<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="10967" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/10967?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-17T06:00:27+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="41933">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/658b51e097727d63aa5c0f5adce81448.pdf</src>
      <authentication>35dd8d51a71581bf1390aa230e5c018b</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="34618">
                  <text>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

~

�Brady Bill faces uphill battle against NRA._
WASHINGTON - A camera
Hes10n arrived and taped an ad
crew set up shop one evening a few similar to one that he did three
weeks ago near a bridge just two years ago. He walked in front of
blocks from the u.s. Capuol, and the bridge support, which, thanks
they wailed for actor Charlton Hes- to Madison Avenue, looked like a
IOn to arrive.
moldy, vandalized wall of a teneHestoo's lalest Slarrin!! role is in ment building. Washing10n is still
commercials for the Nallonal Rifle the murder capital of the nation,
Association, in which he shows the and law-abiding people are taking
seamier side of WashingiOn, D.C.• the heat for it, Heston said. Crimiand makes his point - that the nals, not guns, are the problem.
nation's capital is also the mwder Citizens are being disanned while
capital. And if they have guns, why criminals rule the streets. Then
shouldn ·t you7
·
Heston walked past the end of the
Except there is"n't much within &gt; bridge support and the Capitol
eyeshot of the CapiiOl that is seamy loomed in the background.
enough 10 make the NRA's point · The ad makes the neighborhood
So while the crew waited for Hes- around the CapiiOI look like murIOn 10 arrive, they added some cos- der central, but It was taped in a
metic 10uches. They chalked graffi- relatively safe neighborhood. When
ti on the bridge support and added our associate Scou Sleek asked the
an eery mist - the kind of thing that NRA about the creative license, a
middle Ameri~ expects 10 find in a spokesman said .it was done to
&gt;ghetto.
"enhance what was already there."

Thursday, March 14, 1991

Thursday, March 14, 1991

Pomeroy-Middlej:iort, Ohio

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel

~

•"

•

sands of head injuries, but that
Congress has Deen gun-shy silente." ·
Congress
is afraid of alienating the
about passing the bill becauSe of
The gun-control lobby claims
NRA
and
its
money.
·
intense lobbying by the NRA . the Brady Bill could save thouHouse Speaker Tom Foley, D- sands of lives, and tens of thouWash., has said he will allow the
Brady Bill its day on the House
floor. Gunconttol crusaders hope
that day comes by March 30, the
lOth anniversary of the shooting.
Even though the bill will see the
By United Press International
light of day outside of a House
committee, tt faces an uphill light
Today is Thursday, March. l4, the 73rd day of 1991 with 29210 follow.
The NRA's political action com.The moon is wamng, movmg toward tts new phase.
.
mittee has spread millions of dolThe morning stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn.
lars in campaign co,ntributions
The evening star is Jupiter. ·
.
.
.
.
across Congress.
Those born on this date are under the stgn of Pisces. They mclude
.. The gun-control lobby doesn't Thomas Marshall, vice president under W~w Wilso~. in.l~54; railhave the resources that the NRA road engiooer Casey Jones in 1864; phystctst Alben Emstem Jn 1879;
has, and can't match a media blitz. bandleader Les Brown in 1912 (age 79); cartoORist Hank Ketcham ("DenBut the movement has mounted an nis the Menace") in 1920 (age 71); astronaut Frank Borman in 1928·(age
ad campai!!". One magazine ad fea- 63)· actor Michael Caine and composer Quincy Jones in 1933 (both age
tures a ptcture of Br11dy in his S8); comedian Billy Crystal in 1947 (age 44); and Prince Albert, heir to
wheelchair and the headline, "This
handgun statistic just broke his the throne of Monaco, in .1958 (age 33).

Why the media blitz now?
Beca115e the NRA is doing battle
with a formidable opponent, James
Brady. He was Ronald Reagan's
press secretary on March 30, 1981,
when Reagan and hiss eniOurage
emerged from a Washington hotel
and met a banage of bullets from
the gun of John Hinckley, One bullet pierced Brady' s skull and, in
that act, Hinckley crippled him and
created a life-long advocate for gun
control.
Ten. years later, Brady and his
wife, Sarah, are doggedly, pressing
Congress for a gun-control law
called the "Brady Bill." It would
require a seven-day waiting period
for handgun purchases so police
could check the buyer's background. The Bradys are joined by
· Handgun Control Inc·., a public
interest lobby, in their campaign 10
get the bill through ~ongress.

.

16 oz.

AN ASSORTMENT OF

.POTATO CmPS

STUFFED
ANIMALS

RBG. ·

•2.89

$}69

s ·

-arne

-·

·Buckeyes hope to end slump Friday

-

\

·.

MASON VITAMIN AMINO ACIDS
' ' - $00
' .mg,
l •Arg1n1ne,

LCyst•ine,

1

l .

$299

I

60 s ...........................

500 mg, 60's ......................... J299

,,

·L~Lysine, 500 mg. lOG's ...~.....................J249
L-Ornithine, 500 mg, 30's .....................J299
L-Phenylalanime, soo mg, 30's ••• $299

/

.'..~.

-

;

UP TO

75°/o
OFF

f"'&lt;.

~"~ .

.Shop At
Fruth ·
Pharmacy
For All Your
Easter ·
Needs! We
Have The
Best
Se.lection In
Town!

•TOYS
•GAMES
•DOLLS
UP TO

50°/o OFF
UPIO 12 exo.

Uoto 24 exo.

uoto31txo.

$2.99 $5.49 $7.99

TRI·PRINT PRICE
SPECIAL!

MAIL 11 THRU MAR. 17

Di• Voa Get
Your Fruth
Coaponc In The
Mail?
Df)n't Forget
Thev Expire The
En• Of Mareh.

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

I

·Deck Kits

8'x8' ......:•••• S1 oo
8'x12' ••••••••• S159
8'x16' •••••••••••
IO'x12' •••••••••
oo

.•

·.

l2'x12• •••••••
12'x 16' ....... S29P

AN ASSORTMENT OF

BATTERY OPERATED

--

Fort Recovery's Bihn
D-IV player ofthe·year

•

,.,_ .

documents say th-.t Dykstra paid 10 Kelly lead a five-horner allaek GOSSIIC pitched a scoreless eighth
checks of $21,000 llld $29, 000 10 wilh two home 1'11111 and four RBI inning for the Victory.
)l:elso. Dykstra testified he made as tile Yankees pounded the Wllite Sox 4, Tigers J
the checks out 10 Kelso's lawn care Dodgers. Alvuo Espinoza, Kevin
At Sarasota, Fla., Cory Snyder
company.
Mass and Jesse Barftdd a11o home- had a two-run triple off Walt Ter•
Dykstra is not charRed with any red for tile Yantoct. Mite Sciotcia rell in .the tllird tnning to lift the
crimmal
wron,doing and there is hit a three-run homer and Butch White Sox 10 victory. Greg Hib•
no indication tn the coun record Davis had a solo shot for the bard pirched four scoreless imings
that Dyks'!a bet on bas~ball or ~gers. Jose Gonzalez !tad four for the White Sox. The game was .
other sporting events. Wttnesses htts for Los AnJC)es.
halted by rain after 4 1(2 innings.
say that Dykstra shot craps and
Ro,all 10, Reds 1
TWills 3, Pirates 3
~b~ on golf ~es with Kelso
. At Plant City, Fla., Bill Pceou · Greg Gagne had a pair of doum addibon 10 playmg poker.·
h1t a three-run homer and Danny bles and drove in ·a run for the
'',I,t's
unfortuna!C,
!'W's
alii
can
TartabuU
and George Brea added' Twins and Bobby Bonilla hit Pitts•
say, . Dyk.~~a sa1d ln. a prepared ~NI~IOsplltKanllsCity. burgh's first home run of the
s~te!"ent. I m sorry tl ~ppened. ~tke Bodd1c~e~ of .the. Royals spring. The game was called .after 6 ·
It s JUSt one of those thmgs that aUowed one hll m p1tchmg four 1(2 innings because of rain
.
happen at a point in your life, I scoreless iqnings of the nlin-short·
learned my lesson. If t hun any of ened 5 1/2 innina ,.me.
Th D "I
1
•
my fans or Phillies fans, I'm sorry.
The Royals aiJo received liOII1C
e 81 Y entme
'
As far as I'm concerned, it is over. good news when pitcher ~ark
(UIPSU. . .I
I
JUSl
want
10
concentrate
on
playGubicza
passed
his
first
test
in
a
B
"
lll•Jo
...
or M•t«m..rla. r.c.
•
ing baseball."
.
at Haines City, Fla. Pitch ina
Publbbtd ev«y afternoon : Monda y
In Wednesday's game at Clear- tn his fust game of spring training,
throurh · Frklay, 111 Cou rt St .. Po·
water, Fla., Von Hayes went 3 for S Gubicza pitched two inninas
mt'l'oy, Ohio, by th ~ Ohio Valley Pub·
ll1h1n1 Company/ Multimedia , Inc.,
and drove in three runs to spark the against the Astros and limited them
Pomeroy, Ohio 1~769. Ph. 992·2156. Se ·
Phillies. Dale ~urphy, Dickie 10 one hit in a SCD~eless two-iming
cond class po&amp;t aeP paid at Pomeroy, ...
Thon and John Kruk each added stint. The Royals won the six Ohto.
•
'
two RBifor Philadelphia Kruk and inning ""'e. 4-3.
·
·
Mmaber: Urilted Press International,
ToroniO's·John Olerud homered.
Gubteza, who underwent anhroInlnd, Dally Press Assoclat Jon and the
Ohio N~paper Assoelallon . National
ln other Grapefruit League scopic surgery for a tom rotator
Adv«Uslna Representative-, Branh am
games, Boston outslugged Balli- cuff last Aug. 2 and spent the rest
Newspaper Si.les, · 733. Third Avenue .
more, 16-7; the New York Yankees of the season on the diSabled list,
New York, New York 10017.
beat Los Angeles, 13-9; Kansas walked one and Slillck out one on a
POSTMA~: Stnd addre11 chanres
City clobbered Cincinnati, 10-1, in cool day at Baseball City Stadium.
to Tho llally Sentinel. lll O&gt;W1 St ..
Pomoroy, Olllo 1!1781.
a rain-shortened game; Atlanta
Braves 6, Exl1014
topped Montreal, 6- 4; the New
At West Palm Beach, Fla ..
suuaurnoN R"TES
York Mets downed Houston, lO-S; Tommy Greg doubled home two
BJ carrter or Mil• Ro•te
One Weel&lt; .. ................................. $1.60
Texas edged St Lquis, 4-3; and the runs in the ninth ipning 10 lift the
One Month .................... .... ......... $&amp;. ~
Chicago White Sox nipped Detroit, Braves 10 victory. Jim Kremers
One Year ...... ..... .......... ........ .... 183.20
4-3, in a nlin-shonened game. Min- went 3 for 3 and tripled in a run
· SINGLE COPY
nesota and Pittsburgh played 10 a 3- and Deion Sanders went 3 for 4 for
PRICE
J&gt;ail)' .......... .. .... ................ ... 2S Cerils
3 tie in another game shortened by the Braves.
rain.
Ml!ll 10, AStros 5
SublerlbHs not desiring to pay the car ·
Reel Sox 16, Orioles 7
At Kissimmee, Fla .. Howard . rler may remit In advance dlr~t to
The Dally senttnel on a 3, 6 or 12 m~th
At WinterHaven, Fla., Wade Johnsorl drove in four .runs with a
.
bUIJ. Credii will be gtven carrier each
'
Boggs and Mike Greenwell drove three- run homer and a sinsle .to
•
EIGHTH GRADE CHEE~LEADERS in .three runs each during an eight- lead the Mets to victory. Ken
Kelly Grueser, Second row, Clndi Roush, Sarah
No 1u~rtpt 1on1 by mall ~rmltted In
Eighth grad~ cheerleaders for ~eigs Junior
areas where home carrier aerviCe Is
run seCond inning that powmd the Caminiti hit a solo homer for the
Anderson, and Melissa Wilfong. Top row
available.
Hillh are, front row, left-right· Shilo Moore and
Red Sox to victory. Boggs had a Astros.and !• 8 for II with seven
Stephanie Thomas.
three-run double and Greenwell RBI this spnng.
Mall S.blertplt...
l •..e Mtlp C..at)'
added a three-run homer. Jack Rugers4,Cardillllsl
t! w..u ........... .. ..................... $2t.BI
· Clark also homtted for Bostoo and
At Port Charloae, Fla., a suicide
IIW..U . .. .. .. .... .... .. .... .. ........... $43.16
•
5I w..u .. '" ............................. 181.76
John Marzano had four hits and squeeze by Tony Scruggs scored
O.lolllo Molp Coooly
drove in four runs for the Red Sox. Jeff Kunkel with the J(&gt;olhead run·
u w..u ....................... ...... ..... $23.10
Yankees 13, Dodaera 9
in the eighth innin( and helped the
IIW..U ... ...... .. ....... ... ............. $4~ . 50
liiW..U ... ............................ : .. $88.10
At Fan Lauderdale, Pia., Raber- Rangers beat the Cardinals. Rich
DAYTON, Ohio (UPI)- Ohio
"This is the fourth straight year ·10 playing Tex115. Ted has a good
State is ailing, but the•cure is in I've played against a good· friend in team, one that will get after you.' •
$ight- Towsan State.
the opening round of the touma·Veteran St. John's coach Lou
The Buckeyes,' reeling a bit after . ment, ·; said Penders. "Ted used 10 · Carnesecca knows upsets are
•
losing their final two regular sea- . coach in the same league I did inevitable in the NCAA tourney.
'•
•
son games, hope to rebuild their when I was at Fordham.
"This is money time, this is
confidence against bot!Om-seeded
''They are a toUgh, meb'Opolit.an what you play for," he notes.
·Towson State in an NCAA touma- team," Penders said of SL Peter's. "Five months of games and pracment opener Friday.
" They are scrappy. You have 10 be tice for this, and when you !let
"Confidence has so much to do tough to grow up in that pan of the there, you don't want a qutck
with it," says Buckeye boss Randy country and !·know they aren't exit.' '
-,~D~D....,B.....,EA_UT_Y_TO-YO_U_I_H_O_M_E,-W-IT_H_A_,
Ayers. "You miss a couple of going to be in awe when it comes
shots and it starts to go through
·
•
your head."
A couple of weeks ago, Ohio
PIISSUII. mATED
. State had onjy one loss and was.
: · ranked second in the nation.
•••
, DefeatS'Iast week at PurdUil rand
•
. Iowa dropped Ohio State 10 f'tlth in
09
, " the ratings, bu(JIIit.NCAA selection
•
committee still thoughl enough of
•
00
By GENE CADDES
something has to. be done, she
the Buckeyes to make them the top
wants the ball.
UPJ Sports Writer
seed in the Midwest region.
COLU~BUS, Ohio (UP!) "We use her mainly in the
209 10
RAIL .....~!:::!~.IIA
The Ohio State-Towson State Lynn Bihn, Fort Recovery's 6-foot- pain~ but she also has lin excellent
,.,,,.... hells
game is one of four first round 1 senior center, heads the 1991 outside shot We do let her go out
194
games scheduled Friday at Day10n. U!Ji~e.d Press lllternational girls and drive. She likes to do that and
fer l'1l' Dock ........ 191li
00
fer l'1l2' hell ..... IJOC •
In other matchups, No. 19 St. Dtvtston IV All- Ohio basketball she handles the ball well.
IO'x16'
··~····
S256
For l'116' hc•-. •117•
John's is favored over Northern team for the second year in a row.
"She just dominates in the
s221 00
For 10'112' Dec• -· 1124 •
Illinois, No. 25 Texas is a solid
Bihn, who led the Indians to the paint, not only offensively but
•
For 10'116' Dtclc ... •12t•
00
choice over St. Peter's and a Geor- small-school state championship ~.efensively," added ~cClung,
Fer 12'112' Dock ... IUO•
gia Tech-DCI'IIul tilt is a tossup.
IICI. . S Ill IMS Mt •aUAIY MUDWAII
last season, was selected the Divi- and teams try everything to stop
12'116· ...... •us •
The four winners clash Sunday, sion IV player ol the year in ballot- her. Bruises are the story of her
IT
IICWDID II Mit IRS
with the two survivors moving on ing by coache,s from around the life.
to 0ext week's Midwest regional at state.
"She h~Ips us break the press,"
Pontiac, Mich.
Joining Bihn on the All-Ohio said McClung. ' 'She'll inbounds
A pair of sophomore All-Ameri- first team was Jackie Hannon of the ball and we get it back to her.
lnclutlts berything for Complete Anemllly
.
ca performers will grace the Uni- McDonald, Stephanie Petho of Bel- She's also at the point of our press.
versity of Dayton Arena Ooor Fri- laire St. John's. Nicole Like of
"It's really neat how her teamday- Ohio State's Jimmy Jackson Holgate and ~elanie Miller of mates feel about her," added.
Economy Grade
•· and Georgia Tech's Kenny Ander- OtiOviUe.
McClung. "Sometimes, when you
I'll' 31500 1'112' 399"
son.
· Bihn .averaged 21 points and have a player like Lynn, there's
The ftrst question a lot of people 12.S rebounds per game in leading jealously, But not on this team.
10'112' 45900 12'd' 531"
have about Towson State is, Fort Recovery to an 18-2 regular They all have respect and admira'
12'112' 610DO 12'•16' 12501. IIIIIH~HI .1 1~
'Whcre's thai?''
season. She hit 60.2 percent from tion for her. I've never had an ath•
•
" I don't expect Towson State 10 · the field and 60.8 percent from the lete who works as hard as she
'
be a household name, but few peo- free throw line.
does.''
'
Premium
Grade
·-.
ple recognize what we've done
Bihn, the only returning starter · The 5-7 Petho, the only junior
. with very high admission stan- from last year's title team, has on the first team, also was the
l'a12' 44500
l'xl' 34910
dards." says Terry Truax; coach at started 95 consecutive games for team's .leading scorer, averaging
12'11' ssooo
12' 499"
the Maryland school.
fort Re~overy, scoring in double 34.9 points per game.
.
•
69900 12'116' 14500
,.., Truax also doesn ' t think his figures m the last 50 heading into , ·The 5.-8 Hannon averaged 20
'
'
Tigers deserve to be seeded 16th in this weekend 's state tournament points per game and, like Bihn, will
•
a 16-team region field.
semifinals at St. John Arena. Her be playing in this week's state tour"I think we're a 15th seed, at career ICtal of 1,473 points is 37 nament.
PINE
least." he declared.
shy of the school record of I.SIO.
Miller, 5-9, averaged 21.9
Well, 15th or 16th , Towson She also has 882 cancer rebounds.
points per game for Ottoville and
T-111
State isn't given much or a chance
,.
"Lynn is our leader on the the S-2 Like 28.S points per game
6 PATCH
against Ohio State. Still, the Tigers Ooor," Fort Recovery head coach for Holgate. .
2x4 ECONOMY
".
..
'-.
· almost came up with a shocker a Diane McClung said of Bihn, who
The second team consisted of 5)'ear ago ir the NCAA tourney.
'
already has signed 10 attend Xavier 4 Anna BatringiOn of WorthingtOn
;, :
.,
· "Last year we also had 10 play University. "If the game's close or
Continued on page 5
'-,.,
the top Midwest seed, Oklahoma,
and with two minutes left we were
down two points and had the ball,"
recalls Truax. However, Towson ..
•'
Stale went on to lose, 77-68.
. . ,
•.
"Obviously, we're not as physical as Ohio State," says Truax.
-·.'
"O.ur leading scorers have been
STARTS TOMORROW!
fltiO.Y 7 : 10
our guards for the last five years.
SATURDAr 1: 10 , 7: 10
. Even though we're a little more
I.. DOY UO. hlO
..
balanced this year, we're still
O!OftDOY • TltUAIDOY 1:10
perimeter- oriented.
"I can tell you this." added
'
Tru!IX. "I don' t think people will
•
dislike our team. Our kids ·will not
•
'
go into Dayton with the idea ther
have to apologize for being there.'
·':
"We're definitcl.Y not going 10
7/16"x4'•1'
lay down," said Towson's top
scorer, Devin lloyd, a guard averaging 20 poirlts a game. "People
·,
Price Good Now 1'hru S.twdar, M1acll II, 1991
'•
seem to think it's our last game
·
I J n r'llllt ,_ TrPorraphlcaJ Errora"
anyway. So we'ne going 10 go all
•
out and not bact down.''
Another non-household name
playing at Daytoo is SL Peter's. It's
the first time ever in the NCAA
SSS Pori! St.
......rL 7100·5:00
event for the Peacocks from Jersey
•ld••ll•rt,
OIL
,
City, N. J.. bu( Texu coach Tom
•
Penders knows St. Peter's coach
Pl. Hl-66 II ltl fr• I·IM·7SJ.SI14
Ted Fiore well.
•
•
. ' ..., ' . f J t
.. ~ e.. ; .
• "'l ,. ...
- ~: ..
....,./. . .
., . . ~· •' . - ....
. . '... . .•
. ,,. ' . . '. . .
)
'.
...,
""'· . '';...:·
- ' --·
- .. .

.

.

