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Pea•

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¢

.

- .. -·----

-~

--

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- ,

.·

_. .lOLL PACK'

59
:

'

'

1

~·#
' ·.:~. :
~ -··
:.

'

••

·-·

~ '

NFWPORTBYANCHORHOC~G

.

.12 PIECE SET OF t6oz.

49

12 01.

.

.• l ~

TARN-X
TARNISH
REMOVER

'

·\ · ·

.,

!'··

$2. 99,
.c

I ,· ,._.
REG.

5

4.99

.

':hian sentenced

for drug trafficking

SAPPHIRE OR CRYSTAL

I

'

Nt::~·'*:....~

1\..:BD TEA GLASSES

t=(-c -J .

:

.

~•u·r~:

••••••••
••' •••••
1- . I
.

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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Cpmmentary
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111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED T(l THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA .

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lJ!b

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ROBERT L: WINGETI'
Publisher

PAT WHrrEHEAD
Alotistaat Publisher/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. The;y lbouklbeleoo tbao SOO
words lon1. AU lettero are oubJect tu edltln1 and mulli be algned with
aame, addreso and telephone number. No unoiped lettero wUI be·published. Leltero should be In pod lalite, oddreoslniiAiueo, not peroonall·

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Page 2-The Deily Siudnel
Pomeroy MkldhpDI't. Ohio
-~Uday, JMUII'Y 31, 1~

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:.Iranian homoSexuals fear for their liveS

·The Daily Sentinel

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1

Whynota
.
'peace·dividend'?
By LEON DANIEL
UPI Senior Edllor

WASHINGTON- The medleval government oflranclebrated
. the New Ye.a r by beheading
homosexuals.
Tbls Is the government he!lded
by Hashemi Ra!sanjanl, whom
both George Bush ·and Ronald
Reagan have called " moderate"
· In closed-door meetings o! While,
· House o!flclals·.
In fact, both Reagan and Bush
have had secret communications
wlthRafsanjanlabouttheAmerlcan hostages who are held by
pro-Iranian terrorist groups In
Lebanon.
This Is moderate Rafsanjan l's
Idea of justice:
On New Year's Eve, Iran's
Chief Justice Morteza Moghtadal
held private discussions with
lower judges and court otflclals
to outline a new policy toward
.homosexuals. ·
"The religious punishment for
the despicable act of liomosexu.
allty Is death for both parties,"
Moghtadal said. The judge presiding over the caSe, has five
opt ions for execu t ion o!
homosexuals :
They are either to be " beheaded by a sword"; " stoned to
death" ; "thrown down fro":~ a

height such as a mountain or tall
building"; "die under the rubble
·at a wall demolished on their
head"; or " burned alive."
Moghtadal added: .''It is even
permitted that In puniShlog such
a despicable act, one of the first ·
four punishments be lmplemented and . then have their
corpse bur ned.''
· On New )I'ear's · Day, three
accused · homosexual men were
'beheaded In one of the city
squares o! Nahavand, ·and two
accused lesbians were stoned to
death In the city of Langrood,
according to our Iranian sources.
ThiS Is a new practice that
should come under the scrutiny
o! the United Nations Special
Representative, Reynaldo GaIIndo Pohl. who has received an
unusual. Invitation to viSit Teheran to Investigate human rights
abuses. ·· '
· ·
Pohl has already spoken with
former political priSoners of the
Rafsanjanl regime who have told
him horror stories few could
stomach. Homosexuals are not
the only ones who a r e
persecuted.
One woman told Pohl she knew
of another . woman who was

