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                  <text>Porneroy--Middlepot"t. Ohio
,

THIS-

.The
Golden

WEEK'S
OA ·es·- ·
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,,

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t

;· -~~

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..

-Years•••

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Qhio Lottery

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Piclk 3
774
Pick 4

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1635

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Insert··
'

Clearing lonlibt. Low In ·mid ilia. Suany WedDMclay.
mcha In mlcl 408. '

•

MEIGS
BOYS

,'· Jan. 30-Vinton Co.-Away
·Feb. 2-ltlpre-Ho
...
'
Feb. 3-Athens-Awily

Vol.4o: No. 11.i

P~meroy-Middlc,port; Ohio, ·Tuesday, January 30. 1990

Copyrlthted 1110

.

i

GIRLS

.

By·LEE LEONARD . The House reconvenes Tues·
UPJ8talebouae Reporter
day at 11 a.m. and the Senate at
. COLUMBUS . - State Sen. 1:30 p.m.
Richard Finan, · R·Cinch\natl,
Under current law, the Manswants to 'apply Ohio's death field doctor accused of murder·
penalty for the first time to lng his wife and hiding her body
cold-blooded murderers who In his newly-purchased house In
pJtn their crbnes In detail. ·
:Erie, Pa.. would not be subject to :Fina!l alsb·wants capital pun· the death penalty eyen If
lshment tor anyone who kills convicted.
while stealing qr selllilg lllegl
The death penalty Is available
drugs.
. - ..
only In eight aggravating clr·
. Expansion ofthe death penalty cuinstances, Including murder
Is the subject of a bill sponsored for hire, mass murder, murder to
by Finan, ' now before the Ohio· escape arrest or 'Imprisonment,
Senate Judiciary Committee.
murder w.hlle committing

EASTERN
BOYS

Feb. 2-Southom-HoiM
Feb. 9-SyM_. Vahy-Away
Feb; 16-0ak IIII-H01110

GIRLS

Feb. 1-Southom-Away
Feb. 1-Sy-.. Vahy-H.ne , .

SOUTHERN

.

Fob. 2-Eastorn-Away

'

GilLS

-----------------BOYSSCHEDULE~
. --~----~----~
MEIGS HIGH' SCHOOL
BOYS BASKETBALL .

Nov. 24-Athens ......................... Home
_Dec. 1-ll!ller ............................. Awiy
Dec. 8- Tnmble .. : ........................ Away
Dec. 12-Nelsonvllle-Yorll ........... Home
Dec. 15.,-~tllston ........ : .............. Away
Dec. 19-Vmton Co..................... Home
Dec. 22-;-Belpre.............. ...... ........ Away
Dec. 29-Lopn ........................... Home
Jan. 5-Aiexander ....................... Home
Jan. 9-Federal Hockin&amp; ............. : Home
Jan. 12-lliller ............... :........... Home
Jan. 16-W~rren ................ ...... .... Away
Jan. 19-Tnmble............... .......... Home
Jan. 23-Nelsonvitle-York.. ........... Away
Jan. 26-Wellston ....................... Home
Jan. 30-Vinton Co ...................... Away
Feb. 2-Belpre ............................ Home
Feb. 3-Athens ............................ Away
Feb. 6-Aieunder ....._. .................. AWI'f
Feb. 9-Federal Hockm&amp; ............... Away

EASTERN LOCAL HIGH SCHOOL -·
. 1989-90 BOYS BASKETBALl

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL
1989-90 BOYS BASKETBALL

Nov. 21-Miller ............................: Away
Nov. 24-Federal Hocking ............ Home
Nov. 28-North Gallia ................. Home
Dec. 1-Hannan Trace .. ........... ..... Away
Dec. 5-Kypr Creek ........... .. .... ... Home
Dec. 8-Southwestern .................. Away
-Dec. 15-Southern :...................... Away
· Dec. 16-Symmes Valley .............. Home Dec. 22-Dak Hill ......................... Away
Dec.29-30-Holiday Toum. at Pt. Pleasant
Jan. 2-Federal Hocking ............... Away
Jan. 5-Hannan Trace ... ..... ... .... .. . Home
Jan. 12-North Gallia :.. ........ ........ Away
Jan. 19-Sout~western ... ;.. .......... Home
Jan.26~K,,er Creek .. :............. ..... Away.
Jan. 27-MIIIer .... , ...................... Home .
Feb. 3;-Southern ........................ Home · ·
Feb. 9-Symmes Valley ................. Away
Feb. 16DOak Hill ............. , ..... , ..... Home

Nov. 25-Southwestein ........, . ....... Home
Nov. 28-Ky~r Creek.. ......... ........ Away
Dec. 1-Dak ill .......................'.. Home
Dec. 5-North Gallia .................... Away
Dec. 8-Hannar) Trace .................. Away
Dec. IS-Eastern .................... ... . Home
_Dec. 16-Eastern Pike ........... ....... at 0.11 .
Dec. 22-Symmes Valley .............. Home
Dec. 23-Southeastern .~ ............... Away
Dec :· 29.- Athens ·..................... .... Home
Jan. 5-Dak Hill ........................... Away
Jan. &amp;-Gallipolis ........................ Home
Jan. 12-Kypr Creek .................. Home
Jan. 19-Hannan Trace ............. ;.. Home
Jan. 26-North Gallia .................. Home
Jan. 27-Ravenswood .. ...... .: ........ Home
Feb. 2-Eastern ........................... Away
Feb. 3-Federal Hocking ........... .... Away
Feb. 9-Southwestern .............. ..... Away
Feb. 16-Symmes Valley ........... .... Away

Local news briefs- --

------~---------GIRLS SCHEDULE,--------------~

Nov. 20-Sc!ut~rn ........................ :.... Away
Nov. 30-lldler .......... :..................... Home
Dec. 2-Ea.sttm ....................... ,......... Away
Dec. 7-Tnmblt ................................ Home
Dec. 11-Nelsonville-York .................. Away
Dec. 14-Wel!ston ............................ Home·
Dec. 18-Vinlon Co............................ Away
Dec. 2-1-Belpree ........ :..................... Home
Jan. 4-Aieunder .............................. Away
Jan. 8-Ftc!ml Hoclfinc ..................... Away
Jan. 11-llller .................................. Away
Jan. 15-Eistem ............................... Home
J11. 11-lrh•bl~ ................................ Away
Ja. 22-Ntls•rnvlllt-York ................... Home
Jan. 5-Wellston ............. ·.................. Home.
Jan. 29-VInltn Co .... :...................... Home
fell. 1-Belpre ....... :........................... Away
'fell. 5-Aitundtr.. ........... ................ Home·
Feb. 8-Fedt111· Hockinc ....... ............. Home
Feb. 10-Southim .....................:...... Home

