<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="10979" 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/10979?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-18T07:05:08+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="41945">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/fa4fdb3e33ed8162ccb375737e2afe13.pdf</src>
      <authentication>a1d9cdaf4532fc1740806df79b44d0a3</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="34654">
                  <text>•

Page 14-The Dally Sentinel

STORE
..... HOURS
Monday fhQJ Sunday
8 .AM- 1o·· PM

Stanford tops
Sooners 78-72
·for NIT title ·.

.

POWELL'S

.

'

PRICES

Cards : 6-H, A-C;
2-D; lO.S
~,otto:

' 10-11-31·44·3·35
Kicker:

Page3

ADULT
EAST·ER

· 298 SECOND ST.
· POMtROY. OH.
MAR. 24 THRU MAR. '3o~-- f9c)l

·Pick 3:044
Pick 4: 3354

•

e

·•

a1

•

'

I

•~ . Roast· "'.)....
·, ....$1 79
(hue."
LB.

'

'

'

'

, u.s:o.A. CHOICE .BEEF

Round Steak.•~~-~.~.$ 229
U.S.D.A: CHOICE .BONELESS BEEF'·
.
.
.
.
.
.
·
$
2'
1·9
Rump R

•

': lB.

Oa$f •••••·•·•••

BONE~ESS

.

$ 59

·

Ch1cken Breast .!1.. 2 .
'

Chicken .Livers
CORN KING

' ,.

BUCKET BEEF

·~

st·.
,
"u e e.a
.b

k.

·

1

·

J' . :

·

.6 ••••.•••

$2
79
!•• .

r

Commission·
·
.
.
discusses jail
modifications

39
~-~~-$2
.

'

'

DISCOUNTS
'
.
WILL BE
FROM 5°/o
TO 100°/o.
YOU WILL
GEt' THE
D'ISCOUNT
OFF YOUR
PURCHASE. ·
'

$ 89

Boneless Ham ....~. . 1
. BREADED ' .
. $].
99
.Ocean Perch •••·•••~..
·

....

~

'

Yams ••~•• ~ •••••••••• 4 Las. $1
'

'

HANGING ROCK .

Large Eggs ····~=~~ ..T. 69 (

GOLDEN WHEAl

BANQUET .

.

.

.

Mac. &amp; Cheese.•.•
Pot ·Pies .~•. ~~-••• !. J-. 3
CAMPBELL'S CHICKEN
·
s
s
f$2
..
.
BANQUET '
.
·
Noo dl e .oup .·:~~~~.
-· TV D1·n· ne' rs·. ••••••••••••
· ··~O-l2 oz. .(·9'9&lt;
0

•

REGULAR OR WITH BLEACH.-

TIDE DETERGENT
136

oz.

$699

DOMINO SUGAR. •

:a~· $169

..- cwy At ...... ....., v•

Gtllll ..... 24 1111'11 .... fO. 1991
lllillt I Ptr Custllll•

.
BATHROOM T~SUE
_:_VELVEt'· . . ·

•,-:.u 2· /~· 1

llto4l Only At Pow••• . . . rllu
hell .... 2t thru .... JO, 1991
Unlit 2 .., (Uifllli.

'

'

'

GOLD MEDAL
518.

lAG

FLOUR

'N h western
.
Oh lO
• hlt•
b1u se.vere Storms, Wln
• dS

.

Crow gets atquainted with ·th~ !lays-old French
Alpine Goat, wblcb Peggy and .her family are
r~ng ..

INTRODlJCING ••• TECUMSEH! • Pe&amp;u
Crane, right, took her ramDy's newest' member '
out and about on Wednesdi!Y to meet tile folks
io Pomeroy. Here, Pomeroy Attorney Fred W.
'

'

.

Woman hurt
in accident

---Our Easter Egg Hunt .

r will start at 8 A.M.

Search gets underway

and will c.ontlnue untH
all eggs are found.
lONE EGG PEl OIDEI ·
EXCLUDING TOBACCO
PRODUCTS,}
'

69(

._. Gilly At Pew••• S..,. Yalu

GtNNI lllr. 24 lhru Mar. 30, 1991
limit I Per (Uitomlr

ed that they would be willing to
By BRIAN J. REED
undenake major safeiy-related renSentinel News Stan
ovation
of the ftrst floor cell area.
Necessary modifications to the
That
work
woulc\ include painting
Meigs County Jail were discussed
at Wednesday's regular meeting of and re-wiring.
Soulsby w~I\Sked to formulate
the Meigs County Commissioners.
The commissioners discussed an outline df'nis wishes for the
with Meigs Co11nty Sheriff J8mes first-floor cellblock area for the
M. Soulsby a letter dated March 14 board's review. In addition, Souls·
.which delineates the results of a by said tliat he would investigate
February stale inspection of the further the alternatives to actual jail
jail. The letter, mailed to Soulsby incarceration, including a house
by JaiJ Inspector Barbara Kamins- arrest program much like that
ki, outlines necessary staffing underway in the Juvenile Court
changes and capital improvements system, and community service.
Programs like these could be
that would allow the department to
necessary
i( the second floor of the
continue as a full-service detention
jail
is
closed
or if the jail is reduced
facility and which would also per~
.
to
a
five-day
holding facility
mit the department to use the seeinstead
of
a
fuU-service
facility that
ond floor to house prisoners.
it
is
now.
, "The use of the two housing
In other action, the commissioncells upstairs should be discontiners
agreed to enter into a "cafeteria·
uei:l," the letter states. ''This situation may create a threat to the life style'' insura'nce plan for !Is
safety of jail occupants an&lt;\_ there- employees at their meeting on
Wednesday.
fore a potential enforcement tssue."
The plan was proposed at last
The letter also advises county
officials that full-time staffing week's meeting by American Famwould have 10 be added if the sec- ily Life Assur.ance Corporation
ond floor cellblock is to be used in Representative Herman Lynch. The
program, described as a "pre-tax
the future.
·
While the commissioners took flexible benefit plan", offers a tax
no fonnal action on the matter yes- break for all employees on the
terday, they did indicate 10 Soulsby county payroll whO ar!l enrolled in
th,at they wollld advise in disc~ntin­ the county's self-insurance health
·uation bf'the second floor cell - plari. ' . .
The plan, once in place, will
blpck. '
.
deduct
the cost of health ins'ID'ance.
, "This county commissidner has
from
the
employee's taxable
no .trouble doing anything that con.
income.
In
turn,
Lynch will offer
cerns safety, health standards and
his
cafeteria
plan
policies, such as
the general welfare of the prisoncancer,
intensive
care
and dismemers," Commissioner Richard E.
berment
inslD'ance
to
the
employee,
'J
Jones said at the meeting.
encouraging
the
employee
to use
"However," he continued, "if the
the
money
saved
lhrough
the
tax
state WaniS modern 'hotel' convebreak
"
to
purchase
such
policies.
In
. ..
·
niences in a jall'facility ... then let
fact,
under
some
instances,
such
the state pay for them."
·
Jones went on 10 comment that policies could be obtained "free of
·
'
'
many of state's "requirements" for ' charge".
The
agreement
does not force
When Bll!Y Cran~. Muldlepor.t, ' fuU-service jails make those facili- ·
employees
to
purchase
any of
dectded .ID nu~ a dairY goa! for hts ties nicer than many of the homes
AFLAC's
polictes.
However,
by ·
~-H project this summea:, 11 s ,ll~b- . in Meigs County.
·
law,
those
employees
opting
not
to
ably safe~? say that he .and his SIS·
In addition to proposing the
purchase
the
policies
must
sign
a
ter, Doma, and the1r mother, closing off of the second floor of
Continued on ·page 12
Peggy, dido 't realize just what the·jail, the commissioners indicatthey were getting into.
· · ·
"Emmaline", a full-br;ed French
Alpine goat. was expecting· a baby
o~t
when the Cranes took her intD the
family. A week ago, Emmaline
1
,gave birth toner ,mate babynamed "Tecumseh" by the Crane
J
family . The labor, however, was
By RICH EXNER
· .tornado which also ~prooted
difficult - a painful breech birth
United
Press
International
numerous trees. tel~phone and
which caused Emmaline to reject
Severe
storms
and
high
winds
power
lines. .
her newborn son.
,
swept
across
northwestern
Ohio
Toledo
Edison Co. said at least
It was then the Cranes !D the·res- WedneSday night, spawning a tor- 70,000 homes
were without power
cue! Donia, a college student, nado that destroyed between 50 in Lucas county and the Toledo
milks Emmaline in the morning, and 60 vacation homes in Williams area during the night with about
and BiUy, II, milks in the evening. county.
At least 18 people were 20,000 homes still out early ThlD'sThe Cranes then must bottle feed
.
day.
their new ~~'and have taken over injured.
Moshe·
Mohre.
Williams
county
There were some outages
all of the' maternal" duties that the ei vii · defense director reporting reported
in other areas of WiUiams
mother has failed to perform for from a school where disaster relief · · County and
in Erie County near
·Tecumseh.
headquarters
had
been
established,
.
Sandusky
and
Cedar Point
Though less than a week old, said the injured were treated and amusement parkthe
on
the banks of
Tecumseh already sports budding
Lake Erie.
horns, which the Cranes are going released.
Mohre
said
the
tornado
devasIn Lorain County, the sheriff's
10 have removed in short order. In tated a 5-mile strip near Nettle office
some damage had been
addition, neutering will be per- Lake, a reson area nonh of Mont- causedsaid
in
Amherst
by straight line
formed right away as weU.,For the pelier; about40 miles west of Tole- winds.
,
time. being, the Cranes intend to do.
The storm and winds quickly
make their newest goat a housepet.
''It probably took 50 to 60 moved across the. state Wednesday ·
homes (vacation homes) ou~ upset night.
,
.
one car and tore down a chlD'ch,"
Thll weather service said thai. at
said Mohre.
aboutlO p.m. storms,moved north· .
Mohre said the cburch is gone east at 40 mph from a line between
but pews were left standing by the Dayton and Toledo.
A Pomeroy woman suffered
minor injuries Wednesday when
she lost control of his ~ehicle on
Chester Township Road 92. ·
Mary K. Persons, 58, of 742 E.
The Point Pleasant Fire Depan- a 17-foot boat to provt&lt;lc llliSIStance
Main Street, was transported to
Veterans Memorial Hospttal by the ment put a boat intD the Ohio River to the fire depanment He said they
Meigs County EMS following the to begin the water search for the could assist with the search and
accident. She was treated and later · body of a man missing since Sun· control river traffic.
The ftre depanment spokesman
released, a hospital spokeswoman day. According 10 a fire department
said
Valley Fire Department is hanspokesman,
this
is
the
first
day
a
said Thur.iday.
dling
the radio communications
According to a report from the boat has been used in the search
with
the
rescue boat.
·
Gallia-Meigs post of the State due to high waters.
The
victim's
identity has .not yet
Bill James, Mason County
. Highway Patrol, Persons \j'as west·
been
released.
The
man was work·
bound when she apparently lost Director of Emergency Setvices,
ing
on
a
barge
Sunday
afternoon
control of her 1980 Cadillac Coupe said he is currently attemptin~ to
when
the
barge
hit
a
peer
at the
Deville and slid off the left side of get a helicopter to search the nver ·
GaUipolis
Locks
and
Dam,
causing
the roadway, striking 811 embank· from the dam to Huntington. He
menL Persons reponed to the patrol added as soon as ihe watqr went it to capsize. Aecordlna to a
that the steering had locked up on down.. more boats would be put spokesman for the locks and dam,
the barge and towboat was owned
her automobile just pripr to the intD the water.
by the Mulzer Crushed Stone Co.
Coast
Guard
spokesman
Lt.
Bob
crash.
'
City, IN.
ofTell
Duld
said
Thursd~y
morning
the
· Persons was not Cited in the
guard
has
dispatched
~rson~l
and
·
crash.
·

•1 .
F aml'U
a opts goat
as h o.·usepe[

(The 1OO'o Egg Will
Receive FREE
Groceries!!)

Please bring
UNOPENED egg
to the cashier.
The .cashi.er
MUST open the
egg to
validate the
discount or
.' present the
•
pr1ze.
ONE EGG PER
FAMILY
'
All Eggs In •
· Plain View.

25cenle

•

96 Plastic
Eggs Will
Be Placed
Throughout
The Store
· With Cash
'Discounts
or Prizes in
Each Egg!
'

•

•

'

'

Friday, high near SO. Chance
of rain 80 percent.

9lll3l

EGG
HUNT!!
.
U.S.D.A. CHOICE _BONELESS BEEF

Low tonight In mid 30s.

I

prizes sacb u "M.y Firat Garden" kit; Bunny
HOPPING FOR LEUKEMIA " The kiDder·
Hop
toflllrll, 1 money poac:ll, bac:llpack, sweat·
garten class at Middleport Elem,ntllry held 1
shirt
or beadpbone radio. Pictured, l..r, are
"Bunny Hop" yesterday to benefit tile Leukemia
buany
boppen Liley Howerton, Jordan Kln1,
Society. or America •. Eac:l1 cbHd received 1
Christopher
Pk:kens, Brandl Shea, Angle Stone
"Bunny Hop Cei111kllte" and clependln&amp; on the
·'
•
amount of money raised could quaHI'y
r..- ot11er ·... and Ashley PaJIIe:
'
'

•

.

'

•

,·,

...... '

. .... ' ..

'

.

.
'

..

�Commentary

.
E·gypt working to.improve.its standing
;

-The Daily Sentine.l

Stanford captures NIT ·•.
tt~~!V!!h~LS;l!Y~!~rl~,.

Page 2- The Dally sentinel ,

·-

~

..,

'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
~uraday, March 28,,1991

'

j

.

•

.

-'

Jack Anderson

111 Cou11 S&amp;ree&amp;
Pomeroy, Oblo .

CAIRO,·Emt · An ancient
The best that aom~nc in a
Mubarak's predecessor, Anwar
rwling
cemer.ety
here
is
one
of
lower,
middlc-clall
family
can
Sadlll,
was always the subject of that decision. But dissent has been
DE VOTED TO THE
.. INTEBI!:8TS
.
..OF
. THE MEIGS·.MASON AREA
t e most moving sights in the hope for is a IWI&gt;'room apartment whispering • how he 11a4 many vii·
world.
It
is
filled
with
the
long.
Those
poorer
than that find s~lter las, how he lived the high life rela· splintered and ineffective. One
·
~lb
.
dead and with~ than a million where they. can
. . And !hal is why, of tive to Egyptian standards. how he Western diplomat s.aid rough
IS!m~ ........_,,_-r-or·.-..•n::::loo=o
people
wbo
have
nowhere
th
12
11
1 h
11
polling results show as much as 85
living
qjv
else go.
.
e
.101. 10n J!COp e w o c~ . was out of 10uvh wiq. his people. perc~nl support 'for Mubarak
.
..
10
The City of the Dead, as i~ is ~eater Cairo. thell' ~e. 1..5 m1l· But t.1ubarak lives m a modest througholl( the buildup and the war.
ROBBRT L. WINGETT
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
.
than UV\
ld bon ~avG' ~lected 10 hve w1th the ·house. His living ioom Is about
All thl' s suppon doesn't come
Publisher
known, IS more
General Manacer·
"""years o · dead m thell' roofless shrines.
one-third the size of .the office of
From the outside it BP.pcars as a
It could be a hOibed of dissent the U S Ambassador
. . Cairo
for free. The people of Egypt and
,
.
huge
Third-World
v11lagc
with
.
against
President
Hosni
Mubarak
s
·dd
.
H
·
m
·
·,
·their
president expect some bene8 am
PAT WHITEHEAD
' · street after street lined with low
· ·
·
'
us.sem apparent Y fits from their partnership with
but the res11lerits of the Clly of the didn ' t undersumd that side of Ame'r•'ca. The Unl'ted Sta••s h·as
· AMWanl. Pnbll8ber/Con*roDer
buildings. Behind the buildi'ngs are Dead have not or,anized them- Mubarak ·because before Saddam
"'
tombs for the great and nOt· SO· ~lve~ 10 PfOb?St hiS polici~, nor invaded Kuwait, he tried IO mbe already forgiven $7 biliion in
.A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
~~of centuries past. lbe build· h1s.s1de-&amp;y-side foray With the Muharak io take his side. It starsed E.J!yptian debt. Saudi Arabia is
Association and the American Newspapet' Pu,bttshers Association.
ings rarelf have roofs because the Un.ned St!ltes and other Aral! small, with an offer for Ilaq 10 buY . secretly talking about building
dead don 1 mind the rain aud the nations .......... Iraq
.
manufacturing facilities in EBl1!'
LE'M'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
50 ml' II'100 wort h 0f Egypllan
living here can't·"'~
·-•ons.
.....-:-'
•
·
and
forming
words long. AU tellers are subject to.editing an&lt;! must be signed with
....,.u ...,,u,
. In a SOCiety known .or corrup- · wheal last-July. .
.
. partncrsbi~~'~~
. r· wub
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters wUI be pubEIIY.{ll is a land without oil. Its uon at·the lOp, Mubarak is remark·
. Mubarak was' furious and sided Egypttans Ill other entcrpnses that
lished. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personall·
per
capital
income
is
a
~try
$700
ably
clean.
"I've
ne~er
hear~
a
squarely
witll the .qniled States ~reaMte Jbarakobs. dream tha
da
ties.
a year. Food is subsidized, so whiff about Mubarak h1mself being against the invasion Poverty- " . u
s t some y,
Ej!!P!ianS can buy the essentials. · corrupt," one knowledgeable u :S. stricken Egyptians might be for iv- . w1~h enou,gh help from, ~e new
It sa ~-to-mouth existence:
i ntelligence source IOid us.
en if they diffefed with Mubaraf on . ll;lll&amp;nce, his .people won t ~ave 10
·
live w1th !he dead.
'.
-

-~

-

..

Dear Editor:
I
.The Freshman class of Eastern
High School would like 10 thank
the following people and businesses for their !lelp in making the
• ·Valentine's Dance a success:
: ; • Bill Francis of Francis Florist
·:IQr pictures; Pleaser's Restaunmt
:· for donaling cups; Sear's for saving
·:aitd odonating cardboard for decora~ 'lions; Roland Easunan for donating·
:;benches for the pho10graphs; Paula
: Thomas, Linda Eastman,·Stephanie
• ~offman, Michelle Guess, Adria;·
: Frecker, Charfene Dailey , Nora
:: Easunan, Amanda Barringer, and

..·- .
~LRep9rt says

Debbie FrOst for donating refresh·
ments and working the refreshments table; the Decoration Committee for their. hnrd work in get·
tmg the dccoralions ready on time;
Linda Wilson, Charles and Theda
Dailey, Sheila Rach, Cindy Aeiker
and Tina. Hendricks for their held
as chaperones.
.
Special. ·thanks to Jackalyn
Frost, Mike Frost, and Charles and
Theda Dailey who made it possible
10 get the gym decorated on time.
·
Sincerely,
Katie Pey10n,
Class Advisor
'

treating AIDS
::may
cause more deaths .....,.
.

P~A6E~

..

Pac:me

Reasor to participate in 11th
h ·S h all•Star aame

m. ·

· TUBBS EJECTED • Oklaba.a head coadl
' Billy Tubbs yells at the ref aad Jiolnu to Ills
, players u be Is tbl'OWII out of tbe pJJle ID tbe

: By United Press International
' Chili Davis is awfully hot at the
;plate these days.
: Davis belted two home runs
•Wednesday to account for three

OPERA.T10N

:.DESERT ·

TVC boys prevailll0-77

DELINQUENT
ACCOUN~

:

~ ,infect~d

or

~•

resufr

I

I

. An analysis !hal highlights "the possible disadvanaages'1of treaanent
; serves ty.oo p~, .the~ said, drawing attention.ro the importance of
: counseling and h1ghhghhng the need for researc)l into whether drugs
. affectmfecuousness.
.
: In an essay accompanying the report, Robin Weiss of the Institute of
· Cancer Research in London noted relatively little is known about the
· infectiousness of AIDS patients, making the study "speculative."

Berry's World

•
•
•

.

KEY, TH\S. lS J'US't' Ll~E
QU\CKSANO - T\'\E

.·

MOR.E YOU STUGGLE,

•

GETS!
0
0

,_

.

•

'

~0

It is time to get serious about e~ergjr~poliey --·-J·'-- ~
-rhe war in the Persian Gulf
broug~! home once ·':"ore the vulnerabdi!Y of the Un1ted States 10

, ~~~le.\utoffofmuchneeded
:;:.supphales. have ~ remarked
w~ . ve allowed oal ~ beco!fte
~OO,Ipai
mduslrial·SOC:lelY
gcr we per·
mentlhis r)lllte resow:cc 10 ~ such,
the longer we remam captive to
world events beyond our control.
d E~en though the last · t~o
ec~ es have .been repl~t~ wllh
remmde~ of dils vulnerability, we
as a natiOn nced,~t hopef_ully our
most rcccn~ ~xpcncncc w1th Sad...
~am Hussem .s a~:tcmpted annexa·
bon of Ku~a!t Will. fmally prompt
the Adm1Rutra~1on · an~ lhe
~ongre" 10 get ~us on t1iis subJOCt I personally VICW the need for
a comprehensive, P\'actical and

=::;::

I

.

coherent national energy ~licy as
.
one of our country's most pressing · enhancing the production of the
priorities. In recognition of the existing energyu mix tlian 10 pointmounting call to get on with the ing us. in a new clirection that
. task at hand, the Administration in would ~esult In gre•tly in,crcased
mid-FellruatY .unveiled its national energy ~ndependenc.e.
.
energy strategy. While there were
~ens~g.the ~~~warm recepnon
manf laudable aspects 10 the Presi· the Admm1stranon s proposal was
dent s overall proposal, the consen· receiving on the Hill from memsus· reaction seems to have been · bers of the Majority Party, and
one of unfulfilled expectations.
appreciative of the difficulty it
Most energy analysts had would encounter in gaining serious
assumed this long awaited policy committee consideration, a number
proposal would conlain a series of of members o.f the President' s
new and creative initiatives, initia- p:~~· myself mcluded, saw the
' lives that would strongly empha- n
10 come· up with a completsize our nation's need 10 conserve mentary package that would
Oilll!ld 10 develoP. alternative ener- . expand on the President's proposal.
gy sources. Wh1le it did contain
Alling with my colleagues on
some provisions to address the lhe House MinOI:i!Y.Lea!!er's Eoer·
aforementioned concerns, in gener- gy Task Force, I .JQined m cospon..
a!, the proposal was geared more to soring a bill which we hope, along

Con. Clarence Miller

..

·Nativel~nds

.

,

,

with ·the Ptcsident's proposal 1·u
serve as a blue nnt for A :OV
· energysecurityfnthe2lstC:'u:'·
Titled. the ''Comprehensive Energy
Policy Act of 1991," the biD's key '
· features would prqvide greater
electricity conservation and cfficiency through innovative financial
.incentives and regulatory chang
. It's hard to ~Y what ·the fu~
holds for !his legislation but 11 the
very least it should sen:e 10 ·urn
start the consideration
he!
in ConRtess. No lon11:cr can critics
stand and wallow that no one is •
ing to do something about lhe pro~
lem. Two constructive, cilmprcbensive proposals are on the table and
it !s time for the Majority Leader·
shap of the HouSil'and Senate 10 put •
up or shut up.

proccJ

7

. .

remain in f~deral hands .
b.urea~cratic.

inadeq~at~

Robert Walters

WAIMEA, Hawaii (NEA) • A was passed, was excluded from a
inertia,
1921 federal law specifies that distribution plan that generally fmancu~g . discrepancies in land
thous8nds of acres of land here are applied only to rocky, steep and mventones, unlawful conveyances
Finaliy1 ~ fllltives have comto be used as homesteads for native parched terrain.
of land 10 ineligible recipients and pounded tnell'
problenls by squab:
Hawaii~. ~ut 70 years later, the
Moreover, the few prime tracts countless other problems. . ·,
bling amorig themselves over eligiproperty IS mstead being rented 10 available generally have been withThe natives Who are awarded bility to be awarded homestead
one of of the nation's llugest com- held from the natives. On the island leases, Dlllny of them poor often propeny under a provision of e law
mercia! cattle ranches at an absurd- of Kauai, for example, one of the are rejec~d when theY, apply for that requires recipients 10 have at
ly low rate.·
state 's leading commerical sugar comm~11lloans 10 finance con- least 50 percent native blood.
A similarly scandalous situation ·' companies leases 14,558 acres of struciiOIJ of homes ·OR the tracts
Since 192I,,the nunlbcr of peo-·
exists throughow Hawaii, as thou- homestead·lanll for only about because ihey are rentera raiher than pie who meet that standard has
sands of descendants of~ Polyne- · $3.80 per acre per year.
ownc:rs of the land and thus cannot ~windled, primarily because of
sians who settled the isl8nds cenHere on the "Big Island" of · use ll for collateral: They are . mtermarriage. A referendum on ·
turies ago maintain a frustrating Hawaii, the Palter Ranch • a vast r~q.a~;ired , ~owever, to pay pro- changeing the definition ended
decades-long wait· for access to operation with 60,000 head of cat- hlblbvely high real estate taxes.
inconclusively last year.
their land. Although it has been tie • pays ·the same low rental fee
officially designated as 'rightfully for 32,845 acres of homestead land ..
belonging 10 them, it remains under A company with coimections 10 an ·
the control of others who have no influential politician on the island
legitimate claim 10 iL
of Maui leases 15,620 acres of
As partial compensation 10 the homestead land there at a similar
natives for this ~ountry's 1898 rate. ·
By llnlted Press International
annexation of their islands as a ter·
There has been no lack of hand.
.
TheToday is 'f!lursclav, March. 28, the 87th day of 1991 with 278 10 'ollo.w
ritory, the Hawaiian Homes Com· wringing about the situation. A
mission Act of 1921 IICt aside more re~
. issued
. 'in.
·
1938 by con.~PrM.•'
· •U
• 11 phase: .
"
·
or·;:•moon IS wax'mg, movmg to wan1 Its
The mD~f!ing stars au:e Venus, Man and Saturn.
than 200 ,000 acres of Iand as Jom! Commnt~ on Haw~n. for
homestead lots .to be leased to ~xample, descnlle!l the nauves as
The evenmg stars: are Mercury 111d Jupiter.
.
nati~hoforu"~ '~Mfa:.V req'uii'CS
· . that tha ~~ pcop~ m !he country of . Those lxxn on thiS date are under the sign of Aries They include Rus-·
., the Ia
ciT .ore.lthcra.
Sl8ll author Maxim GOrky in 1868' bandleader Paul Wt.·
· 1891
each IIICt 11 10 be renled at the rate
lri. I ~82, the Interior Depart· brewers frederick Pabst in 1836 and August AnheuSer B:hfr 1899;
of $1 per year, they ranae in size m~t s l."spec!O' general, produced ' Edmund Muskie, the 1968 Democratic vice-presidential
n 10
.;
from OOUIIC loll U 1111111 II qaar· a ..lsterJlll cntique of die Slltutc's . 1914 (&amp;J0'71}; Zbianlcw Brzezin.!ti Caner adm' ·
· C8':'
'
ter of an acre to paroels of ~~ew:ral non-enforccmcnL In 1983, a joint rity advaser, in 19211 (uc 63); and ~tors Dirk~': ~~tonal( sccu
•
hu~ acres auppoiedly iuitable fcderal-sta~ wk force concluded !ind Ken Howard in 1944 (age 47). .
...._...,
aac 70)
to grow crops or provide pasture that·"there 11 . . ~t need and a
for livestock
Clear responsibility for officials at
On this date m history:
But virtually all of Hawaii's both levels f!C government to "ful,
In .1797, Nathaniel Briggs was awarded a patent for the flfSt wash'
choice agricultural land, held by fill the pronuses" of the law.
machine. '
·
·
mg
~ealthy owners of sugar and
But the · program remains
In 1939, Madrid swtellllcred 10 the nationalist forces of G
.
'
pmeapplc plantations when the law stymied by political pressure . Fnmcisco FrancO in the Spanish Civil war. ·
'
eneraiiSsimo ·
.
'
"
v

f

a

•

~··It --.-~·· &gt;.~. •
1M t by Mf:A Inc

..