SNYDER

we.nt 3 for 3 as the Philadelphia KelsO, who is accused of running
Phillies poun~ the 'foroniO. B.lue an illegal. ~er game. ~elso
J~s •. !3-8. tn a spnng uatmng · aUegedly .Pte
up SSO,OOO worth
e . tbiuon game.
·
of garnbl~ng markers for Dyk~.
The .All-Star center fielder was
who admttted he lost the money m
summ~ned 10 Oxford Tuesday to the poker games. Federal court
tesufy mt!te federal blal of Herbert

..

AT YOUR 3 REA FRUTH PHARMACY·STORES
.

sc~nljfd Press lntematlOIUII
s
e a !J'Ue AU-Star, Len Dykdoe~
t let .~sh~al prob1
"&amp;:n~ e::;; wt tesJ~b..
e
e ,Y ter
&gt;:mg m a fedr~:~ m Oxford, Miss., Dykstra
10 acuon Wednesday and

•. :S

Today in history

The Dilly Sentlnei-Page--3.

Dykstra pacesPhillies to 13-8 exhibition victory

••

____;_!J~ac::::_:kA:.:.:n=de:..::..::.rso.:..:....n~a---:-nd_Da___.l~_v._an_A_tta

Pomeroy.....Uiddleport, Ohio

REGULAR S2.99

364 JACKSON PIKE
GALLIPOLIS, OH. 45631
(614) 446-6620

9.9(
'

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

CDX
~'
Sheating ' -...... ,._

1

.

-- . ......

Grade

•.

'\..

G

,.

•Butterfly Bows ·
•Neon Ribbon Bows
•Sho•string Bows .

·PLYWOOD

1/2" ~ ..
4'x8' ~ . -~

AN · ASSORTMENT OF

HAIR BOWS

,....------.-....--------1...·.

ICITS

..

STUDS
]09

1249

doors

f,

•.

.

~·.

.

Pressure Treated

.
.
.-

.Aspenite

LATTICE
PANELS

-.

549

2'x8' 439
4'x8' 799

VALLEY
~

.

-.

.. .

I SUPPLY CO.
.

~

.. .

'

..
'

~

i

~-~

.

-- .
• :..~.;

�Page

4 The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

-

Thursday, March 14, 1991

N.Y. Knicks hand Philadelphia 104-92 defeat ,Wednesday

By JOE CIALINI
UPI Sports Writer
The Philadelphia 76ers have
spent the last few weeks looking
up, at the founh playoff spot in the
NBA's East.em . Confe~.
That's because the top four
teams will get the home-court
advantage that is often lhe difference in the best-of-live fli'Sl rouml
The 76ers might not want to
look !Jack, howevet, because somebody is be gaining on them.
·
The New . York Knicks

~omeroy

"
•
•
•
~
;:

"Right now,l'm playing well. I
hope I can lu!ep it up,'' he said.
"Wisconsin did a great job of
getting the ball to Simms, and he
responded witb a tremendous
same," Bowling Green Coach Jim
1.:Bfr8ll8p said.
.
· Simms missed a chance to ice
the game by making only two of
four free throws laiC in the second
half. His free ll)row with 22 S':C·
onds left put Wisconsin ahead 6967 and sei the stage for Falcon Ed
Colbert's turnaround jumper with
four seconds left in regulation.
That was the only fteld goal the
Falcons scored in the last S: I 0 of
the second half as they let a 65-59
lead dwindle away.
"Our defense was excellent
.
'
down the strc.tch," Wisconsin
.COIICh Steve Yoder said.
In other NIT first round play,
Providence strugBied past James
Madison, 98-93 m double over- .
time; Colorado beat Michigan, 71Continued from Pile 1
64; Cinncinnati replied Ball State,
Christian, 5- fO Linda Homer of 82-55; Southern fllinios edged
Lima Perry and 5-9 Alison Dillon Boise State, 7S· 74: and Stanford
Qf Mansfaeld SL Peters, all seniors, defeated Houston, 93-86.
and 5-10 Stacy Burns of
Crooksville and 6-3 Diana B~hn­
lein of Madeira, both juniors.
Named to the third team were Providence 98,
sophomore Carrie Ferguson of James Madison 93 (l OT)
At Providence, R.I., Chris Watts
South Charleston Southeastern,
scored
9 of his 15 points in the secjunior Denise Meyer of Fort
Loramie and seniors Beth Hunziker ond overtime, including six free
of Rockford Parkway, Dena throws in the last 16 seconds, to
Householder of DeGraff ~verside · rally the Friars. Providence guard
Eric Murdock scored 20 despite
and Shelly AJ!en of East Canton. ·
foulinB
out with eight minutes
McDonald's Clute
remaimng:
Steve Hood scored 27
top Division IV coach
points
and
Kenny
Brooks added 23
Barry Cute, who led McDonald
fdt
James
.Madison.
to a 20-0 regular season and the
No. 1 spot in the final UP! Board
of COIIChes ratings, has been vored
the Division IV coach of the year.
Clute, whose Blue Devils will
take 11 26-0 record into their state
tournament semifinal game against
Fort Loramie Thursday afternoon,
edged New Riegel's Steve Lucius
by one vote, 8-7, in balloting by
Division IV coaches from around
the stllt.e.
.
Fort Recovery's
Diane
1987 BUICK CENTURY
McClung finished third with five
Stock t 4692, 4 door~, ....-,, 110111
votes, followed by Holgate's
wheel drive, 6 cyl., air, PS, PB, power
Duane Sheets with four.
'
lodes, till wheel, AMIFM
lllp8,
Qthers receiving votes were
radials.
Jane Pocppleman~f Fon Loramie,
NOW
Tom Franz of Mechanicsburg,
WAS
Frank Schroeder of Kalida, Kirk
"7495
Martin of South Charleston Southeastern, Greg Riclcard of Convoy
Crestview and Larry Nash of
Zanesville Ro~rans. ·
Jly United Prea lntennd:lo!!ll
Wisconsin's Willie Simms
knows he has a job to do. His
game-high 31 JX!!nts indicilte he is
doing an especially good job.
"My game is 10 help Jhe team
win," said the seniCII' forward, who
led the Badgers Wednesday night
to an 87.-79 overtime victory over
Bowling Green in the first-round of
the National Invitation Tournament
" We won, so I can't complain,"
Simms said
Simms netted 6 of his points in
overtime in which the Wisconsin
outscored Bowling Green 18-10.
Simms, w.hd sank 12 of IS field
goal attempts, has averaged 23.5
points in his last four games.

~·

~
~
.
·:C

.

\

$1'099
.

10\\'30,
10W40or
5W30

.
.

·; ---,

Solder seal
~~ Dot3 Brake
-- --. ' Fluid
.. .

--·

Sports briefs

By United Preu International
Boxing
British offiCials in London fmed
World Boxing OTganiZBtion middleweight champion Chris Eubank
$19,000 Wednesday for head- ·
butting Canadian Dan Sherry in a
controversial
title defense last
. Cleveland ~ Signed Coach
Lenny Wilkins 10 a multi-year con- month. Eubank had been called to
answer charses after his WBO title
~tension.
Sherry in .Brighton,
Quad City (CBA) - Coach defense
England,against
Feb. 23.
Mauro Panaggio announced he will College
retire at end of the season.
Virginia Tech basketball COIICh
. ColleJt
· Frankie AJien stepped down under
Arizona- Women's basketball pressure following three consecucoach June Olkowski announced tive losing seasons at the Blacks·
her resignation.
burg, Va., school. Tech athletic
Texas-San Antonio - Signed director Dave Braine said Allen,
Athletic Director Bobby Thomp- who has one year left on ·his conson, men's basketball coach Stu tract, would move into 11 new athStamer and women's basketball letic administration positon at the
coach Mary Am McLaughlin to 3- school. ... The University of Alabayear COntraCts.
ma-Birmingham announced it will
Texas Tech - Baskethall coach field a Division III football team
Gerald M~ resigned.
this fall. Jim Hilyer, an assistant
Viqima Tech - Frankie Allen coach in college llld lhe pros, was
resigned u Virginia Tech basket- named head coach. The BlazNs are
ball coach and was nam'ed llliswu expected 10 pl&amp;y a 10-game schedathletic director.
·
ule.
Football
Filll!re Skatlna
San Fmncisco - Signed Plan B
Viktor Petrenko of the Soviet
free 11ent defensive bact Dave Union, among the men's favorites
WlliiiiiOre. .
atlbe world fagure sbting chlmpiSan Diego - Signed free 18CDII onships in Munich, Gemiaay, took
Mitchell Benson and Keith the lead the opening originll proMcDollald.
gram. Canadian Kurt BrownlnJI.
H~t~
·
the defending c:~ampion, was m
NHL - Fined Cllic:Jao Black- second. Czechoslovak Pctr llama
hawks goaltender Ed Belfour SSOO held third place, ahead of ChriJto.
for a confrontation with referee pher Bowman and Todd Eldredge
Din MaloueUi.
of the United States.
'
••

,....,

'1:._~

L_\..E_;/-==----:::~----:':"':
_
:
:~
-l'
l
r~=ine
"
Brite
J
Hlwld Clus

1~~

A~·

Mother's
Pre-Wax

Solder seal
car wash
Powder

• 07100

•

Solcterseal
Bug&amp;Tar
Remover

~

•f£9·1

.. ,

299

,.,

'"'"'

995

•'

20
ACDeiCO

" -99
3

Purolator
Oil Filters

1399

99
19
Giant

95

Sound
Solution
Mufflers

Lawn
and Garden
Batteries

::;:,, ...

. ..-

~
LJ1(Itlln81111M'IWIIY

•

Sound Solution
exhaust or
TailPipes

99~
AutOIIte

"

•

l.J18W'I'I8 ~~ta"' N'tf

Lawn

Purolator

I

or

PnceQOOd"""" ettd\ai"I9EI

AlrRHers
~!!.,'"'-

. ·;;-----J

r~~~~

.

1Remanufactured

_,..,...,.-

.

Brake Calipers
1

•om

l~~:

--

)···

Brake
•.
Shoe&amp; ·

'""'

-

2199 . -

-

MCIBrake
~

.....

@
r1Jrj
\ -

~

'18'¥"'81'1'~

~
'I

1899

Remanutactured
Master CylinderS~
-~
Pncegood""""8K~
1y88f'I'IIWI'~
.

.

•

m• ::;:-tJ .: -

.

-

.,

'riLL JD

... .

••

_..

r.. - -~-· · ~ ··•'\,el• '''

- ~···.,. ~-·.
.~~r. •!~&gt;
" •' J ..
~,

'/'1

..

'

2011 UIIP8! R1•380~7

..

(614) 44&amp;-

"

.,.,,.
u .f

•

'"

')\

'I •

I

n·~· ·

11 •• ~ ,, -~- ..

~C&gt;o

'O:olf' " '
- ' oC .,.,, • •"11+1" l •IHI V.l .,,

•••

... .. --· .. ,,,
~

&lt;11 •·~ , If. ~_,...,,._.,

~ .., ,.1..:-. r.. •·~
·~~,_,

,

.I

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

floo-0.-~

GA!:.UP.OUS oad

.

BUY

·-

.,

S~l'• ~rs. '·end 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. u

,,,

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UP!) - Family. The Bisons, who hit386 of illness.
Highly rated David Lipscomb 875 3-pointersfor44.1 percentdur·
No. 11 St. Mary's (Tex.) 96,
(Tenn.) and Minnesota-Duluth took ing the regular season, finished the
Hawaii-Loa 94 (OT)
different routes but the results were game with 13 of 28.
Gabe Ramirez, a 5-9 guard,
the same Wednesday in opening
"We've had pretty good success scored 35 points and Everett Henround play-of the 1991 NAIA shooting 3's but we're not neces· derson hit two free thr\&gt;ws with 22
Tournament. .
. sari! X looking for them every seconds left in overtime to lift No.
No. 4 Minnesotii-Duluth resort- time, • said David Lipscomb COIICh 11 St. Mary's (Tex.) past Hawaiied to stingy defensive play in the Don Meyer. "Tonight, the 3's were Loa. Elliott Henderson forted the
final nine minutes tl&gt; rally to a 76-, there and I thought our shot .selec- overtime with a rebound basket at
68 victory over Xavier (La.) while tion was as good as· it's been all the final buzzer after Hawaii-Loa
No. 3 seeded David Lipscomb put year."
.
led 83-78 with 27 seconds left.
on a dazzling 3-point shooting disShannon Terry had five 3-pamt· . Adrian Wright added 25 points for
play in routing Holy Family (Pa.) · ers in a 25-point perfo~ance ~nd St. Mary's, 24- 6, while Roger
106-75.
Jerry Meyer s~ored 23 mcludmg .Huggins had 23 and Jason Sm1th
Quarterfinal play begins Thurs- three treys as the Bisons hit 55.9 22forHawaiii-Loa, 17-12.
day with 14 of the 16 seeded teams percent from the field. .
No. 10 CoUeae ofldabo 96,
still in the field.
Mike Glitz had 19 pomts and 12
St. Rose (N.Y.) 91
Minnesota-Duluth, 274, trailed rebounds for Holy Family, 27-7.
Johnnie Hilliard scored 46
54-51 with 9:20 to go before taking
St. Mary's (Mich.) 77,
paints, including a pair of ~-poi!'t
off on a 19-3 run over the next No. 7 Wayland B11ptist (Texas~ 68 shots in the secbnd overume m
seven minutes. -David Hauser had
Garth Howard scored 17 pamts, boosting the College oC Idaho, 2712 points and Dave Zollar 7 as they including a 3-point shot that gave 5. Hilliard's 46 points ties him for
accounted for all of the Bulldogs' St. Mary's the lead for good. The the seventh-mbst .prolific game in
19 points in the decisive run. Haus· Eajtles, 25-11, frittered away a 14- NAIA Tournament history.
er fil}ished with 25 points and Zol- pomt second•half lead but J:Ioward , No. 13 Athens State (Ala.) 85,
Jar added 16.
·
hit from long range to gave St.
Whitworth (Wash.) 65
"Our defensive effort was the Mary's the lead with 3:28 left and
Rodney Hutchinson s,cored .29·
difference," said Minnesota- set off a 13-0 run. Wayland, 29-4, points on II of 14 shootmg finng
Duluth Cooch Dale Race. "Also, had just seven players because of Athens State, 23-9, to the vi~tory.
we kept them off the ~ffensive
The District 13 All-Star basket·
board
in
the
second
half
which
was
ball
doubleheader, featuring top
· one of their strengths."
senior
players from southeastern
The Gold Rush was limited to
among
others, will begin
Ohio,
half
of
the
SV
AC's
eight
member
Within
the
last
weeif,
Oak
Hill
nine offensive rebounds.
Sunday
at
3
p.m.
at the University
schools
are
in
a
Gallia
County
High
School
was
accepted
as
the
. Webster Stewart had 18 points
of
Rio
Grande's
Lyne
Center.
School
District
that
may,
Local
for Xavier, 21-12, which scored the 14th member of the Scio10 CountyThe
girls'
~e.
which
will start
because
of
financial
considerations,
first 8 points of the second half to based Southern Ohio Conference,
at
3
p.m.,
wtll
be
followed
by a .
merge
its
four
schools
into
two
or
take a 38-35 lead and stayed ' in with the school to join the confer·
even
one,
the
possible
extinction
of
slam
dunk
contest
and
a
three-point
ence ·as soon as schedules can be
front until the Bulldogs' big finish.
David Lipscomb, 34-p, hit eight worked out, according to a front· . the svAC appears one of the rea- shooting competition. The boys' ·
game will follow at 5 p.m.
ot its first 14 3-point shots en route page report in Monday's Jackson sons for the move.
Each game will pit a Division I·
In
football,
Oak
Hill
will
most
to a 48-31 halftime lead over Holy Journal-Herald.
II
team
against a Divi~ion III-IV
likely
play
in
the
SOC's
Division
I,
. The Hill will officialy become a
squad,
with
Logan boss Ralph Taymember in August, but the likeli- which would include such schools
lor
scheduled
to take the D-l·II
hood is great that the schoolwill as Franklin Furnace Green,
girls
against
Hanna.n
Trace pilot
have to wait as late as the 1993-94 Lucasville Valley, Ponsmouth East
John
Lusher's
small-school
squad.
school year to participate in all · and Ponsmouth Notte Dame. In the
other sports, the HiD SIIDds a very Fairland skipper Jack Harris will
soc Sports.
Oak Hill, whjch was formerly a good chance of being placed in the lead the big-«chool boys a1ainst
member of the Ohio Valley Con· conference's Division II, which Chesapeake mentor Norm Persin
his D-III-IV tesm.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)- ference until 1984, has been a includes Minford, McDermott andTickets
for the hoopfest are $3
Northwest,
Portsmouth
West,
·member
of
the·
Southern
Valley
Ohio State sophomore Jim Jackson,
each
and
will
be sold at the door.
Waverly
and
Wheelersburg.
a fJTSt·team UPI All-America selec- Athletic Conference since the
tion, said he has no plans to enter I 984-85 school year. But because
the NBA draft after this season.
"I've given leaving school for
the NBA some thought, but I know
. ...··
I'll be back bere next year,'' Jackson said as he and the Buckeyes
prepare for their fJTSt-round NCAA
Tournament game Friday in Dayton against Towson State.
'·'I'm going 10 be back next year
because I feel I have a lot yet to
accomplish, both academically and
in basketball," said Jackson. the
NOW IN PROGRESS...
1991 Big Ten MVP.
The 6-foot-6 Jackson leads the
STOP BY AND SEE THE MANY OUTSTANDING FURNITURE BUYS WE HAVE.FOR YOU!
Buckeyes in scoring with 18.8
. .
points a game and is averaging 5.3
rebounds while playing small for·
ward and both guard ~itions . .
"My all-around game has to get
better," Jackson said. "I need to
improve m.y bailhandii.ng, get
stronger and hit the outstde shot
.. .
.'I .. •' . ,,.
with more consistency. I want to
get quicker with my lateral movement and become more of a com- ·
plete player.
·.
.
·~ .
. ~~.·
"I wouldn't mind cormng outtf
jo·
&gt;~
' ~. ·.
I was going to be a top-five pick,"
I ::.:· ' - ' I
t ' .,
~.;_,_-:'" he said "That's what I'm shooting
for. But you've got to tie mentally
4 DRAWER
~
ready to luu)dle the NBA and I'm
CHEST
not sure I'm ready for that."
(" '""" ' ~ .... : 0 . ~ .. Ohio State cooch Randy Ayers
REG.'79.95
SOUDWOOD
•.•
,. , .f'CI ,\" 1&gt;
•· ·
,,d
agreed more time in college will
:oon ... ...,,.., ,
ill •'
i• .. .... . . ..
VIII" I
SIDE CHAIR
better prepare Jackson · for the
·~ - ~~~ ··~'"
rtt l !• lr •• OO&lt;J
1111•"
o·
""'•"!l
e'
l
&lt;l•
..
_,..,.,
·••o
NBA.
...
"I would advise Jimmy to
stay " Ayers said . "I think he
needs another year in school to
help him grow up emotionally. I
think aliolher year would really
help his llll!turity and better JHCP8!'0
him to adiust to life on the road m
theNBA.''

0

.

"

'.

EN DAYS· :A WEEK
OPEN
SEV
. nctayttuoughSaturdiiY
·
. ·30 a.m. to 7 p.m. Mo. s ncsay
·

.J

.

••180

1989 FORD ESCORT GT
Stock t 113561, 2 door coupe, fn111t
wheeldrive,4cyl.,alr, PS; PB.powar
lodes, lilt wheel, cruise, AINFM st&amp;reo 18p8, radials, buclcetsaall, mar
win. defog.

WAS
'6895

WAS
"2995

NOW

'2488

NOW

•&amp;488

1981 OLDS
DELTA ROYAL

1978 FORD F-150 4x4

SIOCk t 6661, 4 wheel drive. V~.
auto .. PS, PB, AINFM radio, 1/21on
pickup. long wide bed, rear step
bumper.

Stock • 14051, 2 doors, hard lOp,
coupe, V-8,air, vinylroof,aulo .!l'ans.,
PS. PB. tillwheel,cruise, sl8reolape,
radials.
·

WAS
'2295

NOW

'1889

~

~

~ , o "' «&lt;bo ICWC•" •~ •·.rl

1984 MERCURY
sliCkq~~~ ~~~~~~. ar,
vinyl """· ou1o.. PS, 1'8, power ..._,
power -~ power lodll, lillwhtll, auile,
AlliN radio, llllfiafs, ,.. win. defog.

NOW

WAS

wana.

NOW

"4895

1987 CHEVY CELEBRITY

1986 FORD
AEROSTAR VAN
S1Dc:k t 113601, 6 cyl.. air, PS, PB,
AMIFM radio, radiell.

NOW

WAS

'6995

v~. air, auK... PS,
lilt
cnise, AMIFM radio, radials, whhe

WAS

'3295

: -i

•

1t

I

L·l·

..