EASTERN LOCAL HIGH SCHOOL
1989-90 GIRLS BASKETBALL
Nov. 27-North Gallia ........... :............ Away
Nov. 30-Harlllln Trace ..................... Home
Dec. 2-lleics .................................. Home
Dec. 4-K~pr Creek.. ...: ... .... ......... ..... Away
Dec. 6- Trrmble ............................ ..... Away
Dec. 7-Southwestern .......... ..... .... : ... Home
gec. U-Southern ............................ Home
ec. -Symmes Valley ................ .... Away
Dee. 16-Feder~l Hocking ........... ........ Away
Dec. 21-Dak Hrll ............................ . Home
Jan. 4.- Hannan Trace ......................... Away
Jan. 10-Trimble ............................... Home
Jan. 11-North Gallja ...... .................. Home
Jan. 15-leics .................................. Away
Jan. IS-Southwestern ....................... Away
Jan. 20-Fecleral Hocking ..... ......... .... Home
Jan. 25-Kypr Creek ..................... ... Home
Feb. 1-Sout~rn ........................ ....... Away
~~~- :-Oak Hrll .. ....... .. ,, ................ ... Away
e . -:Symmes Valley ..................... Home

-Public transit grants awarded

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL
1989-90 GIRLS BASKETBALL
Nov. 20-lleigs ...................... .......... !lome
Nov. 27-Kyfer ·creek ........................ Home
Nov. 30-0a Hill ..... .......................... Away
Dec . 4-;North Galli a ................. ........ Home,
Dec. 7-Hannan Trace ...... .... ............. Home
Dec . 11-Eastern ......... ..... :...... .. .. ....... Away
Dec . 14-Southwestern ...................... Away
Dec. 18-Waterford ........................... Home
Dec. 21-S~mmes Valley .................... Away
Jan. 2-Ne sonville-Vork ............... .:... Away
- Jan. 4-0ak Hill .................... :........... Home
Jan: 11-Kycer Creek ......................... Away
Jan. 18-Hannan Trace .................... , ..Away
Jan. 20-Nelsonville York.. ............ ::.. Home
Ja. 25-North Gallia ... :•. :.. .......... .-....... Away
Jan. 29-Waterford .............. ........... ,.. Away
Feb. !-Eastern .... ............................ Home
Feb. 5-Symmes Valley ................... :. Home ·
Feb . 8-S011thwestern ....... :...... ,..... ... Home
Feb . 10-Mei~s .................................. Away

will

Board
employs
drivers,
teache-rs

More emphasis will be placed
this year on training citizens In
.Red Cross CPR and fir st aid, as
well as training more ,
Instructors.
While a project was s tarted
last year to Improve the radio
communications network, .the
plan this year Is 1ii' get two new
towers In Columbia and Olive ·
Townslps which will give better
Ty;,o s ubstitute teachers and
two-way radio coverage for the
three substltut~i',bus drivers were
co1~~her ·emphasis will be on employed ~~ · Monday night's
meeting of the So~ thern Local
School Dls!Tlcl's Board of Educaes tabllshlng the EMS office as an
Emergency Services Office,
tlon 'at the high school.
Hired as substitute teachers
coordinating necessary lnforma·
lion on fires, ~MS, hazard
were Nancy L. Basye and David
materials, disaster serVices--and
Kaufman. The new substitute
.....
.,b
..
"' •··' Roblnosri,
·• -·
other related emergenoles,•·
.
·
us ' dr 1vers ·~are "arl
Max Hill, Jr., and Ronald Wood,.
The demahd for services Is
reflected In the number of calls.
.The board alsO employed ,Lots
Ihle to provide homebound tutorEmergency runs In 1988 totaled
2311 wllh transfers totaling 60l. _ lng for a student. and Bill Hensler
In 1989 the system handled a total
as the junlot-senlror prom advlof 2489 emergency runs and 689 sor. A speech service agreement
transfers.
was signed by the board with the
A highlight last year Insofar as -Meigs County Board of Educaestabllshlng the EMS afflce as a
tlon. This provides for therapy to
central clearing point for lnfor· Southern students from th
matlon, training and communi· county therapist at a cost unde~
TRAJNII'IG lii08T IMPORTANT - Having all reference
_cations with various agencies, Title 6B of not to exceed $3 600
materials and books a!onc with video equipment In one location for
was going to a one number annually .
'
easy acceaa In tralnln&amp; programs Is lmporlailt to EMS lnatructora.
all
fire
The
board
adopted
a
policy
system
for
the
county
for
Here Bob Dyer, Melp EMS administrator, left, and Joe Struble,
department and squads.
chalnnan of the Board of Trustees, the governing body for the .
statement about training for .
Also last year the basic and
custodians of the district. It
Melp EMS, begln,flllln&amp; the new library cabinet which has been
conatrucled In the EMS Training Center.
·
advanced
training
programs
prqvldes that there be annual
.
were redesigned to comply with
training for custodians In the
stale regulations and guidelines .
knowledge and use of products
In terms of progress at lhe
for cleaning with the tralnln t
be provided by the firms wJiic~
local leve l, the hard work arid
dedication of the volunteer persell the products to the scb00 1
sonnel that make up the system
district.
·
•
•
was
In
m;my
cases
over
and
The
Athletic
Boosters
were
Public transit grants In the amount of $106,982, have been
beyond -the call of duty • Bye r
given approval to build a bar·awarded to the Village of Middleport to provide operating
concluded.
becue pit at the high school. In
assistance to tl)e public transportation system (Blue Streak
,
Cab) for 1990.
D
other action, the Racine Home
Announcement of the award was made Tuesday by the Oblo
NallonalBankwasdeslgnatedas
the depository for school funds ,
Department of Transporatlon, Bernard B. Hurst, P.E.. ODOT
and Charles S. Norris, board
director, Sen. Jap Michael Long, and Rep. Mary Abel.
ershlp for the people of Sou- president was ·au thorlzed to
Former Athens County Repub- ship, city and county officials.
The awards consisted ol$47,3561n federal funds administered
" I also want to be an active theastern . Ohio," Payne
lican Party Chairman Larry
attend the Feb. 9 and 10 meeting
through ODOT and state funds of $59,626. "These dollars will
contact person ·In Columbus for concluded.
Payne
says
his
goa-l
as
a
of
the Ohio High School Boards ·
en&lt;1ble people In Middleport and neighboring rural areas to
He Is a graduate of Ohio State Association to be held . In
non-government agencies, such
candidate
for
the
Ohio
House
of
have a dependable and affotfable public transportation
Representatives Is "to become a · as volunteer !Ire departments,. University where he received a Columbus.
system," Hurst said.
·
strong voice for the average unions, rural water district. bachelor of science In education
Attending the meeting were
He explained that state funds are available through the Obo
and history . He Is a past vice Norris, president; Denny Evans,
etc.," he says.
working
man
and
working
Pl!bllc Transporatlon Gr~~t Porgram. Funds are 11warded to
president of the Athens Cqunty vice president; Gary Willford,
woman of Southeastern Ohio."
match a share of approved federal grants administered by 'the
· · Payne, 41, seeks his · party's
He went on to say that he "will Cooperative Extension Office Scott Wolfe. and Sue Grueser,
Urban Mass Transportation AdmlnistraUon.
.
· nomination for the House seat In work'closely with lclcal chambers Advisory Board, president of the board members, Dennie Hill,
the 94th District comprised of of commerce, small businesses Athens County Farmers ' treasurer, and Bobby Ord, superAthens, Meigs and Gallla and labor. In order to compete Market, a member of the Alex· Intendent.
.,
, Counties. ,
succe$sfully with the rest of the ander Lions Clull, a past chair· '
No ·one was Injured In a fo~r ·veblcle colllslon _at 5: 15 p.m:
·
He has been an employee of the state, the 94th· District must man of the Athens Architectural
Monday .on SR. 7, 0.1 of a mile south of milepost 6, near
Sl'l'\l"
Athens .office of Columbia Gas of retain Its present businesses and Preservation Group., and . a
Pomeroy, according to tl)e State Hljtbway Patrol.
. ,
0
- .J .,
develop new job opportunities for membi!r of the Qhlo Repul)llcan
Ohio since 19'78.
Troopers' said the accident occurred when Carl E. Qualls, 81,
Payne, who ser\ied as GOP . Its residents.
Party and the National Replibll·
Pomero:Y, driving a 1981 eadlllac, went lett of center, colllcllng
I!&gt;....,.
J"
county chairman from 1983 to
''Ha'llni beeil a village -m ayor, can Congressional Committee.
with a 1979 Dodge Powerwagon driven by Richard A. Bowen, 44,
His wife, Susan, lias been a
1988, and as mayor of Albany I know what It Is like to operate a
Pomeroy, then hit a 1985 Chevrolet Impala, driven by William
from 1984 to 1987, says "special local government on a ilmlled teacher and elementary superV!· '
1
-B. Ryan. Jr., 52, Belpre, Ohio and finally a 1977 Olds Cutlas
.'
sor In Vinton County schools for
Interest groups have clout In budget:
.•
·
driven by Daniel W. Young,39, Pomeroy. Damage was
. Columbus, but who speaks up for
"Consequently, as • member the past12years.ThePaynesare
HUNTINGToN, W.Va. (UPI)
.. moder11te to the Powerwagon, Cutlass and Cadillac and minor
the average working man and pf the ()hlo ~gl~lature, I will the parents of three daughters, · - , The fatal shots aimed at
to the Impala.
_
·
bring tq · It · a common sense ages, 10, 5 and 3.
women?"
.
· · Huntington pollee officer Paul
The patrol cited Qualls for failure to yield one-hal! of the
Payne says he will work approach td government. And I'll
Harmon were fired from less
. ·roadway. ·
_ cloaely with local, village, town· proVide positive, energetic lead·
,
than four feet away, an FBI
· Another Meigs County accident occurred at 11:30 a.m.
weapons
specialist testified Mon·
Monday on SR. 7 at milepost 9, also In Salisbury Township. No
day
In
the
m11rder trial of Bobby
.one was Injured. ·
_
Dean
Stacy.
·
Troopers said CharleS Lewis, 66, Pomeroy, driving a 197~
Agent
William
Albrecht tesU·
Ford LTO, was making a right turn when Timothy L. Kincaid,
fled
that
l)e
conilucted
tests on
32, Stockport, Ohio, drlvlne a 19'(7 International dump truck,
the
bullet
boles
In
Harmon's
'
attempted to pass on the right and struck the rlcht aide of tbe'
COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPI) classified as low Income.
bloodied llllrt and Jacket.
Kincaid car. There was moderate damage to the car; minor ·
One of every five Ohio children
The atucb', co~ by the
He said at leutoneottlveshotl
damage to the truck.
·
·
·
under age 6 was not covered by Health ~rtmeat'a Office of
wu
fired from leu than a foot .
The patrol cited Kincaid for failure to stop within the astured
public or private health lnsb- Jiealth P,ollcy all!l Analyals,
awa)', three were fired from leaa
alear _dlstance.
·
·ranee during 1987 and· that's ' · preaentl tile m01t recftt CvrreDt
· thaa four feet and the fifth from
hlcher than the national average, PopUlation Survey retultl from
'
.
an undetermined dlltance.
nya the Ohio Department , !)f, the census Bureau altd IIICludee
pr~be
He said br! ~pared the
Health:
' · ' state and naUollal retponaes to
amount of lead relldue on the
A study tbe department re- the IP'owint problem of the
Deputies of the Meigs County Sheriffs Department are .
clothln(f to the IIIIOIIIIt producecl
leuecl Monday alao sbowl tbat unlnlured.
Investigating the :break.lq and i!nterlne of the Dennis and
by a pn almuar to the murder
more tban 1.23 mDllon Ohloalls
'1t'sdllturblqtof1Ddthatoue
Debbie McKinney I'Hidence on Painter Ridge ijoad In Sllem
weapoa trom vartou dlltancea.
bad no health eoverw. 75 of the 1f011111 il)oat atfectecl by
T~h~.
,
,
,
Harmon wu tlaln with hll own
pereat beiOIIIed to a family lack of bealtb coveraae neecll Accordll!i to the report 1\eltlll stolen Included pictures and a
~rvlce revolver, and beaten
bladed by aomeone who was . and uaes - theae' tervlc:es th'
stereo.
Nlth what prosecutors believe
employld or lll!lf-emptoyed. One moat,L' said Oblo Health Director
.Continued on paee 10
&lt;;onUnued on page 10
LARRY PAYNE
fourtb . of therle famUiel were
UlDtinued on pa&amp;e 10
&gt;-b
.
.
-II•
It
-~--- --;--------~-

.

'

MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
1989-90 GIRLS BASKETBALL

other. states, and we're not husband had been beating her for
plowing any new ground ," said months so -s he stabbed htm to
death," said Finan .
the senator.
"People don 't want everyone
Finan said murdering a convenlence store clerk during a who commits murder to get the
holdup draws the death. penalty death penalty," said Finan.
while poisoning one's spouse "They want those people who do
does . not, because one Is cons I· violence .and really offend their
dered a vlolentcrbne by society . sensibilities to get the chair."
Finan's bill also permits the
Domestic relations are regarded
dealh penalty to 1M: Imposed by a
as Jess clearcut, be said.
"The public understands why jury or three-judge panel a
you km an Alton Coleman (con· second time If the first recom·
Victed of a multi-state murder mendallon Is thrown out because
spree) but It doesn't understand _of a technicality . .Upder current
why you kill Mary Smith, whose law, -the second panel could
reecommend only up to 30 years
. In prison without parole.

'

'

'

Fob. 1-Ealfom-ilomo
Feb. 5-SynnOI Ya·y-Ho...
Feb, 1-SouthwOitom-HO...

19~9-90

another felony, or the the killing vtolerit felonies. ·
.
of a trial witness, poUce officer; . ·-Finan, who .wrote Ohio's 1981
prison guard or high public dealh penalty law after the
official such as the president or earller one was declared uncon·
governor.
·stltutlonal, said he feels the most .
Finan's bill expands these Important part of his new pro~&gt;c
aggravating clrumstances to In· osalls applying the death penalty'
elude kllllng "In a cold, calcu· to murders In drug deals .
lateil and premeditated manner
He -said he Is not concerned
without any pretense of moral or about tinkering wltli the law even
though after nine Years. It still
legaiiUstlflcatlon."
It also adds murder while has not been tested with an
dealing drugs , Including . marl· execution.
· 'Basically·, ever~thlng here
Juana, and murder lithe offender
has previously ~n conVicted of · (In the bill) . has al~ady been_
_m urder or at least two .prior d.ecided by the !;upreine Court In

·. New state rules making it more
.difficult.for· volunteers
to
function
'

BOYS

'

.

Sen. Finan .proposes expanding death penalty

_Jan. 29-VInton Co.-HolM
_Fill. 1-ltlpro-Away
Feb. 5-Aiex....r-Homo

Feb. 3-Fed.Hodci..-Away
Fob. 9-SouthwOitorn-Away

.

2 Soctlono, 34 PogH 26 Cento
. A Multlmedlolnc. Nowopopor ·

'advanced EMT class
begin. ·
By Cllt\RLENE HOEFLICH
This, he pointed out, Includes
Dally Set1!1ne! Staff ·
Better trained emergency · training In starting of IV' s and
squad personnel to Include ·a filii ' tralnlnJZ In l!lvln~~: inlectlons for
· sports medicine program for the reactions to bee stings for EMS
.CO!Jnty's high school and youth · personnel.
leagull groups, along with a . Plans are also being made to
•broader radio communications Implement' more . ·."first re·
; network In the ccounty, are sponder groups"- In communi,
among the 1990goalsoftheMelgs iles. In 1989. according to the .
County Emergency Medical _ administrator, such a group was
formed In Columbia _Townshlp.
Services.
In reViewing the EMS program Byer said It was Very successful
In 1989, and looking to 1990, Bob In that It cut response time 15 to
Byer, EMS administrator, cited 20 m'lnutes In some cases .
the-Increase In Services and the · He described the first respond·
new s~te rules and regulations ers as men and women with a
which ~re making It more level of first aid training able to
for volunteers to assist a victim before the squad ·
arrlves-•·on •· the · scene,. but notOperating on two one-mill transporting serVice.
In 1990, Byer hopes to establish
·tevles gimeratlng $318,000 a year,
the' Meigs EMS, according to "first responder groups '.' In both
· Byer, Is the last truly volunteer Scipio 11,nd Chester Townships.
Another area which the EMS
EMS system In the state.
He said there are several administrator hoix-s to expand In
Individual volunteer EMS squads In sport medicine. Currently
In the state but they are not EMT's arj! on the sidelines with
backed by any type of county· the team physlplan at Meigs and
wide assistance, and the volun· Southern .games. Plans call for
teers are paid on a per run basis, the EMS to expand that to all
a practice not done In Meigs three hpgh schools · as well as
youth league groups; grade
County.
Byer said that currently there school -basketball and midget
are 170 men aad·womeq on .the football. The emphasis will be on
EMS roles, Including 140 trained training the coaches and EMS
In one .of the three levels of personnel to assist In •handling
certification, EMT, advanced ,. sports Injuries.
Byer reported that In 1989 the
and · paramedic, and about 35
updating of primary squads to
designated drivers.
According to Byer. there Is a larger module types was comcontinuing training program for pleted and a program started to
the volunteers. Currently a new. refurbish programs for older
basic EMT class Is underway ' primary module squads . This
with 18 new men and women year the Rutland ·unit Is scheenrolled and - on Feb. 15 a an duled to be refurbished.

• Ho. use
.r_1ayne candida
• te j or_ Oh..W

.

No one ·hurt in Monday wrecks

A u;en t ·

ml.n f;red at

close pange

Ohio's ·rate of tmiJlsured .

.~hildren

_Meigs deputies

t

t

hipter than' average ·

B, &amp; E ·

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�••

Commentary
.;

-

.

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

L. WINGETT .
Publl&amp;her

~OBERT

•.

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manqer ·

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words lonK. All letters are subject to editing aad must bt signed with
name, a&lt;ldreos and telephone number. No unsigned leltOI's wW be publis hOd. Letters should be In gond taste, addressing "'•ues, not persoaalllles.

·

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.Shoddy goods
from

De~s

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!',d,

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Allen·.thinks· thinking can save America

·The Daily Sentinel

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ControUer

'.

Spurs hit 37 percent from·
floor, but still beat Lakers

Page 2-lbe o.ly Sa1tilll
Pornaov-Middhpolt, Ohio
Tueeday, ~ 30, 1980 _

and Reps

ByARNOLDSA~SLAK

WASHINGTON ·_ Just when 20th century, thi~kshemayhave
you think America's students some solutions.
·
that and other examples or
can't get any dumber, the goAllen has just published 81 · Ignorance far and wide to stimu·
vernment or some private think solutions to America's declining
late reform.
. tank comes out with a report on educational performance fn his
Alien · thinks that movi es,
the declining educational perfor- 32nd book " Dumbth" (Prome·
which are ~bsorbed by children ·
mance Of ihe young.
'
theus Books). He shared with us
~ore readily than textbooks, are
A 1983 survey ,of100geography an example · from · his own
being made by people who ·
students 111 the University of experience.
. exemplify declining cult11ral
Miami (Fta·.) showed that 42
·Allen hired a secretary who
literacy .
percent of them didn' t ·know was bright and ertlcient. One day
Perhaps the best example of
where London .was, and ' more he noticed that she hadn't rethat was an experiment by a
frustratedHoliywood screenwrlthanhaltcouidn'tflndChicagoon sponded to an Invitation from
a map. Eight percent couldn't comedian Danny Kaye's widow
ter. He took the script from the
even find Miami.
to appear at a United Nations movie classic "Casablanca,"
A 1984 survey of high school · function honoring Kaye. Allen
made some minor changes. and
students showed that 75 percent .knew he had to be In Lo.s Angeles
sent it to 217 agents. He got back
couldn't l~ate Vietnam on a that day and couldn't make the 184 rejections from agents who
map, and about ·one-third didn't appearance. and he was puzzled didn 't recognize the story· from
know that the United States had · why his secretary hadn't notified one of the top 10 movies of all
fought.a war there.
· Kaye's widow.
time. One called it' "too wordy."
Last year, about one-third of
Tile secretary was working on . Another said it was "not very
American high 'school students the assumption that Allen could Interesting. Make something
surveyecl.couldn'tflnd theUtllted ma~e his appointment in Los
happen."
Stafe~ on a map. And 26 percent Angeles and stilL go to the U.N.
Television can share the blame
of high sch.ool students couldn't She didn't know the U.N. was In for increasing American Jgnorname Mexico as that large New York City, she didn't know ance. The tube Is responsible for
country on the southern border of wliat U.N. stood for and, when a declining attention span which
the Onlted States.
told, she dldn' t know what the Is reflected in the amount of time
Comedian Steve Allen collects United Nations was. Yet she was students are willing to sit and
examples of Ignorance, not be- a college graduate.
even In the length or books they
cause they're funny , but because
Now a fervent apostle of are willing to read.
Allen, a renaissance man for the education, Allen Is spreading
Actor John Ritter played tlie

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta

UPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON - Whatever the merits of the current argument
over the Social Security tax may be. it seems clear that there are
some low down politics being played with it.
Sen. Dan;el Patrick Moynihan, D-N.Y., kicked off the dispute by
announcing that he would intrOduce legislation to cancel scheduled
increases in the Social Se·curity hix because· the government Is using
