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'
POmeroy-Middleport, Oh~

Page-1 0-The Dally Sentinel

r----Local briefs----.
·.

·Middleport woman Cited in crash
A Middleport woman was cited in a one-car crash Monday at
5:24 p.m. in Salisbury ToWIIIhip on S.R. 124, just east of Jllilepost
• 16, according to the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Hi~hway Patrol.
Lisa D. POulin, 17, of 39125 Bradbury Rd. was cited for failure
to control and having expired license plates after her 1985 Dodge
Shelby went off the road.
Poulin, driving east, went off the right side and hit a culven
before turning the car around in the road and hiuing an embankment
off the left side of the road.

EMS responds to six calls
'Six calls for assistanCe were answered by'units of Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services on Monday and early Tuesda.Y.
At 8:41 a.!ll., Racine squad went to Bashan Road. Marilyn Morris was ~en to Holzer. At 10:58 a.m .• Pomeroy squad went to
Locust Street for Paul Bums, who was taken to Pleasant Valley
Hospita1. Al ):23 p.m ., Olive Township Fire Department went to
.• Kaylor Road for a brush fire 8l the Elm Kaylor residence. Coolville .
and Chesta' Fire Depanments were called to assist. At 5:25 p.m.,
Middlepon squad went to State·Route 124 for a car accident. Sianley Aleshire and Lisa Pullins refused treatmenL
At 1:36 a.m. on Tuesday, Pomeroy squad went to the Pomeroy
Police Department for Kim Shamlin, who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. At 7:27 a.m., Syracuse squad went to Forest
Run Road for Gelirgc Folmer, who was taken to Veterans.

-·· _.....__Area deaths~-Gbarles Bradbury

of the United Workers Association.
He is survived by six daughters,
Mrs. Rex (Bonnie) Cheadle,
Albany; Mrs. Roger (Doris) Speigle, Columbus; Mrs. Tom (Betty)
Kirby, Hamden; Mrs. Cliff (Mary)
Wells, Washington Coun House; .
Mona Birchfield, Dade City, Fla.;
and Mrs. Roger (Norma) Bevins,
Turkey Creel~;, Ky.; four sons, Preston (Roberta) Hamon, McAithur;
Gary (Carol) Hamon, Rutland;
Robert (Beverly)
Hamon,
Woodville; and Randy HamOn and
his fiancee, Jennifer Phipps,
Albany; 29 grandchildren, 19 great
grandchildren, three sisters, Anna
Parsons, Cross Lanes, W.Va.;
Nancy Nelson, WiUiams Mountain,
W.Va.; and Cuma Larcado, Sissonville, W.Va.
Besides his parents he was preceded in death by his wife of 48
years, Hazer·covey Hamon; four
sisters, Alma Kisor, Ona Page,
Ruth Zornes and Ina Hamon; five
brothers, Neverette, Van, Virgil,
Fred and William Hamon; and one
son-in~Iaw, Paul Birchfield.
Services will be Thursday at 1
p.m. at the Bigony Jordan Funeral
Home in Albany, with Rev.
Leonard McVey officiating. Burial
wiU be in the School Lot Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home after 2 p.m. on Wednesday.
Donations may be made to the
Athens Area Hospice, P.O. Box
873, Athens, Ohio.45701.

Announcements
Mystery Farm naer
Avice Bailey, Shade, was 1
recelll winner in.the Myaery F11111
Contest sponsored by the Meigs
Soil and Water Couerva&amp;ion District She correctly identified the
farm as that of Virgil King of
Kingsbury.
Bake sale
There will be a lllke Slle on Friday at Reed's Country Store in
Reedsville beginning at 10 a.m.
sponsored by the Easteril Women's

: Charles Asa PowcU Bradbury,
68 , Middleport, died Monday
morning, Man:h 11, 1991, at Holzer Medical Center.
· Born in Middleport on Sept 12,
1922, he was a son of the late Cecil
PoweU and Feme McNamee BradGen~Inglcal society
bury. He was a 1940· graduate of
The
Meigs CoiUity Genealogical
Middleport High School and he
Society
wiU meet Sunday at 2 p.m.
attended Ohio University. He was a
World War II Navy Air Corp Vetat the Meigs Museum.
eran and he tetirOO after. 32 years of
Smorpsbord
service as a chemist with the Ohio
There will be a S':'Wrgasbord
Valley Electric Plant. He was a
dimer at the Bashan Fue House on
past commander of the Feeney
Sunday from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Cost
Bennett Post No. 128 of the Ameriis $4.50 for adults and $2 for chilctm Legion and he was a former
dren under 12. The event is spanMiddleport ViDage Council Memsore«~ by the Ladies Awtiliary.
ber.
Mr. Bradbury is survived by his
Sorority to meet
wife. Jeanne Anne Young BradThe Preceptor Beta Beta ChaP.:·
bury; a daughter, Suzanne Wolfe,
ter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority will
Racine; a daughter and son-in-law,
meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the
Mary Elizabeth and Pat O'Brien,
Grace Episcopal Church.
P.omeroy; a son and daughter-inlaw, Asa and Janie Bradbury, CirDance
cleville; seven grandchildren.
There will be a round and
Wendy Ann Wolfe, Gahanna;
square dance on Friday at the TupTrisha and Megan Wolfe, Racine;
pers Plains 'WW building from 8Joy and Sean O'Brien, Pomeroy;
11 :30 p.m. Music will be provided
a.nd Nicole and )effrey Powell
by "Foggy Mountain Drifters" feaBradbury, Circleville; two aunts
turing Alvin Chutes on the fiddle.
aod several cousins.
Anhur
Conant will be the caller.
·. Services will be Wednesday at 1
Public
is
invited.
p.m. at Fisher Funeral Home in
Middlepon with Rev. Frank Smith
Grao•e to meet
offiCiating. Burial wiU be in Gravel
•
'fiill Cemetery in Cheshire.
Richard
G.
Abels
, ·The Rock S)lri!lgs Grange will
Friends may call today from 4 to
meet Friday at 7:30 p .m. at the
9 p.m. and until ,time ~ the service
Richard Glenn Abels, 70. of grange hall.
on Wednesday.
·
49780 Bald Knob Road in
StivcrsviUe died at home pn Mon. Spriog Smorgasbord
Noble Hamon
day, March 11, 1991 after an
There wiU be a spring smorgasNoble "Zeke" Hamon, 83, of extended iUness.
bord dinner on March 23 at 5 p.m.
Albany. died Monday, March 11,
He was born in Jackson County, at the Long Bottom Community
i991 at his residence.
W.Va., the son of the late Frank building . Menu includes ham,
· Born in Fletcher, W.Va., he was and Laura Richards Abels. He was · turkey and dressing, homemade
a son of the late John and Janc a retired construction worker. He noodles and more. Desserts and
Randolph Hamon. He was a retired served as a trustee for the Freedom drinks are included in the price, $5
coal miner for the Carbon Fuel Gospel Mission, was a U.S. Amry for adults and $2.50 children 12
(:!oal C.ompany and had been Veteran during World War II, and and under.
employed by the Austin Powde1 was a member of the the VFW and
Chili supper
~ompany. He was also a membet
the DAV.
.
The Lottridge Community CenHe is survived by his wife, Myr- 1er will host a cbili supper on Saltie Lee Parsons Abels, Stiversville; urday from 4-8 p.m. Cost is $3.75
two sisters. Elsie McCoUaugh, of for adults and $1.50 for children.
Parkersburg, W.Va. and Mrs . Publlc is invited.
,
~- • Continued from pqe 1
Frankie Potts, Merritt Island, ·Fla.;
Guest speaker
The Rejoicing Life Church in
until the lockout is reSolved," said four brothers, Charles Abels of
George Becker, the union's vice California, John Abels and Robert Middlepon will have special serjielident for administration.
Abels, both of Pennsylvania, and _vices Saturday at 7 p.m. and SunRay
Abels, Ravenswood, W.Va.
day at 10 a.m. with Wyau Brown
· -Becker said companies that use ·
He
was
preceded
in
death
by
a
of the Kenneth Hagin Crusades. He
Ravenswood Alummum products
sister,
Geraldine,
and
a
brother.
is also the former director of the
have been alerted about the diJpute
fnd the company's use or repieoe- BiUFuneral services will be held on Rhema Bible Center, Prayer and
menl workers.
Healing School, Tul1111, Okla. Pas;·' Among the companies cited by Wednesday at 2 p.m. at Straight- tor Michael Pan~·o invites the mlbTucker Funeral Home in
,-the' union were Anheuser-Busch,
Ravenswood. Burial will be in lie. Call992-6 9 for informabon.
Stroh Brewery Co., American
SmorJillllbord dinner ·
National Can, American Electric Ravenswood Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
The Wilkes Grange wiU have a
POwer, General MOMII'S COIJI., Ball
home today from 2 to 4 p.m.
smorgasbord on Saturday from 4-7
Metals, Ford Motor Co., Oeneral
:DYI1amics Corp. and Northrop.
Paul Skidmore
p.m. Cost is $5 for adults and S2
•• ,Union workers claimed they
Paul Skidmore, 77, of State for children under 12. Menu
:were locked out after their contract Route 160, Porter community, Vin- includes baked steak, fried chicken,
:With the company expired. The ton, died Monday, March 11. l99l homemade noodles and dressing,
-company. which claims the union iii Holzer Medical Center. He choice of several cooked vegetaowned and operated Skidmore Gro- bles, fruit salad, homemade pies
~ s on strike , is running the plant
:W)
th
salaried
staff
and
more
than
eery Store on Eastern Avenue in and cakes, iced tea and coffee. All
'
GaUipolis.
proceeds will be used for renova-](1) replacement workers.
· A judge last month ordered
Born Dec. 16, 1913 in Hurri- lion of the grange hall.
union pickets reduced at the plant cane, W.Va., he was a son of the
in response to company claims that late Otis 0. and Margaret Blaine
pickets had vandalized cars of plant Rowsey Skidmore.
personnel.
Veterau Memorial Hospital
He married Lucille Sprague on
Jim Bowen, director of the Nov. 17, 1935, and she survives
MONDAY ADMISSIONS union's District 23, said along with two sons, Pat Skidmore Charlotte Connoly, Portland; GloRavenswood "has turned the hills of Centenary and John Skidmore of ria Compson, Middleport; Herben
Of West Virginia and the communi- 'Cheshire; three grandchildren; Short, Chester; and Timothy
ty around it into a fortified police three brothers, Henry Skidmore of Triplett, Portland:
state with a private security force Evergreen, Herman (Bill) Skid·
MONDAY DISCHARGES 8nd barbed Wlrt."
more of Jacbon and Elmer Skid- ~!d~ _Houchens and Homer
Meanwhile, the union said it more of GaUipolis.
will accelerate its effort to resolve
He was preceded in death by
the dispute by talting a caravan of brothers Harland, Okey and Waranion members to Stamford. Conn .. ren Skidmore; and sisters Dolly
to seek · a meeting with and Gladys Skidmore and Marie Am Ele Power ..................... .28 3/4
Ashland Oil ............... ......... 32 518
Ravenswood's owners.
Foster.
AT&amp;T ...............~ .........................34
• Clarendon Ltd . and Stanwich
He was a member of Vinton Bob Evans ........ ~ ................... 18 7/8
Pa DICI'S Inc. owq a majority inter- Baptist Church, where funeral ser- Charming Shop.................... .14 5/8
&lt;st in Ravenswood, Becker said.
vices wiU be conducted 1 p.m. on City Holcling ...............................l5
- However, comJIIII7 spokeswom- Thursday, with the Rev. Marvin Federal
Moaui ...................... l6 3/8
an Debbie Bnger 11111d die union's SaUee and Rev. CJ. Lemley offiCiGoodyear
'f&amp;R .................... .23 3/4
effort to meet with die majority ating. Burial will be in Vinton
Key
CCilturiort
......................113/4
Or.-ners would be fruitless.
Memorial Park.
Lands' Bnd .........- ................20 118
. '•1 really don't ICC W. .l there is
Friends may call at McCoy- I...imitcd Inc...........................24- 3/4
to gain by it,• Boger said. "The Moore Funeral Home on WednesI Muld.rnedia Inc...........................73
people who have been 11 the nego- day, 6 to 9 p.m.
Rax Restlunml ......................29(32
iladng table for Ra~ood have
Robbins&amp;:Myers .................. .27 1!2
the Mllll power to
a conThe Gladsville Brld&amp;e in Sydney, Shoney's Inc......................... iS 1!2
. tract and agree to a settlement. AUJtralla, bas die looaat concrete Sw Binlt ..............................23 1/4
They continue to have the backing arch in the world, wltll a span of 1,000 Wendy lnt'l. .....................,.... 8 3/4
.or the owners of Ravenswood. •
feel.
Worthington Ind...................23 1/4
•'
• ''

I

$1 995

BOY\ &amp; GIRLS JOGGER-..

S6-$1Q-$12

SIMON'S PICK-A-PAIR

The CentraLine
Home Equity Loan
from Central Trust
REDUCED
CLOSING COSTS

••

By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News Stan

RECEIVES DONATION -Ted Reed, right,
President of Farmer's Bank in Pomeroy, pre·
sents $1,000 lo Middleport Mayor Fred Ho"·

man on Tuesday as a donatloD ·toward tbe local
share of the funds needed for the improvements
to be made at the levee on Walnut Street.

Bank donates Middleport
Village
.
.
:·$1,000 for levee Improvements
:

.

The total cost of the project is a need of $37,500 in local funds.
Ted Reed, President of Fanner's
Anyone wishing to donate to the
$112,500
which will include river
Bank in Pomeroy , presented 'a
project
may do so by contacting the
new
launch
bank
protection,
a
check for $1,000 to Middleport
ramp,
paving
in
the
area,
new
steps
mayor's
office in Middleport. A
Mayor Fred Hoffman as a donation
permanent
plaque wiU be erected at
and
landscaping
of
the
area.
toward the local share of the funds
the
levee
listing
all those individ!lOf
that
total,
$?5,000
is
being
needed for the improvements to be
-als
.•paid
by
grants:.from
the
Waterway;
.or
·
f
irms
who
bave donated
milia •1M le\lee on,W~
Safety Fund of the Ohio Depi!J1- $1;000 Or more to the projecL
in Middleport
ment of Natural Resources Ieavmg

Four hurt in two-c{lr mishap

'

Chester Road striking McKay's
vehicle. McKay's vehicle came to
rest on the guardrail at 1761
Chester ROad. Riffle then went off
the right side of the roadway at
1759 Chester Road. She traveled
on across the roadway and sll'UCk a
nouse at 1755 Chester Road.
McKay's vehicle sustained
heavy damaged to the underneath
of the car and was towed from the
scene. Riffle's vehicle sustained
heavy damage to the entire front
and passenger' side. It was also
towed from the scene.

E~uil y

.Group propose~ aid

. GREATRATF..S

Charges filed on gas theft incident

The inlercsl charges nn sccurt1t C'rnlmLim.•s ·

A Cen1roLine Revolving Line offers a wide
range of credit lines. all wilh incredibly
low rnle•.

may be lax dcductihlc. The IM law allows
for deduclion of snmc or all of lhc inlcrcsl
on lonm; secured hy n pcrsonnl rcsidcncc."'

It'.&lt;ensy to see why lhe CenlraLine Home Equity l.oan l• nm•·
an even hener way 10 bo!Tow. So acl now.
. f'j"''"" ,_ .... ,.,~.

CENTRAL TRlNf
,..

APNCBANK

-

-

Currently, the chamber has 82 paid
members. compared to 102 last
year.
.
Schaad also discussed a resolution passed by the chamber's executive board concerning the Clean
Air Act. That resolution suppons
dual legislation allowing for both
the scrubbing of the Gavin Plant
and the continued operation of ·
, Southern Ohio Coal Company
mines in Meigs County. The resO- 1
lution also urges the lobbying of
elected officials to promulgate an~
pass such legislation.
Schaad encouraged chamber ·
members to attend a meeting in
Athens concerning the Clean Air
Act which will be held in Athens
next Wednesday. That meeting is
expected to be attended by local
and state officials and representatives·of the United Mine Wort.ers,
the Public Utilities Commission of
Ohio and American Electric Power.
Projects in the chamber's immG·
diale future include the pursuit of
toll-free telephone service between
the 992 exchange and Mason ,
W.Va. According to Schaad. she
and Chamber Vice President Chuct.
Kitchen have uaveled to Columbus
to discuss this matter with PUCO
representatives
and plan a trip to
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR Charleston,
W.Va.
to discuss the
Ellzabetb Schaad, Executive maucr with West Virginia
officials.
Director or the Melas Cqunty
A
Leadership
Development
Cbamber ol CQmmeree, .,oke to
has been set ror April
the cba•ber about tbe accom· · Conferenc:c
10,
and
will
be
by the .
pllsbmenll oltbe dlamber 10 far cbamber and theco-sponsored
Ohio
Cooperative
tbls year at Tuesday's meeting or Extension Service. According to
tbe group at Overbrook Center. Schaad, the conference is aimed at
Schaad spoke of tbe chamber's "developing
team of economic
rundralslna aDd membership development apractitioners"
with a
drives, aDd the chamber's future goal of developing long-range
plans for the year ahead.
development plans for the area.

membership recruitment brochure,
and that brochure will be used in
April when the chamber observes
Membership Month in April.
According to Schaad, the chamber
has set a goal of 150 paid members.

Ravenswood Aluminum is running the plant with salaried staff
and more than 700 replacement
workers.
The union Monday sent members to Stamford, Conn., to seek a
meeting with Ravenswood Aluminum's majority owners, Claren·
don Ltd. and Stanwich Partners,
Inc.

.

But company President Don
said Tuesday he wants
to negotiate an agreement in Pitts·
bur¥,h.
·The union does not seem to
understand this fact and is seeking
other avenues to a new contract,"
Worlledge said ..He called the caravan to Connecticut "another Wlforrunate example of their unwillingness to recognize reality."
Worlledge and Vice President of
Labor Relations Earl Schick will
Worlled~te

continue the negotiations.
.
"Mr. Schick and I are working
with the suppon of our investors
and our board of directors, and we
have the fuU authority to negotiate
and execute an agreement," WorUedge said.
According to the Charleston
Gazette, USWA spokesman Joe
Chapman said ofWorlledge'scommen t, "What is reality? We've
done everything else we could to
try to get them to the bargaining
table."
The men who are panicipating
in the convoy made a stop Tuesday
in New York City. according to the
wife of one of the union members
participating. She said the men
handed out leaflets in the Rockefeller Center and on the subways: ·
She added that several leaflets were
handed out and the people were
responsive to the ma~.

Iraqi opposition pledges to
form government-in-exile

---Local briefs----.
TAX SAVINGS

A Munlmedla Inc, Newep~~per

McDowell hopes RAC officials
are sincere during n·egotiations

•

Loan 10 mcel y&lt;HJr specific needL. with
vuriohlc niles and ne•ible repayment plans.
1\nd you can use your CenlraLine to finan ce
nnylhing you need like college tuition, a
home improvement or eYen a new car.

Elizabeth Schaad, the Executive
Director of the Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce updated the
chamber on the activities for the
year to date when the group met in
regular session on Tuesday. The
luncheon meeting was held at
Overbrook Center in Middleport.
Schaad declared last weekend's
dinner and dance a success. The
chamber raised $1,280 on tickets
for the event, held at Royal Oak
Resort and a silent auction held in
conjunction with the dance. Schaad
thanked the committees involved
and those businesses donating auction items: King's Hardware. Ohio
River Bear Company, K &amp; C Jewelers, Anderson's, Fruth Pharmacy,
WMPO. Kenny Utt, CPA, Harris
Farms and Greenhouse, Clark's
Jewelry. SeatS, Big Wheel, Rutland
Furniture, Valley Lumber , and
Baum's True Value Hardware.
Both WMPO •s and lhc Ohio River
Bear Company's donations
received the top bids for the
evening.
According to Schaad, the
biggest accomplishment for the
year so far is the relocation of the
chamber office into the Carnegie
Building on East Second Street.
Schaad reported that the chamber
had purchased new' office furniture
and was in the Jl!11CCSS of installing
temporary parttlions for the building.
Schaad stated that 80 people
attended the chamber's open house
earlier this month.
· The imaging committee of the
chamber has completed a new

Riffle, McKay, and two passengers in McKay's car, Shirley
Friend, 30, Long Bottom, and
Matthew Friend, five months, Long
Bottom. were taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by emergency
squads of the Po!lleroy Fire Depanment. Everyone in McKay's car
was treated and released. Riffle is
still in the hospital undergoing
obsetvation.
Wire, and stair reporters
' Riffle was cited for no financial
Ravenswood Aluminum Corp.
re~ponsibility, no insurance, ieft of officials said they will meet .with
center and no seatbelt ·
·the United 'Steelworlcers of America.next Thursday in Pittsburgh to
try and end their 4-month-old labor
dispute.
"I hope the cOmJl!lll.)' comes to
the table in good filth, said Charlie McDowell , Local 5668
grievance chairman and member of
the negotiating team. "I hope they
are sincere."
AccordinB to McDoweU, the full
union negOilllting team wiU attend
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) - A more support fro!ll state govern- 40 co'sponsots for the proposal.
the meeting in Pittsburgh in hopes
· "Over the years we 1111 legisla- of reaching an agreement ·
bipartisan group of House and Sen- ment."
Currently there are 350 man- tors have tried to be cautious in
ate members Tuesday introduced
.More than 1,'700 workers at the
dates
to local governments in Ohio. passing unfunded mandates on to Jackson County plant have been off
legislation requiring lawmakers to
be aware of how much their man- Those include orders that local the local political subdivisions,"
the job since Nov . 1, when the
dates to local governments will governments must establish specif- said ReP,. Jim Davis, R-St Marys. union's contract expired. The union
cost and· vote on those issues sepa- ic programs and pay the costs and •'This bill wiU demonsuate our sin- says the workers are locked out; the
even such things as local govern- cerity in that endeavor."
rately.
Thirty-five other states have company says they're on strike..
"I've always known the impor- ments paying the costs of holding
tance of local governments having constitutional amendment elec- similar legislation.
"As our local governments
control over their own affliirs and lions, sponsors said.
with increasingly limited ·
Last
year,
several
General
struggle
now, as chairman of the Senate
State and Local Government and Assembly members introduced re!&gt;()urces and tight budgets, we in
Veterans' Affairs Commiuee, I 81J1 similar Ie~isiation, but this year's Columbus must attempt to be pan
faced with the many mandates state version tS softer. Last year's · of the solution rather than increasgovernment has handed down to required the state to pay the costs ing the problem," said Sen. Roben
·
.
local governments, " said Sen. of the mandates. This year's only Burch, 0-Dover.
requires lawmakers have adequate
Dick Schafrath, R-Loudonville.
BEIRUT, Lebanon (UPI) _
"I'm reintroducing this bill fiscal notes explaining the costs to
Iraqi
opposition groups banned in
beCause I recognize the tremendous local governments and vote on it
•
their homeland ended a three-day
burden we' ve placed on our small separately.
conference W~~Y on ousting
· House sponsors say they have
towns and believe they deserve
S~ H~tn ~1 !1' an ~ to
A Pomeroy woman suffered lraq1 Ioyaillll to }Om the II{IIUmg
minor injuries Tuesday when the and ,II, vow to form a translllonal
car she was drivinf struck an coalition g~v~enL
embankment off o Salisbury - The ma]ORty of 325 figures repTownship Road 165 in Meigs resenting 17 secular, Sunni
County.
·
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby repons that charges
Moslem and Shiite groups voted
Mary E. Roush, 41, of 32740 for the formation of a temporary
have been filed against Steve Brumf~eld and Johnny Little of MidTR 165, was taken .to Veterans government tbat would seek to topdlepon for their )Jilrt in the theft of gasoline at Newell's Station on
Memorial Hospital where she was pie Saddam's dictatorship in postFebruary 27. Brumfield gave a statement that he was driving the
treated for her injuries and later war Iraq, opposition officialuaid.
vehicle that was filled with gasoline and -driven off.
• 'The conference has dec:ided
released, a hospital spOkeswoman
The three subjects in the vehicle are to lippear in Meigs County
the direct mission that should be
said Wednesday.
Coun on peuy theft charges.
According to a report from the carried out by-our people to topple
Gallia-Meigs post of the State Saddam Hussein's dicworship rule
Highway Patrol, Roush was nonh- and form a temporary coalition
Meigs County Sheriff's deputies investigated an accident on
. bound when she apparently lost government that would liquidate
County Road 25 on Sunday momin;.
control of her vehicle and went off the lepeiUISsions of dictatorship,"
According to a news release dated Wednesday. Krystal Winethe left side of the roadway. said a swement issued 11 the ftnal
brenner, 27, Rocksprings Road in Pomeroy was westbound on
Herl986 Ford Escort then struck an session ,Of a three-day conference ·
County Road 25 in a 1988 Nissan when she went off the roadway,
embankment, causing moderate in Lebanon by the dissident groups.
The statement did not say
into the ditch and back out onto the roadway. Heavy damage was
damage to the vehicle.
whether
they have agreed to form a
Roush was cited for failure to
Colldllu•d 011 poge 5
government-in-exile
immediately,
control.
The Pomeroy Police Department investigated a two-car accident which occurred Tuesday at
9:26p.m . at. l761 Chester Road.
Four people suffered injuries.
The repon stated that Sandra
McKay, 37, Racine, was driving a
1979 Ford east toward Chester as
another vehicle, a 1978 Mercury
Coup, driven by Lona'Riffle, 25,
Pomeroy, was uaveling westbound
on Chester Road.
The accident occurred when
Riffle went left of center at 1761 ·

Woman hurt
in accident

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Wednesday, March 13, 1991

MEN'S DRESS LEATHER SHOf&lt;:

.

calls it
quits

Weather

Friday.
.
.
. involved in . getting a dialogue
By DENHOLM BARNETSON
Baker did apparently win a going, another 'participant, .Faisal
United Praslnteruatlolial
Sec(etary ~f State James Baker . vague agreement by the Israelis on Hosseini, said af'lerwards: "The
met individually with both sides of how peace should be pursued. For- PLO must be at the table. That is
the Israeli-Palestinian dispute eign .Ministry spokesman Avi how all the Palestinian people
Tuesday but, while he appeared Pazner·told reporters the Israelis, feel."
Word of what exactly was going
upbeat, there was no immediate like Baker, saw a "a new realizabreakthrough in the decades-old tion" emerging from the Gulf War on in Iraq was still sketchy .
slrU$gle following the end of the that the time might be right to try to Reports from Iran said Kurdish
try to move the process of peace rebels in northern Iraq were
PcrSIIII Gulf War.
"The storm is now over," ahead.
advancing on the oil city of Kirkuk
Baker had said his ftrsl round of were hauling government forces in
Baker said during a visit to an
immigrant boom town in northern talks in Jerusalem Monday left him a bid to capture it.'
Israel. ''Everywhere, people are "cautiously optimistic" of possible
Quoting Iraqi refugees who fled
trying to pick up their lives and movement toward peace in the. to Iran, the Iranian news agency
find hope for the future. The troubled region.
said Saddam's forces "resoned to
After the Palestinian meeting, extensive use of napalm bombs in a
nations of the Middle East are, I
think, very anxious to close the one of the!articipants, Hanan bid to quell the popular uprising"
book of war and open the book of Aahrawi sai Balcer asked them to in several pans of Iraq, but heavy
move ahead " .without the PLO, fighting continued.
peace."
·
As Iraqi opposition groups met perhaps wiih other (Arab) governIRN A quoted one refugee as·
for .the second straight day in ments," toward the stan of some saying Saddam 's Presidential
Beirut, Lebanon, to plan a way to kind of dialogue with the Israelis. Guard and other government forces
oust Saddam Hussein, violence and The United States suspended con- recaptQred pans of Basra Monday,
unrest were reported on the tact with the Palestine Liberation but the insurgents checked their
Organization last June.
increase inside Iraq.
advance in other parts of the port
But in a sign of problems city.
Troops loyal to Saddam used
napalm against rebels in the southem town of Basra, lind many peapie were killed when the troops
smashed homes with tink and
artillery ftre, Iran's offiCial Islamic
Republic News Agency reponed.
f:l (.
i I '
An early report that Saddam had
been wounded in the hand in an
I )
i)
assassination attempt apparently
was false.
·
Balcer met with Israeli Prime
Minister Yitzak Shamir and
Defense Minister Moshe Arens in a
second round of talks with top offi•
cials in Jerusalem. Then he met
with a group of Palestinians to
press his case for the stan of a diaIogue between the two groups.
There were, however, no immediate indications .of any break·
through toward the consensus
Baker has been trying to build
IN THE HEART OF POMEROY
since arriving in the Middle East
,.---------------------------------.,

neaoau:

Ohio Lottery

Palmer·

That would bring an additional S96
million in ssles taXes.
.
..., Another possibility is a similar
law for cigarette deslers for applying and canceling state cigareuetax stamps. That would bring an
additional $15 million to state coffers.
In addition, Voinovich is said to
be considering tapping the state's
"stabilization l'eserve fund" estab-'
lished in 1975 as an underwriting
association in response to a shonage of affordable malpractice insurance for physicians and hospitals.