'.

'

'

• .'

.

•

•

Today hi history

THE WORSE \T

runs and help the Minnesota Twins RBI in his last eight at-bats.
tu a 10-4 triumph over the PhiladelShalle Mack added a solo homer
phia Phillics at•Fort Myers, Fla., furtheTwinsandGeneLarnnaoo
Davis has four home runs, a double AI Newman .each had two RBI.
and a single and has collec~ nine Dickie Thon went 3 for 4 with
three RBI for the Phillies.
In other exhibition games:
At West Palm Beach, Fla.,
Charlie Leibrandt combined with
two olhers on a two-hit shuiOut in
the Atlanta Braves' 2-0 victory
·. The Southeastern Ohio Athletic
crew.
.
•
over the New York Yankees.
League's girls' squad ballooned its
Auflick led all scorers with 16 Leibnmdt went six innings, allowwin SII'C8k of victories 10 four over points and had 15 rebounds, and ing both hits. Andres Thomas and
tbe Tri-Valley Conference with a Boho, WQISOII and Cozart invested Gre~ Olson delivered two-olll, run74-50 win Tuesday night in the · in the victory with contributions of sconng singles off loser Lee Guet·
fjrstgameofthe SEOAL-TVC bas· 15, 15 and 14 pOints, respectively. ~an in !he seventh inning. '
kctl!all doubleheader at Alexander For the SEOAL, Warren Local's
AI Kissimmee, Fla., Luis Gon·
Higb'School: ,
Brian Bowc scored 112 10 lead his zalez. lined a single to center off
Jackson's Tiffany Reasor, who team. Gallia Academy's Rob Skid·. Ken Hill to score Gerald Young
l!!d the way for the SEOAL and more .chipped in with eight points from second with llie winning run
ruled the, court with 25 points, was and nme rebounds, and fellow Blue in 'the ninth inning 10 lift the HousNortb Dlv. 3 &amp; 4
Alison Dillon, Mansfield St.
clo§ely foUowed by Athens front· Devil retirees Chad.NeaJ.and 'Josh 10n Astros to a 2-1 triump~ over
liner Becky Sostarich, who had 24. Williams had seven points each.
the St. Louis Cardinals. Ken Peter's; Lisa First, Doylestown
On the 1"\'C side, Federal HockTVC (110) • Auflick (Trimble) Caminiti went 3 for 4 for Houston. Chippewa; Jackie Hannon,
infs Stacie Glass led with 19
8..(}-0-16; Bobo (F.H.) 3-3-0.15; Pete Harnisch starsed for the Astros McDonald; Nicole Like, Holgate;
pomts, and Meigs Marauders JcnWatson (F.H.) '7..()..1=1S; cozan 4- and held the Cardinals scoreless Doric Johnson, £adiz; Jenny
ilifcr Taylor and Missy Nelson . 2-0•14; Lackey (Wellston) 3-1- over five innings. Jose DeLeon Smith, Avon; Cliris Porath,
chipped In with nine and two 0=9; Johnson (Alexander) 1·2-0=8; ~~wed a run on five hits over five Gilmour Academy ; Lynn Bihn,
Fon Recovery; Shelly Allen, East
points,1especlivcly.
Potts (Wcllaton) 1-1-2-7; Burke mrungs for the Cards.
Quartet totals
,
(Alexander) 2,0-2=6; Shuford
At Winter Hav~n , Fla., Jack Canton; Vicky Maltl, Collins West·
SEOAL '· · · ,18 1'5 16.. · 15•74--•+{F-.H:)~Relct-f\'~~-.l .for 3 w1th a .home run em Reserve: · ·~
TVC
9 IS 8 , Illa50
1-1-0=5; Speakman (ViniOn Co.) · and three RBI to l!ft the Boston
SoUtil Dlv. 3 &amp; 4
Tara &lt;;:osby, Springfield Ken !On
' SEOAL (74) ·Reasor (Jackson) 2-0-1=5: Withem (N-Y) 2.:0-0~. R~ ~ox. 10 a 9,-4 tnumph over the
7-2·5=25: Sostarich (Athens) 7-0· TOTALS. 37-10-6=110 ·
C1qcmn.ati Reds. Clark and Ellis Ridge: Jennifer. Brigner, Bloom10=24; Skinner (Athens) 2..()..9=13;
Field aoals. 47·99
Buries hat bac~-to·b.ack homers off ,
Hill (Marietta) 2-0·2=6: Conn,er
Tbree·polnters .J()..25
:ro!D Bro.wm~g 111 the four.th
--iE~~~ ~o~-:~0-4a~=I4b·' M~cA:J:Ilisser
(LoFree
tllnnn.
mrung. LwsinQwnones
• 11:2·
Rebounds
• 656-10
Cincil)nati
the ninth. homered for
-~ -~Turnovers. 14
-~-:--At-vero~Beach ;-Fla:; €raig~Wor~ - - - - . SEOAL (77) • Bowe (Warren thington, Randy Milligan and Mike
•
Field loals -20-44
Local)
5-0-2=12·
Bailey
(Athens)
Devereaux
each
hit
three-run
•
'
Tbree·polnters • 2-4
5-0-0=10:
Shuttleworth
(Logan)
3homers~
power
~
21-hit
auack
as
.
Free throws • 32-43
1-0=9; McKenna (Marietta} 1-2· the Balumore Onoles hammered
· Rebounds • 35
0:8;
Skidmore (Gallia Academy)
Conlinued on page 4
Turnovers • 16
TVC (50) • Glass (Federal 4-0..0=8; Unger (Logan) 4'0-0:8;
Hocking) '3-2· 7= 19; T11ylor Neal (GA&gt; 3..()..1=7; williams &lt;GA&gt;
·
I
(Melli) 3·1·0=9; Canter (Well- · 1-1·2.=7: Bell (Logan) 2-0-0=4;
Jollick
(Athens)
2-0-0=4.
TOIn
lhe
recent
siOry about Aaron
ston) 3-0~6; Runyon (Alexander)
TALS
•
304-5=77
·
Sheets
advancing
to the state
2-0-0=4; Pancake (NelsonvillegOals
•
34~104
wrestling
tournament
it was ncited
Field
Yorlc) 1..()..1•3; Peart (Trimble) 0Three-pointers
·4-14
that
Gary
N&amp;kamoto
was the last
I-0=3; Maxwell (F.H.) 1-0-0•2;
Free
throws·
5-10
Marauder
wrestler
to
advanced to ·
McDonald (N· Y) I-0-0=2; Nelson
Rebounds·
56
the
state
tournament.
But Mike
(Meigs) 1-0-0=2. TOTALS • 154Turnovers
•
20
Willford
was
!he
Marauder
wrestler
8=50
Halrtlme
score
•
·TVC
52,
to
advance
to
the
state
10urriamen1
Field aoaJs • 19-59
SEOAL 36
when he did so in 1984.
Tbree-pplnten • 4-11
Fret throws· 8-14
Qebounds ·'!I
Turnovers • 23

SEOAL .girls win 74-50;

,•

•

i'trst balf of Wedaellday al&amp;bt'a NIT cbamplonslllp pme apiDst Stanford, wblcb tbe Cardl·
nal won 78·72. (UPI)

iReds lose; Twins rout Phillies

'

WASHINGTON (UPI)- Using drugs 10 prolong.tbe lives of people
o,yith ~e AIDS virus could .inCrease .AlDS deaths overall by
:· :=~~:me they can spread the deadly VllUS, a controversial study
·'
.
y.
..: . The British researchers wh,o conducted the study Stressed their inteR·
:uon was not 10 suggcstlrealliiCIIt should be withheld bw 10 underscore the
• need 10 counsel those ge~g therapy 10 JllliCUCC "safe sex" 10 help slelll
• the spread of die virus.
: "lt is unethical· 10 tefuse tteatmcntiO individuals, given that AIDS is
: lethal,' ' W1'0IC Roy Anderson and his colleagues at the University of Lon·
· ;don in the pm~ti~ scimtifJC journal Nalllre.
·
; ·
: • . "By emphasizing dlc ·poaable ~ects of (treatiog .AIDS patients), we
,llope 10 have drawn further aaennon 10 the need 10 unprove colinseling
· )limed at ~ucing high-risk behaviors,'' the resean:hers wrote. ·
' · . But ~ J'CPO!l raised co~ that the anal~is cOuld contribute 10 dis. ,cnnuJlllllon agamst AIDS paliCnts and undennme support for funding for
. treatmcnL
·
"If there is any implil;ation that people (AIDS patients) are ~nsi­
ble then the chance for further discrintination beComes very real, • said
Dr. Mervyn Silverman, president of the American Foundation for AIDS
Research in New Yort.
~ "My ex~ Ill!~~ experien~ of mos(of my colleagues is people
are very res)lOIISible, Silverman S81d. "I think 10 assume that just by
virtue of keeping people alive you will propagate the virus and therefore it
would be beaer not 10 keep people alive wOuld be very cynical.' •
Dr. Sten Vcrmund of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious
Diseases said the study was based on the assumption that AIDS drugs do
not reduce infectiousness.
·
·
. "The ~ line is the.eMire model is bused on a spurious assiunpbon. And that IS an assum~ thallrealment has no impact on infectiousness. I 'think that's improliable," he said.
"Where I object is the fairly extreme statement - I'm reading
between' the.lines·here - of saying treatment the individual is cxacerbali~g ~ problem for the commooity," said Vermund, an AIDS epi. dcnuologlSL .
.
· "There are plenty of peOple who would like 10 cw AIDS ueaunent ,
dollars and here's a Justification 10 do that with quasi-scientific cia•• " he
•581'd •
.
• Dr. June Osborn, chainnan of the National Commmisslon on AIDS
. -said she was conccmed the study would be intaprc~Cd with a "haterui
· twist, '' but she was confident the n:sean:hers intended ool)' 10 underscore
: the importance of counseling.
. Andel:son and his colleagues conducted a mathCmatical analysis in
.:wh~ch th~y calculated the number of AIDS cases that could occur if
;panents lives WCI'C prolonged. with A:z:r, the only drug approved 10 -··
:AIDS in the Uniled Salles.
.
u""'
: "Our analySe&amp; 111gges1 that antiviral therapy, allhough helping the indi&gt;vidual (by delayinJ the onset of AIDS) can under certain circumstances
: harm the commoouy (increasing the overall dealb rate from AIDS as a
· result of the additional infections produced by the lengthened incubulion
period)," the wrote.
. .
'
.
· "The
is a perverse increase in the death rate fiom AIDS " they

d
. idate

' ' ~

Ammann IICORd 22 poiiiiiiO belp 1985.
•
second half, Ammann followed by
SWord ClpiUre !be cllamDiouhip · Keefe, who ICOI'CCI 24 poinll in canning a three-pointer and Vlahov
of the NaliOIIIllnvilllion 'roatlll· Stanford's semifinal victory over hit'a pair of free throws 10 give the
ment Wedneaday night 'wftb a 78- Massachusetts, was named the Cardinal a 67-60 lead with 3:12 10
72 victory over Oldlhoma, which tournament's most valuable player.
go.
·
played the entire IICCODd balf withBrent Price paced the Sooners
Sallier's three-point play closed
out Coach Billy Tubbs.
.
with 26 points and Bryan Salller it 10 67-63 but the Sooners misfired
The Cardinll, 20-13, survived a added 24. In the Sool•n'ICIIIifinal . 011 their next few possession and
13-0 run by the Soonera to end the win over Colorado, Price scored were forced 10 foul. The C&amp;rdinal
fii'SI half and c~ tbe school's {'ust8 pOints and Sail~ went-- made I 1 of 16 free throws i.n the
fii'SI posiiiCUOn utle since the 1942 css. 1bc Sooncn fin1sbed the lei· · final,2:3410 seal the vic10ry . .
Stanford team won !be NCAA tide. 50!1
IS. .
.
.
Oklahoma took its largest lead
;Andrew Vlabov acored 14
. Earlier, Shawl Villdivcr ICOI'CCI at46-37 with 17:50 10 play before
pomts and Deahon WiiiJate and 34 points and Colorado captuml Slanford rallied with a 20-8 run
John Patrick added 13 poillll and · third p~ in the ~t with a capped by a Wingate basket 10 IBkC
Adam Keefe 12 for Stanford 98-91 v1c10ry over Manu- a 57-54 lead with 9:14 remaining.
which became the second
achiiiiCits.
Wingate, held 10 one point in the
10 Conference team 10 win.an NIT
With the. score tied at 60-60. farst half, scOred 9 points during the
8
• includ• ,r ' A. T
The fll'SI half ended with Oklagr.r~,s .J.l Ort. • OUt .
homa leading 39-35 and Tubbs
~'
' confined 10 the locker room.
. COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Carroll; Mellaa Top,laa, Proe·
With the score tied 26-26,
JackSO!J hardwood ace Tiftany . torvllle Flirlaad; Tric:ia Collins, 'Tubb$ was assessed a technical
Reasor IS one of~ players from Carlisle; Myra Bcardaley, Colum· foul by referee Mickey Crowley for
~outheastem Ohio IICiected 10 play · bus Ready;
April Smith, !rguing two non-calls and a foul
·~ ~e 11th annual state all-star Sarahsville Shenandoah; J•llt called underneath wlien Terry
g~rls basketball games, Saturdar, Falrdllld, Rlc:b•OIId Dale ScMidl· Evans fouled Vlahov's lay-u_p
Aprill3 at Ohio SIIIC University s . easteri; Holly Porter, Wyomina; attempt After Tubbs continued hiS
SL John An:na. .
Anna Barrinaton, Wonhinaton disagreemenL he was slaDDCd with
Hen: are the rostm.
Christian; ICriatina ~ Helth.
a second technical by referee Pete:
Nortll Dlv. 1 &amp; 2
·
Pavia and ejected.
Heather Dennis, Shelby; Vicki
Witllllan, Can10n Central Catholic;
Chris Moschella, Boardman; Lisa
Kovack, ·Sylvania Southview;
Christa Wells, Millcnbutg West
Holmes; Vonda Ware, Garfield
Heights Trinity; Shari Delancy,
Chagrin Falls ~ens10n; Kyle. Lath.·
well, Lorain Senior; Allyson Creel,
Findlay; Keni ReeveS, Cuyahoga
Falls.
South Dlv.1 "'2
Sarah Grou, ;;::, City Tippeca·
noc; Michelle S
Pickrlinpln;
Tllrany R - , ~; l..atalha
GlaniOn, Daycon Dunbar; Valeric
. Wells, Columbus Northland; Debbie Blazek, Bellaire; Braaf!7 Col·
burn, Waverly; Monica N.eman,
Youngstown Ursuline; Carrie
EIIIII'IOn
Syl•aiia
Gel••• . Fulial
Garinger, Beavercreek; Alysiah
Samsung · Syn.honi( Shintom
7MafiiiCIIOX
·
· Bond, Reynoldsburg.

»

s

: Appreciates support for recent event

Sentlnei-Page-3

The

Ohio

)

Sound.lign
Zenith

Multi TeCh
Scott

KTY
!'hilco

GE
. RCA

.WE IEPlll ALL MAKES

3~~~~~J:f~oS~o~T!~"2·3524

l'S

ADULT

Correct·on

SATURDAY, MARCH 30---8:00 A.M.
96 Plastic Eggs Will Be Placed·
Throughout. The Store With Cash
Discounts'or Prizes in Each Egg!

. TVC 110, SEOAL 77
On the strength of the offense of
Trimble's Scott Auflick and Federal Hocking's Tracy Bobo, Nat Wat·
son and Mickey Cozart, the TVC
boys lOOk the nighlca(l with a 33P9int knockout of the SEOAL

DIS~OUNTS

WILL BE FROM 5°/o TO 100°/o.
YOU WILL GET THE DISCOUNT OFF
YOUR PURCHASE.

The Daily Sentinel
(V8P811 . . . )
.t. lllvlo... of lltolll-la, be.
Publllhed every afternoon, Monday
lhrwlll&gt; Frl&lt;lay, Ill Court Sl., Po·
moroy, Olllo. by lhe Ohio Valley PuiJ.
Ilobbltr CompiUiy/Mul!lmodla, Inc.,
. Pomeray, Ohio tOO, Pb. !192·21:16. Second class pootqe paid at Pomeray,

~TIRES ARE OUR BUSINESS
Quality Service Before, During aftd After
the Sale.

.

Member; United Pmt International,
Inland Dally Prea Auoctatlon and the
Oldo Newspaper AnorlatiOn. National

Advertlalna Representative, Branham

POSTMASTER: Send acldr... ch._
to '11M! Dally Senllllel, Ill ~ Sl.,
POmeroy, 0111o e7!t.

·(The 100°/o Egg Will Receive FlEE Groceries!:)
•

Please Bring UNOPENED Egg to the
Cashier. The .cashier MUST open the
egg to validate the discount or
present the prize.

S1600

8UM(aiPftON IU'I'ICI

., Curt•••--

Price GoH tiii'U 416191

0... Weel&lt; ................................... -1.60
0... Moollt .... .............................16.115
0... Year ................................. I8UO
8SNCII.B OOPY

ONE EGG PER FAMILY -All Eggs in Plain View.
Our Easter Egg Hunt will start at I A.M. and will continue
until all eggs are found.

POMEROY
.
HOME
AND AUTO
600 EAST ·IWII

PIIICII

!laDy ................................... 25 Coots

Sublcrlbers Dot destr1118 to pay lllecsr·
may nmtl In advance cll....,t lo
The Dally Setltlltol 01113, lor 12 manlh
bull. CJ'Idlt will ·be liveD canlll' Neb
~

.

No oullocrlptlotll by maD pennHted In

.

'

TIRE ROTATION BALANCE 4 TilES
INSPECT BRAKES

Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue.
Now York, N..,. Yorll: 10017.

~.

.

, FAOOIY AUTHoiJzED SERVICE

0

Olllo.

f:~~~.::mters~d

(ONE EGG PER ORDER EXCLUDING TOBACCO PRODUCTS.I

-·I

...................................... Ia

avallablt.

.llol._lltellalpi:MIQ
13 Weelrl ................................ .. S21.1lt

....-

STORE HOURS
Mond1y thru Sun•v I AM-10 PM
2tiHCOND ST .
POMEROY. OH.

........ .................................. 1&amp;3.18

aw-. ..................................-..7t

-·llllpOoltiQ
IIW-.................................. Q.to

.............
........................... .
......................................
'·

,,

.

'

~

' • ..

~'

~

t

I

"

.~ .

'

, ...

.,

~...

f

...

••

.

.

,

.._

.I

. ... "

.'

,,

�•

Thursday, March 28, 1981.

•

Reds... __.:::eoa=tta=•=.::.l'rolll:::.::;,..:::.:.3_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
the l..os Angeles Dodgers 17 ·9.
WorthingtOn went 3 for 4 with four .
RBI and DevereaiQ scored three
times. Cal Rip.ken went 3 for 3 with
two RBI for Ballimore. Eddie Mur·
ray bad a three-run holDer and Gary
Carter and Dave Hansen each·
added two-run shots to power the
Dodgers.
.
At Lakeland, Fla., Jeff Kent sin~led in Jerry Schunk from second
m the top of the 13th to give the
Toronto Blue Jays an 8-7 victory
over the Detroit Tigers. Schunk bad
led off the inning with a double.
Rob Ducey had 8 triple, a homer
and two runs scored for the Blue

Jays. Lou Whitaker tripled and two- run rally in the ninth inning
scored and Tony Phillips tcored and give the Cleveland Indians aStwice and drove in a run for the 4 vic~ over the Seatde Mariam.
Tiaeu. Mickey Teuleton added 8 The Indians lied the score 4-4 when
two-nm homer for DelroiL
Seattle pitcher Keith Comstock
At Chandler, Ariz., Franklin fielded a billll with runnera on first
Stubbs singled to cenler in the bot· and second, and threw the ball pes~
tom of the sixth inning to allow the third for an error allowing Jeff
Milwaukee Brewers to nip the Manto to score. Brook Jacoby~~
Oakland Athletics 1-0 in a game 1 for 3 with two RBI for the b\dicalled with one out in the bottom of , ans. Dennis Hood and Tracy Jones
the sixth du&amp; to rain. Robin Yount each had two hits for Seatde.
led de the sixth with a double and
The game between the San
scored Oil Stubbs' single in the bot~ Francisco Giants and San Diego
tom or the·sixth.
Padres in Yuma, Ariz., w.as can·
At Tucson, Ariz., Wayne Kirby celed due to rain.
singled· in Felix Fermin to cap a

•

i'Y .Th~ ·Bend

-.