WASHINGTON -President Bush unwisely has opted for more
weaponry, declining to declare a •'peace dividend' • that could finance
neglected domestic needs and aid emerging deq10cracles.
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With the Cold War ended, the commander-In-chief's 1991 budget
·,
emphasiZes military spending while the government plunges deeper
•
t/:1..
Into «)ebt.
. .
.Blish has declll\ed'tocancel a single major new weapons system. He
.
(!) 0 • · ~
Insists on continuing to deploy a global navy and demands five more
~)
. .stealth bombers and a ~;~ew Trident submarine.
A stealth bomber is o! new use at all in attacking the problems oft he
37 mUllon Americans who are medically uninsured.
0
A Trident submarine can do nothing to reinforce the beleaguered
Polish economy.
'
Faced with such critical problems at home and opportunities
abroad, the administration came up with a budget that leaves the
Pentagon's costliest weapons untouched and makes no fundamental .
changes In U.S. forces overseas.
At a time when the United States and the Soviet Union are moving to
conclude a treaty reducing strategic weapons, one target for cuttiQg
by CongresS Is the administration's proposed $!100 mUIIo111ncrease lor
the "Star Wars" missile defense system .
·
· Those stealth bombers that cost more than $500 million each als(l
are vulnerable In congressional debate on the budget.
Defending the · administration's budget prloriUes, Defe11se
Secretary Dick Cheney Insists the threat posed by Soviet nuclear
forces has not diminiShed substantially.
.
But there Is Increasing evidence that the United Stat.es is Dow less
threatened by Moscow's long-range nuclear1 forces than by Its own
debt-ridden economy.
Yet as communist power diminishes throughout the world, along
with the threat o! Soviet attack, Bush lnsls ts on arming f!lr nuclear
war.
·
Budget director Richard Darman scoffs openly at the notion of a
peace dividend, deriding It as "wonderland" fantasy ..
If.the adminiStration has fumbled an opportunity, it still is possible
for Congress to declare a peace ciiVldend.
To succeed In the upcoming nine-month battle over the president's
$1.23 trillion budget, lawmakers must shift liuge chunks of money
!tom the Pentagon's $303 billion budgelto domestic programs, such
as health, education and the war on drugs.
" It there's going to be a peace d\vldend·that amounts to anything,"
said Senate Budget Committee Chalnnan Jim Sasser. D-Tenn .• ''this .
Gongress Is going to have to carve It out."
Debate on defense spending becomes Increasingly critical as
Congress searches for ways to aid !tnanclally emerging democracies.
Fragile new government!! In Eastern Euro~ will need cash as well as
It has now been seven years
The lastest
\\ tor
encouragement to survive.
since the National Commission mandatory graouans c\tng to
As the budget battle begins, Bush enjoys an approval rating In the
on Excellence In Education In · begin In 1993-94 scho'b1 "'&lt;\r,
polls of a whopping 80 percent.
1983 shocked the American pub- student proflclepey testing in the ·
To achieve that popularity, ' the P-resident pledged bold new
lie with Its report on the s~d s.tate , . fourth, slxthi' eighth and lOth
Initiatives, At the same time, however, he promiSed no new taxes and
Into which the nation's education grades and new states commit•
refused to reduce significantly military spending.
system had fallen. The report. tees to oversee education
So It was perhaps Inevitable that eventually Bush would widen the
entitled "A Nation at Risk: The progams.
gap between his presidency's promise and Its performance.
Imperative for Educational ReThe amount of money Ohioans
form," touched a responsive spend on education also has
chord with lawmakers from Ohio Increased dramatically since
and other states with Its strongly 1983. State dollars now pay for
· A thought!()r the day: Actress Tallulah Bankhead said, " I'd rather worded warned that unless some- 52.5 percent of the cost of
be strongly wrong than weakly right."
·
thing was done to Improve the education, upo from 50.7 percer:t
Untied States' medicare educa- In 1983. Before 1983, the local
tion system, Amerlca'sabilllty to share was greater than, the state
compete worldwide would be share. .
hampered. · ·
In my position as ranking
·Ohio leglsrators like those In DemocratlcontheSenateEducamost other states, have acted tion and Retirement Committee.
responslblly since then by pass- I hay,e been able the past few ·
lng a blizzard of laws aimed at years to see how these spending
'·
Improving educational quality. Improvements and new require-