Baker presses for peace .

Hospital news

Stocks

..

House Republicans propose
no new
taxes resolution
..

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) "I've seen this happen before
Ohio House Republicans ptoposed when we ~et down to June," Van
a resolution Monday thlll wound Vyven said. June 30 is when the
bind the General Aacmbly to not state's fiscal year ends.
Speculation around Capitol
raising taxes for the next twO yg-s.
"House Republicans believe · Square in Columbus is the gove~­
there is no eltCUIIC for feeding thin nor plans to lap race ttacks, a mediwallets to a bloated government," cal malpractice fund and repeal of
Softball~.
said Rep. Dale Van Vlven, R- laws allowmg busmesses to keep_a
Hamilton. "In support o the gov- slice of taX money they collect m_
Bake lillie
emor and everyone who feels their order to balance the budget. 1\
There will be a bake sale on Sat· pocketbook geailig liahler, we sub- spokesnian for the governor would
urday at the Tuppers Plains Gener- · mit this n!ll!&gt;lution.' •·-,
not conf11111 those.
al Store in Tuppers Plains beginRepublican Gov Geor~e
''I don't think we consider that
ning at 10 a.m. sponsored by the Voinovich has pledged 'not to nuse increasing the laX base,'' said Rep.
Eastern Women's Softball team.
taxes but hu left himself some Jo Ann Davidson, R-Reynoldsburg,
breathinll room by saying there adding the Republicans would supSoup 111pper
could be r.revenuc enhancemenls.' • pon such measures. .
There will be a soup supper on Dernomts conttol the lower cbamThis fisral year, lawmakers and
Saturday at 5 p.m. at the- Sutton ber of the Oenerll Aasembly while the governor hail. to slice more than
United Methodist Church. There Republicans control the Senaie.
$390 million from the budget in
wiU be two kinds of soup, pie, cofVan Vyven said in 38 Republi- order to keep it balanfed.
fee, rea and soda.
can House members are co-sponReports are that Voinovich
soring the resolution. Qne Demo- plans to ask lawmakers !0 repeal
Draft horse meeting
crat said she would also support it, 1975 and 1984 laws cutting ll!les
The Ohio Valley Draft Horse but Van Vyven said they were cur- on horse race tracks makmg
and Mule Association will meet rently Withholding her name so not . improvements. Estimates are the
Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at the to g1ve her problems with the state would receive an additional
home 9f Bob Harris.
majority party in lhc House.
$13 ,7 million over the two-year
The Republicans said .that after budget peri~ ~y repeal~g it.
.
Movies to be sbOWII
the budget is submllted by
The admmtstrabon 1s also S81d
"Golden Fish" and "Homer and Voinovich on Man:h 18, there will to be prepared to ask for repeal of
the Wacky Donut Machine" wiU be be pressure brought to bear upon law that allows state vendors to
shown Saturday at 2 p.m. at the lawmakers and the governor to maintain 1.5 percent of the &amp;axes
Meigs County Public Library in raise taxes to support particular they collect if the money is sent to
Pomeroy. All area children are programs.
the state on or before its due date.
invited to attend.

~Union ...

.

1\lesday, March 12, 1991

Accidents investigated .

~ut indic~ that cffons _remained

refrain from staying a puppet
exploited by the ruler as he wishes " the statement said
·
•
·
·

On Tuesd~Y: an Iraq• Em.ba~sy .. ·
spokesman ndtc~led the ongomg
conference by anu-Saddall_l grou~.
th: ~~:re~ebne~co~l:'h~lcs·g~c~ii~d .
Iraqi opposition have sought to get ..
Iraqi vtsas during their.presence in.
Beirut, but they requested to keep ·
their names anonymous '' the
k
'd
'
SPO esmanS81 ·

ORLANDO, Fla. (UPI)- Aller
a seven-weeil: decline, the nationwide average price of gasoline
increased 1.3 eenll in the 1aat week,
the American Automobile Allocialion said Tueaday.
AAA •s Fuel Gauge Report
shows th~ nationwide average price
of self- serve regular unleaded
gasoline is $1.093 per gaBon.
The Fuel Oauge Report, based
on a nationwide spot check of
gasoline stations, wss conducted
for AAA by Computer Petroleum
Corp. of St Paul, Mim.
.Prices were up in most regions

in the country, with the exception
of.Ne.w England and the Mid- ·
Atlanuc areas. .
.
11le nationwide average pnce or
5elf-~c resular leaded .gasoline' .
and m1d-grade unleaded gasolipe
each increased eight-tenths of a
cent, to $).075 and $1.181 per galIon. The average price of self-serve ·
premium unleaded rose one cent, to
$1.265. ·
Computer Petroleum Corf,.
monitors more than 50,000 dai y
wholesale and retail gasoline prices
throughfi&gt;ul the United States and
Canada.
•

mconclusn~e, observers Slid.
.
Oppos1bon forces IL1ked Ioyaltst
troops to brealc from Saddam.
"We appeal to our armed fm:es
to join the ranks of the rebels and ·

Gas prices
climb after
7 week .decline
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Wednesday, March 13, 1991

Commentary

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The Daily Sentinel

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Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, March 13,1991

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Texas seeking m~re NASA projects

111 Court Street
Pomeroy,

Ohio

DEVOTED TO THE INTEREsTs OF THE MEIGS.-MASON AREA

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,.....,__,._....-, r"'MI!!O!!!!c::loo=o .

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ROBERT l,.. WINGETT

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Publllher

General Manar;er ,

PAT WHITEHEAD
AMistant Publloher/Coalroller

A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers A~oclatlon.

.

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LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should
essthan300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be lgned with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personall·
ties.

WASHINGTON • Texas con·gressmen are on a scavenger hunt
for projects to bolster the Johnson ·
Space Center in Houston and are
scheming Ill snatch space agencies
from other states if that's what it
takes to bring jobs Ill Texas.
The lawmakers fear that the
National Aeronautics an~ Space
Administration will centralize the
space shuttle. program and other
NASA projects in Aorida and that
the Johnson Space Center will faD
by the wayside. In anticipation of
that, the Texilns are trying Ill. persuade NASA to move other pro- ·
jects Ill Houston.
In a tug-of-war with Oilier states
for precious jobs, the Texas law-·
makers will be a formidable foe,
especially with a nationwide recession compounding dte oil slump
Texas has been.in for years. ' .
· In a recent letter to NASA

House GOP upset with new
makeup of intelligence group ...-, .
By ROBERT sHEPARD

J

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Administralllr Richard Truly, 22
members ,of the Texas deleg~tion
urged him 10 move the Space Stalion Freedom headquarters from
ResiOn, Va., to Housron. The Texans told Truly that the move
"makes sense for the space station
and.for NA$Aas a whole."
But it doesn't make sense for
Virginia. Sens. Charles Robb, Dva .. and John warner, R·v a., are
fighting to keep the facility in
Reston, outside of Washington,
D.C. They have met with Truly 10
discuss· the issue, but they may be
out gunned by the Texans. The proposed move to Texas is gaining
momentum in NASA.
The Resllln facility is the bra.in
trust of the space staoon • a project
with a llltal annual budget of $2
billion. Parts of the space station
project are -scauered across the

nation and in three foreign countries, but Res100 is dte headquarters. Space Station Freedom, scheduled for launch in late 1995, is a
manned laborarory in the sky for
the srody of low-gravity sciences.
Moving the office to Texas
wbuld cost at least $26 million,
according 10 intemal NASA esti·
mates. But. the big cost would be
the inevitable delays. One highly
placed source in dte space station
project told our associate Jim
Lynch that the move could delay
the launching of the station by at
least a yeat and possibly two. At $2
billion a year, that's an expensive
wait.
·
· Sources told us that NASA
could also lose as m&amp;l)y as half of
its top space station engineers who
would refuse Ill move.
The move would lllso contradict
the recommendations of a string of

WASHINGTON (UPi) - House Republicans are not happy with the
new makeup of die House Intelligence Committee and are trying, in dif•
ferent ways, Ill brio~ pressure on the majority Democrats. One taclc for the
GOP is Ill raise the wue of secrecy.
· The squabble is unusual for dte Intelligence Committe, which normaUy
keeps a low profile. But the Jl!lllel has a new activist chainnan, Rep. Dave
McCurdy, D-Okla., along wtdl two new members. Reps. Ron De!lums,
0-Calif., and Pavid Bonior, D-Mich.- whose liberal credentials make •
the Republicans nervous.
The Republicans claim Ill be worried lhat national secrets may not be
safe with the committee.
DeUums has been a particular target because of his strong opposition to·
U.S. involvement in conflicu and intrigues overseas. DeUums is an ardent
anti-war spokesman, even OP.J?Osing the politically popular Persian Gulf
War, but he also is a responstble member of Congress.
. In fact. despite his anti-war stance, Dellums has served on dte House
Armed Services Commiuee for many years, even holding a subcommiuee
chainnanship.
·
But that did not deter Rep. Dan Bur10n, R-Ind., from protesting Del.lums' appoin~nt Ill the Intelligence Committee. During a speech to the
House, Bunon dredged up a decade.old comment by Dellurns 10 the effect
that the nation's intelligence agencies should be dismantled.
·. And then .Rep. Bud Shuster, R-Pa., came up with the idea of a secrecy
oath for aU members ofthe commiuee.
1
Shuster, the ranking Republican member of the committee, tried Ill
have die commiuee amend its rules Ill require that members 10 swear they
wjll not disclose any classified information. The move was defeated on a
9-6 party line vote, but Shuster is not giving up the'idea, and says he wiD
trY Ill get a vote in the fuU House.
.
· · Shuster figures, and he might be right, lhat House members would be
reluctant Ill vote against a proposal characterized as protecting national
sel:urity. But he dqes not make a terribly strong case for the secrecy oath.
·Shuster likes to point out that such an oath was taken by members of
the Second Continen!ll Congress who served on their equivalent of the
Inlelllpnce Conuniuee.
· · · · ... · .. ·.. ,., .
"•· ·
•But he slcips over lhe fact that for 2()()..plus years since that time, the
ccilgressional Intelligence committees have gotten along without requirink me111bers Ill take secrecy oaths.
•At a news conference ro·discuss the issue, Shuster spoke ominously of
a ease where u.s. intelligence information was compromised, with the
re$ult that intelligence agcnu or sources lost their lives. But under questioning from reporterS, Shuster made clear that the leak did not come from
th9 lnteUigence Committee. And he could offer no evidence dtat the panel
It is always a Jot easier to take its own destiny. When its army clouded by intrigue and hidden
hllfl ever compromised U.S. intelligence.
•The situation brings to mind dte old advice against trying 10 fix things somedting apart than it is Ill put it against army, there is a clear chain aUiances. Said another way, seldom
back together and so it is hi the · of command.
th~t are not broken.
do the players involved in such parMiddle
East. While we and our
•Shuster, however; argues dtat McCurdy supports a new policy of
The success or failure .of one lays ever lay all their cards on dte
allies most successfuUy dismanded side against lhe other is dictated by table. Seldom are they willing 10 be
rc~uiriqg witnesses, primarily from the administration, to be sworn in
wl)en they testify before the commjuee. He says the policy should apply the war machine of Saddarn Hus- the resources that the respective upfront with those with whom they
sein and removed him as a viable sides can bring Ill bear and by the are dealing.
al~ around and suggestS lhat executive branch offteials are no less uustthrel!l to his Arab neighbors, we decisions of those in command.
wOrthy than members of the committee.
Unlike war, where there are
•But it already is the practice in' some congressional committees to must yet reassemble the pieces that Ouuide the nonnal conventions of generally two sides, one against the
re~~lted from the breakup of Iraq's
. sWear in will)esseS, even when national security is not involved. ·
wat there are no constraints a5 .to other, multi-nation diplomatic
mthtary
Juggernaut and hope that how aggressively one can conduct negotiations tend to be each man or
:Probably lhe issue wiD quiedy slip away without further confrontations
belween the two parties. The Republicans may feel that just by raising the all the pieces Ill this very difficult or prosecute that war.
nation for itself. If !here are nine
· iSSJe they have accomplished something and that Democrats will be extra puzzle fiL
When one moves frorn the bat- nations involved you'll find nine
War by nature has clarity.
cautious tn dealing with national security matters.
.
tlefield to the diplomatic table, different agendas. Given-'these
are casualty counts. and damage however, clarity gives way to complexities, we as a people
•
reports that offer clear indication of obfuscation, a clear chain of com- should not be overly optimistic that
who is inflicting the most damage mand is replaced by back channels our convincing sutcess in the war
on whom.
of communication. Participanu in : in the Persian Gulf will result in
The U.S. led coalition emerged such peace parlays have a tendency. similar success at the negotiating
the Persian
the to hedge, Ill double spcalc, Ill treat table as we and our allies strive 10
r..._---------------------.. from
unequivocal
victor.Gulf
Howconflict
successful
diplomatic negotiations as a poker work out a new and lasting order
we will be in the aftennath in forg- game.
for peace and stability in lhat part
ing a lasting peace in the region
They keep their hands 10 them- of die world.
will be a lot more difficult 10 mea- selves. They become less forthTo the President's articulation
sure af\d to attain, however. In a coming. Their objectives become ,of these four goals that fonn the
war, each side preuy well controls
·
framework for meaningful peace in

Jack Anderson ·
and Dale Van Atta'
government commissions that said
the headquarters for the projecu
should not be alongSide one of its'
primary 111anufacturing facilities.
That is the reason that NASA
moved the space station headquarters from Houston to Reston in
!987. Now, only four years later,
aU signs point to cuu 81dte Resron
facility.
A NASA spokesman told us lhat
nolhing has been decided yet about
the move, and that it was unlikely·
all of the Reston functions would
go to Texas. ·
Fiscal wisdom should dictate
what happens to the space center
headquarters, but it appears more
likely that pork barrel politics will
make th!: decision.
·

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Will face Central Arkansas Thursday

Rio rips Tigers to advance in NAIA
Gary Harrison connected on a · offense which placed the Tigers
"As long as we let Camp42-foot three-point shot at the ahead by 12 (20-8) within the · bellsville get up and down the
buzzer Tuesday to comrlete the opening 10 minutes, thanks in part floor, they presented problems for
University of Rio Grande s 111-92 Ill some of the six three-point field us," Lawhorn commented. "I'd like
thrashing of District 32 champion goals by Campbellsville staner to think we were in better shape
Campbellsville (Ky.) in the first Shane Blevins, who led the Tigers than they were, and dtat' s where
round of the NAJA National Tour- overaU widt 23 points.
runniug up and down those hills for
n31J1ent at Kemper Arena in Kansas
Jeff Brown's dtree-poin"ter put conditioning came in."
City, Mo.
the Redrnen behind by one (27-26),
The Redmen connected on 43 of
lclarrison, who hit 33 points to followed by a Harrison basket Ill 77 81tefllpts on field goals for S5.8
lead all scorers, broke loose in die give Rio Grande its only other lead percent, including 10 of 24 from
second half to help erase the of t!te half. Employing a fast· the three-point range for 41.7 perTigers' halftime lead. The 6-0 paced, physical style, Lou Cun- cent. At dte free throw line, they
senior from Gallipolis also battled ningharn's Tigers again built a 12· were succesJful on 15 of 25
his Campbellsville counterpart, poiilllead (44-32) before·lhe Red- atteinpts for 60 percent and compoint guartl Jerry Butler, 10 key the men, benefiting (rom the insenion mitted 16 turnOvers.
·
defense 1l.i dte second half. Butler or freshman guard Jawanza Childs,
In addition Ill Blevins and Butwas c~ted with 22 p&lt;iinu for the went on a rwi to ~w ihc pp il! ler, Campbellsville drew 17 poinu
game. .
the final minutes of the oertod. from Staley and 15 from Greg
The won boosted Rio Grande's Center Rick Staley's two-pointer Floyd. Staley was responsible for
overall record 10 32-4 and pro- for Campbellsville at the buzzer 13 of the Tigers' 33 rebounds and
pelled the team into the second p\11 Rio Grande behind 55-48.
Butler posted five assisu.
round of tournament action against
The Redmen dten caught the
From the floor, ~pbellsville;
fifth,seeded Central Artansas (25· Tigers by dte \llil in the opening which bowed out at 19-12, was
5), which defeated, Olivet Nazarene moments of the second half, 44.7 percent (34-76), including 10
(Ill.) 75-66 late Tuesday. The Red· advllncing on a 9.() run Ill seize the of 25 attempts from the outside for
men will play Central Arkansas at' lead (56-55) on a Troy Donaldson 40 percent. The Tigers sank 14 of
10:45 a.m. Thursday CST (11:45 field goal.
20 tries from the foul line for 70
a.m. locally). Unseeded Olivet
The lead flip-flopped by a sin- percent and also suffered 16
Nazarene, which the Redmen beat gle point and tied twice (at 66 and turnovers.
89-73 during the regular season at 68) before Hamson hit two points
The win marked the third time
the Subaru Classic in Kankakee, · and a free lhrow with 10 mmutes -the Redmen have advanced beyond
Ill., was eliminated from the tour· left 10 launch ,a run wl)ich put the tile nationals· first round, the secriament at 22-13.
Redmen ahead by 16 before Harri- ond under L8whom. His 1985 team
: "CamJ;bellsville is an exception- son ended the game in high style defeated Berea (Ky.) 89-86 in the
al team and we feel very fortunate with his out-of-rown trifecta shot.
opener and lost 84-68 to West Vir- .
tb have won here," Redmen Coach
Harrison led six of his team- ginia Wesleyan in the second
J.ohn Lawhorn remarked. Lawhorn, mares in~h scoring, as Donald· roBouxndsc.'ore:
making his third trip in II seasons son reco
17 points, Brad Schu·
Ill the nationals, credited dte work bert netted 15, Mark Erslan brought
RIO GRANDE (11 i) ~ Jeff
of all five of his starters in advaqc· down 13, Lester Smith added 10 Brown, 0·2·5·11; Jawanza Childs,
ing the team into further play.
and Child&amp;, in his highest-scoring 5-0-10; Tim Christian, 1-0-2; Troy
; "When we get all five starters game of ihc season, also had 10. In Donaldson, 8-1-17; Mark Erslan, J.
involved, we're very hard Ill stop. addition, Donaldson snatched 12 of · 3-2-13; Gary Harrison, 10-2-7-33;
'that's the secret," he said.
Rio Grande's 48 rebounds and Brad Schubert, 3-3-0-15; Lester
; Despite posting a quick 3-0 lead Brown added 11. Brown and Harri- Smith, 5-0-10. TOTALS 33·10·
as the first half opened, Rio Grande son were each credited with six 15-111.
.
reeled under a swift CampbeUsviUe assists.
Continued on pqe 4

;:Be rry ,s W0 rId.

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"/ christen you NORMAN SCHWARZKOPF
SMITH."

WASHINGTON (NEA) • the ·most recent year for which
Although the international embargo complete records are available. The
against munitions shipments 10 Iraq value of iu purchases that year was
presumably will remain in place $4.6 billion.
tndefinitely, there unfortunately is
But others high on the list
no evidence of any odter signifi- include India with $3.2 billion,
cant chan~es in the global tral'lick- Saudi Arabia with $3 billion,
ing in military weaponry.
Afghanistan with $2.6 billion, Iran
If no lesson is learned from the with $2 billion, Israel with $1.9 bil·
recent war provoked by Iraqi Presi- lion, Cuba with $1.7 billion, Angodent Saddam Hussein, another la with $1.6 billion and Vietnam
. peuy despot elsewhere eventually with $1.51lillion.
will begin terrorizing a region by
Nations whose purchases totaled
rattling sabers purchased from die $700 million Ill $1.3 billion include
United States, the Soviet Union and Syria, Taiwan, Japan, North Korea,
other leading merch11nts in the Poland, West Gennany, Spain, East
world's arms bazaar.
Gennany, Algeria, Turkey, Egypt
"No single event has more ·and Ethiopia.
·
·
forcefully demonstrated the need
The world's leading arms
for a new system of'regional disar- exporters in 1988 were the Soviet
mament and arms transfer restric- Union with $21.4 billion wonh of
tions -than Iraq's invasion of sales, the United States with $14.3
Kuwait," says analyst William D. biUion, China with $3.1 billion and
Hartung, writing in the current France with $1.9 billion. Other
issue qf the World Policy Journal.
major suppliers ran~~ from Bul"The vast majority of nations garia and Brazil Ill
hoslovakia
that have joined the anti-~ coali· and Chile.
tion were significant supphers of
Many of the purchasers have
military technology to Saddam their ow.n political and military
Hussein's regime throughout dte agendas, however, that are entirely
1980s," he adds, noting that the unrelated to U.S.-Soviet tenslons.
recent military confrontation might Moreover, the sellers often have
not have occurred in the absence of other motives as well • as Hanung
profligate arms sales.
notes in describing this country's
Indeed, Iraq was by far ~he policies:
world's leading importer of
"President Bush's penchant for
weapons and munitions in 1988, employing foreign mihtary sales as

the region I would like to add an
observation of my own, that widtout a lot of give and take on every•
body's part, these goals will never
be attainable. ·
Not only do the n81ions of the
Middle East have to do a lot of
hatchet burying, but they ha.-e to
do a _lot.of bridge building as well.
~ike other regions of the world,
be tt Western Europe's involvement with NATO and the European
Community accords or the formation of a political and commercial
pa~t by the countries of Southeast
Asm, ASEAN (The Association of
South. East Asian Nations), the
countnes of the Middle East must
recognize that confrontation must
gtve way to cooperation, that distrust must turn to trust and that
only by working together in a .
meanmgful and constructive way
can they hope to realize 1n1e peace ·:
and prospenty for the1r region.

Robert Walters

a policy instrument was. first
revealed in the summer of 1989, of international security arrange- .
when he announced a multi-year ments, the Bush administration is
plan to send unprecedented levels likely to view victory in dtc war
of U.S. arms and advisors to against Iraq as an occasion to
Colombia, Bolivia and Peru as pail expand military sales to Israel , .
or his widely touted 'war on Egypt and other friendly countries :
drugs.'
·
,in the Middle East.
. "U.S. security assistance has
Indeed, already announced is a
long been used as a carrot to con- record-setting, two-stage $21 bil·
vince countries such as Greece, lion arms package to be sold to
Turkey and the Philippines 10 con- Saudi Arabia that will include
tinue hosting major U.S. bases.
S&lt;;Qres of F-15 fighters, hundreds of
"The Carter administration M· 1 tanks, dozens of Apache hcli·
~ -:ms for access Ill military . copters and multiple baueries of
facllutes m Kenya. Somalia and Patriot missiles.
·
' Oman as part of 1ts push 10 cstab·
That will enrich dte makers of
lish a Rapid Deployment Force" in those weapons systems • and furthe Middle EasL
ther destabilize the already insecure
Instead of seeking a new system region.