Colorado 71,
Mlcblan64
·
Al llouldcr, Colo., Shaun Van- . ·
diver scored 17 of his 27 points in · ·
the second half to lead Colorado.
Michigan shot 36 percent from the · ·
field in the fli'St half, but held a 25- ·
19 advantage under Colorado's dismal .14 percent. Billy Law added
I 5 for the Buffaloes. Michigan· s
Demetrius Calip led all scorers .
with 29 points.
·
Cincinnati 82, BaD State SS
At Cincinnati, Louis. BankS tallied 19 points to lead a hot-shoot·
ing Cincinnati squad. The Bearcats
converted all 16 of their free throw
attempts and buried 10 3-pointers.
Herbert Jones added IS points and
Keith Starks had 14 for the Bearcats,' who led 36-24 at halftime. Chandler Thompson had 16
p&lt;iints and Emanuel Cross added ·
12 for Ball State.
Southern m75, .
BolseSt 74
· Ashraf Amaya's basket with 10
seconds remaining lifted Southern
Illinois. Amaya, who finished the
game with 21 points, then blocked
Jeff Sanor's shot in the lane at the
buzzer to preserve the win. Sterling
Mahan and Rick Shipley had 15
paints apiece for the Salukis. Boise
State's Tanaka Beard pu11Jped in
25points.
·
Stanl'ord 93,
Houston86
. Benny Ammann scored a
career-high 29 points to head .the '
Cardinal attack. Adam Keefe added
22 points 10 help St110ford iniprove
to 16-13. Byron Smith scored 21
points to pace Houston.

Jackson will
stayatOSU

TriCO
washer
Pumps .

Paint

•om

'

Oak Hill to com
. pete in SOC

tTR •t .•Tj:4·2

Plastlkote
ScratCh

(UPI)

District 13
hoopfest slated for
Sunday

"""'"'

.SP'" "'-

of Wednesday night's NIT ftrst-round &amp;ame In
Boulder, Colo., which the Buffaloes won 71-64.

Top-rated N~IA ·squads
survive first round action

Mother's
Natural
wax

199

""'"

CALIP DRIVES • Michiaan (lllllrd Demetrius
Calip (left) slips past Colorado ~ard DUly Law
and looks for the outlet pBSS durm11the nrst half

~,.~­

Plastikote Car
Colors
Touch-UP
Paint

Pennzoil
10W30,
10W40or
5W30
Motor Oil

•

1299 ,. ..

/11/W-1 .

139 ..

9m-e,...i 179

!!~oron

'!

.

159

~

Fort...

PEPPERONI
PIZZAS
$12 99

PIZZA

Quaker State ,(·

•

2 URGE

LARGE DELUXE

B~~~eball

Tcronto- Sent to minor-~
camp for assignment: pirchers Rtck
Trlicek, Nate Cromwell, Bob
Wishnevski, catcher Carlos Delgado and third baseman Chris
Weinke.
BuketbaU
Atlanta - Placed forward
Trevor Wilson on injured list; acti;::=~~tGary Leonard from

992-2124-

Page 5

Badgers need overtime to
edge Bowling Green, 87-79

....•

improved 10 4-0 against Philadcl- MadisonSquareOarden.thisseason 2 run to take a69-581ead on a secondhalf,andJohnSalleyscored
Suns116,Biazers108
phm this season Wednesday night but are 16-14 on the road, one of three-point shol by Vandeweghe.
13 polo~ and grabbed 10 rebounds
At Phoenix, Dan Majerle came
with a I04 -92 victory and moved seven teams ·in the NBA above
Philadelphia closed within three for the Pistons.
ofl the bench to score 26 points and
within 3 1/2 games of the sixth- ,50() away~ home.
points on three occasions in the
Juzlll, Celtlcs109 (OT)
Kevin Johnson added 22 to lead the
place 76ers in the Eastern Confer" We knO'f.they're out there and fourth quarter but then the Knicks
At Salt Lake City, John Stock· Suns. The win over the Pacific
ence.
they know,.,e're behind them," pulledaw•y.
ton scored 9 of his 23 points in Division leaders evened the season
"The home ·court advantage said New York head coach John · In other games Wednesday overtime, breaking a three-game series between the teams at two
might not be that much of a break MacLeod, ·who is 24-24 since night, Chicago nipped Milwaulree Jazz losing streak and ending games apiece. Tom Chambers had
for us," said the Knicks' Kiki Van- replacin~ the ftted Sill Jackson ·on 102-10 I, Dall11s edged Seattle, Bos10n 's run of victories at five.
16 points and Jefl Hornacek 15 for
deweghe , who had 23 points. Dec. 3. 'But the only thing we can Deii'Oit oven:ame Charlotte 94-83 , Karl Malone scored 37 points and Phoenix.
Jerome Kersey led Port·
"We've been playing bettel' but we conii'Ol is the way we play.
Utah nudged Boston ll2-109 in . grabbed 14 rebounds to lead Utah, land with I8 points, while Kevin
still have a long way to go."
"~fwekeepplaying the way we .. overtime,
which also got I~ assists from Duckworth had 16, Clyde Drexler
The Knicks are onfy 15-18 at are, 11 doesn'tllUike any difference
Bulls 102, Bucks 101
Sroclcton and 21 pomts from Thurl and Danny Ainge 14 each and
At Milwaukee, the .Bucks' Bailey. LaJ:ry Bird scored eight of Terry Porter 13. .
what (playoff) position we're in.
We'll be in a good postion because Frank Brickowski had a jumper as his 25 points in the overtime for
Clippers 97, Spurs 93
we're on an upswing." .
·time expired ruled a two-point bas· Boston.
At Los Angeles, Charles Smith
The Knicks, who have won four ket, giving the Bulls their fourth · ·
scored 11 of his 21 points in the
· in a row and nine of their last 10 . straight viciOry. Michael Jordan,
S
. ·f
(ourth quarter, including four free
games, got 26 points from Patrick · who finished ·with 39 points, hit
ports br.te S
throws in the closing seconds, to
end the Spurs' five-game winning
SL Louis- Recalled right wing Ewing and 21 points and 16 two free throws with five seconds Soccer
David Bruce from Peoria of the rehoundsfromChatlesOalcley.
·left to put the Bulls up 102-99.
Argentine' soccer star Diego streak . Ron Harper ~nd Danny
International Hockey League.
"A lot of !Cams have had runs Brickowski then sank a jumper Mllradona scored the lone goal in Manning ·added 17 points apiece
this season but we haven't had ours near the three-point-line as time Napoli's 1-0 victory over Sampdo- for the Clippers, who had six playyet," MacLeod said. "This is the expired but'it was ruled a two-point ria in the first leg of the Italian Cup ers in double figures, Willie Andertime
to have a run and get things basket.
.
semifinals held in Naples, Italy.
son scored 27 points for the Spurs.
Boys tourney scores
started. Things are starting to fall . MaverickS 98, SuperSonics 96
into place for us. We're feeling bet·
At Dallas, Brad Davis drove
· · Hi h S h I Dl . T
ter
about
ourselves.'
'
past
Gary Payton and lofted a layup
g c oo
stru:t ourna.
The Knicks had the scheduling ov.er Derrick McKey at the buzzer,
ment Results
By United Press International
advantage, as Philadelphia was handing the SuperSonics their third
Boys
·
.
'
coming off an eight-day road trip straight loss in Texas. DaviS's shot
Hours:
· WE NOW
·Wednesday, March 13
and a doubie,overtime victory came after Sedate Threatt had tied
U am to Mid. Sun.-Thurs .
HAVE
against Atlanta on Tuesday night.
the game with 4.4 seconds remain"It is human naiure 10 be tired ing on an off-balanced three-point 1-~~~~~~------~ll~:am~to~l~a:m:F:rt:_.&amp;___s_a'_·~·~DE~T;":'~S~I~
DMSJONI
after two overtimes,'' Hersey shot and broke a three-game losing
At Akron
Cle Villa Angela-St Joe 73, Tol St. Hawkins said. "You just have to sb'eak.
suck it UP and play."
PistoiiS 94, Hornets 8~
John68
AI Canton .
.
Charles Barkley led PhiladelAt Auburn Hills, Mich ., Joe
phia with 32 points, II rebounds Dumars scored 26 points and GerMass Perry 80, Oe St. Ignatius 64
and five assists and he's not wor· a!d Henderson added 19, including
At Dayton
WITH 4 LAIGI PEPSI'S
eight during an I 1-0 run midway
West Chester Lakota 60, Xenia ried about the Knicks.
''I am not concerned about them through the founh quarter, 10 lead
Beavercreek 49
catching
us," he said. "We were the P\stons. Henderson, who had
Cine Elder 77, Dayt Patterson 61
tired
but
we can't use ,that as an 13 pomts m the second half, made
Division m
excuse.
We
just got .beaL''
all eight pf his field-goal attempts
At Toledo .
'· •101 Dommo•a Plai,lnc. Our drtv••o•ry ..lllhen •20.00. Qtl'"" .,..tll'lllled to
ThtKnicks won the game in the and both free throws . James
New London (i2, Oak Harbor 52
tfttUrt llff drtvHtl. 11/11111" pMk"*"glocllllon o~ . .... t•a 8nd l!l«kkltloMI wh••
third quarter, when they used a 12- Edwards had 14 points, all in the
...,taMtt. pAI!jfnMI AND CARIIR OPPORTUNrTIII NOWAVAILAilll '
,
Wayne Trace 59, Rocky River40
.
AtAtbens
.
Chesapeake 61, Bloom Carroll41
Unioto 65, Shenandoah 62
AI Canton
Bedford Chane! 79, Campbell
Memorial 65
·
Youngs Liberty 68, Akr St. Vincent-St. Mary 65

Here's the 1991 United Press
International Division IV girls allOhio basketball team, with height,
school year and scoring average:
First team
Lynn Bihn, Fon Recovery, 6-1,
Sen ior 21 0
. •. · ·
. ·
J~ckie Hannon, McDollald, 5-8,
Sem~r. 20.0. . .
.
.
Ntcole Ltke, Holgate, S-2,
Semor, 28.5.
Melailie Miller, Ottoville, 5-9,
Senior, 21.9.
·
Stephanie Petho, Bellaire St.
John's, 5-7, Junior, 34.9.
Second team
~n~a Barrington, Worthington
Chrisuan, 5-4, Semor, 23.4.
Diana Boehnlein, Madeira, 6-3,
Junior, 18.5.
Stacy Bums, Crooksville, 5-10,
Junior, 20.5.
Alison Dillon, Mansfield St.
Peter's, 5·9, .Senior,I8.0.
Linda Homer, Lima Perty, S-10;
Senior, 24.2.
Third team
Shelly AJien, East Canton, 5-8,
Senior, 17.5.
South
Carrie Ferguson,
Charleston Southeastern, 5-11,
Sophomore, 12.5.
Dena Householder, DeGraff
Riverside, 5-8, Senior, 20.4.
Beih Hun Ulcer, Rockford Parleway, 5-10, Senior,l9.7.
NAJA tourney scores
Denise Meyer, Fort Loramie, 54, Junior, 15. 8.
BasketbaU Results
Honorable mention
l!y United Press lnttrnatloul
Summer ·
. Armstrong, · Wednesday, Mardi 13
Mariemont; Jody Brandt, Ansonia; NAIA Tournament at Kansas
Andrea Bechtel, Ridgemont; City, Mo..
.
Andrea Bowser, Norwalk St Paul;
Concord (WVa) 106, Southern
Jennie Ewanski, Fremont St. Colorado 91 ·
•·
Joseph; Laura Ferguson, South
College of Idaho 96, St Rose
Charleston Southeastern; Lisa (NY) 91 (2ol)
Glass, Za!Jesville ROsetrllfiS; Kim
Athens State (Ala) 85, Whit·
Hess, Centerburg; Kelly Hicks, worth (Wash) 65 ,
Fayetteville; Jamie Hanning,
St. Mary's (Mich) 75, Wayland
Hemlock Miller; Missy Hey- Baptist66
dinger, Buckeye &lt;;entral; Deb
Minnesota-Duluth 76, Xavier
Ketchum, East Canton; J~nny (La)68
Kehres, Buckeye Cenll'al; Wendy
David Lipscomb (Tenn) 106
McCallister, Liberty-Benton; Pam Holy Family (Pa) 75 ·
·
Oswald, Berlin Hiland; Kim
Westmoni {Calif) 65,.Emporia
Phillips, Tipp City Bethel; Stacy State (Kan) SS ,
.
Riley, Mechanicsburg; Stac¥ Ritter, Hous10n; Lynnett.e Roeth, CovingtOn; Heidi Sanders, Crooksville;
Krista Seifert, New Riegel; Melissa Women's NCAA scores
Stair, Hardin- Northern; Kim Sowers, Frankfort Adena; Lorin Basketball Results
Trenkamp, Kalida; Pam Vilk, By United Preu International
McDonald; VanesSB Vaughtcrs, Wednesday, March 13
Franklin Furaace Green; Barb East Rqionlll
George Washington 73, RichWank, New Riegel; Michelle
Walker, Columbiana Crestview; mond62
Providence 88, Fairfield 87
Ranee Walls, Latham Western; .
James Madison 70, Kentucky 62
Sarah Zurbrugg, Sebring McKinley.
· ·
Toledo 83, Rurgers 65
Player-of-the-year-Lynn Mideast Re&amp;fonal
Blhn, Fort Recovery . .
Florida St 96, Awatac
. hian St 57
Holy Cross 81, Maryland 74
Coach-of-the-yen-Barry
Clute, McDonald.
SW Missouri 94, Tennessee
Tech64
·
Vanderbilt 73, South Carolina
64
Transactions
Midwest Retional
Stephen F. Austin 73, Mississippi62
.
Wednesday Sports TJ'IIIIIIction
West Regional
·
By United Press lntemational
Southern Cal63, Utah 52

•

•

Sports-scoreboard
Girls IV UPI AIJ-0:1io

~ Dally Sentinel

POmeroy-uldcllepert. Ohio

· ·,

.

'

..
.. .
.,

·.

.. .'
.'

.. .

..
-••

�Page 6 The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thureday, March 14, 1991

Community calendar
Co111munlty Calendar Items
appear two days before an eve.n
and tbe day of that event. lteDII
must be received weD Ia advance
to assure publication Ia the calendar.

will meet Thlll'$day at 7 p.m. at the
home of Veda Davis in Pomeroy.
TUPPERS PLAINS - The Tuppers Plains VFW Post No. 9053
wiU meet Thursday af 7:36 p.m. at
the post home.

of the American Revolution will
celebrate ils Charttr Day luncheon
on Friday at 12:30 p.m. at Overbrook Center in Middlepon. DAR
Good Citizens Winner and the
American History Essay Winners
will be honored.

FACTO~Y

FACTORY DIRECT PRICES

able. Admission is $2.So for adults
and $1 for children lirlder 12. Pro·
cee4s benefit building fund

MIDDLEPORT • Wyatt
Brown of the Kenneth Hagin Cru·
sades will conduct special services
Saturday at 7 p.m. and Sunday at
10 a.m. at the Rejoi!:ing Life
Church in Middlepon. CaiJ 9926249 for more information. Pastor
Michael Pangio invites the public.

STOREWID£ IN OUR
EVERY PIECE Of fUR~~~~~~VE HUNDREDS! BIG
INVENTORY IS REDUECEIVE AN EXTRA ••••••
DISCOUNTS! PLUS R
-

·R

. •

I

. ''

'

DINNER
SPECIALS •.•. ·
.

.

.

.

I

·•

.

.

•SHYING WNCH

MONDAY 11M FIIDAY 11 A.ll.-3 P.M.
e5EIVING DIIIIIIU

._SlAY AIIID FIIDAY 5 P.M.-8 P.M..
SA1UIDAY 5 P.M.·9 P.M.
NO RESERVATIONS NECESSARY

CARRY OUT
AVAILABLE

GILMORE'S
112EAST MAIN ·

POMEROY, OHIO

992-6632

FACTORY DIRECT PRICES

R

u

·ON
. I V'• A PLUS ~B~l WHAl APLUS\ .

_~~fl . "

· ··· ·

T

~

D

· .· F

u

R
-N
.I

R

N
I

YOU RECEIVE
s20 WORTH OF FREE
FURNITURE, FOR
EVERY $100 IN
FURNITURE .YOU · BUY
IN ANY .DEPARTMENT.

.T

u

·R
E

c
·o

'M

:p

:A
:N
·Y

' T

u
R
E

c

0
M
p
A
.Ny

HERE'S.HOW YOUR FREE FURNITURE BONUS WORKS!

'

¥ '1000

1

'1500
~ '2000
F
U
R
N
I

·'100
'200
'300
'400

FREE
FREE
FREE
FREE

FURNITURE
FURNITURE
FURNITURE
Select From:
FURNITURE •Living Rooms

SIMMONS

COUNTRY STYLING LIVING ROOM
. Yaur
· Choice. Of

·T

A Good

~;~!~!

·u

~

c:t::..

All 3 PIECES

:~

$899
s1

Special Order Your
Own CoYirs and
RR~etive Disc-ta and -:o·

.M
p
A

299

'

·

ALSO IMPERIAL
1\ND NATIONAL

N

IMPEIIll TWIN SIZE
lOX SPIIIGS MATTIESS

•Bedroom Suites
•Dining Room Suites and Dinettes
•Sofa Sleepers
•Mattress and Box Spring~
•Coffee Tables and Ertd Tables
•Gun Cabinets
•Rockers
•Entertainment Centers
•Sectionals

lanus Furniture FREE.

(All of the abciY~ qualify
·for FREE furruture)

FACTORY DIRfCT ,RICfS

FACTORY DIRfCT PRICES

QUliN SIZE. ~ ltL 1649 lot

SALE PIKE

'·

L
A
N
D

539995 ,_ SIT

u

R
E

c

UNIQUE

0
M

POCKETED COIL CONSTRUCTION

p·

HOURS
ondtlly thru Saturday
B:lll am-5:00 111111 •
Closetl at 12 Noon

Toll FrH 1-800-137-8217 ·
FACTORY DIRECT PRICES

T

T

RUTLAND FURNITURE COMPANY
742-2211

u

---....., F
U,
R
'---1 N
I

APPLIANCES
,y TO MAlE YOUI PURCHASES EVIN EASIEL..WE HAVE 90 DAn SAME AS CASH, SO YOU CAN PAY WHEN YOUIINCOME TAX REFUND AJUIIVESI TYs &amp;
EICLUDID

St. lt. 124

#1 IN BEDDING! R

Rutlancl, Ohio

FACTORY DIRECT PRICES

Thunday
CLOSED SUIIDI Y

A

~

VCR-TV
Repair Center
FACTORY AUTHOiiZED SERVICE

.\.

· ~ ..

~- .,

:- ·

.

~·

:... ~;,., · .~

,,.., • (o"

." .
•

,~ .-. ,

·''• .~~· · ··"
~ •• "' ~· . ~· c '

~

"" "'

..

···- · .• .•. ,• ..... h. ·:. "

...... ,,,
.... ..... ',), : .

.

'.

•

.,J., ~·

ro •r

.,,.,.( " ol ,..,.,.•• ·••

.. .

ChestnutS~.Nli~eport,orcal[

992-5696.

'

.. ,,. ,...

~-· · ·

. .. •

'

•

·•

- - - . . :.

7

r

~T EtIS C0P

WHERE
BliND-NAME
PAnO FUINiTUIE IS FOUND AT AN
AFFOIDIBLI PIICI.
.,.. Dolly " 5 pJl.
Fri. to I P.M.

•FrH .Deli"ry
•FrH Parking

Whor•C•-

....

Sotilflutlotl II o.,
~oll(l\\'(J.'

11&gt;&lt;1

----

I

~

(_

PHARMACY
TOP.ICS
BY YOUR

SWISHER LOHSE
PHARMACISTS
Gall bladder removal haa bMn changed.radically by loporoecopic
cholec.,.tectomy. In then- proeodure, doctol8 cut emell holea
In the obdomen to lnaert • camero and aurvicollnotrumenta. Both
operation and reeovary are made 1~orter ond aaaior.

****

Doctol8 now advl.. treotlngpeople with borderllne.hyportenolon
promptly. Study 11t the Unlveralty of Mlehigen found them at riak
for developing hMrt dlanae. Weight lou. the doctol8 11y, can,..
duca much of the ria.

** I**

Early teoto at the Medical College ofWiaconaln indicotethet TPA,
the drug uaad to atop heart llttacka. can dluolve dangerouo blood
clotl at tho bock of tha eye fonned during ourgery for detoched
retina.

****

Hore'a e pooltive aide affect: tamoxlfen. tho hormonal drug u11c1
to prevent rac:urrenca of br1111t cancer In poatmenopouul womon, '"'"' to protect agalnlt heart dl-11 by reducing choleaterot levela. according to a report In tho Journal of National Can·
car lnatltute.

****

When your doctor preocrlbeo the bill, we do the r•t. Bring your
pr•criptiona to the exptrta at :
•

WE REPAIR ALL MAlES

\'

'

· For more information contact.
Jeannette ""Crooks Thomas at 784

The Middleport Alumni Association is reminding the public that
applications for the Susan Park
Scholarship must be turned in by
April30.

'

HoME. ENIERtAINMENT CENTER

.
•
:
:

Scholarship deadline nearing

---Wilson nominated to band

I!::============~ •Recliners
3 PIECE EXAMPLEs

JOHN MORA MEMORIAL AWARD WINNER. Walt
WUiiams received the Jolin Mora Memorial Award for "Best Pro·
ject" Ia Tuesday's annual Science Day held at Melp Junior High.
His project was ''Measurlag Particulates."