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Jack Anderson and Dale Van -"1-t{a
Imprisoned for wearm. "!nap- lng." But our sources say thal'sa
proprtate clothing." Another had euphemism for political executhe right clothes, but she was lions o! supporters of ihe Peothrown In priSon· because she pie's Mojahedln, the largest
rode ~-a taxi; unescorted.
·
opposition group In Iran.
Tbls witness told of numerous
Iranian otrlclals have also
women who cracked under the admitted to at least 26executlons
torture a11d either went" mad or by stoning last year . Fourteen
·committed suicide. She knew of were women "convicted o! aduione who died drinking cleaning tery or pro~titutlon. "lnonecase,
fluid, another who hanged her- 12 women and three men were
self and a third who cut her stoned to death on a soccer !leld
wrists.
by spectators who had come for
· · Another woman told Pohl she ihe soccer ga,me. ·
·
had witnessed the killing under
. Iran' s law spells out the rules
torture of three different women, for stoning - the r ocks must be
whose names she knew, as well · small enough so they don't kill
. asthetortureofalO-year-oldglrl the victim Instantly, but large
In a wheelchair, whose name she enough so they .can properly be
did not know.
called stones.
•
The Iranian -government has
Ra!sanjanl's reginll!, In o!!lnot admitted to Pohl that tens of clal commuJiicattoris, has taken
thousands of pollllc;ll prisoners,
a toUgh defensive posture with
but . opposition groups to the the United Nations. "Under no
Rafsanjan l regime claim the circumstances will the ·Isliunlc
-prisoners exist. .
Republic of Iran ever give up the
Iran has admitted to a number practice o! such divine laws and
of executions - most of them by standards which constitute the
hj1nging-lncludlng900between fundamental tenets o! the belief
January apd Ma y of last year. system among! billion Moslems
The Rafsanjanl government In the world and which must duly
claimed that most of the execube regarded as a credible legal
lions were for ':drug tra!!lck- system In the world."

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Education refonn at· a crossroads

,..
:Berry s World.

ments have been affecting the
'luallty of · Ohio's pubJ[c educatlon. ['m pleased to report that 1
see Improvements. Students 'in une&lt;jual dlstrlbution'that hurts so
districts across the state, 1 many school districts In southern
believe, have the capability of and southeastern Ohio. Olilo' s
getting a better education than system of hurt or dered reforms
they did seven years ago because · to more evenly divide school
o! thls Infusion of cash.
district Income. Unless lawmakLast week, ·the committee ers act, and act quickly, we are
heard budget experts outline how just Inviting Intervention by the ·
state funding has Improved. The courts.
state's budget of!lce reported
The select committee on which
that the state education spending I am serving Is planning several
has Increased from $1.85 .billion meetings over the next lew. •
In 1980 to more than $3.9 billion In months to discuss federal and
the current fiscal year. On a per state school funding. As always, I
pupil basiS, state support has wei&lt;:Qme · your comments by
Increased 57.6 percent' without writing to me,, Senator Jan
accounting (or Inflation.
,
Mlchae) Long, In care Of the
. This Is heartening Information, StateHouse. Colu~Dbus, Ohio
built means little unless we can 43215, or by calllng ·_me at (614)
correct the current svstem of 466-8156.

Sen. Jan M. Long

Do we· shortchange U. S. students · ~;~;~n

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Pome~oy- Middlaport, Ohio

".,.,. udly • .1-...y 31• .1880

WASHINGTON (NEA) - The
Buch administration has come
out swinging In an attempt to
discredit a new study that claims
the U,nlted States has one of the
worst records among all Industrlallzed nations In funding primary and secondary education.
·
Purlng his presidential campalgn, George Bush said he
wanted to be "the education
president." Since Ills election
president. '' Since his election, he·
and his edUClUion secretary ,
·Lauro P. Cavazos, have made
·numerous statements lauding
the United States for havlnlt
among the most lavishly funded
education system In the world.
Wrong, ·dead wrong, aays a
newly releued study Issued by
the Economic PIJIICy In~tltute, a
Washington-based economic
think tank.
•
· Researchers Edith Rasell and
Lawrenee Mlsbel contend In a
report entitled "Shortt!hanging
Education" that the United
Statee lookl good Is tho! .Bush
admlnlltratlon's analysis be·
cauM of the disproportionate
Impact of ltlgher-educallon
spending. .
The United States clearly has '
the world-' s largest post ·
secondary education system,
both In terms of student numbers

and money spent on universities,
graduate and professional
schools. When this massive
spending Is factored 'II) to the
general education equation, the
United States does Indeed rank
near. the top In Its support of
education.
Rasell and Mishel argue, however. that a much betf!:!r measure
of overall commlttment toeduca·
lion Is u.s. spending on primary
and secondary education _
grades K-12.
The researchers concluded
that we spend less on K-l2
education that any of 16 IndustrlaiiZed countries, except Ireland and Australia, and tar less
than Japan or Germany. They
conclllde that the United States
would have to Increase Its
funding of pre-college education
by ~~ blllloll annually just to
bring our spendil)g to a rate even
with the average lndustrlsiiZed
nation.
Dead wrong, says the Educalion Department. It claims thaf
the two researchers have "mixed
apples, oranges and moon beams
to produce an Indigestible
concoction."
.
Essentially, the Economic PolIcy Institute relies on tile percent
of national Income spent on
education as Its main measure.

