (1) vs. Temple (10)
west winner vs. West winner
In
a
pair
of
.Division
n
contests
attempts
for
a
.61.4
percent while
Syracuse (2) vs. Richmond (15)
Final, April!
Porls~outh
defeated.
Greenfteld
.
the
losing
Quakers
shot
44.3 perSoutheast Regional at Louisville,
McClain
73-53
and
F81tland
edged
cent
on
26
of
59
attempil!
Ky.
College scores
Miami Trace 64-61.
Lancaster (19-4) led by quarter
Pinsburgh (6) vs. Georgia (11)
With
the
Hannan
'trace
defeat
of
Kansas (3) vs. New Orleans (14) Sunday College Basketball
·
Florida State (7) vs. Southern Results
Cal (10)
By United Press lnlemational
Indiana (2) vs. Coastal Carolina
(15)
Conference Tournament Finals
Midwest Regional at Minneapo- Atlantic: Coast
lis
North Carolina 96, Duke 74
Louisiana State (6) vs. Con- BigEast
.
necticut (11)
Seton Hall 74, Georgetown 62
Nebraska (3) vs. Xavier (14)
Qig Eight
nipeg nipped New Jersey, 4-3, and
By United l'rj!SSIDtemational
Iowa (7) vs. East Tennessee Missouri 90, Nebraska 82
Washington
came from behind to
The Pittsburgh Penguins made a
Slate (10)
Big West
six-player deal with the Hartford defeat Edmonton, 5-3.
Duke (2) vs. NE Louisiana (15)
Blackbawks 5, Rangers 2
UNLV 98, Fresno State 74
Whalers last week to shore up their
west Regional at Salt Lake City · Mid-American
At Chicago, Steve Larmer
defense, but it was the offensive
New Mexico State (6) vs. Easlem Mich. 67, Toledo 66
play of defenseman Peter scored a pair of goals and set up
'Creighton (II)
Southeastern
Taglianetti Sunday that set up their another to lead the Blackhawks
Seton Hall (3) vs. Pepperdine Alabama 88, Tennessee 69
4-3 victory over the New York past New YOlt and into a tie with
(14)
Southwest
St. Louis for the Norris Division
Islanders.
.
· Virginia (7) vs. Brigham Young Arltansas 120, Texas 89
Taglianetti scored twice for lead. Rookie goalie Ed Belfour ran
(10)
Pittsburgh at Uniondale, N.Y.- his record to 38-18-S in facing jusl
Arizona (2) vs. Saint Francis East
once to give the Penguins a short- 22 shots, tying Hall of Farner Tony
• (Pa.) (IS)
Princeton 76, Loyola Marymount lived 2·1lead and again to tic the Esposito's 38-win mark from the
" Friday
48
score at 3-3 with 5:39 left in the 1969-70 season. The triumph also
East Regional at Syracuse,
game. A minute and 13 seconds was the 300.th of -Chicago Coach
Midwest
, ·N.Y.
,.
later, Mark Recchi took il pass Mike Keenan's career. The
North Carolina (I) vs. North- Indiana 70, Illinoi$ 58
.
from Pltil Bowque and scored the Rangers lost their third straight
. eastern (16)
Iowa 80, Ohio St. 69
Red
Winp
4,
Blues
1
game-winner from the slot.
Princeton (8) vs. Villanova (9)
Wright St 112, NE Illinois 91
AI St. Louts, rookie Joban
The victory was Pittsburgh's
Mississippi State (5) vs. Eastern west
Garpenlov
scored two j!Oals in
second in two days on the road
• Michigan (12)
.
UCLA 73, Washington 60
Detroit's
fifth
triumph m seven
after a string of nine losses and a
.
UCLA (4) vs. Penn State (13)
tie away from home ice. It also was games, which dropped the Blues to
Southeast Regional at Atlanta
Boys tourney scores
the Penguins' fourth straight victo- 1-2-2 in their last five games. NeiArkansas (I) vs. Georgia State
ry overall after an 0-4-1 slump, and ther team was able to Lake advan(16)
the
triumph moved them to within tage of numerous scoring opportu·
Boys District Tournament
Arizona Slate (8) vs. Rutgers (9) . Results
four
points of the Patrick Division- nitics. Detroit failed on seven
·
Wake Forest (5) vs. Louisiana
leading
New York Rangers, who power-play chances and St. Louis
· By United Press Inkmational
Tech (12)
lost
S-2
to the Blackhawks in on six.
Alabama (4) vs. Murray Slate Satnrday, March 9
Chicago.
Montreal 4, Los Angeles 4
(13)
. · DIVISION I
John Tucker scored two goals
At Montreal, Tomas Sandstrom
for the Islanders. His fltst gave the scored two goals and Wayne Gret~::west Regional at Uayton, . Lancaster 74, N~w Philadelphia 60
Islanders a 1-0 lead at 4:44 of the zky added three 311sists to help Los
Ohio State (I) vs. Towson Slate S~u~ky 62, Elida 60
•
first period, but Troy Loney tied Angeles storm back from a 4-1
)
·
Pickenngton
52,
Cols
Eastmoor
46
( 16
the score at 1·1 less than seven deficit. The Kings scored three
" Georgia Tech (8) vs. Depaul (9) T?l S~ Johns 70, Tol St. Francis 68
minutes later.
tiees in the second period to tie the
11
Texas (5) vs. St. Peter's (12)
DIYisoon
.
After
Taglianetti'
s
first
goal
score at 4-4 and put their record at
St John' s (4) vs. Northern 111i- Cols Ham Twp 68; Marysville 65
came on a 65-foot shot from center 8-1-2 in their last II games. Their
· nois (13)
(ot)
.
.
ice at 9:09 of the second period, lone loss during that skein was to
· West Regional at Tucson, Ariz.
Cols Bnggs 78, Cols Ltnden 70
Hubie McDonough tied the game
Nevada·Las Vegas (I) vs. Mon- ~;nfield 63, Youngstown Rayen at 2-2 with a rising 20:.footer past streaking Pittsburgh. Gretzky ·now
has scored in 16 slraight games.
uma(16)
Di.. ill y
.
Penguins
goalkeeper
Tom
Barras· Nordiques l, Whalers 1
Georgetown (8) vs. Vanderbilt
VISIOn
oungstown Liberty so.'
At
Hartford, Conn., Joe Sakic
(9)
90, :Warren JFK 66
In other Nffi.. games, DetrOit scored 10:04 into the third period
'·
Michigan Slate (5) vs. Wiscon- DiviSion IV
defeated St. Louis, 4-1; Montreal to lift Quebec ptit slumping Han• sin-Green Bay (12)
Hannan Trace 66, FF Green 51
and Los Angeles played to a 4-4 ford. It was Sakic's 39th goal of the
·· utah (4) vs. South Alahamil (l3) Girls state pairings
tie; Quebec edged Hartford, 2-1; season .and his sixth game-winner.
•' Second Round
-Vancouver beat Buffalo; 7-S;Min- The victory snapped an 0:.6-1 road
· Saturday
·
nesola routed Calgary, 7-3; Win· winless streak
Quebec and left
East Re1lon11l at College Park
By
United
Press
International
N.C. St.-Sou Miss. winner vs.
Pairing~ for this week's 16th
Olda. St-New Mexico winner
girls
state high school basketball
Purdue-Temple winner vs. SyratOurnament
at Ohio Slate's St. John
cuse-Richmond winner
Arena:
Soutbeast Regional at Louisville
BOCA RATON, Fla. (UPI)- nament a year ago drops off her
Divisioh I
Pitt-GeorRia winner vs. Kansas·
Gabriela
Sabatini drove a forehand record.
Cuyahoga Falls (24-1) vs Rocky into the comer
New Orleans winner
'if'
10 win a tie-breaker
Sabatini defeated Graf with
Florida SL·USC winner vs. Indi- River Magnificat (23-3), Thursday, Sunday and defeat Steffi Graf for aggressive play; coming 10 the net
7p.m.
ana-Coaslal Caro. winner
the third straight time, 6-4, 7-6 (8- frequently .and usually managing to
Celina (22-4) vs Beavercreek 6),
Midwest Regional at Minneapoin the championship match of prevail when she did. Graf stayed
(24·2), Thursday, 9 p.m.
lis
the
$500,000 Virginia Slims of on the baseline as usual but was not
LSU-Conn. winner vs. Nebms· Finals: Saturday, 2 p.m.
Florida.
able to make it work.
Division U
ka-Xavier winner
'
Gmf survived two mau:h poinis
Sabatini opened the mau:h with
Canfield (25-1) vs Logan (26-0), at 4-6 and 5-6, but fen behind 6-7
Iowa-East T~nn. St. winner vs.
a
service
break, suffered one of her
Thursday, 2 p.m.
Duke-Northeast La. winner
when she netted a backhand. Then own, broke again and .then took the
l,Jppet Sand\lskY (20-6) vs Day- on the decisive point, Sabatini ran edge she never relinquished in the
West Regional at Salt Lake City
ton
Dunbar (26-1), Thursday, 4 her into the left comer with a foreNew Mex. SL..Creillhton wiMer
first set by holding at 3·! .
p.m.
vs. Seton Hall-Pepperdine winner
hand and then hit the return into the
Both players held service the
.
Virginia-BYU winner vs. Ariz.. Finals: Saturday, 11 a.m.
other comer for the winner.
rest
of the set, and Sabatini won it
Division m
' SL Francis winner
Sabatini, seeded second in the when Graf was long with a fore·
Heath (26·0) vs Springfield tournament behind Graf and ranked
: Suoday
hand.
.
Kenton
Ridge, Friday, 7 p.m.
East Regional at Syracuse
fourth in the world, now has won
Sabatini
again
broke Graf's
Sherwood Fairview (23-2) vs seven of her 27 matches with Graf.
N.Carolina-Northeaster winner
serve
in
the
first
game
of the secvs. Princeton-Villanova winner ' Brookfield (23- 1), Friday, 9 p.m.
It was the second tournarnent ond set, when Graf netted another
Miss. St-Easlem Mich. winner Finals: Saturday, 9 p.m.
victory in three outings this year forehand. Graf broke back at 2-2
Divlsioa IV
vs. UCLA-Penn St winner
for Sabatini. She lost in the quarter- when Sabatini seemed to lose conZanesville Rosecrans (21-S)
Soathelllt Regional at Alla1ta
finals of the Australian CJP.en. but centration and was wide with a
Fon
Recovery (24-2), Friday, 2 defeated Martina Navraulova to forehand
Artansas-Oeorgia SL winner vs.
down the line .. Sabatini
p.m.
: Ariz. St.-Rutgers winner
win the Pan Pacific in Tokyo in resumed her tough play and the two
McDonald (26-0) vs Fort FebnWy.
Wake Forest-La.Tech willll\lf vs.
players held Service the rest of the
Loramie
(23·2), Friday, 4 p.m.
· Alabama-Murray St. winner
Gmf has not won sinqe the Vir- way to the tie-breaker. ·
Finals: Saturday, 6 p.m.
· Midwest R'ellional at Dayton
ginia Slims of New England Nov.
Gmf survived four break points
. Ohio SL-Towson St. winner vs. Transactions · .
5. She will drop out of the No. 1 with the score S-5 but won when
·
Georgia Tech·DePaul winner
spot for the fltSt time since August Sabatini was wide with a return.
Texas-St. Peter's winner vs. St Sunday Sports Tra.._tlon
1987 Monday, when Monica Seles Sabatini held and they went to the
Joltn's-No.·IH. winner
rises
to the top. Graf would have tie· breaker.
By United Press International
· Welt R...,..l at Tueson
fallen
whether she won or lost Sun··
Sabatini jumped to a 2-0 lead,
BMeball
.
UNL\"-Montana winner vs.
day,
because
the
computer
nntings
but
Graf lied it 6·6 with a well·
New Y01t (AL) - Sent cau:hGeu: 1 owt~-Vanderbilt winner
. ers Jeff Livesey and John Toale to operate oo a rolling calendar and placed drop shot, setting up the
M'fc:hlpn St.-Wise-Green Bay their. minor-league complex for Seles' tbird·round loss in this tour· final iwo points that won u for
winner VI. Ulllh-South Ala. winner reassJgnment.
Sabatini.