{t- 1\·

•

R

n·_; \

r.;; "··~·'")

THURSDAY .....................;......". BAKED STEAK
FRIDAY ......... SAVORY STUFFED FISH FilLETS
SATURDAY ... STUFFED CORNISH -GAME HENS

. FEATURED ·
DAILY SPECIALS

Science Day was conducted
Tuesday at Meigs Junior High
School in cooperation with the
Ohio Academy of Science.
·
The I!JifPOSC of the day was to
stimulate interest in science, to promOle research, to promOIC scientif·
ic knowledge and to reco~ high
achievement in auainmg these
objectives.
Each project was judged by a
~ of professionals or educators
in four areas: originality and ere..ativity, clarity of expres,~non, use of
· the scientifiC method and knowledge achieved.
Students receiving a superior
award, and the name .of the their
r.rojects, were James Kopczinslcy,
'Experimenting Aerodynamics;"
Kevin Logan, "The Use of Aluminum in Our Society;" Jaclyn
Swartz, "A Study of Genetics
Using Drosophila;" Becky Meier, ;
"How Does Light Behave?" Heidi
Huffman, "What Kind of Ground
"&gt;
Cover is Best for Reducing Soil
Erosion;" Sam Cowan, "The Making of a AV8 Engine;" Tara Efwin,
•
"How Do Chemotherapy, Smell .
and Heidi Hulfman. SecoDcl row, Tara Erwin,
and Having a Cold Affect, Taste;"
SUPERIOR AWARD WINNERS • These stu·
James Ko~lasky, Jered HID and Kevin Logan • .
Brian Smith, "What Effects Cer1ain
dents at Meigs Junior High School received
Third row, Crystal Vaugban, Sarah Anderso~, ·
Stimuli Have on Crystal Growth;"
superior ratings on their projects ror tile annual
Walt Williams, Sam Cowan and Brian Smith.
Walt Williams, "Measuring ParticSc~tnce Day held there on. T-uesday Ia cooperaThey are now e1illble to attend tbe District Sd·
ulates;" Crystal Vaughan, "What
tion with the Olllo Academy of Science. Pictured
enc:e Day at Ohio Uaiv~ty oa AprU 6.
are the Effects of ·Temperature on. are, 1.,, lroat row, Becky Meier, Jlldyn Swartz
the Action of Yeast?" Jered Hill,
"Shedding the Light on Protists"
and Sarah Anderson, "~lis : The
Building Blocks of Life."
These students receiving superior awards will represent Meigs
Junior High at the District Science
Day at Ohio University on April 6.
If they rece.ive a superior at llle district level they will go on to state
competition at Ohio Weslyan University in Delaware on Apri120.
· Students receiving Governor's
Awards were Becky Meier, Energy
· Resource Research; Walt Williams,
Environmental Science Research;
· Crystal Vaughan, Agriculture and
Food Science Resoarch; Kevin ·
Logan, Recyclin~ and Litter Prevention; and Heidi Huffman, Water
Resource Research .
.Special recognition awanls were
presented to the foUowing students
by those listed: Becky Meier,
Meigs County Jaycees by Brian
'Conde; Heidi Hoffman, Meigs
-Junior High Academic Boosters by
·Debbie Brennan; James Kopczin·
sky. Meigs Local Teachers Association by Carman Manuel; Jaclyn
Swartz, Dr. James P. Conde, Inc.
by Brian Conde; Sam Cowan, Ohio
Research. Back row, Crystal Vaughan, Alricul·
GOVERNOR'S AWARD WINNERS
Power Comrany by Ernie Sisson;
lure
and Food Science Research; Walt WIWams,
Governor's
Award
at
the
annual
Sci·
Receiviag
and Crysta Vaughan, Veterans
Environmental
Science Research; and Kevin
Day
aJ
Junior
School
are,
1-r,
ence
Memonal Hospital by Dr. James
Logan,
Recyclilll
and Litter Prevendon.
front
row,
Meier,
Resource
WithereD.
,
.
, .. The Johii ' Mora Memorial
Award for "Best Project" was
awarded to Walt Williams by
Rusty Bookman, science day director and teacher.
Students receiving an excellent
· rating on llleir projects were Tyler
Wolfe, Jon Mattea, Tara Fowler,
Tfavis Drenner, Joey Barrett,
Patrick Young, Cindy Vance, Jere. my Imboden, Shannon Staats, Cory
Seymour, Beckie Elliott, Man Morris, Cindi Roush, Chuck Legar,
Misty Frum, lana Dailey, Ryan
Dodson, Keith Darst, Missy Clif·
ford, Melissa Vance, Missy Wilfong, Adam Wyatt, Brent Smith,
Julee Wolfe, M!&gt;lly Toban.• Eddena
Russell, Erika Mea4ows, Emily
Johnson, Jeff Darnell, Rorinie
Casto, Ben Ewing, Michele Ward,
Tonya Will, Stephanie Thomas, ·
Amanda Well. Jason Taylor, Reggie Pratt, Shilo Moore, Joey
Ruchti, Adam Sheets, Jarod
Folmer, Robby Baker, Kim Janey,
Vanessa Compston, Carrie
Williams, Kelley Grueser, Daniel
Fowler, Kevin Collins, Sonja Bate:
man, Amy White, Jeremy Runyon,
Jason Pierce, Ryan Rowe, Kim
. SPECIAL AWARD
.
• TileR stu·
tion with the Ohio Academy of Science. They
Haggy, Bobbie Butcher and Billie
are, 1-r, front row, Becky Meier and Jaclyn
dents at Meigs Junior Hiah School are the redp·
Butcher.
ients of the special awards presented Tuesday at
Swartz. Back row, Crystal Vaughan, Sam
Receiving good ratings on their
Cowan, James Kopczlnsky and Heidi H~ffman.
the school's annual Science Day held in cooperaprojects were Todd McDade, Shannon Wise, Ray Russell. Tricia
Roush, Barbara Roslinski, Charles
Martin, Lillie Lambert, John JefAaron Wilson of Eastern High And we want to thank Aaron's .lion."
fers, Jarrod Holman, Jimmy Wolfe, School is being honored as one Of band director William Hall, who
Wilson is the son of Beryl and
Julia Young, Harry Young, Danny the best musicians in the country as has brought his talent to our atten- Linda Wilson, Reedsville.
Reese, Shawn Petrie, Christie a nominee to the 1991 McDonald's
Mash, Adam Krawsczyn, Allison All American High School Band.
Lee. WiUie Kauff, Susan Grueser,
Wilson is one of the many high
Will Hall, Eli Fink, Amy Durst, school senior band memben to be
Josh Sigman, Susan Page, Royden nominated lor selection to the
Hawkins, Pat McGuire, Brett New- McDonald's All American High
some, Frank Musser, Dean Hanlda, School Band. As a nominee Wilson
Jerimiah Gillette, Tony Brown, is in the running to be one of the 53
Brian Wright, Lisa Tatterson, members of the 1991 McDonald's
Crockett Roush, Erica Robie, Todd All American High School Band.
Mitch, Lori McGhee, Annie King,
Annie Jessie, Adam Hendnx, Frank
The McDonaid's All American
·Dickens, Alan Durst, Am.ber High School Band was .created in
Blackwell, Misty Birchfield, 1967 to recognize the dedication
Martha Russell, Sherri .Ramsburg, and achievements of outstanding
Travis Grate, David Feuy, Becky young musicians. The All AmeriDiles, Jered Cook, Melissa Pierce, can Band is made up of one high
Jamie Pennington, Ricky Math- school senior from each state and
eney, Jennifer Dunkle, Stephanie the District of Columbia, as well as
Davis, Karen Cleland, Steve from the 'llirgin Islands and Puerto
Syhraiia
E•r1011 ·
Funai
GoWst· ·
Amott, Jennifer Carpenter, Katie 'Rico. J'his year, the band will cele·:Mapawex
Symphonic Shintom
Satnsung
Sanders, Lisa Yeauger, Qreg brate its 25th anniversary with per·
Ramey, David J&gt;ierce, Rhonda (ormances during the All Amencan
Gl
KTY .
·Multi TeCh
Soundesign
Oiler, Trish McHaff'IC, Amy Litde, Weekend in Springfield, Mass.,
ICA
Z111lth
Philco
Scott
Rob Jones, Monica HolllliiD, Richie which culminates in a special
Hagen, Pbillip Edmonds, Bri~et appearance at the nationally tele·Council, Stacey Blankenshtp, vised McDonald's All American
Roger Arix, Matt Haggy, Shawn High School Basketball Game.
Cremeans and Amy Yates.
'
"We'~ really excited that Aaron
Wilson
has been recognized as one
Tony Zale of Gary, Ind., wbo wore of the country's
ouiStlllding musibozinl'• mlddleweipt croWD from
cians,"
said
Roscoe
Mills, McDonIJ4l·IJ4'1, 1011 tbe title to New York's
ald's
owner
and
opeiiiOr.·
"He '1 an
391'WEST MAIN mET
·
POMEIOY, OliO
Rocky Grulano by lutodout in IJ41
Mt won It back fater that year by exceptionally talented musician
992-3524
llnockinl 011 Grallano iD tbe return and a real asaet to the Eastern High
boat.
School Band and Meigs County.

I

5 Large Showrooms of Furniture In Four
Different Buildings.

FREE FU~NlTURE lS

·U

. I

SYRACUSE • Sign up for sum·
mer ball teams in Syracuse will be
held Saturday from 10 a.m. to noon
at Syracuse Elementary.

SALE ENDS SATURDAY
MARCH 30, 1991

'N

F

PO¥EROY ·• A men 's inde·

pendent "''"tball tournament wiU
be held Saturday, Sunday and
March 24· at Meigs High School.
COst is $90 per ICalll, 10 team maximum. Contact Zane Beegle at 9926626 or 247-4455 for further information. ·

.

-A
.

REEDSVILLE • The Eastern
High School Cheerleaders are
sponsoring their annual che«leading clinic for anyone in grades K-6
on Saturday beginning at 9 a.m.
Registration is $5 per participant.
Contact Debbie Brooks at 9854152 afrcr4 p.m.

FACTORY DIRECTPRICfS

.

.

L

·D

lion.

·RUTLAND FURNITURE .CO.

·

·u
.T

DIRECT PRICES

Ohio

Science Day winners announced

THURSDAY
SYRACUSE • The Meigs
CHESTER • The Shade River
REEDSVU..Lii! • There will be
County Holiness Association annu- Lodge No. 453, Chester, wiD meet a bake· sale on Friday at Reed's
al spring in door camp meeting Thursday at 7:30 p.m. All master. Country Store in Reedsville at 10
through Sunday a~ the Syracuse masons mvited to attend. Refresh- a.m. sponsored by the Eastern
Church of the Nazarene at 7 p.m. ments wiD be served.
· Women's SoftbaU team.
'
'
nightly lind 6 p.m on Sunday. SpeLOTTRIDGE .'!he Lottridge
cial music and speaker with Rev.
GALLIPOL:IS • All Meigs
LONG BOTTOM • The Paith Community Center will host .a chili
Thurl and Mary Kay Mann. Public County Trash Haulers are urged to Gospel Church in Long Bottom supper pn Saturday from 4•8 p.m.
invited.
· attend a meeting of the Gallia will hold special singing and Cost is $3.75 for adults and $1.50
County Solid Waste District on preaching with the Dailey Family for children under 12. Public is
HOBSON • Hobson Church of Thursday at 7 p.m. at the Gallipolis on Friday at 7 p.m. Rev. Steve invited
·
Christ and Christian Union will Senior Citizens Center. Call 992- Reed invites the public.
hoid revival through Saturday at 7 3194 for information. ·
POMEROY · "Golden Fish"
p.fl.l. nightly with Norman Taylor.
SA11JRDAY ·
and "Homer and ihe Wacky Donut
Rev . Theron Durham invites the
POMEROY • Preceptor Beta
WILKESVILLE • Smorgas- Machine" will be shown at the
public.
Beta Chapter, Beta Stgma Phi bord dinner at the Wilkes Grange Meigs County Public Library on
Sorority wiD meet Thursday at 7:30 Hall on Saturday from 4-7 p.m. Saturday at 2 p.m. All area children
· RACINE • A support group p~m. at the Episcopal Church in Cost is $5 for adults and $2 for are invited to attend.
. meeting for those affected by the Pomeroy.
children under 12. All proceeds
Gulf War will meet Thursday at 7
will go toward the renovation of
RACINE : Soup Supper, Satur·
Hall.
p.m. at t(J.e Racine Uni\cd
SHADE • The Shade United . the Wilkes Grange
day, at 5 p.m. at the Sutton United
.
· M'ethodist Church.
"Melllodist Church wiD have revival
. Methodist Church. Two kinds of
Thursdsy lhrouah Sun"·y· at 7 p m
RUTLAND - The youth group soup, pies, cliff~:C. tea and soda wiU
GALLIPOLIS • The AGHJMV nightly with Kelth Kawle.
. . of the Rutland Church of God will be served.
·
Solid Waste Policy Board will
hold a carwash on Saturday from 9
'!!eel Thursday.at 7 P:m. at the GalSYRACUSE. Sign up for sum- a.m. to 3 p.m. at Pleaser's in
HENDERSON • The Gallia
ha County Semor CitiZens Center.
mer ball teams in Syracuse will be Pomeroy. Call Jane Barber at 742-. Twirlers Western Square Dance
. held Thursday from 5-7 p.m. .at 2060 for information.
Club will hold a dance Saturday
GALLIPOLIS - The MGM SyracuseEiementary.
from 8-11 p.m. at the Henderson
Boy Scout and Cqb ScP,ut district
CHESHIRE • The Cheer · Community Cenrcr. Caller wiU be
recognition dinner will be held at
FRIDAY
. Olympics will be held Saturday at Homer Magnet Open to all westthe Grace United Methodist Church
ROCK SPRINGS • The Rock 6 p.m. at Kyger Creek High em style square dancers.
in Gallipolis on .Thursday at 6:30 Springs Grange Hall will meet Fri- School. Competiton will feature II •
p.m. Contact Dr. Bernard Niehm at day at 7:30p.m. at the grange hall. · elementary cheerleading squads.
MIDDLEPORT - the Middle446-5500 ot Bob Arms at 992- .
Awards presented in cheer, dance, port Youth League sign-up day will
5959 for information. Cost of the
TUPPERS PLAINS • There spirit and grand champion and ali be held -Saturday from 9 a.m. to
dinner is $7.
will be a rpund and square dance star ·cheerleader · squad. Public noon. Any new player must bring a
Friday from· 8-11 :30 p.m . at the invited.
copy of their birth certificate.
.
.
.RACINE - The Racine Ameri- Tuppers Plains VFW Building fea·
can Legion Auxiliary Unit No. 602 tunng "Foggy Mountain Drifters"
TUPPERS PLAINS· The TupMIDDLEPORT • A pancake
wiU host a legion birthday party for and Alvin Chutes on the fiddle pers Plains VFW Post 9053 and breakfast will be held Saturday
Post 602 on Thursday at 7:30 p.m. Anhur Conant .will .be the caller. Auxiliary will have a round and from 9 a.m to noon at the American
at the lodge liall.
Public invited.
square dance on Saturday from 8- Legion Hall ,on Fourth Street in
11:30 p.m. featunng the Alvm ,Mic!dlepon. .AU proceeds from llle
POMEROY • ThC Meigs CounMIDDLEPORT • The Return Schutts Band Baked goods will be · breakfast will go toward the Meigs
ty Salon No. 710, Eig~t and Forty Jooathan Meigs Ouipter, Daughters sold and refreshments will be avail- County Soap Bolt Derby Associa-

FACTORY DIRECT PRICES

March 1 '1991

-llot' «
-

Cllootot ....... ....
......................
....
o.ow.
- . . .....

· llw . .. I:Oa
10 1:00 p.111.
......, 10:011 . ....... 4:00 , ...

I'III&amp;CIIII'JIONI
I . Moln
' P~-

•

PH . Hl·lltl
.... OH.

'

�...
Thursday, March

Sentinel

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

john C. Wolf, D.O.

Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

Epididymitis- easier to
cure than it is to spell
· QUESTION • I was experienc·

recei&gt;ed word of lhe death of her
brolher, Curtis Anderson, Dunbar.
W.Va

The infant weighed seven
pounds and two ounces and was 21
mches long.
Paternal grandparents are Carl
and Dorothy Roach,J;'omeroy. ·
Maternal grandparents are Paul
81)d Shelia Curtis, Pomeroy. Mater·
nal great grandparents are Perry
and Sylvia Curtis, Tuppers Plains
and Melvin and Hope Dtake, Long
Bonom.
JACOB C. ROACH

TURNPIKE OF GALLIPOLIS
.

.

.

SERVICE SPECIALS

Mrs. Juanita Bowles and Lou
Eshelman transported Mrs. Ida
White to the emergency room at
Pleasant Valley Hospital on Friday
evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Dono·
hue visited·their daughter and husband, Kenda and Alun Armstrong
in Mt Vernon and 8ttended Alun' s
art showing at Nazarene College.
Gary and Linda Haynes and
daughter, Jordan, Columbps, spent
a recent weekend with Unda's par·
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Donohue.

Classifie

'•
•

•
•

Mrs. Orpha Roush of Rutland :
called on Mrs. Russ Eshelman · •
recently.
Mildred Lee and Deloris Donahue spent a day shopping in Jackson.
Maria Graham and Patsy Hively
went to Virginia. to aaend the grad·
uation of Patsy's husband, Tim,
from Aircraft Maintenance School

3

6
10
Monthly

Giv . .way
H•PPl' Us
lost •nd Found.
Y•d SlltiHid m a~aneet
Pubfic .SIIe • A..clion
9 . ..,._.ted to Buf ·
...

( :/a.~.~ijil'tl

fiU~I'S

1111'

t'lll'l'r

.

.

Galli a Counly
••6

992 M1ddlepori
Pomet'OV
985 Ch•Mr

Gallipolis

367 Ch•hir•
388 Vinaon
245
256

Rio Grande
GuYfln Oist.

643 Artbia Diu
379 WJinut

843

ParUII'td

2•1

letar1 Falls

949 Racine
742 Rulland
667 .Coalville

.. _

BULL:ETiN BOARD DEADUNE
4:30 P.M. DAY BEFORE
PUBUCATION

675
458
576
773
182
895

P1 Pl111••nt
Leon
Apph: Grove
Mason
New H•ven
letalt

21

2Z

23

937 Bvllllo

71 • Autos tar Saltt ·
12 Trucks tor Sah

73 'WMI. 4 WO ' s
1A , Motor~:ycl•
71 lo.tl &amp; Molars for Sille
76 Auto Partsllo Acc es501't8S
11 Auto Repatr
78 Cemp1ng fqUipmeHU
79 C•mpen &amp; Motor Honu!s

tot Rent

49 For L41..

51

~

Sr.rvices

Hau•hoW Ooects

12 - SPO!IOntlloodo

Home lmprOWment s ·
12 - Ph.imbtng &amp; H•••nu

53 Ant.ques '

s•

ljllhlllihll

55
56
57
58

Rusin•• Opporluntl¥
!Yon"¥ to loan
Prof•lionafSer~tic.s

PubliC Notice

Public Notice

BULLETIN
--- BOARD
_ _,_
.

Aru Code 304

SIN'ce

59

't l

Mftc . M•c:h.,.dlte

83 E ACI'IIIting

·
Electuul • f\efriQttriiiiOn
85 Gunwel tiaulmy
It Mobile Hume Rttp1ur

Building Suppli•
Pt11 tor Stle
Muticat Instruments·
Fruits • Veg ..abl•
for 1•1• or Tr,te

a•

17 U,e_holstery

PubHc Notice

Public Notice

.-

l ransportatwn

47 W.med 10 Rent
41 Equipm..t 101 "'""

· HetD Wtnt ...
Situation WIn ted

1.JI WMiad To Do

Public Notice

.

Muon co .• wv

Metgs Cou.t nv
Area Code 814,

Area Code 614

DAY BEFORE PU8LICAJION
COPY DE AOLIN.E
11 00 AM . SATURDAY
!MONOAV PAPER
2 00 PM MONDAY
TUESDAY PAPER
2c00 P M TUESOAV
W[ONE.SOAY PAPER
2 .00 PM . WEDNESDAY
THURSDAY PAPER
2 :00 ·P.M THURSDAY
~HIOAV PAPER
2 fJO P M. fRIDAY
SUNOAY PAPER

.

lldlll ;.
41. Hou•s IlK Renl .
•U Mobile Mom" for A•~t
•3 Farms for Rent
44 -- Apanment tor A~tnt
4i - Funti•Md Rooms

Insurance
"Bustn•s 'fr.en..-.g
·
. 1~ Schools .. lnsln.ctwm
, 16 Radio. TV. C8 AIPIIIr
1? Misctllanwou 1
'

j11/1 ..1wi Ill{ I ;,,l'flht jill' I'XI'IWII
. J.{f'S. :.