The United States spent 4.1
There Is '!'ore to this argument
percent of national income on that statisticians debating arK-12 education In 1985 (the most ca ne methods of analysis .
recent year for which worldwide Whether the study Is discredited
comparatlye numbers are '!Vall- or not may affect futureeduatlon
able) . Japan spend 4.8 percent, Si;X'ndlng.
Germany 4. 6 percent and . On almost the sljme day as the
. Sweden, the world leader, more Institute was Issuing Its !lndlngs,
than 7 percent.
'
the results of t1Je annual National
The Education Department Assessment of Educational Prosays that percent .o! national gress were also released.
"
Income Is an "Inappropriate,
The •report Is based on an
unaccepted measure.'' A better annual test given to high-school
measure, It contends, Is per-pupil juniors. It found that In 1988 only
spending. Using tbls measure, three of 10 taking the test
the United States -ranks second performed "ade&lt;juately" on an
only to SwUzerland.
analytic-writing test; and only
The Education . Department half were granded "a~ept" In a
also gave an f!Xample It says realjlng test.
pro~s Its point. Last year
The test did .show that higher
)l(lsslsslppl spent 3.9 percent o! numbers of minorities ·were
state Income on education wblle testing at least at . "minimal"
Minnesota spent"almCISt twice as
standards of reading and writ·
much per pupU tllan Mississippi
lng. But the overall percentapa
- $4,180 vs. $2,3!!0. 1
of those grad,e d "adequate" and
The Institute, however, diS·
"~dept" were no higher 'tn 1918
agrees with these numbers.
than In 1980.
UsiiiJ a more comple'l rormula
Education ..Secretary..Cavazo.
than the Education Department
says he Is appalled. So are
to measure per-pupil spending vartou members of Congr-.
against• per capita Income, It
They, and the admlnlatratlon,
again rankl theUnll{!c!StatesNo.
see part of the answer as
14 out of161ndustrlallzed natloos
slplflcant reforms In the U.S.
In K-12 spending.
education system. However
"We don' t tell them what they
some In Congress also believe
want to llear," ~ RaaeU. "I
more feaderal spending for fed·
guess that's why tl)ey. are trying
eralspeRdlqforprlmaryeducato dlacredlt our stUdy.' '
tlon to be part of tbe answers.

The ..,..
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Vinton County red hot in 103-54 TVC victory over Meigs .

•me u tbe vu!ap lltM a 32-15 .. and 2-11 In the TVC.
From the line the VIkings hltl7 of lnjl. 71-!!8. At hens downed
•1'1111 advutapll balldtng'up - Jay Palmer whO led his team 241or 70 percent.
Nelsonville-Yor k 70-53 In a nonanci Tulldey ntcht tile Vtnton a 16-illeld at tbe half.
from a two point deficit with two
For Meigs Cary Betzlng 11!11 the league tilt, Miller edged Trimble,
County VWnp were -bini.
Ill tile lleCOIMl half tile Miraud- minutia rematpinl to a five point way with 16, Mike Van Meter . 4643 and Belpre slipped past
Tbe Vlldnp bit~~ 1J1e1r,tJnt era played almatt even 'with life · victOry over Meigl on saturday , scored 14 and Robbie Fields Ale~ander , 59-56.
23 sbota llld Placed four mn In bolt team, wttb the Vlldnp led the VIking scoriq parade added 10. Meigs hit 19 o! 33 for a
In the reserve contest, VInton
double IIJures In roJ!lllf to a OUIIOoriD&amp; Melp 5-29 but 'by . with25polnts. ShawnSpeakman warm 57 percent, and 14 of 22 County pulledaway lntheend for
11J3.54 victory over the Meigl thea the dU~Bae wu ·doDe.
added 19, Tom Reid 15 and Jason from the line for 64. The Maraud- a 47-39 victory over the Mar audMarauden.
The Vlklnp with the wtn raise Caudill 14. Palmer grabbed 10 o! ers had, 23 rebounds with Mike ers. Chad Zlnn of Vinton County
The VIkings jumped out to a · thelrrec:ordto7-8overall, aild6-6 his teams 32 rebounds. The Van Meter grabbing 7, and and Ter ry McGuire of Meigs
.~-41eadllldroDed loa 3f-101ead io tbeTVC. Melp who Iosito the VIkings hit 39 of 65from the floor Robbie Fields 6.
each scored 13.
at theendQ!the,lrstqiiBl'ter. Till! Vllanp 1134 ·on Tuesday night tl!r a sizzling 60 percent, lnclud- . In otherTVC outings Tuesday,
M~lgs will host Belpre on
second quarter waa more Q! the ~W 'It's record fan 102-14 overall lng s from three point q mge. Wellston bombed Federal Hock· Friday night In their flnalbome