•

MCCL mee#ng is held

I

'··----.-.-10-..,..,.....
11 ,_.,tnnllllwlltwoOIIIIIIIIIIUtiM
II lllllltllelofllll. ......... . . _

·'

pumars,.· Rodman push Pistons
to 102-93
win
over
Pacers·
Prtllliaeeludonat

=

• The Detroit forward had 15
points in the second half • the Pistoni rallied from a I 0-point half·
Qme deficit to post back-to-blck
..Jctories for the first time since
~b. 18 and 20.
~~ "You seldom see me take the
b)ll to the hoop, especially in
crunch time, but toniahc was my
night," said Rodman, ·who is Jess
fdared for his offensi~ dna! (8.4
polnl5 per game) tlw1 his powess ·
011 the boards (12.4 rebounds per
outing).
,: Rodman started the Pistons •
5Pun with a drive to tie the score
16-76 with 8: 121eft. He was fouled
and missed the free lbrow, but
glabbed his own ld!ound lmd converted a tbree-poinl play.:J~!
Deaoit ahead 79-76. NIB
followed with three Miaht • • ef!
and Joe Dumars capped the spart
with a baseline jumper with S:OIJ
left to put Delroit ahead 89·76.
. "You can't comp~ Rodman
with anybody in lho llllgue because
there isn't .onyb!Jdy who plays like
.that," Pistons reserve SCott Hastings said. ~ •you really respect him
when you sec how he hsrd he plays
every day in practice. He's practices like he ~ys in pmea."
Indiana head coach Bob Hill
hinted lhit a rule change miahl be
the only way to defend against
Rodman.
r
"Maybe if they let us play six
guys we could keep him off the
boards," Hill said. "He's just an '
incredible adllele."
Dumara led the Pistons with 23
points, Aguirre finished with 17
and James Edwards added 13.
Chuck Person led the Pacera with
18 points, Detlef Schrempf had 17
and Reuie Miller fmilhed with 16.
In Olher NBA actioll Wednesday
niaht. the L.A. Oippcn surprised
Ul8h 9S-89, Orlando kljiped Dallas
97-85 and Ponland beat Seattle

~~~ 'xl'
4

A
at
side Baptist Cbun:h recendy
a Gospel
Coucerl al the Weslfall High School in ML Ster·
Uag. Featured singers were The Perry's, lbe
Mc'Kamey's, The Kingsmen, an!l The Cru. saders. Pictured are those &amp;~lending, 1-r, front
Valorle Clonch, Kay WiUett · ~~nd ~ngie Willett. .

19.50

TREATED PLYWOOD

1n the NBA Wednesday night,

: By United
• The type or zone that Delroit'i
l'iennil Rodman·pla)'Cdln Wednea~ niaht is not illeplln the NJA,
•,lthoufh the Pacers probably
Wished at so.
·: •'I - in a zone IDlllJhl," Rodman Slid. "I like thlt because
When I'm in one or thcle zones I
c&amp;ln '!bow who I am. I'm not anybody, I just play hasJcetball."
· Rodman put fortb an other·
worldly perfonnance to pther 19
PQints and '19 ~bounds and score
t~e first five points in a IS-O
fourth-qUIII'tCI" burst that carrlecl the
to, a 102-93 victory over

4otp wltllll dot collolor

--~-'"'"· ••
"""'""
, •• Wit~ ,... "'
torflct.
. 1111•11
retlllol dtCQ.
loo..h 4 oldto.

•

·~

eyes 011 the loose ball In .the nrst qu·a rter of
Wedaesday nlallt's NBA game In Los ADieles,
which lhe Cllppera won 95-89. (UPI) •

•• -

scored 12 of his 29 po'ints !n !he ' Magic to their fourth straipt victof~ Q1!8fiCI' to heiJ! the Clippers ry. Orf!lndo pulled even with the
· w1~ the1r f~ ~tralght p~e - 1 MaveriCks in the Midwest Division
· thetr lonaest WIIIIUIII.at .m five 'standings by running its record
years. ~aaU.WOf!C poured in a sea- over Dallas ,this season to 4-1. The
son- hagb 41 poaats, but the Jazz Mavericks lost for the fourth consaw. tbclr li~e-aame. winning ~ secutive game, allowing a 16-point
el!'i.~ th~lr fead In the Midwest lead in the second C~,uarter to slip
· DivtSion sliced to a half-pme over away while scoring JUSt 34 points"
San Antonio. Charles Smith added Ia the second half
·
· 22 points for Los Anaeles, which
Trail Blazers iil, SuperSonics
oas not won four in a row since
107
Mardi 28-April2,1986.
At Tacoma, Wash. ,. Clyde
Maalc 97, Mavericks 85
Drexler scorect 26 pc!ints .u1 Terry .
. . At Dallas! Jeny , l!teyno.lds Pa1er sank ~e-winning basseored II straight Orlsnclo poants · ket as the ~I Blazers rallied from
in the fo~ quarter to bqOit .the : a 24- point deliciL ·

'PRING VAl i!" CINEMA
446 4]11

$3 .00 ,

Si .~

ll.IRGAIN 14ATINEES S~TURlloiY &amp; SUNDAY
BARGAIN NIGHT TUESM't'

'

Tnt~tted

to re1l1t rot and' ·
decay. Manyuaeaaround
the home and farm.

2.97

LANDSCAPE nM.RS

Full B" length. Tr..tad to' re-

el8t rot .. d da011y. We elao

atock gllvllnlrad aplkH In
1O".and 12"' lengtha.

BULK GARDEN
SEED ·
NOW IN STOCK

•'I• ._,.

.

o&lt;ucumbt"
•Ltttuct
' .

•Twftlps

. •WIIItt Corn
•Ttlow Corn
•

•WE ALSO STOCK
BULK GRASS SEEDS.

·s.99
'IIEATS 5,000
FT.
SQ.

lAWN FOOD

FortlfiH your lawn to bu lid
a ltroottll' root ayatem.

LAWN FOOD ·wlth
CWGUSS

11.99
'IIEATS

s.ooo SQ. FT.

CONliOL

O'DELL_ · _~C!.~
634 EAR MAIN
POIIEIOY, OHIO
992-5500

Willi hlndlo mountlld. flow conbal. 40 •. \..podly.
1U·H2

DROP SPREADER
Futuroo Mndle
oporatlon.

lrM

control, clog
433·BB4

LUMBER_·-We-make
keys
that work!

Mo~dey-Friday

.

SPREADER

7-5 :30
Saturday .8 -5

'

••

I

.•

.'

,0

Borrowihg money isn't·'r~ally a game ·.:. .but your perfect payment
record ~eserves more than a pat on the back. So Peoples Bank wants
to give you five. Five percent of your total interest amount back - in
cash -just for paying off your loan without missing a due date.

Take out a loan for a new or used car. Consolidate those holiday bills
into one easy payment. Or treat yourself to that big-screen 1V you've
been thinking about in time for Opening Day . .
To be eligible for the "Glmme Five" Loan Rebate, you must apply
.
before April 30, 1991.

I

Ann
Landers

•

• AlliN LANDERS
"'1989, Lo. A•,..t.O .

~ev. Allan Oggs. ~and
Husband's night was observed . Nancy Morris aive the devo- author of "You· Gotta~e the
with a potluck ilinner a the March tio.,s entitled, "A Wife Gives Want To" wiU be speakina at the
Middlepon Pentecostal Chun:h on
meeting or the Middlepon Cbilil 'lbanks."
.
Plans
were
finalized
for
tbe
Thuraday
at 7 p.m.
Conservation ~~u~ witli seven
SJW!ng
Conference
ami
the
canteen
·Rev
,
Oggs
has sll'ugaled with
guests auencllna: Harold ,Blsckston
for
the
American
Red
Cross
Bloodthe !7iPPlina disability Of cerebral
asked the arace.
· Linda Broderick, vice-preSldMt, . mobile. Both events will be held in palsey but has overcome those
.
.
stru gJes and learned to OVercome
conducted the meeting which April
Correspondence
was
receive.
d
all
negative attitudes about dissbili- '
opened with the Pledae of Allety.
from
Mrs
..
Daniel
Miller,
president
IIJIIICC and Mother's Prayer.
·of Ohio Child Conservation League
Rev. Clark Baker invites the
announcing the state conference in P!lblic to attend.
Canton at park Hotel in Belden Village on OcL II and 12. She urged
. aJf members to attend.
· . Chesler Tow,nship will be clean· . , In April Rosa lee Story will
1ng cemetery gronds after Apil 10 sjleak 011 the changes in sc1Jool in,
.
The Hysell Run Holiness
and th95e wanting to save flowers the past 30 yeara.
Guests
.
attending
were
Jeff
Church
will be having a Sunrise
an&lt;t other items should remove Darst, Roben Mash, Dale Colburn, and Communion
Service at 6 Lm.
them by April 10: The trustees
Sam
Scott,
Harold
Black'stone,
on
Easter
Sunday.
Pastor Bob Manrequest tltat in the future flowers
· ley invites the public.
"
that can be hung on the monument . RetJeCc• 5cqtt and.Ken ~, be purchased so that mowing may
be done more effJCienUy.
.

Sunrise service set

PHARMACY

Gress birth

.TOPICS

Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Gress.
Columbus, announce the birth or a
Slfn, Jonathan Tyler on March 19 at
Riverside Hospital.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mra. Walter Roush, Syracuse.
Paternal 2tandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Ricfuud Gress, Middleport, . .
. , M~. Dorothy RoUer, Micldle- .
port, IS paternal great granc!mother.
Ther~ are two other children,
Benjamin, age four, and Joseph,
age two.

Sp!ce.•. like cinnamon and clovaa may increaae the affect of lnauhn rn the body and may lower hallrt di•••• rlak, new I'IHIIrch ,
from the USDA In BaluvHia, Maryland. IUtllleoll. In a te.-tuba.
fooda with thaae 1plcaa 1eem to triple the ho""one•1 ability to
metabolize glucoH.

Auxiliary
" has. .
rece.nt meetm'g

****
Even Infanta may have migraine
haadachH. qy reoaarchen at
the Arkin••• Children'• Hoopltel in Little Rock. Thoae with paranll811d alblinga with migraine are moat likely to get them. The
rnott MVere aymptoma
to raapond to entldepreuanta and
antlhlatamlnes. ,
·

I&gt;ear Ann Landers: I love my than yOilr husband's, but I can !ell
Timt"A S!fndiftll"' 111K1
husband but we have a problem that you that twice a year for a man who
c ...... ora synctlt!• ..
is destroying our I'RIITiase. We've is 34 is way below the n~tional
been married six years and have two average.
young children. I'm 28, and he's 34.
You are not going to resolve this
Ann, my life was in that purse-He never was overly interested , in problem without ,outside . help. H my other keys. driver's license. credit
sex but it's dwindling down to either of you 'has .heallh insurance t:a{ds, money and valuable personal
almost nothing. I Used to think once you may be able to use it to,pay for papers, as well as dozens of "liltle
a month was infrequent -- now it's · several therapy sessions. Also, a things."
-· twice a year and I'm becoming psychiatrist isn't necessary. A
I couldn't decide whetlieror not I , ,The Man:h meetilijl of the Vet·
deeply depressed. My·self-esteem is well-trained counselor can do the should tum around and drive five erans Mem~ Hospital Auxiliary
· . zero minus 10..
·
joh. ·
•hours (two and a half each way)to was opened by Jessie White, prcsiI'm pretty sure he . isn't. fooling
1 urge you to inake this invest- get, my purse, . or trust tho mote\ dent, With pra&gt;:er by Grace Warner.
around. He works very hard and menL Save on something else. This manager to tetum ·il I bet on trust. . A thank-you note was read from
I lcnow where he is at atJ times. problm.' must be resolved or you Since I didn't even have 2~ cents for Scott Lucas, hospital adnlinisaator,
And there is no chance that he is are gmng to become increasingly ~ a phone ~· tt was late m the day for the hospital equipmenL
gay.
depress¢ and the marriage will before I ~ved ~~?me and could call
Plans for the Good Friday 'tea, .
disintegrate.
For
more
information
and
gtve
mstrucnons
for
retuml!lg
which
will be held in th'e lobby
We are great friends and I lcnow
from II a.m. to 4 p.m. for all visihe loves me, but I feel rejected and and reft:n'als, cOntact the American the purse.
I was wondering if I would ever tors and employees were completinadequate and have no confidence ASSociation or Sex EdiiCaii:Xs. Cooni9 myJCif. When I get frustrated I selors and Theripists, 43S N. Michi· see my purse again, when sure ed. An egg hunt is planned for the
spy terrible things 10 him and then I gan Ave., Suite 1717. Chicago, Ill. ~nough, three days later it arrived extended care residents on Friday
·
.
with everything in it. 1 want to · aftemoon.
regret it He say~ Tm obsessed with 60611.
Deal'
Ann
"
Landers:
···Last
'
publicly
thank 'the staff at Conley
New ·song books were ordered
Sff&lt;,"like the rest or America..
October,
while
traveling
alone
from
Inn
in
MarS.
Ji'
a
•••
A,
GRATEFUL
for
.the sing-along conducted by the
I hear abo!)t men _who complain
'nt'a, 1 stopped TRAVELER, OAKTON, VA.
auxiliary for. the residents . of
that their wives are ·cold potatoes Chicago· 10 ·Vl•gt
u
Extended Care. The sing-along is
but very seldom dO I hear a woman overnight at a motel on the western
_DEARTRA VELER: Those folks conducted on the seeond and fourth
. ~y this about her husband. Therapy ' edge ofPennsylylll!ia In the mom- willbcniOrC ,thanamplyrepaidwhen , Thursday afternoons ,of each
is over $100 a session in this ·area ing I continued nly trip eastwaro. they see your leuer.
··.
.
month. VtsiiOrs are welcome.
and we can't afford it Please, Ann~ After picking up a ton ticket, I drove
Lcntsome? Take charge of your . Sewing projects and also tlae
help us, -·NEE.DING MORE 1liAN without stopping through the moun- . life .and tlll'n it around. Write for nurses scholarahips were discussed.
A HUG IN CONN.
tains in the rain and fog until I came Annl.Anikrs' new booklet, "How tQ
The next meeting will be held
1
Make Eriends and Stop Being Ap.rii 16 at 1:30 p.m..at the
. hospi-.
DEAR CONN: Obviously your to my exiL
llhen diiiCOvered that I didn't have Lonely." Send a se/f-6ddressed, long, tal.
sex drive is a great deal saonger
my handbag and couldn't pay the flusiness-.!ize tnl'llope and a chuk
toll. The gentlemen at the ton gate or money order for $4.15 (this in-"
were courteous and helpful. .They dufles postage and handling) to:
The Lutheran and EpiscQpal called.and verified that, indeed, my _Fr~llds. c~o Ann Landers, P.O. Box
chun:hes of the Ohio River Valley purse had ·been found in the dining 11562. Chicago, 111.60611-0562. (In
wiD hgld an Easter Vigil at,8 p.m. .area of the mOtel.
·
CtJNJda, s•nd $5.05.)
Saturday at St. Paul Lutheran
Church on Route 33 in New
Haven, W.Va.
. Pomeroy
Area ministers panicipating in
the service are the Revs. Patricia
Hours:
and Richard Bonds-Krug of the
W£ NOW
11
am to Mid. Sun.-Thurs.
Mason·Jookson Lutheran Ministry;
HAVE
ll ~m to 1 am Fri. &amp; Sal.
the Rev. Roy C. Myers of Grace
DIET PEPSI
Episcopal Church, ~avenswoo'd,
W.Va., and Grace· Episcopal
LARGE
Church, Pomeroy; !!Dd the Rev.
Laura and Ronald Shreffl.er o( St.
Paul Lulheran Church, Pomeroy •.·
and Sl John Lutheran Chun:h, Pine
' .
Grove.
This ancient service will begin
Pickup
outside with the lighting or. a new
Only
fire, and all participants lighting
their candles from the new fire
before they enter the darkness of
•1111 Domino'• Pt01, Inc . Our e1rtwer1 c•ry .... ttwn taa,oo. o.llqry ••llmtt.d to
the sanewary. The Service will end
•_ ......,. .... ~- Vlllld ~ perttclpetiiiJ locMIOft ofllr . .... tu enciHcnDn.. wh••
.
• ........ PAfiTTIMI! ANO CAIIII!U O..aRTUMTlll NOWAYAILAILII
with a reaffll'inBtion of baptism. All
are invited' to the service.
.

BY YOUR

SWISHER LO.HS'E
PHARMACISTS
.
.

****

~aaearchert In hl$h·tech companlea .ln Silicone Valley are d•

11g~lng. new '"delivery'" IVItamo for ratinoic acid. the vitamin A ·
. darrvatrve 11id to amoqth away wrinkles. Mlcroaponga venlon
.alowa down the do1e toftninlmlze drynau, ltinglpg end ractn-.

***
Dental procedural thould be·*accompanied
routinely by antibiotic
coverage ~r people with abnormal heart valves or artificial joints.
the Amarrcan Journal of Medicine reports.
****

.

What'o new in medicine? You can depend on our know-how at ...
0

OPEN
EASTD

K.,nllh MoCulartiiL II.PII.
Chort• 111111&amp; II. Pll.
'
llonlld Heaolrog. R.Pto,
Mon. Wu IM. t:OO e.m. to 1 :00 p.m.,
lundor tO:OO o.m. to 4:00p.m.
PH, 112·21fl
PRESCRII'TIONI
E. Moln
' fritn&lt;ly lorvico
OH .

-

Pom-.

SUNDAY

lO:OO A~M.
TO

12:30 .....

2 MEDIUM
.PIZZAS

PEPPERONI
PIZZA

2m•s

$999

.

•

..
.

'

MOMENTS TO REMEMBER
· - ·PROM 1991 .
.

"...
..

I..

..

.~

BE ·SURE TO STOP BY AND SEE OUR PROM WINDOW
•
'

~

JOE CUSTOMER
~LOAN

PAYMENT DCORD: 24 AJm 0

ealDJeMIIuaaiJ left·Gilt fll tile
paper

wllea

apPeancJ.

•'

.

the

1tory

:"

••.~
•
"...
"....

Only l!n• Tux lluckl .
coupon m•r be uHd for
"MCh tuxedo ranlad 11
muat be pr•~nt.cl •t the
time order 11 pl-...:1 .

•.E

HONORABLE MiNilON • .
Trevor Harrlloa I 6-0 IIOpho·
more rorward w11 aamed
hoaorable •eallon AII·TVC

recsiiJ. Trmlr'l pldan was

Then all you have to do is make all of your Peoples Bank loan
payments on time. And we'll give you more than a handshake. We'll
~ve you five.
.
· ··
·
.
·

..
..
t

' NEW HAVEN
.8 82·2135
MEMBER II'.D.I.C.
Equal Houalnjl Lender®

POINT PLEASANT
6715-1121

r

Not -loblo for .............. loono. _ . , . _,......, 1oano « loono to purehue..,.) ...... or molrlle ' - . • Rebotoa will be pUI by dleck

z

"

''
after~ lnolpeyment

to n:oehed.

I

••rn

992-2124

$599

You can earn a "Gfmme Five" r.oan Rebate on any kind of consumer
loan we offer.
.

CUppers 95, Jazz 19
At Los Angeles, Ron Harper

Guest speaker

Easter vigil set · ·

~--~~~~--~~--~~----~~ -...-

112-107.

Barb Pratt. B1rb Stahl, Jamie
Humphrey, Joe Humphrey, Daa Hood, Gary
Jo1ea anct Sandi Jonea. Not pictured but also •
•ttendlng were Rachel Hood, Linda Jones,
David Johnson and Tammi Joaes.

Depression will continue
without some .counseling
r

.,...
•llllthn
•llue I.AIIco Ita• •s,IM&lt;h
•Uma ...nt
•bccliol

n ..J,hl• Cloncll, Ryan Cloneh, Ron
Clo•~b,

28,1891

Pega 5
-

.

Cemeteries·to be
· cleanedAprillO.,

-

Sentine~

.

O'IIW 111A11D Ll-1 ·

: EYE LOOSB BALL • Ullh forward Thurl
,Bailey (41) and L.A. Clipper forwarcli Danny
.Maanlna (lert) aad Charles Smith keep their

The Daily

Thura~; March

SPRING'
STARTERS

O'DELLS

•

~

•..
......

OPEN

MON. &amp;.FIL 1l I P.M.
TUES.. WED.~. SAT .
1l 5 ....

il

\
j

"
·I

•

•

,,

.'

I

�Page

~The

Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, March 28, 1991

Annual health report released by ~fficials

'
A total of 5,924 office visits
were n:corded and 3.830 skin lesiS
administered during 1990, according to a swistical repon from the
Meigs County Tuberculosis and

Health Clinic which has offices in
the Meigs Multiplii]IOse Building
on Mulberry Heights, Pom~y. ·
During the year 3,862 home visits and outside office COIIIaCts were

made along with 403 school visits.
Eight chest clinics were conducted,· and Dr. Roy L. Donnerberg, chest clinician, Columbus,
recoi'ded during thoae c!inics 139

There were 73 skin test clinics
visits and cooferences. There were
551 chest x-rays obtained and rec- held throughout the county for the
ommeqdations were made for treat· . convenience of lhe pul!lic by perment ·if indlcs!ed after evaluation sonnel ofthedepaabJ.,nt
by the clinician.
The Tuberculosis and Health
Office is guided ·by an advisory
board consisting of 13 members
appoin.ted. by the Meigs County
CommtsSIODaS.

.

The members and the areas they
· represent are Lloyd Blackwood,
Cb0$1Cr, Olive and Orange Townships; James Hill, Syracu~e; Dr.
Larry Kennedy, Middleport;
Jeanette Lawrence, Racine; Rev.
William· Middleswarth, Sutton,
. Letart and Lebanon Townships;

TUBERCULOSIS AND HEALTH BOARD· An advisory
board repreaeatlag al sect1oas of Meigs County Is ehqed with
lllklolng tile progt'lllll aad llbnc:lal 15pects of the Melp County
· tvberc:ulosls IQid Health Assoc:latlou. On tbe board, lef'!; to right,
are front, Donaa Nelaon, Jane Walton, Joan Wolfe, Faye Wallace,

Tuberculosis still a 'sleeping disease'
By Charlene Hoefticb
Senlillel News Stair
"Tuberculosis hasn't gone away
• at limes sleeping • but not gone;"
commented Joan Tewksbary, R. N.,
executive director of the Meigs
County Tuberculosis and Health
Clinic, in talking about a disease
whiclt many have come to believe
is a lhing of the past.
· ·
. "Not 5()," says Tewksbary, who
noted that in 1990 Meigs .County
had lhree cases of tuberculosis.
"Though people don't worry
~tbout 'consumption' anymore, the
·number of victims'is still growin~.
Just because the luberculosis sanitariums are closed doesn't mean
!hat lhe disease is gone,~ she said.
The good news, according to
Tewksbary, is that the means to
control tuberculosis is here and
now. ·To make the disease disappc:ll!' the public has to be aware !hat
it represents a growing problem,
she said.
.
'"We must have our health care
professionals 'think tuberculosis:
because early detectiOn for control
is the key to prevent spreading
infection," the executor director
emphasized.
The.~eigs County Tuberculosis
and Heallh Clinic aacmjlls to find
these cases before the bacilli infect
10 million more, starting another
20 1!1 40 'year cycle, Tewksbar'y
said. These patients infect olhers
aroUnd !hem, even though the con-

EXECUTIVE DIREC·
TOR· Joan Tewltsbary, R. N,
Ill tile exec:atlve director of the
Melas Couaty Taberc:ulosis
ud Health Cllak. Sbe ..tmlnilten tuberculosis akin tests,
pnMdes guldanc:e to aD tuberc:uloals patlen.ts, and contacts
any saspects. Her role is also
.to vlllt bwles, the hospital and
:alll'lllll c:are radlitles as well
. ·u to c:oaduet CODJmunity skiD
teltl• cUaks, lldminister skin
te1t1 In all c:ounty schools and
·work Ia the cbeek clinic, She
aervn • a llalsoa between lhe
:pbJIIdu and tbe patient.

tacts aren't ill, lind .will continue to dent, administrator, or any olher
do so until the disease is treated, person in any institution, school, a
she explained.
day care center. Reports are confiThe tenacity of lhe lllberculosis dential, and the only means to
bacillus is one of the reasons tuber- assure the. least possible spread of
culosis isn't dead, acCording to the the disease, she said
executive director. She explained
Ia talking about the function of
that tuberculosis germs can stay in
lhe local office, Tewksbary noted
the body for many years without that !heir agency cooperates wilh
causing illness, noting that 10 mil- oilier agenties to maximize protec· ·
lion people carry the Opportunistic lion in populatiOn groups that have
germ . and all it needs is one the greatest ·'risk. She sud !hat in
momem of weakness, one momen~ cooperation with nursing home
when lhe immune' system 'Is lielow · associations, the office bas estab- .
par, to develop into luberculosis.
lished policies to monitor reiiidents
She went on to explain that the in iqstitutions for the aged and ·
discovery or effective antibiotics infmn.
·
changed tuberculosis treatment
According to statistics from lhe
from hospitalization to Ou!Patient office, in 1990, 1,886 cootacl5 were
care and from bedren to made in hOspital and extended care
chemotherapy. Improved treatment facilities, and the office is currend.Y
has changed atliJUdes from alarm til ' planning·to Jlllticipate in l)le mulb·
complacency, she said.
phasic health screening to be held
Tuberculosis is still more pl'eva- next fall.
·
lent a~ong low socio-economic
Tewksbary explained that
' groups m lhe Qnlted States b!Jt out· _bec•nse of the. serious risk of trans!'reaks can·aDd do OCCI;If. more o~n miS$lon, tuberculosis exposure and
m affluent .commumues than IS treatment services are provided free
c~mmonly supposed, TewkSbary to !hose residents 'of Meigs County
Slid. Older adults exposed to tUber· who need them.
·
culosis germs many years ago are
The Meigs County Tuberculosis
most vulnerable, along with chitand Heallh Clinic is funded solely
dren exposed to P.ersons whose
through lhe tuberculosis levy wilh
acu.ve tuberculosiS ~ases went
n!!' federal or state monies coming
und1agnose~ or were Improperly into the program. Since the levy
tr~ated wh~le, they. contmued to was l'llll!lwed by a lalge majority in
~ the child s envlrOlllllent. .
1986, there have been 17 active
K:J; ~lements to effecu.ve
cases of tuberculosis.
.
tuberc DSIS control are coopenw~e
The .50 (one,balf of one ll)iD)
efforts ~at prod~e early diagnos•s
levy will be placed on the ballot in
and rap1d reponmg of sus!!Ccted November for renewal. Tewksbary ·
and ~own cases to the I~ III!Jer- said !hat in order for the clinic to
culos1s off1ce. The Ia~ requues continue providing services; c:onreports, w11hm 4~ hours, the eltec- tinued support will be needed :
ubve direc~ pomted out
"Taxpayers will be able to save ,
Accord.mg to Te'Yks~ary,
money in lhe future if services are
reponmg .~~ the respons1b1hty of carried olit now _ rather than
each phys1c1an, denbst1palho.logJSt
much mae money if tuberculosis is
or nurse, as .well as the supenntenallowed to continue unchecked and
multiple deaths occur," she said.
"We are committing ourselves
to the objectives of eliminating
tuberculosis by the year 2010 and
making that objective widely
known so others CIJn join in this

DEPUTY ~ Kathy Cum•
logs is the bookkeeper, malatalus files, and assists during
tUaics conducted at the Melp
County Tuberculosis and

Healt!J ol'f'IC.t .

The $100,000 grand prize in the
accompanyin1 Kicker game· also
went unc~ed. Wednesday night
. The wmnmg Kicker combination
was911131.
None of the tickets listed the six
winning Kicker numbers in exact
order. Howevet, five tickets had the
first five numbels, which pays $~.
000: 37 had die first four numbers,
which pays $1,000; 404 bsd the
fmt four, which pays $100; a.~d
4,43811ad the first two, which pays
$10. .
Kicker ticket sales totaled
$498,009 and lhe IOial prize payout
was $146,780.

NEW YORK (UPI) - More
!han 70 percent of lhe 54 million
women permanently employed in
the United States are suffering
from stress in the workplace,
including a stunning 40 percent
who repqtt being under stress vinually every day, said a survey
releasedWedilesday.
.
"Overall, 40 percent of working .
women say they are bothered by ·
stress in their jobs frequendy almost every day or at least several
days a week," said the survey by
New York Business Group on
Heallh Inc. , a- non-profit organization monitoring employees' health
care proteCtion.
In addition, 32 percent said !hey
experience stress "once or twice a
week.,.
·
"The most frwquent symptoms ·
working women report are loss of
energy or feeling tired (31 percent),,
muscle strain or pain (26 percent),
and difficulty getting staited in the
morning (21 percent)," said the
survey financed by an educational
grant from Upjolm Co.
Women account for about 4S
percent of the 1ota1 Wort force in
the United Stalel and 12 percent ol
the working women are heads or
households.
About 75 pelmlt of lhe working
women in America are employecl
fuU ti~~~t.
,

.

CLERK-RECEPTION·
1ST • Ruth Ann Boyer's role
In tile Melp Tubel-calcl.ls Ud
Health omce is to malataln
cllalc: recorda an.d coatacts
wit .. patleats as well as to
IISIIst Jou Tewksbary, R. N.
In her rounds to the couaty
schools.

..

"

REEDSVll.LE • The Riverview
Garden Club will meet ThursdaY. at
7:30p.m. at the home of Marilyn
Hannum.

CHILDREN'S
SHOE

MIDDLEPORT· Rev. All~n ·
Oggs, evangelist and author, will
speak at the Middlepon .Pentecostal
Church on Thursday at 7 p.~. Rev.
Clark Baker invites the pubhc.

DEPARTMENT•
'
'
(a) Cha11Ce8• Dress flat
·in white with front bow.
Girls' sizes 8'4.4. ·
Reg. 11.99, .aie 8.99.'
(b) Run A.:Oun~s• Ca~ual
Oxford in black with b~own
'trim. Boys' sizes 8 11:!-6.
Reg. 12.99, saie 9.99.
Save S2 on children's shoes
,regularLy priced 9.99-10.99.
Save S3 on styl~s regularly
priced 11.99 or more.
'Not 'i nduding athletic .o r
lap and ballet st)'les.

•

· POMEROY - Mass ·of •the
Lord's Supper, 7:30 p.m. at the
· Sacred Heart Catholic Church followed by adoration at the repository until Midnight ·
POMEROY - Pomeroy group of
AA and ALAnon will meet Thurs-·

7-12

wonu•n ·• •b:rt 4H 0
"'A· 19. ~1

!'WI- 19.19
(lito in
...,. tilfll

•
FAMILY ATIILETIC SHOES
Say., S3-S5 on athletics for
the entire family! Selection
includes styles &amp;om Gitano,
Chic, Voit, Bonjour, Franklin
and Britt G~ar. Choose from·
court oxfurds, cross-trainers
· and mid-hi styles. Regularly
priced 17.99 and 19.99,
now on ..1e for 14.99.

•

I
I
I
I
I

WORK •'-ND SPORT 1100'1'5
Wllh lhla ....... S5 00 any
purt"-eofmen'oorwomen'owork
oroportbooll(ucludlnalllettemol.

ANY HANDBAG
Wldo thla coupon ..... S3 ... ...,
llanolbatCeut...... -~)when
youbufllll'....-prkedohooof
9.119 ...

-.o.........,,..,.-.
"----.o.~....

o..e.......,.perpun:~~ue.

~-- ......... ~....

L

.
RC IT

:10113

I
I

RC"

30111

I
ANY l'liRCAHSI
With lhlo coupon - 13 ... ..., I
I ....,..._ofl0.99ar-coro • •
I oole~I.One......,per.,....m-, I
~--- ... ~·~·
I
I
I
I
I
I .RCIT
31111J

Sale tilde March
1991
--------------~---~·---------

NaulhiiM notWole In 111.-.

.
NGioiiiiiJieo ...u.w. In Ill •1- onol cvlon.
..._ftr:::::;;;;i(l

~

..

·
,
~
;

:••

MOlt -e open .

~:...:.~.lftJ-IIiiJ ~~E~.isUNDAv

.•
.•
•

OHIO RIVER PLAZA - UPPER RT. 7 - GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

f

•

·. MT. HERMAN • Sunrise ser~
. vices,, Mt. Herman U~ Ch~;~rch ,
. 6:30a.m., followed by breaRfast.
. Thefe will be no mgl!t serv1ce . .
Public invited. ·

the public.
REEDSVILLE . Reedsville/
Long Bottom Charge, United
Methodist Church, sunrise services,
.6:30 a.m~ at the Reedsville Chlm:h

Folding
Headphones

Cut
3.,.,_

HALF .
PRICE!

Stereo

Versatile Home/Mobile
VIdeo cassette Player

aHandi~FJ111
flew; dlilg
• Faat-Piay Mode

LowAil15,...-· Reg.219.85
u- AC or DC PowerPerfect for Homll, RV, Boal

gaa 1~,5 r:.~.;·.$v
• UghtweigtJt
I!'

Contfortable

• Compac:t
*33·981

POMEROY • Car w~sh and
bake sale Saturday at Pleaser's
parldng lot All proc~ go to lhe
Meigs County So~p Box Derby
Association. To donate baked
goods contact Angie Swifi at Pleaser's, 992-2057.
·
'

. SCIPIO- The Scipio Township
Fire Department will have an Easter egg liunt on Saturday begiMing
at 1 p.m. for lhe children of Scipio
Township.

: .POMEROY . s'ofenin 'East'er .
vigil. four parts, Service ~f the
Lighl, Liturgy of lhe Word, Liturgy
of Baptism ·and · Litt~rgy of the
Eucharist, 7:30p.m. Fnday, Sacred
Heart Catholic.Church.

20MB HD Notebook PC

'311 .Off

• 1.44MB Floppy Drive a 140K
• Dnk~ Software • 8 lbl.
W25·3508
. . EMil 11•/tt

.

Big-Button Telephone

40% Off

2918 4~,5

a Hold Button With LED Reminder
• Amptm.ct Handut • Touch-Redial
W43-338

Save '110
VCR With On·Screen Display

Save '40

DaHas County commissiooers have reJCCted Oliver Stone s. request ~
use lhe sixlh floor of lhe former Texas School Book Depositor. for bts
movie about the assassination of President JoiJD Kennedy. After a
brief discussion, commissioners informally voted 4-1 on !uesday not
to negotiate an 8$fU!DCDt with lhe director, Stone Jllll!lu~Uon i!'anager
Je.ff Flach, who IS overseeing efforts to restore lhe buil~g to Its 1963
appearance, refused comment after the vote. Stone has hJS 1Jeart set on
using the sixth flOor perch from where Lee Harvey Oswald allegedly
frred the fatal shots but that floor is now an assassination mW~eum and
·the count)' insists tllat Stone use lhe sevenlh for his movie. .

Stomach stapling for ~everely
ob:ese endorsed by panel ., ·

.5915 :.1&amp;

10'

.

Personal
'Printer

Low Alt1~ ,... - .

section.
· The other prqced·ure, calle~ a
stofllach bypass, involves creaupg
a small pouch at the upper porbon
of lhe stOmach and auaching a Y•