.. . ~;

By The Bend

•

lditarod sled dog mushers race up the Yukon

A party was l!cld recently for
Austin sent an Anvik boy to buy see it I like it ifitisn'twindy."
ON THE YUKON RIVER ,
the second binhday of Trista Ash- Alaska (UPI) - Two former Idi- a pair . of boots and when he
But occasional winds blew drifts
ley Simmons at the home of her • tared sled dog race winners led the returned with a pair, Austin pulled over portions of trail, keeping the
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs . way up the Yukon River on Day 9 out a knife, sliced through his pace slow.
Tommy Simmons.
Swiss-born Martin Buser, anothof the 1,163-mile trek . from frozen leather boots and pried them
Attending were her parents, Mr. Anchorage to Nome, an event off his feet.
er leading musher who lost ground
and Mrs. T.T. Simmons and twin known as "The Last Great Race on
"I went through this overflow on the Yukon, dropping to 15th,
brothers, Thomas and Tyler, Earth.' '
and they froze," Austin said. "But said he likes running on the frozen
Melanie Dudding, Mr. and Mrs.
Joe Runyan, 42, the 1989 Iditar- this was days ago. It wasn't bad river.
John Jeffers and Amanda, Mr. and od winner, led to Eagle Island Sun- when it was warmer. They've been
Buser, humming as he worked
Mrs. Danny McDonald, Angela, · day, a homestead halfway along the frozen for a couple of days. I didn't with his dogs at a rest stop, said,
Mindy, Danny Jr. and Tiffany I SO:. mile run up the frozen Yukon. want to go up the Yukon River like "Well, mig6t as weD have a good
McDOnald and Lee Morris.
time being out here. It's pretty
Behind Runyan was Susan that."
Also giving gifts were Mr. and Butcher, 36, winner of four of the
The Yukon offers a 150-mile cold, so if you don't enjoy tt, you
·Mrs. Roben Sanders, grandparents, last five Iditarods. The year Run· stretch of trail on the near-shore ice might as well stay home. Attitude
Deleah and Jonathan Sanders, Effie yan won, Butcher came m second. where mushers can't get lost is a big pan of the game here so 1
Sanders, Lavinia Brannon and Mr. Last year, when Butcher won, Run- mushers can lose the trail in other have a good one, or try to anyway."
and Mrs. Mike Holbrook and Ben.
places.
yan came in second.
Buser said, "I don't mind tun·
The
Yukon,
the
longest
river
in
Three of the top five meers were
ning
on the Yukon. You've got to
Alaska,
frozen
solid
all
the
way
women. Rookie Kate Persons, 37,
go
on
the YuJ(on in order to get to
across,
stretches
1,87S
miles
from
was running her first Iditarod in
Nome.
If you don't want to run on
the
Yukon
terri
tory
to
the
Bering
fourth place, right behind Lavon
the
Yukon,
you're not going 10 finSea.
The
trail
briefly
pulls
off
the
Barve, 45, a top Idiwnd veteran.
ish.
''
river
into
several
Indian
villages
Dee Dee Jonrowe, 38, was in fifth
First to linish wins $50,000. The
where mushers rest.
place.
other
top 20 share the rest of the
The
Yukon
is
cold.
Daytime
In sixth place was Jerry Austin,
$300,000
purse.
44, whose boots froze to his feet highs reached 10 below zero with
nights dipping to about 30 degrees
and had to be cut off.
A dozen mushers reached Eagle below zero, but the Yukon can get
Island within 90 minutes of each colder. Mushers have mixed feelother Sunday afternoon, having ings about the long stretch of
come 734 miles from the Anchor- Yukon trail
"I hate the Yukon," said Terry
age stan. Another dozen followed
Adkins,
who led earlier in the race
them up the Yukon. From Eagle
but
fell
back
to 17th on the Yukon.
Island, the leaders had 429 miles to .
111 Second St., Potn~roy
"It's
cold
and
miserable and you
go to Nome.
can
have
bad
trail
on
the
Yukon,
Seventy-five mushers, including
TOUI INDEPENDENT
.
eight women, started the race too.''
AGENTS SIIYING
Rick Swenson, a four-time ldiMarch 7. Seven mushers have quit
tarod
winner,
dropped
back
to
14th
MEIGS COUNTY
Kara Chantay Osborne, daugh: the ~ling trek and one was dis· on the Yukon and said, "It's colder
qualified.
.
SINCE 11l61
ter of Jim and Connie Osborne, cel"There are more than a dozen here, I'm not particularly glad to
ebrated her first birthday recently
with a pany at the home of her aunt that are close," observed Austin.
"There are 24 teams that are within
.
.
.
and uncle.
about
two
hours
of
each
other
and
A teddy bear theme was carried
out with those in attendance: Kim of those, there are about six that
and Connie Osborne, Bob and look 10 me like they can do it"
PLEASANT
VALLEY HOSPITAL
When he reached the Yukon
Betty Jackson, Marge Osborne,
•
P- r
River
cbeckpoint
of
Anvik,
Austill
Belinda and Torrey Vogt, Vickie
E~R,
and Jennifer Hedges, Jimmy, Con· said, "My feet are frozen solid
right
now,
my
boots
are.
I
can't
get
Ilie and Nicole Jackson, Deanna, .
Cassandra and Holly Coates, them of( so I'm going 10 cut these
'
Ruthann and Holly Dunfee, Misty boots off and find some more
and Derek Clark, Melinda Persons, boots,''
Austin said, "11 would take too
Tracy Klaiber and Chris Paulton.
long
to thaw them out, so I' m
Sending gifts were Gladys and
going
to cut them off. My
. feet are · _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....,_.
Wilben·Barber and Tiffiney and alrightinside."
Ryan Kidder.

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

INSURANCE

Osborne birthday

.

.

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., Inc.
1

NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL·ALLERGIST

"WE HAVE HEARINS AIDS"
(304) 675-1244

c (. _,_

/

i

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•

4

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1 .... - - ...

......

!!~~n.~~~~~n~d~~----~~~~----~~--~~~~~~~ONo~-~~~------~~~------~~~~J~~11~161

Dollar opens .
amid~
central bank selling

LONDON (UPI) - The U.S.
dollar opened sharply suon11er
lllinst most EJDOpcan currenc1es
t.londay, while European central
blnks sold dollars to keep it from
shoollri1 hiJher, dealers said. Gold
was also up.
The U.S. unit was seen as shrugging off last week's weak U.S.
unemployment ftgUres in favor of
expectatiOIIJl of a turnaround in the
U. S. economy and stable U.S. Fed·
era! Reserve mterest rates, dealers
said.
U.S. jobs data released Friday
showed die unemployment rare rise
0.3 percentage point to 6.5 percent
in Febnwy, apinst expectations of
a 0.1 point inc-.
Centn'l blnks of Gennany, Aus·
tria, Spain, Belgium and Switzerland sold dollars Monday morning
in a concerted action to keep the
dollar rise In manageable levels,
dealers said.
In Frankfurt, the dollar opened
higher at 1.5775 German marks
against Friday's close of 1.5620.
In LondOn, the pound sliPJ)ed at
• '''~if."'

BUDDY -READING • Buddy Rflldlug was a part of the Right io
Read Week activities at Riverview School last week. Here, Mike
· Johnson, Josh Smltb, Jody Lee Smith and Andrew Rollins read to

one another l'rom book_s found In the school library. In conjuctlon
with Right to Read Week, the school held a penny book sale and a
reading CODtest.

Monday, March 11,1991

KUWAIT CITY (UP!) - Some
Palesiil)ians claim Kuwaiti police
are beating and jailing them under
talse accusations of collaborating
.with lhe Iraqi occupation forces.
"I saw Kuwaiti police beating
falestinianS just because they were
Palestinians,'' said Email Mohammad, a young woman who stood in
line Monday to sign up for food
rations.
·
"We love Kuwait," she said.
' 'Why do the Kuwaitis tteat us this
way? Palestinians helped the
KuwaitiS when the Iraqi soldiers
were here. When the Kuwaitis
needed bread, we gave it to them.' '
She said most of the physicians

The dollar also opened higher in
Paris, Brussels and Milan: at
5.3720 French francs from 5.2990;
32.44 Belgian francs from 3Ul6i
and 1,178.50 Italian lire fro111
1,162.45.
'
Earlier, lhe dollar shot up to a·
sixth-month hiJh in Tokyo.

The dollar ended at 138.07 yen;·
up 1.32 yen from its New York
level of 136.75 late Friday. The
dollar had closed at 136.30 yen in
Toltyo Friday.
. ,
;

1'ASTE TEST • The gymnasium at Riverview School near
Reedsville was filled with the smellhlf foods l'rom atciund the
world on Frldly as the school wrapped up its Right to Read Week
activities. "PI&amp; Oat on Reading" was the theme for the week, and

(and the other classes at the school) chose 1 reaJon, researched Its
culture and prepared a regional food for the other students In the
school to sample. The theine for the week wu "Pig Out on Read·
ing", and the school's staff also added career week to the week's
traditloaal reading emphasis.

each class made a regional food for the student body; New Eagland
Clam Chowder, Florida bushpupples, Cajun gumbo, German pis, tachlo pudding, HawaUau pineapple aud coconul, and Mexican
nachos were made and served by tbe school's classes.

Anti-Saddam groups open con-ference
BEIRUT, Lebanon (U!'I) A source said the conferees
Iraqi opposition gropps, bound by would seek consensus on joint
the desire to overthrow Saddam methods to oust Saddam, but he
Hussein. beaan a crucial three-day added, "It's rremature to decide
confetenee Monday seeking ideas the nature o the regime in our
on boW to liberate their war-torn COUn!!f. in lhe future."
homeland
While the delegates were arriv_
At 1ea1t 300 representatives of ing Sunday, the leader of,the Shiite
outJawed lnlqi ICCuilr and religious Islamic Action OrJanization said
* · • ~ groups jammed a large coneen hall · Saddam's elite troops crushed an
at die S'yrian·JIIIIdCd Bristol Horel uprising in Iraq's foremost Shiite
as the conference opened. The Moslem holy city, leaving 500 peomeetinf::pn ia a hectic, noisy ple dead.
~ wilh smiling offiCials,
"The last item of news we
clerics Ill(! politicians warmly hug- received .before boarding a plane in
IIDII and ciWtlnJ.
Tehran was about the fall of Kar- A Jarp biDner decorating lhe balaa," Ayatollah Ruhollah
front of the coacen ball pro- Mohammed Taki AI Modaressi
·k' w "Our ally II a pllllllnee told reporten after arriving from
~or _,· plvation fJOal clictator- Iran. '
Jhlp."

1

i

Karbalaa, 55 miles southwest of
Baghdad, derives its religious
importance from a baUle fought in
680 between Islam's Sunni and
Shiite sects. Hussein ibn Ali, the
Shiite leader, was killed and l)is
tomb is located in the city. A
ma~ority of Iraq's population is
Shiite but Saddam is a Sunni Muslim.
Modaressi, 45, whose group was
founded in 1967, said Saddam's
Republican Guard stormed Karbalaa after hammeriiiJ the city with
fank and anillery fire.
"We were told ... 500 people
(were) martyred (died) .in fierce
cllshes," he said.. "Sacldam is carryiiiJ out a scon:hed eurth policy.''
However, ~si also said

insurgents in AI Amara, a Tigris
River pon city-in southeastern Iraq,
repulsed ''waves of auacks by Saddam's forces.' •
In northern Iraq, lhsan Ali
Aliclel Aziz, a 1eptesentative of the
Islamic Movement in Kurdistan·
Iraq, told United l'ress lnremation·
al late Sunday Jhat Kurdish rebels
crushed Saddam 's units in the
provinces of Ranya and Arhil.
"We took control of lhesc two
large provinces in coordination
with soldiers who shifted loyalty,"
Abdcl Aziz said during the interview at Bristol Horel.
He said the Kurds also overwhelmed the northern city of
Ranya and "are movjng to tak the
city of Arhil."

Tbe HaJIIlAM alao IIDIID MIIIQ' cbiii'CIIel rib tbe
belp of Daa'1 aleoe, Cberyle Kntpt who comple&amp;es ·
Tbe Paltb Trio. Tbey are allo memben of tbe ae..d .:
Area Gcil I SID n Alloclatloa.
·

i

i

!