game of the seuon. and Saturday the Marauders will tr;IVel up
Route 33 to take on the state's
11th ranked Division II team the ·
At hens .Bulldogs.
Box score
Melgs ............. lO 151316 - 54
VInton ....... ..... 34 32 16 21 - 103
VINTON Rob Lindsey
2-0-0-4, _Artie Hammond
1-0-1-3. Tl m S t a I e Y.
3-0-0-6. To m R e I d .
Con tinued on page 4

· Two consecutive 3-Polnt field Redlllen mentor John Lawhorn them to stay within range as they
goals 1lY shooting guard Brad ' commented. ·"In the ftrat, Ur- trailed by six at the Intermission:
Schuber t In the aecol!d half gave · bana did whatever It wanted to do
Urbana created Its largestlead
the University. of Rio Grande with the ball. In the second, It· (50-38) In thefirsttwomlnutesof
men's basketball team a fl!ur- turned our way and thosetwoblg· the second half on field gOals by
point lead .a nd ellouah momen· 3&amp; from SchuiH!rt were deflnltei'y · Will Goins and Kerwin Tliomptum to defeat Urbana, 86'-74,1n an the turnaround for us."
son. However. John Lambcke hit
Intense Mid-Ohio (;onference en- · · Paced by guard AnthQny Har- four Points, Troy Donal!lson two,
counter Tuesday atLyneCenter. · rls; who acored 23 In 'the game, andSchubertandErslan contrl~
"Wehlta wall.'''urbii!IBCoach the Blue Knlgbt,s traded the lead · uted irlfecta shots, to narrow the
Bob Ronal said of Rio Grande's with, Rio Gi-an~e twice In a slow range to oulscore the Blue
game. '.'There wasp.'t Jlluch· openiJI&amp; and then outran the hosts Knights 12-2 and' trail by two
depth on our part to liegln'wtth, . -8-0. . · · ··
•
&lt;52-501 at 14:41.
.
bu-t we got up ·b y' 12 and from .·, 'J'Iii!'lll!cime~ were slow coming
D,a rlus Williams' basket at
there. we Just ran out of gas."
back, 11111 tnfecta shots_ and 10:58 put Rio Grande back In
' ''There were two . halves, " con~entrated Inside play allowed · · posse~slon of the lead (56-55) for

feated Blu!flon, 83-69, In a
non-conference encounter. Cedarville Is at Tiffin tonight.
Box score:
RIO GRANDE (86) - Gary .
Harrison, 2-5-9; Mark 'Erslan,
0-2-4-10; Brad Schubert, 2-5-2-21 ;
Jeff Brown, 0-2-0-6; Troy Donaldson, 8-1-17; Johri Lambcke, 4-3-·
11; Dar ius Williams, 3-4-10; Tim ·
Christi an, 1-0-2. TOTALS Z0-9-18- '
86.
URBANA (74) - Will Goins,'
4·1-9; Kerwin Thompson. 3·2-Q12; Jeff Courter, 4-0-8; Anthony
Harris, 9-5-23; John Curtis, 5-0;
10; Duane Tabor, 2-0-4; TOdd"
Char les, 1-0-2; Marty Socha,
3-0-6. TOTALS 31·2-1-74.
'
Halftime scorel Urbana«, Rio

·.

S, D.l'fl: IIAB8a

Whela

)'011°1'1'