shaped section of small bowel to
serve as the oudet from lhe stom •
ach to the intestinal tract.
In addition to improvinj! mental
outlook, the resulting we1ght loss
usually alleviates many of the
health problems associated with
severe obesity, the panel said.
Allhough the death rate from
such operations is very low, the
produre-' can produCe a 11uinber of .
complications, including leaks
from the stapl~s or sutures, diarrhea, vomitmg, .u,cers and gall·
stOnes.
Nearly 80 percent of sev~rely
obese people who have surgery are
women of childbearing age,
prompting the panel to issue a special caution to lhese patients. ·
"Women with reproductive
potential would be well-advised to
avoid ni'MIIAIII!V until their weight
has stibiiTZedlrter surgery.'' said
Dr. Scott Grundy of the University .
of Texas ·

S1688

L.,.;AIIU,..._• R11J.111119.0G

RU'ILAND · Rudand Baseball

·~ONE LOSES AGAiN: For lhe !'Jird lim~ in as \llanr. weeks, the

BETHESDA,-Md. (UPI) Surgery including "stomach stapling" is an effective option fqr
severely obese people who fail to
lose weight by dieting and other
means, an expert panel concluded
.Wednesday.
.
. .
Medically superv•sed d1etmg
and intensive behavior modification should be tried first, but if that
fails surgery is an option, said lhe
14-member panel assembled by the
National Institutes of Heallh after a
·three-day meeting.
.
About 4 million Americans are
believed to be obese and an esti·
mated 1.5 million Americans are
"severely obese,'' which is defuied
roughly as being 100 or more
pounds over Jhe ideal weight for
the average adult male.
•
Severe o~ity can haVe a variety of serious h!=allh CO!'sequences,
including reduce. the hfespan ~
increasin1 the nsk for such dis·
eases as high blood pressure, diabetes and heart and lung problems.
One operation endorsed by lhe
panel is called vertical-banded gastroplasty, whicll restricts the size of
,the stomach by stapling.off a large

1P

•300ff

RIIJ. 9U5

27915

TANDY®

.1000n1a
System

Reg. 311.115

• 179-Ch. Cablti-Com~' lllner

• 1·V.•IB·Event Tl~ • Qulck·Timer
• *16·520

.

24915Pot-·
3:.'\s
Low Alt11

W26·2848

Prints Up to 240 c,..

Range· Doubler
Multlteeter

401Mt Off

. Telephone

23~· ~,5

~nswerer

a Testa Electronics
• 43 Aangft 122·214

Cut
251Mt
.,

Desktop
10-Ch. SCanner

:-c-::..:_ ·- -··~

• Dual Cuuttea

Save '30

• Aamote Tum-On
• One-Touch MeUIIJ4i

PIIYII!Jck

99~

W43·398

You Get All This/
. .Speed· Dial
Cordless Phone

·• 281-Bueci PC Compatible ·
• Color Monitor • 840K RAM
• 20MB sinartDrtve~ Herd Drive

•

Save'40

'

~Software

With 10 AppllcllloM

Plus BONUS
l'ackage/

7985 ,~:15
,__

c;;;::::-; • Lotua ~

a 30-Number Memory
~ Maximum LIIJII

forDnkMate

·~QUWrlle

• 0\!lclcan a Mou..

• Security. Cllde

.
143·558 Tonolpojloo dlllinQ

LowAI·flt,....IIGnlh• A8g.128.85
Ponca, Fire, Ran, More
120·126

40-Channel CB
Walkle·l'llkle

Save '40

5915 :Is
Perttct for Work,
.PIIIIure or ll'avel

. 125·i80311043/1045/1338

~

I,

MIDDLEPORT • Hope Baptist
RU'ILAND . Rutland Freewill Church, Middleport, sunrise secBaptist Church, sunrise seryic~. 6 . vices, 6:15 a.m ., followed by
a.m., Paul Taylor, pastor, mv1tes bre8kfast Public invited.

With Voice
ActuatiOn

·&amp;91!044

POMEROY • "King of the
Beasts" and "Many Moons" will be
presented at the Meigs County
Public. Library on Saturday at 2
p.m. for all area children.

•

EVEN IF YOU MISSED OUR SPRING BOOKLET, YOU DON'T HAVE TO MISS OUR SMARTSavings! .
Last 3days! Clip and.save thru Saturciay with Vllluable f!icway coupom!

MIDDLEPORT ' Silver Run
Baptist Ghurch, sunrise service, 6
a.m. at the church.

MIDDLEPORT · Hysell Run
Holiness Church, sunrise and communion service, 6 a.m. Pastor Bob
Manley invites the public.

pOMEROY . PomerQy, EmerHEMLOCK GROVE - Hem gency Squad, car wash, Saturday 9 lock Grove Christian Church, sun·
a.m. to. 3 p.m. at the fli'C house. on . rise service, 6:30 a.m. followed 'by
Butternut Avenue, $5 for extenor, breakfast at the ~range hall .
Charles Domigan, mmister, invites
$7 for exterior and interior.
'
.
the public.
'
SUNDAY
POMEROY - A 12-step AA
MIDDLEPORT· Victory Bapmeeting Sunday at 7 p.m., JTPA. tist Church, sunrise services, 7
office in Pomeroy.
·
a.m ., Pastor James E. Ke.esee
.
invites the P!lblic. ·
·
.
. .
.
.
LONG .· BOTTOM , Mount '
Olive Communi'ty Church, Long
. RUTLAND • Su!'nse. serv1ce,
Bottom, sunrise service, 6:30 a.m . . Z1on Church of Chnst, 6.30 a.m.,

By United Press InternatiOnal . .
.
STALLONE R:l&lt;:MAKE: Sylv~ster Stalloae ~•ts, his Roc~y and
Rambo characters got a bit tiresome and he says he s gomg to re-~vent
himself wilh a lighter image. "With Rocky and Ram!Jo I'~, fallen mto a
sense of self-parody,': Sl8!1;one told ,Parade magaz1!le. Whe~ I ~"
· 're- invent,' I mean I m gomg to scrape away the 11118J!~ ·:·,It s like
having this love·affair wilh yourself but every now and !hen It s mce to
·take yourself to coun am!' divorce yourself, siart o~er a~n." Stall~
says he was surprised by lhe at~ directed agamst himself and h~s
char8cteis. "I tried to be philosophical a~ut it but there's no~ ph~­
loso)ihy to make me understand why I . ~ve enc~ such mcredi. ble wrath and rejectioil,'' he said. As for his.personalllfe, Stal~ne says
he has po plans to ~e gir~d Jennifer Flavin, 22, hJS tf!U:d wife.
. "She's a wonderful gul but I like her too much to marry her, he Slid.
'~She 'doesn't &amp;serve !hat kind of anguish."

(a) sale 8.99

"The Joy of Easter" will be pre- . followed by breakfast. Public invit·
sented by the choir members.
. ed.

Pastor Lawrence Bush invites the
public.

-People in the.news

•

ll'llrll'•••

9

sign-up, a.m. to 1 p.m., Saturday,
$12fell.
.

COOL VILLE • Pre-Easter · · . POMEROY • Good . Friday .
Revival through Friday at Vander- Communion Service, Pomeroy
hoof Baptist Church. Rev. Ward First Baptist Church, 7 p.m.
Robinson of the Ponerfleld Baptist
Church will be the evangelist. SpeRUTLAND • All night sing,
cial singing to be held each night
GOOd Friday, 7:30p.m., Rutland
.Freewill Baptis(Church. Seve~
APPLE GROVE, Rev. Carl groups will perform.
·
Hicks will.conduct'Lenten Services
at Apple Grove U!iited Methodist . LONG BOTIOM • The Faith
Ch~rch ' through Friday at 6:30
.. Gospel Chu.rch in ~ong Bot~om
p.m., wilh commJ!IIiOn on -r:hurs- will have Good Fnday serv1ces
day. Wednesday pq~yer m~g $t with the Dailey Family at 7 p,m.
6:30 P·tl!·
·
Rev. SteVe Reed invites the public.

BRADBURY • Meigs County
Women's·Fellowship v,iill meet
Thursday at '7:30p.m. at .B~bury
Church of Christ. A patnotic soqg
se.Vice will be held. Lynn Runyan
and Bessie King will be the speak·ers. Refreshments will be served.
Public is invited.

PICWAY'S SPRING SPECTACULAR

Working
women said
under stress

No ·one claims $4 million jackpot
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Ohio's
Slqlel' l.olto jackpot was increased.
to $8 m~n after no one picked
the six winning numbers in
Wednesday nlgbt's drawing.
·A lottery SllOkesman said ·Thurscla!, JICIIe of lhe lickel5 ,sold for the
midweelt drawing listed the winaiDa numben- 3, 10. 11, 31, 35
and 44. The $4 million jlckpot will
be doubled far Sllunlly's drawing.
Sewaly-CliiC pllyas picked five
of die unben to win $1,166 each
llld 3,5S7 pia~ chole fuur of the
mllllben to WDI $711Piece.
Super Lotto lickel sales totaled
$3,067,665 and the prize payout
rotal- $347.566.

effon. All of us, as a society, need
to overcome the obstacles, fully
realize luberculosis isn't.dead, and
continue to have a good tuberculosis control program here," she concluded.

. CHEST CLINICIAN • Dr.
Roy L Donnerberg or Colum·
bus conducts chest clil!ics at
the Meigs Cotmty TubercuJso. ·
·sis and Health Clinic 'in the
Meigs Multipurpcise Builcling .
·on a reglllar baSis. Eight such ·
clinics were held ia 1990 by
tbe pbysiciiD who bad 139
clinic visits and conrereoces,
interpreted chest x-nys and
made trealment rec:ommeadatlous.

Community Calendar Items, day at 7 p.m. at. the Sac~ Heart
appear two days before ID event Catholic Church m the basement.
and tbe day or that ev~t. Items
FRIDAY
must be received weD Ia ..tvaace
PLAINS • Rou.J!d
to assure. publicatioa In tbe c:al- andTUPPERS
square dance, Tuppers Plams
,eodar.
VFW Building, Friday, 8-11:30
p.m. Rocky MounbJin Bl~;~eps.
THURSDAY
Melvin Cross, caller. Public mv•tRACINE · Racine Church of the ed. .
.
Nazarene will have revival thrQugh
'sunday. Rev . Chris Menic.l\ of
REEDSVILLE - Coolville
Franklin Furnace will be the . Unity Singers at Soulh Bethel New
preacher. Services will be held lit.7 Testamen~ church on Silver Ridge,
p.m. nighdy and Sunday 10:~ ~ Good Friday, 7 p.m. Public invited.
6 p.m. Rev. Thomas Gatey mvttes Church localjld off Route 7 across·.
·the public.
from Eastern High School.

. RACINE' • There will be a sup·
POMEROY • Solemn Compon group meeting for those affect- . memoratioo of the Lord's Passion
ell by the Gulf Wiir on Thursday at aad Death, :7:30 p.m. Friday,
7 · p.m. at the Racine United Sacred Hean Calholic Church.
Metl)odist Church.
POt,ffiROY • Good Friday C?Jll·
LONG BOTIOM • The Hazel munity ·service, Pomeroy Unued
Community Church, between 'Long Methodist Church, noon. Public is
Bottom and Portl,and wi!l &gt;hav~ invited.
revival through Sunday WI~ ~- ·
' cial singing nightly. Rev. R1ck
SATURDAY
Wea,ver wiD be the evangelist Rev.
RACINE ; The Racine NneriEdsel Han .invites \he pu\&gt;lic. ·
can Legion PQl!t 662 will have its
Easter egg hunt Saturday at I p.m.
TIJPPERS PLAINS • The Tup- for all childreh age, 2-18. 'All
pers Plains VFW Post 9053 will 'infants, age 0-2, will be provided
meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the with eggs. The huqt will be held in
post home.
the post home.

Jeannette Lawreace; Lllllaa Moore, Helen Swartz; and back, .
Ja111e1 Hill, P11ul Patterson, Harold Rice, Lloyd Blackwood,
Charles Rime, and WilHam Mtddleswartb. Larry Kennedy, a
bol\rd member, was not presenL
· . '
,

'

Community calendar .·

..

Donna Nelson, Chester, Olive and
Orange Townships; Paul Patterson,
Rutland; Harold Rice, Salisb~.
Salem and Rutland .Towoah•ps;
Charl~s Riffle, Salisbury. Salem
and Rutland Townships; Helen
Swartz Bedford, Scipio and
· Columbia TQwnsbips; Jane Walton'
and LiUian Moore, Pomeroy; Joan
Wolfe, Sutton, ·LcblliOJi and Lebirt
Townships; Faye Wallaco. Cenll'al
Ohio LUng Association, and Orion
Roush ancfMsidaMora,.boardcon'
sultants.
· ·
.
Literature on tuberculoais and
other respiratory diseases is avail·
able free of chaige at the offrce.
Information on the various services
can be oblained from Joan Tewksbary, executjve director, at 992·
3722.
.

The Dally Sentinel-Page 7

Pomeroy.,....Mlddleport, Ohio

Thursday, March 28, 1991

\I I

.

;,

�•

.•

Sentinel

March

.

!Fake IDs, bo"owed
licenses all part:of
kids' Spring Break

Big Navy homecoming bash plan~ed

=•·

PIN down EX11U

'..

m

.

Lludc:rdale.
'
.
The pnpnllfity of Key. W
Wl!lll!lla a ·Spina Bn:at gc:uway ba grown

in the last line years. foiJowinllhe efforts oflllher Florida oc•nf•OIIl

ccmmuniliea - JWticultldy Fort l.aQdenlale - 10 .t;........,..,..aUdeatJ
from IJICIIdi"' !heir wed!: of 'Ya:tlicn dainting - a;;;-..J;g in their
commaniliea..
''FortLa!Kic:nlale told lhe kids they didn't want theln, We ay we're

not going to 1ry to aaract lhern or get_rid or them,"

said Kathy Wood·

m.,, a member of the Key West Spring Break Task Forte.
"Key Wi!ll ba bec:ome a more ~ ipot than Padre Island in
Texas. the kids .ii!Jl show up. Here it IS .arid hen: they are. They .._ve

J

I

l
;1

'.,I

f'
l

.

fi~ tf·-

'

.·

.. · ·

..

· An 111m1t on a charge ofiJIICim,lse drinlcing in the Key West is usually a .Ucket w a city wort detail and an assi~110 cleap up the
streeiS and beaches of .the liUlc island, which IS 2.S miles wide by S

miles (Qng.
·
·
"Some of the kids even like tlie cleanup," Herrera said. "There
was one 8irl who told me Jbe was preay sure Jbe'd met hCi fuiURO husband and came IIOI.IId 10 say thanks for busting me.' •
Delpile Fort Laadenlale's efforts to drive away student revelers,
offiCials are ltiU lJQy conf'JJC8till( fake IDs, especiaUy from South·
Carolina, Altinsas, Tennessee and P'ellnsylvania.
' "The ones I have looked atilal Obviously counterfeit," said CapL
RUSIII:I R. Smidl with the ABT off:JCC in Fort Lauderdale. ·~The qual1ty
doesn't maiCh up with tire real driver's license from thatsrare.
"The hlrdest liceniCito fake are lhole stale's that use oo• cards that
are ezgb.q m ~ and have a hologriP,h, ,such as Minnesoia. llloolcs like
an Americ:ln Exprea c:lrd. ••
. .
,
Sllldenls using fake IDs 10 get into a bar usually just lose the cards,
whic:h cost on average SSO each. If they ire caught drinking, they're
· ·
· .
·
· charged with a misd~Jmean9r,
FOr those caugbt producing the.fake·IDs, lhe penalti.es ·are stiffer.
·
Bootleg driver's l.icenses are produced \ISing laminatiiiB machines,
Polaroid cameras and poster boards. The 1i19fC aophislicaled are nlade
with laserprin~.
·
.
.
Two weeks ago; SlaJe asenrs raided the We Copy Print Sblip in
Tampa. Invesligaton 18)' lhe shop's owners were allowinB minors 10
color-copy alreml driver'sllctn~ on irs laser copying macliines. ..
"One.employee ~dmitled ,to doing eight· to 10 a day for over a
year," wd agent Elaine Pavan. I

-~ew

Kids' ·Wahlberg
charged with arson
.

'

.

'

. LOUISVILLE, Ky. (UPI)- arrested two band security guards
· Donnie Wahlberg of the pop sensa- at, the hotel on disorderly conduct
. tion New Kids on the Block denies charges.
·he set a snuill fire with vodka in the
. Polic:e said two- Randy I ones,
:hallway of a hotel where the group 33, of San Frimcisco, and Marcus
.
..
Johnson, 32, df Huntington Beach,
.was staying.
Wahlberg, 21, of Braintree, Calif.- bad been aying 10 control
Mass., surrendered to the · ~.larg.e crowd of mostly young girls
trymg to get up on the• upper
Louisville F'ae Department's arson
squad Wednesday after an arrest floors 10 find the band memberS."
:warrant was issued charging him
"The twO .guards were ~tdng,
;with f111t-degree anon.
,
IIley \Vere loud and abQsive to hotel
• He Pl~ innocent,at his dis- workers, the hotel desk clerk,"
, }'~~~ ~~:!:Ji!:~f;! ~n~o:~ Louisville Police Sgt. Carl Yates
releated on SS,OOO cub bail. A · said. "When the officers ttied 10
;......;.;., conferenc:e wu scheduled calm them down, they became abu·
r - -.
sive to the o(ficers and they were
f«~,1UihoriliUI8id.
·
arrestedondisorderlyC911ducL"
Yates declined 10 llisclose the
;
g laler said ,the charges ··
:WIIIIIIlle.
alleplions involving
. the
m minor-age
"I never came acrou any. .,.;r~. and b8nd embem
vodka, never came acrou any r- .
..mem . •.wbich.~as
mau:hei, 11114 gever even rubbed mvesugated by the pohce Cnmes
two llicks tOgether. The chagcs of Al!',inlt ~~ UmL . . '
anon (are) really ridiculous," he .
They mterviewed 11 different
said.
young women, ages 14-18, who
Meanwhile, two of the band's were in•the hotel lliSI night and
early this morning," Yates said, '
security guards were arrested on "And
f
·
disorderly conduct charges after . .
as a resu 1I o those toter·
they were allege~l abusive 10 ~tews, they developed no informs- ·
uon IQ substanliate any .reporrs cf
hotel workers and
ice while try· wron2doing by the band mem inJ to fend otr a crowd of young bers.' r
girls clamoring to see the band
A spokeswoman for-Bob Woolf,
members.
~ group's Boston-based, business
Alsq, police questioned 11 manag~. said Woolf Was looking
minor-age girls' on undisclosed' into the entire incident and h!ld no
aUegations against New Kids mezg- commenL
ben, but said they fwnd nothing to
F · 0r the
·
substanliate the accusations.
.
ans
pop group crowded
Louisville Fire Chief Russell · outsnie the Seelbach Hotel and
Sanders Said the small fire broke I then at.the city's Hall of Justice as
out about a.m. on the ninth-floor word sprud about' Wahlberg's
hallway carpet of the downtown arr;re"~
.
Kids ~-d ·enJ·oyed 8 ·
Seelbach Hotel. The blaze was
""
, ·started wj!cn ·vodka on the carpet reputati~ for being squ~ clean,
' .was ignited, Sailder$ said.
.
but that tmage was tarntshed last
.. · :
Media reporrs said Wahlberg , year.
.
; p()ured the vodka onto the carpet '
A Houston, Teus, te~nager,
· and set it ablaze aftet an argument Melissa Cantu, 19, sa1d l~st
' with a lirl- The chief did 001 con- Dee~mber that she had _selt w1th
finn the repona saying authorities !~ree !)f the New Ktds who
were SliU-inwstiJIIIIlng. ·
passed me.~round until I was
"We have WllDeltel that indi· thrown away.
·
cate (Wihlbe...) sWied a fire on
On Sept. ~. 1990, a Harvard stu·
. the ninth floor m the ballway and !lent; BenJa'llm Danner, 20,
; at this point that all we ~ly charged tllat he V.:~ auacked by
have, .. Slllders·lllid.:
•
Wlhlberg o~ an 11rl!ner when he
·
Anodler wilnea toldllllborities . refused 10 gtve up his seat on the
. · ·
Wablberg uied 10 extinplish lhe . plane.
blueltimtelf unsuc:cossfully. The
Two of Wahlberg's .brothers
rae was eventually put Cllll with an were also arrested for disorderly ..
exlinguishel' by an unknown per- conduc:tlasl summer after an alter·
9011, Sanden said. No injuries were calion outside the family home in
repOned.
.
Braintree, after teenage girls
In an unrel!lled incidbnt about flocked to the neighborhood in
!3o minuteS later. LouiJVille pollct hoPes of spotting WahlbCig.

z

:;

'a

'

'

.

.,

.Trtn.: your clutter into cash,
sm.~. ~t the eau way... by plto~te,

· n,o need to leave your l1om.e:
, . Place .your classifiecl ad to.d ay!
15 woN!;s or less, 3 days,
. 3papers,$6.00 ··'

9
10

;t&gt;

•

me

u.s.

. TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992·2156
MONDA·Y thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY'
(LOSED. SUNDAY
POliCIES•Arb outllkhl

peid.

.
,
•
Galli• or Mason coun'l• must be pte·

Meig~.

·

,·

,

•AeceWe 1 .50 dMc~L!nl for lids paid In edvance.

•free edt - OlvtMIV and Found eds under 16 word• wm be .
run 3 d-rset· no eharg~t .
.

•s.,tinel .il .not r11ponsible for errors afte1 fin~ it.,. (Chick
fat enara 'bat dtl¥ Ad run1 in paper!. C1ll bftfore 2 :00 p ,m

d• •h• public., ion 10 mike eorreciion.,

'Ads lhM rftu11 be pai~ in a~anc~ 1re
Cllird ol Th~nkl
"Happy AcH

8 88
8ji~e'iitA'hwiiv
·
"'
and •

Yard Saltil

B~.:~sine&amp;s Card and tel'II nefice~l
will 1110 IPPIIf In the Pt. Pla•ent Regilllt 1nd ff'l• G•lli-

potis Dally Tribune. re1ching aver 18.000 homu .

-i· . ,· .

/1·~-:u

,

__...._..

,

' ·.

•

DINNER .
SPECIALS....

•

'

THURSDAY - Stuffed Manicotti
FRIDAY - Orange Roughy and
U.Q. Ribs
SATURDAY - Prime .Rib and •
.
I.B.Q. ~ibs .

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
- 11,00A.M SATURDAY '·

COPV DEADLINE -·
MONOAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER
WEDNESDAY liAPER
·, ' JHliRSOAV PAPER

- 2•00 P.M. MONOAY
2 :1;)0 P.ft' . TUE:SDAY
- 2&lt;00 P.M. WEDNESDAY
.. 2•00 PM . THURSDAY
-

FRIDA'I' PAPER

Cia.~.~ified

.

f'UfH'S ,COI'I.'r I ft£' • .

'

followinl{ IPit&gt;plwn'P

exchange.~ ...
1Yi11son Co .• WV ·

AtOoCode614

Meig1 County

Aru

Are1 Code 304

44i-Galllpolis

992 - Middleport
Pomeroy
98&amp; - .C hnter
843-- Portllnd

317-Ch•hire
311-Vinton

245-Rio Grande

256.- Guvon Oiu.

14-3 -Arabiit Oitt

319-WMnat

,

·

- · 2 ;00 P .M . FAIOAV

SUNDAY P.APER ,

011111 Count yo

Code 614

247 - lelart F·ans
949 - Ric:ine
742-- Rutl•nd
667 Coolville

e7.e -Pt . "''""'
na-Lton

571 - Apple Grovll

773 - M•son
1!112-New Haven
196-lltiU
937 - ButhiO

•~G Wf«:H: T-. thru Fri.-11 11i11·3 pm

eSERVING DINNER

O·et Reccdte Fast .

.Wednesdoy &amp; ·T hursday-S ~m-1 pm
Friday &amp; Saturday-S pm·9 pm

·

CLOSE,I) SUNIIAY &amp;, MONDAY

,FEATURED DAILY SPEC!ALS..:c.ny Out A•oi1 0blo

GILMORE'S
112.East Main
· 992-6632 Pomlroy, Ohio
1

NO RESERVATIONS NECESSARY

· '

HAPPY
EASTER' SALE!
.

•SEQUINS
•TAFFETA
•SATINS
•LACES
•IRREDESCENT y•ee•~..

PALMfR

( MIUI '

CHOCOlATE
, AND ·

IIOU.o'W CHOCOLATE

WE WILL CUSTOM MAlE
EASTER eASKETS!

Public NOtice

Public Nolle

46 Supplieo ond

ORDINANCE NO: 69
Motetialo ........ t2,1100.00
•,
. ANNUAL
Total P.rogrom IVCommunity Pl1111nlng ond
. APPROPJIIATION
ORDINANCE
Z.onlng ....... oo ...... 2,liOO.OO
, An ORDANCE to make
PROGRAM V -BASIC ·
UTILITY SERVICES
'approprlotlono for Current
:e.,.., ... ond other Expon- A1-1-A Electric Utlllty.
•dltu,.. of tiw Vlllogo of Po- 240 Supplloo ond
meroy, Stele of Ohio, during
Moterlolo ... :.... t3, tOO.OO
the 11-1 v-r 1111dlng Do- A1-1-8 Goo Utility' ......, 31. 1111.
240 Supplleo ond Meterl~
loctlon 1. BE IT RE·
olo.. ........ •oooo• 11.1100.00
;•SOLVED by the Cauncll of Total Program V.:tllo Ylllago of Pomeroy, lloolc Utility
.
•,ltoto of Ohio, tllot, to pro'
SoNicoo .... oo ... l4,800.00
PROGRAM VII - .
; vldo for tiM cuoront ox, IMI'- ond other oxpondl·
GENERAL GOVERNMENT
' IU ..o of thtl uld Vllllgo of
A1-.7·A Mayor ond Admin·
!·Pomeroy during tho llocol lotfttlve Ofllcoo,·y•r ending D-bor 31, 210 Pononol lor)llcoo
;'1SI1.thofollowlngoumobe 21.1 Solorleol
Wotioo ...... oo .. I32,000.00
1 ondtlloyoro holrobyHteolde
' O..d f!PPtoprletod ulollowo. 212 Emplo\rM
• •1.1:
Boneltto ........ . t 0,000.00
i SII011on 2, That there be ~40 S-Ileo ond
, opproprlotM from the GEMoteriall ........ 110.000.00
· NERAL FUND:·
240·2 Toot
: PROGRAM I - 8ECURITY
Rofundod ...... ... 3.1100.00
" ·OF PERSONS AND
.Toto! Moyor otid
,,
PROPERTY
Admlniotrollvo
~~
~
otfleea .......'•"ioa.aoo.oo
1
A·1-1-A Pollco LowEnfor· ·A1-7-B Loalollltlvo
:cementActlvltleo ICounclll210 P-nlll s ... ~ce~~• • 210 Peroonlll Service•1 2; 1 lelorletl
211 Solorleol
;; Wegoo ......... 128.437.011
woooo.l4,ooo.oo
':212 EmptDy•
:rotlll Llltllllotlve
:• l....tllo .. oo ..... ~li.OOO. OO
Aotlvltleo .... oo, ... 4.00Q.00
,:240 Supplloo end
·
A·1·7·D Cloti&lt;/T,..ourar
" M.-lalooo ...... 34,000.00 210 ,.-aoniiiSIINicoo
"2110 Copilot
211 Solorlet/
:: Outlay ....... :.... 10,000.00
Woo••
1111000 00
oiTol!ol Pollcto t..w En·
212 Empie;VM.
'
·
I~ too.,.Pment .... 12oa,437.0II
Bonetl.lll .... oo ... ,.. oo2tB.OO
&gt;TDIIII r~~t~r•m 1.
240 Supplloo ond ·
•
,: 1~ of ~.
•
~'!"
A• · MIIIM'Ialo
1,000.00'
ooooo 201...7oVV ToW Clerk/
. .
&gt;•
PROCIIIAM
IV
T
11
''
COMMUNITY
,..oum.oo.oo II. 218 ' 00
ENVIIIONMENT
A1·7·F Solicitor
, 230 Controclulll
;'At-4-A ,Community Pion- . SoNJalo ......... t3,000.00
· n1nt1 end Zonlnt- ·
Tot81
,.
i'
Solloltor .. oooo .....3,000 .00
112
In lllmo'"'
OTHER GENERAL
'lf
GOVERNMENT-1,
''
· A1·7·G. 234 Audllor'o
Tra11um'o
i:,, MAnHEW
In M........, Of
fMI
•oooo ........ l18,000.00
M. WEAVER A'1·7·X 230 Controotuol
;: Qn Your Utl!·.lirthdey.
lervlcoo
··
,, Toe-.., lova!lwwto
T_'!!\......_·;.;::::::;2.~~00
;. ,
11e l'otiiOftln. .
u - 0 ,_, --111 Clov
. I'
lave, MDIII. Dod.
-ment ....... UO.OOO.tlll

I

000000 . . . .

0

CRINOUNE SUPS ALSO FOR RENT

TUXEDO IENTAL FROM

MASIDS AVAILABLE HOE
•

. EASTER

..

IJ

PLUSH 'ANIMALS
30°/o OFF

·EASIER
CARD$

•

FABRIC.
SHOP
110 WEST MAIN
POMROY
992·2284

.CARLTON

Prescription 'Shop
'

992-6669

253 NORTH SECOND

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

"*"

•Pfic;e of ad ~r 111 capite! 'lf!llters js double ptice O.f ad coU:
•7 point lb\e type ot\ly ull!ld

cejlf ~ cl•tUI.ed dlsplev.

I

EZ·II·A 2110 Copllol . '
Outllly.oo ..... l1 13,988.00
Totol Londo ond
Buldlngo .... l1 13,888.00
OTHER USES OF FUNDSE2·11·A 280 Note-l)ebt
SONICO ... oo.·oo 134,000.00
Toiol Other UNo of
Fundi .': ... ,.... 134.000.00
Total Program VSoni'*Y s-or
Fund Appropriation .oo ... •t78.411.57
E8·5·A 240 Dopoollo AI·
funded...
Guoronly
.
Motor ........... 12~.31111.88
Total Ulllltleo Qopbolto
Fund Appropriation ........124,311il.88
GRANQ TOTAL
'
ENTER PRISE .
FUND. APPROPRI~TION........ 111111.823.82·
SECTION 8. Th•
be
opPtopri•d !tom the TRUST
AND AGENCY FUNOS.
POLICE DISABILITY AND

Poanercay Unlly Se,athael

"A Cllltifilli:ladVer1illm ..t pl1cecHn T.,e. DIIIy S•ntln .. le•·

EASTER .
_
BASKETS•••••• STA~ING

FABRICS AVAILABLE:

Buldlngo~

\

In Memoriam

RUSSJLL STOYER

PROM liME
IS HERE

Totel wow Fund ApP,oprlotlona..... l312,781.37 ·
PROGRAM V - II,.SIC
UTILITY SERVICES
Sonilllry Sewer Fund-.
E2·11·A Ofllce2408uppllooMd
Me-lo ...... l30.417.17
Totol
Otilco .......... 130.417. 57 ·
Londo lind

15

' :

WASHINGTON (UPI) ...:., Pris· Health.
.
.
Tile congressionally created
ons are failing 10 provide adequate
health care for inmates infected commission concluded:
. with the AIDS viru$, who are often
-A lack of education of ·
stigmatized and fail to receive inmates llld Staff "createS fear and
COJDP!Wion, the National Commis- discrimination towards individuals
sion on.AIDS concluded Thursday. · with' HIV and ilitjust policies"
In a report to President Bush directed towards inmates who are
and Congress, the. commission sick.
.•
·urged federal, s~ and ·local pris· -Prisoners .with fiiV 'are .
ons to improve health care and :'rapidly acquiring" iu~rculosis 1•11~
AIDS education for inmates infect- and were often a.utomatically segteed wi!lr the AIDS virus and prison gated from the rest of the prison
.workers.
.
.
eV\ID though there is no public
· " Interventions ambnt! prisoners health need to do -so.
.
wiD save lives and will li.ive a sig-Despi te high rates of HIV
nifu:ant impact upon the course or infection and "an ideal opportunity
· the epidemic in communities to · for prevention and education
which prisoners will re~urn," said effons, former prisoners are re • .
the 43·pa$C re'port, '.'HIV Disease . entering·their communitieS with lit·
in Correctional Facilities."
~
tie or no added knowledge about
Inmates' have one of the highest · HIV disease and how w prevent .
rates of infection with the AIDS- it:"
causing human immunodeficiency
· Based on the findings,
com·
virus or HIV. Studies have shown mission recommended:
2.1 percent 10 .5.9 percent of diose
_The
PUblic Health Serentering/ri~on ~ infected with v.ice iss.ue ~uidelines for correctionthe A!D vlfUS, w1th ~me states a1 facilities on the prevention and
reportmg rates m~~;ch htgher rates, treatment of acquired immune defl,
such u 17 percentm New York.
ciency syndrome..1 ·
. "By conc_entra!ing people at
-The Department of Health
ht$flest beha~~ nsk of HIV, ~ur and Humans Services l:larify poli·
pn!lcns and JWis could be se~mg cies about . prisoners getting
as ~ e;~~cepu~ P!Xe 10 achteve involved in studies of potenlial new
P!!blic ,health ob~ves, and espe- AIDS treatments.
.
crally m, the contamm~~~ o_f.HIV ·
-. Malting drug addiction treat·
and substance abuse, sa1d •Dr. ment available to prisoners on ·
June Osborn, commission chair- demand.
·
m
. stead f .
B?;u f&lt;
-:-New studies on incarcerated
n ortu~1y, m.
o usong women and children.
the op~ort'!nrty to Improve the
-Cre~ting a system to attract
health of pnsoners and the pubhc dbcrors·and nurses 10 work in pris'!W~gh ready treatment apd ~uca· ons.
·
non, we have been squander~ng .~
-Prison ciUicials ) ensure
m~Jor pubhc health opportumty,
inmates and staff have access to
wd Osborn dean f the u
ty
. . .•.
o
mvers.
AIDS education and prevention
of Mtch1gan S~hool of Pub he programs.

'

1
14.

blasts ~are of
prisoners with AIDS
.

•'

12

Rep~rt
'

I·

11.

L' ANSE1 .Mich. (UPI)- Rep. American Legion 8aD in L'AJose,
L' Ansc newspaper: then received the 1990s for maliciouslpmearing .
Robert Dllvss, R-Mich;, undec presDavis, the- ranking Republican wider notice after a female audi· someone's ethnicity."
··
sure from Arab-American .and on the House Armed Services ence member decried them in an
Davis, a former mortician, first
women's groups, did an abrupt Committee, opened by declaring interview with Minnesota Public elected. IO Congress in ·I978, noted
about-face apd apologiZed for jokes that "it. is a g~ night w pick on Radio.
,that he split from many Republi.
he told about Iraqi women at a · -~~IS and pte~ on S~ J.lus'
Init\ally, Davis defended the calls w vote for '!he ~ual Rights
Jiolitical roast earlier this month.
SC';D, !hen IOid J~ ~ ·mdicilled . jokes and offere4 no apology, but . Amendment and the Ctvil Rights
"I do not, and did not ·intend he d heard on Captrol Hill.
as the story spread Wednesday he Act
those j~ w offend Alab,pc:ople, . . ·.. 'f!lt.· first three w~ sl~!fS about began feeling the ~t from femi·
Groups representing die Detroit
area's large .Arab community were
nor did I want. to be malicious · lraqt women. Two. tmphed they nisi and Arab"American grou~.
·towards .women in general. 1 was SJI!eJied bad and had bad teeth. The ·
ScOtt Easton, spokesman for the · outraged at Davis'sjokes.
making fun of Sad dam Hussein, third_was: "What. do ~ou cal1 two American-Ar.ab Anti-Discrimina"Given the fact that it was civilsimple as that," Davis said in a Iraqt y.-omen g~tng mto a bar? lion Commiuee iii Washington, ians _women and children jlarticstatement released Wlllfnesdar by·' .Incommg Scuds.
·
·
said his group worked much of the ularly .,... who paid a higb. price of
his WashingtOn offJCe.
Davis continued' with several day with Davis's staff on ·the word- .. allied bombing in Iraq, the man
Davis told a series of jokes more jokes about Saddam Hussein ing of an apology, which was to be shows an appalling lack of decen-,
about Iraqi women before an audi- · and the&gt; Iraqi military; including: read at a news conference in cy," said Jessica Daher, the region·
ence of about 100 people auending "What's the national bird of Iraq? Delr()it Thursday morning.
al director of the American-Arab
''I undezstand some people were A'lti-Discrimination Committee.
the annual Upper Peninsula Leg- Ducic.''
islative Dinner, March 2 at the
The jokes were published in a offend_ed _b~ ·my remarks ll!ld ~~
Feminists were equally
thos~ md~vtd!!,als I apolog~ze, • . incensed. Patty O'Donnell, presi-Davos saod, Arab-Amencans dent of the Michigan chapter of the
deserve the same degree ~f .respect National Organization for Women,
and dt~mty afforde.d ~o other called Davis's remarks ' ' in very
groups m ,nOJ'I!Iem Moch1gan, the poor taste and absolutely disgustUpper Penmsula and anywhere else ing "
for that mauer. There is no room in
·
',

.

, ,

....,.,..,

1,
1

:·r--;::M:==:Di'-1 •

.,

lyncll, :

• Kip •

t~~~.~~:~.71B.OO