the money now being collected, in his word.s, ''as if It were general
revenue" and not being put aside for pensions.'
.
There Is plenty of dispute about the accuracy ·of Moynihan's ·
statements, ·but there Is little argument that the Social Security tax is
taking in more than Is needed for current pensions and that the
surplus Is being u5ed- at the very least as a bookkeeping item -to
mak.e the federal deficit look smaller.
Moynihan and his supporters stress that the Social Security tax is
''regressive," that is, everyone, rich or poor, pays the same rate, and
that it is going up while the income tall , which is supposed to be
" progressive" was reduced to 'benefit the well-to·do during the
Reagan years.
·
President Bush and his backers see the Moynihan move as a
demagogic effort by the Democrats to force the Republicans to raise
income .taxes, which the president has said he will not do, and to give
up trying to reduce the capital gains tax ,
Reducing the Social Security tax and the surplus It produces would
make the federal detlci t look larger and require either mores pending
cuts or more revenues. But it would not, as some administration
supporters·have claimed, reduce current Social Security benefits.
A lew years back, the tax was purposely increased to procjuce
surplus revenueS to be used in the 21st century to pay the pensions o!
20th century baby boomers. The surplus now is being invested In
Treasury bonds. which provide funds to run the government and
which apparently gives rise to the charge that Social Security money ·
is being used to buy airplanes and paperclips.
·
In all of this who-struck-John It is llkely that the ordinary taxpayer
would like to know only (1) Is somebody steallngSocialSecurltyfunds
and (2) can Social Security taxes lle reduced without cutting current
benefits.
'
The apparent answer to the !Irs! question is "po" and .the second
"yes," even though those taxes surely will have to go up eventually It~
pay benefits later.
Meanwhile, both sides are trying to use the argument for political
purposes.
The Democrats hope to steal the politically attractive mantle oftax
cutters from the Republicans and to highlight the difference between
Bush' s proposed,capital gain tax cutfor stock market and real estate
Investors and their own Social Security tax .cut for low- and
middle-Income workers.
.
The GOP, In turn, is looking for a way to avoid giving up the tax
cutting Image it established after 1980 and to convince polltlcally
active older Americans that the Democrats are playlngfastand loose
WASHINGTON(NEA)-Five
with their pensions by proposing a Social Security Ia)\ cui.
,
years
ago, a jUdge in the District
There sre some inflated claims on both sides in this a!!alr and If
of Columbia Superior Court apthere Is a conclusion to be dr.awn, It most likely Is that boih are playing
proved a $1 million settlement of .
rather cheap, transparent poUtics.
a malpractice suit against one of ·
the city's leading hospitals. Today, however, !here is no rec~rd
of that litigation. ·
By United Press Jateraatloaal
Indeed. on the .same day that
the case was settled, the judge
Today Is Tuesday, Jan. 30, the 30th day o! 1990 With 335 to foll!&gt;W .
ordered the lawyers and others
The moon is waxing, moving toward Its first quarter.
involved in the case to never
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn.
The evening star Is Jupiter.
discuss It publicly • then permanThose born on this date are under the sign of Aquarlu~. They Include ently dispatched t~~ legal papers
Franklin D. Roosevelt , 32nd president of the United States, In 1882;
and other written recordS to. a
historian Barbara Tuchman In 1912; actress Dorothy Malone in 1925 locked tile cabinet.
As a _result, all other former ,
present and · future patients at
Howard University Hospital
have no access to mater·ial that
poses serJous·questlonsabout the
faCility's procf!C/ures and its
health professionals.
The manner in which that clvU
suit was resolved Is·unusll!ll, but
hardly unique. Hundreds ofo!her
~E5,
cases In local and federal courts
here have been settled in secret.
UNfo~Tt)l{~i~ L"f
Nationally, the cases in that
category almost certainly, ·

role of an evangelist on a TV
show, "Pray TV." When !be
show aired, local affiliates recelved some 22,000 telephone
calls from people who wanted to
donate money to the fictitious
church.
,
·Even Spuds MacKen~legetsan
average of 5,000 letters a month
- not the trainer, not the beer
sponsor, npt the agent, but the
dog Itself.
Allen thinks Americans can't
afford such ignorance. It puts us
at an economic disadvantage in
the world market and, as a
sidelight, · produces skinheads
and assorted"bigots who perpe·
Irate hate crimes outoftheir own
stupidity.
.
Symptomatic of the Ignorance
is an )ncreaslnj propensity to
elect leaders wlli are TV-genic,
but Intellectually stunted, and
not smart enough to recognize
their own lack of ability to lead.
The only place they will lead the
country is downhill, because.
Allen told us, "we are pushovers
for anyone who speaks authorlta·
tlvely," whether or not they know
what they're
about.

GRANT SOARS FOR ' TWO POINTS Chlcaso'$ Horace Grant ' soars l'ast Atlanta
Hawks' ·Cliff Levingston to add a couple of points

Frosh meet
will resume ·

It will be Alexander agalnlst
Nelsonville, and Belpre and
Wellston in the semi-finals of the
TVC Freshman basketball tournament on Wednesday night.
In opening round actio n last
Saturday morning Alexander
defeated Miller by a score of ·
56-41. K. Graziano hid the way
for the Spartans with 19 points.
Bruce Lanning of the Falcons
matched him for scoring honors
with 19.
In Saturday's second game
Nelsonville jumped out to a 7-2
first quarter lead and defeated
Trimble 54-37. Dan Call led
Nelsonville with 14. Mike Pldlock
added 12. and Jeff Freer 10. For
Trimble .Justin Day took the
gameS scoring honors with 17;
Reuben Kittle added 11.
Belpre held off a VInton Count.y
comeback ·to defeat the Vikings
36-31 in the afternoon's third
game . Belpre held a 20-8 le'ad at
'the half but had to hold off the
Vikings at the end for the victory.
Curt Copen and Travis Wells led
Belpre with 7. Alan Kiefer led
Vinton with 8. 'In the afternoon's
last game Meigs came back from
a 18-15 Federal. Hocking lead at
the half to defeat the Lancers
41-38. ,John Bentley led the way
for Meigs with 12. Chris Viney
added 11 for Federal Hocking.,
In second round action Monday
afternoon 'Brad Spencer drove
the length of the court for a layup
at the buzzer to gtve the Wellston
Golden Rockets a 49-~8 upset
over the Meigs Marauders. Mike
Weh;h had given the Marauders a
1 point lead with 8 seconds
remaining with a three pointer.
but Spencer took the ball the
length of the court to beat the
buzzer. The loss was only the
second of the year for Meigs .
Spencer led Wellston with 17.
Bobby Johnson, Jay Cremeans
imd Welsh each had 10 for Meigs.
Wednesday nights first game
wlll be at 6:00 wl!h Alexander
and Nelsonville. Belpre and
Wellston will meet at 7:30.
,

Couri secrets keep public in lhe dark "~.

I

Today in history

r.

·Berry's World

!

numberinthetensofthousands.
In recent years, some concerned judges and lawyers as
well as a few newspapers notably Newsday In New York
and The Washlngtbn Post- have
mounted campaigns to change
the practices that allow Inform alion about everything from dangerous products to incompetent
doctors to remain locked to rever
In courthouse safes.
What the Post describes as "a
system of private justice (that)
has evo)vect within the public
courts" Is manifested in various
legal prbcedures specifically designed to deprive the public of
Information:
.
- Protective orders Issued by
judges that allow plaintiffs' at·
torneys to gain access to respondents' Internal documents on the
condition that the material not be
disclosed to anyone else.
-Orders Issued by judges that
seal everything from selected
documents In a lawsuit to an
entire case file . In some lnstances, suits are tiled \lOder seal,
.

and the very exlstence .of the
litigation is a secret.
- Confidential resolution of ·
cases settled out or court that
typically Involves an exchange·
In return for a generous settl~ment from the respondent, the
plaintiff agrees to maintain absolute secrecy about everything
that has transpired.
Many lawyers and judges
defend the current system.
"Criminal law is the public
business. (CivU) lawsuits are
usually private business " says
one highly regarded 'federal .
judge in wawlngton.
.
"You represent a client not
cause," says one attor~ey In
response to those who note that
the Information disclosed In one I
person's court case may be
crucial to hundreds or thousands
of others already adv.ersely affected or potentially endangered
by the same faulty product or
Incompetent practitioner.
But the case involving Howard
University Hospital vividly lllustrates the need for disclosure.

Robert Walters

a·

·
The civU suit was tiled by. the
family of a 35-year-old woman
who e.n tered 'the . hospital for
minor sinus surgery in 1983 but
encoun~red breathing cllfficuities after being admitted.
Entries made on the patient's
medical chart by a-nurse claimed
the hospital start conscientiously
monitored thOse problems and
·Summoned a physician whp
'examined the P,atlent three · .
times.
But the doctor said that "was a
falsification .... I had not been
notified." Similarly, a woman
who shared a room with the ·
patient said: "(She) was having
problems breathing... and would
start to gasp, andiwouldbuufor
the nurses . They wouldn't
respond."
The woman stopped brf!lllhlng"
lost conSciousness and died less
than a week later. The nuise who
allegedly falsUied the medical
records retained )ler job, · the
hospital paid $1 mUlion to settle
the malpractice lawsuit .- and .
the judge sealed the me.
•'

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Eastern Europe: strickly from Hung~
B' .
b

..

l
I

I.
I

(

BUDAPEST, Hungary- Who
would have thought It? Publisher
RupertMurdochjustboughta50
percent Interest in a newspaper
In a country with a nominal
communist government. But It's
all right. The government Is
leaving. ·and fhe Hungarian
paper combines two aspects of
, modern free society:. biting poll!·
leal commentary and rather
undressed ladles. · · ·
And in Poland, another first:
The TV guide for Warsaw c,ble
has a naked woman on the cover.
So the West comes East. From
news to nudei,' freedoni Is arrlv·
lng. The American Generals Electric and Motors :- will do
busiDess here In Hungary. !jure
pr!Je! So wUJ Suzuki.
·
But will Westernizing work?
Can tired, poor, East European
nations revive? Logic answers:
Why not? The!!e are E~ropean
countries · do' wei!: W~t Germany, ttaly, today even ~pain
and Portugal,TheEaste~Europeans, we believe, .are only poor

because they haven't been free

phones are&lt;m hold here, too, and ·
housing Is usually grim . and
andshakes. Sosbouldn'ttheEast scarce.
Europeans make It, and quickly?
Technology Is the least of it.
No communist nation has ever Serious people here wonder
done II. It mlgbthave lieen nice to whether the sweet communist
try one laboratory experiment governments not only killed and
before mass prod•Jctlon. That's . jalled people, llut also fried the
not the way the world works. Six brains of the proletariat. Did
East European nations are up for motivation survive? Why work If
grabs, ten counting Yugoslavia there Is no Incentive? Why work
and the Battles. Predictions by If everything Is taken care of economists have not recently pOorly -even If you don't work?
been selling at a premium. So Why let anyone else work hard If
there are nervous experts here.
he shows you up?
The stakes are larlle, represTo unlock their minds, the East
en ling a lood piece of the nature Europeans are going the free
of tbe future. If these experl- market way. In Hungary, subs!:- ffie!IIS work, they will be the · dies have been cut. Privatization
showcases demonstrating that
Is beginning. But when sutisidles
freedom works.
go down.' prlees go up whUe
These are backward countries.
wages don't, and folk.t are
In the drab shun that Js Warsaw . strapped and fearful. As unsubthe phone system Is sub-Third
sldlzed, lnefflclent!lrmsgobank·
World. Hungary Js the most rupt, unemploymellt riles scaradvanced of the lot, and they sun
lly during the transition.
don't know about credit cards,
Th~ devil may be In thedeta11s,
real .stock lilarkets, Insurance
which may be decided In the ·
and checking accounts. . The
Hungarian election tWO months
Now the Soviet unperlum shrin~

\

for BuUs In Monday's NBA game at Chicago.
(UP I)

J.

WI
·
·
W
from now, the first wholly tree
one In Eastern Europe In 40
years.
. ,
Forty-two (!) pollticl\l parties
have formed. The key contest is ' '
expected to be between. the
Hungarian Democratic Forilm
(HDF) ·a nd the Alliance .fQr Free '
Democrats (AFD).
'
'J,'he Free Dernocar.t s Atarted as .
dissidents (tndstly Jews from ' •
Budapest). Now they seem to be 'I~
I
gathering national support as
'
the~ bang the media drum. But, '
hold on, theae urbaa Intellectuals
''
are desert~ by !heir opponents
'as right· wing capitalist free
market extremlats!
The terrain Ia not only contus·
Ing but danproua. Can the
psychologlcal.stagnatlon of eom·
munlam be l'epeajed simply by
electlollli, tree expression and
forellll, lnvl!l!tment?
demo-·
cracy doesn't respond quickly,
will autocracy, or anarcby 1 or
restyled communism take over?

en

atten erg

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team In the lfague," Anderson
said. "They have a lot of heart.
That's why every team shoots to
be like them."
Terry Cummings scored 20
points and rookie David Robin· ·
son added 19 points, 16 rebounds
and 4 blocked shots as the Spurs
·avoided their first three-game
losing streak of the year ..
,
Despite shooting only 37 percent from the noor, San Antonio
Improved to 28~13 - . the best
record In franchise history at the
halfway point of the season.
"But this wasn't our biggest
win," Robinson said. "Every win
means a lot. Lately we've been
up and down. We n~ed to be more
consistent."
·•
James Worthy, who had 32
points for the Lakers, · hit a
jumper with 2:30 left to tie it
82·82. But· his pass was intercepted by Anderson, and that led
to two free throws by Robinson
that gave the Spurs the edge with
a minute left.
Worthy tied it again With 40
seconds to play and the Lakers
had a chance Ito go ahead, but
Anderson swatted away Drew's
layup with 16 seconds left.
San Antonio went without a
timeout and Orlando Woolridge
fouled Anderson With 6 seconds to
play. Anderson's free throw
made it 85·84.
·
Michael Cooper's lnl!ounds
pass was then picked . ott by
Frank Brlckowskl, and Ant;terson
added another free throw with
one second remaining. Worthy
was long with his potenllal

game-tying Jumper from ll feet
at the buzzer,
Anderson finished With 14
points. Byron Scott al10 had 14,
all In the second half, for the
Lakers.
Elsewhere In the NBA Monday
night, Minnesota tbrashedSacra·
menlo 109-91, Chicago topped
Atlanta 121-111 and Dallas ham-'
mered New Jersey 108-88. ·
'l'lmberwolves 109, Klap et
At Minneapolis, Randy Breuer
scored 15 second-half points to
Ignite two surges that helped the
Timberwolves top Sacramento.
Minnesota. 8·33, snapped a ninegame losing streak and won for
just the third time In their last 24
g11mes. Wayman Tisdale. scored
26 points and Rodney McCray
added 20 points for the Kings.
Bulla 121, Hawlul 111
At Chicago, Horace Grant and
.Scottie Pippen sparked an 18•0
f(rst,quarter ru~ that helped the
Bulls snap Atlanta's three-game
winning streak. Pippen finlahed
with 20 points tor Chicago, which
moved within a ·game of first- •
place Detroit in the Central :
Division. i4llf Levingston led
Atlanta w t
points.
May
ks 108, Neh 88
At Dal s, Roy Tarpley and
Derek Harper combined for 12 of
the Mavericks' llrst 14 points In
th.e final period in posting their
sixth straight victory. Tarpley ..
led the Maver leks. with 23 points,
while Harper finished with 20.
The Nets, who lost for the seventh .
time In their last eight . games,
were led by Sam BoWie With 13
points.

.Tigers maintain top spot
By JOE ILLUZZI
UPI Sports Writer
Missouri,
NEW YORK which last week barely survived
Its first test as the No. 1 team In
the nation, maintained Its top
ranking Mond~y In a near
unanimous vote by the UPI
Board of Coaches.
The Tigers received 40 of 41

Missouri sidestepped an upset
first -place v"otes cast. The only
against Rutgers last Tuesbid
coach not to vote Missouri first
day,
coming away with a 89-84
tabbed the Tigers second. giving
honie
victory. The Tigers easily
them 614 of a possible 615 points.
·
disposed
of Colorado In their
Kansas. the team Missouri unseated last week as No. 1. other game and Improved to 19-1.
The rest of the Top 20 featured:
received the other first-place
vote and held Its No. 2 ranking. No.3 Arkansas; No.4 Michigan;
One coach failed to vote this N6. 5 Duke; No. 6 Georgetown;
No. 7 Syracuse; No. 8 Oklahoma;
week.
No. 9 Purdue; No.IO Nevada-Las
Vegas; No. 11 Illinois; No. 12
Louisville; No. 13 · Louisiana
State; No. 14 Connecticut; co-No.
.15 Georgia Tech and La Salle;
No. 17 UCLA; No. 18 North
Carolina; No. 19 St. John's; No.
Another stiff battle in the
Brown .ls dominating the b~ards , 20 Minnesota ..
Mid-Ohio Conference will be on with an average of 8.8, although
Arka·nsas , which has been
the agenda .of I he University o( Donaldson Is responsible for 6.2
holding steady In the middle .of '
Rio Grande men's basketball each time out. Going into io·
the Top 20 all season, climbed six ·
team tonight at 7:30 when the night's game. the Redmen are
places and made the strongest
Ur·bana Blue Knights invade averaging 101.7 points per game surge of the week. Connecticut
Lyne Center.
also made large strides, Improvare giving up 86.2.
The game also marks Gallla
Ing five spots after scoring Its
Urbana's rise in the MOC was
County Insurance Agents Night given impetus aft('r Saturday's
third straight victory over a top
and will feature a hoop shoot!or a 87-71 defeat of conference leader
Big East team with a triumph
cash prize at halftime. Sponsor· · Tiffin on the Blue Knights' turf.
over St. John's.
lng the ~tame are Saunders Bob Ronal's club Is 14-Gand 4·2 in
Georgetown and Louisville.
Insurance, Toler &amp; Toler Insu- the MOC and stands . poised to
ranl!ed third and fourth respecrance, The Wlsetnan Insurance challenge Tiffin ·and Walsh for
tively last week, were the big
Agency. Car oil K. Snowden and the conference crown.
losers. The Hoyas fell to Syra-.
W..R. " Dick" Brow!) Insurance.
cuse and the Cardinals lost to .
Leading the charge aga lnst Rio
The Redmen , 7-13 overall and Grande Is 6-4 junior guard. ·DePaul.
2-4 In the MOC. will be working to Anthony Harris ail9.7 points and
'North Carolina, UCLA and
reverse an earlier loss tot he Blue · 3.7 boards a game. Among the
Minnesota joined the Top 20 this
Knights at Urbana on Dec. 5. In other star"ters in double figures
week while Indiana, Oregon
overtime, Urbana emerged the are forward John Curtis (6-4,
State and Alabama dropped out.
winner, 99-95.
sophomore, 14.5 ·points. 4.6 re·
Coming off a 96-881oss to Walsh bounds) and guard Will Goins
SPRING VAli fV CINFMA
on Saturday. the Rio men (6-1, junior. 13.9 points, 3.9
446 4524
•
bounced back the following day rebounds, 5 assists ).
to defeat Lake Erie, 137-105. In a
Rounding out Ronal 's llnP~p
game which saw the entire bench are forward . Marty Socha (6-4,
play, Jeff Brown .scored 26 freshman. 6.2 points. 4 rebounds)
points , Brad Schubert 19, Troy and center Jeff Courter 16·7.
Donaldson and Darius Williams freshman, 3.3 points, 2.6 boards).
18 each and ..Lyndell Snyder 17. First off the bench will probably
Against Walsh, Gary Harrison be guard Kerwin Thompson (6·0.
hit 27 points and Schubert 24.
junior, 9.3 points) and forward
Todd Charles (6-6, sophomore. 4
Harrison, the starting point' points, 3.7 rebounds).
guard. saw his per-game scoring
The Redmen have scheduled
average go io 19.6 points. while two
more home games for this
Schubert is averaging 16.4 week, against Lake'Erle Friday
markers per outing. Brown, at
power forward. Is contributing at 7:30 p.m. and Wilmington
13.5 points per outing and shoot- Sunday at 3 p.m.
Ing guard Mark Erslan Is bringing in 9.6 points a game.
Based on 19-game statistics
prior to Lake Erie, Harrison is
the .a ssists leader at 8.3 a game.

Redmen, Urbana set
for tough MOC battle ·

SMITH SCORES- Meigs' Kelly ,Smith (25) llres short jumper
with Vikings' Tammy Case (32) trying to block the shot. MHSwon,
. 51-31.

.Meigs girls capture
51·31 TVC cage win
By D"VE HARRIS

The Meigs Marauders girls
basketball team with tremendous team e(fort on defense. out
scored Vinton County in the
second half 33-12, and coasted to,
a 51-31 victory at Meigs High
School Monday night. The Marauders gained revenge for an
eariier 45-32Ioss to the VIkings at
McArthur.
The win allows Meigs to keep
pace
with the VIkings for second
The Daily Sentin~l
place In the TVC Meigs Is now 9
and 4 in the conference and 11-4
(USPS US.HO)
A. Dlvllton of Multimedia, b~.
overall. The VIkings record
drops to 9-3 in the conference onP
Publis hed evfiry afternoon. Monday
full game ahead of thP Maraudthrough Friday, 111 Co uri St.. Po·
meroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pub·
ers and 9 and 6 overall.
llshing Company tMultlm£'dla, Inc.,
. The Marauders came out olthe
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, .Ph . 992·21~. Se·
cond class postage paid at Pomeroy,
gates sky high building a 12·8
Ohio.
lead at the end of the first
•
quarter.
But the VIkings out
M£&gt;mben United Press lnternatlonal,
Iniand D•lly Press Association and the
scored Meigs lf-6 In the second
Ohio NewsPaper Association. National
quarter to take a 19·18 lead into