Today in history
· By United Press International
Today is Wednesday, March 13, the 72nd day of 1991 with 293 to follow.
The moon is waning, moving toward its new phase.
The mo~mg stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Sa111m.
The evemng star 1s Juptter.
~ose born_ on this date !lie under the sign of Pisces. They include
Enghsh chemts.t Joseph PJ:testly, dte discoverer of oxygen, in 1733;
asoonomer Perctval Lowell m 1855; publisher Walter Annenberg in 1908
(age_83); L. Ron Hu~ science fiction writer and founder of Scienrology, ~~ 1911: CIA J?II'CCIIlr W1U11D1 Casey and bandleader Sammy Kaye
both m 1913; and smger-songwriter Neil Seilaka in 1939 (age 52).
'
~

~

UPI Sports Writer

,.... _,

.

::&amp;

Let's re-examine global weapons ,t rade

:

' dueed iOme or the tournament's lack iize to 10 inside but their':
most exciting • - and lligea moti011 offenle creates three·point · ·
Dean Smidt, who luis taken 10 upests. The et.ht Jllllel were atlellpts. of which they make 4 ~
·
straight North Carolina teams to decided by 32 polnll illld Oily one. peu 11
the Sweet Sixteen, needi a Pinal Nonh Caroliu's 83-70 victory
over SW Miaouri SL, wa a dou·
Four ftx.
"We've been Ill the Final 16 1 ble-4ilit will.
The Daily Sentinel
Here's a quick lot* II tllale twO
lot, but we h1ven 't been in the
'
Finai .Four for a while. We really matchups in each Of the rqiOil' I
.t.81oll of-OIIIa,bc.
wiml that," Smith said Tuelday Ill Ibis year. ·
East
he prepared the Tar Heels for their
,......., ..wy olternoooi, Mondoy
No. I Prlaeets• "fli'St-round game against Northeast·
~ ~y. l11 c.&gt;urt St., Po·
_ , , Oldo. lty tile Ohto Valley J'ub.
No.tVI... a;a
em.
I.,.IJW ~/Multtml!lla, Inc., · ,
KrlowiiJ tilel'i twO IeiiiiS style
.,.,._.,., Olllottle. Pll.IIJ:I·ruf. lie- ,, •
The Tar Heels entet
)'efl''l
tournament as the lOp
In dte of slow, deliberate play, the fmal
· - ..,._ palcl at Pomeroy,
Olllo.
EISl. foUbwing a blowout of Duke score could be ia tho 40s. The
in the ACC roumament and expec- Tiler's best defender is guard
Member: Ualtld ~•IntemaHonaJ,
Inlaid Dally Preu AAoclatlon and tile
tations are typically high in Chapel George Leftwich, 'lllbo'll have to
otai•Newtflle::::etstkm.
NltiOAII '
HiD.
chase Or~oodard, the Bi&amp;
tallve, Branllam
· ''The players could enjoy the East's 11
tJuee.poillt shooler
-ea. T33 Third Avenue,
New Tort, Now Yortllll0l7.
Duke win Monday," Smith said. (44.2 percclll).
.
- l
"Not lllday in practice. We need to
No.SMI I IJ•ISC.ft.
I'Oiri'MAII'Eit: lcldrell . . , . _
te TH DIUy
Ill COurt St.,
get after iL"
No. 12
Mlciiii.Po a .,,ow-878.
,.
North Carolina opens the tour·
The Blllldop IR smllll up~
namcnt Fridiy in Syracuse, N.Y., which ·will make Mid-America•
.,_.!PilON R.t.TEB
against the 16th-seeded Huskies, Conference Player of the· Year, · ..
Olt w............... :...........................
champions or the North Atlantic Marcus Keanedy IOUih ror tllelllto
Olt-~ ..................................6.111
O . T - ................................. $13.211
Conference. Smith, havinJ been stop. Keaaedy is an excellent
.,
. sent home by lesser teams in the inside player llld the Hurons lint
-..acorv
·.
PIICI:
past, knows better than to loot 100 optioa on off-. Secolld optioa
lllllf ....·.-............................... ~ C.at&amp;
far ahead.
are the 'I'homM twins. Charlcl .-ct . I I , ................. .,.ythfCir·
''Nonheastern ,looks tremen- Carl, who combined fco 128 three·
- ~ I'IJIIIt ......... dlrtCt 10 .,
dous. They look vt:ty quick," llid pointers this )ar.
Tile
. ., .... ao a·l, lor 12 mtmlb
Smith, who'll be appearins In his
- · c;:rNlt Wilt bt liven carrier Noll
w• .
.
'.
No.IGtQeetowa,...
21st NCAA toumament. one more
than legendary Adolph Rupp.
No.9 VaaderiiDt
No
mall permitted to
anu .,..... carrier ..,..Ice 11
With
a runner-up finish in the
"They'll preaent match up probcvallallle.
lems, but oor size will be a jJoblem Big East Tounwnent last weelreAd,
for them. We're looking It it lite a the Hoyas are playilll their best
, _ ....
two-game tournament. We just ball of the season. Dikembe
hw.... ................................ .. $21.86
Jl Wool&lt;l .................................. $t3.1•
Mutombo and Alonzo MouminJ
want 10 advance 10 the next site.''
uw.,a.,.....li4iiii. ~ ... Sif.7e
If the Tar Heels can win their are a nightmare for any offetne and
u Weob ..................................l23.t0 '1
way Ill Indianapolis, Smidt would a GeorJetown win here sets up a
1650
break John Wooden's reconl of 4? second-round &amp;ame with UNL V.
•
uw..... ..................... ................
NCAA IOW1lliment wins. Smith lw Don't b1nk on iL The COIIIIIIOIIora
l
43.
.
''
"I hope we'll be as hunary as
''
last year," said Smith, referring to
Carolina's upset or No. 1 Oklahoma in the Midwest r~ional.
"We look very intense ri 1 now .
I'm yellin• a lot in practice.''
Awaiting North Carolina,
"should they advance, will be the
winner of the 8-9 game between
••
•
Princeton and Villanova. The
•
Wildcau and Tigers haven't played
since 1979 when the two were
annual opponents. But when PillS·
burgh joined the Big East, Villano•
va was forced to drop two games
•
r1uv""''ll yuu •ou JWI rltJtllllUUI• wnn rrriy, satety·
from their non-league JChedule llld
Princeron was one of them.
·
conscious propane wt'ice Is a Flfllllgu commitment .
In last year's tOurnament the
For 50 y.... wt'vt hlndlld lhtMfYdiY and emergency
opening-round , _ ~ die
needs of llmtliel-lillt youra.
8 and 9 aeedl lAd t1101e ' * • the Stlllad 12dundrd 11 sa JliOo
Ftrrlllgal .. . fit foltiiD lily • wtllllll'lfslhe
.
·
c:oldlst dl)' Ollht
tult ....., Mn ·
By TOM WI111ERS

..-----------a··

•

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j

&lt;••)

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BROWN GOES DOWN • Rio GrHIIt fer·
ward Jeff Brow•
1011 to tilt " " ' to
retrieve ball tlaat 111 IIWIIJ' " - IIIIa Wwe
Campllelllville'a Re_. Saltl (lift) cu 1'1 1
handle OD It. Redmea turd 0.., lhrrlll• (10)

NCAA action begins "Thursday ··

The toughest task remains___. . ·. ~=~7=l~r:__cl_are_n_ce
:;

There

!

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.

I M S'rfi.L aGar~T
WaR ar4D aLL, M
I HaVe To aPt-tiT,
1lliS was KiND oF FUH~

The Dtllly s.ntlnel ~-c~e

Pomeroy--Middleport, Ohio

l

-Ito-

I

-!MI.

•••n

.,._....... .....

..

MARAUDER G~LS • Tbe Meigs Maraud·
er girls buketball team natshed another suc·
cessful season under the direction or coacb
Roger Fos~. ~hired In tile front row from left
to right are, MISIY Nelson, Vema Compston and

Jennifer Taylor: Pictured In the second row
from left to right· Tricia Baer, Kelly Smith,
Kim Hanning and Mary Cremeans, Not pichired Is Kim Ewing. The girls finished the lei•
son witll a Ui-5.

--ill:""'-"'
............

CO.o~y

Reds defeat Phillies 5-l in spring play
CLEARWATER, Aa. (UPI)Terry Lee hit a two-run home run
and Glenn Braggs doubled in two
runs Tuesday Ill lead dte Cincinnati
Reds to a 5-1 victory over tl!e
Philadelphia Phillies.
The Reds scored four runs on
four consecutive hiu off loser Darrel Akerfelds to break a 1-1 dead·
lock in the sixth inning.
· Barry Larkin and Chris Sabq
each singled to begin the rally .
Braggs doubled inside the thirdbase, bag to score ~oth and came

home when Lee foUowed with his
fli'St home run of the sprinlj:.
Philadelphia outh1t Cmcinnati
12-9 but managed only one run in
the fifth inning. Wes Chamberlain
singled, stole second and seored
when Billy Hatcher lost Dale Murphy's fly ball in the sun. The ball
feU in for a double.
Phillies starter Terry Mulholland went four innings and gave up
an uneanied ·run on three hits and
struck out three. The Reds went
ahead loO in the fli'St when Mariano

Fordham meets South Florida
in NIT cage opener Thursday
By Uniled Press Intenatioaal
Fordham's 24-win season
wasn't rewarded widt a trip Ill the
NCAAs but with one to Florida.
The Rams, champions of the
Patriot League, lost Ill St. Francis
(Pa.) in the NCAA's first play-in
ga.nle and were overlooked by the
NCAA Tournament Selection
Comm'ittee for at-large berth.
Instead, they were asked to play in
the National Invitation Tournament.
But, for the first round at least,
not lit home.
The Rams will open their postseason with an opening round game·
Thursday against Soudt Florida in
Tamps.
Fordham ftnished the season 247, but weren't the only 20-wln
"bubble" ream 10 be left out of the
NCAAs. Ball SIBte, Fairleigh Dickinson, Siena, Soudtwest Missouri
SIBte and Fuiman each won 20 or
more lhis year llld are in the NIT.
The first three rounds of the

tournament will be' played at campus siteS beginning Weclnc:scqx and
the semifinals and final$ wtll be
eJayed at New York's Madison
~uare Gilden March 25 llld 1!1.
In Wodnelday's opening round
games,J1111es Madison is at Providence, BaD SIBte vi$ts Cincinnati,
Bowling Green is il't Wisconsin,
Michigan is • Colorado, Southern
Illinois is at Boise SIBte and Housllln plays at Stanford.
Thursday Games: Fairleigh
Dickinson at Siena, AlabamaBinningham at Memphis SL, Fotd·
ham at South Florida, Coppin State
·at Southwest MiSSOuri Stale, Tulsa
81 Olclahoma and Rice at Arkansas
Stale.
The fust round concludes Friday
with Furman at West Virginia, La
Salle at Massachusetts, George
W.uhington at Southern Carolina
and Bulter 81 Wyoming. .
Vanderbilt, playing in dte
NCAAs dtis year, was last year's
NIT champion.

Duncan smgled, went to second on
a singlt by Larkin and scored when
Dickie Thon booted Chris Saba's
ground ball for an error.
Chamberlain and Mickey
Morandini had three hit each for
.II'
h ~ u 1-4 10
· th
the Ph 1 1es, w 0 e 10
e
exhibition season. Larkin and Todd
Benzinger had two hiu each for the
Red 2 2
s, · ·

Sports briefs
Dog Sled
Four-time champion Susan
Butcher dashed up dte Bering Sea
coast to lead the lditarod sled dog
race. She is nearing the end of the
1,163- mile trek, only 229 miles
· from the finish in Nome, Alaska.
Figure Skatln1
· The Soviet duo of ;::a Usova
and Aleksandr Zhulin
the lead
in the dance contest when the
World Championshiput Munich,
Germany. began .with the compulsory pro~am. Defending champions Marma Klimova and SerJei
Ponomarenko of the Soviet Umon
were in second place, followed by
the French sister and brother combination of Isabelle and Paul Ouch·
csnay.

GOOD USID
WAS-S, DIYIIS,
REFRIGERATORS, TYs,
GAS &amp; EUC. UNGES

COUNTY
APPLIANCES

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For
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!

Cal Fenellgas

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holidays.

.

.

Clllllloulu IPII!JI CulliMir Ph1g1Mll:
24 Hour EIMflllllCY Se!vict .
• LMI Payment Plan • Fe_ntllgas Installation Review
I

We parlniH ,our Ulif.
lac;tion. And our txp.ri-

Pnce in

preparln~ compltte

and a&lt;euratP tax returns will

givP you peace of mind.

_. ,..

A. . .'aT•T.,;,._,..,..,,.
,.,..,
HOUIII: Mon. IIIN Fri. lent-1""
. .1.••,....""
111 I. MAIN IT.

POMIIIOY

. 112·1174

�sentinel

The

Wednesday, March 13, 1991

Palmer cal~s it quits after injury
·By Ullited Prt11 ..~1
· 1im Palmer now lalowa it's cui·
er 10 model underwear at qe 4S
than pilch in lhe ~ leagues.
Tbe Hall ofFECI'c:ded it quits
Tuesday, lifter lelmina: he 11811 tom
his riPI hlmllrilla 'ffbile pildlina
agaimllhe
Sox the day

whether I made the bellclub ot not.
It just seems like a sensible dec!·
sion to call it quits anc1 aet J:eldy 10
btnedcasl this year...
Palmer had been out or the
pme Iince 1984 and was eaempt·
1n1 to become tbe first Hall of·
Farner to resume a ihajor-leape
bcfore. .
career. He was inducted into the
.
"My lea decided it for nie," HaD ofF-in 1990.
Palmer WOI'Itecl out since mid·
said Palmer, who allowed rwo nw·
an~ five hits in two innjna• of December UDder Lazaro Cqllazo, a
MO!IdaY's exhibilioa at Bllllenlllll, piiiChinJ COICII fot lbe Uni~ty of
Fla "I was ill J:eldy to 10 IIIII play Miami, and SfCnt 17 days in the
this out for the whole month Orioles trainma camp. Collazo

.,_,..hi

-------.Area deaths-- -Local briefs~' .. _.,;c;,;,;"'""""=tl~tro;;;;"':.:;;fiG;:;.rr,;,I------------~~'{
Marie Bea:ver

alleled Pllimer' s throwing motioo,

n:vamjJinJ the windup, loweriq
his lea tick and Ienathen ina bis
siride,
"'!'hue - tip! 1 then. lin·
dinilis ot wlwcver, bul yeaeaday 1
just felt a pop," llid Pilmc:lr, who
will now n:sume his 1IMw" asling
llld mocWina CRer. "I don't want
it 10 sound u an excuse bec:aUJe
when you're facina the Red Sox
you don't know if you're lbrowina
good or bad because they bavo
such a aood hillint hellclub.
•

••

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ATTEMPI'S STEAL • IUo Grallde'a Brad
Scbubert (24) IUelllpll to steal baD from Camp·
bellsvllle'•. Remont Smltb (lO) dariDJ Tlltlday
monlaa'• NAJA udoaal llasltetbill tourll8•

Rio rips Tigers ...

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SEVENTH GRADE CHEERLEADERS •
Seveatb arade' eHerlellden fer Melp J•lor
HJ&amp;b Sdlool '- . left. riPt, front I'O'If • Alllbef

.

Bennett and Heatler ~...t. Seaild.row, ten.
rJabt, Teresa SlmpiOillllllNIItkl Bentley. . .

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Cosby again na~edDivision
I!I girls 'Player of the Year'
By GENE CADDES
· UPJ Sports Writer
COLUMBUS- Tara Cosby,
whO overcame early seuon hcallh
pro~lems to lead Sprinafield Ken·
ton .Ridae 10 the state 10umament
semifinals, has been voted the
United Press International girls
Division IU playa of .the year fot
the second c:onaeculivo year.

Cosby, a 6. foot· 3· senior is . plar.ed spl!ingly in several others
joined on the All.Ohio fllSt i.e'arn while the Cougars split their first
by Kristina Dupps of Heath, Mar· eight pmes, then won 16 of their
tene Stollinas of Beaver Eastern, last 18.
Cosby averaged 22 points ll&lt;lr ·
Lori Neus ol Bellbrook and Melin·
game
the past season after sconng
da ~rers. of Bloomdale Ehnwood.
· When she became heilthy, we at a 27 per same clip as a jpnicr,
,became heilthy," Kenton Ridae due both 10 her slow start and a
eOICb ·Ed Foulk said of bis atar cen· change in her game.
"She.mai,W'ed this year as a bas·
ter. who missed one game and
lcetblll ~layer and a penon;" said
Foulk. 'She is very much more
team oriented this year. last year,
if she touChed it, she shot it This
she passes, sometimes too
Lisa Marsh, Lorain Catholic:; Sban· year'h..
'
mpc
.
non Miller, caldwell; Holly Poner,
COsby hu averaged 20 t'Oints
Wyoming; Denise Pickenpailgh,
and
12 rebounds per pme ~n her
Heath; lenny Rauh, Coldwater;
four·
year career and needs some
Katrina•Stout, North Adams; Angie
40
points
in the state tournament to
Shardo, Versailles; Dawn Sayre,
hit
the
~.000
points JUt.
R.lell•oad Dale Soutbeastern;
"If
we
can
make .it two more
Jenny Smith, Avon; April Smith,
aames,
she
miaht
mate 2,000,"
Sarabsvllle Shenanclaah.
saidFoulk.
.
Player-of-tile· yearCosby
is
"favoring
Gecqia" as
Tara Cosby, Sprlqfleld KeaiOD
far
as
colleae
is
concerned,
but
Rldae.
there
is
still
some
unfinished
'Coacb·of·tlae·yearscholastic work 10 be done before
Cbrlel Maier, Collhrater.
.
he can sign with the Lady Bullooas
or any other Division I scbool.
Boys tourney SCores
"This year, when we'd go to a
game and sbe'd have her books
Hlp SdiiJ ai Dilb Itt To.rumea1 with her," said Foulk. "I'd never
R II
seen her do that before."
lyll •t 'tn.t f "lfiDUI
Dupps, a third ·team selection a
year 180, IYelllled 19,8 t10ints per
T r ' ;, Madi .U
game this aeason in leading Heath
to a 20-0 regular seuon anda berth
DIVIIlON I
in the state IOUniiiDlCIII semifinils
Ateaat.
Thursday evening agalDst Cosby's
Wrn Hanlinc 72. l.oW! S'View62 ~ton Ricl&amp;e team.
, At Alina
B.tlatou 100, Shaker Ha 7S
At Col. .lllls
Llmculer 62, Sandusky 55
C~UMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Picltcrington 43 Newark 37
~ve Butcher, who piclcd Picker·
Dlvillel D
'
mgton to an unbeaten 20-0 regular
At Younptown
• 'Wster TriWIIy 67, Ashtab Edpood season, has been voted the UPI
girts Division I coach Of the year
66
.
for the third consecutive year.
· Clnftcld 76;Cte Benedictine 59
Butcher, who will be sunning
- At Toledo
·
·
for his third Slate title in the last six
Avon Lake 74, J&gt;errysburg ~
years, was a runaway winner
Lexinaton 79, COpley 70 ·
receivina 16 of 31 votes cast by
At FalriNn
Division I coaches trom .-ound the
CinGreenbillsSO,CinBacon48

Sports scoreboard
'

Division ID Girls
An. ..Ohio UPI n.m

COLUMBUS, Obi~ (UPI) -

. Thll~ 1991.Uruted Pres~ Intemation·

a1 Division m Jir1s All· Ohio bll·
ket'-11 telm, with heiJbt, School
veal and scoring avmp:

mtsTTEAM '
Tara CGiby, Spri11Jftel4 Kenton
Ridle. 6-3, Senior, 22.2.
Kristina Dupp1, Heath, S·ll,

Senior, I9.S.
,
Mrtillda Mytn, Ehnwood, S-9.
Seaa, J9•7•
Lori Neus, Bellbrook, 5·6,
Jllllior' 212.

Marl.c se Stelll•p, Jtanr
F 1 a, S.JI.
35~
SECOND TE.uf
,
Jcaaifer Briper, Bloom-Carran; s.3, Senior, 24.7.
Michelle Drury, Huron, S..fi,
Senior, 19.0.
Vicki Mahl. Collins Western
Reserve,6-l, Senill', 20.4.
Amy Siefring, Coldwller, 5· 7,
Juft;ior, 16.4.
Amy Thompson, Belmont
UniOn Ulcal, 5·7. Senior, 19.S.
TIURD TEAM
Heather Abbot, Grandview, 5·9,
Junill', 15.7.
Julie Palrclalld, Rlcllmoad
Dale Soutbeaateta, 5·9, Se•Jor,
11.0.
·
·,
· Sissy Jackson, Wellsville, S-1 I,
Senior. 22.0.
Latasha -Jefferson, Brookfield,
S-8, Senior, 15.2.
Amy Sander, Genoa, S·9,

.......-.n.

=.!itnmmoN

..,.

Butcher top coach
in 2irls Division I

~Y Cham-Iut78, Col Hamttn rwp

State.

Janet Tribble of Cleveland
Hei~hts, 1ay Ferguson of Lorain
Myra Beardsley, Columbus At Atbet111
Sentor and Mike Galla~her of
Reail~iltki !lre&amp;~ Kinsman Bad· Pcrumouth 77, Fairland 68
tied for second w1th four
aer&lt;• YCoie, ~sbon Andenon; Col Briggs 65, Dresden Tri Val63 WOOSier
votes
each.
Tnld Cuteel, Indian Valley; Susan
·
Others receiving mention were
· C•*'a, Collins Western Reserve;·
Tina
May of Mount Healthy,
Chriltina Clute, Vienna Matthews;
Gretchen
Taylor of Cleveland
Jerilyn CUibi1J8, Huntington; Holly
Glenville
and
Tom Jones of Cuya·
Ecken, Galion Northmor; Kacoe
hop
Falls.
.
,
.
English, SHerwood Fairview;"
Mepn Exline, (bapin Falls; TereH
sa Evans, Sprin~field Kenton
Ridae; Carmen Ellis, Ottawa..QJan.
..•
dorl; Lisa First, Doylestown
Chippewa; Lorie Gatten, Belmilnt
Union Local; Kelly Henson, Grand
•
Valley;. Dorie Johnson, Cadiz;
Karla Kaelber, Marion Pleasant;
Lori Montaomery, But Palestine;

Spr.ing Time

The Dally sentlnei-Page-5 ··~

Pomeroy-Middleport, OhiO

CAMPBELLSVILLE (!12) Silane Blevins, 1-6-3·23; Jerry But·
ler, 7·l·S,22; Grea Floyd, 3·3·0·
IS; Benji ~elly, 3-0·6 ~ Ramont
Smith, 2·3·7; .Rick Stiley, 8•1· 17;
Sammy Watene, 0·2·2. TOTALS
24-10.14-!IZ.
·,
Ha.lftlme _seore - Camp·
beltsville 55, RIO Grande 48.
By Ullited Preu ..teniatlonal
Top-seeded Wisconain-Eau
Claire had no trouble In the open·
ina round of the 1991 NAIA
national basketball tournament
Tuesday but the same could not be
said fot No. 2 Oklahoma City.
Wisconsin-Eau Claire, 28·2,
cruised to a 78-49 win over Maine·
Machias, but Oltlahoma City, 3()..3,
needed a clutch performance by
Mark Chambers to·hold otT Con·
cordia (Neb.) 8().77,
Hilling 10 of 12 shotS from the
field, Chambers scored 27 points
includina 7 of the Chiefs' final 9
points. Concordia got within a
point four times in the final 3 1/2
minutes but each time Chambers
scored to hold otT the Bulldogs.
Devin Smith had 22 points and
John Puetz 21 for Concordia, 23·
11, which had 10 3-point soils but
,

· mtllt piJ!t In Kemper Arena, Kallllis Clly, Mo. ·
Til!! Redmen nJIIed from a 12-point deticlt to
win lll·!IZ. (UPI)

seconds.
Eric Manuel added 21 points
and lS rebounds for Oklahoma
City, which won its 12th in a row;
"I !bought our defense was out·
standing for the most par\," said
Oklahoma City Coach Darrel John·
son. "Concordia just hit some
touJb sbots. l'm glad we've got our
first-game jitten out of the way."
Wisconsin-Eau Claire, which
has been ranked No. 1 the entire
season, scored 15 straight points
early in lbe fnt half 10 open a 2S·9
lead. Reserve Matt Benedict scored
11 of his 14 points in the. decisive
run, in~luding three 3-pointers.
Mike Johnson had 17 pointsand·ll
rebounds as the Blugolcls shot 53.7
·percent in winning their lith in a
row.
.
"The key was F,etting the ball
inside to Johnson, ' said Wiscon·
sin· Eau Claire Ccach Ken Ander·
son. "That's when we were able to
get our rhythm on offense. The flfSI
galliC down here is justlilce playing
the first game of the season, no
matter how many veterans you
have on your ball club."
Todd Middleton had 16 points
for Maine-Machias, 22-S, which
~ails.
shot only 31 percent aild missed all
1;
13 of its 3-pomt attempts.
·
In other fnt-round games, Cen·
tral Arkansas stopped Olivet
·
· · ·
. Nazarene (Ill.) 75·66, Pfeiffer
(N.C.) outshot SL Vincent (Pa.) 92·
82, Northern Slate (S.D.) took out
Georgia Southwestern 92-82, Tay·
After a scoreless three innings in lor (Ind.) stfled Francis Marion 68·
less than ideal weather conditions 47, Rio Grande outran CamP·
Tuesday, Marshall University bellsville 111·92 and Briar Cliff
exploited the University of Rio ·slOpped Park College 72.f/J.
·No. 5 Central Arkansas 75
Grande baseball team's two etron
Olivet Nazilre11e (IlL) 66
to jump out 10 a 17·.5 victory over
1oe
Sitltowski_scored a career
the Redmen at Stanley.L, Evans
high
22
points as Centtal Arkansas,
Field.
26·
4,
held off a late Olivet
The Thundering Herd, led by
Nazarene
comeback. Trailing 51·
infielder George Kayes' three for
37
midway
througb the second
five performance oo hitting, (lOlled
half,
Olivet
Nazarene
got within 6
IS runs and did not commn any
points
four
times
but
never
closer.
errors, while Rio Grande was cred· .
ited with seven hits.
·
The game, originally set for
today, was moved back a day in
anticipation of rain.
"Marshall really didn't do all
that much on hitting, it's just our
pitching wasn't under control,"
Redmen Coach Dave Oglesby
noted as his team went to S·6 on
the season. "We will have to do
better against good teams, or it's
going to be a loog season."
Outftelder Jason Wrijht (~o­
more, Carroll) topped the Rio
Grande hitting chan by going two
for five, while co-captains Darrell
Marcum (senior, Hamilton) and
Bob Young (senior, Utica) were
each one for three.
Pitcher Steve Benneu was cred·
ited with the win for Marshall,
while Chad Carroll (sophomore,
Chillicothe), who went 10 1·1 , was
on the mound for Rio Grande.
Tbe Redmen are idle until Sun·
day at 1 p.m., when they meet Marshall again in a doubleheader to be
playc:&lt;~ at St. Cloud Commons in
Hunungtol!. •
.