~~~~~:~~NDS~CURITY

OF PERSONS AND
PROPERTY
. B-11-:l12,Employera' .
Shore., ........... tll,l21.111
Totol P~ljco D!!lllblllty
Totil
end Penolon
·
.
. lmptOW.
Fund
........
:
.....
111,1121.1111
Totol Pfllllram VI- TranoTOTAL TRUST
portotlcin .... 11 83.889, 17 GRAND
ANO
AGENCY
FUND
PROGRAM II - PUBLIC
APPRORIA- .
HEALTH SER\((CES
TION ......,.... oolll.821.1111
B3-2-A Comotory- '
TOTAL AL('APPROPRIA210 Poroonol lloNicoo- .
TIONS .... 11 .287,B20.150
211 Solorleol
.
(3)14, 21, 28, 3tc
Wegoo ...... oo ....... 11100.00
212 EmployH
'
lenetllo .....
100.00
PubliC
Notice
240 Suppllo• ond
Motorloi* .......... &amp;,OOO.OO
FINANCiAL REPOIIT
250 Copllol
OF TOWNSHIPS
Outllly .. ,......... 18,082.04
' For Fl-1 Y•r Endod
Tcnol
. Oocombor 31, 1180
Cemotery ... oo$23, 782.04
CHESTER TOWNSHIP
Totol Progrom IICOUNTY OF MEIGS
Public Heelth
''Thiolo on u..-lled
s ...lcOI ....... t23,78~.04
Flnonclel Report''
PROGRAM Ill- PARKS
SUMMARY OF CASH
. R,E~:~~~~~~~~~ND
BALANCES, RECEIPTS
ACTIVITIES
AND EXPENDITURES
Bli·3·A Rocrutlon
GOVERNMENlAL FUNDS
Progrom- .
RECEIPTS:
240 Supplleo ond
Tueo ..... oo ......... II0,097.113
Motora
I Io.... ....· $3 ,966.53 Ucen~et,
F P•rmita
.
Totol RecrNIIon
and •• ............. .. 1.9110
Poogrim .. ,.... oo .. 3•.9&amp;6.&amp;3 lntorgovornmontol
Totol Progron&gt; IllRecoipto ......... 90.128:31
Leloure Time
lntorelt .......... ..... 2,212.48
o:.fEili":.:e#.iii.13.966 ·63 Al~~!~~~e ......... 32.oo7.34
·REVENUE FUNDSTOTAL
88·3-A Fire. RECEIPTS .... 1711,391UI6
210 Poroonol SorvlceoDISBURSEMENTS:
211 SolorMIII ·
Gonorol G""- .
oo .p·l·..·...........d'4 000 00
ornment .. ....... 311,724.83
W.~. Up
Public llofotv 18.1311.117
240
Mllleriolo .....:.. 44,0110.51 Public Wi&gt;rko .. ... 49,111 8.88
·2.110 Note-Debt .
Hoolth .. ... oo ........ 11,8411.311·
-Ic
·o
30
000
00
CoPIIII
Outlay
... 411,883.19
S
. -·Fire ..........
'
.
TOTALNTS
DISBURSEToto!
.. oooo .. H8,0110.111
811-1-A Safety.:..
ME
........ 180.192.03
212 'Unltormo .... 14,804.21 rUondlol RlecDIIil ptb II Ov1~1203 113
88-7-A 2110 Permlplve
• •
I ""
Tea ... oo ............. 7.881.111 OtRhor Blourcu/
30 00
19-11-A ~40
eco pto........ ...... o.
' 00
U-lty·............. 411.11112.44 Othw
SourFinonclng
ce • IU 11111
. I ..... 300
Totlli• Other
Special
.
F d1
1137 088 77 Totol crl Rec. 1Jo Othor
un ........
•
·
GF!AND
TOTAL SPECIAL
, Sourcoo 0•• 1'Untlorl Dlob.
REVEN.UE FUNQ APPRO·
• Otllor Uooo .... 11,1503.13 .
Fund Caoh lolence
P"8 IATION
1
·
.....
SECTION
II. Utii,'(BII.&amp;
Thot there be 1I 1I 90 ...... oo.... 24•1112 .1 I
opproprilltod from the fol- Fund Ceoh Bolonce
lowing DEBT SERVICE 12131/80 ........ 4t115.78
' NON-EXPENDABLE
F''NDS · •
. u
TRUST FUNDS
GENERAL OBLIGATION
OPERATING ReCEIPTa
Other 'f,~Di!:e'~.· •u~a lnteroat .... :.oo ...':'oo .... 304.17
C-2-H Bylldlng
TOTAL
. .
RECEIPTS .... ....... 304. 17
Fund .......... .. .. ell ,u•24. til DISBU•SEMENTS·.·
Tatol Othor Dob!'a.,..
"
Ice Fund. :.... .ooll,l24.1il SMupplleol end
304 7
GRAND TOTAL DEBT
-111 11 ........... ,....
.I
SERVICE ....... 11,524.11 TOTANT~DISIURSE·
.
SECTION 7: Thot !hero be
ME B........ .... ... 304.17
opproprlatod loon&gt; · !he Fund Cooh Bolonco
fallowing
ENTERPRISE 111190 .. .. ... ............ 3,000
FUNDS.
Fund Cooh Solonco
WATER FUND12/31/10 ........ ....... 3.000
OFFICE- .
Fund Cooh
.
E1-F-A210Poroonel
Balonce .... ...... 44.1t5.7a
ao..lceo- ·
Dopooltory
. ·.
Bolonce.o ........ 41,1111.78
2111olorleo/
w 110111 ........ .. 170.ooo.oo · clnvHih meHnto d........3,ooo.oo
212 Employee
•• 011 on .... ..... ... - 0 . Benoflto ......... 11,000.00 To.lel T..... .., H
240 aupplleo .. d .
. at-.. ,........ -.1111.78
Moterlelo .. ,... 130,000.00 Lou Outkotendlng
.
Chell o................... - 0 210. Copllol .
TOTAL.
Outllly ....... ,.. oooo4,700.00
a•• •NCE
•• .~
Totol
. '
"""
oooooo-, 11 1. 78
OffiCII ........ 1219,700.00
l:g~~:DRYNEOIFS
E1-II·E PUMPING
240 lupplleo 1111d
Outotondlng
Mttorlalo ...... l111,1iB1.37 1N/1111~.: ....
.. -'0.
211.0 Copllol
- •-•• .......... oo 3 1• 0
Retlrod ......................-oOutllly ............ 10' ooo:oo ' Outatondlnt
Totlll
121111111 37 12/31/)0 ........ 31,310.00
... " ·... · • ·
· 1 oertlfy tlllo ooport lo be
E1-il- DISTil IIUTION
correct end tru.;'to the boot
lt80 Note-Debt
of my kn-..
S~~n~lcto ........184,000.00
K...., R. ........ Clerk .
Jolll Dlotri- ·
·
"''·
button ............ 4.000.00
P.
1!1·1-G METEIII
Chootor, OltiO 41720
2110 Capitol
· 114-III·MI2
Outlay ............ IZ,IIOO.OO 131 28, 1tc
Totol Meterooooo .... 2.1100.00
00 . . . . . . .

0

•

•

00 "

'

00

-··.

•

itr,·
r . . J.'l:.'U
..

. ._,

"·

00 . . . 00 . . . . . .

Pu'1.....