Adverrts'tn~ RepresentatlvP, Branham
Newspaper Sall'5, 733 Third Avenue,
the locker room at halftime.
New York. New York 10017.
Midway In the second period
Meigs was holding on to a 4 point
POSTMASTER: send address changes
to The Dally Sentinel, 111 COun St., \
lead when junior guard Jennifer
Pomeroy. Ohio 45789.
Taylor went down with a knee 1
injury.
SUB8CBIPTION RATES
llr Carrier or Mot ... RGate
• Taylor was playing her first
, One Week...................................$1,.40
action after being out two weeks
One Month ....... ..........................$6.10
One Year , ....... ... .:...... ..., .. ... , .. .. $72.80
due to illpess. ~~than a minute
later Kelly S111lth picked up her
SINGLE COPY
. PRI(JE
third foul. Both girls had tosltout
1 Dally ............... ,................... ~ .ee•••
the remainder of the half. The
Subetrlbel'l nordeslrlngropuy the car..
VIkings took adVanta~ of the
rter may rmll In advance direct lo
Marauders
bad lu'Ck to rally and
The Dally Sentinel on • 3. 6or 12 month
bull. C,redll wW be e~ven carrt« eecb
. take the lead at the 'haU.
week.
In the third Smith and Taylor
No sublcrtptlona by mall permitted in
were able to return and the
areas where homP carrll'!' aervlre II
Marauders
playing outlltandlng
available.
team defegse outscored VInton
'
12-8 and bold .. ao.27Jead heading
-~~~ CooOif .
'
-·Help
Into the final 8 minutes. The
13 Wel'kJ .................................. $19.:H
26 Wel'kJ .................................. 137.96
fourth quartet was all Meigs u
112 wee~ca ....,............................. rru&amp;
tbe MarauderJ outscored thl'
- l l l o l p CotiOIJ
Vlklnp 21-4 to Wlli golD* away.
mw..... .,.. .. ..... .. ..... .. . .b•Hil
' 2ti WHb .. .. .
.. ... .. ... . .. 1411 :II
Kelly Smltb ICOred 16 to lead
. 52 WeekJ .., ....., .......................... m.tu,
tilE' way for·Melp, Kim Hannlna

-

By IEFF SHAIN
UPJ Sporla Writer
. It's not often a team can shoot
37 percent from the floor and still
beat ·the Los Angeles Lakers, but
it . becomes a lot easier when
IViagic Johnson Isn't choreographing ·the offense known as
"Showtlme."
Willie Anderson hit two free
throws, blocked a shot and a
made a steal In the final 75
seconds Monday night. s)lllrklng
the San Antonio Spurs to an 86-84
· victory over the Lakers.
The victbry was the first for the
Spurs at the Forum In 15 games
dating to Jan . 6. 1984. The
Lakers, the lastNBA team to lose
its lOth game, saw a four-game
winning streak snapped With
·only their second loss In 21 home
gllmes this season.
Los Angeles, 31-10. managed
just one point above Its seasonlow In scoring. Without Johnson,
home with the flu. the Lakers
committed. 20 turnovers and hit
just 43 percent of their shots.
Replacement point guard Larry
Drew had only 4 points and 8
assists.
"(Johnson) handles the ball so
much and delivers It in spots the
players know so well," Lakers
Coach Pat Riley said. "It would
probably take a couple of days
for us to get In sync (without
Johnson)."
Still, the signUicance of beatIng the Lakers for the ilrst th:Tie In
more than six years wasn't lost
on the San Antonio players.
"They'll say that Magic wasn't
there, but they are still the best

added 13. T. Graves led Vinton
with 8.
Ver na Compston scored 15
points to lead the little Marauders to a 37-25 victory in the first
co ntest. M. Vanover led VInton
County with 13.
Vinton .............. ....... 8 19 ' 27 31
Meigs ......... ............. 12 18 32 51
MEIGS - Smith 5-0-6-16,
Baer 2-0-5-9, Newsome
2-0-0-4, Hanning 5-0-3-13,
Taylo.r 2-0-3-7, Ewing
I-0-0-2. Rouse 0-0-0-0,
Neison 0-0-0-0 . . TOTALS
11-0-17-51.
VIN'OON- Case 2-0-0-4, T.
Graves 4-0-0-8. M. ·Graves
1-'0-1-3. Caudill 3-0-0-6;
Fain 3-0-0-6, Dixon
1-0-0-2, Vanover 1-0-0-2 .
TOTALS 15-0-I-31.

Dr. ·D aniel
R. Trent

1985 Mercury Grand Marquis ••• S4495

Fully equipped. G"ood condition..

.

.

Family Practice
•

$

1984 Ford LTD ....................... 1695

4 dr., PB, PS, V-6. Air.

.

.

1983. Ford F:-150 (x4 ••••••••••• $3895
6 cyl. 4 spd.

.

1980 Chevy .Van~~ .................. S1195

Auto. PB. PS.

.

'1979 Mercury XR7 ••••••••••• S895
2 dr., PB. PS. Air:
..
SEE RAY R,IGGS

.

Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday
9 a.m. - 5 p.m.
. Wednesday ·
9 a.m. · Noon
'·

'

Appointments and Wa.lk·ins Welcome

Office Staff:
Lisa Thome, LPN
Gail Hoveatter
Linda 1\'ent

.......

'I .

+

St. Rt. 7

915·4100

,,,

138 Main St., New Haven, WV
(304) 882-3134
Formerly Bend Area Medical Center
·
VI

-·'

�"

..
Pomeloy Mldclei)CIIt, Ohio

•

Tullllaf, J....-y 30, 1880

Syracuse holds on· io. edge
St. John's in Big -~t batde
TOMWITHERS

toplaybutcouldn'tgetthebasket
to tie or put them over the top.
St. Jo~11' s . Coach Lou Carae· .. The Redmen had several oppor·
secca felt before his team's Big · !unites In the closing stages, but
East matchup Monday night with . ml.ned several outside shots and
No. 7 Syracuse that his Redmen committed co.stly turnovers.
would -have a chance to win If
"We bung tight, we just
they could keep the score In the couldn't catch them ai the end, "
sixties.
Carnesecca said. ' 'We had a
Almost, Lou.
couple of miscues, but that's part
· Almost was the.operative word of the gjlme."
for the 19th-ranked Redmen, who
Williams led the RedrneD with
yielded 70 points and blew 22 points and Sealy added 16;
several opportunities In the closThe Orangemen, coming ott a
lng minutes, droppillg a 70.65 vlctocy Saturday at GeQrget~n
decision to the Orangemen.
-thelrflrstatGeQrgetownslnce
Billy , Owens and Stephen the Big East's Inception 1n1979-80
Thompson scored 22 poillts each . - once again were plagued by
and theOrangemen never trailed poor · free-throw shooting, · an
to post the win which knocked St. Achilles heel .that has coat tbem
John's out of a first-place tie with dearly In the NCAA tournament.
surprising No. a Connecticut In
"We knew coming Into this
the Big East.
.
two-game road trip that It would
Ir Syracuse, 15-3 and 6-3 In the be tough," Syracuse Coach Jim
conference, has a weakness Boehelm said. "We did a good job
shooting frorri the outside, It offensively In the first· half, but
wasn't apparent In the first halt. we're still missing tree throws.
Consecutive three-pointers by When Stevie (Thompson) finally
LeRon Eilts and Thompson put got those two to go (with 5:311 to
Syracuse up 29-22 with 8: 25 to play), I knew we should be all
play In the first half. and leaving right."
Carnesecca shaking his head.
Derrick Coleman, who scored
"They say tbat that club can't just 7 points hut grabbed 11
shoot from the outside. then they rebounds, said there was more
come out and hit three or four than a few anxious moments
three-polniers," he said. ''They doWII the stretch.
wereashotascouldbe. We had to
"Basketball Is an unpredlctafight to stay In there."
ble th!Dg," Coleman said. "At
And . ·right they did. · After oae point when we were only up
trailing by .nille early In the by tWo, I didn't think we would
ganie, "the Redmen hung tough. pull It out. But you just have to
Led by_ Jayson Williams and dig ln."
Malik Sealy, St. John's closed
And as Syracuse Is finding out;
wlthhi 40-36 at halftime.
In the Big East you had better
St. John's, 17-4 and 6-3 In the bring your shovel every lllghlBig East, closed to61-59 with4:05
' Elsewhere In the Top 20. Mon....

uPI Sports Writer

LOOKS FOR TEAMMATE -Iowa forward Jay Webb looks fora
learn male as IIIIDols' P. J, BOwman (10) and Marcus Uberty (30)
offer resistance durln.Kfirst hillf action In Carver-Hawkeye Arena
Monday night- (UPI)

UPI ratings

Su Dlep 81.111. Wyomlna 51
Utah 14, (oJerado St. 3"1 •

NEW YORK (UP I) -TheUnkdPras
lnte rraUollll Board 111 Coachel' Top !I
,-olh-,;e h•Aietb.,.U n.tlap. will flrlf-

Mollt 10' Ohio Colle&amp;f' llukdbal Belajta

Vounp&amp;own st IS. NE DIIAOII 11

p~u: eY Oieii iUldrecordA, lhroush ·lan . !lln ~.

pare neh H8, WlaJ polnl11 (bued on II

PGinll ·
,................. fU J

' I. MIIIIIDUrl (44)1 (11·1)
2. Ka ntlllo ~ IJ (20-1 l ..................... 5511 !
3 . .VIuu!MII.N 417-'l ) ,,, .... : ................
.t . MiciUIIPU' ( 1!1-3) ........................ -101 K
5. Duke «1'-3 J .............................. 38! 'f
6. Geofle!lown (I~'Z ) .... .. ....... .... ... 37-1 3
7, SJtat.'\l llr. ( li-3) .... .................... SUIt
II. OII.IIIhema ,( loi-2 ) .......... .......... .. . SII i
9 . Pllrdl.lf' (J$-2) ... ... ......... ............ 28113
10. Nevlld•LIL'I Ve (M l l.t·.f) ........ ! 11 t
II . llllnobl CI~) .......................... ~ 10 1t
l'l. lA:Jult!l...tlle(l4-3 J ............... ....... I~2 t
1a. Louisiana Still .. c 14--11 ............. 111 13
1~ . Co nned k:ul ( 17-3) .....................17 111
u : (ilet GtorclaT&lt;' •:h flz-.1 ) ~ ........111 11

Br ookfield 80. LaBrae 29
45, Kinsman Bad~Pr ~2

Cr es twoOO 76. Wlrdham '26
Edison So uth 52. Bu ckeye S.W. 50

Fe deral Ha wk ing 63. WPlls lon 32
f'ronlll'f 46. Fort F ryt&gt; -1 1
Carre! 1 Gufleld 51, Dlamord SE 4!,
Hol ga te 78, Fon J.enntnfC5 29
LoRan 73, NeliOnvtlle York 42
Mt'lj!!S 51, Vlnyon Coum ;y 31
MoKadore 64, ROol&amp; vilk• ~3
Stt&gt;ub!' n-.tHe 58, Mt&gt;adowbrook 52
Tlp(J('canOf' 84, Xenia Hljj'l'l 33
Tolt&gt;dO M a comber~- Wase an 52
Union Local 'nl. Barnes vtlle -49
Warren Chalnpton 58. New lon Falls 35
Wattorford ~. Racil'll' Southern 33
...
Wa_vnt' Trac t&gt; !'18, Plone~r Norlh Ce n 52
We-JI~ vllk' G2, Bl&gt;llaln&gt; S1 .'John 52
WocdridKf.' 47, Waterloo 44

IS. Itie) La Salle I IS. I l ~ ................11:1 18
17. UCLA {lt-31 _...................... .....It

1.

IK. North Carollhll ( 15-1) ............... .32
II. &amp; . John's ( 11-t 1........................30

1

a . Mlnne1ota

n

(IW ) ... ...... .. ........... .211

z

z· uftranled

Transactions

Oth lf:rt~ rec:pivln&amp; vole!!: Alabama,
Brl&amp;ham l'ODJtlf, Clem!fon, Colorado

Sl.UI!, CrdKNon, EMI Tt&gt;nnet~1111e State
lndi~UW,

Mo..t..., Sport riNIIoM

Kani!IIS Slate, Loyola Mary-

lla!leball

mounl, Mlchl,;~~n Sl~le , New Me.dco
Sl.tt!, Ore,;on State, Te1ta11, XaviH

Clndnrldl - Slptd oudlddtr Hr.rm
WlnNnaham to 2·)f!ar ~ontrad .
Lo1 An!P!h'fl - Slped plit•her Rey
!lriU'IllP to 1-)eW' contrad ; "lttrned
lnldder Glenn HolllhUI to a minorleapt c:orirat.1.
Mll . .u We - Slpd plk:ller Chuck
Crlm IO~)Il!at cofllnt.t: MlgMd 1111\rider ·
Rd«arDI•UJd plkher MlkellrWteck to
l·re• conlracts.
Mlnntllo&amp;a - ~I pd plllcher Rick
Ai:•llen to I- year c. .nt.t .
·
New York (AL) -Promoted Arthur
Richman from \'I~ lll"e&amp;ldeM llf metl.a
relal1011111o wnklr vh:e prnklenl.
New Vork (NL) - lnvlle• ptlchers
Roc!k)' OtlldM~aand Manl\f lkr~andn,
catcher Or ..ndo Mercado andeulflelder
Darren Reed to tralnlna c ,...~ named
!«t&gt;Y e Phillip• admh••t•lw ulll8&amp;anc
for Oudnaallll MIMI' tr qUH •
San Dleao - Slped third b..eman
Mllu! PalllaruletO l·)@U' conlracl .
SeUtk&gt;- Reaehedco.-ndllll'f'~menl
wllh pll.cher Rcfttt &amp;n ldl~ad ud&lt;'atche r

/ Ohio ).

Cage scorftl
('ollel[l' BIUIMI!tball Rl'S ill11
f!:llMi

IWnlley lit, Quhuiplat• ll

Blo ondil!ld 63. ('.W. Po111 :.!t
HfH"knl'll7t C4r..,l1 62
fanio!;iuNii7, Sl . P eler ' N:i7
C"hf&gt;frwy 54 , K'l*'ner
IJefMware 70, Na\'yll
fhmln«ham Sl:. 7H, &lt;.Vrry61
Holy C:ro"~ lit. Ntw Hamp8hlrt' 5!t

»

Howard 77, ,\lo~aan 81.111
L~~t~.. t~·

n

Lt&gt;~~~~·

Mul'll 111, wa.-ner ·111
M ~ll11h lit, Elbabftbtown 72'
. Pbii• . Tex•leo 104, EMk'rnU

Prlntl't&lt;M17$, SuMqueh•• liM
~rtalfllld ..a8, llry••• 45
Spr-Int~~: Gardea $11, Del. V llflr y 51
St. 1\nllrlm IJ, st. Mlchar.l (VI • • 71
Ston,y • " • ttH, York~=
HJ• t_'lllf' 7t, St . .John'" 1~

Da•ld VitJie.
Tnu - stped oulflekler Cl!l'll E111py
lo l·,ear conlrad.

W. New FAt!knd tl. Ro~ Wllll.un~~ll
WIIWH ... Drii'W N
.
Y orll. ( P I&amp;. ) Ill, AJittttowtt 71

Bas lielh 1&amp;11
Portland - Slpd foi'WJird N•e
,fllhneon for &amp;hr l't'mal .. er of thltlleaflon.
Slou.- F~tlhi WIIA) - Slpd cen&amp;tor
PdiU' GudmundiiAOn: waiYfd prd Ken

.....

,\Jahafllll !'U. JO.f, MINK.' V·allry St . IO:t
B a pd!U 90, N&lt; "· ""hf'vlllf' 7-1
( 'umfi!l'llll7,
61
(.£ m1ittiiH~Ilf' 11, •8t·h• 53

McJo'~dden .

a ..., ...

C'oUI'IIf'

ranlfllua - AniKMinrl'd ba~~kM~aiJ
cf'llll'r Ed Book will
al ltMI thref'
Wf'l'lul due to an WI! lnjllry.
Flortd11 Stille - S.apn~•d hulldball
II\IIU'd Tharem MlllfM. .
OtoiWefOWn - A.nftOUIIl:Pd forward

m•"

l 'hurle!&lt;ilprt-W.VII. Jilt, Jlla.lrm·TI!Ik;)'o 115

roastul Car ~•trw. 711, Wlntllrop -at

b "t

C:~trolh*

71, UMB&lt; ' tl
•~. Kf' IIILII:kr&amp;7, MlcldlrTen._ 51
' t~a"tt-rnT••nrn!ll'P Sl . M. Marllllall M
F.mol')' &amp; Hrnfy Ill, 1.,)1
It
li'n lnnoN ~ . GIPn\'llle 116
Florida 1\&amp;M 11:1, N. Caroll111l 1U :T 115
Gumhllnt~~: 115, .Jacbon St . 8Cl ·
Jli,·ksonvllk' 7-1, Falrk'IPD1cklnton7l
~ulntll1• 105, So. MhuiiH!IfpplrMII

nc•hu...-

Millon Bell 111 cran,.errtn~ to
Unl"erlllt y of Rl c:hmond.

Md. t :ll&gt;ilrr n Shun- fl. lrooldJII 1n
MIU'JfTIOU .. ill, GaiW....c 7S
NC ·WIImln~on $1, Olll'lealen 17

·
Koulh tarofiM 1'1. MIJU!U so
~ud1 ('~troll• St. '75, lethurr fook-

q.,.k'rback Marie R)'pltn &amp;orepllaceSaa
~ncllk'O wide rt'ceher.JohnTq-lorand

.. .

man tiK

KanFrucl~quarterbackJotMo...,.,

Koulh f'loriU P , Va. Commonwealth

HO(!ker

EclmoNon - Recalled paliender
lhMiy Exelb)' tr0111 Plloettlk ol UU!

Tl' n~h .....ooaa 81, F\innan Ill
Tennn_.e lt"ellllt. Mor.heM Sl. 95
VMI7:&amp;, Appalachlln M&amp;alt&gt; 71
W"'lera farall• 71, T.f' fll•dl!llt

ln&amp;nna&amp;lollll Hocker Lupe: sealsoal10111!1'

Eld.,. "Po..,...

Redllcll.

To

Phoeal11.

\\',\-' a. Statr 71, Sheptlmlll

Mlnnt:aOIA - Sent defM~man dq mn
lo Kalamai!Oo of lhe lnler•ilo•l

W.Va. Wt~~ll-yan IN, W.Va. Tet b 91
\\'IW!ellnr .le~tfliiO, Wnt Llhfnyii
\ 'ounJRtown Sf, 95. NE llllnol.oi 711

Ho~

u.........,...

.-\ulpe• ~eaur Rob
Mum)' .. Balllfrlore ol lhe American
Hoeke)' IAIII(II'I!': .,.., paltender Jim
Hrtvaa.ll. to Balllmete.
Teanh•
Uil . 'l'eniM Ahotlatlon - Named ,lay
Berw;er io .-.plla&lt;re o\aron Krkbteln o•

Hndley il, Wldllla 81 . 14
DePIW I ii,IM!aml ( Pla.) -111
lowalt,DIIaohli
l\ll'orthern Iowa 77, ae.el ..d sc. 7$
Slf'ftll Hill. 111, Tri-St•t e 10-1, OT

DlYIRCIIp~..._

Holzer Clinic will ·agaln sponsor a University of Rio Grande
basketball gam~ when the Redmen host the Storm of Lake Erie
College on Friday, Feb..2 at 7: 30
p.m . in Lyne Center.
.
Free tickets for the game are
available at Holzer Clinic offices
throughout the area. The clinic
operates out of Its base facility of
U.S. 35 near Gallipolis; Its family
practice and healt~ center at
Fourth Avenue anq Sycamore
St ree.t In Gallipolis; 11nd In offices
In Middleport. Jacksbn, Proctor·
ville and Point Pleiulant.
A foul shooting cohtest, under
the supervision of lthe clinic's
Sports, Industrial Rehabilitative ·
and Rehabilitative Medicine Department, will be conducted at
halftime, With cash. prizes to be

awarded.
A longtime sponsor of Rio
Grande men's games, Holzer
Clinic's contribution to the Rio
Grande Athletic Booster Club
, has made a .difference in the lives
of young people from the Immediate area and around the $late
who· attend Rio Grande, Coach
John Lawhorn remarked_
"One of Rio Grande's goals has
always been to help people get a
good start In life through education," Lawhorn said. "With the .
Athletic Booster Fund, we make
scholarships avalla ble to promisIng student athletes who receive
the opportunity to exercise their
minds and their athletic talents.
Holzer Clinic's contrlbu Uon
helps make this possible and for
that·we .are very
. appreciative.·:

Baseball card sho~
Saturday at KG

.

P,ay the ·fiddler - now
I

MINDY MONT(;OMERl'

Montgomery ·
wins honor
fromMOC

•

TC'U 811, N. ArlloM Ill
T~ · Pan Aml'f'ICM 71, MIUw 18

.....

St . If, San .low fl . II
NM'a .. •Re.o 'ft So. Utah Tl

Meigs County Health Insurance
Enrollment
Hoapitalization lnaurance now available not only for
healthy people, but qualifying people with pre-exiating health conditione. No phyaical exam or long
health history. Meiga County area enrollment haa begun so:

Basketball ·
Utah · forward l&lt;arl Malone,
who on Saturday became the 11th
player In NBA history to score 60
points, was named the NBA 's
Player of the Week. Malone
scored 61 pulnts I~ Utah's 144-96
victory over Milwaukee.

i

f-- _.__ ... ·~ - · ·
..

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' ' ~ '' "''W'""' '''' "

•

- ~' COAfEO ASPIRIN

. ...

COATED
ASP.RIN
NOW

S2.13

lEG.
S2.73

NOW

:university, Athens Campus,
-Dean's Lis I ior the fall quarter,
Included on the list were
James Donald Bradbucy and
·Emilie Ann Slssop, Cheshire;
' John Alan Coen, "Joy Ann Coulson, Jill Krlstina.·E thrldge, Douglas E. Law, and Whitney Dawn
Smith, Coolville area; Amy D.
Louks, Heather Camille Shuler,
Long Bottom.
Shelly R. Thompson Duboise,
Mark Randall Smith, Katheryn
Elizabeth Thomas, Kimberly M.
Van Matre, Bobby Joe Werry,
Middleport; Deanna L. Laney
Apllng, Jeffrey Jon Arnold, Melissa Ann Calaway, Marty Lee
Cline, Marc Anthony Corsi,
Terry Scott Fields, Jodi Ann
·Harrlson 1 Deeanna Dawn Henderson, Christopher Scot
Kennedy, Michael iurtls
Kennedy. Larissa Lee Long,

PINK BISMUTH

a.

UQUID 8 01.

lEG.

$159

NOW

S2.39

I

$149 1
I
I

..

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· ·"" --~·-·
--.· ---··-·
lA
"'~~ Malt''
~PS
·-

. ~ -.

.

INJAHT'S

'

I
I
I

'.

Winner named

---"

.......
............ . .. .
"

• Todd Tripp of 39564, Sumner
: Road, Pomeroy, was the winner
· of last Wl!ek's mystery farm
contest sponsored by the Meigs
County SoU and Water Conservation District. He wu one of 24 to
·correctly Identify the farm as
that of Fanny Bell Brown near
Keno bridge on State Routi! 248.
Ai his prize he
receive a $5
check from The Dally Sentinel.

,:~ ::;"- ""'"' 'I '·

~'

~

.. , _ _ ,
·
-·-

, .
t."

,.II

..

I
I

I
I

I
I

4 oz.

ALLERGY

=~3

NOW

S1l9 •u•
UG.

--·

PRESCRIPnON SHOP .

Call Toll Free 1-800·462-8161

Do you have quelllono ebout IIOw the tax lewolfflct your
return? Cell your local H•R Blook office, hUir yet, llop by
the one neerwt you. We're rudy to help you I ·

992·6669
271 North Second

M•lga Local 992-2870
Aak for
An1pach

H&amp;RBLOCK

Mlcldltport, Ohio
'

-

-

I

•

Forty-four Meigs Cunty stu-

~dents were listed on the Ohio

'Now 99~

lEG.

EFFERVESCENt
COLD MEDICINE
20

•

10 CAPS

79C

•

.

:Dean's
lis't announced at ·OU ·
·•

COLD
CAPS

courn

4

Mrs. Dorothy Morris preslcjed - sale held recently In Middleport.
over· the Group II meeting of the ' The least colD -was taken and
Middleport First Presbyterian Katherine Brown read from
Church held recently at the home ''The Dally Word" a reading
· of Mrs. Katherine Brown.
entitled "I Go to Meet My God."
The opening prayer was given
Devotions were given by Mar·
by Martha Anderson, entitled tha Anderson and were taken
• ; 'Prayer Pe~fect" by James from a sermonette by Rev .
: Whitcomb Riley. ·
William Mlddleswarth.
Katherille Miller gave . the
The Bible study was given by
treasurer's report and the secre- Faye Wallace. It was on "Love
• tary's report was also given. _ Washes Dirty Feet-"
The closing prayer was given
Each member gave $3 towards by Dorothy Morris.
·
. the ministerial association.
A dessert course wa.s served by
A report was made on the bake the hostess.

-

-"w •

;;=:T::A;iiiX 1IP OF THE
WEEK
DO YOU QUALIFY FOR

61

·&gt; Group 2 hotdf_meeting
•

~

.r.:..

----.--.- --

Sports briefs .

.

eurtn: on higher incomea for
11ch filing ltttuo. Att . of your
toubto income will be IIXId 11
liM lower 1 " ' role If:
oyour flli"ll lttluo io "Mirrlltd
Filing Jointly" or "QUIIIIfying
Wi-ler!," and your IM.Ibto
lnQOmo io 130,910 or t.o.
oyour filing ltt1Uo lo "Heed of ,
Houllhold," end your 18ubto
Income itt *24,110 or t.o.
oyour filing ottiuo II "Bingle."
ond your 18ublo lnaome 11
111.1110 or '-•·
·
._......., oyour fling - U I II "Mirrlld
UlliEIUI EA
l'llna...,.,1181y,"andyour•·
' • '
lblllncornt~ Ia 1111,471 or leu.
r ...bt. incamo Ia your··incomo rldUCid by 'fOil' elowebte ..emptlono ond your lttndllrd
uotlon or ltiiDIHd dlduOIIonl. In·
como in DCIII!I of the lbove omounto lo lithe 2S" rote end me~·
eloo ~ oubject to liM edllhiOrlll 1!(, f1!111aa or 1 II% eumpllon •nch•ll"·

•

Mindy Montgomery, a 5;6
guard for the University' of Rio
G.rande . women's basketball
team, was chosen the Mld·Ohlo• ·
Conference Player of the Weekr
for Jan. 14-20.
Montgomery was lnstrument;ll
in Rio Grande's 2-0 record for the
week.
The emerging 3·po1Dt field goal
specialist was six of six fora total
of 17 points ln .Rio Grande's ~8-62
victory over Walsh ·on Jan. 16,
and had seven of. itille tr)fecta
attempts go through to post a
total of 19 points In the 89-75
defeat ot Malone on Jan. 20. ·
For the week. her total field
goal percentage was 86.6 percent ·
(13-15) and . she netted three
rebounds and one assist. The daughter qf Robert and
Linda Montgomery of Chillicothe, she Is 1989 graduate of
Chillicothe High School. She Is
majoring. In education at Rio
Grande:

"FLU &amp; COLD RELIEF CENTER"

lEG.
SJ,83

The Daily Sentinel

I
I

will

.II

Grange.! to meet .
The ; Star Grange ·and Stat
' Junior Grange will bold their
reeular meetlnl 011
at
.7: 30 p.m. 't the gra$ge
located on County
I''

Ce11ter. A potlUC~'4In!!!lJ',...,
.will follow the meetlnJ
memllera artfurpd to attl!n4.

Community calendar

TUESDAY
Sacred Heart Catholic ·church.
The third six weeks' honor roll ·Josle Jarrell, Robert Johnson,
The
Ches
ter
CHESTER
For more Infor mation call 1-800Kara King, Jesse Little, Jessica
lor several elementary schools In
Township
Trustees
will
meet
333-5051.
Meigs County has been Smith, Jessica Theiss.
7:30
p:m.
at
the
town
Tuesday,
Fourth Grade: Matt Dill, Ty announced.
Students making a grade of son Eva.ns, Ryan Grace, Nicole hall.
"B" or above hi all their subjeets Hill, ' Nikki Robinson, Jessica
MEIGS -The M~son Chapter ·
Roush, Danny · Sayre, Anna
to be listed on the honor roll In
157,