bDt )ICMt're bot,

Second half·rally deflates·-Urbana; Redmen Win, 86-7~
'ihe first lime since 14: 45 In the asof 24 free throw attempts for75
opening halt. Harris knotted the percent. They r ecor(jed 11 tur·
score at 57, Thompson netted a novers a nd 33 rebound s. Urbana
basket and Harris added two to connected on 33 of 60 a ttempts
lead the Redmen61-57at9: 19, but !rom the !loor for 55 percent and
Donaldson hli a bucket 16 se- hit six of Its seven foul shot tr ies
conds later and Schubert !ol- for 85.7 percent. The Blue
lowed up with a 3-polnter to lead Knights never had a tur nover ,
62-61. Schubert posted his second but snatched only 24 boards.
The win Improves R io
straight tri!ecta ShOt at 7: 55 and
the game was fi rmly back In Rio · Grande' s record to 8-13 and 3-4 In
the MOC , while Urbana goes to
Grande' s hands.
. '.'We missed some key shots, 14,7 and 4-3. The Redmen will
and Rio Grande did a great job on host Lake Erie at 7:30 p.m.
us defe nsive ly." remarked Friday and the Blue Knights are
home against Ohio Dom inican
Ronal.
·Lawhorn agreed, feeling Ers- Saturday.
In other MOC games Tuesday,
lan·s· defensive work and post
bot!om-ranked
Ohio Dom inica n
play . from Donaldson and
upset
Walsh,
70-68,
In over time.
Lambcke boosted the rally. On
the whole, Lawhorn !elt the Mount .Ver non Nazarene dedefense had Improved.
."We have to stay alter some
things, because o! our youth, so
· we have to go out every day and
.keep teaching, " he said.
, ,
In a nother balanced scorlhg
game. Schubert emerged with 21 '
points and 10 rebounds, 'VIth
111 Second St., Pomeroy
Gary Ha rrison supplying .10 '·
assiSts. In addition to leading all
YOUR INDEPENDENT
scorers, Harris led Urbana on the
AGENTS SERVING
boards with nine, while Goins
was responsible for nine assists.
MEIGS COUNTY
The Redmen shot 45.3 percent
SINCE 1868
on field goals (:ll)-64) and netted

Redwonien Jend .off OD~ attack
Reeling !rom a vigorous Ohio hosts bead by 16 (74-58) at 4: 31.
Dominican offense, the UnlverAlthough the visitors relied on
· slty of Rio Grande women's
lou! shooting to get ahead, the
basketball team capitaliZed on a Redwomen maintained control
balanced overall performance In down the stretch.
·
the second half at Lyne Center
"Most ot our story Is Debbie
Tuesday and outlasted the Lady Fredrick," Foote· said of the 5-6
Panthers, 85-76.
.~·.
· · poln~ guard from South CharlesDebbie Fredrick recorded 31 'ton, Oblo. ·'She came through
. points~ a career high, to help turn ·with a lot of leadership. Renee
aro11nd Rio Grande's fortul)es · and J,nnl shot th~ .ball ) Yell.
after Its loss- to Mid-Ohio Confer- . althoug)l we didn't ~ much out
ence cham plol) 'Urbana over the of our defense." ·
.
weekend. •
Foote's statement was borne
"It's beena~ough weekandlt's out br the relloundlng. ODC bad
hard to come back mentally after 43 comJ)Ifed to JUo .Gr~de's 35,
losing an Important conference but the Redwomen held their
ganie ltke tbat/ ' ,Redwomen turnovers to 25 while the Lady
Coach Doug Foote commented.· Panthers lost the ball 30 times.
"We played very hard, perhaps
Watd ·shored up the. otfe11se
. without enough Intensity, but all Wlth,14 P9lnts and Couch had 11..
In all, I'm pleased.''
· Bai'nltz and Kathy Sny!ler each
. Tlte Lady· Pantliers, entering had elghr rebounds. From the
the contest 0-19 and· 0-6 In the field, Rio Grande was 40.7
MOC, had fallen·' 93-44 to the percent (31-76) andnetted16of20
Redwomen In ColulJtlbus on Jan~ attempts from the freetbrowllne
13 and . had revenge on . their for 80 percent.
.
· mlhds as they opened strong
Owens, a former standout at
against the hosts.
Symmes Valley High School, led ·
. Led by Teresa Owens and·Lisa ODC'$.scoring with '16 points and
Janusz, ODC tied With Rio nine boards, while Janusz had 15
Grande at 8, 12 and 18, with j he . markers·. Along with balanced
lead rocking back and forth until scoring by · the team, Kelly
the guests found themselves · Hovest alsd had nine rebounds .
ahj!ad'. by_ two' points al ,the The v_!sltors shot ~.l percent .on.
lnlerm~i.ln\ • . · , -·~~, ,....!leld goals' (30-83) af\d were 55
"I give a lot, of credit to OD , percent at the line (.11-20).
because you Jlke·to see a team In · The Redwornen, now 15·8 over- .
your .conference do Wj!ll.''.F,aote all and 4-2 In t~e 1\-IOC, are at
sa( d. "They Clll'le right out and • Wilmington 'ijlu~ay at 7:30
were lmpree~ve.' • ,
p.m. .Ohio . Dombilcan hosts
Alter' bOlsterini•' tts tlagglng • Mount . Vernon Nazarene
'first half defense, the Red~men Saturday.
I
tied twice to open the ·se&lt;tOnd BOx acore:
periOd ana led 43-40 at 18: 43 on a
basket oby Ann Barnltz.
Barnllz, Fre(jrlck and Jennl
Couch paced the offense, scoring
consistently until the Redwomen .
achieved their first double-figure
lead (55-44) ·at -12:33. The 'Rio ·
ladles then ple~ced ·ODC.' s de- ,
, fense In quick succ;es1lon as
· 3-polnttleld gpals by Renee Ward ·
'
. and· Mindy Monliomery plit the
.