I
'

·''

3
6
10

PubliC Notice

'

:)

.1"
...-.••
'

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·I

RAte

tion is lhll tboiC who roJW•iued t' n Jduad pew up In Jerosalena.
~~
will be brouPt 10 trial aad thole
....... hil wife Huda 11141 tbtlr.
who did not Will be left lloDe.
tine ,uuti(_clllldrei Ire itt despM"' '
• 'We're fairly coafide11t ._. • ltlliJI. ~ IIIVe 10 food. . ·"'
govemmeat it · co•mitted to
"Dia Ia an we hve," uid ':1
democl'llcy,'' the U.S. dlplo•t Hilda. opeaiJtc·a cablilet llid dis- _.. 1
said
.
.~a hslf doz.m or 10 ~of, •
He said lhe Red Croa_and the Antb breld.
.
·
Red Crescent, ill ~ equivalent,
The EI-Kurds desperately fear a
are takiiiJ names of those reported covernment crack4own on tbe ,
missina. addiq, "It's more likefy . large Paleatinian 'commanity,
that the lraqiJ filM._ .. than the wltich does much of this oil-rich ·;_.
Kuwsiti alllharitiea.
eillltiM's Milt.
. ,
Fathi El-Kurd: • 'l'ltitor in die .
"Our future is very dart,'' llid '·~
Kuwait Miililtry or Ed-tioit for HUdi. .., Wll
In Kllwiit. so I ...
18 years who holds Jordattiin cid· - : , 11{
Wilen Sad- .
zenship, is proud 10 call himwJf a aldlla li , &amp; ....
~t. be , ,
10 • 1
Palestinian. He waa born Ia
..u....

r

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1:_

AnnoJncements

' Ov,r 1 6 Words

$4.00

.zo

.-

$6.00 .

Rtl

1 C•rd ot Ttr.,.ks

.30

69.00
$13 .00
- $1 .30/ day

2 In M•mory

.42

3 A.nnoucemenu

.60

· 4 Giva.way
!io Happy Ads

.06/day
Monthlv
Rates lfo tor conaerutMt runS. brokenupdayrow•ll be ch•gtd

6 lost and Found7 Yard Sllelpaid '" a••n eel

lor etch da¥ •• seperete eds.

W~t.d

to Buy

Sl~rv I~,~~~

Umsifi•·tl flU~··-~ t'ot 't•r ''"'
folluwifl~ I t 11t•tlht)m• •·~•·lwnw·.~ ...
Galli~ County
Area Code 614

Meigs County
Area Code 614

446 Gallipolis
367 ,Ch•hife

992 Middleport
Pomeroy

388 Vinton

245
266
643
379

Rio Gtande
Guvan Oist.
ArebiaOist.
Walnut

Public Notice

Public Notice

.

Homeallf . . .
MHil•"--- ........
Fluns fcMo ... .

a1 -· F•m ' • 1 .. .,..,
W~t~ttcl •• luy
·~ Liwttoct.

p.., .......
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a2

....

36
36

Rut

•• M..,&amp;o.-

c..... ~-ed

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247 le1an hils

67~

Helo Wented

12 Situel~n Wented
1l lnsur-"ce
14 Bulin•• TrAining
15 SchOols&amp; Instruc tion
16 Radio. TV &amp; CB Rup;m

Muon Co , WV
Area Code 304 '

9B!t en....
843 Portt.nd

949 Racina
742 Rutl•d
667 Coolville

11

17 MIICellanltOUI
1,8 Wanted To Do •

Pt. PINUnt

458 lton
~ 76 Apple Grove

ljilijlll4611

773 Mason
882 New H.ven ·
895 lelart

21
22
23

937 Bufflio

PUbliC Notice

1

Businen Opportunrty
Mon., to Loin

. . . . . Flffl .. a.et

-r

EmplciVIIIf:nt

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
11 .00 A.M. SATURDAY
. 2 :00P.M . MONOA,Y
2 .00 PM TUESDAY
2 .00 PM. WEDNESDAY
2 o00 PM . THU"SOAV
2 ' 1)0 PM . FRIDAY

-.

31 32
33
J•

'

'I ! ,' . '~·

8 Publics ... &amp; AuctiOn

~9

'A clilliSihCd adv ~ rtl5ttllll.lltl placud II) Tht~ Dally Stmlnlttl (e•
cept
~ liril.s•flt.od dtsplifY. Bu,slnc:; S Card imd h~tJill noticnl
w1ll ;•ls u itppt!M 11'1 the PI Plt!;!Sant Rl!!l•stcr illld th tt Galli
puhs O.a1 ly Tr~bl111u , machmg o"t!r 18. 000 hortltn

THURSDAY PAPER
tHIOAV PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

'

15
15
15
15
15

I

POLI CII:S
"AilS outsKic M~t QS. Gatlia or Mason count•es must bu p te
piud.
··Roct:Nt! S 5&gt;0 diSCOunt lor 01df paid 1n ad\l;mcll.
"fn~e 01ch
G•veOIWay Rl1d found ads t.mdi!t 15 words wdl be
run 3 davs at no c h•ge
"Pncu of ad 101 all caplt.tl IIIUttrs •s doublu pnct! ol ad c o1t
• 7 poml lln111 tv-pu only u.ed
·
' S 111nt n1lll 11 not responstbltdor efrors 11htn, linl d&amp;¥ , ICht:ck
tor IHtOfS first dav ad runs in papur) . C11ll bt~tore 2 .00 p .m .
dOll¥ aftttr pubhcationlo mak e corre&lt;:uon
'Ads that must be pa1d m ad\lancc arn
Card of Thank~
Hi6PPY Ad•
·' 1
In Mumur~•u
Y11td Salt.os

COPY DEADLINE
MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER
WEONf.SDAY PAPER

Words

Days

Prot• ~tonal Servlcttl ·

4\

HOUittlefllleM

42

Melltte-Hem• fur llhtnl

43 F•m• tOf "en'

44·- AperiMMl fOf '" ettt
'45 · Furnilh.. ......_
46 Specefof,.ent·
47 WIMHIOfteftt
48 . f ..................,

49

FOfle . .

51

HouoohofoiCIM.

52 - B_... _
53 ""'~
54 · Mttc. M•ch .....

·~··""·

56 ht1 tor lale
56

57 MMiical tMtrwments ·

· 51 Fr.ttta Vt9...W•
•• ,., •••• t ....

PUbliC Notice

controct entorH Into pur- to tlvo .,.. 01nt of hla bld,-but
PROBATE COURT OF
LEGAL NOTICE
auent '1' thla a-I•OMnt, In no IIVanl moro than fifty
NOTICI! TO
proving -ion ATII· 71·
MEIGI COUNTY. OHIO
Notico lo glwn that Sky· mlnortty buolnou enter· lhou..nd dolan, or • bond
CONTRACTORS
:1.31 on lta18 R - 711ot
In Tha Matter Of
line Calluler Partnoro [appN· prl•a wHI bo afforded full for ten per cent of hlo bid:
.STATE OF OHIO
Athene County and YM'Iou•
Ja1on Tr..y DoMooo
Oint) hao fllod an appllca11on ·opportunity to aubmlt bido payable to tba Dlr-or.
Dt!PARTMENT OF
~
........... Ia
Ca• No. 21,920
with the Public Utllltlet In raapon• to thlo hwltadon
Blddora mull apply, on tho
Athenl, Q81111, HI ' . ..
Dockat N, Paga 238
TRANSPORTATION
Commlulon of Ohio ICaoo andwlllnotbodloarlml"""'d p r - formo, for quallflca·
Malgo. Monroe, M.....,.
NOTICE
No. 90 · 1839-RC-ACEI avalnat on the grounclo of tlono It lout tM dayo prior
it"!".:..~~·1 r.~
Nobla. VInton and
Not lea II horoby glvanthot -lng authority to provide raco. color, or national origin ttl tha date oat for opening ,
C0
t0n C-IH. by 1_,1&gt;/1111
tlio ..,derolgnod flied In callulloo mobile telephone In con•'"aratlon for an bldo In . accordan01 with
Contraat laloa L...l PY retro·refleotlw
,el; •••
.
.
No. 11· 213
Caoe No. 28920 appNcotlon
pew..111 I let
IOfVIco to tho public In tho award.
Chapter 11525 Ohio Ravlaod
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
to tho Common Pluo Court.
for _ . , I I - 11M
Ohio Rurol SINice Araa
"Minimum wago ratoo for Code.
.
FQ.OOCIFII7)
Probata Dlvlolon of Molgo CRSA) No. 10,aolltlltllohed thlo pro)lct havo bMn pro·
Plano and opaclftaatlono
RIO-OOIIRIMJI
llnoo.
County, Ohio. for an ordono by tho Federal Communlco· cletermlnod ao _.Ired · by ara an flle .ln tha D-rtmont
............ -O.GO ...
chenge hie name tO Jaeon tlono Commloolon CFCC). law end ara ut forth In tho of Tranoportatlon and !hoof·
loalod propooela wll bo orO.CIOmllll.
Toacy _DoMooo.
1111....
·
. 11co of tho Dlotrlct Dtputy recolvod at tho offiGe of tho
Tho FCC h.. cletermlnod bid
Worlt Iangiii - Virlaut
Said eppllcatlon will bo
"Cota oat for comt*· Dir-t.
01.-or of tho Ohio D-rt- fut or vorlout mlfu.
Ohio RSA No. 10 to conllll
haard In uld Court. at 2:30 of Ill or portlona of Athono, tlon of· thlo wodt ohalltoe ao • Tho Dlreotor .e.-veo tho
rMIIt of Tranoporlltlon, Col·
P..,.ntwllllft-Y....._
p.m. on tboo 12111 day of
Hocking Moiga M-n .., forth In tboo bidding pro- right to raject any and all
Ohio. U.t11CI:OO A.
The
Ohio
and' VInton' C nt~· pollll.''
bid1
M., Ohio Standard TIOM, T_ _
April. 1891, •• Co-ouu.
._
- et
·
'-••
ou
·
Tuaoday,
Aprl
2,
1811.
for
Sacond • - · Po..,.roy, Ohio. Anylntoroatod-.
E - bidder oball ba re·
JERRY WRAY,
flu all bl-.a thot It wll af.
Ohio 41711.
firm. corporation, or antlty qulracl tO IIIII ""lth hla bid a
DIRECTOR OF · lmpnMMnta In:
•
llrmatlvaly ln.,re that In any
Jooon T. Hyoell.
who cen · - good cau• oortlflerl choak or caahlor'o
TRANSPORTATION
Atbono, Gallla, Hocking; ODntraGI entarad Into ,.....
By Karla DoMou, Mothar - why tblo appliCation ohould chock for en amount equal 13) 11. 18, 2tc
1\hlgo, Mon-. Moroan. IUant IO thlo
not bo gr.,tod ahould file
Nobla, VInton and Waahlng•
Ito Natural Ouardlen
131 1'1. ltc
with tho Corftml_.n •J-................................................................._,_t.on
..
~--n-tlee
__._o_hlo
__for
___
lm_·~----------------~------~-.. . . .-.~. . . ..-~. .. -. ..-~••~
_ . , atata..-t datalllng
R
I
E
G
I
'I'
tha raa10no on or _ , .
ea state en1ra

w...._.

•

,..,.Inti

D=na

li-.

odw--

PubliC Notice

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
lo ,Tho Mottar Of
Junin Franklin DeMo11

Ciu No. 28', 911
Doci&lt;at n. P•r 23&amp;
NOTIC
Netic a io haooby glvan that

the

underalgned flied In

Cue No. 21919 appHcatlon
to lht Common Ploao Court.
Prol&gt;ota ·Divlolon -of Molgt
County, Ohio. fonnorclerto
change hi1 nanW to Justin
Franklin OeMo11.

•

Said ap'pllcllion will bo
haard in Hid Court at 2:30
p.m. on lho 12th day of
April, 1991, al Courthouao. Second Street. Pomeroy,
Ohio ~57tl9.
Juotin F. Hyooll.
By- Ktrll DeMo11, Mother

&amp; Natural Guardien
131-11. 1tc

. 1 card of Thanks
The FamNy Of
MELVIN G. CIRCLE
WlohHIOetqiNII

lhenltetoal'-who
-clod help and
htendlhlp • the time of
. lila dulh. s-Ill
INnlte go to 1he Rw.
Don M II fc W1r a..ld
Powell. tho Ewing
Funentl Home. Sboron
ltMity and .. . _

who -

flowero. glfta

and food.
Tha Fomlly of
-vln G. Clrclo

Unleeathal:,r=:;::=:;;;:::i~P========1

Marah 28.1111
.
Commloalon
._wu
• writ·
... otateiMnt to t b o t and an. acco . . .nylng ,..
quut for an oral hoartng In
thlo matter. tho GIH wll bo
decided on tho boola of tboo
lnlorOMtlon contained In tboo
application and tboo affldavlto aubmlttod by tbe application. Further lnformetlon
may be obtained by con.-.
lng tho Public Utlltlet Com·
mloolon of Ohio, 180 !!all
Brood Stroat, Columbuo,
Ohio 43211 ·01173.
13) 1 I, 1tc

Business
Services

POMEROY. OHIO
992-2259

LINDA'S
PAINTING

How.-.1 L WrlteNI

11111101 • 0111101

NEW-BPA.