-...otr, OliO 457_60

•Vinyl Siding

Offlct 614· ..1·1116

•Restoration
•Repair Work

DOtnE s. •la.liooi

IIOMI614·tft·S6t2

HOUIEI•LOTIIIPARIWIS
COMMERCIAL
. We Neeol Uotl•pl

992-5526
POMEIOY,

...

-' .. '

.. . 11·5·•"-

NEW
FOR ~M~:~~EI
.992.7013
or 992-SSS3

_,,..

•Remodeling and

Public Notice

Congressman apol~gizes for jokes about Iraqis ·.·

.

992·2772 or
•
742-2U1
· 538 Bryen Ploa.
. Mldc!leport.

JOS II. S.l!lll Stnet

•Kitchens • Baths

IAIUS .UESIE .

.r

· . Call ffUt o!Jici! .for paid in &lt;Jdvancn r~lm}

lhe'

•

'

,I l

•Garagaa

•Roofing . ·
•lneullltlo!i

THIS l"xl"
BUL~ETIN SOARD
·. SPACE AVAiLABLE
AT S5:00 PER DAY.

Nt&lt;-NU..

•Room Additions

Wlndowa

cALL 614-992-7104 FOR APPl

f•

·~Ii ...

I. L. MASH
CARPENtRY.

•Replacement

VERY NICE LARGE HOME ON APPROX. 31!
ACRES-4 BR, 3 baiiiS, 2 llrages, r~n1ed I
BR apartment Property includes p9f!d, •.11prox. ~.BOO sq. ft. _form bii!L Jnd mobi'e
home. Areel borptn at $84,900.
-.

uss

.
Jansa

J&amp;L
INSULA
II ON
•VInyl lldlng . ·

·. FOR SALE IN RACINE ·

A. T h e

-somebody...... . .

BULLETiN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30P.M. DAY BEFORE ·
PUBLICATION

CA&amp;Ii?!!·

:!':;

:are

11:

I

Iii ds CiiljlkCI ill cheen'as f&lt;xma-

Business Services

B.QLLETIN BOAIID_

rr_e

;Jcnolk

.

Ohio

Want to:

illfaDt chugbtn Kedrin ~ldlole. 10 in Mayport, Fla., along with four
lions of F-14 Tqnicars and A-6 . gm:. OIJ.i&amp;es .i ~ · where he 'other shi~. Ships also wiD re1urn
lnlrudcn rond ovabiad.
saw hec c~ the finlb!De.
w Newpon. R.I., .and Colrs .Neck,
-~-,
. .
-~
"Wbm that Oyov~:n•elllover,l
.At ieast 300sailors will see their N. ].
·
.
. .
. ~d · ~ bc;::ommr
thnogb• I was~ 10 die. It _.. babies for the finl time. Navy offiThe Saratoga .was deployed'
~
g
~
wOoderful." said Pal Tmddl. wbli cials said.
Aug. 7, afltZ Iraq's Aug~ 2 invasion.
led b the sre;eted·her_husband, I eery. with
Babies, banners and b~loons · of Kuwait. The Kennedy _and its ·
.
.. . .PJ were
Y
their four chiJdrm.
·
· will be stabtml·a{ong tbe ptez for bailie group left Aug. 15, with only
"
Bj Ulllted ...._ .-... II '
.
.
aucraft earners USS Jobn F.
. LL Cmdr.Jmy Trudell: an F-14 l'ibat sailc!n ~ c:alling-the; "II)Oih- '.five days noiice· .·
·.
·
l'btlo k of boitoiied llld bops~~ Jiceu • !lave.beal coit~en.:![ and USS ~~a and pilot from Wamer-Robms, Ga., er of all paities," a teference-to·/ · .. Twenty.:OOC menibeiS of Sarato1DCI .
lhe baltleship US Wos- exc~anged bags wi!h bis twins, s~ Hussein's liattle HieroriC.
ga's ctew lost~ lives before the
:S.;;!!.,~~~,::':toiOik~llx!-.S COISI!l.
.
•
•
IIISUD and Randy! ~ 9; Eric, 7;
Area bars are stocking up on war began. The sailOrs drowned
Ai1110J1
. driwt'sli .
~ ~ ~ Since !he a.t
. ~e':Iedy, Wtscoosm and . ~Casey, S. His ~!llldren ~ore- beer foo: returnigg s.ailors and when a com~e~ ferry C8pSUed
o( the SpririJ Baat paiod. wbich !ndi•icwUy lqias die last week of
~~~
to:Waboutll
lO
nboas that reajl: My dad S a 10,000 pwas were bemg donated while retiJrniDg to· the ship from
·Fellraary and runs anlil die -* after~, u na~ compiled by
. ~w
hecn."
..
for the homecoming. .Local busi- Haifa, Israel. ·.
·
·.the Florida DivWot1 or Akobolic; Beverages llld To!w:co showed
9.000 of the Ad~ Fleet JletllDD· "Man. is il nla; w be back rrom .· nesses are as.exciled as family and
Three aircraft from the SaratQ,
Wednesday.
.
.
.
lid.The K........tv and.,..;.__ .
tiJ!s one," he sa!d- smilint. sum· friends $ince the return of ,sailors ga's air wing were shot down early
. " In the fll1l week. there were 200 armu in Key West," said Sgt. . . .
.- !
-~were ~up the feelings of fliers dot- meansthen:wmofsales.
.
in the war. The Kennedy managed
George lleneila, wbo was part mdie fnl ABT last f~ U) pallill the
~1180
_of ~~ ~~~ tmg the O!;eam tlmlae. .
Kennedy sailors alone ha v~ to make it through .the war without .
island during Spring .Break.
.
.
with~
liiiD 50
LL_Jo~ ~C:S·. an F-14 pil\'t ~paid an estimated $20 million losing one plane. . . .
,
"I woUJ4 a)' 99 perc:aU of the IIICIIJ WCie f~ JQiJos it pno• uion
. · --«· .
·1
wbo lives m Vu-guna Beacll, saJd smce they left port '-August.
The WiSconsin, wbich ·may be
· of altoholic bevc:ntcel- Oat of thole, a least 80 pc:acaa hid • "I'Cbody
-=~~f:esw~ · ~e was one day of lhe war be . Returning with the Kennedy and maldng·i!S final deployment due to .
else's driver's I~ or fake ID."
··
W
~
. ...._1,
willnevez forget.
the Wisconsin are the cruisers USS its planned retirement with the bat~ ·
In the last foar ~ police in Key Weat have seiztd 678 fake
by~;.~;~=~
"Tbe day tbat my baby was . Biddle! ~S~ ~homas S. Gates, . tleship
Mi~ ~Its 16-:
driVer's licenJes llld an anklld ••,tbet bcnowed lioN••. dtlt- . Nl • · . . acne: ·. aa. · . .
bcim, 1 roand thlt Ojd Ill about noon USS MississiPPI. USS South Car- irich guns 324 umes. The salvos.
.~~ Vt{g 1!1 1 ~ and flew a night mission over Iraq olina; USS San Jacil!W and frigate were fired at enemy targets in·
='~~ow';:! to the .ae's wbcle.lhey wm illued for re~~~roto
Bav.ahl If Stauofn
. _eM: •
rest o ""' returamg and got~~ a .lot-.a lot of sur- USS Thomas C. Han.
·
occupiedl(uwait. · . ·
·
·•' e ve ICIIII fake driver's licc:lllea from Fbida apd Mltylllld 1114
~ came ~to other bases face.;.ro-~ ~ ...~.around Bagh· . The Thomas S. &lt;;&gt;ates .was
Saratoga battle group warships:
New Hamplbire," Helteaa said. ."But this ye6i J*(icalldy, 1 didn't
~Ltill&lt; A.!"I!C~ft'eml dad. ·_said Ollip. That was a lot scheduled to be the fust shtp to .. launched 86 Tomahawk ·missiles · .
noCice that many fake IDJ. MOlt tidl weaellling IOiaellc)dy die's raJ
-r:ursda?' s ~elebra~ . of exH~~Mforonebday."h th : .. rewmEStoT~orfolk Thllrsda
. y, at 1:15 striking_targets deep in Iraq,
· driver' • licente. I'd ay !!() percem oC die IDs we c:onfi.,.led were .. .pr~vie:!f
.
.
..
. . u w11e ary roug t eu . p.m. . . .
. .
Navy saod.
·
uons. Thousands o family and
· .. The camez Saratoga 1s due back
'·
Law e~~tlirmnmt 9ffkW. ~~ave confiruled S43 fate
in
Cltanvlllel',-463 in Daylllll:l Beadt, 204 in Pea.... and I02 in Fort

NORRlLJS Va. {U!J)- Six.· ::.:':.?;
=:;_car;rn~s,ooo
~. ... IDWIId Easl Coast ::!?;

.Pea.;

1991

.

Home R•palr•

..SIMON'S
PICK·
A-PAIR
SAME ·
LOCATION

OVEN IIPAII

•'Siding
. •Painting .

AU IIlilS
.... It Iii Or We .

UN'S APPUANO
· SDYICI

POMEIOY.t.
OHIO·
2/Z7(tlll 100.

·CARPENTER SERVICE

· -ROOm Addltlone ·
, ,
-Gutlllr worll •
·
-Eio!ctrlcol ond .Phlmblnt

-con..... won:

992·5335 'or
915-3561

Acrell ,,.. hot OHicel

117

.

'·

BISSELL
IUILDEIS

........
-··-·

CUSTOM BUilT
'HOMES &amp; GARAGES

Step

.

Pi. 949·2101
or 1.1.949·2160 ·
•. Dly or Night ·
NO SUNDAY CALLS

I Co.t np.. ·

Fr.. Estlmat..

. !FREE EITIMA:rESI

985-4473
.
667-6179 \

' V•.C. YOUNG Ill

.

UPHOLSTUY

213·118. S.C.d .

Mlddle.....t
Hand Tufting
Cultnm Drapea
36 Ye•n

SIDING.CO~

· Gutters
· Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
· .··. Painting ·

lhwll-.hllt
"FrH·E.lmet•"

TII·COUNIY

,BILL SLACK
992-2269
11·12-10-lfn

I~CYCLING
OPEN 7 DAYS

PH. 949·2101
or .... 949-2160
IIOSUNDAY

... ,.r.

FOIEVD IIONIE
PROM TANNING
SPECIAL

USED API'UAICIS
tO DAY •aii'IIITT

so ...

1st
Schtiill
. Stu..,s
10 SESSIONS - $10

WAIIIII-$11G up,
DIYI$-$.. up

lllfiiGIUYOIIS-StOO up
IMIIS-Gss-lloc.....$12 ~ up
FIIIZIIS-S 125 up '

.

A WEEK

9 A.M. 'Til7 P.M.

Jou

If
clean up your
yar on WHktnch .... wo
bu1_ IJfl weoktnds.

TRI-COUNTY
· RECYCLING .

1-1111 Oft tloo lyj!!!ls On
Tho Com• of
II. 7 &amp;II. !43

c.n 949·2126
For Appt.

IIICIO OVEII5-$1t up

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVKE

FOIEYII DONIE

992-5335· or 915-U61

Auou from Pod Offlct .
POMEROY, OMO
101:10/lt 1111

i

3·14·'51-Jtn

LINDA'S
PAINTING

l IJOL Ill NT AL

KELUI'S CUSTOM BENDING.
We Mow CI!Onged Our Location To
1111 •
East on Rt. 241 through
ch..ter, Oh.

SPECIALIZING IN ....
•Cullom B1111t Exhault Systama
•Complete Lint of Exhault Suppliaa
•Handle and lnltall Monroe Shocka
c- ud See U1 For A Free Iaspectlon
and Eotlmate .
.

tldlltOI • UIIMGI
'FREE ESTIMATES
Take the pain·out of

painting.

PIL 614·915-3949

· Let me do it. for yeu.
YEIY IEASONAIL£ ·

PUbliC Notice

•FIREWOOD

NEW- BPAII

742-2451 .

TOOlS &amp; IIIUIIIIIJI!

REMOVAL ·..

USED RAILROAD nES

~--·tl-1

·

·TRIM and

BISSELL

We SIIJ Whet We Do.
We Do Whet_._·~--~·

MlliE lEWIS, Ow..,
II. i, hllollll, ON.

SHRUB &amp; TREE

ROOFING

949·2168

olluilanebl• Ret•
•Quality Work
•FrH -=•tlma1a1
•Carpet Haa Faat Dry
Time
•High Glo11 on. Til•
Floor Flnl1h

Pameroy,

lltwwnl L Wrltnll

614·992·2321

IIIDIPINIHIII'
CARPD CIIAIIIIIS
and ~ PLOOR CAllE .

614-992 ·6120

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•ILOWN IN
INSULATION

FREE ESTIMATES

Ex.peri~nee

Ow111r &amp; Operator

.•LIGHT HAULING

·~W90 ·tln

ol Mlilll''"

All lrlttis
EMILEE MEIINAR .
. For

."At l•b 1 tl1 Prien"

ec-p~eta ·

Rtnio!W111 ·

-Roofln• ··
-lnterlpr.Ex•tor

FIR

CIDAI ·
CON$TIUCTION ·
992-6641., .
691·6164

IISSELL &amp; IUIII
CONSYIUCnON

YOUNG'S

01

NO JOI TOO SMALL
FREE ESTIMATES

Plcklp.

· U• Court Str•t
· Entrance

Pslnt!"'l

•Roofing

47269 St. lt. 241

IODNIY DWI
l.ootg lotlom, Oh. lt5743
3/15/91/1

110.

HAVE REFEIIEIKES

NIW ,,

(6141 915-4110

PUILIC NOTICE
ATTENTION: Minority,
Wo..,.n, • Smell lulinoto
Contrectoro • Suppllero
PROJECT: W•otowoter
lyotem lmprove!M!!I Projoel, Rutland, Ohio, ContriiCI A
OWNER: Ylll!'ll• of Rullond, Ol!lc&gt;.
liD DATE: M•n:h :1:11.
1881,11:00 P.M.

. 3·6·'91- 1 mo. pd.

$fl6il/

Public Notice

MOilLE HOMI FURNACES- HEAT PUMPS
All FURNACE PAm

lng, Piping end Volv...
BIOwero. '•nolng, Pumpo,
AeretOro, ind CltH!Ioro.
l'leno 1M¥ be obllllned by
contootlng E~ A•
w..m Conltnletion, Inc. •a•••· 700 Wlftlder GrfW.
II 'IIOII!Ing bldo flom quell- ~-.Ohio 44181,114llod Minority, Women, ond 348-1111511.
Small Buolnou Contrectoro
lnlereot portle• ohould
ond Supplloroforthefoll-· · contiiCI Mr. Ray Korr, 1:00
lng phiiMI of work:
A.M. ID 1:00 P.M. 111:
E,.;cavedon. Orh,•waya.
W•••m Con•u&amp;.ction, .
Soodlng. I'Nceot ond Coot· Inc., P.O. lox 31, Choetor,
ln·PI-ConcrotoWork,Mo- Ohio 41720, 614·882·
oonl'(, Roof111g, Mloa. St&lt;MI III'I... IFAXJ814-182-IIQII.
Work, Dooro ond Wln-11.
Plumbmg, Pointing, ·Coulk21, 21, 3tc

. IINNm'S MOBILE HOME
HIA11NG I COOLING

Leltltttl 0. s.tftnl Sell eel Rd. oH Rt. 141

1114)' ....9416 tr 1·100·171·5967

oNo llnOkt, lll'lls or wood lrlth Inside hour.e.
oluml up 10 It-Inch diamtllrwood
&gt;HIIIIS_,Io,_ute
......... ~30 ·inch!OI'I,IWOOII

&lt;UIII,.... ,....,. """''duct '""m

-MiyllllocMid10 1001tttlrom ll'o lloU.e·

r.tlcellanaoua

. - . Sllllconsuuetlon

Milrchei'ICIIIt

LOAD fVEfY 12 HOURS

...._.,. _____.. _
.CALL
VICKER'S WoOO HEATilG

EASTER FLOWERS

PhOM (:104) SJW211oller 5p.m,

Fresh or Artificial-Big Selection
. ·, o·, a t oes..._____ so.·.•· ...-$373
Eat 1ng
Golden Bananas ......oooo•.oooo 4 lbs. $119
Winter Hardy Azaleas.__oo$444 ...
. (4 aolorel

,

White ·.
· .·.· Sl 49 ~·
Half Runner .lean.5_,______

---------S11Aw••111, cAuunow•.
00

•·

WI IAYI .WI, ASPAUIUS,
CAI.AGI, IIOCCOLI PLANTS.

·- --.- ------

MEIGS
FARM
MARKET
• 300 WEST MAll milT
POMEROY, OHIO

I

�•

Sentinel

--.. .

3 Announcllnentl

-~II;·~==
=
.
b...

Wrle: llwit

W..

March

Ohio
32 . Moblle.ltolnM
for Sale

LAFF-A-DAY

·- ~~&gt;-

..

-

_.....

m

42 MoblleHomu

lorAint

....

acll'lno........,..

'N' cu1 nEe ~ 1.-rr Wrlaltt

-

1

~

OOttol' n 11£ ~D. ..I'*&gt;-

·v

t91 -tC13- jqq - zoo- 201 ...

1'111.

.,.

.....

- - -

.....,

33 Fenna tor 8lle
.2 ·I t ,...,... ...._, ...

low to Pano lour otntplo

.,

00.

.......

.-.-

·-·-.1·-.. . .
AI

nllltod.

.......

' 0 Our Hotll6

-- - -.

35 Loti A Acl'lllgl

=·

m' ....
='
'I''~ --.eN •+---------..,...----------1--..
I

,._._.1111111Ltllr.

L~

!t! :

":r;
=-~~r=-.---:
-~--........
,. ...,r,. ;r,.-llalior...

18 · Wlntld to Do

hoiil

raw -

Ia tho miU JUIII

aoll~111r.r.

_ .. Dor eon ewiw.
lilt, lftol daiM, otiM' ", H
....... 1:10 ....... A.- 2•10.

:=..:..-L.~

- . oflor ....... DlwfHno
a 'arma. 114 UIIZM

a.r.·~Q

"' clr...... -

wv. ....,.,.

- .loCllwtloo-.
iar ....,.
IG07.

-

or.

........... In llqulol .........

North 4th.., lldC
t 2 bid_
.............. ·~......
- - . 101111
211111. ,

.

Onel J cuswlllll,.......,.•·
,,. nllio IIICI .., ·~t...oclulla

...... _,. 01Mipa•1 IM:ICa.

Unlurnllhlil 3 bid OOftl apt.
looMed - - -r llaiDr
Cllnlo .. W'nl Ylntlnla.llfO......

-·-.. . 1--1

10 .. "'I .................

·
=-:.·-CUI....... ••

=·:·:~riit~r~:-: ~
-·

53

Antlqull

luy ...............

~

.........

....,....... ~1-

- - 410
-

1044
11.0011.

1111 I. lloln IIFM. , . , _
Hotn: II.T.W. IJII,to 1:10
p.&amp;, . . . . ., 1 :00 .. ·1:00 p.lll.

"""'"' with
-·
-rloCtoM,,
month• . _ . , «44NI'II.
.....
.....nolrontogo,
-

57N131. '

·.f~~illl~t!::

Colt,

a ,... ., . . . . . -

- - - - ,_ .,.-

llo[

0..1.
. . . . . . . . .. 1 ,.._to
···~··
Building~build114 . . . . .

=,.,.

.
. . lnt1 1111111 'lnotar ..h Ono 1 - Font
,..,. - . ; ;
om

··- 1 ·-............
~-·-

_.,llelaw
uwllhall....,.
1
ma.
tea:'o;::;!!._,
"he
•

=

TIIA1''5 !JOT fRU€! 1 LM
TO MY 1 TOI.P YOO &amp;0!

r.:.=x~

'::.

ii.::i:' "ii.ilil': GIIC '1M. Ono .... --. ~- ::...C"':..-~
- ---'INokWih•
......
....
twin
..... . ~.,...~~·1M~-~·-~~~~ lfT--=~1.
• 1 ldiauaa.Cal~
1DW71-'12111.

111
.....,,.,_,,,
CA. - ·

.;:::..;:.=,.._,.....,..,___,_....;

•

"! -

1-.~

- ·-

.......
.--.

110 --h ..........

---'-rs~

.

.._ .... UIIrdfannl.'lrv.•~

~lt1
.. UMd~~
"-.~-

.-n. '•nl Usa
lnd
.,..__
c. ......... -. ... - .':J..'"i:C*I4. ....

0

Selaon Fln81 from Ontario,

Canada (T)

ec-nr.

ita lena-

Stereo. D
W (Jj. Pllhet IICiwllng
llnL.IIII A myetery writ..- II
klllect bofore ?lnllhlng hiS
book. Stereo. Q
(l)·W•II'eaOeln the

21111.
:
1111 KXIO Ooocl Concalon.
1400.114 Ul Ul7.

Opportunity

62 Wllntld to Buy

41 HoUSM tor Rent

want to • • .._, Countr
Tobaooo Poun~111 fDr 10
- - lleriiwl.. ,.,.,,
AI. ... Andy Slglor, :101-aP1011.

-

....

Nuclnr9L

•

CAIO clbt

~~ 104 ~~~

(!) The Milici
a•Top...,.
Falher·Son Dotective Tum:
Holtlge Situation; Woman
Hold el Gu!)IIOin
_ Ui
Stereo. Q

s

01'1

-~
2-.~7.
rnu..
IHt, ...,. 1

MW

cyclo,l2

.~.

•

Pior . . ., 1111 - · ~R·100,

Clllaftlrlp.m. 114 ue , . .

o•
11te S~ntP~CN
Grandpa
Inherits a ·
~

lprtune alter hla ·~ow~

;

:=
.On ....=·.::=.;aQ
'

75 Boltl &amp; MotOI'I
forSale
,
-,.-.,-,...,.....;Crd.;.;.,,;;;Tlf.H;,;;...ui....,W.,..-M.-!

'I'::S..wlh OO!'Idni. -. AU haal1;;.

• I

Aieo
Col -

-.-wv.

J :GO p.01., -

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

-·--==

_..__._,IOV...
.01 o-. c..,.. I I =

.8:06 (J) NIA lnltallle?P

1113, 1112 h; - - -

new, . . oond, .........,._

Sot-c..
· 3 - :1.8

Y......,

tflll, 1211. ..... John ...... lhp llator, Lillo '
With~.....
·
·
MSB oftor &amp;p.m• .

lUIIe, 2 'TDI

_., ... 'r.l!o-or :Z
-.;~~~~.

=

:lbr holao ar ,,.,,., In Oollo
H.U.D. AfltNoVed. 1141.
'

•

Rral Es tole

31 Homn for Sale :
lobyolttor Wonted: Po~.Omtlor
11

old

-

child.

11111 14d0 Holly Pork homo,
............. goa - · ...
..... liOIIonl 2candblon
.00 B14-

IIIVldmtlolv 24 hau...... 182-a.t4.
No ...
nlilgoto come
or - to t1ome· 2 IR houoo, North Clolllo lohool
PreW
atn•
bue will oon1ld1r aol~ to etner. Dlot~ot, bNIIont condblon,
- · lluot .... rn Clilllpollo or tor;o '*'-' ront. m,ooo. e14o
on Rt.:ll W.M , _ Giltlpollo. -1111oftor 4:00.
.•
Muat:

ncM....ntoker,

be

good
alllt8ct•, no tHnrgrre, only
~ llnord need IPPIY, wry
good Colt 114-+ll.ot11

-·P.•·

....-

'

:lbr " - Dn AI. 1111 112 milo
F111111 T-. h3.0011. Mil Tou
lloblloHomoOrC:.rorT,.....n.
111 •••

•m.

=·. . -

. lor Nnt In Pcllnt
Pl...m, i Mdn:MNnl. IIC location, 1M ... 11041.
NIDI 2 ~ 1droom ..._, 7 mH•
out - l d Rlclgo, :IOW?I-

-.

'

for flint

--.........
•::r-·
··~
at • ..,.,..........._
.......
111 •• 11170fiM

-~
~· lit. 1

a: """"
.

. pt. PIIIUnt
VIcinity

a

"""""

otrlo 3 .............
IM~..-. hMchonl dlnotlo,
blllh, TV room, uti Mr "'!"'J

-..lldlnt•. -

Pci!Mfoy,

~~

.

.. llorllyll ....
-Vorl -................
llondor

. . \-Wile ....

8

..,. .....

root........... · · - 1110
lllldl llrwk
il47.
Itt ,
I To . ., I !ll..r :lbr
.... In Choel... Ohio.

Dr••• -

Mlddllpolt

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

7t

I o.m. to I p.m. --~111. tllo
117 t i ..... Qol.

=:."olt
wa-.

URD

!!tYoro. ..,......,.,

. ... _

ICing ... wolw bod , _ luA ...
Dry•t'lrppr
"'""""' -111
·ttl
Tho2M4.
Wwohor
-~
·• 2 -Inti podo,
....
. a.wJNo•h•
IMI 1nt_..
oantrot
--41-oriiNllli.

._

111-210.
LAYNI'S I'URNINIII
YiN II IIIIITAL DITIC10R8
Complolo homo lumlolllnae.
. . 1111.
, _ .....
- ;I 114-1411'11 t11
0112,
01lt.·
out N.
lulbllo
Rd. A ...- I Ill. i:if 1110

......

tr&lt;ts.,.

I

I dr, aGI

~tun~' .......

., .. - ....-.010.
~

o. ••r
,,.,.__

a na..•ll

IIIIII*

~pttldv

Udr to

.c; . . _ ""' JorrloCto

llmiLLNIINCI

ecw.ETHINa FOR MY
DAD TO HAl-l&amp; HIS
NEO&lt;TIE:e&gt;ON.

camPint&amp;
MotorHomn

17.-.
~lull.-both;
. . .1. -

All

1 - - , OH. 1 -

~~~~~

.....loTri .......... OIIIo
Co. -IYANIINTiiiPhi. .,

~TNII: The ?Milt

'

.toahMn,OH.
...... • . lle;ll ,.... Win- .
• Doorl. .... loll-•1
114 ... 1111.