S~tltts

"A cliisstfted advetl"tfllh!lll pi&lt;.~Ct.'\lln lhH Dally Stmltnt!l {tfA
Ctf!JI
dassthud dt~play , Bu~iuuu Card and lt.'!J;,I,nohcllls,
·WtH .1lsu &lt;tppvar 111 lhc Pt Pleasant Ae!]IS1er ;and thfd Galh
puhs Oa tiV Trtbunu, muchmg ovur 18.000 hotllt=$

~ -

11
12
13
14

62 Wante-d to Buy
&amp; j livttttock
64 Hay &amp; Gfam
65 Sued • fertthur

3 I 8usin•s &amp;uJ•ngs
35 lots &amp; Aeree,ge
36 Re .. hltle Wtnted

46

.r 111 S11ppltes
II lt,esluck

61 · fe1m Equlfl'mvnt

ll F.-rms tOt Slit

4
5
6
7
8

[itlp'il 'i ll'l '': t
S1•, vlt,1' ~)

'Si:!nltrH.o( 11 not responsible~ for euou, ahur tint d-'f . (Check '
lor ~uors first d., ad runs tn paput) Cilll b efore 2 00 p m
dil¥ atlt!r publtcilllion tom~" cou~clrCH'
,
"Ads that •nusl be p11d m advance an:
C;ud of lhanlt~
Ho.p!Jy Ad~

Technology

31 Hom• to. Sele
32 M•t• Mom• lot Sitlt=

3 Annoucem•••

of ad fo• all c~ilall"tcrs rs doublu pnc'! ot ad cost
"1 po1n1 knt~ tv~ only uled

We are setting the standards in muHimedia, the next revolution in computing. We also plan to manufacture digital
conipact cassenes (DCC) in our own u.s. plan!$. And our
Tandy 1000 RL makes home computing so simple, we
actually guarantee success-

Public.Notice

..

. Mot.,: ..... ..... t24.381.88
TDiol W- FUIMI Apfl'•
81·8·C llnOI Clunlng,
18· 1 ·A BofelyA1·1·A Pol leo Law Entor- A· 1 •7-0 Cladt/T-ourtr
TDiol
UtHitloo Oopooito
Drilllono
.....
U12.
711
.37
21 0 Pwoonol lorvicoo
Snow and Ice Romavol
21 2
Ito
240 8•-'"'loo ond
.
Un rmo .... t4,1104.21
11 Bola~-,;
Fund Appro.
PROGRAM
VIABIC
2
210 Poroonol Sorvlcu·~
Mn:-~"'t
t1 0 11 I 811 IS· 7·A 2110 Ptrmlooivo
prlalion .. .. ... . 124,361.88 ·
UTILITY
IEIIVICES
211 Sotarleo/
w,n ... ....... t1&amp;.ooo.oo
Totol
i..:..,
T........ ............ 7.1111 .81
·- ·
GRANO TOTAL
Sanitary a - FulldWogoo ...... ... 129,437.06 212 mptoyoo
a- ·1111
II·I·A 240
•
·
ENTERPRISE'
E2·1·A
Otfi
.
.
212 Employee
Bonet ito .......... ,d... ,.218.00
RotMVol ...... t10,111.811
Utllllv ............. 41.882.44
FUNDS APPROPRI·
...ollll .. ....... 31,000.00 240 8 upp1 o on
Toto! Slreal ~Nclion,
Total 0 - Spoclol
. 240 Supplloo ATION ....... te18,823 .82
Mat.rlolo
......
l30.417.17
240 Supptloo ond" ,
MoiCorllalo .......... 1.000.00
Moi!',!'"F - d , R•111 8ll . Fundo ........ t137.061.77 TDiol
SEC110N 9. Thot there bo
111
6
P~· un ...
•
·
ftRANO TOTAL IPECI L
M-lalo ....... . 34,000.00 Tolo1 erk/
IIIIPropilollod
11om the TRUST
OfiiGo
.....
......
30.417.87
T.-ourer
......
.,l.218.00
12•11·1
SI-Hiahwavond
'"
~
2150 Copitol
A1· 7·F Solicitor
lm-lment Fund
.• REVEN.UE FUND AI'PRO·
ANO AGENCY FUN OS. .
t..doMd
outtoy ..... ,...... 1o.ooo.oo 230 Contr...uol
240 Buppleo l
"'IATION ..... t31B,711.81
POLICE DISABILITY AND
· BullcllngoToto1 Polico Law En·
·
SECTION 15. ThoUitei'o bo 12·8·A
PENSION
FUND '
2110
Copitol
. . , icet·• ....... u,ooo.oo
Malnor•nae ...... B.072.21 oppropriotlll from ,.,. to~
lorcemont .... t208,437.01
PROGRAM
I - SECURITY
o.,.toy
........
t113,11e.oo
Tot11
Toto! Program 1Totol IItie Hlghwoy • •
- · DEBT .ERVICE
OF PERSONS AND
Totoll.andoond
Solicitor
.......
....
3.000.00
lmpto,..
~
....
11,072.21
FUNDS.
Socurlty of Poroono and
PROPERTY
llulhlingo .... l1 13.111.00
Ptopeny .•... *206.~7.09 OTHER GENERAL
Total Pr!IOI'om Vt- Trono·
GENERAL OBliGATION
1-11·212
Employora'
OTHER
USES
OF
FUNOIPROGRAM IV A1~9~t;"2~~~:li;,..
poot- .... t113.111.17
BONO FUND
..........
... t&amp;.l21 .56
8horo
E2·1·A
2110
N--Debt
COMMUNITY
.
a T-ouror'o
PROGRAM II - PUBLIC
Other Ootot . Bervlco Fund
Total Polico Oioobillty
.. -,
Sor.ice
.........
34.000.00
ENVIRONMENT
HEALTH .SERVICI!B
C.2·H BuUdlna
F
ondPenolon
TO!ol
Other
Uoao
ol
Ho .............
tta.ooo.oo B3·2·A co~-F•Md
t8•ts24 ·81
A1·4-A Community Pten- A1·7·X
230 Contractual
"~'-•
~· ..............
Fulld .. .. .. .. ...... U.l21 .61i
FUIMio ........ .. t34.000.00
nlng and Zoning210 Poroonol Servlc•Total Other Dabllarv·
Sarvicto
GRANO TOTAL TRUST
TDII!I
V240 Supptloo and
Prloo..,. .......... 2.000.00 211 Solorloo/
leo Fund ......... tl.l24.151 lon118ry . _ _
ANO AGENCY FUND
Mll1orlolo ... .....U,tsOO.OO Total Other Ganorol Gov·
w
ogmoop.io
...y........ ... t800.00 GRANO TOTAL DEBT
APPRORIA·
Fund~
Totol Pn&gt;grom IV00
iornmoitt ....... t20,000.00 21 2 E1
SERVICE ....... tl.824.81
TtON ...... ...... . 85,121 .66
pololkM
......
'171.4t1.17
Communlty Planning ond
Totol Proo,.mVII........ ..... . 100.00
8ECTION 7:Thol-obo EI·•A 240 Oopoolto Ro· TOTAL All APPROPRIA·
Gov. ·
240 Bupplioo ond
IPproprlolod
from
tho
TIONS .. .. t1 . 287,820.60
z:;:~,.R .\;;t'\i::.:2a~~~c00 Ganorol
ornmant ..... t148.718.00
Mo-•~o
• 00000 followtn•
ENTERPRISE fuiiCioti)31 14, 21. 28, 3tc ·
OTHER
UBES
OF
FUND:
..........
u,
•
•
UTILITY SERVICES
A1·7·X 273.
280 Cop"-!
FUNDI,
A1·1i·A Electric UtllllyWorkmon'o Com·
Outlly.: .. ........ 111.082.04 WATER FUNDRul
General
240 Supplloo ond
penaotlon .... . '17,000.00 Toto!
OE1FFFICEA -2t
Motorlolo ........ U,100.00 Totol Other Uooo of
Comotory ..... U3, 782.04
• •
0 Poroonol
A1 ·5·8 Oio UtllilyFunclo ........ ,.t17.000.00 Totti Prog,.m II- .
Sorvicoo240 Supplleo ond Mototi ·
SECTtON 3: Thotthoro bo Public H•lth
211 Solerloo/
. ..
... ...... ....... .. . t1,500 ..00 opproprlolod· from tho OES-Ic
W,oo . .... .." · t70' 000 .00
NERAL FU NO for contingo·
- • " ..... " t23 ' 792 .04
Totot Program Vnclooforpur-onotothlr· PROGRAM Ill- PAIIKS. 212 mployH
Inic Utility
wiM provicltid tor. to be ox·
RECREATION FUND
Senolill .. ....... 18.000.00
Sorvicoo .. .. ..... U,tiOO.OO pencled In oocordonce wHh
LEISURE TIME
240 Supplloo and
PROGRAM VII tho jrovioiono of Section
ACTIVITIES
Motorlolo ...... 130 •.000.00
OENERALOOVERNMENT ts70 .40~ R.C ., the ourTi of B5·3·A Recrootion
210 CopHol
A1·7·A Movor ond Admin· U81.215o.06.
ProgramOutlly ..... ......... 4,700.00
lotrotlvo Offlcoo0luA~D APPRO·
g~:rr?.J
240 Supplloo ond
Total
210 Poroonol Sorvicoo
Moterlalo ........ t3.1tsli.ts3
Offlco ........ 1219,700.00
PRIATION ·· •·• 13• 1 •28 au. 08 Totol
211 Solorloo/
Recrootion
E1·8-E
PUMPING
SECTION 4. Thollhert bo
Wogoo ....... ...132,000.00 opproprlotod
!rom fol·
Program ........... 3,115ts.53 240 lupplloo ond
212 Employee
~Ina SPECI~~ REVENUE
Total Pr~om IllMoterillo ...... t11.8111 .37
,.
Bonofilo ......... 10,000.00 FUNDI. Conotruc· tel-lime ' ' 1
2110 Capitol
240 Supplloo ond
lion. Moinlenonce. olld Ro·
ACtlvllloo ........ t3.988.13
Outlay ......... ... 10.000.00
Motorlllo ........ 110,000.00 pair F~~~ORAM VI _
OTHER IPECIAL .
Total
240·2 To•ea
TRANBPORTATION
REVENUE FUNDSPumping ...... 121.111 .37
,.
Rolulldod .. ....... 3,100.00- B1·1·8 Slraol Coilolructlon 88·3-li FireE1·6·J DISTRIBUTION
Totol Moyor and
210 Poroonol8orvicoo210 Noto·Debt
ond R-notructlonAdminl01rll11ve
210 P•oonillorvlcao211 Solorloo/
Sorvico ........ t84.000.00
EXTRA IIICE HOlE -2 BR, I bath, unfinished up·
Offlcu ....... ., 05,1100.00 211 Solarloo/
wO ....
up·p·l·lo·...........d•4,000.00 Total Dlllri·
..
A1·7·B Lagiolotlvo
24 •••
sta1rs bedroom, Pill', carport, ·storage building.
~1~eo..oy
..••. tB8.ooo.oo
button ... .......114.ooo.oo
21D-Actlvitioo (CounclltOOO
Mll1orlolo ........ 44.0t50.&amp;1 E1·1·G METERS
1
210 Poroonol Sorvlcoo.~
I ...... . ·· 24 •
.00 280 NotO·Debt
2t50 Capitol
240 Supplloo end
sorvlco ..........30,000.00 0 ut toy .. .......... t 2,800.00
211 S.lorloo/
M.l.rlal.
1115 000 00
Wogoo. t4,000.00
Total Strooi'caii· •
·
1 !Tot~oi~F:!:ire:!.:;,·.:,:··;,:;
.. ·~··~7~8.~06~0!.ts~11!T!ot:a~lM~ot=oro~.·;,:;
·· ·;;.;.. ~
· 2:.110~o~.oo~l!:==================- ·' ··~
Toto! Logiolotlvo
.tructlon 1nd Aacon·
t. Actlvitleo ...... ,. ..4,000.00
''
Olrucllon : ... t178.000.00

..

•rr,:""et"·-·

•

B&amp;E SHOE
SERVICE .
'
427 2nd Ave.
Ga IIi polis, Ohio

TANDY•
1000RLIHO
PC·Competlble
. Sysl...,

PC Wlth 20MB HD
And Color Monlto~

·Save
•.3 00

sgg9

VERY NICE LARGE HOME ON APPROX. 3~
ACRES-4 BR. 3 bolhs, 2gorages, renled I
BR apartment. Properly includes pond, ap·
prox. 4,800 sq. ft. form bid~ and mobile
home. A reel bargain at $84,900.

Save sgg

•eo

Reg. Sepal'llt
Items t299.90

Low AI $30 p., Month•

Jusr. !Xing original coupon trom newspaper inio
RaDIO Shack 10 save on this •lem! Not valid in con/Unction witn any other offer. One couPOn pe1 purcnase. Not rede!matlle tor cash. No copies or
coupon lVIII be.accepted Cash value 1/10 oiiC
Offer en!ls 3/17191
·

. ct!Jied. Cuh value litO of ,, _O'tfer encts
3117191

FOR SALE IN SYRACUSE

THIS l"xl"
- .. BULLETIN BOARD
SPACE AVAILABLE
AT $5.00 PER DAY

Bteperleas Remote Operation

0

into Radio Shack to yve on ttliS kem, Not
valid in conjmctlon witt~ any olher otter.
· 0~ couPon per purchase. Not reBmable
for tash. No cop~es ot coupon w1M be ac-

Reg.
179.95

.

.

Read liPBest Seier..
Read the

'

CLRSSIFIED RDS
Handheld
I
Franklin
I
Spelling·
Ace®
I
I I
Cut
I I
1 .1
270/o
HQ VCR With Quick-Timer Recording I I
N~s·s19
·
1 1
Reg. 39.95
Just br ng 0r1Q1na1 coupon trom nawspa;Jer IIUO
I
1
Save
N63-en
RadiO Shack to 51\ie on 1n1s h:eml Not valid in con·
~nctiOn with any ottw:r otter. Oft! co~ per pu.•· I
I
ol
Reg. 241.95 chise. Not reOeema!)~ cash No

S189
·•eo

$29

1

101

Checks Any ol 80,000
Words Instantly

·
.

&lt;·

COOieS

..

CB With Mike Controls

'"hi! 4915 -

.

.

''

Reg. 911.95

Tone/pulse dialing

Public Notice

FINANCIAL REPORT OF
THE BOAAP OF ueRARV
TRUSTEES
Moigo County Public
Library
For Fi ...l Yoor Ending·
Decem'* 31 . 1190
County of Molgo
GOVERNMENTAL FUNDS
RECEIPTS:
ToKOo .............. ..... 427,083
P111ron Finoo
end FHI ...... .... .....2,063
Eo!"ingo on
on tnv....,.nto .... 1 I. tsl3
Mioc. R-plo ... ....... 4,436
Contributiono, Oifto
I! Oon~tlono ............. 289
Toto! R......,to ......4150,413
DISBURSEMENTS:
Solrleo 6
Bonoflll ..... ....... 113, 378
Supplleo .... ..... .......... 8.434
purchoood 6 Controctod
SoMceo ...... .... .... 48.781
Library Motorlolo
6 lnlorrit.olion ...... 33,1199
Capitol Outlly ...... 108,217
Other Objecto ..... ...... 1,1141
Totol Diob . ......... ..3211.029
E~ceoo/(Ooflcioncy) ol

lng, piping and Volvoo,
Btowon. Fencing. Pumps.
Aorotoro, and Clorlflero.
Plano mov be obtained !lv
conllcting Engi-.tng Ao·
oocl111oo, 700 Winkler Orlvo,
WC!Oot•. Ohio 441191, 111 4·
348·81811.
lntereat p•rtles should
contact Mr. Roy Korr, 8:00
A.M. to ts:OO P.M. ot:
Wesam Construction.
Inc., P.O. Bo• 38, Choot•.
Ohio 41720, 814·992·
...... )fAlC)814-892·1B09.
8109,
13) 14, 21. 2B, 3tc

Diobmlo ............ 1 24.384
c..h in Bonito (Not) .... 7.139
Potty Cooh ................ .... 110
Chango Cooh . ..... ........... 14
a- ........ ,...... 228.889
Totol Fund Sol. ..... 238, 792
THIS IS AN UNAUDITED
FINANCIAL REPORT
P.O. Add,.oo:
Molgo
County Publio Ubrory. 218
W. Main St.. Pomeroy.
Dolo 3/12/91
I certify tho ,-ding report to be coma!.
Connlo L. Bollov
Clorlt·T--• of tho
·Boord of Library Truid,
114-992·15113
131 141tc

• Great for Students, Executives
or Sacrelllriea
t14-1056

Cut 33o/o

Three-Way Speaker

2915

Save 1110

.
95
149

Reg. 44.95

~r;p!:

Month•

Each
· Reg. 259.85 *40·&lt;1032

• Spttd·DIIII up to 20 Numbers
i-I:I9htid KeyPilda TouCh·Redtlt
While. *'13·581 . Almond, N43·582

..

Public Notice

A.apts. over

• Automatic Hands-Free Recording

20-Memory Phone ·

MUIIve 15" Wooftrl

MOST FORDS AND
MERCURY CARS!

3 ll. lAG YQlOW or

WHITE ONIONS................. S1.00
WANDO or liTTlE MARVEl

PEA SEED ••••••••••••••••••••••-,~•••••• 99&lt;
IDAHO

SWEET ONIONS ........tl.t~!... 99&lt;
NEW CABBAGE ................. 18&lt; lb.
CELLO CARROTS .......M~t;.f~!••• 59&lt;
Holland Bulbs Have
Arrived

dllurN ol the Vlllogo of Po·
meroy. Stll1o of Ohio, during
tho fiocal yoor ondlng Oo·
comber 31, 1891 .
Section 1. BE IT RE·
SOLVED by the Council of
tho VIllage of Pomeroy,
Stott of Ohio, 1hot, to pro·
vide for the curr. .t BK•
penu1 and oth•r expendf-

$7
. 50

'

Reg.
14.95

Our ServiCe

7~!

Cat. No.

N

23·023
23-550

. Pkg, 211 .59

1.09

Pkg. 2/2.59

AA

23-551
23-552

Pkg . 212.59
Pkg, 412.89

1.7!J
1.59
1.89

9V
AAA

23·553
23-555

Each 1.89

D

c

• Our Mcm Popu ..r Pocket Model
• Adju8tabll Display lor Eeay VIewing
a lergt, Eeay·to·U18 Keys
• ·P-tKty
• ThrH·Kty Memory Slit Endl3/17111

. . . . . .---.I'Q;. . . . ,... .-.. . ---IIGY

Check Your Phone Book for the R8dlo Sheck 8tore or Dwler Nn.-t You
SWIT~
TONE/l'UlSE - S - .. 110111_ ............ , ~dill)
~
Wo _
......... . _ ,.

----.-stooa'~Aco/1!ooTII-~C.,.

PRICES APPLY AT PARTICIPATING STOAE8 AND DEALERS

I

'

Reg.

Size

300 West

'

Pkg. 211 .59

1.29
.78

•

'd

Deft•

HappyAda

'"· 949-2101
or las. 949-2160
· Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS

4·16-11-lfR

MICIOWAYI
OVEII IIPAII

REG. S2.15

WHITE CHOCOLATE ....... S1.89

lb.

P~y

'.,

992-5526

YOUNG'S

USED APPUAIIOS

...., • .-em

Dim-$.. .,

-E-

IMIIS---SIU

-a--r~o

-AIOIS-$110 If

and-~~~~

-Conarete wort&amp;
-II..lint

20°/o OFF

lEN'S AmtANCE
SIIYKI

(FR IE EITIMATES I

Y. (. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

"2-JUS • ttS·SUI
Acre. ,,... .... Offltt
POMIIOY, OMO

,.... ,.Ohio
11·14-'90 tln

10110flt If~

·u•a•s

•'INi"""

PAIN liNG

WilWII·Dl&amp;DI

liN'S APPUIJICI
SIIYICI
992-5335 or
915-3561

Hand Tufting
Cultom Drape•

Takt the ... lit tl
• llllltj.
let 1111 • It ftll' ,..,.

36Yeoro!K.,...s....

VEIY iiASCNMAIII

fOIIYU IIONU
PROM TANNING
SPECIAl
ht so IIJtllt Schaol
Stu.ntl
10 SESSIOitS - $10
, . 949·2126
,., Appt.

•• Aa.,
FHII

FOIIVU-IIU
IASUI lt., IACIII
3-4-' 1·1110.

•
' I

If

IIEIZEIS-SIU If
1100 0¥111S-$7t .,.

-lntet'lor • ExWIOr
Pointing

FREE I!ITIMATII

JU·It. StciRII
1111111-,srt

614-992·1121

1iAVE llfi.NCES

Wo loy Whit We Oo.
w.'oo

(61~1
J.

tiS-4110

'11·, ....

I lA

oVIHYI. IIDING
•ALUMIIIIUM BIOINO

Till ...

oiLOWN IN

INIULATION

IIMOYAL

•sstLL

•LIGHT HAULING

SIDING CO.

•FIREWOOD
llll SLACK
992·2269

... ._.hilt

"F,_ Eltlmal....

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

.,.... t4t-2111
,

992-7013
or 992-5553

..·•,'

TOll flEE

DAIWII, OHIO

3/&amp;/'11/1

mo.