FREE ESTIMATES

Public Notice
NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE'OF OHIG
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbuo. Ohio
March I, 1981
Contract &amp;alao Lagal Copy
No. 91-212
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
IRG·OOOIC1291
FG-OOOFIBI)
RSG·OOORI:I421
Soalod PIOPOHII will bo
rec:olvod at tho office of tho
Dlr-or of tho Ohio Dtpart·
ment of Tranoportetlon, Col·
umbuo. Ohio, untN 1 0:00 A.
M., Ohio Standard TIOM,
Tu-y, Aprl 2, 1891 , for
lmprvv..-taln:
Albano, Gallla. H-lng,
Moigo, Mon-. Morgan.
Noble. VInton and Watihlno·
ton Countll!o. Ohio for Improving ooatlon ATH-3320 .40 en U. 8. Route :13 by
-lyfnl ratrc-rltflectlve feat
*v water baoad pelnt for
cenler llrieo. lane linea and

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning

CUll 915·4110

949-2161

......._.

BISSELL &amp; BUill
CONniUCnON

•Garapa

•Con•l•te
lttiiOdellng
Stop &amp; Contpara
Fr~~lltltltat11

915-4473
667·6179

5-JI.'to lfn

REDUCED - REDUCED - REDUCED - IIOW YOU CAll
OWII THIS COUIIJIY HOlE AT THIS REDUCED PRICE - 2
story brick home nestled on approx. 1.485 scres ol privacy!
You 1nd this IOI&amp;eOUs fireplace. No worry aboul spaceeilher
- lhis beauty has 4 bedrooms, 2 bat~,
family room w~h
woodbumer and many olher fealures at can make this
country homel "HOME SWEET HOME" for y . CALL FOR AP·
POJNTMENl ODAY!!!
·

od~lneli.

langlh - o.oo .. o.....

w--

Worlo length -

Varlouo
tut or varlcuo mlloe.
Pavement
Varlae.
Tha Ohio D - r t - of
Tran_.atlon b...,. notl·
flu all
thot It wll af·
flrm.-,o lniUf'! that In ...,

bl-•

GROOM
ROOM
Complete Grooming
For All lrttds

SPRlliG IS COIIIIG!I View lhe awakenin~ of Mother N11ure
lrom lhis barn slyle home in Deller, Oh10. Surrounded by
Nature. BeautJ and fresh counlry air. MANY OTHER GREAT
FEATURES. $56,000.00,
.

Ow111r &amp; Oplf'lltor

EMILEE MEIINAR

1111EIEST RATE AS LOW AS U75'lll Variable 1nd 1.625 .
fixed - We c1n All ,our ptoperty lnd wt Mvt Duprs.

HENRY E. CLELAND .. ............ 992-8191
JEAN TRUSSELL ...... ... ...... .... 949-2880
JO. HILL .................... .. ....... ;... 986-4488
OFFICE .................................. 992-2259

992-2156
IJ

21J.. . IJ nt

..........

HeiNl Tufllnt .

Painting

992-2269

We .., Wlll!t We Do.
We Do Wlll!t We ....
.
1..1.1 ...

1-4-,J.I ......

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

HOlM .lt~t~alrl

•ALUMINUM l1hltiMt
. .LOWIIltlll
I• .UI ATIOll

Sp14l'l. . . .

c..... ,_._.

IISSILl -

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

NEW • USED PAIITI
FOR ALL MAICIB •
MODELl

110 JOI
SIIALl
P1EE UfiiATU

sao•o co.

H2-7013
or H2·55SJ

"Ptw lUI

OITOUfiR

1-100-141-0070

CltAI

1 I"

GltiO

II

1/1

.. ...

MNYW'M' 1ft

. . . . Sl•op
liftS-... .,
&amp; SIIIAI'OIS-$1. op

nmns-sm.,

I&amp;L IIIIlS
....... Or ••
I

P I II 0

SEIVKE

Y. C. YOUNc II
"2-621

PICI·

CAIPINTIY

Pldt.,.

•Room Addltlonl

A.PAll

SIIVICI

•Kitchens• ......
•VInyllldlnt

SAMI
LOCAIIOII

APPUIIICI

................
991-!IJJS "

91!1·1!161

117L ........

"-'·-

J/fltl11f11

,.,._lilrtl

..,.. 1811MATQ)

•Garage•

DJII~S

-

'lOise ........

KEN'S APPUANO

I. L MISM

_ _.

...

Aeea't

IICliO ..,.._.,. .,.

•etOWAH
OVINIIPAII

,

c

0

IIMitv--tttS

614-992-6820

'-~&amp;-

USED UIUOAD TIES

..

•VINYl SIDING

WHAlEY'S
AUtO PAm

DAIWII,

, ·• ll SlACi

.,
61 ••tft.JSII

CIAlamD,_

FREE ESTIMATES

t91-SUS or tiS·IS61
Acrea Frer~~ ""' Office
OliO

POMEROY- 2 bedroom, B! slory home with carpe~ buiK·in
bookshelves, Jlllio and rear balcooy lo enjoJ a beaulilul view
of the riverP. $23,500.00. MAKE AN OFFER.

WANT
ADS
WORK! .

. IPIIlSIBf

·an IPPUAIICIS

ESTABLISHED RESTAURANT/DAIRY QUEEN business
available in Meigs County. All equipment, building, and
ground included. CALL US TODAY FOR ALL THE DETAILS!!!

BUSIIIESS IS SO GOOD - WE'RE RUlllllliG OUT OF
STOCII WE IIHD LISTIIIGS. If you Wlnl ta atCl, call us
-rll\lll - · D1r ldalltnct 11t111tlon. Dtir aliaaCIH iaexperlencld. For beat r11ulta ull 992-2259.

,..,.,
•.•.,...

ROOFING

Taka the pain out of
. painting.
Let me do it for yov.
YEIY REASONAilf
HA YE IEFEIENQS
3·1·'11- 1 mo. pd.

a few pennies spent here ·
co,mes bacli folding money

••

"wanted to help the Palestinian
people," but he insilsed there were
few collaborators,
Kuwaiti citizens are divided on
that question. Many of them reported acts of kindness by Palestinians
durinjl the occupation. Other
Kilwattis insist many Palestinians
aided the Iraqis and must be punished.
The Kuwaitr government has
said there have been no reprisals"
against Palestinians, but an American diplomatic source acknowledged, "That docsn 't mean there
lraven't been any. We have
observed some.''
,
The Kuwaiti govcnment's posi-

RATES

'

TO PlACE AN AD CAll 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to S f.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAy

· SEATil.E
The FBI was investigating the case of a Honolulu woman who became ill after taking a Sudafed 12-hour cold capsule, but aj!ents said it was not connected to three Seattle-area poisonings in whiCh the victims ingested cyllllide-laced Sudafed.
The Hawaii illness was the ftnt linked to Sudafed outside Washington since two people died and a third became seriously ill last week in
the Tacoma-Olympia area after taking cyanide-laced Sudafed. The poi·
sonings prompted a nationwide recall of the cold titedication sold in
boxed "bUster packs" of capsules surrounded by plastic bubbles and a·
foil backinf.
The FB said Sunday the Honolulu woman became ill after laking
Sudafed which had been pUJthased either in Hawaii or from lii.-port
shops in Los Angeles or San Francisco pior to the recall.
She was treated by her local physiCU\11 and blood samples revealed
lJ1ICCS of cyanide, "although the amount was only slightly hilhcr than
what would be considered as normal levels,'' the FBI said
. "It has yet to be determined that the womait iiiJessed a product with
which someone may have tampered." Jim R. Freeman, special-agentin- charge of1he Honolulu FBI bureau, said Sunday.
"This incident does not ·appear to be related to lhe current invesli·
galion in WashinJton state involving cyanide-tainted Sudafed 12·
Hour capsules,' • an FBI spokesman in Seattle said.
·
,,
· Burroughs Wellcome Co. of Research Triangle Park, N.C. voluntarily recalled I million Sudafcd 12-hour cold capsules March 3 after the -~
deaths of Kathleen Daneker, 40, of Tacoma, and Stan McWhorter, 44.
of Lacey, were linked to cyanide poisoning and tampered packages of •
Sudafed wilh identical lot numbers.
The same lot number was found on another package of taint_ed
.- $udafed Jhat involved the near-death of Jennifer Meling of Tumwater ·'
Feb. 2. Ci)fficials initially believed 'that incidenno be lui isolated ~
. -cyanide poisoninl not relilted to product tam_Peri!Jg.
;
Daneker died Feb. II, but the cyanide potSOning was not discovered ,
until state test resulls were returned on March 1. McWhorter died Feb.
18, but his death was not connected to the others until afrer the FDA
issued a statewide alen on Sudafed March 2.
Philip Tracy, company president and chief executive officer,
pcknowledged last week the company had learned Feb. 6 of the
Tllmwater_iUness, but relied on the "isolated case" interpretaiion of .
the FBI and local law enforcement in not taking any action.
.
Two wrongful death lawsuits were ffied in fedeml court against the
company last week, both before and afrer Tracy announced in Seattle a
$100,000 reward for infonnation leading to the tamperer's arrest conviction.
·•
.
·
· The lawsuits, brought by survivors of Daileker and McWhorter,
accused the company of negligence in not initiating the recall sooner
and seek unspecified damages.
. :
"I think you should make a product as safe as possible and if0the ,;
product cannot be safe, then it is essential.to the weU·being of the pub- •
lie to take it off die market or change the fcnn," Daniel Sullivan, a
lawyer for Daneker's family.
"
Tracy said the London-owned Burroughs Wellcomc sold about $15
million worth of Sudafed in· the United States last year, compared to
the company's $1 bilHon in Qverall sales.
• "
It was disclosed by Sullivan Friday that Daneker pwthased her .,
tainted capsules on Feb. 2, tile same day that Melin~ became ill.
.
"The FBI seemed very interested in lhe dates,' said SUllivan, who
infonned authorities after Daneker's sons found a checkbook ~totation
showing the pwdtase date.
In each of the Sudafed poisOnings, officials suspect the tamperer
removed only one capsule from the blister pack, replaced the pelletlike medication with powdery, yellow cyanide and replaced lhe capSule '
through a slit cut in the foil backing, which was then taped.
'
This was then insened into boxes wilh different lot numbers th8n '
the tainted blister packs - possibly, officials believe, so the poiliolled '
package would malCh lhe exterior Sudafed lot numben in the half· ;
dozen stores where it was placed.
·
, :
~ FBI said lhe tampering was plainly visible to an alert eye and, ·
following the recall, two consumers discovered similar evidence on '
two packages. A !bird suspected tampered box was found after it was '
pulled from the shelves. Of those, one has been confinned to contain :
cyanide and test results on the other two are expected Monday.
As of Sunday, the FDA had examined 200,000 additiollal Sudafed 1
capsules pulled from approximately 450 stores in the Seattle-TacomaOlympia areas, said spokeswoman Sue HurchcrofL

Dan in•ites everyone to join him on WMOV
1:30-4:00 p.m. Monday thrv Friday,
as ht plays the best in Southern Ga1111l Musk

Kuw¢.ti police who wrongly suspected h1m of collaborating with
the Iraqis.
He said his two brothers have
been missing for nine days.
"I am sure the police are holding them,'' said the youth, who
added Jhat during his incarceration
he saw interrogating pollee bum
Palestinian suspects with cigarettes
arid beat them severely.
"The Kuwaiti police think all
Palestinians coUaborated." he said,
"but most of us opposed Iraq's
invasion of Kuwait.'
.
The youth acmowledged some
Palestinians in Kuwait believed
Iraqi President Saddam Hussein