17-5
Rl·o
•
• •
"I
10 9•lnDtng ll t
with Marshall

a

.

· !iS'ed to her v~cle. Sbe was cited 10 Meigs County Coun for driv-

Mike Carr had 24 ooints to lead
Olivet Nazarene, who shot only 30
percent in finishing 22-13.
No. 6 Preilfer (N.C.) 92
St. Vineent (Pa.) 8Z
Tony Smith scored 40 points, :;
including ' 18 in lhe o{leni{lg 8 l/2
minutes of the second half, lifting
Pfeiffer, 27·3, to an easy victory.
Smith, who averaged Z!i 7 points a
game this season, had 7 potnts and
Rodney Wilson 8 through lhe mid·
die pan of the fU"St half that gave
the Falcoos coniiDI and then posted
his 18·point spree that put Pfeiffer
up 72-45 with 11:31 to play. St.
Vincent ended the season 20·7.
Nortbern State (S.D.) 80
No.8 Georgia Soutbwestern 67 · .
Scott Pieper sco!OO 10 of his 12 -:
points over a 5:40 span of the sec.
ond half, leading Northern Stale,
26-7, to lhe first upset of the lOur.
nament. But Pieper, a reserve cen·
ter, s~d his string with a turnaround jumper from the. lane that ·'
cost Georgia Southwestern its last
lead of the pme. The Hurricanes
slipped to 27-fi after seeing a nine·
game winning strealt snapped.
No. 9 Taylor (Ind.) 68
Francis Marion (S.C.) 47
Dale Miller staned and ended a
Taylor run with 3·point shots in
guidin~ th.e Trojans, 32·3, 10 .their
24th victory in 25 games.·The Tro·
jans led 19·18 with 7:40 remaining
in the first half before Miller
knocked down a 3-point shot from
the top of the key to set off a 21·5
run that ended with another Miller
3-pomter.
.
No. 14 Briar Cliff (Iowa) 7Z
Park CoUege (Mo.) 60
'.
An 18-point, !!·rebound perfor·
mance by Amado Martinez sparked
Briar Cliff, 27·5, to a fifth suaight · •,
win. The Chargers built a 28-25
first half lead into a 40-25 bul~e •,.
early in the second half and Park ..
never got closer than nine the rest ,,
of the way. Jol)nny Davis scored 16 ~:.
points for Park, Zf1..7, which man· ::
aged only four of 25 3·point shots. :,·

EMS responds to seven calls

mg under the influence.
On Monday, deputies IOOit a hil/sltip accident ~ Jeff Hanis
. of Ponland reported that somelime between 7 p.m. on Sundav and 8
a.m. on Monday, an unknown vehicle struck Harris Farm rs 1988
Plymouth "!~'~· damaging the left front fender.
'f!le accident occurred on private Jlloptlty at the Harris Farms
parking lot.

Seven cills for assistance were answered by units of Meigs ·
County Emergency Medical Services on Tuesday.
·
At9:S4 a.m., Pomeroy sqUid went 10 State Route 681 for Wilbur
Robinson, who was taken to Veleralls Memorial Hospitil. At 9:58
a.m., Middleport sqUid wen110 Leading Creek Road for John Lam· ·
ben. He was lnlJJsponed 10 Veterans. At 10:43 a.m.• Syracuse squad
to Americare for Herb Roush, who was laken to Veterans.
At 12:25 p.m.• Middlepon squad went to South Second for
Homer Moodispaugh. He was lnlJJsported to Holzer Medical Center.
At 3:35 p.m., Pomeroy fire departi!Jenl went to R~kspri ngs and
Slat~; Roure 33 for a brush fire. At 8:56p.m., Middleport squad went
to BrQwnell Avenue for James Priddy, who was treated but not
Iran~. At 9:.26 p.m., Pomeroy units went to Chester Road for a
car acctdent, and tralisported Mary Cheatham .• Matthew Fran and
Chesley Fnui to Veterans.
·
.

Gallia school board member indicted
A Gallia County Local school board member was indicted Tues. day on charges of unlawful inten:st in a public conll'8Ct.
, !'- ~ial session of the Galli&amp; County grand jury indicted J.E.
Dtek CJemeens on two seplllllte counts. The charges are mted as
fourth .depee felonies, Cllfl)'lna with them a possible jail sentence
of 18 1110nths and a $2.500 fine for each count ·
. Special prosec~tor John.Lentes, of Pomeroy, presented inform&amp;.·
non to the grand Jury t;elanng Cremeens' proposil of a motion at a
school board meetmg m January 1990 to re-employ his soo, Larry
Cremeens.
•
Larry Cremeens was fii'Cd March 27, 1989 from his position as
cadet l'rl:nclpal at Hannan T~ Elementary and tcacber at Hannan
Trace High School for "amss tmmomlity and other good and .just
causes" after an arbiuator found he had improperly touched and
made suggestinns to female students and staff members at tiTHS.
Dicit Cremeens cast the deciding vote on the board to reinstate
his son 10 .the two positions on Jan. 22, 1990, and tO negotiate a set·
·tlement wtth Larry Cremeens that would have given him back pay
lost benefits, and paid for attol1!Cys fees.
'
Cremeens was scheduled to be arraigned in the Gallia County
Court of Common Pleas at 11:30 a.m.Wednesday, .
·

.

·• Meigs announcements

DANCE FOR ·JOY

AEROBIC DANCE CLASS BEGINS
10 WEEK SPRING SESSION MAR. 18

Dues to be paid

AT CARLETON SCHOOL, SY8ACUSE

I 'r

r•

Youth League to meet

Richard B. Dunfee, 65, McGill Benjamin Hutchens
Road, Guysville, died Tuesday,
Benjamin D. Hutchens, ·o r
March 12, 1991, at his residence 196SS Laffeyette in Guysville, died
after an extended illness.
Tuesday , March 12, 1991 at
Born in Guysville, he was the O'Bienness Memorial Hospital.
son of the late Silas Dunfee and
He was born' on August 24 ,
Mable Bean Dunfee Misner. He 10913 jn Boament, Ohio, the son of
was a former ef~~plbyee of the B&amp;O the late Charles and Zora .Gauld
Railroad.
,
Hutchens. He was a retired
Mr. Dunfee is survived by two employee of Ohio University and a
sisters, Pearl Donahue, Guysville, member of the Athens VFW and
with whom he resided; and Janice Athens DAV.
Boyer, Guysville; one brother, Paul
He is survived by a son, Daniel
A marriage license baS been granted in Meigs County Probaie
Dunfee, Guysville; and 13 nieces (Sally) Hutebens, Centerville; three
Court.to
James Lowell Chadwell, 41, Long Bottom, saainst Cynthia
· lll)d nephews. ·
daughters, Mrs. Kenneth (Shirley)
Sue
Pitzer,
29, Reedsville; and to Paris Rufford Hess, 35, Pomeroy,
Besides his parents he was P.re· VanCiever, Lebanon, Ohio, Mrs.
to.Betty
Hatfield,
36, Delbarton, W.Va.
ceded in death by a nephew, Phillip William "Willie" (Sharon) Schill,
Joe Boyer,
Guysville, and Shelby Hutchens,
Services will be held Friday at Guysville; a brother, Clarence; and
11 a.m. 11 the White-Blower Funer· a stster, Mrs. Dan (Nola) Pearcy,
· al Hpme ih Coolville with Rev. · Guysville.
Revival ·
Ban sign-up
Besides his parents, he was pre·
Hel.en Coe Walker offici11ting.
· The Rutland Freewill Baptist
Sign up for the Syracuse Sum·
Burial will he in Wyers Cemetery ceded in death by his wife, Beulah
in Guys\(,ille. ·
· Chrisy Hutc~ens, who died . in ·Church will have. revival Tuesday mer Ball Team wiU be held Thurs·
through March 23 with Robert day frol!l S·7 p.m.; Saturday froin
Friends may call at the funeral 1976; one sister and four brothers.
home on Thursday from 7 10 9 p.m.
Funeral services will be held on Stewart preaching. Paul Taylor, 10 a.m. to noon and Mim:h 19 from
5·1 p.m. at the Syracuse Elemen·
In lieu of flowers donations may Friday at I p.m. at White-Blower pastor, invites the public.
tary School. Binh cenificate copies
be made 10 the Athens County Hos· Funeral Home in Coolville with
•
Masoos
to
meet
must be provided
pice for Cancer Research.
Dave Cogar officiating. Burial will
The
Middlepon
Masonic
Lodge
SiDilinl
.
be in Bean Cemetery in Guysville.
No.
363
F
and
AM
will
meet
Sun·
The
Faith
Gosfel
Church
in
Friends may call at the funeral day at 2 p.m. for practice work in
George W. Folmer, Sr.
Lon~
Bottom
wit
have
special
home from 7 10 9 p.m. on Thurs· the master mason degree. The
singmg and preachina with the
day.
group will also meet Marth 24 at 2 Dailey Family on Friday at '7 p.m.
George W. Folmer Sr., 79, For·
est Run Road, Pomeroy, died Tues· Gordon Caldwell
p.m.
Rev. Steve Reed invites the public . .
day, Mim:h 12, 1991, at Vetemns
· Memorial Hospital after a long ill·
Gordon Cl\ldwell, 70, Tuppers
ness.
·
Plains, died Tuesday evemng,
Born Feb, 26, 191~ in Pomeroy, March 12,1991, 'at SL Joseph Hos·
he was a·son of the late Dow E. and pitil in Parkersburg, W.Va.
Lizzie Young Folmer. A coal
Arrangements
will
be
miner, he worked at Foote Mineral. 'announced later by the White·
He also operated a vegetable stand Blower Funeral Home in Coolville.
20 Classes $45-High SchO.I Discount S10
on Forest Rw Ri&gt;ad.
Mr. Folmer is survived by his
wife, Cora; two dau~hters and
Class Times: Mon. &amp; Wed.
to 8:30
sons·in·law, Mrs. Dav.td (Shelby)
All members of the Racine
Tues. It Thurs. 5:46-to 6:45
Davis, Pomeroy; and Mrs. Pearl American Legion are requested to
JOY IlliG, INSTIUaOI
(Linda) Edwards; Long Bottom; pay all dues by March 25 or name
Call
Jo
992·3794
er JHNtil Ow111 992·6193
three sons and daughters-in-law, will be removed .from the roster. ~

Marriage licenses ·

Coatiaued from paae J

• narrowly missed two in the finil

Jim (Elsie) Folma, Pomeroy; Bill
(Erma) Folmer, New Haven,
Marie Beaver, 76, of Escondido W.Va.; and George "Dick" ·
Calif., a former Meigs County resi: (Sharon) Folmer Jr., Pomeroy; one
dent, died Thursday, March 7 1991 brother, Max Folmer, Long Bot•
in La JoUa, Calif. after an extCnc!ed tom; a special brother and sister-in·
law, Dale and 1ayce Cunningham;
illness.
She was born 'on' Dec. 13, 1914 14 grandchildren and nine great·
grandchildren.
in East Liverpool, Ohio. She was
Besides his parents he was pre·
homemaker.
ceded
in death by a son,·Donald
Surviving are two daughters
"Sonny"
Folmerj and three broth·
Lorraine McMurray and Su~
ers,
Clarence,
Gene and Ollie
Cavote, both of Escondido, Calif.;
Folmer.
and one granddaughter, Anne
Services will be held Thursday
Marie Cavote.
at
3
p.m. at Ewing's Funeral Home
· Servi~es were held on Tuesday
with
Rev. Cecil Wise offiCiating.
at Alhiser-Wilson Mortuary in
Burial
will be in Rock Springs .
Escondido. Burial. was in Oak Hill Cemetery.
Memoriil Parle in Escondido, Calif.
Friends may call at the funeril
home today from 2 to 4 p.m. and 7
Richard B. Dunfee
to 9 p.m.

Racine Youth League wiU hold its 1991 organizational meeting
on Wednesday at 7:30p.m. at the home ofloe Kirby, Sr. on Yellowbush Road Interested coaches and parents are urged 10 attend.

. Revival scheduled
Keith Kapple will be the spealt
. erat services at Shade United
Methodist Church Thursday through Sunday at 7 p.m. each evening.

Dissolution sought

,

A dissolution of marriage· has been granted in Meigs County
Common Pleas Coun to Kimberly S. Pickens and Earl 0 . Pickens.
•

•••

Foreclosure sought
A foreclosure suit has been flied in Meigs County Common Pleas
Court in the amount of $23,774.35 by Federal Home Loan Mortgage .
Corporation of Findlay against Forest Lee Gangwer, Cincinnati, and
others.

Weather
Soutb Central Ohio

Rain changing to snow .by mid·
· night Wednesday, with a tow in the

lower 30s. Chance of precipiWion
is near 100 percent Mostly cloudy
!hursday, with a cbance of morn·
mg snow, and highs near 40.
Chance of snow is SO rcent.

Hospital news

~

,...., ·
• Veterans Memorial Hospitat":-':'
TUESDAY ADMISSIONS : ;
Walter H. Roush , Pomeroy; John
D. Lambert, Middleport and Mil·
lard Jones, Pomeroy.
,1:•
.
TUESDAY DISCHARGES :o,
None.

HOLZER CLINIC

BLACK LUNG. CLINIC
PULMONARY
REHAB

110.

446-5244

4

~r

·Seed ' .

Planting Is

Just Around
The Corner.··'

-

, IN STOCk

.aus

GARDEN

-·
IISUIANCE

111 s._,·St. Puu ey
YOIIIIIDI,._.r

AGIJmHimG

.. •esco1m
S.CI1i61

SEED
•

'•' .

Special of the Week!

li'•

.

$164 .

••

•

PICKENS
HAIQWAIE

.,

'FISH &amp; CHIPS
-

ADOLPH'S DAllY YALUY

"At .... w Iff ...
~OY, 0110

_.... _

I

POMEROY'S QUALITY SHOE STORE
.
SPECIALiZING IN SIZe~ SERVICE • SELECTION

••••rey Mnn• •lie•"

PH. 992-2556

~

~

j

· CHAPMAN SHOES
-~

OPEN 9·5 MON. THRU SAT., 9·8 FRIDAY

~..
.

if.',

.,.,~~~·~~·~-~

What
of new services would you like to
see from Bank One?
.
(Be reasonable now. Free samples and hot tubs
don't count.) If you can think of something that gets you
excited about banking with Bank One,let us know.
No fooling. We want to hear about it
01991 1b!c:Ont C~.

•

Why would one of the most successful banks in
Americaasksuchathing?Simple.\\ekoowrurfuturesuc.cess depends on making you feel good aboot our bank.
So we're willing to go a little farther than the
average banker to win your business and keep it
.
.Along with new productS and services, and

the convenience and stability of one of the nation's strong- ~
est banks, this unusual attitude is what sets us apart. :
To see our approach
inaction,stopbythe BANK-'~£ I
closest Bank One.
ti1t.~ .. -·~ ~~j • i
Our door's always open. w ru.u.nt::r 11: lU/a:::-,.
• _!
M&lt;mll&lt;•FIJIG

i

.

"

.

�r
The

Sentinel

·

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

A FREEZER, ·
II WIN A MQ-P.ED I
MICROWAVE,. or
FROZEN:!IINeme: .....................
. ...........
. ............ I.
,
•FOOD
CERTIFICATE..... · IIII Adclreu: ....................................... ,. lI
I

,

Joins Ohio Valley Foodland s

ODLAND

I
II Phone: .... ................ .... ................... 1
IN•nle: ....... ....... ........... ..... ................... ll
I
1.
II
No Purchase Necel8arv ·
I
1Address: ............... .. ... .... ...................... 11
Must be 18 years· old or older.
1
I Phone: ........... :.................................... ,,
Drawing Set .. Mer. 30. 1991 1
I
..
11
,
.
I

Salute• Oar Troops rllth A818 WELCOME HOMEIII

L---1!~~!~-~!!!!:.:·2!~--~l--------~----------

TENDERBEST QUALITY
BOSTON STYLE
BONE-IN

·- 1
I

/

•

FOODLAND

Cottage
Cheese

Pork Roast

e

YUBI
YOGURT

24

.. .

2 fOR 99(
ARMOUR MEAT

SPRITE, DIET or REG.

Hot Dogs

Coca.- 2 liter
Cola Bottle

•

12 oz.
PKG.

HERR'S

Potato ChiP,s

iONELESS

English
Roast

1-LI. lAG

HOLLY FARMS

.
k
00 leS

ASSORTED ARCHWAY
9-11

Pick-0-Chix

ARMOUR

Treet

oz.

~·------------~------~------------------~~----~----~----------------------------------------------------------------~·
•

i

Community calendar.

• Community Calendar Items
appear two cla71 Wore a eveat

S959 for infonnation. Cost of the

Cost is $5 for adults and $2 for
dinner is $7.
children under 12. All proceeds
and tile day of dill emaL Items
· will go toward the renovation of
must be recelvecl ~u '- adYIIIICe
RACINE · The RBcine Ameri- the Wilkes Grange Hall.
lo lllllre publiCation .In tbe cal· can Legion Auxiliary Unit No. 602
tndal'.
wiU host a legion birthday party for
RUTLAND • The youth group
Post 602 on ,Thursday at 7:30 p.m. of the Rutland Church of God will
,
WEDNESDAY
altho lodge hall.
hold a carwash on Saturday from 9
SYRACUSE - ·The Meigs ·
a,m. ·to 3 p.m. at Pleaser's in
CoUIIIY Holiness Asiodatioll annuPOMEROY· The Meigs Coun- Pomeroy. Call Jane Barl)er at 742al spring in door camp meeting ly Salon No. 710, Eight and Forty 2060 for infonnation.
through Sunday at lbe Syracuse will mee1 Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
Chun:h of lhe NIIZ8I"Cno at 7 p.m. home of Veda Davis in Pomeroy.
CHESHIRE · The Cheer
~tightly 1¥.1'16 p.m on Sunday. Spe·
Olympics will be held Saturday at
cial music and spoeker with Rev.
TUPPERS PLAINS - The Tup- 6 p.m. at Kyger Creek High
Thwt and Mary Kay Minn. Public pers Plains VFW Post No. 9053 School. Competiton will feature II
invited.
will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at elementary cheerleading squads.
Awards presented in cheer, dance,
the post home.
·
' HOBSON • liobson Church of
spirit and grand champion and all
Christ and Christian Union will . CHESTER ·· The Shade River star cheerlead.er squad . Public.·
hold 1-evival du:oulh SaiUrday at 7 · Lodge No. 453, Chester, will meet . invited.
p.m. nighily with. Nonnan Taylor. Thursdar at 7:30 p.m. All master
Rev.·Theron Durham invites the masons mvited to attend. Refresh·
TUPPERS PLAINS • The Tuo- .
public.
ments will be served.
pers Plains VFW Post 9053 and
Auxl.l•"ary will have a round an. d
' TUPPERS PLAINS • The Tup·
square
dance on Saturday from 8GALLIPOLIS · All Meigs
pers Plains Angels 10flball sip-up County Trash Haulers are urged 10 11:30 p.m. featuring the Alvin
wiD be Wednesday at 7 p.m. m the attend a meeting of the Gallia Schutts Band. Baked goods will be
Eastern High School Cafeteria. County Solid Waste Districr on sold and refreshments will be availAges·for the jiDiior team ~ 11-15 Thursday at 7 p.m. at tho Gallipolis able. Admission is $2.50 for adults
years, but particiJlllllts should be 12 Senior Citizens Center. Call 992· and $1 for children' under 12. Probefore Aug. 1 and not more~ IS 3194 for infOJ1n81ion.
ceeds benefit building fund.
~y Aug. 1 Sign-up fe;e is $15 and a
MIDDLEPORT _ Wyatt
birth certifJCate !XJPY must be proPOMEROY · Preceptor Beta
..ided. Call Jill Holter, coach, for Beta Chapter, Beta Sjgma Phi Brown of the Kenneth Hagin Crutnformatioll, 919-2603.
·
Sorority will meet Thursday at 7:30 sildes will conduct special services
.
p.m. at the Episcopal Church in Saturday at 7 p.m. an d Sun da Y at
: POMEROY • The Ohio VaHey Pomeroy.
·
1p a.m. at the Rejoicing Life
pratt aorse and Mule Association
.
Church
in Middleport. Call 992wiU meet Wednesday at 7:30p.m.
6249 for more infonnation. Pastor
FRIDAY
ill the tiome of Bob llarris.
ROCK SPRINGS · The Rock Michael Pangio invites the public.
Springs Grange Hall will meet Fri••
THURSDAY
LOTTRIDGE • The Lottridee
day at 7:30p.m. at the grange hall.
" RACINE • A support group
Community Center will host a chtli
111eeting for those affected by the
TUPPERS PLAINS • There supper on Saturday from 4-8 p.m.
Gulf War will meet Thursday at 7 will be a round and square dance ·Cost is $3.75 for adults and $1.50
p.m. et the Racine United Friday from 8-.11:30 p.m. at the · for children under 12. Public is
Methodist Church.
· Tuppers Plains VFW Building fea- invited.
i
turing "Foggy Mountain Drifters"
' GALLIPOLIS • The AGHJMV and Alvin Chutes on the fiddle
POMEROY . "Golden Fish"
Solid Waste Policy Board will Anhur Conant will be the caller. and "Homer and the Wacky Donut
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the Gal- Public invited.
Machine" will be shown at the
County Senior·C•tizens Center.
Meigs County Public Library on
MIDDLEPORT· The Return Saturday at 2 p.m. All area children
~ CHESHIRE • The Gallia·
Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughters are invited to attend.
Meigs Community Action Agency of the American Revolution will
hold a free clothing day on celebrate its Charter Day luncheon
MIDDLEPORT - The Meigs
'fhursday from 9 a.m. to noon at on Friday at 12:30 p.m. at Overthe old high school building in brook Center in Middleport. DAR County Retired Teachers Association will meet Saturday at 12:30
Cheshire. .
Good Citizens Winner and the . p.m.
at the Middleport American
American History Essay Winners Legion
HaiL Contact Mary E.
GALJ..IPOLIS • The MG.M ·wiU be honored:.
• .1. ,
Chapmail at. 992-3887 for a reserBoy' Scoufil!ctCilti"SC,OUt-dl!tiict
vation.
recognition dinner will be held at
SATURDAY
.
the Grace United Methodist Olun:h
WILKESVILLE • SmorgasIn Gallipolis on Thursday at 6:.30 bord dinner at the Wilkes Grange
HENDERSON • The Gallia
p.m. Contact Dr. Bernard Niehm at liall on Saturday from 4·7 p.m. ·Twirlers Western Square Dance
446-SSOO or Bob Arms at 992Club will hold a dance Saturday
from 8-11 p.f!l . at the Henderson
Community Center. Caller will be
Hilmer Magnet. Open to all westem style square dancers.
•

Off

PKG.

12

I

20!
.

~

Poet's comer

GO GET tuM!!!

: Iraq •s leader said words, big as a
bolder
·
· He said an angel stood on each

oz.

man's shouldel

CA~.

~

He says !hoy are protected with
each breath
But suppose il iS the Angel of
'Death
· That angel is well known in
hmeofwar
·
.
About the most popular. yes by
far

. The world will improve when
he is dead ·
American troops, we are so
proud of you
How glad we'll be when that
task is .through
.A.s true Americans our blood
will boil
.
Until you land safely on Amencan soil
·

Mary F. Smith
PS I admit this is a little late but I
·
thought 1 had more lime!!

\

_

....__.... ...
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::;.:.:---=·
•, !!-:::....
I ....... ..
I :A'c."="~,.

I
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SAVEBltnd.IDStaDt
60¢ OFF REG. PRICE

7 01. IIIOUDtliD

Coffee

---

----

1 Goo4 .... ., ... t0-16
I
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I

Cloly AI ...... FHIIt. .,

IIDU~Dll

-------Food lt8mpoond

I

,

60e

co~

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JlliA..SSf__________________6.9£_1

--A;;,;.:-:NC:A~Itbll For Typogr8phlcal or Plctor..l Err0f8.

'

Keep up the good work, upset
his throne
If you catch him, break every
bone
'
Blow up his castle, put him out
on the street
• Blast away until he faces utter
defeat
:. Let him stand with no place to
hide
; Viewed on 1V the whole world
.,Vide
.

.