J&amp;L

INSULA
nON
•VInyl Siding

Wli1EI5-$110 If

-Room •• , ........

NEW 6 USED PAIITB
FOR AU MAKES 6
MODELS

01

PO.OOY, OliO

CAIPENTEI SIRYKE

•

1-100·141-0070

742-2451

• 1/1110/111

OHIO VALLEY
BULK F

HAPPY
BIRTHDAYII

eReatoratlon
•Repair Work

UPIOI.STDY

Atnn ,,_ Pad Office
117 I. ,_,.. St.
I'OF1"10Y OWO

THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY
We Accept Food Stamps

514 East Main

•Kitchana a Batha
,•Vinyl lidlnl

AU IIAIIS
lrl.. " ..
Wa
Plcllllp.

.or

11t.

•Garage•

3-14·'91-tfn

•

S,.Wia. . ln
·c..... rr-•IHalr

•Room AclclltiOns

, Floor Flnlah
MilE LEWIS, Ow•
II. I, hllootll, ON.

1/lttl

"AI IHIOII..II Prien"

Mtlln

MILK CHOCOLATE ...........S1.69

Taylor was 40
on March 9thl

Oww

CUSTOM IUilT
. HOMES &amp; GAIAGES

REG. SUS

ALL MOLDS

M"

BISSELL
BUILDERS

rosia oc
Chocola~e Sale

traciA

OWNER: Villogo ol Ru·
llond. Ohio.
• BID OATE: Morch 28,
1181, 1:00 P.M.
W-in Con-lon. Inc.
II IHking bide from qual~
llod MlnMIIy, Wo_,., ond
lmolllu.,_Contnolore
ond lupplioro tor tho tonowtng p i t - of worlt: •
• Excovll1ion, Orlvowoyo.
llollllng. " ' - " ond Coot·
ln·PioaeC..-.Worlt, Ml·
oilnry, Roofing, Mloc. BINI
W'ork, Oooro and Windows.
Plumbing, Pointing, Coutk-

Open II Doyao
Mon.-Fri. l·tl
Clooad Sot. • Sun.
5.t6 Upl* lh«l&amp;, C•llprMr
Ap,t. 614·446·0002

Pomeroy, Ohio

PUBLIC NOTICE
AnENTION: Minority.
Women. • Bmoll Bulin111
CO!IIr...on • luppllwo
.PROJECT: Wootowolor
lyolem lmprvvo- ProJect, Rutlolld, Ohio, Con·

Sale

l A - SlOP

MEIGS FARM MARKET

IUreo of the oold VIllage ol
Pomeroy during · tho !local
yeor ending Oecombor 31.
1191. the followln_goumo bo
ond they oro hereby Ill oolcla
ond oppi'Oprlotlll 11 followo,
viz:
Soction 2. Thol tho,. bo
tppi'Oprlotlll from tho GE·
NI!RAL FUND:
PROGRAM I - IECURITY
OF PERSONS ANO
PROPERTY

Public Notice

Dual-Powered Tilt
Display .Calculator ·

•R•oonllblo Rat•
oQuolhy Work
ofrH Eldmat•
•Carpet Haa fait Dry
Time
•High Bloao on Til~

&gt;

WHAlEY'S
AUIO PAllS

R. L MASH
CARPEN11Y

CAIIPIT CliAIIIIS
allll 'fU FLOOI CAU

SEED POTATOES •••• }.t~;.!M. 56.44

•J"P Eagle, Dl81tl, and Turbo Charged Vehlclea Slightly Higher

Save Money and Stock Up Now
For Fun or Emergencies

IIIII I Ill NI A!

CEmFIED IIENNEIEC

Expen~

...."""

~----.,.------,-------r------ _
·

.I

ORDINANCE NO. 194
ANNUAL
APPROPRIATION
ORDINANCE
An. OROANCE to moko
appropriltiona tor Current

Expen••• and other

Business Services
,......____.... ..,.

54 Mlscellansous
Merchandise

Public Notice

5

TIRE ROTATION SPECIAL

..

IAIGAIN AT 39,500

coupon Will be accepted. Cash vaiLIE 111 0 ot 1e
Otter ends 3117/91

Voice-Actuated Cassette

G--

.

CAll 614•992·7104 FOR APPl

f43·395

....

1125·145111043
Just brifllr original coupon trom ne~r

"'-om

FOR SALE IN RACINE

Answerer/
Speakerphone

0

..

"Since 1963"

*21·1514

'

1 CMdotTh~ks

.2 In Men!Or'l

"Pr i ~;tr

Yotrd

i

Atlll[itill l.llllf"liS

Ratesar!pfor con ..c:u\l'le rum. brobrlupd.,awlll bech•g..t
lor each d• fitS MP••Ite ad&amp;.

pot~d
.
"Rcct:Nti S. &amp;O drscount tOt adt p,ltd tn allw an c e
•free ads· Gtve•way 1md Fo,.,nd ildS undll!f 15 words wtll be
run J d-.s al no ch•ge

CnNtlng New S!llndlrds in Dfg/1111 Audio Recotdlllfl,
Multimedia Compul/ng end Home Computing

Cut40o/o

'

Over 15 Words
•
,20
t4.00
. .30
t6.00
$9.00
.42
' .60
$13.00
.05/ day
' $1 .30 / day

15
16
15
15
16

1

"Ads o ui!Uchr Mr•gs. Galh11 or Mu on counues must bu pre

CONTINUING
INNOVATION

of

Llm1ted Tfme Offer
For Appollltment

'

Rete

Wordt

Days

POLICI~S

111 Memottam

Special Includes 5 qts.
Motor Craft On and Motor Craft on

Have All4 Ttrea Rotated .
By Our Sendee Penonnel.

• The Area's
'Wumber 1 Marketplace·
.

RATES

TO PlACE AN AD CAll 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to S P.M.
8 ~.M. until NOON SATURDAY
ClOSED SUMO AY

,'

OIL CHANGE &amp; FILTER
Mololcaall•

•

.• '

Raymond and Lelha Cotterill
have returned home from Florida
where they visited Ray and Mary
Birchfield for over two weeks.
Mr. and Mrs. Randi Gilley and
daughter recently visited her mother~ Mrs. Louise Eshelman and family.
.

Mrs. Dorolhy From and family

able.

ing pain in the area of my left testi·
It often takes ·several weeks of
cle and asked my family doctor to treatment for cpidiymitis to clear
examine me. He found a tender up. When !his disorder comes on
spot near the testicle and told me I suddenly with severe syrnj)!Oms, it
had epididymitis. Can you explain is termed acute epididymitis. This
exactly what this i.s and ·how it type of infection usually clears up
develops?
with treatment and does not return.
ANSWER· I'll start with the Episodes with symptoms Qf lesser
"what" part of your question r.rsL severity but over !Oliger periods of
The epididymis Q a dilated tube- time are called chronic epididymi·
like structure Q is attached to the tis. This condition is slightly more
back side of the testicle; it is longer li.kely. ~o return than acute ep_i· •
than the testicle, so it is folded over didymlbs, but the chances are snll
to fit into the confmed space of the good that one episode is all you
scrotum. As· the tube gets farlher will suffer.
from the testicle, it tapers to a
'
smaller size and becomes the vas
"Family Medicine" is a weekly
deferens, or spermatic cord. After column. To submit questions,
being produced by the testicle, the write to John C. Wolr, D.O.,
not yet fully developed sperm are Oblo U!llverslty CoDqe ol' Oste·
moved into the epididymis where patbic Medicine, Grosvenor Hall,
they mature. Once this process is Athens, Ohio 45701.
complete, the sperm are held in the
epidiymis
· 1 · until they are needed for
In one of the country's more publi·
eJSCU auon or until they wear out cized assa~ination attempts, Pres!·
from old age. So in a sense, the epi· dent Gerald Ford was unharmed
didymis serves as an i.ncubator 811d ·when a Secret. service agent grabbed
a warehouse.
a pistol aimed at him by Lynette
· Adding the ending "itis" to the "Squeaky" Fromme, a Charles Man·
name of an anatomical region son follower, in Sacramen\0. Calif.,
refers to inflammation of that tissue . 8ept. 5, 1975.
.
,
• like ap~ndicitis, tonsillitis. or
epididymitis. The tenn epididymilis describes swelling and tender·
ness of the epididymis. This typi·
cally occurs (the ''how" part of
your question) because of iinfec·
lion. Escherichia coil, Gonoroccus
and Ch/(Jiflydla are the most common bacteria involved. The infec·
lion usually starts in the penis, urinary bladder or prostate and then · ·
spreads to the epididymis. In some
cases, cultures of ·the urine and
prostate fluid show none of these
bacteria. The experts debate
whether these episodes of epi·
didymitis are caused by bacteria
which are hard to grow in culture,,
or if there are other non-infeclious
changes responsible ..
QUESTION • How is epi·
4- 8x .1 0s
didymis treated, and is it likely 10
4· 5 X 71
32·WALLETS
recur?
ANSWER • The usuaJ .treat·
16 ·GIANT WALLETS
ment is based on clearing up the
II '
I
FREE
infection that is causing lhe cpi· .
didymitis. Antibiotics such as
doxycycline or tetracycline are usuFRUTH PHARMACY #6
ally prescribed for lhc infection
788 1\1. Second Ave .
along with anti-inflammatory med·
In Middleport
ications like ibuprofen or aspirin,
Sunday, March 17
which are used to reduce the pain
12 Noon til&amp; P.M.
and swelling. Heat. such as soaking
Portrait• Delivered:
in a warm bath, helps promote
Monday, April 1.
healing. Additional suppon provid·
4 P.M. til 6 P.M.
ed by an athletic supporter can also
make the sufferer more comfon-

••'.
'.

Harrisonville happenings

Birth announced
Darin and Donna Roach,
Pomeroy, are announcing the birth
of their first child, a son, Jacob
Carl Roach , at Holzer Medical
Center.

Familr. ..
Medicine

1991

....
. .·-..
'

...

•Rapllcament

Wlndowa
•Roofing
•lnaulotlon

JAMES KEESEE
992-2772 or

742-2251
1139 Bry•n
Middleport,

..'•.
·.•••..

...
·,

IISSEU &amp; lUilE
CONSIIUCIION

........
--~·-·
.,_
......
·-dalln.

Stop I C11111pare
FrDt lstlmlltts

985-4473
667-6179
eRomodellng and
Homo Repair~
•Roofing
•licilng
•Pointlno

NO JOB TOO SIALL

FREE ESTIMATEs

.•
·..•.

'.
'•

'

•
'•
' '•

'•

..•,

·,'•

'•

..•••
..

··'
·•
. __::

•• •

:::

.....
: ·~

.•·::::

CEDAI
CONSTIUCnON • ~.
tt2·6MI or · ::~~

691-616.
:· ~:
tz.• ,
. •. •
---=-:=:::.t 11..--.:.=!;·
:::.1 ....
.. '
-USED IAI&amp;IOAI11S

• ti·H&gt;tfa

'•

..

�.

\

.

BORN LOSER

Annou nc eme nl '
3 Announcements
_ , . Solo: 1101 Foulth
A-c:-a~·· llln:h 11th.
11th.
I Dloco, How

Q-.

PJI.I4.~Tf,O!
Real Estate

Clift . ...........
FIMniA....t 1111-

chandiM, Ml~.

4

Giveaway

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

''

1:00 (J).

(l)
(JJ!Ifta

(J) •

.

•

,

lour .......... _ . , .
low !0. Iorin lour - - ~·

l

1~ ·,~ Rri·D ,.

Ill.

wcharlallri
c· ~ 1;1' :'
3·2·1 c-ct

•• .
.
·

(!) lquere Ona · 1;1 . .
· !IDa A_LF ~

'

41 Housea fo; Rent

LOst &amp; Found

~ bod- .!n Paint
-nt 30W75-1111• .
For Ront: . Laoatlon:
B-Rood. I~-·

.

SHE WAS RI6HT..YOU CAN'T
6ET MU.CH WATER FROM .·
A PENCIL SHARPENER ..

" " ' - I , _ I - · n... I
·~mno lnolde polo, oarpolod,

.-..

r.,

:1&lt;.!