~
I I

4011 -

............. ,...
--...__.,,... -=-=
12ltl, I

111111 .........

...........
R

rltM. COitloo=

414

14

-- -

9

Ill

.. PIIHIII

........ -

·~-,-

ciiiCI

1Ift ...... :II, ......,..

- · ..,. linn

82

• • ••

iM:g-.

1111

1ft

·-

,,•

"·

,.:::.~

I:IM:OO lUlL

\

-

Plumbing &amp;
Htellng
cart~A•

"",... .._-ttl ......

....... :'-·Cll'-=·:•=:-•n
t"""

Tnllnlng

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

0 •.,. •••• ONo
114 ... 1111

NDwli•s I tlam
-~·-~
~

... Ill I l l l l i i - - · -.

--.ch '21, 1111

1

n lOOks like you· might enpoy greater
pres11ge and llatus In the year llheed In
.,_~you weren't prevtoully eckMWiedged. Career lmprovementa ere
IIPeo lllcely.
•
- . a (llarelll1·"""' 11) You're likely
' to ,. . tMot* br '"!lfklng through ._._
tid onc1 aoonpelent lnhlnrleclllrlu than
br hendllng llctdllh deualcpmatt on
your own todey. UH your I'IIIOUn:eo.
Arlll, gel a jump on U"' br undtlratoncl··

"I'm I fllltn. Lalt wtlk, bwgllrt ltOie
..-ythlng In the hoo. bu? the throw rug I

*

wuateeptngon."

r

ing the ln?luences which are governing
you In the year ahead . Send lor Aries'
Astro-Graph·predlctlona today by mall·
ing $1.25 lo 1\slro-CJraph, c/o I his
-.paper, P.O. ~· 91428, Cleveland,
OH 44101-3428. Be sure to state your
Zodl~&lt;; llgn. I• '
TAURUS (April :ZO..._y 20) Devote aa
much time u poellbte to whet Ia your
most meaillnglul obpecllve today. You
might not have the luxury or establllhlng your own agenda iomorrow.
G l - ,.._, 21-.111111 10) Someone
you've known lor qul1e a Wille Ia much
Iandor or you thon you've had rt111110r1to
believe. This Individual may pertonally
supply the n'llulng .wlltnce.
·
CANCER 1"- 21-.!uiJI :12) Do not
place too much lignl?lcance qn early
developments todly, even th'ough they
appear to bo commending. Vou get
luckier u the d a y - on, end It Ia the
hetlPr end ruullt 111a1 count.
IS&gt; l.?u?r 2t-Aug. :12) Someone with
wllom you'N Clollly uaoelatect might
bo requtrecl to mike • '*d diCIIIon todar that will tteve mutuel ~•bola·
. llonl. Aftor the dust
111 bene?lla
wHI bo oiMOUI.
Y11G0 (Aug. 21 'IIIII. II) II you're bo1h
PN!*" and practlclll In your ftnanclel
InvOlvements, thla could bo a profttable
day lor you. Uee your head buying or
iol?lng.
'
.

-lei.

I,IBIIA (Sept. 23-0Ct. 23) An endeavor
lp Which you are preuntiY Involved
·could bo substantially lldvancec? todly
- II you're prepared to lake a celculat·
eel rlalc. But, remember, a celcutatect
rlalc Ia not a wild gamble.
ICOIIPIO (Oct. 24-Mo¥. :12) Go abol.t
doing your good deeds quietly tod1y,
without drlwlng ellentlon to you,...,,
Word o1 What you've done will reech
olhera without you having to t.. them.
IACIIT:I'AIII\II (No¥. 23-0eo. 21)
Something you've been wenllng to accomplllh Isn't a given today, yet II len't
quite u dllllcull u you've Imagined. 11
you tec;kle 11 h1lecl on, ~ II likely.
C.oti?COIIN (Dec.....,_, 11) YO!! are
pr...,lly In a cycle w?Mre your put .:forts aN coming
to roost. 1'1 r•
gard to making money, II IOOictllkethe
hard WOfk you've been putting In will
not bo In vain.
AQUARIUS(,.,., 20:-fab. 111 You COUld
bo In lor an lal_.lng upattence ~o­
dar: hevlng to deal with aatmaar mal1or
' that cwtned yuu a ptoblem In the put.

110fM

Thllllme.~.you'llc:omeoutthe

victor.

I'IICII (!'eli. •

:Ill) Tlwe .,.
llrong lndlclltlona 111a1 you may ruur·
riC! an o?d antorprlle Whla!t you onoa
M

...

IPPI MCIIecl with greet enthutl81m. ,
You'll bo gtac? you dldn'ttoa II
the1
tcrap help.

an

..

'

,,
POng

11:30~· OTonlg?lllhOw

s -.

® IIIC?tltd
on OM

..

·.

-'

•'

.

3/28

.

C E U F W E F.
p

R P U W) C . J N F

CSABUBGH

. .·

JNA'PSTN

lf.:.::o~Oip
I C1 liar

s.eo:

. .,
.,

..'

.." . i

,,'

-·.,

CRYFTOQUOTE

3-28

J

..

.' .' •

AXYDLBAAX!i
Is LONG FELLOW

R U W F C C 'M P A

Cllf:e'~L

....... Tontz$11
11:11WCMariQ
11:011(1). PniO . . Ntz$11

lime -

...

0...

(7) .?oltiii.IL1Uz$lltl'a

42 One -

One letter stands for another. ln this sample A Is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's; etc. Single letter~,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words ate
all hints. Each day the code letters are dllferent.

s-. Q'

8~·· ~ Mra.

film

44 ~·by
dallvree.~teo~r ~y;T,;;~~~
DAILY" 1

.

0 llllllill Tonlg?ll

. ,•

38 B1atty

fitter)

Q)Ni•-1011
AIMIIID 1111
IIJ lllaml Yloe 8-.

.On
___...,....

·.

37 Freshly

mans
43-up(got

w (1) • • • •

o•

..

40 GHslen ·
41 Cogno·

CNN
0 700 C!utt With Pat
llobartaon
10'.20 (J) MOVII: Tllundlr llaad
(2:00)
10'.30 (!) Weal Yilllntl llepoo1a
• CnioPt and ClwM

® IIPgPII CoUrt Q

fixtures

man's

,.,...'l...,...
e
e.-,.._, •
GJ .....

choice

2~ Tradl·

'•

tool

0

11:00~·

to that
paiton

35 School·
room

31 Woocfs·

on lw Prlu Sterao.

Macktne and
.
Nick start

oihers
8 A parson, . 24 Cigarette

..

pal :

34 Ute
energy

'

siuc?gea•
Kia8 Landing ,.
....... hanlllne with

~

and

Geddes
29Pub '
drinks ·
31 Terminus
32 Dodged ·
31lln gener'

itiunc:.ri'IN

-..-.....,.,wv
...,......OIIIIl
............ .

Spielberg

28 Barbara

f~!P1Ptiiii~I..
W4PIIIMIW Lhr

•

mtmber

7 OlgnHitd
woman

••e

BriCkmln'a term aa ·
temporary Mnlor partner Ia
•xteoiC!ICP. s-. Q '
'® .....

.

2Wilt
fallow
3 5pv
Yaltlrday'a AniWII'
4 Litter unh · 17 Sawbuck 30 Chair
5 Valley
. 11 E. T. craft
pal)
II Olchestra 22 Director 33 Pythlas's

26Sod

10:00 ~. Ill LA. Law

-ton llot-.
........... .
a._.,.lnMooii,-

I

· landing

Haro?d Morris wama youtha
lboul the dangers of paw
pressure and flow amtll
· mlllakn can hive major
c;on.-quencea. (0:30)

IF WALDO JUNIOR ·
IS H[ILF AS HANDSoME
AS HIS PAPPY, HE'LL BE
A BODACIOUS
MOVIE STAll I!

calcula-

tors --- .

24 Eagle's

Q.Qlft!0Stereo.
Twice
,..,.,..,. Ex-cOn

WALOO JUNIOR
ARRIVED AT SUNUp,
SNUFFY!!

Invader•

DOWN
1 Old

20 "G!lllyl"
I Gambler's
tional
21 Bleacher . scheme
27 Patriotic
occupants 11 Mock-'50s
mono23 Shade
rock
gram
trH
g10up
28 Animals

lorcecl to dec:icle between her
•two loves: mualc or Joe.

JJARNEY

45Whole
p1nel1
45 Picnic

corriCI

brUit cancer. Sl8reo. Q
11J PGA Golf Ptayere

-·

0111,~--

1171 .... -

Branda'S flmlly QIYII Pier
support u aiMi Is te1tect rot

Ron'l TV - . ......tolna '
In llnlh .... - llilna IIIWil :
Mhor . , . _ _ - .... ,

- ...z18101.
ill trior
12x11
w1o1
111 111- ona.

' 15 Swindle
111 Minimally
· 18 Musically

from JICkaonvllle. Fla. (RI .
• r:utJIII.Now
0 CliNt Amlfloan ~- .
• ....., POng Lhrl .
8:30 ~ • Ill Wln$le Helen Ia
.

'

IIHU'I.

lion ..... '!"~ lulllottw.hoo CA,
t tlloh. I 14K14
buNnti. In CIIMhlre. 1-1'

A AuctiOn

s........, .... ~10

RACK~

S('I'IICOS

IY~

h ••,. oon•an. 104 Ill
-.101111'1171.

ATJE

,.

~--

PMI.ftl.l.le.-.
lllr ... -tonal, 1121/mo.
pluo . . . . . . - . Colt ....
-111&amp;. ...... I I:IIOp.tll. - ·

Rob and

Child

Champlonllhlp, tat round

1118 ... _ . 2111, AJC. Corho
........ -TV. r .......

112 wv.
...
Rd.fu!nlo!llo!l.
Pt. ,.......

32 Mobile HomM
lldorlr
for Sllle

:1011.

PubllcSale ·

NI.Vard

-= ,..,...__·-·-

.,.,•...

t-. -

........ ¥orr tlglll
.~.,.....

DII*INII'URNmiRI

letter
14 Actors

ao-'aMIIIIIOII

~·1111-'lll24020
lor ollor
llongor
'"""liec(
, 8 •'
;:-.:.orfn.33Mua t 'fl.
:

w.-.: - 79
Tho; 1171 OloJwnalollo Cutlo•

1177 , . , ....

Hebrew

1111· IIJ. The Antl?lonllta
JICk defendl an Old friend
aocullecl ol murder: Slereo.

....... C4iilluoy .

111 oanolllonod Wwoho.., !Jopro.
AIIInOood-lonl
- n t - ~pi ....... lor .......
....,..7111. tM .......

10Sham

-12-lvory's .
· counter·
part
13 Firat

(!) An ! . . . . Itt ...

Acclsiortes

AutOI for Salt

1I7J Ch""J ...... RIN. Qood.
RTAJJillblePrlol.tiWII1114.
1m Dl!.dllo A....,n v.t; tHO

APPLIAIICIS

,....... ..... '&amp;1:1" Fall,
.......... lllvfll Ill. ... ......
c:not-1. con_.,.,.,

__ ....
.........

.........

lor 1111 Olrllelcl
..... lllld ............,.,. """' lllr Air 'W:~UI Coll!lt. Polity .....
4:00PM.
· .-.
llul Rlvw Yrow In
~,.,..,.

lllttiiiY- .....
'or i1t11o. - ICIIIe
........,

Countr
Applo~ Ina. _ . . . 1 ff'lnt .. T.V..... 0Den
GOOD

Auto Parta &amp;

T1 di'Spo tl dii Oil

5 Extinct
birda

STereo. C

.......... ,.... •-:t.. _.. ,_Dottvw,.

... _

A VIcinity

·-~

lor - 8:00
In
lila
p.lll. 114-'JV'

42 Moblll Homll

Vorl ..., Plloloy ....... ah,
JM I • •
....... . . _ , . . . .
~- . Coono

.76

Soib,.. Dn All c..,. In
llialc a CMh a co~,,h u.
OUt
,., Quollty • Pr__.....
lohonCorpN,._..

01 C!IMrl Slt!l

. · (IJ _ (I).~Peakl Truman grle- D¥« Joale'e
dnlh: Donniii'IICIIIvea •
II1ICibre vllllor. Stereo. Q
·(!) llyaury? PolrOI autall
' :n=t*lr JIAP In ..ooverii1Q
IUbmlllnl plana. Q

HOUUhold
GoodI

Ill

ACROSS
1 Righi
away, on
· memos ·

returns to bueballto pitch .
aaMial hiS. Old nernesls.

11111 Pontoon
lift,
motor, tNIIer, I
. e
~ -lvoluo,I04-t'f'l. '

r.t rlch;md l se

51

by THOMAS JOSEPH

Amatfcan Mullc 8hop

8:00 ()) •

••

CROSSWORD

perauadea Marlene 10 loin
hor In setting up a bualneaa.
· Stereo. c

'

.

•Qn

•

1:30~· 0 OIP!oNWII Wootd
Kim get1 I IUrprtH when
. the clack?N 10 ~ •

~~L::.~

1NO 14 l. long T., .... - ,' !
.,10 h; ...,.....,
trolly

1fT Wanted to Rent

Gallipolis
l VICinity

vs. API I
Ill,..........

CoNIIIIon. t\1110. .,.....,
1'1111.

,_ ....: Alumll.., Wlrwla•a.

Yard Sate

0 lupatlaute 1973: Nor1on

.....,_, .... - · 2 Tllb. .

I·U·tl

.,.JI

·HuX11111M. begin 10 trill Clair
like an Old woman. (R)

71D-LTD ohd !
drive, PNHent oand, iOt ID: ;

NORTH

•u

7:35 (I) 8lnfOid and Son
8:00 ~ • Ill Co8br IPtow The

74
MotorcyCIII _ _
. .,;._.:.:.;.;;,;.:.;.,;;:..;;.;,;;;;_

14 ..

BIIDOI .

.QJ 54
P. Hal Sims, """ of the greatest and
.KI087S
most colorful players of the '301 and
'40s, always boasted that be bad never WEST
EAST
~a two-way li-. But one .QI52
. • AJIOI74
day, when faced with a t.·w.f., he .1094
. •Jiz
.... u
thougbt for quite some time bef~ ex· .K7
claiming. "Damn it - both of you 1 •Quz
have the .queea. • .And he was rlgbt!
S()UTH
Someoae had doctored the deek just to
see how be would react to ' mlsguess·
, .AKU
ing•.a 1wo-way finesse. ·
t10111
The secret to improving your odds
with a two-way finesse is to delay talt·
Vulnerable: East·West
ing the finesae for u long u you can.
Dealer:
South
Find out u much u poalble about the
other auit distributions first.
s..• Well Nor,. But
After West has led the spade two to
I NT
Pus . 3 NT
1\Plpoa
East's ace and East has returned the
spade jack, you u declarer have your
Opening lead: +2
back apinat the wall. You must run
the clubs Ill. bring hOme three .,....
trump. But-before you atte01pt to play
•
tha1 suit, it .il rigbt to caJ$1 tbe heart
'
tricks. Play off the A-K of bearta and sii spaces In West's band for a poaiblf:
then .CI'OIIII .to dummy's queen. Here club queen, whereu East hal oniJ
you .learn that the suit is divided 3-3. four spaces. The pertentaae pJ.ay ta tc
Assuming the opening lead il a true crosa to your ace of clubl, matt tllf
card, you alao know that West started JJth · heart aad run the elub jack
with four spades and East with sis. tbrougb West. With the liven layout
This means you know seven of West's that works beautifully and you briDt
cards and nine of East's. That leavl!f home an overtrick.
·

a ~wanabll lld-Daa

!:!·c::~=.~....----~~ :r.:r-:.v-:.~~.:::
_John-.
.
.
bib..:-..,..,
-

BUllIIIII

LU:.:
,.,..,.antordy$11 c;~

.Gll.lrA*I'H

1111tJHp CJ7,114 • • 1ae.

___ __,
.,

By James Jacoby

wa•~~.....,­

W'

21

i~!:&amp;N9c;~_

Tonii?N Bllrto. "
(1) ......... , . . ,

0

:.e:;;.o.n.r

- .l,'lrldo,aI:ON:GO
tmjii&amp;Mme. auy,
.
Wll"181.111-

RtaiEitate
· Wantlcl

lluno ......

Covill
1111 Chov 4KI,- lwl, lOS,'
~ AC, Ill, AM-I'II. 11,100.
IIIC..Tnolorwllh..-.
11.711: - · H - · 11110: .
. 112 1111 ......,.,
Wll ,.,_ .,...
1111 Font F·110, 4X4, M,IIOO.
114 •• 4415.

. . . . '"'="4•:;,,...nn
................

tciAM LIYI ANSWIII
Nl
Summon- Rower- Twice- Dismay - WINDOWS
Aller a long time spent at a Federal GovemiJ'Ient
.building trying to straighten out some .red tape, rve·
decided that government Is a system for keeping people
In line, mostly in front of WINDOWS.
.
;.--;..;;;...__
:...,_

(2:30)

~oootr.-a-.Noo.1111-111NUI. .

No. 3 boloW.

I I .I I I I I I I

ANSWER

7:01(1) HeppJ O.yi .
,.,. Dodgo Yin.

·

you dtulop

~ UNSC~AMBLE FOR

. ~-~~Q
~ .

7:30 ~

-----·
· "

·-

4

zE....; ·

73 Vllntl4WD'I .

.;,.

..

1:35 (J) """' GriPitttt
1:00u_,o "'-'of
® I ONein of Jewotle

1.11oe now p11w . _ IIICIt!lll wtoar
- ' ........... with......

...._eo--..,......

_..don,

&lt;ms-a./=8

HcM•IhOid
Goodl

a~~

optimist to
Most people feet that their lot ·
In tHe is limited to thair own

.

••
7
:_:~1·:~1~~I~~I~:1~ e ~;-rn::;trow~~.:i=:.
~
""'
8 ~::~J~~~:~~~~ES I' I' ~t 1 ll I'· I' I' I

0Up=·

'

1142:
'
ANrnlm••lf ·IO 10,_ IUid, I
...-.. - h •., P!llnt PI
~.
off ..... llrkllilori - - _..,
111,0011. Col a - 1 .
1..0'11 FOil ..... In Do......

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

-

'

'"'"-..,.

-rK.1;. ;,u-1=o;. .·,I',;s...;v~
. ~.l - • . ~
1

s

- ~,-B_u_o_A_N_o~~

~..it,MC..._Q

Cit pi I kltoi-

10 . . . . . - - of • ?Imber,

0

--

.,.._

.

1:06 (J)
. . .Ill
...,IIIC
" ·..._
··· C
1:30
~.
, IJ) Alllllllt and CD 111110

~

...000.

~

OigMt

- :::-:...11r1011 - · IIIII
~·-"=:I
Zl21 ..... l:tll I'll.

7

I

RUDCES

.~ I' I I I' _

Ql WOf!d TOC:.,

1.•1••

-*·

...;.;M~A..:.L.;..8..:.,Y~11 ·.

gf#.;n:!!;~:_

,oiL .

,._
....,.,
-~-..-­
"Don't be afraid of it, Mr. Col- :;:: '-.:
tins. Eat it!"

'

- ~~ce5(Q .

IK*IIIngoh:!f'""
VI -oil c.wr * 111111 1111 .
Royburil
....,.__
--~~~-·­

iiCii'.; 1

..._ '"'*' ol ...
• low
ICIIIftlbled Midi lie-

1:00~· · (1) (1) • • • •

Olli•wey

...._

..._,~ClAY

~-

.

4

...
'=~=' ~~lA-4~tis· ....

........
" 111111111, 4,14"

-

. . . . . . .

.....

,

Television

~-

..................
......,
,..... .,-.
•

-

'

Pomeroy-Middlepqrt, Ohio

BORN

._.
. .........
........-=... .....

....,..

.0. ._

I Thll...... l.-le -

1991

Autos for Sill

71

1043, 00...... OH-.

... "Sf

1811

.

GWV

GHH

HPBF

YGZ
N G R•

DGW0 UWV
GWV

EPO

PRFAGJUPW.-GCNHFZ DPWJGTS
Yesttrd1y'a Cryptoquott: ,•. DO NOT BE •DIS.
HEARTENED BY YOUR IMPERFECfiONS, BUT ALWAYS RISE UP WITH FRESf:l COURAGE. - ST.
FRANCIS DE SAW
I'

..

•. • , lr.

.,

�'

•
\

Page-12..,...The Dally Sentinel

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

..------Local briefs---, MI.ddlepor- t court news
Stolen property recovered
1

Divorces,
dissolutiOns
processed
~
A divorce action has beeli flied ' from Betty J. Williams. A dissolu- ,;

.

· Five calls for assistance were answered l!Y Meigs County Emergency Medical Services on Wednesday and early Thursday.
At 2:35. a.m. on Wednesday, Pomeroy squad. went to Johnson
Road for Lillian Napper, who was treated bot not 11'8Dsported.
At 7:17 p.m., Pomeroy squad was dispatchecd to High Street for
Marie Bichman, who was tranSported to Veterans Memorial Hospi'
tal. At 7:26 p.m., Pomeroy squad and Chester resclie went to State
• Route 248. Mary 'Parsons went to Veterans as a result of a motor
vehicle accident At 10:15 p.m., Pomewy squad was called to Rose
HiD for Charles Walth, who was taken to Veterans.
TupPers Plains squad went to ReedsviUe on Thorsday morning·
at2:49 a.m. for Loui~Posey. Posey was transponell to Veterans.

Thefts, vandalism investigated

HUBBARD$
'
I GREENHO..USE •.

Belpre man arre,sted on warrant
A 29 year old !ielpre man waS arrested !here on a Meigs County
bench wanant on Wednesday.
.
·
Robert B. Drain of Belpre was arrested in Belpre when.his name
was run through .the LEADS systelll and it was learned that he was
wanted in Meigs County on an pld bench wanant.
·
·
According .to Meigs County Sheriff James M. SOI!Isbf, the fami1y J.lOSied bond in Meigs County and Drain was not returned to
Me1gs County.

Lottery numb~rs
Pick-3

.

044.

---Area deaths--Roy L. Brickles

.~

AT&amp;T ... ,.............................. ~34 318
Bob Evans ..................................19
Charming Shop.................... .l4 3/4
City Holding ........................ .l4 1!2
Federal Mogul ......................1 5 1/2
GoodyearT&amp;R .....................21 5/8
Key Centurion ...................... 12 1/2
Lands' End ...........................22 3/8
Limited Inc ...........................25 3/4
Multimedia Inc. :... ,.. ,............72 7/8
Rax Restaurant ..................... ll/16
Robbins&amp;Myers ................... 28 1/2
Shoney'slilc .....~ ................... l6 5/8
Star Bank ............................. .-21 3/4
Wendy Int'l. .............•.......... 10 718
Wonhington Iild ..,.. :·....... ~ .....24)/4 1

Friday

jl C&amp;ny _Out Orclera Available (304) 773-S321 .il
VISA • MASTERCAlm • AMERICAN }!:XPRESS ACCEP'Il!:D ,

.ANDERSON'S .

Spting Sale/

.-....

.r

VINYL
LINOLEUM

CARPET
,SALE

8 ~0~ .
~Skl l'Ji
1 S4tt.

SERTA
MATTRESS
SALE

· Dress tor Sl,lccess

.SUMMER

Expert craftsmanship gives
them added value and
make them a smart choice.

FURNITURE
SALE.

Navy/White
and Black

rJJie

SHOE PLACE

-DINING TABLE
AND CHAIR
..

BEDROOM
SUITE SALE

SALE

•

$4295
•

••

In'• Co•paay Vlce President Paul Reed;
AIIJII~,..._e Stulc:l!a. .Sapervlsor. Jo Ann
Cl'i~p; Far.m ers Jank and Savlngs ,Compall)',
Senior VIce President Paul.Kioes; Derby Director Roger Williams and Assistant Director Jim
Pape. The derby will ,be held June 22 and 23.
·

Visa ·
Mastercard

DER'
S
ON'S
FURNITURE, APPL,ANCES, TV'S, FLOOR COVERING
992·3671

comprised of an increase in consumer expectations and the stock
market, a Commerce Deparlr!Jent
spokesman said.
The month-to-month gain was
the first recorded since July. when
it stood at 146.2 and was
unchanged from June.
The index fell 0.8 percent,in the
third quarter of 1990 and 2.9 percent in the fourth quarter.
January's numbers were revised

down 0.1 percentage point from 0.4
percent, while December's figure
remained 11nchanged. Most of lhe
January change was due to manufacturers' new orders for consumer
goods and orders, adjusted for
inflation, lhe government said.
The comprehensive index, compiled by the Commerce Depart·
men!' s Bureau of Economic Analysis, tracks II ·segments of lhe economy in an .effort to predict future
business activity in the United
Stales.
The government said that of the
11 components, seven were up,
lhree were down, and one - vendor performance - remained
unchanged.
·
·
·
'th
•h
hildr
February's positive contributors,
eggs and assistmg WI ~·e c
en from largest to smallest, included
on lhe day of the hunt. · .
In addition 10 the hunt, Mrs. stock prices. the index of consumer
Easter Bunny (not identified) and expectations, building foermits,
her two assistants, Emma Paugh money supply adjusted or inflaand Brenda Johnson, will be on tion, manufacturers' llrdets fdr con.
sumer goods and materials ildjuSied
hand to greetlhe -rltildren. Parents ' . for inflatiQn, inflation-adjusted
are encouraged to bring !heir own change in manufacturers' unfilled
cameras to photograph, their chi I- orders and the change in sensitive
dren seated on the lap of Mrs. East· . materials prices.
er Bunny.
T~e winner of the "guess who
Negative contributors, also from
the Easter Bunny is" contest will be largest to smallest, included aver·
announced on Sunday. The picture age weekly unemploymeni claims,
appeared in a recent issue of The . the average workweek and con·
Daily Sentinel.
tracts and equipment for plant and
In olher business at last night's equipment, adjusted for inflation.
The composite index of coinci·
meeting, Bob Gilmore,_president,
announced that a contract has been dent indicators, a monlhly approxl·
signed wilh Schneider Amusement mation of aggregate economic
Co. of Logan for the fall block activity, fell 0.6 percent in Februparty. ,The carnival wiD be in town ary to 126.6, after dropping l.S
Sept 19-21 and will be set up in percent in January and 0.8 pen:ent
the area of Dave Diles Part.
in December.
.
The committee for the CatfiSh
The composite index: of lagging
Festival on July 4 was named and . indicators, meanwhile, feU 0.2.perconsists of Mike Floccari, chair- . cent in February to 119.7 percent
man, Brenda Johnson, Emma after increaSing O.S percent in JanPaugh, an!l Marcia Terry.
uary and 0.7 percent in December.