: Twist that grin 10 the back of his

head
'

How sweet it is-,--_B_yC_yn_~_iaO_li_ve_n·----....;;·~~
.,

By Cynthia S. Oliveri
occur naturally in foods like fruits, . before teeth are brushed, the .
County Extension Agent
vegetables, and milk products . greater the risk for tooth decay -.
Home Economics
Although they contain sugar, these Thus, eating such foods as frequent•
Valentines Day and Easter are foods are important sources of vita· between meal snacks may be more:.
hamtful to teeth than having tllel!J:
two holidays associated with mins, minerals and fiber.
candy! This week "Contemporary
Read ingredient labels to get a al meals. The Guidelines recom ...
Living" takes a look at sugar in the rough idea of lhe sugars contained men.d regular brushing with fluo.;:
diet:
.' .
· in a product. Ma.nufacturers add ride toothpaste, flossing, and drink-!
Eight of ten home food man- sugars like high-fructose corn ing fluoridated water. For more-agers said avoiding too much sugar syrup, dextrose, sorbitol, maltose, information about the Dietary
was important to them in a U.S. and com syrup to foods. lngredi· Guidelines and eating right, contact•
Department of Agriculture survey · ents are listed on the label in order the Meigs County Extension OffiCC:
of consumer knowledge and atti- by weight .. from greatest to least, at 992-6696.
:
tudes about diets. But practicing so if a sugar is listed as one of the
this conviction is obviously very 'fi!St three in~nts, or if several r----:===--~ :
difficult for some people almost sugars are hsted on the label, tile
REMEMBER·
~
1/2 of the survey respon!lents product is probably high in sugar.
WITH FLOWERS
~·
thought their diets were too high in
The new Dietary Guidelines
To o....t a beautifully
•
sugar/sweets compared with what" identify starChes, along with slig·
detlped fun~•l
•
lrrlft@:emena, Ju•l
is most healthful.
ars, as promoting tooth decay since
...
tall or vl•ll
· The sugar in our diets includes these foods break down into sugars
•
,
more than what we stir into our in tho mouth and stick Co the teeth
•
POMEROY
•
. ·coffee and sprinkle on cereal. It ·..and gums. The mort~ often these
FLOWER
~HOP
also includes the sugars in foods foods (starches and sugars) are
.,. Tit~ f'ay A meriar Se1ad• Lout"
eaten even sm•ll amoiDits and
. PH. 992-6454
like candy, jams, jellies, syrups ...
.. the
. th .. th
and soft drinks. In fact, one can
of
the
longer
y
are
m
e
mou
0
pop has the equivalent of I tea·
spoons of sugar.
The 1990 revision of "Nubilion
and Your Health: Dietary Guidelines for Americans," just released
by the Department of Agriculture
and the Deparl!llent of Health and
Human Services, advises us to
"Use sugars only in moderation."
Sugars and many foods that cqntain
large amounts of sugars provide
calories. but are limited in. nutti·
ents. They should be used in modcration by most healthy people, and
sparingly by those with low calorie
needs. For very active people with
high energy needs, sugars can be
an additional source of calories.
Are any sugars healthier than
OFFER fiVDS
MAY Jl . 1991 .
others? All processed sugars (such
as white table sugar, honey, com
FREE CUSTOM
SOme restnchons
sweeteners, molas.ses, brown sugar,
1"\.11
FEATURES.
may 01pply. See Clealer
fructose) provide
calories and little
cL•ss RINas • V.""llli OF OV£R sso ,.,
ror d e1 ai1~ .
al ·
Q,..,,,..1/l"!'tlif'f-&gt;r.
, ,.,.
. .
I 0 th .~ h d
c se. n e Ouoer an , sugars so t-=.:......:...::._-:::;,;:;.-c::;;;~:-:;;.;;;;;;;;;:-~-~

-

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@
.

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JID11Q1RVED

$80
000 (etUffied.
.
'

tO pOlt'Ce Offl'CefS

ATTENTION!

Hove you
ordered your
fon&lt;y Easter

SO(ks?
ONLY 7 WEEKS
LEFT TO DO SO!
(h t·r :10 Bt·aut ifu l

: As POW's they are .bathed and
(ed '
- Allowed 10 relax on a nice clean
6ed
\
It may be a sleeping bag that
iays on lhe floor
• But comlll!"ed to what they had,
'!l'ho'd asldor more
: They are more like guests in a
l)ig hotel
.
: If only our own were treated as
well
; The Iraq leaders are all insane
' They treat qur people very inhu·
mane
Forcing them to make statements that are unlnle
Ir they live, there's nothing else
they can do
·
God up above is viewing it all
Fear not Saddam will gel his
call .

... ..

DES PLAINES, Ill. (UP!) An undercover police officer who
forgot he had placed a bag containing $80,000 in marked bills on top
of his car when he drove away, is
breathing a little easier.
. /,\n .a~ey walked into the~
Phlines police station 'Tuesday
afternoon carrying the dirty white
canvas bag that he said his client
found in a city street more than a
week ago, Mayor Micheal Albrecht
announced.
Neither Albrecht nor police
would release the name of the
attorney, who would not identify
his client, Albrecht said.
Albrecht said the officer who
MIDDLEPORT - The Middle- lost the cash was pleased with its
port Youth League sign· up day will return. The officer, whose name
be held Saturday from 9 a.m. to was not revealed because of his
noon. Any new player must bring a undercover status, has not been
suspended or disciplined, pending
copy of their birth certificate.
the outcome of an investigation, the
MIDDLEPORT • A pancake mayor added.
breakfast will be held Saturday
from 9 a.m to nOOJi at the American
Legion Hall on Fourth Street in
Middleport. All proceeds from the
breakfast will go toward the Meigs
County Soap Box Derby Association.
·

: He could be hiding about anywhere
• Waiting for his victim to appear
; One thing sure and .that thing
Certain
· He will pull back, death's dl!rk
curtain
: The lraquis are not stupid,
lhey're very brave
: They surrender in order to
escape the grave.

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Wednesday, March 13, 199(

Page-7·:

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will

CTN.

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F

oz.

The Daily Sentinelj

By The Bend

.

,.

-

March 13, 1991

BIG BEND

.,

•

212 E. Main- Pomeroy

668

SWISHER
LOHSE
PHARMACY

Super
Easter
Savings!!
RUSSELL STOVER
MARSHMALLOW EGGS

RUSSELL
STOVER
FILLED
EASTER
BASKETS

1 DOZEN-Reg. $2.95
ONLY$2

NOW

24

WHITMAN'S

$1.95 ................. $149
sus .................. S369 .
56.95 .................. $5 19
Reg. 58,95 .................. $669
Reg. 519.95 ............. $14 95

PECAN (ARMEL
NOUGAT EGG
4 OZ. ONLY

Reg. SJ.69

$1 17

( ·oiHr-. l'o ( 'flpo-,t•
1-'rnlll.

BUTTONS
AND

BOWS

RUSSELL STOVER
HAPPY EASTER BOX

RUSSELL STOVER
MILK CHOCOlATE
MARSHMALLOW
BUNNIES

CONTAINS 13 EGGS
Reg. $3.95
ONLY $2

2 OZ. - Rtg. 75c

95

ONLY

ss(

992-5177

'1.

220 EA'iT MAIN

COMPLETE STOCK

MALIBU MUSK

POMER OY, OHIO

EARRINGS

SPRAY COLOGNE
.25 OZ. - Reg. $1.50

l/2 PRICE
IDUIING II£AKFAST HOURS ONLY)

.

·

Presenlthis coupon before orderina. llentillts you to $1.00 OFF any breakfast
sendwlch with your purc•se of Hash Browns and lar&amp;t beveraae.
Limit one coupon rtdHtuble.per cuslomtr per visit. Not valid wllh any other offer.
Plus tax if applicable. No facsimile of this coupon accepttcl.
·
1 1
Thii coupon pod bt....n lar. 14 and lar. 24, 1991.
,.1
' ' _

~23 WEST MAIN STiiiiiiod only at this lcDonald's.J ~J

ONLY

-......

"".

~.

Mon. llwu a.t. 1:00 l .m. to 8 :00p.m.
Iunder 10:00 e.m. to 4:00p.m. 1
PREICAII'TIDNI
E. Main
f~.,cly

PH . 992 · 2955

...,.leto '""''"0V· OH.
o,.. .,............... .

99(
OFFERS
GOOD
THROUGH
SUNDAY
MARCH 17,
1991

�•

Pa_ge 8 The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, March 13, 1991

Wedneaday, March 13, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Senllnet-Page-8· ·
I

Myron Floren Orchestra to repeat Teen gives tearful description of shooting .
performance at PVH Charity Ball ·
as

Top Frost · Natural

Limit I Pleue, Per Family With
Any Other Pu...,hue (el!dudlna.
ltemo prohibited by lawl

•

'

lb.

·All Purpose ~lour

Myron Floren imd His Orches- effons would ,help 10 improve his
tra, a hit wilh ball goers in 1988 band. Todly.lllole "bosses" hearli·
and 1989, will return to lhe slage of ly agree with Welt as they note the
the Point Pleasant Moose Lodge great popularity of Floren, his
Saturday, Aprill3, for lhe Pleasanr• musicianship and his dependability.
Yallel:' Hospital Charity Ball,
A native of Webster, South
according Ill Margaret Amburgey·
Dakota,
first took up the
chairman.
·
' · aa:udionFloren
ll,¥ 7. beginaing, lite .
Myron Floren, Lawrenc~ Welk, with a Sears-Roebuck cataWelk's assistant band director for log instrument that cost $19.95.
many years, is a quiet-mannered, With no teachers in that farm coun-fast-fmgered accordionist much in try. long hours of practice took the
, demand across the country as a place of formal instruction, and
soloist and condQctor. When the when he was 8, he was entertaining
enthusiastic Welk hired young Flo- erowds at lhe Day County Fair. At
ren in 1950, while both were ill St · 9, he won first and second place
Louis on separate engagements, prizes in a local amateur contest,
Welk's hotel and ballroom Mboss- playing bolh aa:onlion and piano.
. es" thought he had gone benerk in
He worked his way throush
brinfing into the band an accor• AugusiiiiiB College in Sioux Falls,
diomst far superior to Welk him- S.D., by teaching lhe accordion,
. self.
·
and began ID play profesSionally Bl
But Welk is perhaps more musi19 over radio station KSOO. He
cally knowledgeable than any olher also played for countless puties
television orchestra leader, and and dances, and in .1944 joined a
knew full well Floren's potential as USO unit to entertain troops in
a musician, and bow much his

lO .lbs.
&amp;Up

Peoples Bank has jlresen!ed the
Pleasant Valley Hospital .Health
Foundation with the final installment of a $51,500 pledge made in
the initial sta$es o( lhe Foundation's campa1gn to raise funds
toward establishment of an endowment to provide financial assistance
to area students pursuing heallhcare
-- careers.
The bank, wilh offices in Point
Pleasant, New Haven, and Mason,
was lhe first major contributor to
the Foundation, which has since .
raised more lhan $300,000. Interest
1on lhe endowment principal has, to
·date, allowed the Foundation to
award $22,000 in grants and _loans
to 17 students studying to become
doclors, nurses, pharmacists, medical lab technicians and mdiology
- teehnolo~sts.
·
Applications are now being
· accepted for funding for lhe 1991
academk year, and are available
from guidance counselors in high
schools in Mason, Gallia, and
Meigs counties, or by calling the
Pleasant Valley Hospital Public
·Relalions Department at (304) 6754340, ext 253.
The PVH Health Foundation
was established in 1985 to aid
Pleasant Valley Hos~ital in its

5 lb.
-Bag ·

Food Club • 24 oz. Ctn.
·ALL

White, Red Flame or
Seedless

Betty Crocker • Supermoist
18.25 oz. Box
Umlt I Box Pleue, Per F. .Uy
With Ally Otber Purc:bue
(exdudlng ltemo prohibited by
law)

Maxwell House

Limit I Can Pleue, Per Family Willi
Ally Other Purc:haae (exdudlngltemo
prohibited by lawl

Your Choice
Ground 13 oz. Can
French Roast 12 oz. Can

Top Frost .

•

Umlt 4 Dlnnen Pleue, Per Family
With Any Other Purchooe (excludlnl
ltemo prohibited by lawl

I - 11 oz. 'Size
Chicken, Turkey,
.
Salisbury Steak, '"'d
Meat Loaf

l
R8gu

'Hoinestyle ·
Spaghetti Sauce

Plalo~

Meat;
MushrOom

. 28 oz.
·Jar·

·~

Food Club Fresh Frying

Betty Brown Homestyle

Chicken Breasts White Bread

49
lb.

16 oz.
Loaf

'

Upon his return to the United
States, he joined "The Buckey
Four." a hillbilly group, and
remained with lhem for four years
until 1950, when he accepted
Welk's invitation to join him.
Floren's favorite music is lhe
polka, although he is fond of all
types, and is eq~ly adept at playing all typeS, from classical to pop
rhythm. He has written nliiDerous
composit:ions, is a member of the
ASCAP and has published a popu·
tar series of accordion instruction
boots. He records regularly for
Ranwood Records.
TICkds for the April 13 baD, to
be held from 9 p.m. to I a.m., are .
· S46 per couple and $23 for singles ·
and are available in lhe Administm- ·
lion Office off lhe main lobby at
Pleasant Valley Hospital, or by
calling (304) 675-4340, ext. 360.
Table reservations are available atan additional 50 cents per person.

PVH Health Foundation helps area
st.udents purs~e heathcare careers

Limit I Ball Pleue, Per Family
With Any Other Purc:bue
(exdudlng Items prohibited loy law)

'

Thompson
Sweet
Black

ElirqJe, '

•
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efforts to maintain and imorove
upon lhe quality' of heallh services
in Mason County and the surrounding area. · After studying possible
areas of need in the community, the
Foundation determined a critical
area of concern to be lhe downward
trend in lhe numbers of young peopte entering healthcare vocauons
today. In 1988, the Foundation
ticked off an inten~ive fund-raising
campaign, and in 1989, made its

EXETER, N.H. (UPI) - A
Seallrook teonager bnD doWII pn
the witness Slllld he described
how be and a CliiiiiJllllloa fon:ed his
lover's husband 10 his kllees and
shol him in the held with a .38 caliber handgun.
•'I took lhe gun out

or my pocket and cocked the hammer bact,' •.
William Flynn testified Tuesday.
"I pointed the gun at his head. I
said 'God forgive me' and pulled
the trigger."
Flynn, wbo turned 17 Tuesday,
was in his second day of testimony
in the tri~l of Gregory Smar!'s
wife, Pam~ wbo is charged wtth
being an accomplice 10 first-degree
murder for allegedly instigating lhe
killing.
Flynn test:ified Monday lhe former school official had seduced
him and then threatened to cut off
their affair unless he carried out her.
wishes to kill her husband.
Under questioning Tuesday by
Assisll!nt Attorney General Paul
Maggiotto, Flynn described how he
and Patrick Randall entered the
couple's Derry condominium
before Gregory Smart, 24. arrived
home on lhe evening of May 1,
1990. While wai:i"J for him, Flynn
said he and Ran
collected jew-

elry and stereo speakers to take
with them and lliiiSIICked the condo
to make lhe slaying appear to be
lhe result of a botched burglary.
Flynn said when Smart arrived
home, he and Randall jumped him
as walked in the door.
. "After he $01 into the house he
wasn' t strugglmg very hfd. he was
asking what was ~oing on," Fl yM
said, sobbing. • We told l!im to
shut up."
Flynn said Randall had taken a
knife from a butcher block in the
kitchen, but was unable to use it.
"He was kneeling !here and .it
was obvious that we weren't going
to be able to cut his throat, • • he
said. "We couldn't bring ourselves
todoiL" .
With a quivering voice, Flynn
said he motioned to his pocket
where the gun was and Randall
nodded. ·It was chen, he said, that he.
shot Smart in lhe head.
·
Flynn, after a brief recess, said .
he had not wanted' to l:ill Greg
Smart, but he felt duit was the only .
way that he and Pamela Smart
could be togelher.
Flynn, Randall and Vance Lattime Jr., .who drove them away
from the condominium after the
shooting, have pleaded guilty to .

second-degree murder in connec·
lion wilh the slaying and agreed 10
testify against Smart.
Gregory Smart's father ,
William, said after Flynn's testimony that he felt the defendant's leal'S
were genuine. ·
"He seems to have remorse,"
said Smart. .wl!o added he believes ·
Flynn was "manipulaled" into taking Pllrt in the crime.
But he said, " I can never forgive him. It's never going ID bring
my son hack."
Pamela Smart, 23, is lhe fortner
director of media services at Win•
~acunnet High School in Hampron.
where the three teens were students. She allegedly became
involved iii a love affair wilh Flynn
several monlhs before lhe slaying.
On Monday, Flynn testified that
after their sexual relationship
began, Smart told him several
times chat the only way they could
be togelher is if her husband was
killed. He said she became angry
wilh him on two occasions after
she had given him the opportunity
to kill Greg Smart and he had not
done 5o.
·
He said Pamela Smart helped tO
plan lhe murder for a ·night when
she would be at a school meeting.

Apartment searched in 'Sudafed ·
~:ae~~!r~g~c:rs:d!~ ·drug taminerl·ng
l·nvestigaiion
r

.

pursue healthcare careers' and to
return to our community to put '
theirskillstoworlc.
To be eligible for funding, a student must be a resident of Mason, .
Gallia or Meigs eounlies. and have
been accepted into a program of
heahltcare study at a college or university in West Virginia and Ohio.

Flight attendants win
battle over weight limits
DALLAS (UPI) - The Associ- bolh a 25-year-old and a 55-yearation of Professional Flight Atten- old 5·foot·5 woman were required
dants announced Tuesday it had ·to weigh no more lhan 129 pounds.
reached agreement with American Under the new standard, the 25Airlines on a lenl!lhy dispute over year-old 's maximum weight is 136
weight limits for Hight altendants.
·pounds and the 55- year-old's maxUnder lhe seutement. APFA and imum weight is 154 pounds.
lhe Equal Employment Opportwii"We are pleased with our victoty Commission agreed to drop law- ry, •' Leon said. '·American has libsuits charging American used eralized its weight standards allowweight rules to discriminate against ing for increases in weight with
older workers and women workers, age. And, more than 200 of our
union president Cheryle Leon 51!id. flight attendants who were affected
The APFA represents the · by American's discriminalory stan18,000 flight attendants at Ameri· dards. will be immediately restored
can Airlines.
•
to the payroll.''
Under American's old s&amp;andard,

·
·
SEATTLE (UPI)- Law her husband was not a prime sus- didn't want anyone to know.
enforcement agents were seen peel and chat all "persons of inter- Durham also had been divorced
searching the apartment of the est" in lhe case were being treated~ two years earlier from hill wife and
estranged husband of a woman equally.
· ·
was said to be depressed, wlice
who nearly died of cyanide poison- . The station also reported that said.
. .
'
ing last monlh after raking a tainted Joe Meling was hospitalized last
Results of Tuesday's auiDpsy on
Sudafed·cold cajlsule.
monlh after leaving a note chat said Durham's body were expected
The FBI, the lead investigative he was thinking of suicide.
Wednesday wilh lhe return of tests
agency of !he local Sudafed tamPolice had been told earlier that from the state IDxicology lab.
•
pering that tilled two other people, the day Jennifer Meling became ill
·- · ·
would neither confirm nor deny was the same day that Kathleen
chat a selltch had been carried out Daneker, 40, Tacoma, went to a
Tuesday at lhe Tumwater, Wash., st~r~ and purchased the box of
SPRIN6 VAllEY CINEMA
apartment of Joe Meling.
· tam led Sudafed that led to her
446 4524
; .
Officers who would not confirm death five days 18\CI'. A Lacey man,
$3. 00 1MiA1Ill MTIIIEU SA"JJtDi.Y I SI.BY
U .DO &amp;AKAJII NlliMf T'W SDIY
their. identity to reporters spent Stan McWhoner, 44, died Feb. 18
about six hours at the residence. after taking cyanide-tainted
Television cameras filmed them Sudafed.
vacuuming Meting's ear and leavOn Monday a 30'-year-old
ing lhe apanment wilh a box and a Everett man phoned police clai!llbag, lhe contents of which were not ing to have taken Sudafed.and died .
revealed.
several hours later of cyanide poi•'
A television station, KSTW-1V soning . But police said Jack
in Tacoma, quoted Melin~'s wife, Durham had no. Sudafed in his
Jennifer, who is recovermg from .apartment, could have obtained
her near-death•bOut with cyanide cyanide where he worked and may
Feb. 2, as saying she was aware her have been suicidaL
estranged husband's home was
A neighbor of Durham, Keri
being searched for a second time.
Paul, said Tuesday that Duhamtolc:!
Meling also said she was told by her eight months ago chat he was
investigators earlier in lhe day that suffering from terminal cancer and

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L.A. mayor calls
for police chief
accountability

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LOS ANGELES (UP!) - Care-..
fu lly sidesteppin$, the issue of
whether he would, tf he could, fire
embattled Police Chief Daryl
Gates, Mayor Tom Bradley
endorsed a proposal 10 amend the
city Charter 10 rrulke fublre chiefs
more accoun1able. ·
A citywide movement, meanwhile, was grow in~ to pressure
Gates 10 step down tn response 10
the March 3 videotaped police
beating of Rodney King. .
·· · The American Civil .Liberties
Union took out full-page .newspa, per ads urging citizens 10 demand
Gates' resignation, while promi nent leaders oflhe black community called for his ouster. '
· Despite ihe public outcry over
Gates' perceived responsibility for
the incident, no elected offtcial has
joined in l)ie call fo~ his resignation, citing city law that prevents
the mayor or the City Council from ·
firing the chief of, police or any ,
deparunent head.
·
Bradley, after meeting with
some two dozen black community ·
leaders Tuesday, said be would
support ~hanging the law through a
charter amendment, allowing for a
critical evaluation of the performance of police chiefs and other
deparunent heads every five years.
Depending on tbe evaluation,
the department head could be kept
011 or let go.
" I ltave long supported the idea
that all city managers s.hould be
subject ... to the guidelines that
would permit the mayor to have
autho,r ity -over them to ~emove
them or discipline them," he wid a
City Hall news conference. "Under
the present system, there is nolbing
the mayor or the Police Commission can do with regard to firing
the chief of police."
Bradley said that he has
received numerous calls and leaers
from people throughout the nation,
urging him .10 fire Gates.
"They don't undersland, it can't
be done," he said.:
.
However, when asked whether,
he continues 10. support Gates,
Bradley avoided a direct answer.
He instead accusing the news
media of trying 10 draw him into a
public argument'with Gales.
"You've tried over and over .
again to make this an issue of a
conflict betw!)Cn the mayor and the ·
chief so that you cal! distract the
" . PL!,blic from the problem he~"e and I
refuse 10 be put in that position,"
Bradley said.
·
He !hen left the ronm without
answering anymore questions on
the subject.
The Los Angeles County ~d
jury Tuesday conlinued its investi-·
~ation of the police officers' conlluct, hearing more testimony about
the conlroversial beating.
The 23-member panel was
expected 10 issue indictments soon,
possibly by the end of the week.
In Washington, FBI Direcw
William Sessions declined a
request from several black members of the House of Represenlatives for a wider investigation of
police brutality in Los Angeles. He
urged them instead to seek a Justice
Q.eparunent inquiry.
·
· : Rep. Donald Edwards, O-Slin
Jose, chairman of the House Judiciary Commitlee's Subcommittee
OQ Civil and Constimtional Rights,
said his panel would begin hearings
next week on police brutality in
America.
Meanwhile, the Los Angeles
City Council· began its first hear;ngs into the issue, allowing the
public 10 address the Public Safety
Committee for more than two
hours. The committee also listened
to police officials describe the
department's training procedures
on the use offorce.
Councilman Michael Woo said
the King beating has become "an
embarrasSment and a disgrace" 10
the city. He said he had 10 answer
to city leaders from across the ·
nation while attending a Congressional Cities Conference in WashingiOR, D.C., over the weekend_
The strongest reaction to the
beating has been from the ACLU,
which launched a media campaign
to pressure Gates out.
In a newspaper ad, with a phoiOgraph from the 1960s of a cop
apparently striking a person, the
ACLU said the Kinl! ~~ng . "was
not an tsolated JOCtdent satd the
city paid out more than $8 million
liiSI year to settle police abuse
.
cases.
The ad also included a clip-out ·
form letter for people 10 sign and
return to the ACLU demanding
GateS' resignation.
Police were not immediately
available for comment

I

In a letter to. City Council memberS, Bradley asked thill the proposal 10 amend the Charter be considered for the June ballot However, it appears _unlik~ly that even if
rushed thtoUgll the various council
channels i! would qualify in time.
Bradle&amp;,~ts to require a
enl head JOb perreview of
formance every five years. During
that time, the manager would be
proteCted by civil service codes,•
blil after the five-year term his or
her contract would either be
renewed or terrninalbd,

Classifie
TO PLACE AN AD CALL

STORE HOURS

PRICES EFFECTIVE-· MAR. . 10 .THRU MAR. . 1b,

lrt ~ MumUr tillll

Monthly

Busm~1

Card

;i n~

Ill•

h,11oill. no1 _iCt!SI

Ar~a

Code ~14

"446

992

MukUeport
Pom..-oy
Ch•ter
Ponland
let 111 fills
R•c•ne
Rull•d
Coolville

Gallipolis
Ch._htrle
Vinton ·
Rio Gr•nde,
Guvan Din
~43 Ar•bi• Dis,,

367
]88
245
256

379 Walnut

Public Notice

Free G1ft To All Skaters

985-9996-985-3939

decoeoed,loteoiBox
32, Orenge Township,
Tuppers Plolno,
Ohio
467B3,
Robe" E. liuck,
Probate Judge
Judith R. ,Werry, Clerk
13113. 20. 27, 3tc

· "Since 1963'' '

'•'

427 2nd

•

$J 99
.Perch fillets ••••••• ~. _
$ . 89
Smoked Sausage ..L!. 1 ··

·. Gallipolis~

Ave:

Ohio

.•.

2

lnMemory

••'

.

.

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
·on Morch 4, 19B1 ; in the
Mligo County
Probote
Court, Caoo No, · 219·n.
Thornao L. Taylor. Box 202.
c. R. #62, Torch, Ohio
46781, weo appOinted ExeToy!~,

B&amp;E SHOE SERVICE

Frying Chicken ••~. S9&lt;

ECKRICH KIELBASA or

GiYIIIW'IY

5 _ Happy Ads
6 Lost •nd·found
7 . Vard, Sale!pit•d •n adva_,ict!l '
. 8 Publ• c S•le .&amp; Auction
9 Wan1~. lo Buy

U,,.