.

~~~.,.::i~

1:05 (I) Bavarir HIIIIIIIIIWI
1:30
IIJ NIC Nightly NeWI

!JJ.
/Ji ~bllott and ~

'

r: ~::::: odh~· ~~·

22

p.m. Sotu,.y.

MoneY to LOan

I.OAHIIYIIAIL
Up to $&amp;,GOO In 12 haUlS. WI

-~~. 114-211&amp;-11111S.

t!Uitae.

44

Business Services

-;~;::==:;:;=11F=:;::;:;:;:::;:==tl
THE
M
11

Sl ON'S
PICK.
A·PAI.R
SAME
LOCATION

GROOM
ROOM
· Complete Grooming
·
· F All 1 --~
or
r ....s

; £MILE£ MERINAR

Use Court

· ow 111 r &amp; Operator

Street
Entrance

614 -992-6820
P-r'oy, Ohio
· 2-ll&lt;ll·tln

Jl, ~

Haword L W.r itanl ·

.ROOFING .
. NEW - REPAIR

.

949-2168

-e. -....... "1'"',$10110.3040
31•4 10

3

.....

Woo••
Aptlolnl~ , S.O..Co~oe.

t-•

IT y

IIIIDOIEPOIT, OHIO 45 760
Offkt 614·992·2116 r
HOME 614-992-56U

oomrs.

·~

NJ. 1110 Chllhom A..n.., 2 -

Company · ttn 10 1"'" """"• CA. ...,..,... c;onclltton,
Bou
. .l.
h.:.i. .

~...,":"'
7305&amp;.vot_:iuJ:d. f::1
P&lt;lntttn.

~'7m.

Ext. 31:1.

pnogo, ¥1nyl oldlng, oxoellenl

1...

In trl!lnlnt In

'*"" - ·

tlon auc11 oo LPN, NU,.Ing ~~~c~~ca~
am n
_,.,. ........ Atoo,

-.....

••s. .

~· IM-211-IUO,
GOVERNMENT HOlliES

11

fLIT you!l

from 11

(U repaltl, Dollnquont Ill
proper~r· R·~ a•••ntona. vour
111 805-112-8000. Ext. QH.

814 418 0331

Solo On All ~ In Stock. Oat Jack S.X FIM Collar? I
Our- - . You luy. You W&lt;idoill Contotno NO ayntllolla
Could .... lla Buoloof DVNthroltiO. For , _ I oatol J
1o1W1 c..,...., A Ill Hai-th 114-

--·

D'Nolth Protluco etor-441-1133.

2231.

"'1e"'M"""'s.,.R--2CIO---,Hoo"'
. '-.,.-:-,-=Ex,_;COI_,.tont;
"""
. #'
Condhlon, t.on·Ttton 100 Howe,~
Uoo. $100. ·a14-141'-412t alar.

• - Wllhroldo. For c111o11 •
olio! RIO F.... I SUpply &amp;14-

7p.m.
,
SUzuld 11!5, otrNI ond troll dltt

'1112-2114.

,

Mu11ca1
lnstrume,nts

L-1111 Off tftolypass Dn
lha Com• of

delivery in Pc.maray ·
and 'Middleport city
limits.
WE ALSO SERVICE
CHAI.N SAWS

TRI·COUNTY
RECYCUNG

lt. 7 &amp; II. 143

Pom•oy, Ohio

59

For sale

......

orTtad6

.,

For
Solo: TuiUYO I - · ·
W-Putot,..lorchloltono.

I ,11111 S'rppi!l"
&amp; l.lvr::,toc..;

-1.nso.

....4\.....
-r.·onollo&lt;.
1771.
.

8:05 rn MOVIE: lAdy Slng1 the
t!ilua1 (R) (2:55)
. .
8:30 (%)a 0 Different World
'. ·
•WIIIttey upeet~ her boss by. · ,
buying 8 p11011n~agamst hiS r
wiShes. Stereo.
.
liD a1 Babel Ma ~~ flnds ,. :'
herself In a motel wtth the ~
perfect. man. S1ereo. Q
·
. 111 ~ Mulk: 8floll ,
a:OO&lt;J&gt;a o CIIHreln an
·
•ttampt 10 sava..lter. ••ea
t
room, R8becca tlel'ves
Woody's Chill. stlireo. 1;1
Cll Myatar)fl Colonel
,!'

,,

14 ft. oiunitnum SEA ·Noinypa 'j
ltohlnt
- ·· · - · 7112 ,,
motor. IM-211&amp;-11114.

I·

11114 Bombar FIOh I Ski, 140hp,
llerauoy Trolllna llolor,
lllny Extnoall1144411.fi01. .

110

!

Ex-nt ConciMian. Ruow Good r
And ~ Good, ..... Than
1000 Houra on llolor. 114-441- :
4101!, 114411-21110.
I

CAll JOI PIIUl

614-992-SI 14
9 AM·7 PM-7 ~ays o Willi
HI, 91,2- .

PH.

·

~o~h~~O:, ~found murder~.

1.

(!])• BeveiiY HII..,I021D
. Brandon teame hla glrHriancl
·has tost her virginity.(~~-

~,:gv~ oe.ih1t.(;,
,. .

253 West Main St.
Parneray; 011.

,f.,.roull: mM:all.

I

0 MQVIE: Daotry (2:00) .

SOt

341. Nauta-Uno H - - In

...

as.n:raAaowllngTour ,J

DAVE'S SMAll
ENGINE REPAIR

Paying ~ ..h for aluminum,
copper. bfl... mlnl11 lt....
magnelium, t1dl1tors. 111neu. alt•nators and 111 non-

I H~AFlD WIN"Tl-1~
5AV 'T'He'f &lt;5iOr Mf!i:. ~M

YYlt•J"l':Z

THE[X.I!i FOUND.

lliputitlon (2:dlll. •
• Nauvlla Now
IZ!I .Laii'Y King Uvtl
1:30 (%)a !IJ WJnaa JDI! and
Brian's motheir vialla afltt
deserting them 20 years
earlier. Stereo. 1;1
l
·, (!) Myete~l Aller a
.
' Cevanillsh family me~
, dies. Poirot investlgat... IPt
~o:JWRaclng Striae From·
, WettPalmBeech,Flt. (T) ..
)O:OO&lt;J&gt;•l'«» t.A. Law An v ..:·il
aduii•"!!U• !'Oman Is , '.~·. .
.
accuaed of hang1ng her
etdany husband. Sloroo. g
®

IT WAS
G;ILJITEA

SLOW.

I

I

i'

Se rvrc es

.....

II••• ·

.BARNEY

,

fter~\Prtrnattma Uva

LITTLE
SNEEZY lEAR It

&lt;Zl Myllt!JI The Colonel's
wile .and her lover con1111 to
11111 murder. (PI 2) g ! ,
illl 112l• Collata llatlletilall
~a1 11or Trelt: The N(ext

,a ='T'~ NM . · ·
1D 700 Club Willi Pat ,
R._.
.:

oNomokt, Mhtlor woodtrl!h Inside hou~.c
o8urri: 14' 10 1f-ilch dlamtterwoad
•HIM1 WIHit' lor tloulehot:l use
o8ums up to 30·1r&lt;h lanolwood
o\J111 ~ur Pf"'ll tt~mral duel S)'!l!rn

..
'

·Marbllocalfl! 10·100 ,,., lmmlllt

10:30 a Croolc and Cheat''

·
n.np.a-••
011
Roacr Cllamplanahlp o..nd

o Mtctter

..,....,1

11o"'' ·
\

,.

· - -OOilllllJCiion

LOAD EVERY '2 HOURS

~~

CALL ·
VICKER'S WOOD HEATING
"''~•tt.oo.Aoo~oc.

....wv....,

Phono (3041 Slf-2211 altar 5 p.m.

14

.

~CPSIOOO
DflUI£ SATEUIT£ TV SYSTEM

·.unlden

BusiMIB
Training

..-=•rflll ...... _
llogtolntlorl-12llt8.

11M

wanted to Do

.....

~BI•n•l.clon,

.

or llprlng .._.

84

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

87
Why flying. llsh have headaches
till the Ice malta

Upholstery

....
_ttl~ ....

:II,... .

goa
30W'78-4154
urnlt-.

"" ,.. -

.,

""'"""'" .Upftot•!'Jntl .... .
Tho
"' lltmll""' """""'lllng.
,.
1;..

a

life by understanding the lnll.uences · inistratlonl that may Impede your prowhich govern you In the year ahead. gress coold be self·lmpoaad today: Be
ASTRO-GRAPH
Send lOr your Astro-Graph predictions Vl!ry careful no1 to be' lhe one who pula
=~~:loh
today by mailing $1.25 lo Aslro-Graph, ,obitacles In y'our path.
(!]) • Arunlo Hill $terto. 1;1 ·
. c/o this newspaper, P.O. BOx 91428, .UBRA (hpt. D-()ct. 23) If you're in·
I[J Miami VIce Stereo. .
Cleveland, OH 44101•3428. Bo.aure to valved In some type of group endeavor
tBOnltage
state your Zodiac sign.
.
'
today, don't aUOIY yourself to be,drawn
IZ!I M&amp;Myune
BERNICE
AR1EI(Ibreh 21·Aprll11) This Is not a ;ritQ tho middle. of the squabbllnts of
~nocrow and Mra. King
BEDE OSOL
particularly good day to Involve yourself friends. 'l'hls coold occur lf'you le1 your
11:30(J)G !IJ Tonight Shaw
. or friends in any type of risky venture · g...,q down. · o
· ·
wllh "illy" odds. Use your best )udg· ICOIIPiO (Oct. 24'No¥. 22) Usually,
Stereo.
men1 a1 all times.
, .
you are,a va"f determined person once
'
~ =~lltlhlln'o 0n1 .
TAURUS (April 20-Mar 20) Diacon1enl you set your mind· 1o a specific Oblec·
on 0111
·
on the home front is a Slrong posslblllly tlva. However. your locus mlghl not be ·
today; family 1'!'18&lt;11bers may place the up .to par today, lind you could - all
::%'":.2~e 8llop
blame lor things that go awry on every. &lt;:Ourself the going gets Iough.
1DiparteC1ntar
ona but 1hemsel-. including you.
. IAGITTARIUI.(IIa¥. 23-Dec. 21) II may
GEMINI (lleJ 21..Junell0) An lndlflar- notprovewtsetiJ!faytotrytomake,....
11:31:=-~llllllltl
ant a1111ude on your behalf mlgh1 cause , )or ohangea In 1!\ arttngament lnvotvtnt
you to act without ftrtll rev...._ the · otheia, Condltlona are uaedy 100 c:on12:00(J)•InlotheNight
coneequencaa. Try lo curb ·your lmpul- .luling lnd your.Input could makelhlnga
(!]). P811y Machine Willi
stvalnlllnt:lltoday.
·
worae. :
·
lbrcll 15, 1.1
CANCER (.lune 21..Julf 22) Belol-a the CAPRICOM (~, 22......._ tt)lf you're
=~
Y.ou could be mora fortunate than ueual day to o-. there Ia a ~blll1y- that , InvolVed In a calleptlva v..ture:that reIn the year ahead In regard to lulfllltnt your puna might feel Nke the equlvalatit qut- althef funding or dr.trfbutlon, be
~ ==•aHIIhlNow
your ambltloua objectl~. This.Ia be- of a sieve. Don'! C&lt;!ftlpound mau.. on alert today. Somebady Ia golnt 1o
0
MOVII: battry (2:00)
unnaceaaary . financial gala Q90i1 dell, yet II rl)lght not be you.
cauee both Lady Luck and circum.· with
1l!:OI (l) Nlglitlltill;l
AQUAIIIUI(.tltt. 20' l'ab. 11)1n a part.
stancea will be moving In your tavor. .. extravagance.
.
12:ll0
(J). Q Lltl Night Will
LI!O
(July
23-AIIg.
221
You
might
have
'*~hlp
err.notmenl'today,
don't
worry
PIICEB (Fib. 20-Marcll 20) If you are
David LatllnNn ..
employed by ano-. 1111111 not the day to deal with a rather testy -Op"*&gt;1 . ·roo mUCh ab(Jut yout eoflort's. lntlll())
MOVIE: Juvanlla Jungll
lnvoMng
An
extremety
11811-centerect
In·
,
tlone;
bo
nioril
mlilcllul
Ql
your
own.
H
to 1 - your performenct1 level. Your
(1
:301
dlvtdual.
Diplomacy
and
tact
on
your
you
dO
wllat'a
right.:
thlo
Individual
WIH
detlr• ollnduatrlouiiMIIS wlft be noled,
follow Mill.
.
a o• Haw•
and, If It lon'1 up to a1andarda, your pay. · behalf will help laasen conlrontltlons.
.·
chick may suffer lator. Gat a jump on YIIGO (AIItl. 23 Sept, 22) The greatest .

«)

Pl-. Call Todlir, tM-441 •:stnn

a

""" "
10:41 ~
POirot Hnk•
villi clue 10 the Callendilh
murder CIM. (Pt 2 ol 2) 1;1
11:00(J)• Cll Cll• 0 Newt
® 'Night Court 1;1 ,
. (I) MOVIE: In the HHI of the .

8

Retrain
,._.,.., .......,
-~. 81111nt YaHor

18

•s

•

1

, ,,, 1Z!1 Pri11111Newa

75 Boat• &amp;Motors

'

DURIIG FEIIUAIY

QIOnl •

blko, good·thto; 814-1112.3020 of· •
tori p.m.
. ·

~

...... frH pickup and

·

"'

=-=-=·-,:;fo;;::r~$8.;:.:1~e~~ ,

Til-COUNTY

bu_y_ on welkencls.

t.AYEI! t$ t:JPE"'·

•·

VZIO, nlrta good, $210. 304-171- ,

13 n. \&lt;f!ull lhral...

J"

CltONE

••

Motorcyc.._,
...
="'=,:,;;..;.;;.;..;.:.,;,.;,.,;;..,...~ ·
1112 RIIBO, oxc oond,l300. tm;

-.·. oo ..,_.nt oboul tho
HapPy .Jack s.x FIM oollor? IT
WORK8111 Contalno NO oyn-

32 · Mobile Home1
for Sale

Gal yaw lawn a"" gar·
•n equipment tulllll •
tintl . ...... . lhar,.....r
for the 1oming -ion!

.
. ,
. .
By James J~~Y

NORTH .
+lp
2

.,

t8742

I

.;
..

9

-.·. ao o • - About Thl 74

!

H·11-l /!10 . pd.

9 A .M. 'TIL 7 P.M .
If
clean up yout
yar on w.ntls.... we

•

P.fST, HEY, CI.,IPPY •.. PON'T i..oo~ · NOw,

4-

In oetw ltlkfL YO&lt;IIO CIIOIIor current ropo !fl. ·
and man 11-21 ,..,. lor •to 2111 . Qoltlatd
5~~ol~:- ochool,
or A~
inld ao•o, .304-67._t37V alter .
Into.....
Pt....,,.,
Pn. .lob
:ou
. PM.
2215 Slllth St, Paint 4
~:::-,,......,,...,.....,.......,.,....,...-..,.
Wod .,_ 20, Roduood To Sol: 2 Story 3br NIOIIy fUmlohod mobile home. 1
3:00 ""'· .. lor ...... eom. Lal In ChllhiN, Ohio. milo boklw ·-b~na
Excellent oondliOn. 1104·1132· riY•, CA, hill,
, Rof.

We Need

o~\~'~~~~s
A WEEK ·

1.
i

FRANK AND ERNEST

BEAUTIFUL APARriiiNrll AT
BUDQET PRICES AT ""'*EBTATE!,.~IM ••.•ltoon. ,Piu
"""' 11-. Wollt to lhap l
movtoo. Cllll'lt ua 21118. EOH.
Elllotonoy ....,._ No ,polL
011 · ...
_ , . '"" qulrod. 111 ue tm.
.
ano1u
nv1ng.
1
and
a
room apotl-. 01 \lllllae
-AportniOnlo
. In
"""MldtllotiOit.
RC&gt;arolilo
FNm

i

+AI091
'· Sometimes you·
)
have to cboose
EAST
7:30 (J). (JJ Jaopttrdyll;l
: (" whi.clt of t~o suits to attack to gener· WEST
.9
32
® NIQitl Court t:;:l
•· ate tile eirtr~ tricks yw need. At other • A6 s
•at
~
· !f~~:=mant
times, ·aa in today's deal, you must •QJI09.7
• Q 10 9 3
(J)• lbma'• F•IJ
play on bt!th'of your good suits and de- : ~ ~ 2
•K&amp;s
illl WhHI of ,_na 1;1
cide which ~lsad first. · . .
·· ·
SOUTH
. liD • M"A"S"H
· In a no-trtJmp contract, always •·
~
.KQ IOI
IZII Croooltre
· start by cilunting your top tricks. Here/
.AK6
7:35.(1) Sanlo!d and Son
there are five: tw() hearts, two dia·
t A 1(,5..
1:00 (J) • IIJ eoa.b r Show Clair'
mQIHI$ aJ14.one club. Four mo~ fr\ckll •·
.
+QJ
3 .·
Is concerned When Rudy
mdllt be flitlnd. Three can come .from ,1
Vulnerable: El!st-Wesl
begins to enlor young .
.
spades, alid the.club Sliit will generate
Dealer: South
womanhood. (R) Sloreo. l;l ·
Lwo or three more. Neither black suit
(JJ MOVIE: Ptyci!O 111 (RI.
iuullicient in itselfi bolh must be ~ ·' ·
1
(2:001
ta~lishetl and caahea:·
1
· So••- ~, West Nortb Eoat
Cll (J) a Father Dowlng
In a team match in Dallas one cte- · 2 NT .. Pass 3 NT' All pa$1 '1
Myal8riH Father Dowling's
darer ductetl· the heart quien lesd, ·\
· .
.
help lo sought by • dying
won the second heart trick and imme- .
Opentng lead. • Q
man. Stereo. 1;1
( diately took Lbe club linesae. Disaster!
&lt;Zl War I PHCa In IIIII ·
. IL lost to Easl's king and another heart
=~r the WOifd
came back. With a sinking leelin&amp;.
With Aud!eJ Htpbum A .
South won. and ietl ·a spade, but Wesl
selection QllonTial gardens .; ( .put up the ace and cashed.two heart
is presented ¥II the buuty
.trtckS. One down.
ot the roee Is peiebrattd. ·
• At the other table, declarer took the ,
(1 :001
, ,~
• firsttrtck and theilled a low spade to,
IIDI ~Coltea• Baakttball , ward dummy's jack. When the jack
~ur--. ,:'~~Ia~~~
held tbe trick, SOUth ca_ll~ Jor another ·
television cartoons. (RI · ·' ·
SJ)ade. Wesl ducked again bul had to
Stereo. Q
. . . l w"!lbe th1rd "!"""· With nothing bet·
I[J Mulder, She Wroll"
. ter •to do, West led another heart. De0

314 BR """'"'a"""·.,._,
~lr'!!.OH. Exc. Cond. Wofk:
AVON I All Aroao t Shl~oy · INI.
tOt.eU-11110 or Homo 104-132·
8poaro, S04-e71-1GII.
Euv Wofkl E-lanl Poyl ,_. For Solo By OWnir, • IS1~·~.Coii~~-;;.~·TIW7.~.~EEOOit~·~
...a.to Pralluclt II home. catl eom. Lot, In CrOwn City, d 11
lor 1"""-tlon. ,.,.._..,_ - · 3br, -mont, 2 cor

IISI, IOM32·7110.

'

otPoilwdn5M.f14.ae

a•a.

3·i3

7:05 (I) Happy Dirt

l

'"'· .

_.,..... No ox• C.1111'441 tilt. . · , · .
oortonoo n•• 1 oy. No - . .
Full/pall limo, hoU,. All or PM.
Fouoa:!'~· ~!~l,llfl~(-tmlr
Cluallftl..., .,... """""·
..
1a01
WHidV. ,..,..._ .,..... !!.~Jr. HI l ua,oao.oo eM-

IZII Monayl!ne

8Scarec!Ow and Mra. King

•

I I I 'I I I I I I

BRIDGE ·

1D lpartaCaniW

.31 Homea.for Sale
1br,rum-....:~:..t-. - ·
-112
1
8tory 4 ,_~-Lau-'• bamcttif palt!, talalo
,112,mlto Eall

W.Ya. YDUTHS. AIS J'!U lnto-

205 N. StCond Slr•t

Gutters
" Down1pouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

Help Wanted
A'- • ~ .'.a~ ~ 11 . .._._

FREE J!)B TRAINING OHIO AND

TuiiH r::" RI: ;;

Real Estate

Emrloyment Servtces

~~~S:~MBte Fof

· UnP.ack ~ Lofty~ Pious- Census - CONFUSE
· .
I have a 'way of dealing with unwantad phone sollcRol'$.,,
• Yllui ca~at rid of them last if you .l~m how to·,
• ,COII!FU
them. . .
,...
· .,.,...._.:_.·_··-"""-'--~· ·- . . , •

ii)M~ywrQ

Apartment
for Rant .
1br ..,._ 1n Rio ara~ ~t
utllhlaO pold, 1235/mo. IM- 8

. .,

"·\

ICIAM LITS ANSWIU

Nlaht Court 1;1
.

(!]) •

Unlumlollod :lbr, vatY nloo, 322
Third AHtaiO, Oottr-. ·814-

-

hllp J041 gol I lianiiiH
Loin ly 111111. ,...,.. eeeo

I"

C)

ill 112l• Currant Allilir 1;1
2br Rt. 181. C.ll304.e7H'IOt. .

.

to · him especially if
they ra heavily :··-···· ."

f9 LETTHS
PRI.~T\;uM.. B.UED .r

Cll (!) MacHaii/Lehrer ·
NewiiHOUr 1;1
·

oq.,.,.._.

wor't)'

.

..

. 7:CIO (J) G Ill Wheal Of F 1 D,..m ot JaaNtla
..
IJl clle lnitde Eelltlon 1;1 ·

VENDING ·ROUTE: For Soli.
ltrong, oolld bualneoo.
High tiolllc, '"-' laoll-. Now
t 1110 214 YENO. .

' Father to his newly tnarriad

I' I'! I I

8 .,.

&lt;Zl WHd Ame!laa
(!) 3-2·1 Conte!;!
Ill ill. CBS New. 1;1 ·
(!]) • AI!CIY Glltlltlt

.i

8

·-

son, · A man's deed.s car1 ~a

0 N p Er:'f, T

·IDUpCioM
.1:35 (I) Andy Oillltttl

Gallipolis
&amp; VICinity
ALL Yard 8aiH Mllll So Plklln
Advo,_. DEADUNE: a:ao p.m.
tha day boloN thl .., to to Nn.

r~"· vl,u IG .El . · 1~1.·.
'

. IJl (J) • ABC ,.._ " ·

42 Mobile Homes
. ,lor Re!lt

J

i

==~~

. Dtgeit

1

1LL IMPRESS·HER 8C(
~FERIN6 TO TURN ON
.T~E DRINKING I=OLINTAIN ..

u....n

~ ~ T' A G U M ·11·
c.:~
r._l I' I t:·;. .

..

(l)

Hall .. A..trltlon

t.n.. ., .,.

..... 01 ...

•

EV£NINO

BUIIIINI .
Opponunlty

21

Shepherd, ~.

6

·wanted ..

f 1nanctdl

T't!e Dally Senllnei....Page-11

'

.