Prizes available at the
Middleport egg hunt

wor1dng woman demands
comfort and style ... 1t1ese
mid-heel pumps offer both I

htrifa_gt hou$t

'

WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
government's index of leading ceonomic indicators increased 1.1 per·
. cent in February (o 140.5 after
dropping a revised 0.5 percem in
January and 0. I percent ·m Decem·
ber, the Commerce Department
said Friday.
Almost three-fourths of the gain
in February's index - the largest
monthly increase since a 1.6 percent gain in June 1988 - was

'i

DOWNTOWN POMROY

•

eriil Clean Air Act, American Electric Power must sharply reduce
emissions by Jan. 1, 1995 (or Jan.
I, 1997 if scrubbers arc used) and
further reduce the emissions by
Jan, 1, 2000.
These reductions can be accom·
plished through the installation of
scru,bbers at the Gavin plant or
through fuel switching. The company is required to choose lhe lowest cost alternative so as not to
impose unreasonable or excessive
cOsts on its costumers.

· COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) -A some samples were collected in
nationwide hotline has generated 1985 and 1986 before DNA tests
dozens of telephone calls for an were widely used and standard
Ohio-based I8Sk force investigating storage procedures were adopted.
lhe killings of 11 women in Ohio,
Ohio investigators believe lh~
Illinois, Alabama, New York and killer is a truck driver who has
Pennsylvania.
changed routes at least twice. The
Licking County Sheriff Gerry early killings loosely followed a
!iilly; chairmim of the task force, . north•south pattern and the later
said up to 15 illvestigaiors are killing occurred on' east-west inter·
expected. to begin following the states.
leads m aboultwo weeks.
Similarities in the slayings
A three-hour meeting at the include:
Buckeye State Sheriff's Associa..., Victims frequented truck
tion Thursday in Columbus attract- stops and were known or suspected
ed 22Iaw enforcement offi~.
prostitutes.
-All but the flfSt victim, found
The task force plans 10 distribute to Ohio truck stops fliers in 1985, were missing pieces of
wilh photos of the victims, all pros- clothing, usually pimties and shoes.
litotes or suspectt:d prostitutes. and
- All the victims were found
a request for help.
.
' along major ·interstates but were
Investigators said one primary no! killed' where they were found;
issue to be decided is whether to no weapons .were found and all
conduct DNA tests on semen Saffi- were beaten, strangled or suffocatples found at some of the homicide ed.
scenes. DNA tests, or genetic finThe victims include:
gerprinting, detect the unique
-Marcia Mathews, 25, whose
chemical code found in each per- · ·body- was· found June- 12, 1985,
son's cells.
along 1-71 near Mansfield, Ohio.
· The Columbus Dispatch said it
-Shirley Dean Taylor, 23,
has learned !hat some of lhe semen whose body was found July 20,
samples have deteriorated so much 1986, along 1-71 near 1-76 in Medi·
that they may lhwan a DNA test.
na County, Ohio.
- April Barnett, 18, whose
Sources told the newspaper

·._ Proposaf upsets Ohio retailers_.

Toke care of busl~ and
look your best! Today's

THIU EASTER

proposed changes in state law and
ture. ·
regulation that provide economic
Tos!Cnson said !hat while every- in~entives for utilities to install
one in Ohio wants to comply wilh stack gas scrubbers rather than
new clean air rules, slltejrCgula- switch to more expensive, out-oftions unfairly burden utilities that state coal.
want to use Ohio's most abundant
The rally is another step in a
fuel, coal.
movement geared to saving 1258
He said !hat using Ohio's coal · mining jobs at the Meigs Mines
is the best way to keep electric where .high sulfur coal is produced
rates low, while Ohio's busineSses for lhe Gavin Plant at Cheshire in
and consumers. as well as miners GaUia County.
and ()petators, will benefit from
In order to comply wilh !he Fed-

.

.

AEP has estimated !hat it will
cost $800 million to install scrub·
hers al Gavin, compared \vilh $200
million for modifications to accommodate low-sulfur coal.
Emphasis at Monday's rally will
be on convincing le~tislators to
change certain state laws and regulations to provide economic incentives to electric utilities, making
installation of scrubbers • while
more expensive to install and operate than importing low-sulfur co'ila favorable alternative.

Leads sought in serial killer case

~ST MAJOR SPONSOR· Farmen.BIIIIk and Savings. COIIlJIIIAI)':"betall\e"the ftNC -maJOr
sponsor or tbe Mel&amp;• Counl)i Soapbox Derby
wltlllts presentation or a $1;000 eheck oo Thursday anernoon. Pictured at tile check presenta·
lion. were, len to, riJ[ht, F ? Bank and Sav·

•

SALE

200fo OFF

introduced into the Ohio Legisla·

Leading indicators up 1.1 % in February

..

FOCUS
.

families.
Miners and their families wi!I be
addressed by slate legislators and
others including Larry Ward, presi·
dent of District 6, Ullited Mine
Workers of America; Harold
Erdos, Mayor of Cadiz; John
Hodges, president of the Oh.io
AFL.CIO, and Tosterson. ·
· Also on the speaking agenda are
Rep. Jerry Krutinski and Sen.
Robert Ner· , authors of lhe "Save
Ohio Coa Bill", which. will be

required to keep track of 20,000 to
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) • ·tomer.
"There
is
no
way
merchants
in
40,000
items swallows any money
Retail merchants from around Ollie
set out Thursday to wage war Ohio can absorb this," Jack Par- they get from the state.
He said if lhe sales tax discount
against Gov. Geor¥e Voinovich tridge, vic.e .president of The
· ends, the additional cost will be put
and his pliln to elimmate lhe com- Kroger Co., said.
pensation retailers receive for colParlrid~e. who is also chairman on the backs of customers in the
of the Ohm Council of Rel8il Mer- form of price increases.
lecting sales tax for lhe state. .
Ohio's auto dealers could be
As pan of his proposed 1992-93 chants, said his company. receives
state budget; Voinovich hope.s to about $700,000 for collecting state hun ihe hardest by cutting the sales
sales tax. He said !his amount looks tax discount. Michael McDaniel,
genera~ $109 million in additional
state revenue by eliminating lhe 1.5 high but "comes no where close to · president of McDaniel Motors in
percent discount retailers get for covering lhe costs of collecting !his . Marion, said the constant up and
tax."
down of the auto market makes it
collecting sales taxes.
Even though sales tax collection impossible to absorb an additional
Retailers said repealing !his dis.
count will increas·e the cost of is highly automated, Partridge said cost. He predicts !hat as many as
doing business and thE cost will lhe cost of training workers on lhe 100. auto dealers could go out of
·
have to be passed on to the cus- · systems and lhe constant updating · business as a result

THIS FUND RAISING PROGRAM IS LEGITIMATE AND YOUR FIRE
DEPARTMENT ASKS FOR YOUR SUPPORt.
.

ALL DRESS SHOES

•

By Charlene Hoefllch
Sentinel News Staff
A rally of miners to call on Ohio
lej!islatures to "give scrubbers a
f811" chance" has been called by lhe
O,hio Mining and Reclamation
Association for ~onday, noon ,to 2
p.m .- o• the step$ of the Capuol.
Columbus.
· Purpose of the rally, according
to Neal Tostenson, president, is to
call for fairness for Ohio's electric
,consumers, business~:s and coal

'

PEOONS REPRESENTING YOUR FIRE DEPARTMENT WILl BE
CONTACnNG ALL HOMES IN TIE AREA OVER THE COMING
WEEKS, ASKING FOR ADONAnON OF $20.00. PERSONS WILL
BE GOING DOOR TO DOOR AND WILL CARRY IDENnRCAnON
OR AN I.D. BADGE.

1
,

Area miners to hold 'save scrubbers' rally

-Country Fried Fish Dinner

'

THE FIRE DEPARTMENT WiSHESt.fO THANK EVERYONE FOR
THEIR DONATION BY GIVING ACOMPUMENTAIY CERTIFICATE
FOR AN BXI 0"' COLOR PORTRAIT TO IE TAKEN AT THE RUT.
LAND FIRE DEPARTMENT. . ·

·

''
'

TO RAISE MONO 'FOR NEEDED EQUIPMENT•

Good Friday services wjll be
held at Faith· Go~pel Church in
Lon~ Bottom begmning at 7 p.m.
Special singing and preaching will'
be presented. Easter Sunrise Services at the church will be held at 6 · ·
a.m. on Sunday wilh" breakfast. to
follow.

In Columbus Monday _

Monday

- Beans and Cornbread
,
'
Tuesday
- ~oulash
Wednesday -Roast Beef Manhattan
'
Thursday
·Lasagna

2 Section a, 14 Pageo 25 oento
A Multimedia Inc, Newopoper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, March 29, 1991

Ashland Oil .................... ;... 31 3!8

Ticket sales: Si,29J ,036.00 Payoff: $223,984.50.
.
Pidl-4 '
3354. .
Ticket sales: $257,267.00. Pay. off: $127.300.00
Cards
Six of hearts.
lq?? of clubs.
Two of dilunonds.
Ten of spades.
.
Ticket sales: ~1.697.00. Payoff: $17,290.
. Saper Lotto
10.11-31~3-35 .

RU

Homestyle Lunch _S pecials
Monday~Fri.day, ll am.-3 pm

RT THE TLAND
fiRE DEPARTMENT

Good Friday services

\tot. 41, No. 238
CopyHghted 1H1

,'
•

MASON, WV

Stocks
.
Am Ele Power .:....................:...... 29

ceded in dealh by two brothers,
Roy Z. Brickles, 88, of 39581 Dana and ,William Bricldes.
Gold Ridge Rd., Pomeroy, died
Graveside services will be held
Thorsday, Feb. 28, .1991 at 'Veter· at the Carleton Church Cemetery 'at
ans Memorial Hospital foUowing a I p.m. Qn Saturday with Clyde
brief iUness.
'
Henderson officiating.
ije was'a ClllllCnter, a member
Friends may call atlhe Ewing
of Carpenters , Local #650 of F~neral Home-from 6 to ~ p.m. on
Pomeroy and dte Carleton Church. Fnday:
. --- He wasoom on June 2, 1'902 in --- -~-----'" -- Bedford Township, the son of lhe 1----------~----------.
late Charles and Clara HuU BricklesHe is survived by his wife,.
Mabel Bri,clcles; two sons, Donald
Brickles of Martinsville, Ind., and
Cecil Brickles of Mt. Sterling;
. seven grandchildren and 11 great·
TH.E RUTLAND FIRE DEPARTMENT IS
grandchildren. ' ·
SPONSORING A FUND RAISING PROGRAM
Besides his parents, he· was pre-

SIJPPO

RT.33

Present at the meeting were
Commissiopers Jones, Manning
Roush and David Koblentz, Story,
GloecJrner, and Clerk Mary Hob·
Stetter.

••

'

..

with Meigs County Prosecutor
Steven L. Story the possible
appointment of an attorney 'to represent lhe Meigs tdRDD board in a .
recently filed Civil suit involving
lhe board, the commissioners and
the State MRDD board and its
director. Story and the commissioners agreed to discuss the case
with the MRDD board's president
and to delermine the future of the
case before acting on the request.
The commissioners at no time dur·
ing the meeting n:vealed that they
would be wiUing to provide funds ·
for such counsel
·
In other action vesterdav. the
county commissioners:
voted to approve lhe bond of Meigs
County Treasurer Howard E,
Frank;
,
• Voted to approve the appOint·

Low Jonigbt in mid 20s. .
Saturday, high near 40. ,
Chance of snow 80 percent.

Weather .

MASON. FAMILY
RES.T AURANT

The Meigs County Sherifr s depanment arrested a Racine man
on charges of pelly theft and no operator's license following lhe
!heft of gas from lhe Southern High School bus garage.
Just after midni~ht on Tuesday morning; deputies were notified
of a suspicious vehiCle parked on a dead-end section of Main Stieet
in Racine. The caller advised !hat a subject was seen getting out of
the vehicle and wallQng towards the Soulhern Local School bus
1
garage.
•
.
•
•
When deputies arrived, !he vehicle was moving from lhe location
and was stopped. According to a deparunent news release, there
were two gasoline cans and a hose in lhe back seat and a strong
odor of gasoline on the defendant's person.
Gasoline had been taken from two boses and some was spilled
.on the ground. In addition, where the suspect vehicle had been
parked,lhere had been gasoline spilled on the ground.
Arrested was Tom Swain .of Racine, who was lodged iq the
coumy jail and charged with petty theft and no operator's license.

Pick 3:187
Pick4: 2687
Cards : 10-H, 10-C
3-D; J·S

Sermonette
PageS

SIMithi"f f111'1 ,.,.,, '''"i"l:At .

Alleged gas theft investigated

Veterans Memorial H011pital
WEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS
- Clifford Lambert, Pomeroy.
WEDNESDAY DISCHARGES
- Suzanne · Hendersop, Betty
Archer. Janet Henry, and lona
Brie Ides.

Good Friday

"NOW OPEN"
POMD EASTER
FLOWERS

commission ...

The Meigs County Sherifrs Department reports that someone
has stolen a furnace from the front yard of Delores Shepard of
Pomeroy.
,
The theft was ,believed to have occurred on Tuesday. A truck
was seen leaving the area with a furnace and a male subject in lhe
back on Tuesday afternoon.
.
.
·
. ··
The sheriffs department also investigated a repon from Larry
Turley of ~cine on Tuesday, who reported that on laie Monday
night or early Tuesday morning, a hole had been cut into his greenhouse and someone had stolen 10 bags of potting soil, a bag of fertilizer and I 00 potting trays.

. Hospital news ·.·

Ohio Lotte,ry

.and costs, expired tags.
· in Meigs County Common Pleas . lion has been g11111ted to R~y A. :
Also fined were Steven R. Court by Theresa-B. Good against Klein IIJid Samantha A. Klem.
•,
Brumfield, Middleport, Rick A. ~wa~ne Edward Good. An action
·:
Pri~&lt;re. Pomeroy, Charles Potts, for dissolution of marriage has
Jr., Middleport, and Thomas R. been filed by Clyde E. Sayre of · •
·
Roach, Racine, all $425 and costs • Syracuse and Janetl8 "R. Sayre of
and three days in jail, on the charge Mid~eport.
of physical control of a motor v~iDtvorces have been _granted to
cle while under the influence of Wanda Mollett from Clinton Mol· ,
CHOOSE FROM
alcohol or drugs. Pridemore was lett and to Wendell H. Williams
also fined $25 and costs and Potts,
•lilies .•Azaleas •Reiger
$10 and costs on charges of expired .
·
ltgonias •Caladiums
operator's licenses.
Soutil Cenlnll Oblo
M · Tul'
Forfeitin~ bonds were Patty L.
Rain likely Thurdsay night, with
• ums •. 1p1
••
Hudson, M1ddlepoit, $51, speed- , a low between 35 and 4Q. Chalice ·
•Hyacinths •MiniatUre
iqg; Mark J. Hall, Reynoldsburg, · of rain is 70 percent Occasional '·
Roses eRegular Rases
••
Mark A. Kimes, Racine, Carl E. rain Friday, with highs near 50.
I( I h
.
'
Klaiver, Long Bottom, $460 each, · Chance of rain is 80 percent
• a one .,.s •
on physical control of a 11101or,
Obloextendedforeeast
,
•Amaryllis's •Daffodils .
veh1cle while \mder the influence
Saturday tllrou1h M011day · .
"'
of alcohol or drugs; and Jeffrey M.
A chance of rain or snow in the
Houn:· Monday thru
~
Evans, Wooster, $51, speeding. eastern pan of the swe, with fair
Saturday 9 A.M.-15 P.M. . i
Kimes also forfeited a S60 bond on elsewhere Saturday. A chance of
a left of center charge.
showers across the state Sunday
~and Monday. Highs will range
•
from the mid 30s to mid 40s Salur_c_on_ti_nu_ed--fi-:-ro_m-;:p-:-ag-e- · - - - day,
111d from the 40s to the lower
4192·5776
Syracuse, Ohio '
~
waiver to that effect.
ment ofRoben Byer as the Manag· . 50s Sunday and Monday.
•
Additionally, the self-insurance er of lhe Meigs Co'unty Emergency
•
•
health insurance Plan will not be Management Age0cy; ·
affected. In fact, AFLAC ~s not . • Heard a presentatidn from
~
JTPA's .David Gloeckner, who dis·
sell major medical insurance.
••'
The plan milSt now be approved cussed next year'SJJTPA budge~
,•
by the Internal Revenue ServiCe,
- Discussed clean up of.a minor
'.
the laws of which allow such a · dirt slide in the county collf!house
•
plan. After IRS aP.froval is parlcing lo~
1
obl8ined; AFLAC w11 begin to
-Discussed an architect's possi·
,•'
implement the plan, which costs ble involvement in bid writing for
••
the county nothinf.
renovation in two courthouse
The commissiOners discussed offices.

' Nine were fined, five forfeited
bonds, and one case was dismissed
in ·the court of Middlepon Mayor
Fred Hoffman Wednesday nighL
The case dismissed was that of
Stanley E. Aleshire, Rutland, who
was charged wit!I driving without
an operator~ license following an
accident on Middlepon Hill early
Satprday evening. Aleshire has a
Florida driver's lice"se, it was
reported.
_
Fined were Timolhy M. Herdman, Pomeroy, $25 and cos_ts, dill·
orderly manner; Randall Lee
Roach, West Columbia, W. Va.,
$10 and costs, f\llllllng a stop sign;
Freda L. Chandlier, Cheshire, $25
and costs, no operator's license;
Bailey J. Dugan, RutlBn\1, $10 and
costs, expired operat(lr's license
and $15 and costs, driving while
under insurance suspension, and
James Brumfield, Pomeroy_. $10

Rev. Jim Satterfield of Mt. Moriah Church or God has notified
the Meigs County Sheriffs Deparunent that a microwave oven
reported as stolen last Friday night has been recovered. .
. ·
A subject told Rev. Satterf.eld !hat he had found lhe microwave
over an em~em when he was out Iooldng for aluminum cans.
According to· Sheriff James M. Souls by, lhe depanment's investi·
gating staff wiD be interviewing lhe subject on Thursday evening.

EMS answers five calls ·

!

111U!'!dfi. Mlreh 28, 1991

Plans for the community Easter
egg hunt to be held at 2 p.m. Sunday at Hartinger Park in Middlepon
were completed at Thursday
ni_ght's meeting of lhe Middlepon
Community Association.
Members of the Association pu1
dollar bills in each of the 1200
plastic eggs which will be hid atlhe
park for the hunt. Besides lhe
money in !hose eggs. one will be
marked for $50 and another for
$25. All of the money for the event
has been contributed by Middleport
and Pomeroy merchants; organizatibns and individuals. Mitch Mead·
ows is chairman of lhe egg hunt
: The park will be divided into
sections to accommodate four age
categories of the hunt - walking to
four, five to seven, eight _to 10, and
10 to 12. Tots too smalliD get opt
there and hunt eggs wiD be presented with an egg or a small toy as
loilg as the supply lasts. .
It was emphasized by the committee that no adults will be permittell beyond the starting line. Mid~pon ftremen will bf hiding the
~ . ~~~

'

,IJ\

body was found Dec . 4, 1986,
along I· 71 in Ashland County.
Ohio.
- Jill Allen, 26, whose body
was found Dec. 19, 1986. along J.
70 in Illinois near Illinois Route 4.
- Anna Marie Patterson, 27 .
whose body was· found M~ch 23.
"1987, in Warren County, Ohio.
- Mary Elizabeth Reeves, 32,
Arlington, Va., whose body -was
found May 5, 1987 ncar 1-65 in
Escambia County, Ala.
-'- Jane Doe II , in her 20s ,
whose body was found Aug, 10,
1987, along [. 70 ncar Dayton,
Ohio.
-·
-Lamonica Cole, 19, whose
body was found Nov, II , 1987.
along. I-70 at 1-76. ncar Breezewood, Pa.
- Terry Roarke, 31, whose
body was found March 29 , 1988,
along I-87 in New York state.
·
- Jane Doe II, in her 20s ,
whose body was found April 19,
1990, _al_oqg 1:7.0 aJ.QhiQ:JJ in
Licking County. Ohio.
- Kalherine Hill, 26, whose
body was found Nov . 5. 1990,
along l-280 south of Ohio 295 ncar
Toledo.

AT&amp;T apparently unseats four NCR
directors, includi~g chairman Exley
By JACK LESAR
offer," Exley told shareholders at
United Press International
the special meeting. ''It makes no
American Telephone &amp; Tele- sense to abdicate to AT&amp;T the full
graph Co .. pressing a $6 billion, value of your invesunent."
$90-a- share hostile takeover of
Exley told shareholders NCR
NCR Corp., apparently unseated direc10rs opposed any transaction
four incumbent NCR directors, "unless such a transaction reflects
including Chairman Charles E. the full value of NCR's prospects
Exley Jr.• at the company's an11ual going forward."
meeting Thursday.
"Your board is commiued to
But it was uncertain whether deliver full value to all NCR shareAT&amp;T mustered the 80 percent holders - either ... as an indepenmajority necessary to remove and dent company, or lhrough a transreplace all 13 directors - a move action that delivers full value to
that would allow AT&amp;T to disman- NCR shareholders,'· be said.
. tie NCR's poison pill takeover
Financial advisers to AT&amp;T and
defense,
Spokesmen for both companies
said official results will be unavailable for abou1 two weeks, while the
shareholder votes are 18bulated and
certified as required because of lhe
proxy contest.
Sources at both companies said
Leo Loring Vaughan, 71 , long·
they belived AT&amp;T managed lhe . time Pomeroy businessman, died
simple. majority required to elect its Thursday, March 28, 199,1, at St.
four-can\lidate slate to the board Joseph Hospital in Parkersburg foland defeat the NCR slate seclcing lowing an extended illness.
relection - which included both
Mr. Vaughan was affiliated with
Exle,Y and NCR President Gilbert the. Logan Monument Co. for 43
Williamson.
year. He retired on Jan. 1, 1991.
But,lhey said lhe vote to remove
Born in Pomeroy, he was the
and r~lace lhe entire NCR board son of the late Walter L. and Thor- wh1ch requires support by 80 rna Byrne Vaughan. He was a lifepercent of all StoCk outsi8Rding long member of the Pomeroy Unil·
was expected to be close.
ed Melhodist Church.
The NCR source said he·
Poring World War II, Mr.
believed it would go in NCR's Vaughan served as an army captain
favor, while the AT&amp;T executive wilh lhe 172nd Field Artillery Batsaid he believed lhe communica- talion and was awarded the bronze
tions company had "a good star. He was a member of Drew
chance."
·
Webster Post39, American Legion,
At last count, in mid-February, Pomeroy.
AT&amp;T said about 66 percent of all
An active M8s'on, he was a
outsl8nding NCR shares had been member of the Knights of the York
tendered under its $90-a-share Cross of Honour, Ohio Priory 18, a
offer.
,
50-year member and past masrcr of
The shareholder votes on the Pomeroy Masonic Lodge 164,
AT&amp;T's move to unseat lhe NCR past high priest of Pomeroy Chap·
board dominated the agendas at ter 80, Royal Arch Masons, past
NCR's annual meetin$ and a spe· illustrious master of Bosworth
cia! shareholders meeting called at Council 46, Royal and Select
AT &amp;T's request. The meetings Masons, and a past imminent comwere held back-to-back Thursday mander of Ohio Valley Comat NCR's headquarters in Dayton, mandry 24, Knights Templar.
Ohio.
Active for many years in com•'There are compelling reasons munity and civic affairs, Mr.
for shareholders to reject AT&amp;T's Vaughan was i,trumental in estab·

NCR met Wednesday at NCR's
request to review an NCR proposal
for a negotiated merger at $110 a
share, or about $7.4 billion - a 22
percent increase over AT&amp;T's current offer of $90 a share, or $6 bil·
lion.
,
AT&amp;T refused to meet the $110
price - which marked a rollback
by NCR. In rejecting AT&amp;T's proposal last December, NCR directors had said !hey would not even
discuss an offer of less !han $125 a
share.
In a brief statenmcnt issued
Continued on page 10

Leo Vaughan, 71, longtime
Pomeroy businessman, dies

:t'

I

lishing Veterans Memorial Hospital as a memorial to veterans of
World War II. He served on the
board of trustees of the hospital.
He was also a member of the former Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce.
He is survived by his wife,
Rowena Harrah Vaughan, whom
he married Dec . 25, 1942, two
Continued on page 10

r

�</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="34656">
            <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="34655">
              <text>March 28, 1991</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="889">
      <name>brickles</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