Order of the Eastern Star
their respective schools are as Thompson, John Matson.
WE'LL
will
have Grand VIsitation on
Fifth Grade: Kristen Hensler,
follows:
. .
at
7:30
p.m.
Phyllis
Tuesday
Amy Northup, Jennie Scarberry,
OVERLOOK
SYRACUSE ELEMENTARY
1
Gilkey, worthy matron, Invites
First Grade: Cara Ash, Sarah Bobby Wrltesel.
YOUB F'IB$T·
Sixth Grade: John Card, Chris all area members.
Ball, Mia Bass, Jason CUndiff,
Gilbride, Paul Ihle, Craig
Jeremy Fisher, Chad Hubbard,
ACCIDENT
WEDNEsDAY
Tim Kpightlng, T!!(ldy Slater, KD!ghl, Ryan Ma~Un, Chanda .
- - YOII IIUIIIfy M e P&lt;oiMiod·
RACINE- The Southern BoosErin Struble, Matthew Warner, Mulford, Nick Smith.
••· tor liMe._ Cans IM'
ters
will
meet
Wednesday,
7
p.m.
..... q1 ' 'I t A-......,,April Travis.
high
school.
All
parents
are
at
the
LIFE
REJOICING
Second Grade: Joshua Davis,
urged to at tend .
CHRISTIAN SCHOOL
Sara Fife, Donnie Proffitt, Ash·
Uftllle
·Kindergarten : Heather Baxley R11pe, Jon Smltll, Autumn
.,... of JiGIIcv .... _ ....
MIDDLEPORTThe
Middleter, Allison Story, Ehran Wilson .
Thomas.
· First Grade: Chasldl Biggs, port Literary Club will meet .
· Third Grade: Err6n Aldridge,
1:30 p;m. at the
Bridget Cross. Ashll Davis. Tara Erin Harris, Jenny Long, • Deb- Wednesday,
The"lllil' • . , .........
home
of
Mrs.
Dwight Wallace.
byhSearls, Rose .Schrock.
Knighting, Kim Sayre.
Second Grade: Tawny Jones, Mrs. Richard Owen will review
- · $ DliJRI .... tlftltl ......
Fourth Grade: Cynthia Caldthe
bo~k. "My Russia ."
.
Joseph
McCall.
.
well, Valerie Cundiff, Jennifer
. . . . 21 - . . lflllllou: ., It·
PORTLAND -The Lebanon
Third Grade: Rachel Forbes,
_ ... "" 1M ... 10 . . ; . . 1111.
Friend, Evan Struble, Billy
ToWIIshlp
Trustees
will
meet
·
Jacque
Hall,
Rachel
Panglo.
Young.
Fourth Grade: Tara Davis, Wednesday, 7 p.m. at the townFifth· Grade: Brian Allen,
1111 ~torn 11ow 11w . , _ - ...,.
ship building. ··
Aaron
Panglo, Steven Rice.
Chris Ball, Kevin Fields, .Shaun
=·=lliu...
Ill ..
A.... Sixth Grade: Todd Davis,
Fife, Philip Hamm, Jason LawAula . . . . . .
THURSDAY
rence, Travis Lisle, Amber Shawn Rice.
· c.ll ua .._. dMI ar ...,......
Seventh Grade: Emily As beck,
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Thomas.
llrellq-gll·lor .... . - . .
Sixth Grade; Robby Crow, Mandy Jones, Jason Panglo, Group of A.A. and Al-Anon will
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
·Rochelle Jenkins, Jennifer Law - Kristen Torres .
rence, Samml Sisson, Rayan
Young.
·

---·. "" -ltMrl,...,...
..,,,"
.......
.
.......
...
.....
..... ..--.t -_..........-............
_.,
,_
.-...,.aeta•

'···

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-.,-aCom,.... .

'

PORTLAND ELEMENTARY
.First Grade: Nick Bolin, Justin
Burris, Brandl Codner, Kayla
Pullins, Jan'lce Richards, Brandon SmithSecond Grade: Erin Bolin,
Rebekah Coil IDs, Rebecca Davis,
Anita Holter, Joey McKinney,
Joshua Pullins.
Third Grade: Teresa Bush.
Fourth Grade; Jeremiah Carpenter, Ashley McKinney, Jenny
Sellers.
Fifth Grade: · Greg McKinney,
·
Amy Rizer.
Sixth Grade: Robin Gillispie,
C.J. Harris, Denise Roush, Gabe
Smith. ·
D.H.: Terry Malone.
RACINE .ELEMENTARY
First Grade: Michael Ball,
Angel Bird, Brady Bowling, Clay
Enslen, Macyn Ervin, Jonathan
Evans, Couriney Hill, Jeremy
Hill, Shauna Manuel, Erin
·Roach, Tommy .Robert!!, Joey
Sands, Jamie Stemple, Tony
Vollmar.
Second Grade:· Jessica Ash,
James Boso, Sarah Brauer.
Carty Crow, Stacey Ervin, Kim
lhle, Tasha Johnson, Stacy
Lyons, Amber Maynard, Kyle
Norris, Chris Randolph, Tara
Rose, Dena Sayre, Bobble Scarberry, Jared Smith, Brandon
Wolfe, Lena Yoacham.
Third Grade: Steven Boso,
Jenny Carleton, Josh Ervin,
Suzanne Evans, Jody Hupp,

''Spring Clothing Arriving"
IN STOCK••• NIKKI AND SOUTHERN
LADY~ TOP LINE MERCHANDISE.

..Juate! named

Grand vi!itation
set for OES

1984 Ford Tempo •••••••• ,•• S2195

Auto., PS, Air, 66,000 miles.
LOADED.

RACINE DEPARTMENT STORE

31D SOEET

RACINE, OHIO

9'9-2800

MASTERCARD-VISA-GOLDEN BUCKEYE

892-6187

..

~tmh
A PART OF THE
MEIGS COUNTY COMMUNITY

Above art! students fr0111 the CertUied NurslnJ Alllllstant Training ProKfam It Melp Blrll
School wllo are l't!CelvlnJ.thelr oa-alle experience at Overbrook Center. Pictured are Bracy
Korn, ~rbara ColemBII, Angela Donohue, Roe Lynn Basham, Mrs. Margie Blake, Instructor, ·
Dee Shane, Heidi Caruthers and Lara Hall. Absent at time plture was take were Scott Ogdln1
Tract Bartels, Shelly Triplett and Theresa Philips.
•

I have appreciated the opportunity to use Ov~rbrook Center as
a training site for Meigs High School students enrolled in the Certified Nursing Assistant Training Program. The Nursing Manageme_J!t at Overbrook has been very supportive in establishing this
Training Program at t. he H.igh School, a.ndfy students are excited
about beginning their clinical experienc on-site at Overbrook
Center.
· ·
·
.
·
.
(
.
•

~

·

.

.

~~0.. fum I R.. ~ .
'

.

Mrs. Margie Blake, RN
Nursing Assistant Training Instructor
And Program -Coordinator

.

1973 Ford F-1 00 ••••••:...... S895

I

Overbrook Center is providing a re!Jiistic learning experience in'
which my students can develop their true interests and abilities in
the field of Long Term Care; a vocational learning experience thetis
the link between Meigs High School and the students in our com·
·
'
munities!

·

'

.

.

1973 Chevy C-1 0............. S795

V-8. Auto.

POMEROY

lower Markup ...Means Reasonable Prices!!

1984 Mercury Cougar ••• S3995

'

214 EAST MAIN

Alumni banquet
planned May 26

Judith L. Mees, Steven Alan
The Rutland alumni banquel
Musser, Larry Scott Powell, · will be held May 26. The theme
Jennifer Leight Swartz, and will be "The Nifty Fifties." .
· Monl~a Layne ·Turner. all of
The deadline for reservations
Pomeroy,
will be May 8. Further plans will
Jennifer Jayean Arnold, David be announced later.
·
Jennings Beegle, Tammy Dawn
Holter, Melissa Kay Lucas, Ryan
.
. Craig Oliver. Shelagh Wilson r __
Porter, Susan Elayne Roessler. · IJTau;
and Dixie Kay Wolfe, all ot
Four Meigs Co11ntlans were
Racine; John Wetzel Rice, Rolisted
among the 562 students on
bert Vernon Steele, Reedsville;
the
Athens
campus of Ohio
Katheleen A. Peyton, Rutland;
University
who
were candidates
Kathy Alana Jones, New Marshlor
degrees
at
the e11d of fall
field; Brenda Susan Sinclair,
quarter.
·
.
Shade. and Shawn ,William Ar· Bobby Joe Wercy ot Middlenott, Syracuse.
. port graduated With honors havIng earned an accumulative
grade point average of between
3. and 3.499. He received a
bachelor of science In education . .
The Mason Chapter 157, Order · Others graduating were Mlof the Eastern Star will have c bael Curtis Kenney, Pomeroy, a
grand vllsjtation on Tuesday at bachelor of science In education; ·
· Julia A. Stout, Pomeroy, a
7:30p.m.
Phyllis Gilkey, worthy matron, bachelor of music; and Lee
Invites all area members to" Galaer, Reedsville, a bachelor of
science In Industrial technology.
attend.

V-8, euto.

I

Tuesday, January 30, 1990
Page 6

Honor rolls announced

BJ BoB HOEFLICH
demonstrations of Appalacblans
rr yc)u'r!! gonna dance, you arts and crafts under the spon.
gOita pay the fiddler.
sorshlp of the Meigs County
And It's time
SeniOr Cltlzeris and a quilt show
to pay up - that
will be held In the Pomeroy City
Is, If you want to
Hall auditorium. ·
d811ce with the
.It you'd like to get Involved as a
Royal Oak BAlworker or sponsor of any event
lroom Dance
during the observance or If you
Club this year.
feel that you have an Idea tl\at
Dues, which are
.
would tie In well, just contact the
$40, are now payable and are to Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce
be sent to Opal Grueser, 36192 Office. .
Rock S~Jrlngs Road, Pomeroy,
45769.
And - on Valentine's Day ,
· Without the dues, dances tor Mildred and Gerald Shuster.
the year cannot be planned. The long-time Pomeroy residents,
committee will have three and . will · be mark!ng their . wedding
possibly a fourth dance during anniversary - pretty neat urn:
the yell' a!"d by the, way, new lng, eh? It will be their 58th members are welcome. Dues now that's adding up.
The
must be sent Immediately so that .Shusters reside on Lincoln
the committee can proceed with Heights.
bookings a11d pl.ans.
If you want to move onto the
Do , remember Elizabeth
political scene, there's another
Horak, long-time Pomeroy resi- opportunity upcoming.
dent, who Is confiDed to IC!J at St.
.Four county level offices will
Joseph Hospital. The address Is be fllle&lt;! this year wllh nomina·
!19th and Murdock Ave. , Parkers- tioris-by both parties to be made
' burg;W. Va., 261Q1 ..
In the May primaries and both
· And - . Bill Lehew, also a parties · will elect Central Comlong-time reslden.t of Pomeroy, mittee members at those
'u nderwent triple bypass heart · primaries.
surgery at University Hospital In
The county offices to be filled ·
Columbus on Mollday. As you no ihls year Include: one seat on the
doubt realize, be, too, could stand Board of County Commissioners
some encouragement.
now held by Manning Roush; the
County Auditor's post now filled
With February just on the edge by Bill Wlcklille; the Probate
ready to move In, It won't be long Judgeship now held by Robert
pntll the Pomeroy Sesqulcenten- Buck, and the County Coroner's
·nlal observance starts.
post now held by Dr. Douglas
The kickoff will be on April 28 Hunter.
when a Founders Day dln11er will
You have uiltll4 p.m. on Feb. 22
·b e held at the Pomeroy Eli~men­ to file your petition of candidacy
tary School. Steven M. Newman, With the Meigs Cou~ty Board of
author of Worldwalk will be the Elections located on Butternut
speaker. He Is listed as the first Ave., In Pomeroy. Personnel of
. person to walk around the world the board office will be happy to
along In the Gulness Book of answer any ques !Ions you might
World Records, .
Providing have, I'm sure.
entertainment for the dinner will
be a bell choll' from ParkersOf course, January's weather
. burg, W.Va.
has been an, Improvement over
On tile s'ame · weekend there December's 13 and 14 bellow - ·
will be a variety of other but does It have to be so gray? Oh
activities Including displays and well, keep smlllllg.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

100

,.

Beat of .the Bend

PRESCRIPTION SHOR .

• -

-

.

·By ~he Bend

THE 16"TAX RATE7
For 1989, 1hero oro ,two 11x
rotto. 1 6% end 28,., end 1 6%

Soulhern U. Tt~~~u 8odu•rn 81

Fr~t~~..,

Holzer Clinic Night
_o n ·tap Friday at Rio

day night, No. 11 Illinois was
UJll!llded by "Iowa 69-67 and No. 12
. Lolllavllle crualled Soutbern Mia·
alhlppt1()5.88.
.
, ' At Iowa Clty,lowa, Les JeJ»eD
made a drtvtnc Jay-up with two
seconds left tottvetbeHiwkeyea
lbelr secolld itralght home upset
ot a ranked team In two weeks.
· The Hawkeyes, .who bl!at No.4
Mlchlg811 a week ago, Improved
to 10-8 and 2-6 In the Big TeD.
Jepsen ~red 18 polnlll JIIICI
ll'abbed .a. seasoD-hlgh 17 re- ·
boiJnds to lead the way. Marcus
Liberty scored 20 points to lead
· the Fighting llllnl, 15-4 811d 5-4 In
the conference.
' . ·
At .Louisville, Ky., JerOI)'Ie
Harmon scored 20 poillts and
Tony Kimbro added 17 points and
9 rebounds to lead the Cardinals
over the Golden Eagles . . The
Cardinals, 15-3 and 5-1 tn· the
.Metro Conference, placed seven
plilyers In double figures. Southern Mlsslsslppl,ll-7 811d2·31D the
league, was led by Clarence
Weatherspoo11 with 22 points .a nd
11 rebounds . .
In other games, It was: Bucknell 74, Cornell62; Delaware 70,
Navy 51; Holy Cross· 82, New
Hampshire 59; Lafayette 7••
Lehigh 69; Jacksonville 74, Falrleigh Dickinson 73; Marylalld 89,
VIrginia Tech 80; Old Dominion
76, Richmond 74 In overUme;
South Florida 68, VIrginia Commonwe!llth 65; Bradley 70, Wlchlla State 64; DePaul 76, Miami
41!; Fresno State 69, San Jose
State 53; Utah 44, Colorado State
37 and San Diego State 68,
Wyoming 59-

A baseball card show to benefit
the University of Rio Grande
baseball team's spring Irip to
Panama City, Fla.. Is scheduled
for Saturday, Feb. 3 from JOa.m,.
until 4· p.m. M Lyrie Center.
Tables will be provided for
dealers and admission Is 50 cents
· · per person or $1 per family.
For more Information, contact
Randy Skaggs, . A.A ,B. Cards,
Box 115, Rio Grande, Ohio 45674,
at 245-5874_

By United Press International
· ~lve Clev~Jiand State a 75-73lead.
Former Ohio State coach .El- Turner then lilt 2 more free
don Miller escaped the Bucl&lt;eye throws totl.ethegame, 75-75, with
State Monday night wilh a 77-75 47 seconds remaining.
comeback victory over Cleve- • Robertson missed the front In
land State as his Northern Iowa of a one-on-one at 42 seconds and
team Improved to 14-4.
Phyle. made a reverse layoup
Both Cleveland State 811d With sevl!n secollds left to give
Northern Iowa are In the Associa- coach Eldon Miller's No~thern
tion of Mid-Continent Unlversl- Iowa team a 77-75 lead. Cleve. ties but games Involving Cleve- land State never got another shot
land State do nofcount In league off.
.
standings while the Vikings are
Cedric McCullough led North. on NCAA probation.
ern Iowa with 15 points, Troy
Steve Phyfe made a reverse Muilenburg had 13, Turner 12 and .
l'ayup with seven seconds re- Phyfe . 11. Brian Parker led
maining to culminate the Nor!h- Cleveland State with 25 poillts as
ern Iowa rally.
the VIkings fell to 10-8.
Cleveland State led 73-68 until
At Youngstown, Reggie Kemp
Phyfe sank 2 free throws with scored 24 polntsand·TimJackson
1: 19 remaining to pull the Panth- 181n leading YoungStown State to
ers to within 73-70.
. a 95-79 victory over Northeastern
Kenny Robertson, who m~de llllnols.
only 2 of 11 .free throws on the
Northeastern Illinois/\. 4-17,
night, then sanki ol2 free throws kept the game close untll'Youngto give Cleveland State a 74-70 stown State went on a 1'4-6 run,
lead with 1: 17 remaining.
with Alfonzo Lurry scoring il of
· Dal Turner made a 3-polnt shot the points, during a three-minute
at 1: 07 for Northern Iowa and span to take a 40-29 lead with 5: 22
Robertson made 1 of 2 free remaining In the first half.
throws with 58 seconds Jell to

W•Na .. on -

Mlct.-~ 1

N.E . l.oulslana I I, Nl~holl1 st:. $1
Pralr~ \'lf'W U. Al corn 111. IS

.t

Mtek.len ... l'l of Den~r In Pro Bowl;
UIK!netd Df'nw.r quarlerhacll. ,Jo._
Elway will IIOl plaJI .
NFC Named Tampa le)' wide
rt't.'f!l"e r- Muk carrter 11nd Wuhlnct•n

NE l.oUII si!UIIl&amp;l, Nlrbollli MI. Sl
Old Dominion 71. Rlchm.ad N. OT

A•U•.

th ~

Hou•on Naml!d K1•n HouHton
defmaiYP, baeUeld riach.
Food! loll
.4.FC - No~~~~ed linebacker Jo ... ay
Rl&lt;mMrt of New bls~Aftdto l'l!plactKarl

M;w )'l~tnd lfB. VlfKinla Tt'cll.lll

!J, IIUH111 112. Sl . LouiN 11
1\Jiu Ill, Dr•b U
Vlra: ennr.~~ t:z. liE lowa ·llurllnat .. U
WI.~·Hre en Hit)' 12, llllnotii•Cblcqo 11
1' •unt~~:MIIM'n St. fl~. NE llllnohl '71
S.uthw t!!!t
i\rk.· IJtdt&gt; Rock 71. S.t',
ArkanMillllSI . 11, Autin Pe11 Q

8171

Corllak~'w

us •

.-

Cl~lllltd

. ClriR Ohio HI Jh School Bulleth Ill
A.k r Eas t 67, St n&gt;etsbci rG-17
ArchOOid 72. Dt'lphos Sl John 43
&amp;I' In Hiland 70, 1'051(' C~n Cath 35

pQiac s rur flnl plilt:f', I-I lor III!Cfllld, etc. )
and I&amp;Mt we r k's ran lila.,:

Tum

Nordlern Iowa 17,

Northern Iowa edges
Cleveland State five .

••

•

..
... ,.,...... ClriiA.•

••

1 ••caW, 11•1•re,

......

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PrfWall . . . . . . Pt111W...

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Wf.p., ....11111.
•

1

SpecitJ Care for Peop_k Who ..Are SP«*J

(614) 992·6472
·333 PAGE STilET

IIDDUPOII~

.U

�Ohio

30. 1890

Tunlk;, lan

·All
Star band includes
.
:two local young men
, Two Eastern High School band
· members recently participated
: In the Ohio Pennsylvannla High
· School All Star Band at Kent
: State University.
•
; The participating students
•were Aaron Wilson, son of Beryl
:and Unda Wilson, Reedsville,
:and Robin White, .s on of Robert
·and Dove White, Coolville.
: The students were selected for
; membership In the All Star. Band
•from applicants representing
:more than 90 Ohio .and Pennsyl·
: vannla hll!h achools.
During the two day events, the
:students were Involved In seating
:auditions and ·approximately 10
•hours ot rehearsals. They were
:also treated to a workshop with
:the Kent State wind, brass, and
· pere~~sslon faculty and a concert
:presented by the Kent State .
:raculty. . . "
· ·
· At the conclusion ot the second
day, the All Star Band gave a
concert ·tor parents and band

1ay

ao. 1880

Mailm~ . finds-~boy

with hand blown off--People in the newr-----...,

A edly, bltiDI blm on the Inner
W!loae ,)eft band thJtb area," E1terison Ald. "The
biCIWII ott by a flncrecker doi bel! been trained 1o at tack
end who was attacked by hlf pet
•
pit bun, Which Wal tralDecl to
Solne uld he had Just IJI'Rbbed .
attack at the IOUDd o1 gunfire,
a lllndwlch et a convenience
was uved by a letter carrier who
·~ down tile 1treet wben he
. hNJ'd a woman acreemlng tor aw a woman running to a

MINNEAPOLIS (UPJ) -

.w•

5-)'HHld boy

dlrectof!l from throughout Ohio
and Pennsylvannla. ·
Wilson, a Junior percussionist;
and White, a , senior euphonium
player, have bOth participated In
Eastern's marching, concert,
pep, and Jazz bands, Meigs All
County band, and competed In
solo and ensemble contests.
Both are students of Blll Hall,
Eastern band director, and are
members of the Modern Music
Masters (Tri·Ml.

- O R. . _

00

,...._u~.

help. .
"
U:S. Postal Service employee
Ken Solne · was credited with
savlhg tile life of Tony Bricker
who wu lilted In stable conditio~
followtngsurgery.
·
· - "Clearly, Ken Solne did an
outstanding Job of first aid,
undoubtedly saving ·the youne
bOY's lite by stopping 111e now of
blood ,..Jth direct pressure on the
wound," Sgt. David Estenson .
Said. I
.
·
,
· Estenson, a member of the
bomb SQ)Iad, &amp;flli the jloy ~as
apparl!ntly playiDI with matches
In an upstairs bedroom with hls
yo_ung~r s!bi!Jiis ,al)d ~I ted an .
!llegalllrecracker In )lis hand. · ·
"At that tim~, his pet 3-year·
old pit bull attacked hlni repeat-

Cut the fat

telephone booth.
"All of a ·sudden there was
11nother gal, I believe the
JIIOtller," Solne uld. "I tboll&amp;'ht
abe wu saylna, 'He's dead, he's
dead.' That 110t my curiosity.
•'Tbere was 811otlier woman
ho.,lne a baby end I decided to
pull over that WilY and see what
was wroog. She said he blew hiS
hand off.''
He said h~ then spotted the lxiy .
"His hand wu gone," Solne
!IBid. "I decided to run lllllde.
The kl!! ·was walklne around.
1'/0bcidy was taking charge of tbe
sltWIIIon. There were other little
kids runnlna jll'ound., ·
"I lllld him down and grabbec! a
ud tied a tourniquet abOve
·
hand, should have been,

elbow. I yelled at the gal wbo wu ,
there to get • blanltet elld find biB
fingers and put them Qlllce.
"I put the folded blutket under
his bead and just lle1d the ~tile
guy there UDW the embu~
urtved. He kepi llkiiii!Jie to fix
his hand. The only thiDj I could
say was that the dootor would fix
lt. I don't even know hts ~~&amp;me. ,
I'm feeling .k ind of bad."
Solne said the adults In the
house did not know whet .to do.
"I couljln't believe what was
going oil. It was total chaos.
There were tbree women and
ll)ey didn't have eiiOUih common
sense to blow their noses. Yo'!
don't let this little guy ao walking
arpund bleedllll to death," he
said.
"
Estenson salt! the firecracker
was believed to be aoout31nches
. lpng and 1·1nch In diameter.
"Tiie cl011e11t tblng I could say
Is that It was least three times
m,re powerful than an M-80," he
said, referrlni to a powerful
· firecracker common In the Unl-.
ted States.

By Ualtaod Pr-Internatlonal
her death that she did not want a funeral. She&lt;
~ ~'
wanted to be cremated and have her. asheutrewn
PVDDING OOEs TO CLOSE, COSTNER: · over th,e land where her TV series, 'The 'Bli
• Gl-a-aruil&amp;ievlaPDeiDerwlllgetthespeclal Valley, was tllmed for many years. A close
trea,tment from Harvard uatvetslty's Hasty friend, Lu-ry Kleao. rented a helicopter last week
Pllddlqg_ Theatrlcal&amp;IJI'OUP ibis year. Close, who and complied with her wishes."
starred In "Fatal Attraction" and "Dangerous
SEARCH FOR DRAMATIC DEAN: Uoyd
Llallonl,," will :bli bonored as the woman .o r the Richards, the outgoing dean otthe Yale School
year on Feb. 13 1!(1th a parade through Harvard Drama, was Inducted Into ·the Theater Hall ofSquare In Cambridge, Mass, Costner, whose Fame tn ceremonies at Broadway's Gershwin
recent movies .Include " Field ot Dreams" and Theater Monday as the school announced a
"BuU Durham,' • will.pick 11~ his tradition pudding nationwide search tor his successor. Richards has
pot on Felt, 20 at the premier of the group's 142nd been In the job since 1979butnowwants more time
annual music prpductlon, "Suede Expectations." to pursue other·aspects of the theater, Including
Last year's !fasty Pudding winners were acting. He said his responsibilities at Yale have
Kathleen Tu~ ancl Robin WWiama.
lorced him to pass up directing opportunities In
. CELEIIBITY PAREWELLS: ·Lena Horae sent England and In Russia as well as offers to actin
yellow roses and a note that sa!d '"I love you" to films and -even direct In films. "This will be a
Ava Garin•'s1 funeral In Smithfield, N.C., difficult search to undertake, " said Yale PresiMond8,y. Also alftqng the nora! arran~ements was . dent Ben no C. Schmidt Jr., who called Richards
a wreath with a ta'rd s!gneii merely "Francis." It "a giant , both In the university and In the
came from Los Nn~eles and the consensus opinion . American theater." Richards, who Is leaving
was that It camt rom Francia Albert''F'rank" Yale at the end of the school year, returned
Sinatra, Gardner' 'third, husband ... The late Saturday !rom, Lithuania where he saw the final
Barbara staawyck wanted something more than rehearsals for a productiOn ol "A Walk In the