Classifie

Hawaii Sudafed
illness not linked to
Seattle case: FBI

Dan, Faith and Tamara ·
··
would like to .give
everyone a warm
invitation to join them ·
thru their radio ministry.
HAYMAN'S
INSPIRATIONAL HOUR
can be heard
every Saturday Night
at 12 Midnight on
WEMM 107.9 FM
Huntington
where they are in their ·
17th year of
·
broadcasting.
Also. they can be hard every Sunday at 4:00
p.m. on WMOV 1380 AM, Ravenswood.

wh&lt;;&gt; worked during the iitCupation
were Palestinians.
·
"Our doctors ueated everyone,' • Mohammad said, her voice
breaking with emotibn. "What is
happening to us is not right.''
-When a crowd gathered around
her in the Palestinian area of
Hawalli, a man in Arab dress
armed with a holstered,pistol broke ·
up the interview. .
"I am from the police," he said.
"Please do not stand here. We are
trying to orpnize food supplies.''
Elsewhere in Hawalli, a Palestinian youth who requested
anonymity said he was arrested,
beaten and jailed for five days by

'

Monday's closing 'was the high;
est for the dollar in Tokyo since
Sept 12, when _it ended at 138.3CJ
yen.
"The market expects a signifi;
cant rebound in consumer confif
dence and business (in the United
States)," a Japanese currency ana·
lyst said.
·

cuPn -

. CHOW LINE • Students at Riverview School found the Second
.Grade's hushpupples among their ra~orites on Friday, as students
tasted fonds l'rom around the world 1n conjunction with Right to
Read Week activilles. Second Graile Teacher Lea Ann Galli's class

•

.Some Palestinians say they're being beaten, wrongly jaile _\;-

the outset to $1.85i5 from Si:873S.
In· Zurich, the U.S. cdrrency
opened stron~t 1.3770 Swiss
francs from I.
• .
.
,

.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•Reltoratlon
•ReJMilr Work

SPICIAl

ht

so ... Sdiltl.
ltullllta

$10
c.IMt·Ut6

It JISIJ IS-

.....,.

ttt-5516 \

PO.IOYO.O

'

.

•'

••

�Monday, March 11, 1991

LAFF-A-DAY ·

.. ..

4

~

·-______ .,
,.,.. -..
.....
1

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:rl7us:&amp;.::.-=.
:;""'..!:
t:,~.::==~nr:.
Hlw • • • an 114 Ul 1111.
1

-Would

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QJf\.A'(I~

•

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l.ol
aooldna lor I
mo1o, - . tor towo ona CO!!"

•

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·e~Mr~enca.

MQN.1 MARCH 11
( h!t!11 TV l!SI.ng N

WllONZe
156TT!llt lJ.W.l
'ltli.H .

to do IIIII; tllliig,

....... Loarondo lllwll. 114-

. HappyAdl

5

a.

1

21

.6

0

•

1

SllE 5 60NE!
PE66't' JEAN ~AS
WJVED AWAV!

Mild_..,:::ei.:"''d
tho

NOT
._with~
to
moll
.....
""' tho~

-

LOOK! MV LETTER
TO I-tER CAME BACK!

SOMETIMES WilEN
PEOPLE MOVE
AIIJA'{. THE'r' LEAVE

11 · 111 1

.. .

..

COOKIES IN Tf.IE
CUPSOARD5 ..

od

"':~·~~~~~·•:., eymoon ·Is !he

II)
1:01 (I) loverly Hlllbl...

iW -.ottCOIIIIIo
ClleAICNevq"

8 ...

l!laeCISNritiQ

®I Andr Ofllllth

a Up ClaM

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

.-.,=:-.•
NO

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I~ I' I I I 1• ~= .~=.aq:=
HABCEL

you dooolap

•
.

6

7:00 IJ.&gt; e IIJ Wheel of 1 ' -

I

CIJ Cll I lnalcli Ecllllon Q
(!) (!) MaoNoi!J"hNr

=~=
e Nighti'Nalr
Courta_
Q

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'"

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UNSCRAMBLE -'80VE LETTER S
TO GET ANSWER

...
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1

2br,
walhlr, IDOl,
~. lohlnd
cable T.V.,
AC. Go""'
dovlllo ..- . a14417-7lU.

Uol hllln Clrpota Rt. 111 Natth,
-..
-·
· ..--·- . -OOM -

..
•
-. '' .

•

~-

;.._=

KitCllpot
. .Slrlpl.
prd. $4.110 pnl,
Cindy

12 Trucks tor Sale
tm ~ PlolooUJI. 1101w Hilt

Supplir",
c. I IVL'stock

ci1111'

ttl 11010r',MIO. I14-+ti-OQI.

awithDOint
hMcrh.
.. ... -

,•

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1110 8.W.I. Cllo¥y P.U. Tnlell, V. ~

~
. -

.. outo,
114-44t·1CI21.

.61 Fann Equipment
11020 aftor &amp;p.m.

.,'
•••
•.

'

to"- """'·
tiiiiL 114-441-

· .... • .

' .

.'

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD'I .

):

.
.
·'~oil
1879 Joop CU, $1,1100. e - . .a;
11124.
~
~

aMorley~~ne
II) 8caNCtOw-

. .. 111111flrl'IU.. -- · -

FRANK AND ERNEST .
t'ftJtf'$ THE TUNif(. IF IT
GETS' roo &amp;Q/liN(;J you CAN
FAST·FO/l'WA/ZP THftOUt1H
Ttff PAille A/Jf$.

Q
7:05 (I) Htoppy O.ya

stereo. Q

We Mtmt'l Family .
IIDl Wlleol ol F -

Chalange Around Alone, lag

or--· - -·· "'

J&amp;L

. BISSELL
:BUILDERS

. CUSTOM IUILT
H-S .&amp; GAUGES
"At IMIOnalllt PricH"
, ... 949-2101
or 1ft. '949·2160

'.

INSULATION
•VInyl Siding
Win do• Roofing
. •lntu'-tlon

a

4-1

11·4-

BUT 111 RUIHI

Gel , _ ............
......l....nt tunetl up

arwl ltlatlts ....,,..
for tlit coning -10111

DUliNG FEIIUAIY
- ''" pidrup anti
delinry
anti M"dl1,.,t dty

it,_.,

......

WE ALSO SEttVICE
CHAIN SAWS

DIVE'S 511111
ENGIIIE IEPIII
253West . . St.
P1 uuoy, OIL

PH.
992·3922
,
Z+'

tii.C:OUrnY
IECJCUNG ,

OPEN7 DAYS ·
A WEEK
9 A.M. 'nL 7 P.M .

H ' " dMn 1111 rtltll'
~rd 011 wlllre....... wl
~~ur

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

fii·COUNTY

iHoo;ldor~IOI~·~!OW1S-~~'JII~2121~. M~
woll

_..
,_
_
on•1
Oldor
typo
"""" a
bodrooma
:,1111..:.:.,.="':-F-:-ond=-=o"'t- ,-,..=od;cLJn.c:- ._ld ..,.... :114 mlloo
gorlt " ' -log 1 c - LJn. 11om oldY on Rl.l, tii,IIOO, 304o
illlo ~.
111-U41ollori:GO.
l7lo-.
Pod• 1 Ta SoH: 2 81ooy To loll eon. Lei
Clloohl';o~~·
Awn. Clil . . t1, ••
Excellent
condition.
lilt, 104-4:12-mll.

In,............,....._....,...,,_Gift•a.

32 Mabile Homea
-for Sale

Solo On AD Cllpot In 81oell. Get
Our Polao llolor. You llur. You

a...,.ouo

lYing. t ond 2 bollopo~rninlo ot •.Yic;n''-iiM

- - 11a .....r_
c:or,.t., II 111 114-

. - a l i i 111 ~":f.r' F...,.

SWAIN
AUCTION • I'URHrtulll. II
Olivo II., Golllpallo. - . Uood
lumNura, IIOIION, Wooton&gt; •
WOiti-. I1UoUtH.

-

-

and

.RI-olio

till. Cl11114-112'
• E0H.
ll,_.loo nd - · t877 MXII 211drm mobllo llomo Lorge upotllno opo~- 231
F - Dill .... •
orTM' lor •lo. 17100.00 114-tn-3128 Flrll Avonuo. KIDhon wltlliotov.
........ CIJII-·0110.
.,
.......
=-.:...·
l Nlrl~ 1280/mo. p1w
FIIU TIIUIIIG OHIO "'""'
•~ 1117 141111 · cto"'on
llobllo
NNoloron
Ill, UJhMioo • clopiloill.
7"
.,.. .. 114 448 ••••

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53

Ltaotw40ff ... llypou0.
Tlooc- af

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-

143

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,.,.....,.....·~ow.
.........1ft.

.... 1NO ~ - l o n.
pllotoo
-rtpllon to
1 l'aHOn, Athono. Ohio 417'01 or

ona

.......
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11.-t·
....... , II
M4ll .. Mn·
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CAU

54 Miscellaneous
MarchandI•

.. 4.tf2-5114

.

-·

_, .

.

•'

-·-......
...._.to.
luy,
-~ trociO,' 1!00'1:00
-•yo,
Sot. dn - ·

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"

';

W.gon. (R) C

·.:
:,

(!) MlnJcle Planet Stereo. Q
(!) FlftMn v... Of
MICNIII/Lellrer A look at
Hltaen yoera ol broadcast
~';j~sm Is presonted.

ZHonda ~~:.t'• ~·
,For-:
Whooloro.
Hood
Da'ltlmo: 114.......... 1\ . _ 'i

with 711711!1111ngo.

Wldo-

(2:00)
CIJ (JJ MtcGyver A group
olpeopte _,cliea 10r
treuure hidden In a eldon

,.•'

74 · MOtorcyclea
1111 '100 llog,., 114o44f.t4H

® MOVI : All Night Long (Rl

-~

:.·

wltll plow, ........ ,.., and lrall dlol
Jlm'o =~;*,.I 8A. 31, tori
blllo, p.m.
good tMio, 114-'JII.a.- ...
Well
1 114 , •• Sllij

75 Boats&amp; Motors
for Sale

'·
;,
,

Qij Oe Evening llhllclo

Herman wtna a weekerld with
Coach Wood II a charity
auction. Stereo. C
I!]. MOVIE: •PolleJgelat Ill'
FOX Night otiiiO .......

;I

,,
•·•

, -;;,

"'M'"'n.,.-at'="o.mtnum==-:81=A-::.....,_=~
· ~ - ~-;,
?liZ •
rwotor. 114-al-1014.
.
.··
1114
Floll • 8111, 140hp,
110
Trolllna
llo"''~
Ext roo! ......
MIOI.- ·
llohlng

lla!IL . lncludoo

-bor

,• Antlq•,...
u..

lfCYCUNG

lt.

tO,

. -. ~

In

·::.:'J:::,.-=':"....~.t.:i
~~:"""111""·

11-'v Cam-1
bolllncf, -

7:31 (I) Santoni Son
1:00 C2). ii))I'Nih PrinM of
lei Air WIN chollangea
Charlton to epend ihroe dtys
in a ~ neighborhood .
Stereo.

cu.....'71 V.n, ... .. ~
4110 ond t ....• •
....
Nody to plllnl, tt,SIIO. S04.a7l•, -.
7:188.
,,

otocilo. - . E4UI- co, aftor lp.m.

992-2772 01'
742-2251
13111YM Place

. Hoo,
114-446.

with -h - ·===·.:::.::.:":

JAMISUISD

Middleport. Ohio

410 -

-Ill

•R~Itcement

Day or Nltiht
JIG SUNDAY CAllS

.

Jolin -

II,OGO
1044.

v•• • ~1
'!!:.~• - .
etalllllil,
.........

;;.flb-flnl

~

(PG13)

~~ '
~;;

Anler!CII'•
, Setting Sail for Sen Diogo

:I:

·• ~•..

QJPrlrnaNewo

1:05 (I) MOVIE: Logan'a llun (POl
(2:30)

e

1:30 ~
IIJ 11o11om AnthOny
helps a friend ally lOber.
Stereo. C
91 0 • Major Dad The
Major Ia shocked alter "'
dlscove,. Elizabeth 11 dating
a Martnt. Stereo. Q

....- . .

83

Livestock

a an 1.1a11o
a Alneito.o'o Wlklemou
8:00 C2) e 0 MOVIi!: 'Lethal

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MOIIl£ HOME FUINACES - HEAT PUMPS
AU. FUINACE PAm

(I) • MOVII!: 'Lucky
Day' AIC Monday .Night
Movie (2:001 Stereo•.!;I
(!) leiJUt 1M LHt HOme
Movte A war-beleaguered
Llbllneee family Ia prolllecl.