PubliC NotiCe
'

'
:. PUBLIC HEARING .

8

· wiT.h':,.VI~tePPge~;,f M:,dl~~~~ ·
munity I)IIYeopment atock
Grant Fundo through tho1
Ohio Oeponment
of 'OeYelopment,
·
' A p•blic hearing will bo
•td Mondoy. March 25.
'!191 , at 7:30 P.M. in. the
chomboro
located 11
. 4ouncll
237 Roco
St .. Middleport,
for the purpote of dlocusfing tho g-al provloiono
ol the FV '991 CDBG pro-·
9~1m end the amount olva·

·

PubliC Notice
rlouo ft.tndo IVIiloble,

1..!:'~~\·;·~::n~':'n!!r:!

13

lntiUfilnn

14

8u_smess Tram•ng

21
22
21

Bu.s.!n·'-~ Opportunrtv ·
Monev to Loan
Protesuonal ~8 vi c~

In Memory Of
HETTIE WH,ITE .
Who died 21 years
ago. MaJCh 13.
Sadly mlased by
daughtera, aons,
f11mit and frienda

11
2

~:oMp~~~~~!!v

46

oz.

Tomato JUICe : •••tt:••
LAY'S REG. S1'.39 SIZE
Potato Chips .........
'

'

TWIN PET

CAKE MIXES

5f$J·

Good Onlr At Powell's $up• Volu
Good Mar. 10 tllru Mar. 16, 1991
linlt S ,., Cust-

F. am1·1 y

March 13, &amp; years
ego today.
He 'is loved and
miqf!d by his father
and mother. Ayward
and ':,~·hJonel,

Rh d

11.s
•

oz.3 ,/ $2

Good OniJ At Powlll's S... v..,
Geod .... 10 thru .... 16, ' " '
Unlit J ..... c.t-

Entre~ ......

1·59

:.nbrot~r~·!nJdo~i:~:

era and all who knew

oz.
Burritos ••••••••••••••••
5

PURE SWEET

SUGAR

' ~::· $] 09

Gootl Only AI Powol't Super Yolu
Gootl Mar. 10 thru Mar, "· 1991
linlt I l'rtr Custertllf

TIDE ULTRA .

CORIER OF BAlDINOB AND HAYMAN ROAD- Anice lay·
ihg home site. Has a dug·welland a cistern. Electric available
on thiS 2 acre s~e.
sa.ooo

~

I

FLATWOODS AREA- Agrowing area. Approx. 3acres with a.
great laying building site or mobile home site. TPC water
available, Electric lines across the property. Farmers !iOmt
approved. Almost ready to go, just needs you.
$1.000

...

DETE~ENT

37~~;~ ~4 99
Good

Only At Pewil'a Super v•

GocMI Mar. 10 thru ..,. 16; '"'
lirllt I l'rtr Cult-

• MIDDlEPORT- Price Affordable-·AHI story home w~h
vinyl siding, insulation, 3 bedrooms, large living room, dining
rO()m. Has some newer paneling
$22,000
ltACIN~ - .F•llr Needed - For this I ~. story home. 3 to 4
bedrooms with 4 porches, .~ basement. dmmg room, fal)'llly

·

room, inda small outbu11dmg. Good s1ze lot·

. I

•

'

$21,500

&amp; ' 4 WO ' s

v ..ns

76 Auto Pans !:lor AcceS-s.of•oa~
77 · A"to Repit•r .
78 Camptng Eq,upmOOI
79 Camper~a &amp; Motor Hon ll:!s

82 Plumbing 6 HeJII•nu

•

84 ' Eieciuell &amp; Rel;tQUicttton.
85 Gun111al H~lmy
86 Mob•ltt Horitll Rtlpour
8'7 Upholster v

Mut~ cal lnu ; umenu

Frutts &amp; Vegutable&amp;

Public Notice

PubliC Notice
Btir,g 5 ICNI out Ot the
Northweot corner ot the 14·
acre troct doOC&lt;Ibod In Vol- '
umo 222. Pogo,.,, Mligo ·
County D•d Atcordl.
. , REFERENCE OEED: Vol- ,
2BO. Pige 7251, Melgo
Cotmty Deld Recordo.
real
l:::p·r•~·~.,..~·t~
real aneta to

of

for "ot leu then ,twothird• 12/ 31 tho lforaulcV
oppral•d vol"•· Cooh In
hand on de .. of ute.
~
. Sold aala lo oubjoat to •I&gt;' .,
provel by the Common PINe
Court, Melgo County, Ohio. 1
Jomeo M. Souloby, Sheriff
Mligo County, Ohio
Approved:
be

I. CarlOn Crow, Attorney

lor Plaintiff,
Bonk One. Atheno; N.A,
13113, 20, 27. 3tc

Real Estate General

FOR S.ALE IN YRACUSE
.
'

is open for an

,,

45769
( 614 g
'
) 92-2104, Extension 214

E.XTRA NICE HOME -2 BR, 1 bath, unfinished UP·
sla1rs bedroom, garage, carport, 'storage building.

BARGAIN AT 139,500

EOE

~========:J========:Jl!:======:;:9:9;2:·:3:0:1:4::====::!

Business Services

FREE ESTIMATES

949-2161
3-4·!H ••· pd,

THE

GROOM
ROOM
Complete Grooming

For All Brttds

EMILfE MERINAR
Owner &amp;

Operator

614-992-6820
Pomeroy1

REDUCED - REDUCED - REDUCED - 110W YOU CM
OWN THIS COUNTRY HOI£ AT THIS RE DUCEO PRICE- 2
story brick.home nestled on approx. 1:485 acres of privacy!
You and th~ gorgeous fireplace. No worry about space either
- th1s beauly has 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, family room wrth
woodburner and manx other fealures thai can make this
, country hOme, "HOME SWEET HOME" lor you, CALL FOR AP·
POINTMENT TODAY!~

•New Homes
•Garages
-complete
••-.Wing
Stop &amp; Compare
~rH lstllnatn

SPRING IS COMING! I View the awakening of Mother Nalure
from this barn style home ln Dexter, Ohio. Surrounded b~
Nature. Beauty and fresh country air. MANY OTHER GREAT
fEATURES. $56,000.00:
.

985-4473
667-6179

5-31-'90 tin

POMEROY- 2 bedioom, I ~ star~ home wilh carpet, buill·in ·
.bookshelves, !)'tio and rear balcony to enjoy a beautiful view
of the river!! $23,500.00, MAKE AN OFFER.

WHALEY'S
AUTO PAnS

BUSINESS IS SO GOOD - WE'RE· RUNNING OUT OF
STOCK! WE ,I£ED liSTINGS. If you nnt to sill, call us
'ript now. Our edslttract atttnti1111. Our ulis staff is ••·
PtriiRCed. for beSli'ISIItS Call 992-2259.

Speclalldna In
Cutt•m ,,... l..alt
NEW • UIED PAfiT&amp;
FOR ALL MAKER •
MODELl

. INTEREST RATE AS LOW AS '6.175% Yarlablt and 8.625
filed - We can iell your property and wt nave DU1'fS.

992-7013
or 992·5553

992-6191
949-2880
985-4411
992-2259

01 TOLl FlEE

1-•oo·•••-oo1o
DAIWII, OliO
3/ 5/'91/t

•,

lED HIGI.EY'$
llllll SHOP
Open 5 D•v•
Mon.-Fri. B-8
Clootd Bat. • Sun.

SIMON'S
PICK·
A-PAIR
SAME
LOCATION

mo.

I UUL flE NI AL

546. Uppor ........ Golllpolis
'.,,•• 614-446-0002

'

hnwlf Hi

Ow•

IJI/111

YOUNG'S

Use Court Strnt
Entrcmce

CARPENTER SERVICE
-Room Additions

.

- Gutt1r work
...:.electrlc•l and

POMf1~Yz~1?m~

IFR EE ESTIMATES!

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

11·14-'90 lin

OHko 614-992-2116
HOM£ 614-992-5692
DOmE S. TUlliO, IIIOKER

BISSELL
BUILDERS

HOUIEI•LOTIIIFARMS
COMMERCIAL
We Need UoJiniJI!

AU.IIADS
Iring It In Or We

Plo u,.

Gtt your lawn and gar·
den equipmtnt tuntd up
and bllll• sharpenetl
far tht coml1111 seosonl

. DURING FEBRUARY
-

R. L, MASH
CARPENTRY

. ONO.

~~ ;
J&amp;L

INSULATION
•VInyl Siding .
JAIIIS UESEI
t9,·2772 or
742-2251

RUSH I

3/6-"0/lln

992-s3u ., •n-JS61
Across Frorro Pest Office

PH. 949·280 1
or 1•. 949·2169
• Day or Night
. NO SUNDAY CALLS

4-1&amp;-1&amp;-lln

Acrttu ,,.. l'rtat OHka
2171. s.c-1 St.
1'011110¥. 01110

KEN'S APPLIANCE
· SERVICE

•Rtplacement
Wlndowa
•Roofing
•lnaulttlon

lEN'S APPLIANCE
SEIVICE
992·5335 or
985-3561

IAIIIIU----$125.,

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp;1 GARAGES

"At Reasonable Prien"

MICROWAVE
OVEN REPAIR

o•ns-s.,.,

IICIO OVIIIS-S" .,

'-lnterktr • EJCtefiot
.Painting

205 II. Sacarrd Str•t
MIDDLEI'OU, OHIO 45760

90 DA I WAIU"" .
WASHm-StlO.,

FHIZIRS-$ US .,

- Roofing

~) ~
TuiiN r: ~.; Rr. " 1 rr

USED APPUINQS

HFIIGIRATOIS-$100 .,

Plumbing

- Concme work

lt·f.10.Wo

IISSEU &amp; lUilE
coNnncnoN

ESTABLISHED RESTAURANT/DAllY QUEEN business
available in Meigs County. All equipment, building, and
ground Included, CAll US TODAY FOR All THE DETAILS!!!

HENRY E. CLELAND ..............
JEAN TRUSSELL ........ ... ..... .. .
JO HILL ..... ... ...... ., .......... .. .....
OFFICE .. ....... -· ............ , .... ; .. .. .

·•

Services

Pets for Sale

Pomeroy, OH.

P,, ~
"liiiiln:R RtAITT

HAYIAII ROAD- Approx. 50 acres of vacanlland. Electnc
available. Has a great wooded buikhngsile. Some large trees.
.
.
$20.000

73

.
on a Dailey, Director of Nursing
VMH Skilled Nursing' Facility ·
ll.SV2 East Memori·a·l Dr1've

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Peinting

POMEROY- PEACOCK AVE.- Completely remodeled w4h
new windows, new carpel, new almost everything. Has a din·
ing room, living room, 3 bedrooms, foyer, kitchen w~h new
cabinets, new bath, and a full basement w~h lolsofwindows
and its own new furnace.
Must Stl $~.000

Ti-u ~k s lo r · Saltl

. or

ROOFING

RACCOON CREEK - A nice camping lol with electric and
Grey water disposal. Sh.owers and bathrooms really close,
, also has alronlage on Raccoon Creek for a boat dock. Really
• nice. Just $5.900

PATIO

BEm CROCKJR

CAT FOOD
6oz.

$

BANQUET- 28-32 OZ.

.

HUNT'S

Autos for $11tt

72

activities director for the longterm care unit. Flexible schedule.
If In
' t ereS t 8d, COn t aC t :
Becky Janovec, SN F Director

1------:------------

'

71

?A M Otcwcy ~it!S
7S Bu;at s &amp; Motors tor $;a le

wanted

Apart-time position

In Loving,Meniorv

hrt•r•li!r

Trans orlalion

59 For Sale or Trade

Help

a.

83 hcwati"g

ACTIVITIES DIRECTOR

""""'ion• on v•riouoactlvltioo which m1y be undertiby
the village ·Under
prog111mo,
.
Written comments wHibe r===::;;;:R:ela~I~E~stfat:e:G:e:n:e:ra::l=====j
oCcepted until 7:30 P.M. .
March 25. '99hnd moy be
moiled
to Mayor
Hoffmen, 237
Race StFred
.. Middleport, Ohio. 45760.
POMEROY, OHIO
, Fred Hoffman, Mayor
992
22 59
Village of Middleport
. 131 13 1tc

POITIAIID- BIG lOT- One story home. Acute 5 room, 2
bedroom home with attic space for more rooms. one car gar·
age, level lot, well. insulated for economical living.
Reduced $22.500

Hay &amp; Griltn

65 Sued

B1 Ho fJ'elnlprovttmeru 10 •

PubliC Notice

In Memory

' ·BRADBURY- Close In- Small one lloor plan home with 3
bedrooms. Approx. ~acre With garden space, storage build· ·
. ing and nice sitting porches. Newer carpel in some rooms,
.and a newer range, ·
Reduced $14'.500

Cheddar Cheese .:.~z~.. 99~

64

Vge Looliilf-lti AIi11111e WMTA!Jl-:_

SYRACUSE - Close But Not Secluded ..: An older home
With a new heai pump, new "JOI and completely redone in·
side. Home has ·3 bedrooms, sunroom, dimng room, rap
around porch, and a patm. Two ol the bedrooms are buge.
. ,
·
. Asklnl $43,000

,

FLAVORITE SHREDDED MOZZARELLA

6 3 li"estock

state:
IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
The addrooa of uld ntal
OF
ltote li 40!1Bti. T,R. :!45.
Coolville, Ohio 45723. Sold
MEiGS COUNTY, OHIO
BANK ON, Athena, ....A.
reel eitata i1 more fully de·
Plointifl ocrlbecl aolotiowt:
Coot No. 9Q-CV.-238
Situated In Orange Town·
. . vs.
ohlp, County of Meigo. St.te
NEDA B. CLEMSON, n~o
ol Ohio, In Ohio Compony'o
N~DA B..MITCHELL,
Purc~•i• 1nd In the North·
wad Quarter of Section 34.
wlnat horsepower 131 ~
Of equiptrtent ET AL '
Oetandlnta Town 4. Range ' 12 and
The Board of
Accilerator I Decelerator;
LEGAL NOTICE
bounded end deacrlbed ••
Transmipion: Full Power
. re•rv• the sigh~ to
SHEA lFF:s SALE OF
followo: .
. .
ShHt w/lntogrol Torque
any or ell bldo.
REAL ESTATE
· Beginning at the North·
Converter; Brekea: 141
Order ot the Boord of
Ao Sheriff of Melgo weat corner Of lha &amp;4·ecre
Wheel Sitlt·Ad]uotlng, Hv·
Tru11011 of Ororige
drat lie w 1 p~wer bOostan:
Town•hip. County, Ohio, I hereby offer trllct ot r•loolllte cloocribed
Sta,rlng: Hydrootetlc; CAB:
Dorothy Colowey, Clerk; lor ule It 10':30 A.M. on In Deed Book 222, Pogo
ROPS w/Heoter, Defrootor,
Wllllem S. Hondor.on, Thurocloy, April 1B. 1991, 1B1. Melgo County Deed
Alr Suspenolcn Stet. AdJu•-·
Jameo E. Wotoon, Roger .A. D.. on .the tront 11ep1 ot Racorde; thence South 80
able Conoola; ScorHier: C"t-.
A. Ritohle the Mligo County Court- rode: thanca Eaat 10 rode;
houl8, Pomeroy. Ohio ~ tha thence Nol1h 80 rodo to tho
tlng Width 48" mounted bl- 131 1 3. 1tc
tollo~lng
deocrlbed reol canter ot the Townehip
hind front wheels with 5
Ro•d; thence.We at elong th•
ohlnko; Tlroo: 14:00x24 on
center . of the · Townahip
10" Rlmt: Moldboord: 12'
Road to tho place of "'ginPower Shill, 121 Pow• Tilt
ning, conteining 6 acre ••
c~lndet-. Ughto: 121 Hood, 121
mora or 1&amp;11.
Stop &amp; Toll, 121' Back-up, (21
Blode, I1I Reor Working;
I

~~--20&amp; NORTH SECOND AVE .
MIDDLEPORT. OHIO
OFFICE 992-2886/HOME 992-6692
DOTTIE S. TURNER. BROKER

$169
2°/o Milk ••••••••••••••

hrm fqurpmunt
Wilnted' to Buy

,
Mpbil e Hom es tor Rt:nt
Fatms lor Rent
Apar tmen• tor Runt
Furnished Rooms
SpaCe trii R ent
Want e d ·tO .Rent
Equtpment f'o• Ru1;1t
For le•e

56
s·7
58

Public Notice

, OPPOR~

GAL

61
62

51 Hou~ehold Gooch
.6 2 -c Spo.-ting Good1- ··
53 AnttqUes
5 4 Mts-c . Mer chandtse
55 Building su·p pl iw

~75 PI Pleasant
458 leon
576 Apple_GrOve

"773 Mason
882 · ..~Haven
89S letar1
937 , ButfOIIIo

Buddmgs-

Merchand ise

18- Radio. TV a. C8 Rt:pan
17 Miseetlan~us '
18 Warrit~~:d To Oo

M•son Co • WV
Ar~tt&lt;~ Code 304

lot Sale

Huuws lor Rent

42
43
44
45
46
47
.t8
49

NEW -REPAIR

.

B~smess

15 Schools&amp; lnstruclrnn

Real Estate General

fLAVORITE

J1

41

Howard L Wrlt.MI

Tomatoes •••• ~ ••••• ~~ •• 49(

MubtluHomes tor 'Soalt:
F..-r_ms lor ~ale .

I;Qj)FJJI .

11 , Help W1n1«t

•

EQUAL HC)UUitO

H .;rm~

32
33

35 , lots &amp; Acr e age
3!) Real Ett11e Want ed .

12 Situ• lion Wanted

cutor of the lltata of Blain

WHOLE

.SCHOONER BR~ND BREADED .

4

31 ·

PUBLIC NOTICE
Fuel Tank: 1701 gollona; HyThe Boord of Orange droullc· Byotem: 1211 GoiTownohlp, Mliga County of lono; Bock-Up Alarm; EnOhio. will reoelvtl bldo untR glne HOod Sides Lock-Up
12:00 o•cloc~ P.M. the 25th Kit; Roar Tow Hitch; Operatdoy of Morch 1991 for tho lng Weight: 29,000 lbo.
purch10e ot e Used luOFFER ED 11 trade-In:
tlculotecl Motor Grader with. Uoecl Gillon 104 S/ N
.minimum opoclllcotlona 11 104HB-CC-090B7.
lotlowa: Engine: Oloailt · l:iB~Id:clefr11t1i~o~oubmlt detailed

'

Pork Roast •••••••~•• $1 ~9

3 Annouclments

Public Notice

nee

·

SKATE-A-WAY
35th Anniversary Party
FRIDAY, MARCH 15

PORK SHOULDER STEAKS OR ,.

Chicken Breast •• :~$1

742

SAME LOCATION

Chuck Roast ••••••••
29

843
' 241
949
667

Ll.

SPLIT

985

PICK-A~PAIR
Court

.,

Mergs County

.. JlULLE'i'IN BOARD DEADLINE
.
4:30P.M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATJON

Use

t ' ffJ .' f'r

G ·anu~ County
Area Code 614

~ - -· -

USDA CHOICE BONELESS.

.30

followillg t t•l•·llhtitw ,.xclla11g••s ...
Stmhnd

.BULLETIN
BOARD
·--- -

.

C..-d, of Thtnks
f 2. In Memory
.

' .42
· .6D
.05/ day

Form SupplieS
&amp; Livestock

Real Estate

i'

Employment
Serv 1ce o

l:lu .~.,.~i.{it•tl prrJw.~

DAY DEFORE PU8LICAI tON
COP'Y DEADLINE
1-1 00 AM SATURDAY
MONDAY PAPER
2 00 PM MONQAY
TUESDAY PAPER
2 .00 PM TUESDAY
·wE.O Nf.SOAV PAPER ,
2 .00 PM . WEDNESQAY
THi)ASQli!Y PAPER.
2 :00' P. :M THURSDAY
t-HIOAV PAPER
2 IJO "P M. FRIDAY
SUNI1AV pAPER •

$ . 99
R1beye St~ak •••..••, 4
. BEEF BUCKET ·. . . . . . .
.·. $.
9
7
Cubed Steak •..•. ~~. :. · 2· · ·

·

.20

'

wtll also ;tppt!at rn the Pt Pllws.;ml Rll!jllsll!r and tht:! Galli
pulrlri 0~''' T,u bunc. !l! acl~ "' !l o vut 1 ji. 000 hom t!S

U~~A CHOICE BONELE~S BEEF . lB.

15
15

A1111 uu 11 cements

Ov.,-r 15 Words

$4.00 . . .
$6.00
$9.00
$13.00
• $1 30/ dav

Rates o11e tor conMcu(lvllt runs. bJoken up d.-v 5 w"l -be ch •gild ·
lor eKh d..- a, sepaurte ;Jds .
·

Vi1fd Salt:s

c la:uodtud lhspltJY ,

16
15

10

"A ci•srlthd ad'll e rhSt:lllL'ftl pl;.ct:tl m lh t! D~ulv
~ "JJI

. 15

3
6

POUOitS
'Ads oulilde Mtlii:ls. Galha Or ~asun countreos nm!i1 be prl!
pilld
.
'
' R ~ ctttVIt 6 , !)0 drt.c:ountlor adf pilnd tn alhlm1cc
..
'Fre«- .. .1
G1ve.w1y find found ads undt!f 1!:.. words will be
Rin 3 days al no ch•ge.
·
'Puce oJ ad f~n itll c•rtilllllf(tt!'JS •sdouhlc pu i:t! ot ad .c ost
' 1 ~1r,t • ltne typu unl, u s~
·
.
.
'Senlitttfil's not r~t~powstbl l! lor ~tnor so•hur firSi tlil'f ICh tJtk
tor tltrUrs hrsl dfN ad.ftt ll $ m pap~• I C;~llln~fore 2 .00 p 111
d"' ~flur pubhCOII iOIIIO maMtl CDiftl CI!UII
'.•
' Ads that ,n~u! be pard"rtl ad'llo.nct! cu•:
C;ud ot Thank~
HII~P'I' Ad ~&gt;

Rate

Words

Days
1

CLOSED SUNDAY

298 SECOND st. ·
PQMtROVf OH.

• The Area'$ Number ·1 Marketplace

RATES ·

992-2156

MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

Monday tbtu .Sunday .
8 AM-10 PM

' The

Ohio

March 13, 1991

10-The Dati Sentlner

Fr" pickup and

delivery in P-oy
and ·Mitldltport

city

limits. ·

539 Brytn Pltce
Middlepo", Ohio

,,

TRI·COUm
RECYCLING

'

11-14-tln

OPEN 7 DAYS
A WEEK
9 A. M. 'TIL 7 P.M.
' If JINII cltan up your
yor on wllktnds..-.w•
ltu.I_"' . - ....

Til-COUNTY
RECYCUNG

t ....... Off "'' .,,.., Oro

•Garages
·• Room Additions

WE ALSO SEIIVICE
CHAII" SAWS ..

Rt. 7 &amp; lt. 14J

•Kitchen• • Bathe

DAVE'S SMAll

Poying cellh Iii&lt; ..,,lftum.
copper, brall. IIIMna.. ettll.

•Vinyl Siding
•Restoration
•Repair Work

ENGINE REPAIR
253 West Main St.

Po1111rey, Oh. ·

. 992-5526
POMEIOY,

PH. '992

o•o

TIN Contor el

,_.,, Ohle

rneen•Mim, rtdletor., ...,~
Mt• ....,netort •nd .. non·
f.-rout i'MtM • .
CAll FOR

r•us

614-992-5114
9AM-7PII-7DnsoW,.t
loll.'ttl -

'

�Page 12-The Dally Sentinel

LAFF-A-DAY

- .....................

4

Glveeway

_

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednetday, ~ 13 1981

-

Fliewcod, ....oned loge, ·

I'JS.JII2t.

Bullnea
Buildinga

Lolt &amp; Found

6

-'w Doy C.. a. ...,
..._-..a.
I LnL • 1:30 p.m. Aaoe

lloo

an.,

FOI.01d:_ml...l l n , on 111.. Rd. 114-1112-ml.

....

.._~

11' black, 4 ~

Bulkllng.l14

-.-~~~MG.~
me. 114 •• 1114.

•

1

•0

·"'

I '

'

-

=

··~·

c:J

z llary

EVENING

.
e:-a_x

~=(1) 3-2·1

IItie 1o
llon...frt.,

a

NO, HE'S DOWN

CONFUSED, DAp...

6AR8ER 51-lOP
6ETTIN6 HIS
CLIT..

F111:111CI&lt;il

I 6UE5S WHAT I WANT
TO ASK VOV 15,DO VOU

I'M . ALL

ATOOR DAD'S

...........

NO, I UNDERSTAND...'i'Oll

KNOW AN'(TI·IIN6 ABOVT LOI/E?

WERE PRETlY SUS'!' TIIERE
IN BARBER SCHOOL ..

reservoir."

- . . - . DEADUNE: 1:oo p.m.

tha doy ...,,_""' ... 1o 1o ....

21

mi. o"
,.,_Thuro.
'71
ChWJ I.W., '73 CheVy f11c1wp.

())3-2·1~

Bualne,a

NOT lo

WI mid to Buy

Employment Services

.

ii,Rlclt_ ....._IDi,
,..

...,.._-tho--

Wontad 1o bUY: J"'* ooro with
ouctlono, •· or wl- molOI'o I ocrop mot·
IL8'M-3'1'114821.
IJoio.d
Olllo. ~......,, Yl ....... 304-7l'J.1711,
Wontad To Buy: Junll Aoltoo
.;;;,:==.;.;.;;;,..;:~---1 whh or wlhoul Coli
9 Wlntld tO Buy
Loory Lively. IM 311 1303.
WANTID: to,IO within 10
30 ., 40 nn1 · Qot. 1111111 0 1 Alo
Ill County Areo. Wooctod wlh
ha..