.

Tourney ·to begin
on February 13 .
The gtrls Division II Sectional .
basketball tournaments will g~t
. under way an Tuesday Feburary
13, at Oak Hill High School.
·
Theflrstgamew!llputJackson ·
County rivals
Wellston: ana
· Jackson to.ba"ttle, that game will
be on F~b. 13, at 7: il. The wlflper
of that game will advance to the
upper bracket Sectional Cham' plonshlp game with second
seeded Meigs on Monday Feburary 19, at 8:00. The winner will
advance to Chillicothe for district p'iay on Monday the 26th at ,
6: 30 vs. Coal "trove upper
bracket winner.
In the bottom bracket top •
seeded Gallla Academy will play
Northwest on Monday the 19th at,
6: 00. the winner wiJI advance to
district at Chillicothe on Tuesday
Feburary 27 at 6: 30 vs. Unloto
bracket winner.

· RIO GRANDE (85) - A.tn
Barnlti, 2-4-8; Kathy Snyder,
2-4-8; Angle Packard, 1-0-2;
Debbie Fredrlck,12-1-4-31; Jenni
Couch. 2-1-2-11; Mindy Montgo·
. mery. 3-1:0-9~ Renee Ward, 3-2-214; ·Amy Snyder, 1·0·2. TOTALS
211-HI-85.
.
•
' OHIO DOMINICAN (76) Karl ' Rlebesell, 3-1-4-13; Lisa
Janusz, 5-3-15; Kelly Hoves!,
· 5-0-10; Carol Monroe, 3-0-6; Mary
Tressler, 3-2·0-12; Jac~ Rey .nolds, 1-2-4; Teresa Owens, 7-216. TOTALS 27-3-ll·'i&amp;.
Halftime score: Ohio Domini•can 38, Rio Grande 36.

1

COUNTY
APPLIANCES

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ltH. 4U·1699
HOUIS: I A.M.·6 lt.M.

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13 Weeki ..... .... ..................\...... m.110
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Call or Come In and See Dallas Sayre or Dale Hill '
••
•

ADOlPH'S DAllY VAUIY

'"''1''

"At fila w .et fila''*!*' n
!tOIIIIOY, 0110
·PH. ftl-1556

399 ·soutH •••
MIDDLEPOn, 01110
PHONE 992·6421

I

•
'

I

�'

Pomeroy-Midclaport, Ohio

Wadnnday, Jenu.-y 31, 1990 . ·

-Royals' Brett wants pay -~. or a trade

__..,...
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...... .,, ..

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Sacrani••.•
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OI'UIIIilolt Jlll...kee

O.h:ap.CBo••H
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We$lHciWJ Sports Caleadar

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NATIONAL ROCKEY LEAGUE .

Tlpp City Tlppt~aaae M; II. M•••
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llarrilt!.lll.

Wheelersburg, Logan fives
sixth in ·respective divisions
By GENE ~AnDES
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPI~
New leaders emerged fn both
Division III and Division IV In
this week's UnttedPresslnterna·
tiona! Ohio High
Board .ol
coaches'
girlsSchool
basketball

pair of wins last week, held a
198-143 margin this week over a
pair . of teams tied for the
runnerup spot- Canton McKin·
ley ( 14 ·1 &gt; and Cleveland
Kennedy
(16-0)
· The
Tigers
received
13 of
22 first
place
votes.