a funer.al. A friend of Stanwyck's, Houston Woods," by Lee Blessing, a 'two-character play
Chronicle cotultuiist ·Maxine Meslnger, said, about American and Soviet arms negotiators th.a t
''Barbara Stanwyck had C!lretully outlined before made Its premiere at the Yale Repertory Theater .
'
.

ot

.

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace -

'

!,

TO PlAtE AN AD-CAL[ 9,2,.21 56
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
. 8 A.M. until NOON SATURPAY
CLOSED SUNDA·Y ... ·
POLICIES

Meigs Countr. CouncU
on Aging, Inc.

~ ·

~

.

COPV OEAO.L INE . .;
MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAV PAPER

•

C·are Support SY$tem (assess·
ment of hDspftalfzed seniors for
foUow·up care ~ discharge)
Case Management (tdentlf!Jing
problems aiid obtaining assts·
·

Center Dining (nuirttwus meals)
Day Acllvllles
Educ~Jonal

Programs

Health Assessment
Health Clinics
Information and Referral

Dard Ad1ma
Trudy Andrews
EmmeAdam.
Mr. • Mfl, Frences And•san ' Berthll Evana
Kety Anthony
Cl•ice Erwin
Ethel Arbeugh
Ch•l• • Fred• Edwards
Toni Andr.Ws
Marion EIMrlbaoh
Irene Arnold
Watt., • Kattvyn Evan•
Mildred Amald
Emil • Ptullne E'tflon
~ , Vlrglnla Eaatep
.w Jem• BNWington
Mary V. Eaeterd..,.
Betty Blroniek
Allen • Polfr Elchinget
Elm• C. Brllndt
Harvey~Erlewine
Mamie Buckler
Eunie Brinker
Ann• Fitch
Merg•et Bowl•
Helen Fl•h•
H•rold Bl . . .tan
Wlllam Folm•
W•ren • Eeth• 81 ...
Ruby Fridc
Bob a Bernioe 11111111¥
Relph Frye
Ralph • Wllml llllll•d,
Annlafrenk
Adalihtfl
Sarah Fowi.Mera•et Blllttner
Eerl &amp; Uleh Freck•
lunloll llo Effiollock
Thom11 Frye
l!lmore Boice
Lee a Glenna Fe«y
.lullnlte S.chtel
Ellub•h Fide
Ecltaon • Berni DB Bak•
Leote Ferrell
Vtrginit Blend
Lorene Freck•
Mery Frenca Baumg.-dn•
' Bernice Fry
T• . . Byer
Etrl frei:k•
M . l. Bahr
. Euwet• Bechtle
Irene Gilmore
Robert &amp; Eve Brabbin
Goldie Graham
EtfMI Bentz
Mary E. Gru ...r
FlootiolodtJI.,
·
•
Norma
Goochvin
JOhn • Hanrltlta Bail fit
WHii.-n &amp; Buena Grueser
Carl &amp; HU:el S.rnhil
Cl•ence Gilmore
John • Merjorie Brewer
Franca Goeglein
VklleS.vt•
.
Byrt Griffin
Rwa leedt
E. MulneGeskill
~-Brennan
Carl &amp; Pluline Gorbv
Betty &amp; Edg• Butch•
Anne Merta Gr""t•
Ch•l•. Daisy 81-•lee
Mabel Goff
.,.., Bowing
Vona Ollenwater
Htten Burkh_.
George Ganhlim•
•Loretta S.egte
EthtiOruHer
C.th•lne Brown
Alphe 8111.,-

Clifford Hill
Donna Hill

Eisle Barnh.rt

p rotecllvc/Legal Assl.!llancc;

HUgh &amp; Lou~e le"ht

o•••Broth•s
WUtn &amp; Nettle Boyer
WifiiJCetto

S u pportlve Assistance (for eK·

ample, fUI!ng out Insurance I
medical forms and answering
benejlt questwns)

Tax Assistance
Transportation and Escort (eight
vehicles; Including one van with
a wheel chair llfl.. are avallable
for personal/medical trips)

Fr~~nces

·

:t
:·
•

t

.,.m•
Cottrell
l.IUrll COurt

l

Ev.lyn C.tto
Perry a Sylvia Curtis ,

JUST e3 A YEARI

the_,...,

A memMr... entitles you to receive alx bi-

HMmCarper

Mil*ed lhle

0111 Casto .
JoMPh • Lucille c.hoon

VIol•. Jerr..l

Jo-

ct.,

llo Coryl Cook

'

llwrence It L.ene C...ptnt•

loleCI•k
Rlch•d &amp; Polly Curtil

Berth• Conde
Carole Coleman
Martha Childl

.... •• . .letance
.... volu- opponunhiel
.... IOCIII IIGtlvltlel
.... plenned~
.... 1111Dilll - ' •
'
Mel! 1M CjiUJIOn below with your '3 member·
1111p
1M ahlae County SenlorChlzene
Center. lox 742, Pom.oy. OH. 4117159.

Helena Danl*
Mercia Den•on
Gohle DMI
Darothr DownJe
HeDern.U ;
·
Ronetd • lonnie Darat
Loo • Mory O..lcMon

,_to

-••Frodo-lo

• • - ll'q, Douglioo
Rl&lt;lhlll Downlo
WIN.mOownle. Jr.
EmonDomowood

I
I
I
I
I

ldnoDwLor--ldoon
Mr.

-hO..Io

·--------------------~

I

I

a M,._ Edwin L. D . Dllo

:1.":.Dixon

WOllam Metloc:k '
Th•on Morrtt
Bruc• • Donn. Morril
UIUen NIPP•
M•rg•tt Nunn
Helen NeutzUng
Anna Nl.ll.on
N.omi Neville
Alma Newton
Paul &amp; Alice Ne•e
Oorothe NeutzNng
Carroll &amp; Addle Norrl1
Audra Nice
FIIY• Nepp.M•rg•et Nltltols

MeeLynch
France~ lewlt
EU.., lAonerd
Doratt., Long

16
16
' 1.5
t5

'
Ov.r 1 $ Wpr!l•
R1ta
.
.20
e4.00
e&amp;.OO .,
.30
.42
at.oo
.80
$13.00
.06 / dey
t1 . 30/day

Annou nr.e 111 r.n ts
I - Card of Thlflks
2 - ln Memory · '
3 - Annoucemlnts

KormM Mcilroy
Virgil ~liror
Oono Mciii'G'I

.

~a

'II'

•

Juenlla Rotllfl
Mory·V. Rtlbol
LIU181Ufftt

5 - H•PPV Ad&amp;

Mei91 CoumY
Area Code 114

M.. an Co.. WV

A,u Code 304

992 .. MickltpOrt · ,&amp;76 ..!... Pt ,

Pameroy
985- Ch•ttf
843- Ponland
247 -· L.. an Fens
949...:.. Radne
742 - Rytlend
667 - Cootvill•

311 - Vit'ton
241 - Rio Grande
251 ...... Guven D;st.
643 - Arabi • Ditt.
379 - W.. nut

n3 - Meson
182- Ntw H•en
81&amp;- letlfl

'
Bulin•'
Oppartunlt'f'
22 - Mq'niiV 10 loan
23 Prot•lional Stfvices

137 - Bufhlo

~EOAL

p.,.....,.

FINANCIAL REPORT
OF TOWN I HIPS
For Floot* Yu! Ending
. Oocomber 31. 1181
. BEDFORD TOWNSHIP
COUNTY OF· MEIGS
"Thlo II en ul\ludlte
Flnenclol Report"
SUMMARY OF
CASH BALANCES,
RECEIPTS AND ·
EXPENDITURES
Oovernmenul FundiRECEIPTS;
r.................. .
1li

I

992-2156

1989 GROUP CONTRIBUTORS
CII•CJIIS

~~o,.,_,

Aeybon WeH•ce
a.rnlceWinn
Go•olcl • foyo Wlldormuth
Ellu.oth Wllto.d
llullhWonl
I libel Wolf•
M1bel Wilburn
HtllhK. Wll
Het·en WMIIIMI
Derlut a Nellla Welhtrttoh:
Owlnnle Whfte
JudHn a Helen Whitl
RoJcoe a Mirth Willon
Homw a lel¥1 WIMIJ'd
AudreWIII

-

Eoot lottrl Unll.. - - Wom.,

l chool

Rulo IIMidl'f
ClooL l.ollg - - Chun:h•
Mt. Union lopllotCIIurOII
MI. M.,loh C"- of Oadl.odl• A-wy
·
Mt. Marloh loptlot CII-

RoolneUnllod - - _ . ,

'

RoDinollnll• - - l i o n

·,_,_u-

"":'.:..llchool

Rockopr=nllod - - - · o Clol•
RoDino
lot
cr. . w.
Temple
Mil
Cllwatli, Alb..,.
l'lolllo
Clwlol

r._

fll Til''

.

ADl

lorbera J .. Oru•or.
c•orl&lt;, Januery 18, 18SO
42774 Holwlf llldgo
lhode, Ohio 41771
114-811·1244

·

I~) 30.1tc

-IID4Iol Cllu""'

..
Uoolloolln

.

Cl. .

----··

OIGIIUIIIOIS
I RIIIIIIIIS
_ _ ,...., --1121 .

Ulien Z..We

......._

Do""'' Routh ·

&amp; . - . - ...lot Ch-

- =-:.=.,llo*•

Club '

Hai.iF""' •-•lgan
w.A.
--Dille-or
IIIDin

Effie Send••
Dolly ll'f!O
Alloe llrulllo

R-o-

hololw-

lvolyot lummorflolcl
CI. . I I -

,.

Joo a Mynlf llooon

-.

,

•••

In

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

~

•
•
••
•

MEDICAL WORATORY TECHNIOAN
Part time poaltloa Ia avllllable for • Medical
LaboratOry . Tecbnlclln to work rotating
lhlfta 1111 , ~Requlree Independent ·

worker with ca llltlle in allert11 of ollnlcll
.laboratory.
lam fringe ben.,lta. •
.
Plea• oontact:
Cew!ll Uela: Laboratory lupervleor
Veterans Memorial Hoepltal
111 E. ,Memorlll Drive
Pollltroyr OH. 41718
,
111~1182-2104, EXUnllon 211
. -

.

81 ..:.. Homelmprowmentt

·1

-Interior &amp; Extlll'ior · '

Pollillng·

NEWLAND
ENTERPRISES

• V. C. YO\ING Ill

DUMP TRUCK
$and-Stone.Dirt

. 992"6215

1614) 667-J271

!FREE ESTIMATES I 1

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
Now

Roger Hysell)
Garage
lt. 124, ,..,...., Ohio

90 DAY WMIAIIIIY

--....:..-----'--~---,------ .....,__

..••
INSU:.AnON '.,•
J&amp;L

Wllfer Sp..lal 011 ''
VINYL SIDING
VINYL REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS •

PH. 949·2101
or •••· 949-2160

FREE ESTIMATES

4-16-16-tfn

12-13-'lt-1••·

' NO SUNDAY

(AU$

AUTO &amp;TRUCK ;
REPAIR
.
Alto Tr••••lttltl
PH. 992·5682 '
... 992-7121

WANTED

LOW GlADE OAI

SAW LOGS
S160 ,..!:'....

l

up

liEN'S APPLIANCE
5UVICE

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

992-5335 ... 915-3-561

DEUVEHD JO

OHIO PALLET
COMPANY
POIIIIOY OH.

DAVI'l ,
SMALL EN-E
We can ~r attd rt·
COI't radiators IIIII!
hlattr corn. We aho acid boll 01111 rOtf
aut radiators. We also
.r.... GnT.... .

IEPAII

L-tlllotY...,L I tr
lit • 1•1•••... 011.

BISSELL
BUILDERS

CUSTOM BUllT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

PAIITS AND SERVICE
For Moot 2 end 4-cycte

"AI haHMblt Prices"

enoinel

PH. 949·2101
or lu. 94t·21ttO

Plf HIU. fOlD

Stock f'lone lor
Homelltlo, Weld-.
TkumHh.lrlalle•
Stoatton.

Middleport,

·PH.

__.......... -

,.--

,

•
••

992-2772!
•sHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and AE·
MOVAL

•

.~

•'

:l

•LIGHT HAULING

!

•fiREWOOD

•'

BILL SLACK
992·2269
EVENINGS

~

~
'~

Day er Night
NO SUNDAY CAU5

~--~--~--------· ~

RACINE :
'
GUN CLUB :
GUN SHOOT ~
~

.
..
1:00 P.M.

EVERY SUNDAY
Starts at

•

Factory Choked
12 Gauge Only
9-1·19-tln

.-nUND IIIE

AND DIRT

742·3011

SPREAD

•Tire Selea

•'

'•
~·

SALES and

SEIYICE

UMESTONE

•Frant

10 Ton Minimum

End

~
:

Alignment
~
eOH Change • lube : ~

1600...,.Watlf

'lllhrary

•Bralle Work
Ull n.,

.•,..

HOMIPA.

...,.

•Mobile Home

•Mobile Home

FOR SALE

Aentele
•Lot Rental•

949·2493

lt.llllaltlaef
Pllllllf'elr Ollie .

011.

•

-•

•

ALLEN'S
.HAULING

TOP. SOIL

___:____

".l

1.,..----...;':;:·6:;:-l::;t-;::tln::.&amp; ~

Srtl5tr•t,

.'

·-lullt

"Free Eetimetee"

USED

&amp;

J•n, 30. 1871

'

.,_g

83 ~ hCIWiting
84 - EieCtrl.;ll ~ Relrigetation
86 - Gun..-•1 Heullng
86 · Mobil a Home Repu
87·· Upholltery

COINIIY ··.

Away 11 Ye1r1
Ago

'

82 - Plumbing• He •

•V INYL 8101 NG
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

Of·

CECIL RANI
.Who,.....

' I

.. ,

.

Services

My H....,..,

Looot1111
AMWio6n .......
11oe . . I""ICllll100'oC .... lno.
lijooolellooooea.--c-. ,
' .... _.......,._..,.......... , . -...tH
"

u. .

I wll •leii'I•MI:

•.

~

Ooovoiy 1111••-mooaolloo-n&amp;lno.

aver: be;

,•'
•
,•

• COUIIIy

MlilollliOft Chul'llll of CIWioc. " - - • ·
RetllleflriltCIMirelllofTheNIIII.. II

.

memory

c - ..

·o
.... .
Pu~i+~§
Chu"lli-Uooll
.. __

.,

In
LUCY
WhoPaaHd·Awev
Jen..ry 30, 1187
The aelt - • ~clan.
the lhoak MVere;
You' 101 not fOrgotten,
Nor ·wtll you

-Roofing

DOZER
SITEWORII • ROADS
CLEARING

7·11-'89-tfn

Pulollc lof~ .. .... ,2,100.00
Public Worlli ..... 4t,l81.18
Copltll Outlov .....1,024.30
TOTAL' DI88URSEMENT8 ..........87,373.81i
Tote! Roctipte
lUnd"') Dlob...... 12,111 .23
Fund Cuh lolence
Jon. 1. 111110 ..... 34,117.81
C•h lolenoo
31. '811 ..... 27,822.43

In Me~m

Lucy deer: .

-Concrete Work

992-21'8 t

For•lolll•llfeencl

s,_..,.-., UIIIMII - - WomWt
Dor

Oeorlll 8111••
Kolhl- loot!

..••-

-Room Addltiono ·
-0ul18rWOI'k
-Eiectrlcol • Plumbing

l!la•:

11)30, , .

~~--...,.....,,..,..-..--· 2
1 card ar Tiliin1ca

.

· ernment ......... 17,817.21

o-1

WANT'AD

s
.
CARPENTER SEIYIC

Oonerel Oov·

telling the •-on• on or be·
foro Fobruory 28, 1810. Unleu 1M · t:;ommlulon r•
' celv• 1 written lltatement
to thot effec1 ond on liccomponylng roqu•t flpr on
. or.. hearing in thlt matter,
the CUI willie decided on ·
the b•to of the ln .. lllliotio;l
contelnect In tM eppllootlon Jo~:t::~:~,Y"""43,104.88
ond the offldevlte oubmBelenoo ......... :43,S04.81
tlv,...
t.oeo Outii1andlng
formllllon 'may "Ch................. II,137.3S
by contacting the PW!Io TOTAL
Utllltloo ·; Conwnlllion of
BALANCE ...... 34.187.81
Ohio, 180 Eeot lroecl
I certify lhe foil-Ing ro·
Stroet. Columbln. OH. port to too .......,. .. d true.
432S8·0873. 1
10 the belt of my knowl-

I

...................
PH. N·l ) ;: ... ................. ~ .... ..........•........

Camplf1g Equtpment

79 - Campen &amp; Motor Homes

.tJ1.e s.s ·serv1ce~
..
Gr..tA.IIwillflll

.,__,,.......,In·
•"'-'neot

...... ldetel

78

54- Miac. Mert'handin
55 - Building Supplit1
56- Peu for S.l le
57 - Music .. lnairumenn
58 - Fruits • Veglllebl•
69 - For Stle or Trade

~1

s•e

72 - "True"' lor Salu
73- Vant &amp; 4 wo ·s
74 Molorcyc:l•
75- 80ets a. MotOil tor Slle
76 - Auta P1tt1 &amp; Acc•IOfi•
77 - Auto Aep air

Mr:rchandi se

liil6hl4611

576 - Apple Grove

71 - Autos lor

51 - Hou•hold Good•
52- Sportirtg Gooda
53- Antiques

'

Plea~~nt

•58 - Leon

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

lcothe Welat

'

448 + Gallipolis
367 - Ch•hile

1

w.,ttd

1,3- lnturanc:e , .
.. . ,
14 - Butin•l Ttitmng)
11 - Scl'loals &amp; lnstruc,Uon
18 -· Radio. TV &amp; CB R,eP.air
17 - Miac,tlaneou•
'
18 · Wanted To Do

ADDRESS: .. .... .. ..., ... ........ .......... .... .. . .

Mi,...daWetat
Jim Wellt

·-

•

aion a written mtarnent de·

I

NAME: ............. :... .................. , ..... ....................

Joseph Zwilling
"'

G~li• County,
Artt Code 614

1 1-- Hela Wanted
12 - Situ~lion

Tronsport alion

44 - Ap•nmint tor Rent
46 - Furni•hed Rooms
46 - Space for Rent
47- Wented to Ren1 .
48 - Equipment tor R•nt
49 - For leae

~)1~1 Vil.l'~

pag«•s.c·m·«•r 1II«'
'
. ·. .
.,..
fullowinl{ l«'l«•phon(• Rxcharig«·.~ ...

63 - li~lltOek

. 64 - Hay &amp; Gf~in
66 - Seed &amp; Fertilinn

41 - HouJttlor Rent
42 - Mobile Homes tor Rent
43 - F~rms tor Rent

Elllpi"VI'I•: nt

Classifi«·~

61 -·Farm Equipment
62 - Wanted tQ Buy

l;fili11Jjl

"

NOTICE
Notice Iii givon thot lndeColluler N-IHil,
miOnlll '"'*'ion Ag. .oyl
the SvrilcuM Vlloge h• !no., 1ooo fllld .,. op)lll..tlon
made orron ....ente fol the with the Public ·U1111tlee
drl'*lrig WIWir to be .,.,; Commlolion of Ohio (Cue ·
lylld It the .o-e - - No. 81-.1824-RC·ACEI· for
tloowd fr~u•ncy ·1or ,rodlo· ·IIUttoorlty to provldl dlgl1el
toatt* octiYity. Til• Syto· dlepley poglng •rvlce In oil
cu• Vlllogo wMI teko ltopo or porte of Alhlend, . Athto .,.eu,. thot the roqulrld ena, Belmont,' Columbiane,
monitoring will continue -to Coehocton. Oolllo, Ouern·
lo!o pertorme,
·
•
uy, Her[lion.
Hocking,
C11 30, 31: (211
HOlm•. Jockoon, J - r·
oon. Knox, Law...,.., Ucll·
lng, Motp; Mon;oo, 'Mor·
· gon·•. Morr-. MulidiiiUm.
Noblo, Perry, Plloe, floso,
~loto, T-erow"' Vinton.
W•hlll!llon, end Woyne
Countloo, Ohio; Any lnter•tod poreon; firm. corporelion, or IO!tity 'I""" ..nohow
good ciiU• Why tlolo eppll-•
C.tlon ohould not too gronted
ohould file wkh the commie·

..
I .

AHred • Hilde Veeuger

fnlnk I Wende RIJ:tr
Lola Aober10n
O.Orge Wenena Atdtkln

"-lng.notlftld of thle .viOlI·,'
tlon by the Ohio Environ·

monthly 1 ·1
Starting .......................:........... ... :..... :.. ldetel

BouiiiiWMo
floyd Wobor
o...1INN•

MoryK.Rouoh
Arlit ll•ttr

DRAFT PUBLIC NOTICE
Tho! Syr_.. VII- looo
llilld to. monltot tor ,.dlo·
loglcol ootlvlty In tM drink,.,, __
eu~ I I roquired
under tM etete 1 uto drink·
lng weter lewo. Rule 3'74881·2&amp; of the Ohio Admlnletr~~tkf• Code requir• a
community eupply to
~collect four
conaecutive
quortotly ump•oe ·for doter·
•mlnotlon of compllonoowitlo

r will pay

I will pay yearly I
Starting ................ ,............ .

31 - Homn tor 5•1 a
32- Mobill Homn tor Sale
33- Farml lor Sale
3 &amp;- Buain•• Buildings
36- lott &amp; Acreage
36 -· Reel Elllte Wanted

· • - Giwe.wey

Public N alice

1

M~ryA.W•t.ter

Lester • Catherine Rusa.tl

Public. N alice

$ A MONTH CLUB .
CHECK ONE
t 1 .00 Club I
tii.OO Club I
t10.00 Club I
UO.OO Club I

\

6 ·· lost and Found
7·- Y•d Sela (patd in advance!
8 - Pubhc Sale &amp; Auction
9- W.tnled IO Buy

Rate• are tor coft•cutive runs. broken upd••will btch.,ged
lor eacl'l dl'( as Mpflfaie 1dl

Farm SUPtllles
&amp; L1 vestock

Real Estate

,. '

Public Nalice

IS·A
'

2 :00P.M ." WEDNESDAY·'

' -.m~:: :=~DRAS~~y

•

Respite Care (assts,tance for
famUies who are caring for an
elderly farnUy member 1n !heir
home}

...

DorothY Roller

- 2 00 P.M . TUESDAY,

conteminent leveta.: ·upon

'

-ov-Wtll
8611 &amp; Georgie WetiiOfl
Orec•Whei._OiociYa Wlllkw
hm• • Ketll WeHr
llefv1 Wlll.-d
.
lem • Cler~ .WIIIIemt

Nona• Robert•
o.... ~~y Rtlblll
Edith Aels•
FrtnDII Rou-.,
· Gern•Rou.t.
frtnDII Roberta
Harold a Margery Routh
Arnold &amp; Florence Rld'lerdl
Erme Aoulh
WHbur a Mltllde Rowl.,., lr.
.Ro• Reynolds
Uly Rondolph

DAY BfFORE PUBliCATION
· ·11 ;00 A.M . SATURDAY
"2 :00P.M . MONDAY

:the radtoi,Ogiclill murmum

Outreach

--

Peullne Rtdenour

•

\
Home Maintenance (minor horne
repairs)

MaryWebn•
Mobol Wlddllll

Lulu Mee Oulvey

EvoiynLucllt

Home Deliv~ed Meals

DorCJthv Wood•d

Bennie • Nl(llle Perry
PhyMis Poulin

Cerol Lunetord
Ambet Lohn

Homemake.-IHeaiu~ Services

Dore Wining

Delar6t Powell
111• Pooler
Eva G. Price

a
-~~~all •

•

Marvert 8 . WaR
Edne w.,lend ·
Frida Welling
Glldys Welbum
Florence Woodv•rd
AdaW.-nw
Allee Wemsll'f'

EmH Ptldlla
Pe•l Protfln
Norma Per•
Edna Plcktnl

Mory Rlnlll.,

Chore Service {c/eanlng·laundry)

Sare Voat
Chetter VanMet•
Mary Ann VanCooner

.Nellie P~rk•
Marltyn PowMI
Erwin • Lucille Potretr

Helen Aeynotdt
ootcle' RHctlffe

•

. I wleh to Join tho

Hezei ~VanCaanr11

Rex O'Brien
MuineOwena

Edith Jlvldon
AlborUIKolhlw
Glldy1 Knottt
Qoorgo • Mary Koutl
Mlft•• Konlval
Anna Jene Kincade
.Chalter • Annlltte Knight
Mo,.ln • Evoloo Kelly
Ellubolh Kollw
Orece Krld•
Wm. • Goldie Krackomberg•

•

IN,. THE HOME
.,

v.... v..,Meter

N•••

Uoyd Jenldnt

SERVICES &amp; : PROGRAMS
FOR SENIORS

Jotephlne Stll•
Mery Alice SUnu'ets
J . AMen &amp; Dorothy Smhh
Herry &amp; Edith Schwtb
New• Sevtrled
Myrtle Stenler
Flor:ence Smhh
C.rofvn Smith
EINnor Smith
Lucille Smith
Harold • Wilma Sargent
. Trell • Edne Schoenleb
.Wilda Surherry
Marie Steiner
Rose Slaton
F.,n Smllh
Helen Swartz
Mildred Sponc•
·
\l.,n 6 Ferndor11 Story
Betty Spencer
John Shein·
Cecil L. S10cy
ChM•&amp;Th.... Sch.t
Cl•enoe Story
Albert Schuhz

H. H. Tipton

Thtlm•
Helen Norrlt
Mary Ne•e

Bertha Johnaon
Marg•et Johnson
NonnaJewd

~/

·Bill (Ch•I•J ThurstOn
Btytha Thein
Ednl Triplet1
Edg.- a o,.tte Thome•
Bet:sie Turtev
EdnaTann• ·
Melba Thompion
Doria Thomu
Wilbur Theoblld
J•m•Travil
Robert &amp; Joen Tewbbury
JaneTelford
Caryl Tyler
HenryTurn..Howard &amp; Evelyn Thome

Alice Mlll1
Conltllnce JoiN' Mnch•
lane M . Mayn11rd .
Evelyn Mains

Hwold • Elluboth Lohoo

Olodya Dllon

H.-Io

Gertrude MitcheU
Ruby • Ltwl1 Miller
Don Mlllt

MaoyLyon

lwaDBI•uer

~ ...

Nln Moore·
Mll*ecl Mllldowe
Sam &amp; Core Mlc:haelt
Helen Mill•
Violet Mllhone
Joan Morris
Cath•lne Me•
Neva Moore •
CedHa Mitch
W-,ne Mllho1n
J . Peul • Allee M. Ma11m1n
Eloiu Mankin
Jt1n Moore ,
Donald • Betty Maurer
Ruth Morrit

Kedwyn Lam bin
Calvin Une
Carl• Pll•l..e Lee
Llwnn• • Marjorie lAon•d

Robwt D....worth

I---------------~-----,
I wut &amp;e -.port tile Seaior Clllzena
I
II Cea&amp;er ~~enlee with .my {Pembenhlp
I

MariaNt Metcllf.
Caroline Mill•
Maye More

Will•d • Elate Hin•
Virgil • Mary Hemm
Vll'l Halcomb
Jackie HWdebfand
Merv K . Hoh•
Dovle &amp; Nadine HudsOn
lule Hampton
Helen Hood
Helen Hicks:
OlaHvMI
Kethel Hatfilld
Focie Haym1n
Pauline Hysell
Willkla Holcomb
Rhode Hall
Ethel Hugh•
Hlt1n Herril
Orit Hubb•d
HeNt HayH
P~line Hudeon
~ellle Hetfilfd
Rhoda Hackltt
Ch•I•Heck
Albert Hotfn•

.I'/

Iotty Soy'"
Dwe 6 Dor01hy Sayre

Jessie Marl; in
Jeatle MOlden

Hendrbr.

.. HIOAY PA.PE.R
SUNDAY PAPER

a.

PhyNII McMillan

•

WEDNESDAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER

' \ /l

a.

Roger Hift

MaeCrou ....
Lucille
Tlltlmt C.mpiltll

mornhly ...,.,. of
where you'll
gee up-tD-diltelntomoetlon on ilauee of inter·
nt to thoM 1511.
.....IOCIII - r l t y end other benefit
lntonnetlon
....hellth program•

{

.

Florence Cin:le
•
Allie CarrMn
Cl•e Critwell
Ora CarMy
Ru ...ll &amp; Etta Culluma
Bonnie Conde
Marie Chllf)fnln

Support The Senior Citizens
Center With Your
· Membership

Frede McFenn
Herel McCloud
Huel McHeffle
Ju~ McHeffle
Gerald F. • Anne McGrew
Mr .. Oereld T. McGrew
Lee • 8eul8h McCom•
Florence McDenlel
S. l . &amp; Gr11ce l . McMull'll'f'

Helena Howen
Rol(lo• &amp; Ew Hollon
Wm. • Eliub.th Habtten•

Manll¥ • Melinda Chri1ly
Eerl • Oeralclne Cron
Ruben • Thetma Collin•
O.ynllll Cl•k
Elizabeth Cermlft
Cordie Colltne
Rubal Caldwell
Sarah Celctw.ll
JentttH Ch•her
Marcelle Chapmen
Doug Clrde
Carl Casto
Dora Crilpln
Elfzlbelh Cutler
EdnaC.rmen
Errol! • Cl•• Conroy
Ern•t • Sadla Carr"

Alb.t &amp; Clera Smith
Marquerlle ltell"ns
F.,.eschultz
Joen Sorden
,
Mamie Sw1ua•
Elmo Virginia Smith
Mine Swlther
Lew,.,ce Maiy Stewart

M11McPeek

Mldred Hlrrit
Hilde H1rril

T«. . Brown

Recreallonal/Soclal .Actlvltles

I NAID:
I
1 ADDUII8:
I
I n.NO.:

Daylon McElroy
RoM McDade

Garn• Ervine
Ethel Eu-lw
H•f• Eblin
Sybil Eber1bech

.AT THE MULTIPURP&amp;sE
.. SENIOR (:ENTER

IDnce) .

,

'

Multipurpose Senior Center, 1st Floor
(614) 992-2.161 ·
Mulberry Heights, P. 0. Box 722. Pomeroy. Ohio 46769 ·

.

•

3'

115

10 .
Monthly

afle1 publicllion to m•ke correction.
• Ad1 that mu11 be peld In ad\lance artt
·,
' C~td ol Thanks
H1ppy Ads··
In Mernorltm
·• Yll'd 511•
'
.
.
.
·~ l
... "
"A clauilied adverti11ment pl.c:ad in Th~t D1iiY. Senlin .. (u·
&lt;=tiPI
cl•ultied displ-r. Butin•s Card 1nd leg.t noticnl
will •l•o IIppe.,- in tht Pl . Ple••nt Aegist•r ·.nd lht Gall1·
... polll D•ity Tri~une. relichirtg over 18,000 hom•
.. 1

Meigs County . C au neil on .A ging, Inc. ·

INDIVIDUAL CONTRIBUTORS

Alzheimer's Disease/Related
Disorders (family caregiver train·
lng and support groups)

Worde

6

d~

,

..

SERVICES &amp; P~OGRAMS .
FOR SENIORS

D•vl

'7p01n11ifte1ypeonlyuaed.
.-;_~
'
• Sent mel II not rnponslble tor •rors a he, first d.., . iChecl&amp;
tor enort tirlt diV ad runa in paper) . Call before 2 :00p.m.

Thanks The
1989
Contributors
.

..

,

'Adt outstde Meigs, .Galli a or Mason counties mu11 ba pre ·
paid.
.
'
'RvcttMt &amp;.60 discount for adl pa1d \n fldvence.
'free ads
Give....-ev •nd found adt undtr 16 wordt wiM be
run l dil'fS 11 rMI ch•ge. . ...
.1 !
'Pr~ce ot ed tor all capd1ll:etteu is double price ol 1d c:osl-.

.,

&lt;·· -,\~li-

"

•

.·-

'
\

'The Deily Sutinii-PIIgt 7

-Pun•ot 'Middlsport. Ohio

Hl·747t

J.lf.'D-111

"

c
............
WANIa

w. ::-.:: l l ..
Pl. ttiiJS61
11JII
Buying

tw

f:uw.:

7:30-1:00
Mon. thrU Fri.
7:30-4:00

.,•.

t

�The

Sentinel

LAFF·A·DAY

44

30. 1980

Tuerdr,,

Ohio

-

,Apartment

..

--

72 Truck8 for.SIIIe

a.........
"=!!...:,11

for Rent

1114 ..1.

111- .

- - ....-~c..

. 11-':4":h-......
41. .

.

1

Tluok, -

.... ·POmiaiov-Midd'rport.
__
...
.... .... -·-Ohio.
- ··-·"'

•

'::~::.' S~tl~ll-&lt;i~~s·
•t

Television·
Viewing

...

..

OM ~~

9

'

"

TUES., JAN.

•

a.IIM lly CLAY I .

O four
Roorronge '-"-'• ol
scrombl.d -ds

30 •

'

.......

::=.HOur ...