Television
,. Viewlng ..
p THURS.; MARCH 14. .-'. ,'

~~~ AANDGWITI!
K.T. ~~OF~--

I

•..

Po~y-Niddleport, Ohio
.

Thursday, March 14, 1991

J•l

'

'

CROSSWORD
.
Jl.
·
by THOMAS bSEPH
ACR"""'
DOWN . .
u...,
1 Jerry
Herman
hit

.1 Cartographer'a
. . war.._
""'
2 Away . ,
lrom the •
i d
wn
3 Sousa

5 Beach

'

!

.'
sheller
'
K'
I
11 1ng o .
'
comndr
12 Annua .
nlc~name,
I
.
ith
ennts or .
w. • ·
y
d ,
go" avent
"the .
, ester . BY I
' :
13 Sfa!lsy
4 Supper
.Jfrlend
Hollywood ~\ :
14 . leal or
course
20 Provo's
31 .l;exan
,Wall
$ Reddish
llille
team
.
15 Hides
brown '
21 Stile
35 Colleen
17 Farm'
Fall
flower of 36 White
' .
·' layer
. bloomars ,. . 20 Down
House
•· I
18 Story· . ~ 7 Food .
. 22 va:ra·
. office
.,
. .
Th
h
.
laiHng
scr., ,II.
.
•
.a
a apa.
•
'
Uncle
8 Gori\lfi . 23 Yoti
· 37 Slng!lr· •
22 Made
8 Sandra
said hi"'~"
actress
cookl
Kiki
2*''M;.. d ,·, .
Carter
as
or
D
~·a or s
24 Agendl
10 Tiny
oppo38 Golf
25 Friend to
worker
aition
go.• l
''
. Francois · 16 Terminus ·:21 Gardener, 39 Ails
26Jopllfl. ~
18Mad
. attim••
40Undar·
. place '
Haner's
30 Wast of,
' stood
27 EJitend
•
.·
ones
•'
subscrip·
lion
30 Like a
•
'
he·m•n
,
32 Polygon
comer
33 Bat woad
34 TV
fundrlilsar
38 Easlarn
.

:a

.

..
..

..

;

pi

t~ a

'41 Erithusi·
astic
review
.
421dolizes

43 Vaccine
type

44 Helicopter~
parts .
45 Vend
.

J.r...++-f.-~+--1

1•

L....;:.L...L.....L-'-.J--'

.

.

'

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTFS - Here's how ID )V&lt;)rk It:

3/14
'

,

A X Y I) L BAA X R , . ·
·
lsLONGFEI.LOW ., •
.One letter stands for another. In this sample A Is used .,
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc, Single letters, 1
~postrophes, the tenath and format.l on or the words are . ,
all ·hlnts. Each day the code letters .redlfferent. · ..

. CRYPTOQUoTEYKOPAHKO ·' JP

3-14
VK JVUJ

.',
CKUA
'•

M W
Q KB

J

V

8 P8 K

Q G0

T G

J AKU H K

WBXO, _: JVPQUO

J

V P8 K0

P EE

•

J .'

C KU A •

:
)

EGAAKY

•

'

Yesterday'sCryptoquote:MOSTPEOPLEWOUlD ••
SUCCF.m&gt; IN SMAll. THINGS, IF THEY WERE NOT . , .
T.ROlfnLEU Willi GREAT AMBITIONS. LONGF£LtoW
I

�••

.••
12-The

March

•

1991

---Area deaths--- Theme ...
Robert Fruth

'

J

I.

I
I

l

I

I

I

I
i
)

Former Mason County Sheriff
Robert E. "Bob" Frulh, 57, of Point
Pleasant, died at home on Wednes·
day, March 13, 1991.
Born May 17, '1933 in Mason, he
was a son of th~ late ChrisiOpher
and Elizabeth (Manley) Frulh. He
was also preceded in death by a
brother, carl "Buck" Frulh.
.
He had been in law enforcement
since 1?58 and had served as
Sheriff of Mason County from
1980-1988, where he was instrumental in the implemenlation of
the civil , service process for
deputies and correctional officers.
During his term as sheriff, Fruth attended law enforcement training
programs, drug and alcohol seminars and information programs on
the operations of the Real and ·Personal Property Tax Division of the
sheriff's department Fruth initiated
the Kid Tracks program in the .
county.
He had served as a police officer
and constable with the Town of
Mason and had also served as
palrolman wilh the City of Point
Pleasant. He later became chief of
plilice for l)le city. Fruth .had.been
the police chief for the Town of
.Henderson and had been employed
with the security force at IndianaMichigan Elecnic Company. He
was certified as a police officer in
West Virginia by the governor's
office.
· A member ·of the Mason-county
Democratic Party and the Executive Committee of Mason County,
: Fruth was a lifelong resident of
. Mason County. He was also a
· member of the Loyal Order of the
Moose No. 731, the Ironworkers
Local Union, Parkersburg No. 787,
·the I.O.O.F. No. 33, Point Pl~ant,
served as president of the F.O.P.
Lodge No.I 02, the Minturn Lodge
No.l9, AF. &amp; A.M., Point Pleasant
Chapter No. 7 R.A.M. and Scottish
Rite, WV Trappers ASSilCiation and
WV State Farm Museum.
Fruth was a past member of the
Slate and National Sheriff's As·
sociation and had served on the
·Board of Trustees of the WV
Sheriff's Association. He was a
graduate of Wahama .High Sc.hool
·and had attended Marshall Umversity. He also attended Trinity
'United Methodist Church. Fruth
·was active in sports; hunting and
.farming.
· Survivors include his wife, Bonnie J. (Burnene) .Fruth; one son,
Robert E. "Robbie" of Point
Pleasant; a daughter, Marsha K.
Carpenter of f':lew Haven: two sisters, Christine Frulh of Point
Pleasant and Vera. Kreimer of
Parlcersburg; a brother, Ralph of
Ashton, and three grandchildren.
Service will be held at 2 p,m. on
Saturday, March 16, ,at the CrowHusscll Funeral · Home wid! Rev.
Louis A. Husscll o(ficiating. Burial
will fo llow in the Kirkland
Memorial Gardens.
Visiting hours will be held at the
funeral home on Friday, March 15,
from 2-4 p.m. and 6-9 p.m.

Continued from pqe 1
Ulinment will be incorporaled into
the evening of fashion.
In other mailers of the mer·
chants, Bruce Reed, candidate fer
mayor of Pomeroy, spoke at the
meeting to gain inpul from die mer·
chants as to their feelings and con·
cems about Paneroy.
Reed staled he is looking forward to servillg Pomeroy u mayer
is if he is elecled and lhst he will
strive to make Pomeroy a belller
place. He stressed that he wo·uld I
work for. the pavement of strcc.ts
and the updllting of the existing
sewage system.
.
Also discussed were promotion·
al possibilities for the Merchants
including Mother's Day and the
ROBERT E. FRUTH
Pomci'oy Alumni activities in May;
· Besides his father, he was pre- Heritage Weekend on June 8 and 9;
ceded in death by his paternal the Oliio University Communivergrandfather, Edgar Wendorf, Sr., sity Band Concen sponsored by
. and maternal grandfat!Jer, Captain Banlc One on June 27 along· with
Harold Beegle.
An-in-the-Park; a car shOw on July
Memorial services will be held 20 sponsored by the Oldies But
by the family in Tampa, Fla
Goodies Car Club; the SternwhcclerS Festival on OcL II and 12; and
the annual open house for downIOwn merchants to kick-off the holContinued from page 1
iday season iii November.
time honorary Kent!lcky Colonel
The purchase of more Chrisimas
and a member of the Litile Hoclcing banners for the village was also
Church of ChrisL
discussed with Joan Wolfe, coHe is survived by his wife, manager of Bank One in Pomeroy,
Helen Young Caldwell; a son, stating the bank would give $SOO
William Caldwell, London; a toward the project if the Merchants
daughter, Rita Hutchinson, New would match !hat figure. The $SOO
Lexington; eight grandchildren and of Bank One's donation would
eight great grandchildren; a sister come from the sale of its Christmas
and brother-in-law, Helene and ornaments. This year's ornament,
Avery Goeglein, Pomeroy; and the second in a series, fCIIIures the
several nieces and nephews.
former Remington House (Meigs
Besides his parenrs he was pre- Inn).
ceded in death by a sister, Ruby
Cole.
.
Services will be Saturday at I
Veterans Memorial Hospital
p.m. at the White-BloWer Funeral
WEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS ·
Home in Coolville with Rev. Steve . • George Harvey, Gallipolis;
Fuchs offiCiating. Burial will be in Isabelle Brandenbe!ll, Rutland;
Success Cemetery.
and Dennis Saelens, MiddlcporL
Friends may call at the funeral
WEDNESOAY DISCHARGES
home on Friday from 3-S p.m. and • Carl Roach and linda Imboden.
7-9 p.m.
Carol Watterson, of GalliJlOUS,
and Everett E. Watterson, Vmton,
received a decree of divorce from
the Gallia County Common Plea.s .
Court Wednesday.

Jeffrey Wendorf
Word has been received of the
death of Jeffrey E. Wendorf, 35, of
Tam pi!, Fla., formerly or Meigs
County. He died Friday, March I at
Doctor's Hospilal in Tampa after a
brief illness.
He was born in Washington,
D.C. on July 16, 1955, the son of
the late Ed&amp;ar Wendorf and June
Wendcrf.Roush;
Besides his mother, he is survived by his stepfather, Larry
Roush of Racine; one brother,
Randy Wendoff, Superior, Wis.:
maternal grandmother, Alice Beegle, Dunnellon, P11.; paternal
grandmother, Viola Wendorf of
Misltawlka. lad.; one ancle, Lynn
Bcc&amp;le of Crwtal River, Fla., and
an aunt, Beverly Coleman,
Mishawaka, Ind.

.
e

•

•

UFREE
ESTIMATES"

•11 Colors
•Advanced Generation Olefin
•100°/o Polypropylene Back
•Easy Care ·
SQ. YD.
llnAWD

BERBER
CARPET

~

*NYLON PROTECTION PLUS
*10 YR. LIMITED WARRANTY
*18 COLORS

$12 99 ~.

YD.

.

·SCULPTURED
·cARPET

·

.

IISTAUU

ST AINMASTER
CARPn

•7 Colors
*Continuous Fllam111t Nylon
• Anti·Stat. .
*lloat Sot Yam

28eallano, 14 1'811M 21 oenta

· A Multlrnedle lno. No:• poper

Group supports .move to increase waste limit·

~

.

'

'

.

.

.

By MELJ,ND~ POWERS 1
per day for a 90-day period.
allead with it,"
..
OVP News Staff
,
Briggs ciled the recent closure . Bri$gs said that the Gallia facili., · · In a majority vote Thursday ..of the_ERO, Inc. landf'Jil.in .Mason ty, whtle talcing in its limit of Gal;
· e'(enina, the policy committee of County as a rC1!50n for asking for · lia, Meigs· and Mason Counties
&gt;the 'Aihcns-Gallia-Hoclcing-Jack- the extension: The Gallia County trash. has had rum trucks away that
son-Meigs-Vinton Solid Waste facility has taken .nearly 128 tons . are carrying in-disnict waste.
• Manage!llont District agreed to per day every day since the Mas!Jn
. "What my concern is is that
. support a move to raiJe the limit of landfill closed on March 7, he said, there will be iUegal dutnping if we
waste allowed into the Gallia an increase of more than 70 tons continue to tum these trash haulers
: County Landfill.
.
· over las! months average.
away," Briggs said. "I'm assuming
· · Gallia Countr Solid Waste
"It is possible to have increased that some of the in-district waste is
• Dileetor Doug Bnggs went to the waste receipts on a temporary being redirected to the Wellston
·' committee to ask for support of his basis," Brisp told the committee. and I ackson sites, but I can't be
application to the Ohio Environ·· "I have di.scussed with our com- sure where it goes."
:. mental Protection AJency to ·missioners the pouiblity to seek a
The policy commit!CC agreed in
• extend' the daily wasiC !units from 300 ton-per-day ernl::rgency permit, a 18·~ vote to write a letter to be
• lhe present 1211 JODS up .to 300 tons and they voted (Thursday). to go

sent to t4e Ohio EPA in suppon of trash, it works against our budget," mel)ts would allow the AGHJMV
the application for extension.
he said. "How are we going to distri,c tto dump waste in ·those
After a lengthy discussion, the .· mariage down the niad 10 operate?" counties in case of emergency, and
policy committee also approved ·its
Dale Neal, ch11irman of the would allow those counties to
1991 !ludget, listing approximately AGHJMV district policy commit· dump in the AGHJMV district in
$487,673 in exjlenditures. Disnict tee, reassured Burdell lhst the dis· emergency situations. '
Director Lance Wilson told the Diet would be able 10 function.
• Approved a letter to the Ohio
committee that receipts for the
"We are going 10 reduce our EPA encouraging expedient review
.coming year were estimated at trash, but we are going to accept of applications for proposed land$500,000.
.
.
more out of disnict trash to opcr- fill sites within the disb"lct.
Gallia County commiuee mem- ate," Neal said.
• Heard a proposal from John
ber Lawrence Burdell said he was
In other business, the commit· . Van Volkenbur, •. of SCS Engiunsure of lhe premise of the bud- tee:
.
neers, on the re¥tSJons required to
get.
)
• Agreed to pursue mutual aid' the district plan by the Ohio EPA.
"This commiuee was put togeth- . agreements with Ross, Washington No action was l8ken on the proposer to reduce trash, but if we reduce and other counties. Th~se agree· al .

,·a

~

*Tracklou Saxony
•s Yr. Wear Warranty
*11 Colors
*Fuubusttr Yarn

~-

S1379

.

'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, March 15,1991

LEVEL LOOP ·
CARPET

•

•

a1

.

Low tonight in upper ·
20s. Saturday, sunny. High
in mid-50s.

S1.8''

SQ. YD.
IISTAILD
wmPAD

SQ. YD.

IMnAWD
wnll PAD .

---Local briefs---(Conllnued from Page 1)
and a small registration fee.
.
The scholarships are provided by the Ohio Colincil of Private
Colleges and Schools through the cooperation of the .state's business and trade schools.
Studenrs can obtain an application from Representative Abel by
writing her at the Ohio House of Representatives, 77 SOuth High
Street in Columbus, 43215 or by calling I-466-2S75.
Compleled forms must be returned to Abel's office for Jl(Jmifl!l·
tion 10 the council by May 17.
-·"

The bedding sale you've been
waiting lor! Now our three
best-selling Serta models, In,
eluding lamous Serta Perfect
· Sleeper@, are marked to low,
.•Jow prices.

LAST NIGHT'S AD SHOULD
HAVE. READ ....
\

~~(.

TWIN
EA. PC.

For

..

SERTA PERFECT
SLEEPER ~:i:!:TT
FUl~ SET ................ $369 .
QUEEN SET ............ $479

FooDLAND
We

SlOB
.
$

FUll, EA. PC.............. 154.
QUEEN SET ................ 5354

LB.

BIG BEND

By LEE ANN THOMPSON
counties being honored for their
OVP News Stan
effons.
Young people can have million·
. William Fish, the Scout Execudollar scouting programs, not with live for MGM, reCalled his days as
cold, hard cash, but by what leaders a SCC?Ut in .Hun.n, W.V~ .. and
and other volunteers give from credited hts leader m Huntmgton
their hearts.
•
with giving him "a million doUars
· The annual Meigs, Gallia, . \j'orth of scouung."
Mason District volunteer scouter
And tl1at's what all scouts.can
appreciation and recognition dinner receive ., by what'~ in lhe· volun' was held Thur~ay night in Gal· tcers' heartS, not thetr wallets. .
lipolis, with leaders from all three'
"I ~ot a sense of of duecuon,

SERTA SUPREME ·
ULTRA w!:.!:""

99
Inconvenience.

r--Local briefs-__,
'

NOW IN STOCK

'

.Meigs EMS responds to two calls
Units of the Meigs County·Emergency Medical Service .responded to two calls for assistance on Thwsday.
·
· At 1:53 p.m. the Pomeroy unit-went 10 Butternut Avenue for
· Tammy TeFrell who was taken to VMH and later transferred .to
· 1 .~ Holzer Medical Center.
The Middlepon unit, at 10:05 p.m., was called 10 Walnut Slreet
for Roscoe Roush who was transported to Veterans.

•FREE DELIVERY'
.•FREE SET UP
•PLUS WE'LL HAUL AWAY YOUR OLD BEDDING

BASEBlLL SHOES

-

nlabHil: bet efForts •t
ian·ConservatiOII Corps to
11 trail tile C8111p Ia Meigs
County. Sbe Willi preaented ,I pll!que by Bob Arms of tbe MGM
District Awards Committee.
''

Pomeroy police in11estigate accident
oe.,..

The Pomeroy Police
blient investigaled an accident that
occurred on West Main Street in front of the SuperAmerica Store in
Pomeroy on Thursday aflCmoon 1112:21 p.m.
·
According to the report. Clarence Searles, Bidwell, was traveling
west 10ward Middleport in his 1989 Chevrolet when a 1987 Ford
driven by Belinda Deem, Middlepon, pulled away from Suj)Cr·
America strilcing the left· front side of Searlea' vehicle. The repon
stated that Deem wu ullable to see Searles because a telephone
booth was in her lin~f-sigll~o ·
Searles' vehicle sustained light damage to the driver's side and
Deerit~s vehicle sustained light damage to the front passenger side.
There were no injuries and J10 citations.

·

0 IIIIE All SLIDEI - Metal Spikes .......... $67.9 5
IN BLACKONLY

0 IIIIE SLASHII ....;. . .tal Spibs."••••••••••• $44.95
IN BLACK OR WHITE

0 NilE IIYSTOIIE -

lubber Oeat •••••••••• S31.95

GREAT FOR SOFTBALLI

SOFTSIDERS ••••
CYLINDER
TUBE BED

1

I

•New Waveless
Motion
•Lightweight

ONLY$399°0

FULL 01

QUEEN

.

Arrest made on theft

: B&amp;E in11estigated ·
219 ... Soc•d
'

'

ttl·56t7

Middle rt, ON.

leadership and responsibility from
my scout leader," Fish t91d those
gathered at GfliCe United Methodist
Church. He spoke emotionally of
Huntington businessman James A.
Gwinn, a leader· who gave so much
to his scouters ~ach Tuesd~y at
Trinity Episcopal Church.
A millionaire by monetary Stan·
dards, Gwinn gave his troop of 84
scoulers an experience to grow, to
gain lcnowledge in and receive the
tools of future leadership through .
''I hope you can bestow a million-dollar program to your kids,
with what's in your hearts," Fish
said.
That's not to say money is not

. . ·

needed Ito operate scouting in the
tri-county area • it is necessary. On
an average, the yearly cost for
scouting is $64 per member in the
program. There are 750 boys in
scouting in the MGM district
which translates to approximately
$48,000 annually.
·
There is a fund-raising drive
going on in lhe ni-county area • the
Sustaining Membership Enrollment
• with chairman in Meigs, Gallia
and Mason, Fish said.
Boy Scouting "slands tall and
ready to serve lcids," Fish said. It is
directly through lhe efforts of the
volunteers, who carry on their
shoulders a big responsibility, he

.

noted.
Garwood for his wort with youth
The responsibilities of the den during the past SO years He
and pack leaders, Scoutmaslers and received a plaque and watch from
camp di~tors are great • and with· the orpnization.
:
out them, there will be no Eagle
Wallcer was also named ScoutScouts in the communities. The . master of the Year. Cubmaster 9f
young peo~le get a sense of respon. the Year was presented to Carl
sibility, duection and leadership Matheny, Cubmaster of Pack 262
from those volunteers, just like at Aat Rock, W.VL Scou~er of the
Fish received when he was young- Year was presenled to (lob Wortster in Boy Scours.
·
man of T!OOII 240 in Rutland.
:
A number of those leaders were
The Disaicl Award of Merit was
recognized at lhe dinner meeting p'resented to two volunteers ' •
Thursday night.
Danny Will, Merit Bqe CoordiWalter Walker of Troop 200 in nator of MGM and assistant Scout·
Gallipolis was honored by the Dis- master of Troop 249 in Pomeroy,
Diet 12 Veterans of Foreign Wars and George Wrlidtt, assistant CubAuxiliary Youth Director Mary master ofPaclt 249 in Pomeroy.

Area miners unprepared to cope with m.ine closing .
ATHENS • Neilher coal miners
nor their communities are prepared
to cope with the closing of the
Meigs mine, said a jobs coordinaIOr.

Glenn Enslen, head of employment training for the Tri-County
Community Action Agency, 10ld an
Ohio House hearing on Wednesday
that his agency wouldn't be able 10
retrain the mine's 1,300 workers
with irs current resources.

"To lake that large number of
individuals at one time would be
virtually impossible," Enslen told
lhe Selecl Committee on the Federal Clean Air Act, which is consid·
ering the impact of new federal air
pollution curbs on Ohio power
companies:
The mine, which is o~raled by
an Ohio Power siibstdiary, is
expected 10 close because it pro-

duces high-sulfur and relatively
high-priced coal. It was opened in
1972 to provide fuel for Ohio
Power's Gavin station in Cheshire.
American Elecnic Power, which
owns Ohio Power, is debating
whether 10 install stack scrubbers at
the Gavin plant, switch itiO cleaner
coal from other regions, or close il
because of the cos! of the coal il
uses.

Enslen said that when the Sun:
nyhill mine in Perry_County wu··
closed last year, 300 mi~ lost
their jobs. He said 82 of the work·
ers hav.c been retrained and placed
in new jobs.
He also said closing or the
Meigs mine would have a much·
bigger impact on Meigs Couniy .
than closing of the S unnyhill mine ·
did in Perry County.

'·

May version of ICFC competition dropped .·

RIO GRANDE, Ohio (UPI) Spring chickens won't be flying at
Bob Evans Farms Inc.'s InternaWilliam Hayes of Dex~ and Ronald E. Johnson of Salc;m
tional Chicken Flying Meet any
Township were II1UiSPOrlCd to Orient. Corm:tional Institution by the
more. The southern Ohio sausage
Meigs County Sheriff's Department to being scrvina sentences
and restaurant o~eration 'said
'
recently imposed by die Meigs County Common Pleas Court
Thursday it's droppmg the compeAccording to the Meigs County Sheriff's Department, both subtition.
;
. 'jects entered guilty pleas 10 charges of tratliclcing in drugs.
The flying chicken contest traditionally has been scheduled on the
'ncide~Jt
. third Saturday in May at the Bob
Evans Farm in Rio Grande. This
Joffre~ D. Roush of Paneroy was atTCIIed Thunday evening by
.
year's event had been slated foi'
Meigs County Shcrill's IIOPutles on charges of aggravated burglary
May
18.
and theft from Pcll')' County.
·
·
The
event drew between 500
Roush was lodged in the Meigs County Jail pet!ding the required ·
and
2,000
people, depeitding on the
Rule 4 Hearing since Perry County is not an adjoining county. The
weather,
spokeswoman Tammy
Rule 4 Housing was set for Friday morning before Meigs County
Ri&gt;bens
said.
..
Coun Judge Patrick ff. O'Brien.
Feathers win fly, however, as a
smaller version of the International
Chicken Flying Meet is plamed for
~Meigs County.Sherlff's Department is investigating a report
, the Bob' Evans Farm Festival in
OciOber. Robens said the faD festiCoatiaued 011 Pl&amp;e 5
val generally attracts 60,000 peo-

Hayes and Johnson transported

•Zipper Top

MERIT AW.ARD • Danny Will of Tr~ 149 In Pomeroy was
presented tbe D!,trlct Award of Merit by' Dr. Bernard Nlehm,
. MGM Sroutlng cbalrman. Will, right, was honored at tbe annual
recognition dinner for the tri-county area.

MG~ leader says million-dollar scouting comes from heart
.

sssoo

FUll, EA. PC.............. $1 08
QUEEN SET ................ $2 99 .

English Roast

$

·
·
'
,

SERTA PREMIER
COMFORT w!.=:TT

·TENDERBEST USDA CHOICE
BONELESS .

Harold D. Wood
Harold Delbert Wood, 8S, of
Route 2 in Little Hocking, died
Wednesday at Sl. Joseph Hospilal
in Parlcersburg, W.Va. .
·
He was born in New Brighton,
Pa., the ·son of the late 'Francis
Corbin and Lenpra Captiola Medis
Wood. He was a retired employee
of lhe SMC Plant after 38 years of
service. He was also a .contractor.
He was a member of the Little
Hocking Church of Chrisl.
He is survived by three daugh·
ters, Charlotte Eckhan, Vienna,
W.Va., Shirley Rogers, Little
Hocking, and Sharon Lewis, Little
Hocking; two sons, Jack Dodd, Lit·
tie Hocking, and · Fran~ Wood of
Belpre; 14 grandchildren; five
great-grandchildren; two sisters,
Evelyn Godbey, Parkersburg,
W.Va., and Lellian Davis, Dayton;
and one brother, Walter Wood of
Parkersburg, W.Va.
Besides his pareniS, he was preceded in dealh by his wife, Bessie
· Westfall in 1~73, one brother and
two sisters.
Funeral services will be held at
ll &gt;a~m. on Saturday at White·
Ethridge Funeral Home in Belpre
with Pastor Steve Fuchs officiating.
Burial will be in Torch Baptist
Cemetery.
·
Friends may call at the funeral
home on Friday from noon to 9
p.m. and 9 a.m. to time of service
on Saturday.

Boy Scout Troop'*249 will sell
fresh homemade vegetable soup at
the Pomeroy Firehouse on Sunday
at 11:30 a.m. Soup is $2 a quart,
and people should bring their own
containers.

Cards : 6-H,.J-C;
3-D; J-s·

PageS

Hospital news

Scout soup sale

Pick 3: 06i
Pick 4:8217

r~gionals

CaldwelL.

Divorce granted

Ohio Lottery

Hannan Trace
·eliminated in

pie.'
"We have greatly enjoyed host. !"g tJ;ie International Chicken Flyto~ Meet for the past 20 years,"
satd Mary L. Cusick, lntemational
Chicken Flying Association .secre·
tary.
"However, we feel that we have
oth.e r opportunities at the farm
wliich our visitors wiD enjoy just as
much and will help to preserve the
. company's heritage," slle lllid.
The company is restoring the
homestead, the large brick house
localed on the farm. Bob and Jewell Evans raised their six children
in the homestead, which is on the
National 'Register of Historic:
Places.
Other ilnprovements planned for
tbe farm are the addition of a
nature· fitness trail and a camping
area. The farm is locallid off State

Route 35 and open daily Memorial
Day through Labor Day and week·

ends from April to Memorial Day .
and Labor Day through October.

Judge orders Mathias'
brother to .take DNA tests
By MELINDA POWERS
OVPNew~Statf

Tho brother of a. Kinauga man
accused of murder must IIOW sub·
mit several biological samples for
testing to prove he was not
involved in the alleged lcilling.
In a court-proclaimed "odd
case" Thursday, Roben Mathias,
half-brother ol William A. Mathias,
23, was ordmcl by Oallia County
Common Plou Judge Donald A.
Cox to Sivo 1amplea ol bead and
pubic hair, blood, saliva and fingerprints for DNA lellin&amp;.
William Mathias is charged with

two counts of murder witll specifi. :
cations and one count CIICh of "JJ!! ·
and'lcidnappina in connection With-:
the death Dlll·yar-old Slleey R. '
Lucas, Gallipolis, 1as1 October.
·
Cox told the courtroom that :

althoughthereisno~cdcntfor :

ordering a non-defendant 10 submit ·
to the testing, the case warrants :
such a decision.
.
"It's ocld law fer an ocld case,"·
Coxaud.
::
Or. Edward J. Betkich, Oallit ·:
County coroner, will perform the ·
Jesting on Robert Mathias. Berldcli :
•.
Continued 011 pap 5
•
•

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="308">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9596">
                <text>03. March</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="34620">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="34619">
              <text>March 14, 1991</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="464">
      <name>fruth</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="4116">
      <name>wendorf</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="576">
      <name>wood</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