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a Beauty end the lout Q

8:30 (!) In .,. Hank Wllllama
Tradition (1:301
O.P. Pfo Surfing From
Huntington Beach. catn. (R)
1D:GO(JJ , . _
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goofing off. I h!ll uleep on the job."
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you'll Hnd It The Aatro-Graph Match- VIRGO (Aug. 23-lept. 22) The pollllbll- .
(J) Night Court Q
maker Instantly reveals which ligna are ltlet lor fu~llllng your ambHIOU8 expec.
(l)Newewalela
r&lt;&gt;in'!"tlcally perlect lor you. Mall $2 to tatlona look good today, but you might
aJ) I Ati8RIO Hal Stereo. Q
Malcn,.....er, c/o this n""""'*· P.O. do things In stages ra- than In one ·
0 Mlallll Viol Stereo.
Box 81428, C-.nd, OH « 101-M28. fall swoop.
ARIEl (.._. 21·Ajlrll11) In a discus- IJ8IIA (lopl 2J.Oct. 2J) Even though H
QJMolle
sion wllh a friend today, do not treat may not enhance your popularity, H'a
ond ..... King
lightly ., IOIU81hlalndlvldual llkM -1· not to do lhlnga against your better
ously. II you dO, your pal might stop Judgment today. Don't ylold to P"' I 1:30 (J) e 0 Tonight 8Mw
coming to you lor advice.
pr811Ure.
Stereo.
TAURUI (April~ 20) You'll funC• SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 221 Strive for
(JJTheltlon elfectlvely today, provided you continuity ol purpoee today, eo you fin·
(l) 1urap1an .loumal,
don't attempt to do too many things at len what you etart. Any 100M tnreMia
(I)
Nluhlllnt C '
once. It might be wtee lull to do one you leave hanging could be neglected
AiaeJilo Hal Stereo. Q
laak and - I t through to conclualon .
lor quite- time.
.
Amlflca Tonight
GEMINI (..., 21..,_ 211) Be vety care- IAGmARtUI (110¥, D-Oec. 21) You
lui not to attempt to lnatruct otlwa on may be tempted to do aometnlng out 01
how to do eomethlng that you do not spite In order to even an old score wtlh
a 8portl Tonight
know how to do·youraelf. You could cre- anotlw. II you c!o. you'll learn the hard
11:31 (I) C1IMrl Q
ate a needlen problem.
way that spite does not make right
CANCER (June 21-.IIJIJ 22) Your ablll- CAPRICOIIN (Dec. 1WM. 11) Some- 12:00 (I). 11110 tho Night
Wllh
llet at ,_,clllng, probing and detect- thing In which you're pr-ly I n NIIIP1 . . .
Ing are especially k_,loday. Tlwe are ,.. promising potential, but H must be
a • •UiiSUI' cu Late
strong Indications you wtll put them to nurtured one llep et ·a time. Don't be
Night
constructive u -.
Impatient.
OThel!qUaktr
LEO (.IUIJ 21-Aug. 22) There are two AQUARIUI (olen. 20-Fell. It) Appear·
NUIIY. . Now
sidell to .-y story, and It Ia Important ancea are exlremely Important today,
Colletle
that you keep lhlaln mind today. II not, 10, If you ~~opo:·to ba o - , put on •
IDMIM ,ca~Sioto Fullotlon ,
you may rush Into a)l!dgrnant , off.,d- poaltlve aHIIudO. In order' to beCome
aiF....bS-(T)
lng an Innocent party.
eomeone Othen . . wtlllnQ to IOIIOW,
NewtHight
you ftrat nave to lOOk the port
II) IHuty tncl the " " ' Q

sica-

Building

M.c:h 12, 11t1

SupplieS

Thera are lndlcallons you might partlcl·
pate In an ..terprioo In lhe year ahead
- · you'll have a minor, bUt reward·
lng, role. The worth ol this venture won't
be determined by lhe size of your
partiCipation.
·
PIICE8 (Feb. »March 20) Your IntuItion could be 111 .,ormously valuable
a-today, 10 don't treat It lndlflerently. Let your lellllnga- u yow guide.
Know where to look for romance and

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After West bad led\a trump and tbe
dununy was tabled, Willy Nilly
cbaraecllnto tile play. He drew trumps
and coatlnued with the ace and anoth·
er club. He wu boplnc for an even
club break, but East IP'&amp;Ielully cubed
three trlcb In the suit and then led the
.spade kine to defeat tile cqntract. ·
Willy should bave counted biB tricks
more carefully. He bad nine sure winne,., and the lOth could come from either a s-s club division - whicb wUI
bappea about a third of the lime - or
a club ruff ill the dummy. Tbe correct
play Is to win the u..t trick In band
and Immediately cub three diamond
tricks, dllcanllDI a club from the
dammy. Nut lead tbe ace and another
club.
East 'irlll win and return a tru~2z_

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

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but South wins in band and ruffs a club
In the dummy with the heart kin&amp; for
his lOth .Irick.
·
Note tbat if South carelesaly willl
either of the trump leadl with dum·
my's kill&amp;. West will be able to ruff the
third club with the beart - .
·.
Any time you can arranp to ruff ill'
the band with the fewer trump~, It Ia
al~ certain to be the rtcbt play.

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ACROSS
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creatural
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8 Sedimen18 Touch·
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location
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CROSSWORD

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27 Polhlc:al
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18 Walt•m
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21 Reverie
30 Wall•m
22 David
star Lalli
Ogd•n- 31 Contents
ol
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"M'A'S'H"
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23 Idea
32 Gary
24 Cryptog·
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31 Rink
25 Secret
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111:31 (I) MOVII: 2010: The YW. Mallo eon- (PG) (2:30)
11:00~• w.we 1111

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This week we will look at some dif- ·
WEST
femtt aspects of declarer play.
U all playen ~ their tricks .AJI03
correctly, there would be no average • 742
pla)'I!I'S - · everyone would be an •usu
+K
expert.
1
North was correct to raise his part·
ner's flve-c&amp;nl·major opentnc bid to
two bearla. With a weak hand ll is best
to make a limited bid immediately if

you can.

®1 M'A'S'H

a Yocllt Racing Boo

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M,.. King

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Billy Grlham Ia IOined by
Lemelle Harrlo, Michael w.
Smith end hoCkey great
Glenn Chico Reach. (I :00)

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SCUM LETS ANSWERS
3· &amp;
Yonder- Bylaw - Inlet - Flimsy - SLOWLY
My neigh~ Is the mother ol six teenagers. I over·
heilrd tier comment to the grocery clerk thai kids grow
up quickly but leave home very SLOWLY.

WI O..mof.Mnnle

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PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARE S

1:35 (I) Andy Ofllllth

ARLO AND JANIS

11,1110 Cllllll1' CAROl

quiet interval
between bells and ·-···. •

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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One letter stands for another.ln this sample AIs used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
· apostrophes, the leflllh and formation of the words are
all hints. Each day the code letters are dlffermt.

3·11

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Yesterday's Cryptoquote: MAKE IT YOUR BUSI·
NESS TO KNOW YOURSELF, WHICH IS THE MOST
DIFFICULT IN TH!l WORLD.- CERVANTES
0 fill bY ICing FIIIUrH ~. Inc:

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Peg• 10-The Dally Sentlnal

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

EMS responds to 13 caUsforassistance

Clouds cover most of Ohio early today ·

Units of the Meigs County Cornell who refused treallllent. and
Emergency Medical Service at I0:48 p.m. the unit went io the
responded to 13 calls for assistance sheriffs office for Troy Wanken
over the weekend and early Mon· who refused treatment.
day morning.
On Sunday at 2:20 a.m. the
On Saturday at 9: 18 a.m. the MiddlepOrt unit went .to Third
Middleport unit werit to Second Street for Ernest Wells who was
Avenue for Gloria Compston who taken to Veterans ..
was taken to Veterans Memorial
At 9:54 a.m. the Pomeroy Fire
Hospital.
Department went to 15 Oak Street
At 11:38 a.m. the Racine unit for a structure fire at the Hendricks
was called to Long Run Road for re~oonoo.
·
Max Folmer who was taken to Vet·
The Middleport unit, at 3: 16
erans.
·
p.m., was called to Zuspan Hollow
. ·The Rutland unit at 3:49 p.m. Road for Gary Haning who was
went to Vance Road for Ronnie . taken to Veterans, and at 3:55 p.m.
Hubbard who was taken to Holzer the unit responded to Village
Medical Center.
Manor for Donald Van Cooney ,
The Middleport unit went to also taken to VeteranS.
Oliver Street at 5:05 p.m. for
At 9:07 p.m. the Pomeroy unit
Lashia Mitchell who was treated went to State Street for John
but not transported, and at 5:28 McKen~e who was transported to
p.m. the unit went to North Second VeteranS.
for Joyce Blevins who was transFinally on Monday morning at
paned to Vettrans.
5:12 a.m. the Racine unit went to
At I0:38 p.m. the Pomeroy unit Bald-Knob Road for Richard
was called to East Main for Wiley Ables.

.

By Unlled PreSs International
Clouds that lingered ·over much
of Ohio Sunday evening thinned
outovemightsolhatcleartopwtly
cloudy conditions dominaled much
of the state by Monday morning.
Northeast patts of the state continued to be plagued by a bit more
cloud cover and snow flurries .
Predawn temperatures were scattered through the 20s with winds
less than 10 mph and variable in
direction.

MARION, Ohio (UPI) - A
f1111l that printed nearly 1 million .
patriotic Desert Stonn posters is
now prinlil1g a Desert Calm placard
to greet returning servic~ men and
women.
The placard is being printed by
Macola Printing Services pf Marion which sent the Desert Storm
posters to 23 states, Canada and
troops in the Persian Gulf.
"There•s always a calm aflel: a
storm," said Manager Jerry Wil- ·
son. "This is a continuation of our
first effort. We wanted to create
something to welcome the ttoops
home."

Duel K. Ridenour .

Charles A. Btadbury
Charles Asa Bradbury, a wellknown Middlepon resident, died
early Monday morning, March 11.
1991, at Holzer Medical Center,
following an exlended illness.
Details and arrangements will
be announced by Fisher Funeral
Home in Middleport.

Bessie M. Martindale

Bessie Mae Martiiulale, 80, of
9775 West 201h Avenue, Lake·
wood, Col.. former.Jy of Stewart,
died Thursday, March 7. 1991, in
Lakewood.
She was born in Zare, W.Va. on
May 11, 1910, tbC daughter of the
late Joseph and Csroline Zymbach
DePoy. She was a member of the
Order of Eastern Star in Athens.
She is survived by a son, Kenneth G. Pinnell of Malta; a daughter, Irene P. Nielson, Lakewood,
Col.; a brother, Ray DePoy, of
Stewart: ~ sistas, Mary Zickifoose, Helvila, W.Va., Lure Miller,
Bloominsdale. Ohio, and Hulda
Kelly; Columbus; 10 gran(jchildren; and 21 great-granchildren.
· Funeral services will be held on
Tuesday at 11 a.m. at White-Blower Funeral Home in Coolville, with
Rev. Cecil A. Morrison officiating.
Burial will be . in Vanderhoof
Cemetery.
·
· There will be no caUing hours.

;

Gertrude M. Greenlee

a sister, Velvey Keys, Middlepon;
a grandson. Michael McDaniel of
Richmond, Ind.; two great grandchildren, several nieces, nephews
and cousins.
She was preceded in death by
her husband Lon V. Greenlee; a
brother, Arnold and a ~ster, Nora.
Funeral services will be on
Tuesday at 2 p.m. at Fisher Funeral
Home m Middlepon with AI Hanson officiating. Burial will be in
Riverview Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home today from 2 to 4 p.m. and 7
to 9 p.m. and until the nme of the
service on Tuesday.

James C. Perkins, 54, East Main
Street, Pomeroy, died Saturday,
March 9, '1991, at Velerans Memo.rial Hospital.
Born September 23', 1936, he
was a son or the late Roben E. and
Delena Hall Perkins. He worked as
a labom at Excelsior Salt Wolts
and was involved with Big Bend
ReacL
Mr. Perkins is survived by a
daughter, Linda M. Buckley, Middleport; a son, James W. Perkins,
Pomeroy; and four grandchildren,
Amanda Buckley, Amber Perkins,
Sherman Buckley Jr., and Erin
Perltins.
·
Besides his parents he was pteceded in death by four sisters and
seven brothers.
Services will be Tuesday at 1
. p.m. at Ewing Funeral Home with
Rev. James Keesee officiating.
Burial will be in Letart Falls.
Friends ma)t call at the funeral ·
today from 6 to 9 p.m.