AVON • All ••- Coli llorllyn ·
WNYOr30WII·~I.
A d - COonllnllor • Dlroclor Soc:lll Boo vtcn NMdod ot
-tor 11 bad nurolna locHMy.
LlcoMod at ollalblo. fir .....,.
auro. Sltory onl ..,..
manM!roto wllh .............. Coli
--~:':0:::~~ or t. oppolntmont
1pm _...__ ... Ad-c.:~:::::::::::::::::l.:::=:.:===:..._J •=30
mlnlltr.tor,304~.
Appolntmant Saorotootoo. ,.._
llonol Colnpoftll hN 10 lmmadllto -fngo. NO a·
__
,_ AM
.... at
- PM. ·
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __,_ _ _ _ _...;._ _......j porlonct time,
.......

-•n

all 112l. CllrNnl Altair Q

lollollcn. p - 114:,:.;..
..;:177.::;,::..- - : : - - : - - : - - -

1.oco1 lfonc!lr!g Routa ""' Solo.
Won' Loot! Clll lie Nawl11'111-1414.

1-

-Oppllii~T.V. NtLo-

'' Mliil•'"'
UPHOLSTERY

IIIRIIOI • Dn.OI

........,,

FREE ESTIMATES

41 Houaea lor Rent.

llpollo, ""

• " 1_, In Point
PI-1111M71-1111.

0000

-

""'

Rent:

l.oolllcn:

Trovol . _ , If you oro Inter•
Iliad In -'lrig your own
....... I """"" I both, nloa 6
cruloe or trovol ogoncy
no lnokto .,..., wpocad,
IINIOI.
VENDING ROUTE: For Site. I
lli'ong, oolld. bwlnooo. 42 'Mobile Homes
Ouorontoad • - ,pluo banuo, High froltlo, -llocotlono. Now
oqul,..._ 1-800-21&lt;1-VEND.
fOr Rent
ld aontO
l'onllo'*1l
!revet
roqw,d. ~
eon
I lA on Cllothlm Avo.~.
30&lt;1 ..75-7308 .... lor ..... 22 Money to Loan
IIIUO utHMIIo I ,.._, Coli
Penllln.
1
llolorolpm.t~lll.
UMH8 BY IIAIL
AVON I All AlMa I SillrlOf Up to ~.GOO In 7Z houro. Wo
Spooro, 311W75--.
- can halp rou got o llanotwo
111011110
&amp;..n ly lloll. 1-NIIIIO' Cloy Chopol -:~
DRIVERS· OTA
114-1
......
IIIIIEDIATE HIRING WITH II-

---·~-"\:"eia

21 :I·Jie. Second

Take tht pain out of
pointing.
let me do it for you.

Hand Tufting
Cu.tom Dl'llpea
36 Yean Experl•ee

VERT REASONAIL£
HAIIt REFERENCES
1614) 9,85-4180

614-992-1318
We Say Whet We Do .
We Do Whet We Say.

IO·If.l mo.

3· 11·'81 · 1' mo. pd.

eRemodellng and
Homil Repeira
•Rooting
"Siding
•Painting

FOIEYEI IIONZE
PROM TANNING
SPECIAL
ht SO High School
Student•

NO JOB TOO SMAll
FREE ESTIMATES

10 SESSIONS - $10
Call 949-2126

CEDAR

CONSIIUCtiON

For Appt.

992·6648 or
698-6864

FOIEYEI IIONZE
IASIIAII ID.,

12·11 · 10-lftt

uc•

3-4·'91·1110.

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SID!NO
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSEU
SIDING CO.

•LIGHT HAULING

.... ._.. ....

•FIREWOOD

BILL SlACK
992-2269

._FreeE•Imetu"

... 949-2111
or los. 949-2160

USED RAILROAD TIES

NO SUNDAY CAW
3·11-lln

•·12·90·1fn

C:.

MEDIATE· ANSWERS. Phona In

.......

oppllcallono .....,.... 7A.II.•
tP.M., Tulldoy S/12 lhru Prldn

3115 and w wiH p1

~

•

Real Estate

.,a

nottly rou ot -.ao .....,.
IP.M. lha cloy. lllnlmum 31 Homos lor Sale
... montha ._....... - - ' l:lldrootlt8, pool dick 1'71
to oom 11.000 12.000, or ...000
for nolhlnt otiW ...n 1101 quit· South Fourth Mliid'loport (nNr
gl-lclo8. NIOO·m: ~!J:: High) 111,000.00 8~

ll\lt.No

Eooy Work! Elcellont Poyt Ao-blo Produoto ot ho- Colt
tor lntormotlon. 1104-MI-8003
Ext: :tt3.
FEDERAL LAW ENFORCEMENT
NO

u...,.,_ noc-ry. For

' :rrJicallon

Ink&gt;. con 111·755~---" Ed. 01111!1. lo.m......m. 7
-•EEJOITRAININOOHIOAND
·••

~-

__ ,.... ____
~-

YOUTHS •-

ted In lnlnlng In haoillh -polion I I LPN, Hurolnt ..
- . lladloal -~~~~ lnd
~lcolI ...- - cllrkl. Alao,
·-n ng
- . Young
women and men 1141 ,..,.
old. Out of ochool, ...._..., or
groduoloo ....,.Into Pl. PH. Job
lorvleo, 221 llllh 11, Pelnt
PI-nt, Wed !loren 10,
to:OCioln to ''oo ...... ~a~ Job
Cotpo rep.
HVAC S.VIca Tocllnlclon. Ful~

time Pootlon, o-.; Loo
col ~ny. Good -~
Condllloo-. Muot lo Ei·

. .need. Bend q_.IM To:
Clo Bo• 011...._ OeUipotto Doltv

111-, aa
nlrd A - . Go~
OHCon~;_ _ All ~

=-

1

1

,_,...

lbr -hod.ftc-·
-.
=:rn·
lbr-- Ew••••·
IIW7Nill.

44

31• BR homo 2 ot.,Y, -mont,

AI

- cc 111 ct1•
_m_menla
low
811.00. FRE lEW oolor

ADi":nCII,

Upperlllotll.
114114-44f.7311
Booldo - •
Cowot
Cell

.....

Klna-woterllad,boolloo•

=-~

__,_

bulldng. I kilo. 114-8112- ~.
·
For ly aw.... •
Conw I.Gt, 1ft C..... City, Ill
11actr1c, 3br, - . ..., 2 oar
~·
, vtnyt aiding, uoatlonl
114-'Mt~
e~·
'""'
'
~
&lt;1414!17.
GOVERNMENT HOMES 1r0m 81
(U ropoli!. Dlllnquanl IlK
lo... Your
11 ·- - Ext. GH·
111101 tor curront ropollot.
for Hlo 1111 Ool1lold
Avo, Mid IO'o, 304..75-tm oftar
00 Pll
•:
.
Reduced To Son: 2 Story ,..,
eon. Lal In ChHhlro, 01\lo.
Excello,. condMion. 804-832·

,

llollohon COrpoto At. 17 NCII'Ih,

56

_,

tlll'i, Rio Orolldl, OH Coli IM-

--·---·

..... ~llrlpo.

..

-"r· ·,..__

flold tunrW*g. 112 mi.
, . , _ Rd. Pt. Ploioont, WY,

HeM

&amp;158, tiiM..32·1tlV•

P..s lor sale

'II Chaw 8-10, .... 4.1 V_.
Booutllul llorklnio. IIWI7- auto. air, AM-1111, UII.U.. ......
0III.
:; o t - 810,000.1114'
· ... '
Drlgon•rnd c.nery Perallin,. e 4 or IJI..4230.
Slameee and Hl~n~~layan kltt.... 1m Jaop c.», 11.100. 114-211·
114 .41 , ......... 7 P.M.
1124.
~.· ~·.
Filii Tonk, 2413 Joclloon f/No.
""'"' P ........ :~UW'JS.aoes, , 74
Motorcycles
lull IIW TOQPic&lt;!
. I lloh1 blrdo, •
...,lon..,.lo ond oupp~,.:
1182 111110,
$3110.tm

n;o-

at-

1131.

~lon,

-- - --

oNo lftiOkl.ahtsorwoodlrash in! a. hJur.e

- ... ••f.Widl-·...
.... . .... 30-toogwoocl

oUIII JOUr Pft"'tt'f "'**lck£1 S~f!ll'l
-Miybl- IO·IOOiootMtllehow

LOAD EVEIIY 12 HOUIIS

CALL
,
VICKER'S WOOD HEATING .
:IS!O!'

1•11~2211 tlltr p.in.

f'IO: ....._

=- . . .

-~~nd ......, Doa (IIIII• LDI old, , AKC' .....
.
terod, 304-e7Wetl

0

•

.

•

Kevin's first day as a nlnlll

. a

grader Ia luM of

mortilleationa. (R) Stereo. Q
(1) Nallonal GeographiC
SpeclotiStereo. g
(]) Going Home.to Clottpel
Willi Patti Labelle The
Barrett Sla~ra. Albertina
Hunter, The Mighty CIOuda or
Joy, and Edwin Hewklna join ·
in a celabl'otion of gospel
muak:.lt :OO)
1111 Billy Graltotm Cruaacle
Silly Graham ia jolnad by
Babble Maaon, Richard
Allork and Sandi Panl. 11 :00)
Stereo. C
(J]) • MOVIE: lllo MIIIOro
leartllotcl Wlr (Ril2:30)
48 Holn Seereo._g

'!· :

30W7I,
1

oc•
,.,..,, .,. w- Q

1.111 F.... and Fellivlla:
llllletleld, W.Va. Tha Slallor
llrothoro perform. (1 :00)

8 PrlmeNewo

• I.I.JIU. iE.lL c.,w...

en MOVIE: TIN Luck ol tltot

ll.m.-4!p.m.; 8uncloy, 12 lp.m.
Solo On AI Corpllln llociL Gel
-You ..... You
Cauld .... lla lucbf -

lrlah 12:00)

1;05 (I) MOVIE: Little lllg Man
(PG) 13:001
1:30 w
Growing Pltltta

OUr-

-.._. .... . . . . . . . . --.57
..._ Corpot., R 17 -

w•
Jason llllnka Maggll doean't

114-

""""......,... .....

North 4th In lllddlapct1, 2

t.t- AUCTION I '

,.
..... ,., -Ired• - - ISM.
Nloa 1br oporlmlnt,

FURNITURE. 12

OU,.II.,O= "o. - 1 Uaad

--1144it11H.

~

76

Musical
lnltruments

C:i. ..._,. required. • Nioaty.......,...- -..,1
.....
~
·-'b;::
1:4 hoot,
.
•~kina
liar.

Alumlnutn

52 Sponlng Goods
C... XX o-1 llorno Co-

r, '111

... Knlna, Ontv 11100 - ·
oil .. oWodord . . .
1tn1-. lllo . Gun llhotl' AI

truall . _

•: ;

!)!ff)l

n~

':Q

llllown. tf71 p1ua 1114 E. lloln • - · _...,_
utiiMIIo. ~ atOO. 11-. : II.T.W. 10:00 Lm. to 8:1111
rolrla. fum-. No poto. Not p.m.,._
a.m.!
1:GO to I:GO p.m.
lutliiM torchllcl. 1'14 UI11U. 111 Rl 2121.
Qullto
Vllloy Vlow Apoot-. Alo
0...,. 011; 1 orZ badooom~. ·
pn1 1NO
aooc1
tend
photoo
onil
-DIIon
to·
wolrlo won ....,..,
kitchen, etectrtc
,
, 1 - · A I - 01\lo ....,.,. or
SmHA lundod coQ Analo 0111 8141112olll'1 or IMIIliZ·
~.. 114-241-41170, ElfO, Ul1.

3 DOint hMclo

.

54 Mlacellaneous
Merchandlae

wah ,_ -

0020 oftw 8p.m.

campers a

;

MolorHomes

'

79

MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
Ct) "'CU

..,.............-.-.

..,...,._ ....... -1111,
IICI LMII, lluglo

jlono -

t- =-- llttta-.-.
1171 ConaDnl • .,..,. 11 ft,

tontt ,,_...

S1

.

Home
·. ' ·
Improvements., · •.:

John · Doero
Bid&lt;
-·
$1,000
or bait410oHor.
IM-441-

w•

BARNEY
WHEN DO
THESE THINGS
HIT, LUKEY?

W Clle Equal Juollce
· Linda and Pater alttlnd lhtolr
rnolhtor's funeral . Stereo. Q
11m Ole WIOU Kilby'S
raport.on Mlega,ladoptlon
pula I ba~ ' l welfare In '

blade,
runo geOd, ,_.,.
1121 or. OOft'le lnd ......

Jl111'a ,...., Eaulpme~ :~.~~
Oollltoollo, 114 4
:
WlcleltltllllonMWAUMCitenn
,_... • "",........ luy,
1011, trodo, I:GN:OO -doyo,
811. lUI Noon.
'

..

-

I="' Hoa

...._...

....

...... Tonlt "
c.L -IVAIII

lf.'*'L
Qofll
IIIIMISES,

ASTRO-GRAPH

Jeoban. OH 1100 llflla ..

llclnt I

Aept
•••· • llacln. ..... lotlnollol
•

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

..._I

-Voa
-oupo
.
0Dovlo
• goo CNolc
Ad. Por1o,
~::...... - doll...,. 114-

PII.Rnblng a
HMtlng

'
:

-

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

.,. Jtorto

COIIPUTINOflllfG RSl TO Mlfl

114 411

.

Enlov Over

~00

chon-

,.lo.'I•III•-•LIVE
•• It .....,..,. - 24
hauoo. 1110 oyotem In·

cludooclecOdor.
CALL TODAY

FEBiiUA~~~:ECIAL

ZENIX VIDEO

Jlh ... W.of ............

Sl 195

&amp;.'t. n , OND

Eltcti'ICal &amp;
Refrlger8tlon

...-ch14,1t81

Two-eKpec:tallonslh&amp;1 you - e unable
to Mfllllasl year might become reollllea
in th8 year ahead. Don't give up on your
dra-; IIIey haven't bolfl dlftled, )ust
delayed.

PISCIS jFelt. 20 l'r Oft 201 Tho more
lndepandlfltly you are able lo operate
tCJCIBY.. lho more ellectlve you are llkoly
to be. Oon'llot anyone put you In a polllion ·lhal , could lnhlbll your lleKiblllty.

Trying to patch up a broken romance?
Tho Astra-Graph Matchmaker can help
you understand what to dolo make the
relationship work . Mail $2 to Malch·
maker. c/o lhis newspaper, P.O. Box
91428. Cleveland. OH 44101-3428.
ARIES (M8rch 11·Aprll11) You're likely
to be responslve to a person who Is lruly
In need or your asslslance today. In lacl.
there Is a possibility you might even
make some sacrHices 11 necessary.
TAURUS jAprll 20-lby 20) Much to
your credit, you'll pro)ect a very friendly
• ambiance that wlft be readily perceiYIICI
by thole with whom you'll be lnvoiYIICI
loclay. In lacl, the whoie world will you 81 alrllfld:
GI!MINI llbJ 2Hune 20) What appeared 10 be dllncullearller In the week
could lurn out to be a b r - tOdl}'.
Things you prevloualy percelved u obalaciH might now be uHd 81 •tepplng
alonett.

CAIICElllolune 21...1ufr 22) You lhOUid
be able lo handle most developrnenls
rather well tOday, but your graaleat
strength Is likely to be In slluatlons
which permll you lo uaa the lull scope of
your lmaglnMion.
UIO loluiJ 21-Afll. 221 Follow your lnlu·
Ilion In commercial dealings IOdl}',
_ , 11 your logic dlclates olherwlaa.

Your instincts will be difficult 10 match.
VIRGO lAug. 23-Sept. 221 You mlghl
have 10 deal wllh someone who IS hard
to llgure out today, and tho only way
you 'll be able to make headway Is
through this Individual's emollons.
LIBRA jlopl. 23-0111. 23) II you have to
perform an arduous task IOday. try to
do It lar from the range ol kibitzers and
advisors. Lett to your own devlcea.
you'll do a good job.
·
SCORPIO 10111. 24-Nov. 22) You may
be in love lollh IOvolodl}'. and there Is
nothing wrong with that In 18C1, lhere Is
ample room In thiS world lor an optlml,._
tk: romantic.
SAGITTAIIUI jNov. 23-Dec. ~11 Unleao you dllclpllne youraalflod/IY, lhere
Is a poaolblllty you may nol do your bell
on crhlcal aulgnmenlo, Mpecioltr:
lhoM wltera delldllnea are lnvolwd•
CAPRICORN lllec. 22-.lan. 111 Tllara II
a atrong proboiblllly lhat your phone
may be a ralhar buly lnatrumenlloday,
either with you trying 10 reach othara or
others trying 10 reach you.
'
AQUARIUS jJatt. 20 Pab. 11) H yOu
have lhe lime, money and Inclination,
tOday could be a good day to go lhOp..
ping. Your lnatlnc:1a tor epoltlng bar·
gains are especially lharp ..

tt:ooa&gt;e
(I) w• a a•
GJ)Newa
(J) Night Coul1

(1)Newowelch
Arunlo Hoi Ste...,. Q

o Milml vrce see....

• Fain at1CI l'elllvltla:
llluellotcl, w.va. The Stetler
Brotherl perform. 11 :OOJ
8Maoooyllna
(I]) Scarecrow ltld loin. King

Q
11:01 (I) MOVIE: TIN lllaaootrl
lliMka (PG) 12:301
11:30 ()). @ Tonlghllhow
Stereo.
(J) Nlkla

Cll Antltl6a'a DefenM

Uanlar

~!='=~tarao. Q

J.IJ.tl

.

.....

1•

+

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH

=

about

ACROSS
1 Stophon

·:l .

. 5 Fondle

11Ay•
tollah's

1 Quote
2 Sovtat
river

3 'Love
Boat•
thoma
slngor
4 Lennon'•

countty

12 Singer

Newlon·
John

Yoltord8J'I An-r
11 Splnn
34 Approved
20 Arthur of
by lito
tannll
rules
21 Lightning 31 Proz's
· hurler
.
,.._,.r

wllo
5Rzzy
drlnb
IWems
7 Equips .
IZsalse's 22 Whip
37 W1011g
sis
2:1 VNuvlan 38 Yon laa
· flow
31 Pam·
I AltiCk
. dtnlzan
command 25 Squad
plone
29 Salt·IMied
chaer
22 Theatrical 10 Uttar
30 Bagel
40 Luggage
18 City
turkaya
vahlclo
topper
attach·
24 Hlda
18 Store
away
33 Plo"o's
ment
topper
41 Mimic
door sign
M Bowler's
pleco
27Cenyon
sound
28 Plzzarla
llxtUI'OI
30 L.A.
eager
31 Argon,

13 Sonora
sniCk
14 Boquesl
15 W~tpbl
18 Prohbb
17F;ta
· kn ht
19 Be 1Y

e.g.

(II.)

StrMch
.

.

. DAILY CRYPTOQUO'Jl'S - Here's how to work It . 3113

AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample AIs used
for the three. L's, Xfor the two O's, etc. Sln1le letters,
apostrophts, the leflllh and formation of the words are
all hints. Eich day the code letters aie different.
3-13
CRYPTOQUOTE
K R X E

XNPPWWB
AU

l RNYB

VWRVYW
AD · XKFYY

Ez'wc

LWHW

DRI!

EHRNJYWB

a • ·uNIUI' caa Lltl

FKJAEARDX . -. YRDTUWYYRL
Yntmlay'1 Cryptoquote: FRIENDS ARE LOST BY
CAWNG OFTEN AND BY CALLING SELDOM. FRENCH PROVERB

a

Nlgltt

"

LA E Z

'
'•

•

EZADTX,

aDS,a
• A~Mr~D~
Ttllllghl
lltConllt

~par~~ Tonight
11:31 (J) Cltaen Q
•
11:00(1).1nto Ill Night Star.o.
(J]) • "'"" MIOiilnt Willi
Nla PIIPIII

•

32 Nuclear
weapon
34 Bend
35 Ceosar's
egg a
38 Preton·
tious talk

1;1

. (J]) •

NORTH

tJH4

...

~sia.....

•

I I .I

By Jame1 Jaeaby
.AQ~42
'
IH
It Is often said - correctly - that
.AJ
many CODtracts are lost by playirlc too
quiclily at tbe first trick. Wilen the WEST
EAST
dummy appean, always slop and COD· • 32
...
aider all of your choices.
.,J 1013
tKQIO
Once North opened the blddilll and tt87S43
•su4s2
showed spade support, there was no .KQI09~
holding South. He didn't use Black-1
SOOTH
wood immediately, because if North
tAKQIOUT
showed only one ace, he coUldn't be
• .KB76
sure whether it was the ~rt or the
•Az
club ace. loislead he cue-bid' the ace of
diamonds and then asked for aces
Vulnerable: East-West
when his partner revealed the ace of
Dealer: North
hearts.
West led the king of clubs and South Solltlo
Wool Nortl1 Eut
played too quickly. He could see a dia·
Pus
mood loser In both hands, so he called
2+
Pass 3•
Pus
for dummy's ace of clubs and threw
4t
Pass 4.
Pus
his two of diamonds onlo tbe table . 4NT
Pass ~·
Pus
7.
All piSI
Not foreseeing the forthcoming cataB·
trophe, declarer confidently drew
Opening lead: K
trumps arid turned .to the hearts.
West's discard caused South's jaw to
sas several inches. Then he complained about bad luck.
jack as an entry) and discards the two
However.. his partner had spotted of diamonds on the established live of
!be correct play. At trick one declarer · hearts.
.
.
Here declarer had three choices at
sbould discard a heart on the ace of
clubs. He draws trumps and turns to trick one: to ruff the club lead (wbicb
the hearts. When the 4-0 break Is dis- is also a successful play) or lo win witJo
clOied, he ruffs the fourth rowtd in. dummy's ace and discard a diamond
band, returns to dummy with a trump or a heart. He should have analym all
(I hope you saw the need to retain the of them.

43 Equal
44 8o IDrty

To Ia Annootncacl
CrMk at1CI CliMe

j

1· I

BRIDOI!:

=~i!V:.L
en 700 Club With Pet
(J]) •

,,

.

41 FrOihly
42 AclrNI

Robl1110n
..
10:30 tD lncoral TIN Flnll Round

..... ._...
- . n d .....

cliliftiii•Utili
eo.......,
n _
1
.,.,..., ..,,

ak ......
10:00 ()) • @ Quantum Leap
Sam leaps lnlo the life ol 1
- l g e l Who Wanll to help
an actor. s -. Q

0-~.:;:olor 30" ...,_, g•

82

.

..

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(j)Newo

.

.

@ 0.. John L.ouiH
clalma to hove the meana to
aava the center from ruin.
Stereo. 0
w
Anflltlng 1ut ~
Alter bec:omlng !Overt,
Hannah and M1ny toave
problema. Ste...,. 1;1
()) Amerla1n Mlllera Artllla
Frenklln'l mueleal career 11

1:30 ()) •

With .._..J.I,IIIO. Own« Will
Flnace.'IM-DII ' ' "
·
- Hoa: good cand., 1150.
IM211·11b.

ond Uoad F1n11 liqul-':
OVer 110 Uaad Troctoro lo
Chooao Fronl. llo~F.,.
,ord Now Hollo ond

c•

l.lltjelllvlle Now
a Larry KlttiJ u..1

Mil•,

5 II. haovy dUty l~ah l!og,
John Dooro 2 bolt""' plow 3 p1
hMch, 304-17S-4301.
'

M.D. Kalharlno decides lo
join lhto E811man aloft.
Stereo. C
(!) MOVI!: Amazing Grace
11 :30)
,.
Gil
Jake ancl lila
l'almal1 McCabe Clelanda a
wile ICCUHd Of murdering
her chtttlng llaylrlend.
Slereo. C
·
0 MOVII: Apology 12:00)

C.oter'o Plumbing

.

'

IF·'tOtJ HAVE ACHICI&lt;EN
eoNe IN~ THRQolrr'll

80«.
AC 180 Dl- Troctor, 1700 Hro
~."!';.D-f7 AC. wldl "'"'::io':i
Ido
1 IIIII MQuln IRI 3pt. moh, IZ.'ISOil· Loto
.... Pull , _ wlh oliver ..... Ill
C.• O.vld rown Traetor

-111.~

!&lt;NOW WHAT ...... ,..,....1

....,. .... lutlr ......... . -

1'11-43011.
John Doero - · -

We Daagl1 Hollonw,.-ar,

([l

lludalt Tronomloolono, Uwl 1robulll, ......,. • ..1; 114-Z45i
11077,1~1.
\

(' • ''11' ,!r·c~

Wt1cl•••••a.e.......,1051.

Untumlohad.

Fumlahecl
. Roome

Auto Parte &amp;
. AcctiiOrlel

~ long bod, . . . ~

Low ut11n1oo, -... a 1n111

-

mind his ftlrtlng. IR) &amp;:;II
1:00 ()) • Ol Night c-t Roz
jolns A Happy Alone Healthy
AdultiiHAHA) eupport
grouj). Stereo. Q

SWAIN

114 111 IIJI,

· mlden

Ciounldown (PG) (2:00)

(J) Clle TIN Wonder YMra

·AS At:H P.I'T(HCXDGisr

-

DfWXE SATElUjE TV SYSTEM

(J) MOVIE: TIN Final

75 Boats • Moto.. ' ' ·
"'
''" ' ' •
for Sale
•:

ole)

And loniloa, Atoa Flnonolng
Avolloblo. C... I Sono, Jock·
oon,OHI14-III-MII.

- ~CPS1000

..
..

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Apoot....,. . . . . _ lai Z or I
........ion . . . . . . . .

WI I I IIIIDI ftDMII'I'IT

•

e

.,.ulol 111, ond nN lllot
blloo, good tllo, I'M-J112.3010 ·~
... 8 p.m. .
•

1111 .....,..