~~~oday

'
SOMETIMES HE

WELL, SHE STARTED OFF 9V
5AVIN6 SOMEilliN6 ABOUT • iN
ALL llER VEAASOF
•AHD
I MISSED TilE
PARf...

WllAT DID SIIE SAV,
CHARLIE 8ROWN'

IIASBAODREAA\5
AND NEEDS

COMFO!f,TIN6 ... I

.

·I·A.vw ·EEI
. I 1~ I I _

&lt;ll '~AFIFerAwlf"
(!) Mtttfi

"If

lloo

.

• Ill !ll •QIIl a • a
(J) ell IIIIWIJ AnteriCo

· ~-~
...,. ,.

1m lnl-lcinal 4•4.
f4IO.
-11+74N1IC-· 11unt · WI.
.......

*N

I SHELAV

1:00c=:111 Alld

..,'

:

below to lorm four simple -d•.

IVININO

73 VIM &amp; 4 WD'I

•

.

I

I

PESHE_;.,l',.....l .._", Grandma atways told us that
h,..-_l,.:.....:yl...:..rl.:..;

lit Chlorletln CNrge"
OJem
..,

. . . . _ _
opportunity knocks but some. . - - - - - - - - - . times It sneaks up and then

1:05 (J) ....,..,. I II. •••
1:30. (J)_ illliiiiC Nlglidt Nowt

~-1-. ,.;l~r-;l"'•:.:",.(._:. .;E:rl-=s~. ,l, ·. -~j ; ·i;,~:f~~ .i~~h:h~~~gq:.d~

111 tlpcnLool1 (0:301

~ ·Ill~
Nlwt 1;1

1i'Lct!!~
lit

L-,...L--L-1.,....~. .....,," -.J you develop from stop No. 3. below.

l'lblllr McOat

0 .......
ill Top Clld

1:31 (J)
7:00

AnciJ Gt1llltlt

IJISca ecrow I Mr,. King
i (J) PM ~zlrie

o-2'

IIl 8port8Centor
!Il • Ill CurNnt Aft81r
(!) (!)

,.
75

'- •a

.,''
·,'
.,
.,'

Boata,a Motors
tor Sale

1m 17 ft. Sta..,.ft Tri-HuH

MacNel ~--

He-HIM•
'
dllWhHIOI

'

OJ
M·
1111 Abbott And coewno
IIJ Mlemt VIce
ill VldtoCountry

7:311• w Family Feud
(J)College8ullet11811

. ,,~

!Il ~--Tonight
• (J) Mama't Famly

FRANK AND ERNEST
' .
'

ltJ c-aftro
9 NlghtCOUn
7;35 (J) NBA BlakllbiM .
. 8:00 (I) MoVIE: The DoiiCIItll

..
..,'

I .... l'ord TNCII bad. F"o !UH
Dualtanlto. Exoollont
ohapa. 1110. 080. 114-111 3522
orl14-117•3111.

olul7"'·

Employment

·''

1971 V-28 CamMo )IOrto,
- - allln, rtghtltoncl tront

Serv1ces

.;

POOR BOY TIRES, 304-117i"'

.:

-3102.

3331, front end
.,...., 4,000 .....

....m-tt,_, MW tlra.

delenee. (Rl 1;1
·
·111 Wtto'o '1M lioN? Tony
agrees to coach Angela's
'fQIII~biM team. r;J

•

t.ndw, nouplece. rear bumptr
~;304

DelinqUent (2:001
• (2) Ma1IO* Revelation
eboul hit client forces
Matlock to change his
·

••

'

lllanmird

(!) (!) Nova New. genetic
ltudles prompt controversial

!

...a tina,

:t,uestk&gt;ns about man's origin.

-·
,•

i

(J) dll CoHaga BlllkllbiH

ltltl • tt2l Rescuo: t11

Rescuer trias to repair an
airborne plane from a moving

ear. (R)
•liD MOYIE: Angel Haan
IRJ (2:001
OJPrtmiNeWI

lit MOVIE: ateo;kmall (1 :DOt
IIJ Murder, 111e Wrow
ill Chun:lt 8treelllldon

8:311(J) The Wonder v... Kevin
will have to defy his f'n9l1l to
pia~ contact football. (Rl r;J
CroOk a Chlae
(J) In The - O f The
Nlgllt A COUncilwoman helps
a young boy whO mat_have

I

Business Servie_es

21

1:00.

Buslnees ·

R.- L HOLLON
TRUCKING

PLUMBING &amp; "",, "'"'" I
Ntw "-lion:

168 North Stcond

. CHESTER, OHIO

SALES &amp; SERVICE

•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE

Middleport, Ohio 45760
We C1rry Fl1hing Suppll•

th.t

rou do
monor

- clov-

ln-.-tho ollortng.
CASH IN Clll IIULTJ.IIILLION

Frlgklolre -

83
Ll .-.ock
'''" · - · wann =:--,-,v-::....
1 dryor, 40ft.

;n~.=:"Wao~· 114-

-· -

.

pOWer, General Noriega
stllncla firm. IJ
rtll •
MOlliE: 'Plot To
Kill AciOIJIIt Hltllr' CBS
TUMCIIJ MO¥te (2:00) r;J
OJ Lany Kina Uvel
IDl MOYIE: Oiongo 01 The

a

a

City (1:00)

11J MOVIE: Breaking Away

1-1

iPGJ (2:00)
ill N•ohvlllll Now
t:30 ill College BulletllaN
Ill C-'i Hayden reluctantly
igrHI to meet the
Roaeblocl&lt;l. r;J

ARE YOU,
l'te;A.U.Y~

·,.·,;- I .

IRAIID OPEtlltll
CHUCK'S CAR WASH

9:50 (I) MOVIE: The Split (RJ

\

For Appt. Call
992-6717

Dftll

1-11-'90-1 mo.

On~

r

lew·YIC
s.rvlcl,
CrMk .f1d. P1rte, eup-

.,~-

.

82

Plumbing

a

'

\.

Heating

·

Bl!YING ALUMINUM CANS, G
' S.
PLASTIC, .COPPER, BRASS, SHE T '
ALUMINUM, RADIATORS AND M . R~

DaiiiiiOIIo, Ohio

84

HoURS: Mon.-Fri. 12:00 to II p.m.
Saturday 9 e.m. to 12 noon

-

Electrical a
__ Refrigeration

W.sl

Eut
Pass

Pass

AU pass

at

Opening lead:

&lt;

+K

9 of diamonds; and East, with the king
of spades and the Q·B of diamonds, had
to come down to two cards. East had "
to either make declarer's spade queen
a winner ot ungund the diamonds, so
the slam was made.
It was a good omen lor Sabine Zen·
kel. One week later at the North
American Championships in Lancas·
ter, Pa., she formed a partnership
with American expert Rhoda Walsh
and won the Life Master Women's
Pain.

•.

.•'
'

e boner

AW·STilAY·LII

HDSS SHOll DON'T WORK

··l .1

Fourth and Plno

114 441 !llf

THESE

.''

Cortor'o Plomblng
andH.,Ina

SPECIAL ACCOUNTS FOR
N

'
''

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: West

31 Pry
32 That lady
33 French
port
35 Box office
draw
36Gruel

Co.-

97 IEECM STIDJ, MIDDlEPOn, 0 0
Located Throe llocks ...._ S.,..
llelt

WORTH A HOOT!!

•'

~Without

·''

cure.
42 Spanish

'

440vemead
45Grantor.

provlf1CB
"'

'

FOI IIIFOIMAnON CALL 9'f2·319C
'

RDblrti'On

S.p11c Tonk Pumolng -~OoJHo
EVANS ENTERPHIIEI,
Jooltlon, OH 1-.:117..1121.

RECYCLE CE TER

to "'dd'op1rt ,..,..,

... ....,,._,.·

(2:00)
10:D0(1)700CiubWIIII·Pat , .

''

pl=kup, and dotlvoty. 814-

•

.

+Q7
f10 "9 1643
+AH
tJS

Onessls
4 Probe
5 Over·
wrought
8 LaMan
11 ·Remunerate 7 Gl's
12 Endanger- · address
ment
8 Waa a
1:f Be shriven
candidate
Anewer
14 Beard
I Perceive
on grain 10 .Health
21 Jumble
35 Except
15 Opening
resort
22 Competent 311 Liquid
171nlurlate 16 Break
23 Rock
measure
18 VItality
bread ·
musical '37 Medicinal
21 That's
17 Closing 25 Hitchcock
plant
hilarious!
device
film
38 Average
24 Diatribe; 18 Window 27 Work39 Paunchy
harangue
section
aholic
40 Arab attire
28 Mortily
19 Advanlage30 - soup 41 High spot
28 Cuban
20 Cornice, 34 Hof Stove C3 German
dance
e.g.
topic
name prefix
2t Pull

(!) Fronlllftl O:.splte
altempll to oust him from

:---=--..,.:.~:,.'=="'~:":a

soum

1 Alrlcen
lake
5 Signal
10 Palrol
or leave

proflles 1lto Palestinian leader
Yaslr Aralll. IJ

Wote- lor Salo: 100 Ranoh lb. 114-117-1411.
.1'8111:,KMIIUII,I14 4•1 " . Point Pl.. now hu Soddloo and
Toctl,~ .
-coat wllner.
fur
OOIL Loolhar
3 fal'mla
worn
-IIIIa MW. :104-1711-2041.
84 Hay Gl!lln

985-4422

510'/' 2nd St., Micld!eport

a murder. ljil
Ia wte An old tilker

~ F~ FronUine

ond oholr, Eo- Ono ,_ - - oom plcklf,.
oollon1-.Hoil.l14~1o- .• ---~1

Real Estate

•ANYTI:IING
AT ALL

IUSIIDS' PHONI
16141 992-6550
,USIDINCI PHON!
16141 992.7754

reaamn•ncl•

. •""topoofllo
and NOr
Mndyou krlow,
through 1lto .... you ho..

DOLLAR RISEARCH. ftMinlo.,
- • taltl by mall. Wrlto P.
0. lib• 2141lillljlolle, OH 41131.

•FILL DIRT

Pay Your Phone
and C,ble Billa Here

OHIO VALLEY PUIUIHINO CO.

+62

THOMAS JOSEPH
3ACROSS

buddy's villi llhlk1t up Don
and Floaea_nne's Mil-Images.

INCmCEI

EAST
tK9432
.J2
+Q862

by

wltnMMCI

Ill R u

OpportunHy ·

WEST
tJ105
. f7
+103
tKQ109873

CROSSWORD :

a

f·ln&lt;lrlCIJI

tA4

Here is a deal that Sabine Zenkel of
west Germany played in Dallas last
,November. Aft~r the king of clubs
lead against Zenkel's six-heart con·
'tract, the straightforward play for
slam is to draw trumps and hope that
diamonds split3-3, with the queen held
by West. But declarer felt strongly, after West had pre-empted, that the diamond queen was likely to be held by
Easl. So she woo dummy's ace of
clubs, played A·K of hearts and !hen
the jack of diamonds from .dummy.
East played low and the jack won the
trick. Then a low diamond from dummy to the ace brought the 10 fronT
West. Zenkel now got off lead with the
jack of clubs.
West won the queen and played jack
of spa.des. Once again declarer felt
strongly that west would not have preempted wilh as much as the king of
spades oul3ide the club suit, so she
went risht up with dummy's spade
ace. She now ran off the rest of her
trumps. Declarer's last two cards
were the queen of spades and a small
diamond. Dummy was left with the K-

la!,P.A'i·~oope~l r;J

.

fAKQS
+KJ95

By James Jacoby
.

I·JI-H

tAU

Pre-empt
guides the play

7:05(1) Jetmlonl

- · 125 HP, Evlrwdo Englilo,
compilto top, upholilafy.
C.Ut4-!188-1311aftlf 7:00p.m.

NORTH

BRIOOE

·=Court1;1

~

•

SCRAM LETS ·ANSWIEIIS
Gyrate- Blimp- Quest- Kitfen - PIGSTY
.
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YQti. Mall $2 to Matchmaker, c/o thll
new1p1per, P.O. Box 11428, C-lAd.
OH 44101-3428.
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toP* tdOIV, 10 lie c.relulend prudent
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~ 1!614).446-7619 or (SIC) 992·2104

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YIN H beiore11111oo late.
LIO (...., D-A,. II) Co-workers
might lind you a .-y.dllllcuH peraon to
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a hlftd-. IIIey CM be helplul, they

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Pomeroy-Midclaport. Ohio

10-The Dllily Sa ttitel

Tu11d1y, .t.nuery 30. 1990

r---Local news briefs----, .Annual' Meigs Cour.t report released ·O~!gj.,~~ ~gel
. Continued from page 1
Sheriff James M. Soulsby reports ihat the first session of the
department's firearms training course for this year was held
· Monday evening. A make up session was held this morning
(Tuesday ) at the Emergency Medical Service building for
county officers who were unable to attend the Monday night
session.
The sesslc&gt;n was · conducted by Bureau of Criminal
Investigation agent Jim Jiockenberry: This was the class
· roomh&amp;esslon. Sheriff Soulsby reports that when the weather
clears actual firearm training will be conducted.
Sheriff Soulslly and Prpsecu ting Attorney Steve Story and
Assistant Prosecuting 'Attorney Linda ·Warner were in
attendance.
·
Sheriff Soulsby reports Ihat Hockenberry ·. Is assisting In
selling up the training program to reduce civil and criminal
liability to the officers and to the county should officers be
Involved In a shooting Incident.

EMS responds to five rolls
~

.

Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical · Service
responded to fjve calls on Monday.
At 8:57a.m. the Tunpers Plains unit was called to Route 248
for Lenora Davis who was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
ThePo!fteroy UQit, at 5:19 p,m. went to Route 143 and 7 on a
auto accident In which Barb Bowen . was taken to Veterans.
Richard Bowen and Carl Qualls were treated but nbt
transi&gt;orted. and Daniel Young aqd William Ryan Jr. refuSed
-treatmenL
·
At 6: 58p.m . the Racine unit responded to a call on Mile Hill
.
Road in which Herbert Walker was taken to Veterans.
The Middleport unit, at 8:07p.m. went to South Second for
Evan Wlsema·n who was transported to Veterans, and a Ill: 59
p.m . !he Pomeroy unit was called to Peacock Ave. for Merry
Crickman who was taken to Veterans.
·

I

t

Total collections during 1989 In
Meigs County Court were
$233.283.42, ac;cordlng to the
annual report prepared by Ll nda
Bentz, tbe court's first deputy.
This total represents a $58,531.71
Increase over last year's total
g~llecllons of $174,751:71.
Of the total, amounts paid to
the State of Ohio Include $3,170
for wildlife cases; S23,372.95 to
the Ohio Highway Patrol, which
gets 45 percent of fines paid In the
county; $31,147 to Rotary and
Reparations, a state c'ost which
goes Into the general fund; $174 to
State Legal Aid; and $1,133 for
seat belt fines. Total money Jl!l!d
to ,the slate Is $58,996.95, an
Increase or $8,515.68 from 1988.

Liule issues wamjng .
Middleport Chief of Pollee Sid
Little advised today that anyone
who has been fined In Middleport
court and fails to pay on the fine
.. arid costs on a regular basis will
be Issued a warrant and cited Into
court

Ronalci 1.. Fletcher. "Thll ·
creates unnect!IS8ry suffering
and drallll valuable health resourc• to J.NIY, 'or care. We
should be t.ocualilg more effort 011
preveatlon; , ·eulng probl- ~
now, and preventing more cottly
medical Intervention In . tbe
~
p
future."
Fletcher, citing data thaJ ' :
shows children use primary and
acute health services more than ·
·any other age group except for
the eldel:ty, said the .state's rate
. of 20.4 percent uQinsur~ cblld· ~
ren under age 6 was higher than
· th'e national rate of 19.7 percent. •

Money paid Into the county $9,023.47 over last year. Other
totaled $92,941.07; $29,644 .82 cases amounted to $52,607.86, an
more than 1988. Of the total, $8,454.42 Increase over 1988.
$47,154.72 went · to the county
There ·w ere 740 misdemeanors
general fund ; S26,393.95 to the · tiled ln-1989, as oppilsed to 618in
law library; $16,173.95 to tile auto 1988. Felony cases also Increased
license and gas lund; and from 78 In 1988 to 95.
'
$3,218.45 to the sheriff.
Regular traffic violat!onl saw
Civil judgments for the year the greatest Increase, going (fom
totaled $25,571.07, an Increase of 1,649 In 1988 to 2,280, an lncreafie
of 631 cases. Seat belt violations
were responsible for much of the
Increase, Bentz said.
Continued from page 1
DWI cases ln.creased by 51 In
1989, from 104 In 1988 to 155.
· was his own flashlight. .
Altogether, .!l21 criminal cases
"I found, ltrst of all, there Is a
bullet hole In the right front were procesSed during the year;
collar," ·Albrecht said. "There. 83 civil cases and 289 ·small
Was a greater concentration of \!lalms cases.
powder residue on the underside
or the collar. The only way you
~oukl have a gre·a t concentration .
Veterana Memorial
of powder residue Is If the muzzle
·. Monday admissions .:.. Norma
(of the gun) was close up."
Stacy, a native of Columbus, Humphreys, Pomeroy: Elsie
Ohio, Is on trial for a second time Westfall, Ravenswooq, W.Ya.;
on a charge that he killed ·and Lenora Davis, Long Bottom.
Monday discharges - Anna
Harmon on a darl\ Jluntlngtort
·
Sprague
..
stnl!f!t corner In 1981.

·Agent...

·

Hospital news

•.

Tickets· fO.. aih
to .be !!Old ai door

;.