.e.

-·

...

- .....
.,.

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\

sure will take much of the day to
get organized and push to the east
of the Rockies. The low will move
across Kansas Monday night and
head east toward Ohio. Moisture
will spread east ahead of the low
and sbould spread clouds into west·
em.Ohio before daybreak Tuesday.
The cloud cover will be followed by rain on Tuesday over
western Ohio and the threat will
spread east to encompass all of
Obio Tuesday night into Wednesday.
· ·
·

.

.

"II is easy to take liberty for granted when you've never had it taken
from youc"
One former POW did not arrive
on the wecial plane because he was
so seriously injured. Officials said
Army Staff Sgt. Daniel J. Stamaris,
31, or Boise, Idaho, returned to
United States aboard an earlier
flight. He wore a red beret and was
carried by stretcher.
The Air Force jet carrying the
former POWs touched down at the
Air Force base in suburban Maryland shonly before noon. A small
American flag was flown from the
plane's exit, along with a huge yei·
low ribbon.
The 19 men and two women
were greeted by Cheney and Powell and their wives. The women
were Army Spec. Melissa Nealy,
20, of Grand Rapids, Mich., and
Army Maj. Rhonda Comum, 36, of
Freeville, N.Y.
Oqe of the former POWs, on
wooden crutches, handed !hem to a
military aide and proudly limped
down the exit. sta1rs on his own
power - tightly grasping the rail
on each side.
A milita~y band played the
· national anthem as the flags of each .
military service fluttered in the
chill wind of the overcast day. But
the sun broke through the clouds
shortly after the arrival and the
crowd started chanting, "U.S.A.,
U.S.A., U.S.A."
Another flag flew from the outstretched suspension ladders of two
military ·fu'e engines.
A especially loud cheer arose as
the name of Navy Lt. Jeffrey zaun,
28. of Cherry Hill, N.J ., was
announced. Zaun' s bntised and battered face' angered and haunted
America afte~ he was displayed on
~a~hdad television during hiS capuvtty.
.
Although most Americans
believed Zaun and his POW col·
leagues had been brutally tortured,
military officials have since said
those injuries occurred during high·
speed ejection from jets that had
~.n struck by Iraqi anti-aircralt
A huge sip attached 10 the passenger termmal said: "Welcome
Home Desert Storm Soldiers."
Another sign said, "Welcome
Home from the Persian Gulf."
After the brief ceremony, the
former POWs Slepped off the plat·
form and wete huSj!ed and kissed
by members or thetr families and
laved ones. Thtre were man~.
They were then.placed a
a
caravan of buses and taken for
medical ilnd psychologic81 exami·
nations, and further debriefings by
U.S. intelligence officials.
Military officials said the former
POWs would receive counseling

~

'

On the erly morning weather •
map, low pressure was over the •
north Atlantic. High pressure :
extended from Hudson Bay :
through the Great Lalces to the Gulf of Mexico. Broad low pressure :
occupied the rest of the central and :
westrm United States.
•
:
High pressure will begin to :
move east Monday night as low •
pressure moves to eastern Kansas :
by daybreak Tuesday and to north- :
east Missomi by Tuesday ()Vening. •
•

~

local 'support," Wilson said. :
ny employee Vicky Hannum,
"What we got is . beyond our •
designed ll)e Desert Calm poster. It
wildest expectations."
:
features a dove with an olive
President Bush received one of :
brmlch in its beak, a U.S. soldier, a
the posters. and wrote a letter of ;
flag and stars to represent the allies.
thanks to the print shop. Several •
Hundreds of thousands of servicemen and women also wrote. :
The shop's 15 C!J!ployees hope
Americans take, the message to Desert Storm posters were dis"I was in Vietnam," Master :·
tributed the first two weeks of the · Sgt. Donald Welsh wrote from •
heart.
"I personally was disgusted war. The Huntington National Saudi Arabia. "Never did we :
with the wav the Vietnam vets Bank iri · Columbus ordered receive the support that the citizens ·
were treated/' said Wilson. "I.'m · 150,000.
of America are now disPlaying.
:·
Macoia gave away the posters at
against war, but I'm not against the
· "It is very gratifying ... that :
fttst but with the demand so heavy. businesses such 8$ rours are will- ~
guys.
"It's not going to be another they had to charge to defray costs.
ing to provide remmders that we ::·
"What we wanted to do was get are here," he said.
Vietnam," he said. "We want
· :·
them to feel proud of coming

and support their families.
The group sai.d it found financial help for day-care is available to
pnly 15,000 of the estimated
300,000 Ohio children in lowiocome families.
Despite 60 percent federal
matching funds available for extra
day· care assistance to families
receiving Aid to Dependent Chil·
dren, such help went to only 1.6
percent of 435,000 ADC children
under 13 last year, the fond found.
Real said the federal government does not limit the number of
ADC families that can receive
money for child care if parents are
trying to get off welfare and into
jobs. Ohio has not fully used that .
assistanCe, he said.
Michael Fox, new director of
the state Department of Human
Services, has said making better
use of federal $-y-care money for
welfare families should be a priority of Gov , George Voinovich

Stolen bus found in Tennessee .~.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)Whoever stole a Greyhound bus in
Columbus last week apparently
drove it 10 Nashville, Tenn., and
then swiped another one.
Authorities said the bus, missing
from Columb!IS since Tuesday
night, turned up 111 Greyhound's
terminal in Nashville l~te Friday. .
A police officer said a Tennessee law enforcement agency
notified him of the recovered bus
but had no other details.
Tennessee officials said that a

bus was stolen-from the Nashville ;.
terminal about the same time the ·
Columbus bus was found.
·
George Turner, customer ser- ;
vice representative for Greyhound •..
in Columbus, is Julppy the original ~ ·
missing bUS haS been found.
.: ·
"1'1)1 glad because it was stolen ..:
on my shift," said Turner. He said ::
he believes the bus thief must be a :·
former Greyhound driver.
~
"A regular person wouldn ' t !·
know their way around the termi- .:
nals like that,'' Turner said.
::
,.

Stocks
Am Ele Power .....................28 5/8.

Weather

· Ashland Oil ........................ 32 3/4
AT&amp;T ...................................331/2
Bob Evans .................................. 19
Charmirig Shop ........................... 15 ·
City l;iolding ............................... l.S
Federal Mogul ...................... 16 5/8
GoodyearT&amp;R ........................... 24
Key Centurion ...................... 11 1/4
Lands' End .................................20
Limited Inc. ..........................25 1/4
Multimedia Inc ...........................74
Rax Restaurant ............................. 1
Robbins&amp;Myers ...................26 3/4
Shoney's lnc ............. :...........15 1/2
continuedfrompage1
Star Bank ......•••.....•...•........•........23
Wendy
lnt'l. .......................... 9 3/8
and he given some time off with
Worthington
hid ................,. ..23 3/4
their families and loved ones.

Ohio Lottery

•

home. That's the differenoo."
When the crisis in the Persian
Gulf started. employee Molly Lu
Balis went to Wilson with an idea
to suppon the ttoops.

President Bush ...

James Perkins

Announcements ·

.,

COLUMBUS. Ohio (UP!) The Childreri's Defense Fund-Ohio
on Monday called 6 n the state to
make better use of federal day-care
money available to help get welfare
families into self-support jobs.
The group, in its second ."Ohio
Futures" report, said the state has
$83 million coming in new federal
day-care money for the working
poor, but has failed to· make good
use of the money available.
·'The greatest irony of all is that
safe, reliable child care is a costeffective alternative to public assistance,'' said Mark Real. director of
the fund , a private, non-profit
· advocacy group for ·children's
issues.
· The fund said it costs about
$7,500 a year to keep two people
on yublic assistance but less than
hal that - about $3,500 - for
full-time day-care for a preschool
child. ·
Day-care frees parents to work

BUEL K. RIDENOUR

Gertrude M. Greenlee, 85, of
Middleport. died early on Sunday,
March 10, 1991, at Veterans
Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy.
· She was born on August 23,
1905 in Middleport, the dauahter of
the lite Elza W. and Ida Pickens
Dodson. She was a homemaker and
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Ohio's
a member of the Middleport Super Lotto jacicpot was increased
Church of ChrisL
to $20 million after no one picked
She is survived by two daugh· the six winning numbers in the
terS. Dorothy (Gene) McDaniel, all weekend drawing.
or Middlepon; a daughter, Betty
Lou Greenlee, also or Middleport;
None of the tickets sold for the
weekend drawing listed the six
winning numbers- 1, 4, 14, 28,
33
and 46, a lottery spokesman said
RadDe Amerkan LepiD AuxD·
Sunday.
That means the $16 milIary
The Rlcine American Legion lion was carried over and increased
Auxiliary Unit 602 ·will host a by $4 million for Wednesday 's
.
.
Legion Birthday Party for Post 602 drawing.
There were 107 players who
on Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the
picked five of the numbers to win
Legion Hall.
'$1,553 each, and 6,028 players
who selected four of the numbers
EIJllt IUid Forty to meet
~
The Meigs County Salon No. to win $86
710, Eisht and Forty will meet
Thunday at 7 p.m. at the home of
Super Loito ticket sales totaled
Veda Davis.
$6,042,606 and the prize payout
totaled $684,579.
DARiucheon
One ticket listed the winning
The Return Jonathan Meigs combination in the accompanying
Chapeer, DlupterS of the Ameri- Kicker game, making it worth
can llewlllllicll will celeb• with $100.000. The winning Kicker
Cliarfar Dly LMICM 1111 an Friday at combination was 610477.
12:30 p.m. 11 ()o.;eblocio Center in
Middleport. DAR Good Citizens
In addition to the one ticket that
Winner and the AIDaic8ll History
bad
·the six Kicker numbers in
Essay Winners will be honored
exact order, six had the first five
gueau.
Reservations are dae today numbers; which pays $5,000; 65
(Monday) with Mn. An11ur Skin· ·had the fust four numbers, which
pays $1,000; 70 I had the first
• IIIII', 992-2500 II' Mn. Roy Holkl,
992· 7261. HOIIJFJ a Mn. Skin· tim, which pays SHIO: llld 7,672
ncr, Mrs. Holter, Mr1. Georae had the fust duce. which pays $10.
Kicker ticket sales totaled
Hac:kett Jr., Mn. Harold Haacr,
$837,676
while the total prize payMra. Edward Poster, Mn. James
out wa.s $341,820.
.
Werry IIIICI Mn. Gene Yoa..

'

Larry Hannum, father of compa-

Group urges better use
of day care Money

Super .Lotto Jackpot
grows to $20 million

.'

Fairly strong weather systems
held sway over conditions over the
continental United States. Deep
lowpressurewasoutoverthewestem Atlantic and was still influencing weather conditions from New
England through the mid-Atlantic
states. Over much of the remainder
of the eastern half of the United
States high pressure was the rule.
Disorganized low pressure occupied much of the central and west·
em United States. This lo:w pres-

Firm prints posters for returning veterans

--Area deaths---Duel K. Rioonour, 86, of State
Route 248 Chesler, Ohio. died Sat·
urday, Marth 9, 1991 in Veterans
Memorial Hospital, Pomeroy. He
was self-employed at Ridenour
Supply Company.
.
Born March 28, 1904, he was a
son of the late Lowell E. Ridenour
and Zelda Keebaugh Ridenour.
· Survivinj! are his wife, Mildred
Pauline W1ckham Ridenour: and
two sons, James L. Ridenour of
Chester and John B. Ridenour of
Pomeroy. Also surviving are· five
grandchildren and three great·
grandchildren.
He was preceded in death by a
sister, Thelma Ridenour and a
grandson, Jamie Ridenour.
Services will be conducted
Tuesday, 3 p.m. at Ewing Funeral
Home in Pomeroy, the Rev. Sharon
Hausman officiating. Burial fol·
· lows in Chester Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
· home Monday, 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to
9p.m.

----~------------Mo~n-d~a•y~,MB--ro_h__
11_,_1_99__
1;

Meigs winter
athletes are
·- honored

·-•.•

Pick 3:259
Pick 4:5771

Cards : 10-H, J·C;

.