-11.
ltw ft7l .... _et ....
... Dlnottt
wlh 4 Cholro, PoliO per-· 4
,_., , , _ Bod, 812.10 per
4 Drowo Chaot . o1
Droworo, IUO ~- Rt. 141,
4 M._ 011 Rt. 7 In c.-ry.
HOURS: I!IOftdoy Htru 811-r,

·

ft/U/1\JI~EP I

8Crollli'*
7:35 (I) IInford and Son
1;00 ())
@ Unoolved
Myaletlea An aaplrlng
)oumalilt and a crew of 14
dlaappear from their bOat. IR)
Seereo. C

.

troy, tooCI 11ow1a. Ex·

lolo end Chair, 11.11/: -11.

No ....L 814 441 4821.

::f.

Saff.n

.,.

&amp;OVN.T'ING?
•
"''Cf GOING •••
NOW OIJ/( PAYf

11110 7011 MogM, IM-4*'1441
after ep.m.
_1

.... ClaM tor ...... 23" hlah,

011-

au-.
1210.

~' IUIIO good,

""' Bolo: AKC Roalot- Cllm
T - Pupa, SloG'· 11110. Cuto
EMler .......,...,.,_17110,

lluv or 1111. R-ow Anllq-,

LacatH Ott
ScMolld. aH lt. 1.41
(6141 4. .·9416 or 1-100·172~5967

.

73 Vana &amp; 4 WD'a

53
~~:_...~~.;':-h. ~-..:.,A;;,;nt:,;lqUea~::..,...,...61 Fann Equipment

BENNm'S MOBILE HOME
HEAtiNG &amp; COOLING

.

..

AftE

AKC -nlono Wlllo plio, SIIIO. oncl,._ 30&lt;1-171-1471.
AKC Yorkolllro Tonier Puppy.

-..a IIIII Chill ....
of Drowero
~_.811.14
_ ...

"""""*"'

'

.

'

Oooomlnlt. A l l - Allllvloo.
tome Pot Food Ooolor. Julo
w-. Colt1M,..tl,4231.

PICKENI FUANITUR~

:.=co..::=\!,-~.':,

Orocl- 1111:::t.! ond z bod"""" opol1
11 . VI._
Minor
and
' IUvwllal
In M-pao1. From
1111. C.lll14-t12·7717. EOH.
Lorge upotoh opoot.-, 2311
Flrol A..,uo. Kftchon- I l l Nlrlgorotor1_ 1210/aw. pluo

. I

you'vE tf'IVftiTIP

-/

·
-,..5-'
- ·_ h12
- Corpot
180: -;;;;;;-;,;;tii;j;i;"''ii;;;:;;;
~.-IIO
Jl
$1_yord.
Groom ond Supply ..,;., Pot

-

.,. 441-4171.

••

olpn. loin·

lllocll, brtcll, -

RENTZ OWN

q

~ NG!"

=.nment
TCitllglotSte...,. l;l
(1). Mama'a Family
1111 WhMI of Forlune Q
(J]). M'A'S'H
Ill College leakeiHII

Supplies
- . llntllo, ole. Claude Win•

-1021.

-

7:05 (I) Happr Daya
7:30 ()) • @ Jeapardyl Q

Building

55

I,AYIE'8 FURNITURE
Cornptolo - . . lum:l:
Houl'o:llor&gt;8ot,N.
0322, ...1... out -vllo
Ad.
.

:' 3br Aonch, C-drol
celllngo, 1 both, Ill'--· ... lo.
nice lot, -lion; Pricod low
MO'o. otfwo conoldorod. 11+

Extro nlco, roiiORiblo I bdrm,
luK 11111-rt, - · otarop

--

.............. --~~·-"""·
8111.00.~ tot-.
oo
..........

IJ -

UniUml- I bad,_ opt!
- - -nd Clnlc 0

MOIILf HOME FURNACES - HEAT PUMPS
ALL FURN4a PARTS

•••""'*''•-....
- ...5
""-

--~
I'll..... Skiap

·8

8MOf111YHne
Sca..crow and Mra. lOng

WOLI'PTAHNINO IEDI

APPLIANCES

Cholhlre...011. E~c. cond. Work:
IIIM"32-"''"' or' Homo 104-132:
118111.

114 11141 URI

Stt~k/1

I

UIED

D 8tiorliCanter.

Apanment
fOr Rent .

rlvlfj

N•w In

race and confrontl an Old
enemy. Q

1 a.m. lo I p.m. llon..a.t. t'M-111!,. 1117 3rd. Avo. Qal.

Ful~poot

LINDA'S
PAINTING

·· S
·-=-~'!'9yvar
drlvea In a Champlonohlp

Caunty Atmlona Ina. Good

r r I' r I' ,. r 1

SCUM Lf1S ANSWBS
Hl.
.Ta~Jtly- Stoke - Crest- Gladly -LAST YEAR
Overheard on Well Street • A . rule · of economics
reveels that the . best time to buy anything Js LAST
YEAR."
.

(1)
NewloHaurQ

=•=. . vondlng--.

I
30 -•·- Good Trollor an ,._, ver, nice,
Ill hoall~111111
hrlouo lnqulrl•
only. 31M·

w• lnaldll!clltlon 1;1
()) Mat:NIH/Laltrer

w

~~~~~~~~~~E~ETTERS

6 ~~fc!~~~iER LETTERS lO 1 ·1

~ I DIHm of Jot.,tle

ttvouan tha

Public Sale
g:~&amp;'::..c:"~a ~aso!..~:: 11
=~~~~~&amp;...~ ~"'1::
ki'p;;· ~a;iAu;'AUctiiiiilo&lt;;:nc;;;p;;;;; 388-ICI85. No Sundo' C.llo.
_,;__H.,;;jj,;,;I.:;;P..;W.,;;a;;;n;,;;t;;;ed.;;___ duototot, Froa Ellll-•1 como

I
~~ llt.o Com-

•

1:35 (I) Andy Cllttlllll
7:00())• @Wheeloll'-..e

.,.. ..,.I, you ..,.. .,_rgo~oc~

lha olfortnO.

AlwiJ Clllllllh

(J]) •

lhll ""' dO buol·

Hild.....,

8

D Up ClaM

-wah~roukrww1 ond

g

.

111 1121e caa Nrill Q

opponunHy

_....,.

2·111

eM-48 11011.

8

~ AbbOtt lttd Coatallo

~~..-~NewaQ

~
d~-oo. t,;t--------~------~ OHIO VAU.IY
INOTlCII
,
y.
PUIUSH1NO CO.

P.

Ad.

lnlide the P&lt;IA T. '• 8 WOIId Tocla!_
. aJi Our HOUM Q
1:01 (I) levetly Hlllbllllta
1:30 ai • @ NBC Nightly Newt

"We Jogged twice around the

ALL YoniSoloo- 81 Paid In

Q

~:-:;go- Q
0 Cartoon 1!.,..81

ho·•r c'J anl~
'I14 4411111.
Wciuld 1M to dO blllpllllng,
,....,.ar1
I
eaplrlence.
~ LIOralldl 1111&lt;1. .....

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

ill 0 .

1:00 ()). (I) (J) •

my ha(nl or
Hi,Vtl ...... lf1DII

Yard Sale ·

~bomacd.

M WED., MARCH 13 M

In I!Mauga. · - Would Ilia to do lllbjllllna In

pm.

Krl-

Television·
·v iewing

I

llollllr ol I .,..,.. In "" -

loloclo
4 u;

pooling
- h· ~
Ill 1
. -··
.1
5 clop. Col :J04.7"'3.aS22 oler I

7

101111 -

1•10.

L08T rad oncl .. ~.
-~ IIIllCh 1\ __,__
LOIT~

Conter.

ct't

1lle Dally SenUnei-PigB 13

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

KIT 'N' CARLYu;~ by Larry Wrtpt

33 FanMtor~

18 Wall\ld to Do

'

wednelda , March 13, 1991

T H W FE

•

�Page 14-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy.....Middleport, Ohio

Six forfeit bond in ·mayor's court
Six individuals forfeited bonds
and six were fined in the court of
Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler on
Tuesday evening.
. Forfeiting bonds were Jerry
Johnson Jr., Racine, $63, traffic
light violation; Michael Wall, Rut·
land, $47, speed; Harold Sisson.
Pomeroy, $43, failure to yield;
John Greer, New Haven, W.Va.,
$63, uaffiC light signal; Rea LaniZ,
Pomeroy, $50, speed; and Wiley
Comell, Colliers, W.Va., $113,
public intoxication. .
Fined were John Jeffers, Syracuse, 463 and costs, operating
under suspension; David ·smi.th,
Poffieroy, $63 and costs, operating
under suspension; Willi~ Elliott,
Pomeroy, $43 and costs~ assured

Wednesday, March 13,1991

Hoffman fines six in mayor's court

clear distance, $SO and costs, no
financial responsibility; Beth
Gloeckner, Pomeroy, failure to
comply with parting ticket ordinance, $S2 on tickets and SSO for
failure to comply; Elsie Arthur,
Pomeroy, $213 and costs, petty
theft at Foodland; and Tom11_1y
Lane, Pomeroy, $63 and costs, dis·
orderly _conduct, $88 and costs,
consummg alcohol under age 21,
and $213 and costs, assault.

Ohio News Briefs
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) - · A
U.S. District Court jury has convicted two· men op charges relating
to the growth of 8,400 marijuana
plan1:5 in Perry County;

Four indiViduals forfeiled bonds
and six were fined in the court of
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
on Tuesday evening.
Forfeiting bolids' were Brenda L:
Vining, Middleport, SSO, $peed;
Wayne L. Williams, Middleport,
S110, disorderlY. m~ner; Michael
D. Stroop, Gallipohs, $55, speed;
and Donny E. Stone, MidiiJepon,
$110, disorderly manner.
Fined were Donny E. Stone,
Middleport, $10 and costs, running
a stop sign, and SIO and costs,
expired operatOr's license: Vincent
M. King, Pomeroy, $50 and costs,
FRA suspension; Thomas E. Wil·
son Sr., Pomeroy, $10 1111d costs,
expired registration; Lori L. Grahani, Hemlock, SSO and costs, FRA

suspension; Gregory B. ~nter,
Langsville, $10 and costs, ille~al
U-tum, $10 and costs, squealing
tires, and $25 and coats, COIISWIIing
alcohol under age 21; and Neal
Bonec11tter, Middleport, $25 and
costs, consuming alcohol under aae
21.

Loud music outlawed
.'

----Livestock report - - Mediuai. 85.00-94.00.

Ga"r •• Stocky anti co.

Mardi 9, 1"1
Medlnorr..e,Steen:
25().300 lbo., 96.00.t2S.OO;
300-SOO lbo., 92.S0-112.00;
500-700 lbo .• 75.00-93.00;
700-UI'..65.00-76.00.
Medlu• l'l"lllle, Hell'":
25().300 lbo.,.81 .5().100.00;
300-500 lbo .. 79.00.93.SO:
S00-700 lbo .• 75.00.87.50;
700-Up ~.00-74.00.

Spria...

Ohio Lottery

.Colorado
eliminates
Michigan

i75.00 A down.
Cow/CdCom . .
900.IJO..dowa.
Baby c.t.a:
m.OOAdown.
lluldltrs-t:
4CJO.EOO lbs., 43.S0-47 .00.
T · H ·

,;~ lbt., 48.00-49.00.

Plck3: 857
Pick 4:8736
Cards : 10-H, K-C;
6-D; K-S
Super Lotto:
15-37-42-4-35·38
Kicker:664971

BuldltrS..n:

39.00-41.50.

lluldltrcows:

Ulililies. 51.00-58.00•
Canaer/Cuuen, 43.00-53.00.
Lighl weiah• low grade cows, 43.00-Down.
lloif...U.I, Up 10 68.50.
H - Stten 111d Bulls:
300-800 lbt. 67.00.90.50.

TOLEDO (UP!)- Music !hat's
played too loudly in the city or
T9ledo could lead to a ·misde·
meanor citation.
City Council unanimously
pasSed an ordinance Tuesday banning music that can be heard from
cars cr so-called boom-boxes.

c.on:

PlpbyHeod:

PageS

18.00.38.00.

•

•

BuldltrBuU:

Ulililies, 61.S0-70.00.
Canaer!Cutier. 51.00.58.00.
Veal Calv11:
.
OlOict/prime. 95.00.107.00.

at

COPYRIC.HT 1991 • THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND
PRICES GOOD SUNDAY. MARCH 10, THROUGH
SATURDAY. MARCH 18." 19111,1N ,.....,,,.,

Board consider·s closing
school-aged program

AllriiiMI1BII'OliCY-Each of these advertised items is requirad te&gt;be readily available for
.... an Me~ Kroger St~re. except as specifically noted in this ad. If we do run out of an
lld\rertiled item, . we w•l offer you your choice of • comparable item when available
reflecting tho oome sovinat or • roinche&lt;:k which will ontlde you to purchiee the advtnioad
hem ot the advertioad prlc:o whhin 30 days.
one vondo&lt;
will be ICc:optad per
·

-

-·- -

·- --·

·

Thompson White
Seedless Grapes
Pound

REGULAR ONLY

Kroger
Apple Juice
84-oz.
GOP FAlTIIFUL - Rex Elsass, far
was
the guest speaker lor .the anaual Li,ncoln Day
iliaaer on Wednesday alght, hek! by the Meigs
County Republlean Party. Also in atteadante

!SOLD IN

S. OF 10-10.5-LBS.

Assorted
Pork Chops

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) - rr can give th\lm we ought to forget
the state House of Representatives it," said Rep. Robert Nctzler, R·
Republican )&gt;arty faill)fl!l fill~ the off~c1ai~.: RepuP.hc~ Wome~ s mju.ee !Deets. The Central Commit; ,. hasJIS v.:a)l.JI1Fe.will.l» onc..lljp. ~ .:J..auo.. He called it a bill "designed
Meigs f!mmty S"eritor Cftf:ieRS' ~r[;-"'(!tuiY'Pres1den! Maxenc:. 6oeglem. ree will·meet on-Wedlies41y lOplclC • school1iliploma and one prOficiency to get a few oh·yeah votes.''
tcr on Wednesday evening for the Central Commit~ Ch81J111an· Ev~- a new County Treasurer.
test {Qr Ohio public school stu·
The liouse passed three other
party's annual Lincoln Day dinner. lyn Cia~. an.d Henry Wells, wlio
Bruce Reed, representing the dents.
·
1
bills Wednesday, including one
· Rex Elsass, Political Director along ,with C!art serves on ~he VIllage of Pomeroy, presented a
The House voted 90-7 Wednes- giving townships limited self govfor the .Ohio Republican Party was Board of ElectiOns. '!"ells also ts a souvenir mug to Elsass. Both Reed day in favor of legislation abolish· emment. An almost identical bill
the featured speaker. He .praised former county commiSSI~ner. ·
and Dottie Turner each spoke ing the four-tiered high school was vetoed la'st year by _then Gov.
local Republican elected officials
· ~eorge M. Colh~s. who briefly as Mayoral ca~didates in diplomas and changing the profi-. Rtchard Celeste because 11 contams
and called on those attending the restgned last week as Me~gs C!&gt;!l"· the u~oming primary election in ciency testing law from requiring language prohibiting townships
dinner to continue to work for ·the ty Treasurer I~ accept a posmon the Village of Pomeroy.
ninth and twelfth grade tests to just from milldng any ~ws affecting the
party and its candidates.
with the &lt;?h10 pepart~ent of
Out of County visitors. reCO$· the only grade examination.
sale, use or possess1on of fuearms.
Meigs County Commissioner Transportauon, spoke ~nefly an!! nized were Sam Van Voorhts, OhiO
Sponsor Rep. Ronald Gerberry,
The proposal, which passed on
Richard Jones served Master of thanked all those attendmg for their Republican Party Candidate D-Austintown and Education Com- an 82-13 vote, would allow town·
Ceremonies for the evening and suppon ove~ man~ years. He tallced Recruitment Director; David Heil, mince chairman, called the four ship's trustees to. vote to place the
· told the crowd in his opening about the fn~ndshtps 1JUI(Ie over 14 representing
Congressman diplomas "a little bit lite the self govemmen11ssue on the ballot
remarks that the secret of success years of ~mce ~, County Treasur· · Clarence Miller, who was recuper- Wheel of Fortune." He said such for a public referendum.
in elections was "wort together, er, ~ smgled RICh J~es out for ating from recent surgery and tiered diplomas punish children for
There was some debate about it
win together." Jones recognized speCial ~·
.
unable to attend; Gallia County , life.
'
allowing townships to enact ~ning
members Of the County Republican
Colhns ~uccessor as County Commissioner George Pope:
The current law calls for stu- regulations that could keep mdusCentral.
and Executive Cha1rman Will be named SaturdaY Athens County Auditor Pete dents to receive either a full diplo- tries from locatimr: in them, but
Couladis; Vinton County Commis- rna with "distinction" or "com·
~
sioner Jim Beckner; Court of mendation," a diploma or basic
Appeals Judge William Harsha; . competency, or a certificate of
and Jack Dowler OOOT's District attendance. Gerberry noted the leg•
~
10 Deputy Director.
islation
enacting
the
four-tiered
At the conclusion of the meet- diplomas was rushed through the
1
ing, door prizes were awarded.
General Assembly in 1987·as part
Plans for the sixth annual spring
of the budget bill and ·sponsored by
fashion
show were discussed at
Sen. Gene Watts, R-Columbus.
Wednesday's
,regular meeting _of
He called for ihe House to
the
Pomeroy
Merchants
Assocta·
"unite and send a strong message
lion.
.
to the Senate."
The
theme
of
this
year's
show
is
Later, Watts said the Senate is
"Pomeroy: Heanland of America,
in no rush to pass the bill.
Several lawmakers argued the Musical Fashion Review." the
legislation does not do enough and show returns this year to Pomeroy
Elementary on April 12 at 7:30
there needs to be additional study.
~·rr this is the best solution we p.m. Cost of tictrets is $4 per per·.

%11

U.S. D.C. INSPECTED GRADE A
FRESH, FARM RAISED

300 SI:IEETS PER ROLL 1-PLY

Cottonelle ·
Bathroom Tissue

Delta Pride ~
Catfiih Fillets ~,......, ·

4-Rol Pkg.

• I. ••

Approxi~ately 200 of the .Coml_ll"i!tee, Repu.blican elect~d ·evening when the Executive Com-

as

REGULAR, LOWFAT OR NON-FAT
~··············

~

Kroger
Cottage Cheese

z

·

· GaHon

24-oz.
~

· sponsor Rep. Jerome F. Luebbers,
D-Cincipnati, said townships
· already fia¥e1hat authority.
Stlll1 Rep. Olio Beatty, D-.
Columbus, ·said it will have a
·"dclrimenial effect on (economic)
development''
Other legislation passed
Wednesday included extending the
homestead tax exemption to surviving spouses of deceased homeowners and manufactured homeowners
unanimously, and allowing a mem- ·
ber of the slate Board of Education
to hold another government position on 'Ill 84-13 vote.
That bill arose from the rorcPd
resigilation of Paul Bricker, former
state board president, who was
emplofed by the Social Security
Admin1sttation. .

4.

/a
'I

'1'1

I

a m
Jt.eLc 'rr
•

~

• son and tickets should be avllilable
soon.
·
Stores participating in this
year's show include Buttons and
Bows, The Fabric Shop, Dan's in
Middleport, Clark's Jewelry Store,
Chapman Shoes and K&amp;C Jewelers.
This year's show will take on a
somewhat new style as more enterContinued on paae 12

LIMIT ONE Z-.ol. CIIITAIIER WITH COUPIIII &amp; t1UI
ADIIITIOIAI. PUIICIWE
F

LIMIT ONE COUPON PER FAMILY

•

•••••••••••••••••••••.•1.

50 COW'ON GOOD IUN . MAIICH 161AT. MARCH 11, 1•1

Sl.tiA:CT lO ~ITA Tie LOCAl. TWI

LINCOLN DAY DINNER - Roa Ellasl, riabt, Political Director or the Ohio Republkan Party, Willi tile featured speaker at the
Melp County Repulllkan Party's Llucoln Day dlaner on Wedaesday even Ina. Also pictured It Melas 'County Commissioner
Rlcbard E. Jones, wllo acted as Master of Ceremoales. (Pboto
Courtesy or Paul Gerlll'd)

GORDEN CALDWELL

,...---- Loca·l briefs ---_,

G. H. Caldwell,

•

Post to observe anniversary

,

Drew Webster Post 1139 will celebmte the 72nd birthday of the
American Legion on Tuesday evening, March 19th at the Post
home. A roast beef dinner with all the trimmings will be served at
6:30 p.m, The program will follow at 7:30 p.m. The Leigionnaire of
the Year trophy and membership awards will be presented. All
legion and auxilliary members, family and friends are urged to
attend. Speaker for the evening will be Ruth Crutcher, the 2nd Vice
Commanclet of the 8th District.

.:;~

r:.:

=~·= · .~ggc

'

S::l;dy

22
Donuts.......... .
SHOPPE

-oz~

••
1
·---~---:

99
5
Beef........... :... ~~~

THORN APPLE VALLEY
4-f.LB.AVG• .

Corned Beef
Brisket....................... .

6

Scholarships available
.

Full-tuition scholariships to Ohio's private colleges and schools
wiD be available to six gradualins_higb school senion frpm the area,
State Representative Mary Abel (D·Athens) reponed today.
Students can IIP,PIY for the scholarships throu&amp;h Abel's office in
Columbus, If nommated, they wiD be in the numing fer one of 77
available scholarships that J:11Y all school expenses except for boots
Contiaued on palf 12

-

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

•

Theme announced .I or
• n s.how
spring .ash. IO_

"

Sealtast
Skim Milk

sider the ·closing of the prograin 's
school-age program, wh1ch would
require the local public schools ·
(i.e., Meigs Local, Southern Local
and Eastern Local School Districts)
to provide the educational services
to school-a'ged children. ·
The school-age program serves
.24 students at Carleton Sc:boOI, and
only one of its employees was to
have been included in the layoff.
According to Lentes, such a closing
would only save 25 percent of what
is needed.
,
·
"To the board's knowledge,"
Lentes said, "no court has ever
awarded the plaintiff in this type of
action against the State or Ohio.
Even if we were hopeful of that
result, it is likely to like several
years for the case to be completed
and therefore, (any decision) will
not impact this year's budget problems."
A preliminary hearing on the
case 1s scheduled for Friday at I
p.m. in Ju!Ige Crow's court to
determine whether the restraining
order will be cqntinued.

House approv.es law returning
than 200 attend
:annual Lincoln Day dinner to one high school diploma

Saaltest
lea Crea-..

Split Chicken
Breasts.. . . . . . ;. . . . . . . . lb.

were Former Melp Cou•ty Treasurer George
Collins, aad Joha Dowler, botb of wllom are
now employed at the Oblo Deplll'tmeat or TraasJIOrtatloil's District 10 ollke Ia Marietta. (Pboto
Courtesy or Paul Gerlll'd)
.

The Meigs County Board of · · The ;fCSITllining ordeJ: was si~ed
Mental Relardation has announced followmg a lawsu1t f1led Fnday
that it is considering the ciosiJig of with a sworn complaint from three
its school-aged program in light of of the program's participants. That
a lawsuit flied 18ainst the program Statement Stated that the layoffs
last week.
and service reduction would cause
On Friday, March 8, Meigs "immediate and irreparable harm
County Common Pleas Court and injury" to the MRDD proJudge Fred W. Crow Ill signed a gram's students and clients.
temporary restraining order pro·
"'The (MROD) board is underhibiting the MRDD board from standing of the plaintiff's intent
executing tlie planned layoff.'!( 17 through this court action," a
employees. ·
·
. . . MRDD news release says. "All
According to the MRDD board, decisions of the board have been in
four management staff, five full· an attempt to meet, and when peslime employees and eight substitute sible, to exceed minimum stan·
staff members were to be laid off dards of service."
on March II, due to inereased
"At the same time," the release
operating costs and the failure of its continues, "the board must live
fourth levy bid in a February spe- within its budget and the system
cial election.
wbich generates those funds. It is a
In addition, the board voted to reality that we have a deficit of
close its Adult Services Program nearly one-fourth or the program's .
· for up to five weeks during the . needs. Each day, the program runs
summer of 1991. These actions, at the current level increases that
according to the MRDD board, shortfall." ·
were necessary to balance a proBoard President John Lentes
iected budget deficit of $2?5.000. , says that the board m1,1st nQW con·

~ More

SEALTEST FAT FREE FROZEN
D'ESSERT OR

U.S. Grade A
Wampler/Longacre or Perdue

2 s.otlone, 12 Pegeo 25 cents
A Multlmedlo Inc. -poper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, · Thurs~y, March 14, 1991

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. NONE
SOLD TO DEALERS.

item DUr~hued.

Low tonight near 30.
High Friday in mid-40s.

former Meigs ·
auditor, .dies
Former Meigs County Auditor
Gorden H. Caldwell, 70, Tuppers
Plains, died Tuesday, March ·12,
1991, at St. Joseph Hospital in
Parkersburg, W.Va. following an
extended iUness.
Bom in Meigs County on April
5, 1920, he was a son of the laic
William and Sophia Koehler Cald·
wen .
. .Mr. Caldwell served as Meigs
County Auditor for 16 years. He
was a past secretary and treasurer
of the Oransc ToWIIIhip Voluntcer
Fire Department, a lifetime honorary member ol die C01111ty Audi· .
tor"s Association or Ohio, a life·
Coatlnued on paae 12

STRUCTURE DESTROYED - Tbll home

owned by T0111 Tltelsl of RadH and occupied by

Richard Randolp,b waa destrOJ'td b! nre on
monlitg around 10 a.m. ne struc-

Weda~IIY

ment fro• West VlriiDia reaponded to the

sc:eae. (Sentinel pboto b7 Denis M. Wolfe)
·~

I'

),

tun II loaltM oar die IDtenectloli ol Roalel
1u IIDCI331. ne RadBe nn Deparlm•tlloal
with die SDttiiDD ud RneMwood llln o.,art-

\

.

I

~

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