.
'
Tickets tor the Eastern vs.
Southern . boys basketball game·
Fri!lay will be sold at the door
. onlY, according · to Pamela A. '
•Douthitt, Eastern's atl1letlc dt···
rector. Doors wm: open at 5:30 ''
p.m. and there will 'only be 650
tlc)u!ts sold, she advised.
'

•
•

Meigs to receive sum
to supplement programs
. '•'" Meigs County has been chosen phase or the program.
.
·to receive $l),776 to supplement . Under the terms of the grant
emergency food and shelter from the national board, local
programs in the area.
governmental or private volun·
The selection was made by a tary organizations chosen to
national board consisting of receive funds must be non-profit,
affiliates of national voluntary haye an accounting system and
organizations and chaired by !he conduct an annual audit, prac·
Federal Emergency Manage- tlce nondiscrimination, have
ment Agency (FEMA) .
demonstrated the capability to
United Way of America will deliver emergency food and or
provide the administrative sta!f shelter programs, and If they are
and tunctlon as fiscal agent. The a prlvatevoluntaryorganlzatlon,
board was charged to distribute they should have a voluntary
funds appropriated by congress board. Qualifying organizations
to help expand the capacity of are u.r ged to apply.
food and shelter programs In
Meigs County has distributed
high need areas aroqnd the emergency food and shelter
country·
funds previously with the Gallla·
A local boardmadeupofMelgs Meigs Community Action
County citizens will determine Agency. This agency was rehow the funds awarded !o the ' spoms!ble for providing numercounty are to be distributed ous meals and nights of lodging.
amo~ the emergency food and . Further Information on. the proshelter programs run by local gram may be obtained by conservice organizations In the area. tactlng Sid Edwards, executive
The·local board Is responsible for director of the Gallla Meigs
recommending agencies to re- Community Action Agency at
celve these funds and any addl· · 992-6629.
tiona! funds a"allable under this

Inez Ellen Stephens,. 89, of
Chesapeake, died Sunday at
Pulley Care Center, South Point. ·
She was born June 24, 1900 at
Huntington, W.Va. to the late
Sherman and Mary Lafon Nance.
·-

Survivors lnciude five daugh·
ters, Mrs. Harvey (Opal)
Butcher and Mrs. Billy (Im·
ogene) Templeton, bOth of Chesa·
peake, Mrs. Oulda Templeton
Johnson, of Belpre, Mrs. Russell
(Wykle) Wllltley, of VInton, and
Mrs. Charles (Nancy) South, of
South Point: three· sons, Owen
Stephens Jr., ·of Chesapeake,
Jack Stephens, of Valdosta, Ga.,
and Richard &lt;Dick) Stephens, of
Clearwater, Fla.; 20 grandchild·
ren; 32 great grandchildren; one
great great granddaughter;
three step grandchildren; .. and
one sister, Retta Brammer, of
Chesapeake.
She was preceded In death by
her husband. Owen T. Stephens;
(wp brothers, two sisters and two
Infant daughters.
Services will be 11 a.m. Thurs·
day at the Schneider Funeral
Home, Chesapeake, with Randy
Templeton and Rev. Dallas Reynolds both officiating. Burial will
be In the Centenary Cemetary In ·
Lawrence County. Friends may
call at the funeral home from 6 to
8 p.m. on Wednesday .

Audrey Saulen
Audrey B. Sauters, 83, Athens,
died Monday at the Amerlcare
Pomeroy Nursing Center after
an ex tended Illness.
Born In Athens County she was
the daughter of the late Herbert
and Amanda Bell Douglas. She
was retired from the Athens
State Hospital and was a
member of the Shade United
Methodist Church.
,
'
Mrs. Sauters Is survtved by two
daughters and sons-In-law, Max·
lne and Paul Shaulis, Albany;
and Marlene and John Elswick,
Athens; four grandchildren, ·
three great grandchllren, two
sisters, Edna Smith, Columbus;
and Grace Frazier, Springfield;
and one brotller, Clinton Dou·
glas, Albany.
In addition to her parents, Mrs.
Sauters was preceded In death by

AT FRUTH PHA
· HALLS

QQllQJlWWPS.
BONEY·LEIION

30
COUNT BAG

Lepealomeet
There will be a regular meet·
lng of the Racine American

' '

8.8¢

.

- .. -·----

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5010

aoudy tonight. Low In mid
301. Hlp ln mid 508. Chance of
rain 80 percent.

Page _5

•

•

at

2 S.c!iona. 14 Pogoo 26 Cenu

Pomero,y-Middleport. Ohio; W~nesday. JanlJary 31. ·1990

Vo1.40, No.1il&amp;
CopyriAhted 1890 .

(;ran~ Will p~vide,
By NANCY YOACHAM

cated miners will benefit from
News Saff
· the grant.
.
A . $200,000 worker training
The Tri-County Community
grant' to assist coal miners wlto Action Agency, Athens; with
were laid orr rrom Southern Ohio experience In operating an
Coal Company as a result of last Industry-targeted retraining prO.
fall's physical merger of Meigs gram oflhls type, wllladmlrtlster
Mine No. 1 and Raccoon Mine No. the grant from OBES. Gallla·
3, was announced this morning at Meigs and Jackson-VInton Com·
a press conference In Athens.
munlty Action Agencies will act
The announcement of the grant as subcontractors to put the
from the Ohio Bureau of Employ- program Into effect In this area
ment Services came -from State through their respective .J TPA
Sen. Jan Michael Long, D· offices.
Chiillcilthe, and State Rep. Mary
It was reported that the money
Abel, D·Athens. It Is expe.c ted to the two subcontracting agen·
that apprQxlmately 100 dlslo·
will be distributed on a basis

A Multlmodlo Inc. Newapopor

•

trairting for idled mtners

proportionate to the number of
displaced miners In the counties
served by the agencies. With 33
affected miners In Meigs County,
22 In Gallla, and another 20·to 30
I~ Mason and Jackson Counties
In West VIrginia, It would appear
that Gallla-Melgs C.A .A. would
receive a sizable portion of the
available funds.
Even though the money Is
coming from the State of Ohio,
displaced workers from West
VIrginia who worked for SOICCO
may also take advantage or the
training services offered, it was
pointed oui. Displaced miners

~ntlilel

-TISSUE- ,

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59
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.

.12 PIECE SET OF t6oz.

49

12 01.

.

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TARN-X
TARNISH
REMOVER

'

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$2. 99,
.c

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REG.

5

4.99

.

':hian sentenced

for drug trafficking

SAPPHIRE OR CRYSTAL

I

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1\..:BD TEA GLASSES

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••••••••
••' •••••
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from Athens County will also will need very little additional
bj!neflt.
,
training because they are hlgltly
Because the money. must be skilled workers already. Many
spent by Juty, training which will displaced miners only need help
be available for miners will he In improving Interviewing skills
short term, explained Mona and writing resumes In order to
Craig, director of JTPA Opera· lind other jobs.
tions forTri·County C.A.A. Craig
Craig admitted that not all
mentioned short term programs miners will be able to find jobs In
available at Hocking Technical the Immediate locale, .but that If
College In Nelsonville a~ an high-paying jobs can be located
example of possible training. outside the area. some miners
However, other area educational would be willing to move. ''Jobs
facilities might also l:)e able to do exist," said Craig, "but they
provide the type ·of compressed usually can't be round on the
tralrilnl!: pr()l!:rams necessary.
· street. They must be searched!
Craig noted that some miners out." JTPA job developers will
.

'

Thomas R. Quillen, 35, Route
143, Pomeroy, appeared In Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
Tuesday morning ~efore Judge
Fred W. Crow ln for sentencing
on a ·ptld\' plea of guilty to a
charge. of trafficking I!I ·drugs
(cultivation ·of marijuana). The
charge was contained In a bill of
Information filed Dec. 12, 1989, by
Prosecuting Attorney Steven L.
Story. ·
Cultivation, as charged In the
bill of Information, ·ts a felony of
the fourth degree, according to
Paul Gerard, criminal bailiff for
the common pleas court.
Quillen was charged as a result
of an Incident which occurred In

WASHINGTON (UP!)
Budget dlrectoor Richard Dar·
man came to Capitol Hill to
outline President Bush's proposed budget lor 1991, but tound
• himself fending ·off accusations
. from angry House Democrats
tbat the $1.23 trillion spending
plan contains lies, gimmicks and
Intimidation. . .
Democrats on the House
Budget Committee . charged
Tuesday that the administration
avoided tough choices, like In·
cliidlng new taxes to cut. the
detltlt. Some· accusations became so personal that House
Budget Ctia!rrllan Leon Panel ta,
D'·Callf., suggj!sted Darman
write them off as political
rhetoric.
·
· Darman was expected to facl!
.. ...,.·~~,, ~IP.cJ~m W~nes4By dur- .
a &gt;· •!IChedllleci ' appearance
before · tlie ' Senate Budget
Committee.
·
·
Democrats condemned· Bush
for proposing. what several called
an unrealistically high defense
budget thaJ falls to account for
reforms In Eastern Europe and
the reduced Soviet military
threat.
Bush proposed more money·lor
defense next year; but less than
needed to keep pace with lnfla·

August of last year at his
residence In which sheriff's depu·
ties found marijuana growing In
pdts behind the home. A total of
13 plants were seized, Gerard
said.
.
Judge Crow sentenced Quillen
to a definite term of one ·year' In
prison, as recommended by the
prosecutor, and ordered a fine of
$2,()00. Quillen was remanded to
the custody or the sheriff until he
Is transported to the Orient
Correctional Reception Center to
begin his sentence.
Guy Wayne Shuler, 27, Ru·
!land, appeared Tuesday morn·
lng before Judge Crow to enter a
Continued on page 7

Gorbachev has no intention ..of resigning
,
....

~

NA'I'V84
ai 'BOI IU n.AVOit A,
'
''

2. ,~.··

.

FRUTH PHARMi(Y· CAN .REfR'tHEh
FOLLOWING TO YOU FOR HOME. USE
•COMODE CHAIRS
•HUMIDIFIERS.
•WALKERS

·.~

.'

FOR ADULTS AND' CHILDREN·
·ALL US AT 992~6491

\

Legion Poll 602 on Tbunday at
7:30 p.m. Refreshments will be
sei'VI!d following the meeting.

Pick 4

.

'

"As Seen On TV"

Funeral services for Helen
Ellza beth Cavender Burkhart,
81, of Middleport, who dleii
Sunday morning at her res!·
dence, will be held at 10 a.m.
Thursday at the Rawlings-Coats·
Fisher Funeral Home , In
Middleport.
AI Hartson will officiate at the
services. Burial will be In· Cun·
nlngham Memorial Park In St.
Albans, W. Va. Friends may call
2 to 4 and 6 to 8 p.m. Wednesday
at the funeral home."
·
Born In Cincinnati, she was the
daughter or the late Kathryn M.
Vaughan, She was manager of
the Darling Dress Shop In Cha·
rleston for many years, a
member or the Middleport
Church or Christ, and attended
tbe Friendship Bible Coffee.
. Survivors Include several close
friends, J. L. and Mary Stewart
of Pomeroy, Clay and Geneva
Tuttle, Middleport, David and
Joy Russell, Parkersburg, Eric,
Ryan and Mary Russell, Par·kersburg, and C. Robert Kautz
· '
Lexington, Ky.
She was preceded In death by
her mother, her first husband,
Walter Lee Cavender, and her
second husband, Herschel G.
Burkhart.

....;...--Mei88 announcements---

022

CY IN MIDDLEP·ORT
VELVET ··.
BATJIROOM,"

Helen Burkhart

The lunch menu. for the remainder of the week for Eaatern
Local has been announced.
Wednesday: taco aalad with
com chiiJI, peas, fruit, and milk.
Thursday: cheeseburger,
baked beans, fruit, cookie and
milk.
.
Friday: flab, tater tots, fruit,
andmUk.

Pick 3

.. . '

her husband, Dana Sau ters, an
Infant daughter, three brothers,
Lash, Harold, and Everett Dou·
glas, and two sisters, Lydia Cain
and Edith Smith.
Services will be Thursday, 1
p.m .. at the Hughes Funeral
Home In Athens with · the Rev.
Merlin Teets officiating. Burial
will be In the Pleasant Hill
·cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home on Wednesday from 2·4
p.m. and 7-9 p.m . .

Lunch menu

Ohio Lottery

work closely with clients In
searching out job possibilities,
Other areas where the grant
may assist miners will be with
transportation and child care, In
order to ensure that miners will
be able to take advantage of
available training programs .
"As state legislators, It is
Imperative that we work toward
providing training and assist·
ance to displaced wogkers In
Southern OhiO," stat~d Long and
Abel.
Both legislators were com·
mended by those at th e meeting
Continued on page 7.

Bush avoids ·tough choices, Dems charge ,

--Area deaths· -Inez Stephens

Hoyas ·
romp past
Seton Hall

MOSCOW (UPI)
Mikhail
Gorbachev said Wednesday lie
has no Intention of resigning as
chief or the Soviet Communist
P,!lrty, dismissing rumors l!e
might step down a.S ''groundless
suppositions," the official news
agency Tass said.
Tass later reported Pre!!ldent
Bush called Gorbachev Wednes·
day and that the men "exchanged opinions on topical
International ·Issues, predoml·
nantly concerning Europe, and
on prospects for the arms reduc·

lion qegotiatlons."
· The report said the men
"reaffirmed their determination
to act In the spirit or the Malta
accords" reached at their sum·
mit on the Mediterranean ls.land
late last year, and "noted . the
Importance of regular Soviet·
American summit contacts ... "
The TfSS report did .not say If
Gorbachev's future was
· discussed.
Foreign Ministry spokesman
Gef\nady Geraslmov said the
rumors were "lll·lntentioned."
Tass and Radio Moscow said
·, Gorbachev made tbe, denial In
remarks to reporters at a recepContlnued on page 1

-----~--

.. -

-

992-6491'
786 Nort.h
. Second
. .

Middleport,
Ohi·o ··
,I

•

'

Three
injured
in· two Pomeroy accidents
.
.

Three persons received minor
Injuries In two accidents ,which
occurred earty Tuesday evening
at the same location.
Both accidents happened at the
Intersection of Sycamore ' and
East Main In Pomeroy.
According to Pomeroy pollee,
the first occurred ai 5:37p.m. A
vehicle driven by Jean Ellen
Allen, 42, Syracuse, was struck
on tlie left front and side as she
P!'lled from Sycamore onto East
Main, by a car driven by Garry
Black, 36, Portland, who failed to
stop for the red light. Both
vehicles had moderate damage.
Both Allen and Black were
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hosjiltlll, - where- they- w~re
treated and released, ·by the
Pomeroy unit of the ¥elgs
County Emergency Medical
Service.
Black was charged with run·
nlng i red light and no financial
responslblllty.
The second accident to occur at'
the Intersection remains under
Investigation since one of the
veblcles left the IICene.
Pollee reported that a vehicle
driven by .Mary Kay Braley, 44,
Pomeroy, was hit In the rear by a
car whlc)) fied the scene. It was
·later found' on Powell's Super
Valu parking lot and the owner
was determined to be Charlotte
'

Patterson, Pomeroy. The driver
of the car has not been deter·
mined and the accident remains
under Investigation.
Both the rear of the Braley car
and the front of the Patterson car
had heavy damage.
Braley was taken by the
Pomerov EMS to.Yeterans Mem·

orlal Hospital where she was
treated and released.
Pollee are also Investigating
some damage to a truck owned
by Charles Knapp, Jr. while It
was parked pn East Main St. late
Tuesday night . Knapp had reportedly been In a business and

when he returned to the vehicle,
he found that the back sliding
window .had been damaged and'
that some money In the glove
compartment had been taken.
The damage and money taken
totaled about $500, pollee
reported.

Public Health Week emphasizes
.
development of healthy lifestyles
-

By CHARLENE HOEn.JCii
quitting which she says are
Seallnel Staff Writer
helpful to many.
Be a winner by quitting Among the tips given by the
smoking, that Is!
nursing director are:
That's the word from Norma
-Smoke one less cigarette
Torres, R.N., nursing-director at every day.
the Meigs County Health
-Make each cigarette a spe·
Department.
clal decision, and put off making
Since this Is Public Health the decision.
-Don't give up cigarettes,
Week, special emphasis Is being
placed on developing healthy completely. Carry one with you
lifestyles.
In caSe of heed, and you'll find
It's not easy to quit smoking, • you're saving It permanently.
-Don't quite "forever'', Just
Ms. Torres admits. She said that
about 50 percent of,people who stop for a day, and then tomor·
quit smoking are succeslful by row try It for anoqter day, .and
doing It "cold turkey." ·The first . tomorrow ...and tomorrow.
48 houn are tbe moat critical and :
-Tell your friendS ancj family
after that It get easier, she you'requltdng. A public commit·
pointed out, and then gave tips 011 ment bo~tets WIIJ power.

.

-Pick a "quit " day , and do it.
-Hide all evidence of cl·
· garettes, like ashtrays and
matches.
-Lay In a .supply of chewi ng
gum, cough drops, and carrol
slicks.
-Nervousness and hunger are
signs of the body's readjustm ent.
U they are hard to manage, ask
your doctor for help.
· Ms. Torres pointed out that 30
m filion Americans have quit
smoking .c:lgarettes.
They know that smoking Is not
Continued on page 7

,Buck·seeks reelectlon a8 probate judge
·

Prices Good
At The
Micldlepo'rt
·Store Only

tlon, meaning a cut In the ments to doctors and hospitals by eer - and Mr. Hyde- Darman
Pentagon's buying power In the $5.5 billion next. year Is a tough
the budgeteer." Schumer said. ·
fiscal year starting oct. 1.
·"One side or you sees the
choice tor Congress, not Bush .
House Republicans defended
problem and the other side Is
"Dick. you don't know what a
Bush's budget as a credible tough choice Is," Russo told
unwilling to really grasp it."
starting point. But they did so Darman. "The tough choice lo~ .
Rep. Barbara Boxer, D-Cal!f,,
without the passion that accom- you to Is soak the rich and make
accused the administration of
panied the Democratic attacks.
"Intimidation" against Congress
them pay higher taxes. It (Bush's
"Those who do not like your budg,et) only makes Iough choi- by proposing military base clos·
budget have It Incumbent on ces ln my direction. It doesn't
lngs that save less money than .
them to produce__ ibelr better make tough choices In your
would strategic weapons cuts.
budget," said Rep. Bill Frenzel direction."
Her San Francisco district was
of Minnesota. "Those who like
Darman denied the charge and
target ed for base closings last
bold strokes can put them on the
assured Russo that "I feel some
year and by the Pentagon this
table."
·
~ of the same frustrations" about
week.
· · .T he most bitter Democrat was
the budget process.
Rep. Jim Slattery. D-Kan. ,
Rep. Marty Russo or Illinois, a
Panetta , who called Bush's
fumed tha t Bush's budget prosix-year veteran of the· budget
budget "a disappointment,"
motes more "smoke and mir·
panel.
asked Darman how he can say
rors" solutions lo budge t
"This budget process stinks Bush offered an honest budget
problems.
and lies," he told Darman when It contains money-saving
He said continued use of the
Tuesday during .a lengthy out· gimmicks, which Panetta listed. Social Security Irust lund surplu s
burst during which he said he . "I lh\Jik every one or the.se Is . to mask the deficit' ~ size Wi!S
could' no! · wall lo' get off tl)e defensible,'' Darman countered,
"\he biggest lie we have told the
~mmlttee.
offering to. provide Panetta w,lth
American people" and said
"Aillt Is Is one big chlirade .... "a list of gimmicks Invented by.
Bush's plan to use the surplus to
We don't-deal in reality," Russo
the Congress" thai numbers
slash the national debt after 1993
said.
·
was "another scaru."
more than 100.
Ec holng comments of other
Rep. Charles Schumer, 0"Our proposal is not ,s moke and
Democrats, Russo accused Dar· N.Y ., said Darman had' a split
mirrors.'' replied an agitated
man of defending a budget that personality - one that makes
Darman. "It will gel the deficit
either dropped tough choices ·tn reasoned speeches about fiscal
down. There lsn 't .a trac(' .o f .
Congress's lap or. avoided them problems ant! another that dedishonesty In this (budget)
altogether.
.
·
fends a budget that avoids
presentation."
,
He said the administration solving those problems .
Darman told Slattery his accu-.
proposal to cut Medicare pay"It's almost like we ·have Dr. . sa !Ions were "out of bounds."
Jekyll - Darman the pamphlet ·

Robert Buck of Pomeroy has
filed with the Melp County
Board of Eleetlons a petition of
candidacy for another term u
Judge ' of the Melp County
Probate and Juvenile Court. ,
He baa been 1n that poi!Uon
llnce 19?9. 1:be new sill year 1erm
will commence In 1991.
PriOr to belltl elected judge of
the Probate and JuvenUe Court,
the Melp County native served a
four year term as Juctce of tbe
Meigs County Court, 19711·78.
Before that he was an assistant

prosecuting attorney ·for Meigs · Judp Buck has b1!en active In Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary
CountY for two veara.
numerous church and commun· · Club,· and baa worked with the
Active In s~te Jpdlclal affairs, lty attain. He ·II a member of Melp County .Ja~ 'alld the
Judge Buck was elected to the Trinity ConcrepUonal .CIJurch Melp County Cllaptllr ~ the
executive committee of the 9111o wllere he hu Mrved u deacon, American Red
JuvenUe Judi• Allaoclatlon In elder, choir member, SUnday
Judge Buck II nall'l'letl 110 till
1983 and aerwd' on lbat commit· schoolauperlntendent and preal· former Debbl Ketbaqll, a PlY•
tee until tliis year wben he wu dent ·of Coun!:ll. He replarly chololtat In the Metal Coull)'
named a vice president of tile partlclpltes In the Bil Bend achooll. They ate tbe pareata of
ohio Juvenile Judlfll AIIIIOCla· Mlnatrel Auqclatlon mu1lcal three daqhtera, Jennifer Lyttn
tton. He bu been recognized with productlona, aervea on the Home and Julllnne Re-, hotb · 1111·
10 awards tram tbe Oblo Su· Health Servlct11 Advllory Board, dents at Meip Hl&amp;h Scbool,·and
preme Court touupertor judicial and Ia a member of Pomeroy Jacquel)'ll 'Louise, • Pomeroy
aervtce to the a)ate.
Loclp.164, F. and A. M,
elementary school student. .
He Is a past president of the
·

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er-. ·

--- -- ·-

· ~" -:-~------...,.-----~!;----·--·--

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