Wednesday, chance of rain
90 percent.

:: Page 3
:-

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~

..'..... ..

.·:.. .
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·"' '
,.
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·va1.
41, No. 22e
' :t;:&gt;pyrlghtecl1991
"·

.:.

:~uggested by Mayor Hoffman .

The
Daily
Sentinel

'

1 Secdon, 1o Pill• 25 cenle
A Muhlmedllo Inc. Newapilper

· Mandatory trash pick-up possibility
By JULIE E. DILLON
Sentinel News Staff
The possibility of implementing
a JDandatory trash pick-up service
within the Village of M1ddleport
was discussed at Monday evening's
regular meeting of Middleport Village Council.
·
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman suggests the mandatory trash
pick-up to alleviate trash build up
.a( varipus sites within the village.

He also noted the significantly
higher costs of transporting village
trash 10 a Gallia County landfill as
opposed to previously hauling it to
a Mason County landfill which is
now closed.
Council agreed the only way to
enforce mandatory trash pick-up
would be to bill it through the village as an additional cost to water
and sew~e service. Provisions for
senior cuizen discounts would
remain in place as well as discounts

for village residents who ·continue ad(led that the mandatory trash
to recycle. Mayor Hoffman feels a pick-up service would not be promandatory trash pick-up service vided by the village but would be
could encourage more people to contracted to a business that prorecycle.
vides that type of service, such as
Mayor Hoffman stressed the Manley's Trash Service. If the plan
implementation of such a program were to be implemented, however,
is only a possibility at this time but bids for the service would have to
that he would further investigate be taken.
the matter. He noted that plans like
A public hearing will be held at .
the one discussed are currently in the next meeting of Middleport
place in Gallipolis and Athens and Village Council on March 25 to
seem to be working efficiently. He . discuss Community Development
Bloc!c Grants and what momes are
avail.able. Mayor Hoffman noted
that Jean Trussell, housing special·
ist for the village , had attended
seminars on grant availability and
the application process.
Mayor Hoffman discussed housing rehabilitation grant availability

noting a program which provides
for partial payment of improve·
ments to rental J)l opertics. He said
that the program pays hillf of the
cost with the property owner to pay
the other half for the improvements
with an agreement that there would
be no increase in renL
Another matter discussed at the
meeting included Fourth of July
activities in the village which are
being headed up by Bob Gilmore.
A celebration centered around the
success of ~ration Desen Storm
is planned w1th special re!;ognition
to be given to local people who
served in the Gulf War. Conflnnation has been received of a special
guest for the festivities which will
be announced at a later time when

more details are complete.
Also discussed during the meet·
ing was the recent annual inspection of the Middleport Jail facilities
in which Mayor Hoffman reported
that everything "went well."
Rev. James Seddon, minister of
the Middleport First Baptist
Church, opened the meeting with
prayer. Members of the Middleport
Ministerial Association r¢cently
agreed at the request of Council to
have ministers attend and give
opening prayers at all meetings.
Attending were Mayor Hoffmail, Clerk-Treasurer Jon Buck,
and Council members, Dewey Horton , James Clatworthy, Judy
Crooks, Paul Gerard, William
"Bucky" Walters and Jack Satterfield.

Meigs Local School board
approves personnel matters·

,•
\,

I
·
ALL·TVC ACADEMIC TEAM • Members
, 'or the All-TVC Academic Team rrom Meigs
. · High School are, front row • Micbelle Young,
. : Xelly J;)oldge, Trlcla Baer, Jenall'er Taylor, an~
· ...Loreaa Oiler. Secood .row: Missy Nelosn, Darc1
. -.Wolfe, Kristen Slawter, Eric Heck, Joe McElory

and Frank
plct.red, Aaroa Sheets.
These Individuals, aloog wltll other members of
the 1990-91 Meigs winter sports teams, were
honored by the Meigs Boosters at MHS Monday ·
evening. See additional pbotos and story oo page
3.
.

- A~dvocacy,gro,up- .urges better
·use ofstate day-care funding
families into self-suppon jobs.
The group, in its second "Ohio
Futures" report, said the state has
$83 million coming in new federal
day-care money for the workil)g

poor, but has failed to make good
use of the money available.
''The greatest irony of all is that
safe, reliable child care is a cost·
effective alternative to public assistance,"·said Mark Real, direc~ ~f
the fund, a private, non -prof1t
~dvocacy group for chil~en's
ISSUes.

If alcohol is running
your family, stop and get
help--before you run out
of options ..

.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, TUesday, March 12, 1991

COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPI) The Children's Defense FUnd-Ohio
on Monday called on the state to
make better use of federal day-care
money available to help gel welfare

Every day, alcohol shatters
thousands of families who
have no means of coping
with the
problems of the
alcoholic.
The fact is,
families of
· alcoholics
need help, too.

•

•

••.•

&gt;

Low tonight in mid 30s•

••

.·''

South Central Ohio
•·
Increasing cloudiness Monday :
night, with a low near 30. Chance ;
of precipitation is 20 percenL Rain ; .
likely Tuesday, with highs near 50. ·:
Chance of rain is 70 pefcent.
· :: ·
Ohio extended rorecast
Wednesday tltrough Friday
Rain likely Wednesday. and a ::
chance of rain or snow Thursday, ;.
with fair weather on Friday. Highs·:: . . :
wili range from 45 to 55 Wednes- .; · . .
day, and in the 40s Thursday and :.
Fnday. Overnight lows wili range ··
from 35 to 45 Wednesday momin~. '
in the 30s early Thurdsay. and 10
the 20s Friday morning.

'

K-D; K-S

The Meigs Locw School Board
decided several personnel matters
at its meeting on Monday nighL
Jennings Beegle was employed
its a substitute comprehensive
social sbldies teacher and Richard
Coleman as a history, psychologysociology and computer science
substitute. John Arnott was hired as
Junior High Athletic Director~·
Mike Ktirinedy iS a11istant track
coach. ·
In other matters, ihe school
board adopted a resolution petitioning the arbitrator to hear and decide

matter pending between the Coalition for Equity and Adequacy
Meigs Local Teachers' Association · of School funding at a cost of 50
prior, to April 1. That matter con· cents per pupil.
cems a medical insurance payment
The village also granted permis·
dispute.
sion to the Village of Pomeroy to
The board also passed a resolu- have trees around the sewage treat·
tion excluding the Meigs Local ment plant at the football lield cut
School District from a class action and removed for enlargement of
lawsuit flied by the Cleveland City the plant and be replaced with pine
Schools. Th~ suit concerns· the trees.
·
equllilble'. rul'lding issue and the I · A requeac fiom Ole Melp ·Band
Cleveland City Schools · are fQ! financial assistance in purchasopposed to changes in that policy.
ing new band instruments was
In a related matter, a resolution . tabled.
'
of joinder to participate in the Ohio
Additionally, the board set commenafnent for May 19.
1i

Federal government offers
Ohio dr~g control money

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) The fund said it costs about
$7,500 a year to keep two people The state announced Monday that
on yublic assistanoo but less than $16.9 million in fe&lt;!eral money is
hal that -· about $3,500 - for being made availa\)le through the
full-time day -care for a preschool Governor's Office of Crimiruil Justice Services to expand drug conchild.
Day-care frees parents to work trol programs in Oh1o.
The money will be awarded
and suppon their families.
The group said it found flnan· usin~ federal drug control and syscia! help for day-care is available to tem 1mproveme11t act funds.
"When it comes to drug law
only 15,000 of the estimated
300,000 Ohio children in low- enforcement, we need to give sheriffs, police officers, and prosecu·
income families.
Despite 60 percent federal tors the crime fighting tools they
matching funds available for extra cannot provide for themselves,"
day- care assistance to families LL Gov. Michael DeWine said.
•'And we will do more ,to assist
· receiving Aid to Dependent Chilthe
most vulnerable people in our
dren, such help went to Qnly 1.6
criminal
justice system, those who
percent of 435,000 ADC children
have
been
victims of crime," he
under 13 last year, the fund found.
Real said the federal govern· said.
Drug control and system
ment does not limit the number of
ADC families that can receive improvement programs are
money for child care if parents are designed to combat the illicit drug
trying to get off welfare and into market, provide drug offenders
jobs. Ohio )las not fully used that with treatment and improve the
administration.of justice.
assistan~. he said.

· There are 34 narcotics trafficking task forces funded by local law
eilforcep!ent and prosecuting agencies across Ohio. Efforts to
increase the number of task forces
are underway, DeWine said.
The Govemor's Office of Crim-

ina! Justice Services said forensic
crime labs are being modernized to
handle the volume of drug evidence aild increasing the number of
dru$ treatment for offenders in correellonal institutions and community coireetional programs are a high
priority in the drug control stra~gy.

Union workers try to
discourage purchases
Wire, staff dispatches ·
company offi~ials failed 10 come to
terms on a new contracL
CHARLESTON, W.Va.· Union
workers involved in a labor dispute
The union said Mon'!!IY. it would
at Ravenswood Aluminum Corp. begin distributing handbtlls to the
want to discourage companies and public abOut aluminum products,
the public from buying products particularly beer cans, made by
made by "strikebreakers," offteials replacement workers.
"1bese same beer products are
said.
More than 1,700 workers at the · also available in steel cans, botlles
Jackson County plant have been ~ff and kegs, which we will encourage
the public to buy as an alternative
the job since Nov. 1 when the Umted Steelworkers of America and
Coatiaued on page10

; DERBY DEMONSTRATION· Odella A. Siegfried, Admlnls·
tr"ative Assistant for the Melgi County Soapbox Derby Association
assisted associadon members with a derby demonstration recently
at Chesblre Kyger Scbool. Also pictured In a sample derby car Is
Brad Holflllan, son or Cindy and Perry Hoffman, Jr. Derby appli·
cations are available from the Middleport Recreall.on Departtnent,
and all Kmartlocadons.

Soap Box Derby forms may
be picked up on March 15
Beginning on March IS, boys coontry. Those forms will be availand girls interested in participating al!le at the customer service
in the 1991 may pick up registra- counter in each of the Kmart outtion materials at any one of the letS.
2,300 Kmart stores in the United
More than 150 youngsters, winStates.
ners on the local level, are expected
"We are extremely pleased to to compete in the Derby in Akron
have the support of Kmart in dis· on August I0. There wiD he a live
tributing regiSirlltibn materials for telecasi or the race day activities on
the derby program," said Jeff Lola. Public B(!!4111asting Service (PBS).
general manager of the All-AmeriThe Soap Box Derby is open to
can Soap Box Derby. "We now boys and girls between the ages of
have locations in cities around the nine and 16. Meigs County will
co)lntry where we can direct boys hold its first kit-car ~ box derby
and girls to obtain the registration on June 22 and 23 in Middleport.
forms."
Registration materials for the
·Each of the Kmart stores will local oothy are also available from
stoCk a supply of the official Derby Roger Williams at the Middleport
registration forms, which also list Recreation Department. All area
contaCt information about the 12 youngsters are encouraged to parre~onill Derby directors .ound the ticipate in the derby.

· WORK PRoGRESSING ON GENERAL DYNAMICS PLANT • ~ C1111nty olllclals received an apdlte oa work being dOne.at tilt
GeMral Dyumlea Land S;rstems DlvlsiOII raclllty In Apple Grove, W.Va. Mondly. Mason County C0111mlalon President Larry Sayre, Polat

Pleasant Ma,or RaueU HoOud, and Mason COIIDty KcoiiOIIIk Developmeat Authority Presidrnt Cbarles Lanham, (left to rJaht), are lbown
the ta11et ara tlte (acWty emp.=s will use, by Cllad Job-, project mauaer from tlte NelabborpU CollltnlCtlon Co. ol Hundngtoa. May
'1.7 hal beeDac~.feted • CODipl
elate, according to JoiiiiiOII. Muon County's newest roacf, wbkb ~ to tilt faclllty, bu beta olllc:lllly
named "Ge
o,.n-ICI Way." The flc:Dity, called tbe Malon 'lft:hnolotD Center, will be Died for researdt and development Ill potential
tletb othennal pn tedlaoiOIIY appllcatloas oa mala battle taalll and other military bardware. The local ofBdals were also KCOmpanled by
Development Autltorlty Director Frank Lee. (OVP photo
. by Mindy Keams.)
.

i

t

'

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