SPOKANE, Wash. (UPI~ Slugger George Brett of the
Kansas City Royals threatened
Tuesday to demand a trade It the
team. does not Increase his
annual base salary of $1.5
million .
Brett, a 17·year veteran of the
major leagues. made his com·
ments In an Interview with The
Spokesman-Review, a Spokane
newspaper.
·
Brett wants Kansas City to
renegotiate or supplement the
" lifetime" contract he signed In
1984. .
· ·
.
''I broug)lt lt to thel!' attention
In November, · and I haven't
heard· back tram them," said
Brett, who was In Spokane trying
to negotiate the purchase ·of the
Spokane Chiefs hockey team.
''My pride Is hurt and my ego Is
hurt."
Brett told the newspaper his
relationship with the Royals Is
"shaky" and said his'. contract
situation Is hindering .his ability
to concentrate on off-season
conditioning.
· Brett and John · Schuerholz,
. general manager· of the Royals,
have not talked since meeting in
November, when Brett llrst
requested more money . . ·
· "He said he'd get back to me

Lemieux~s

after theholidays,"Brettsald. ''I
haven't got a call. Maybe they're
tired of my act ;"
Schuerho\Z told the newspaper;
"I said, 'It there's anythtDa ' to
say to you, I'll get back to you.
But I c~n't promise you
anything.'
"We've nev~i' renegotiated
;my salary," the general manager said. "I don't know :of
anyone (In baseball) who hlfS
·
ever tore up a contract."
A lifetime .310hltter, Brett said
he decided to seek a raise after
baseb!!ll's pay scale .. jum~ ·
dramatically this wt'ntei-. He said
as many as nthe Royals could
earn more money than him this
5eason, Including newly acquired
Mark Davis.
Brett said he was not sure how
much more moneyhewlllask the
Royals to pay'_htm. '
. .
"[have no Idea, just to be paid
respectably compared to my
peers;" he said. " WI)en you see
guys get paid' $2:5 mlll!on to hit
.230 with 10 .home runs and 40
RBI, something ts wrong."
U the. Royals don't come up
with more money, Brett said he
would be Interested In playing for
the Boston Red Sox, St. Louis
Cardinals, San Diego Padres, ·
Los Angeles Dodgers, Tellas

By JQHN SWENSON
UPI Sports Writer
WhUe Mario Lemieux Is shootlng for a record-breaking scoring
streak, the Penguins are dropping deeper In the Patrick
Division.
.
Rivals have been unable to stop
Lemieux as he drives for Gretz·
ky 's point-scoring record of 51
consecutive games. But .the defenseless Penguins can not stop
their opponents.
The Philadelphia F1yers are
the latest team to feast on
Pittsburgh, snapping a month·
long slumpTuesday,plght with a
6-3 victory over the Penll':'ins.
The last-place f )yers, who
entered the game 1-9·3 In their
last 13 games, moved to within
one point &lt;;lf the Penguins In the
Patrick Division. Pittsburgh,
which was outscored 16-5 In two
weekend games, fell to 1·4·11n Its ·.
last six games.
''It was a divisional ~arne so It
was a big game for us, said Tim
Kerr. who scored two goals and
an assist for a thref-polnt game.
"Our confidence has definitely
been down; we've done a lot or ·
head-shaking. We've lost a lot or ·
one-goal games, so It's about
time we tried to win a couple. ''
. ·Lemieux's assls't on Tony Tan·

ti' s llrst-perlod goal gave him at
least one point In 40 straight
games, the second longest scar·
ing streak In NHL history behind
Wayne Gretzky.
"It was a good feeling,:• said
Lemieux, who picked up three

I

• 'I -

~I

'f'o"..:''

J - l i ........

.

.•1• asr aw• mm
992-6674

assists. "But when you are
getting points and the team Is not
winning, I think ·I have to do a
little more out there. My job Is to
get big goals at the right time,
and I'm not doing it."
.
The. Flyers·outscored the Pen-

.

gutns 3·1 tn the second period to
carry a 4·2 edge Into the final
period.
•
Tantl scored a goal. which
gave him his 11th career· hat
trick, just 30 seconds Into the
third period to move the Pengutns within 4-3. But defense man
Cord Murphy's eighth goal of the·
season, sweeping the puck Into.
an empty net with goalie wendell
Young out concentratiilg o~Kerr
In the right circle made tt ·5·3 at
14:16. Kerr picked up his third
point ol the game on the goal.
Brian Propp finished the scoring
with his 11th at 17:48.
•·
Mike Bullard's und goal of the ;
season, on a slap shot from the
right circle, made tt 2-1 just 11
seconds Into the seCQnd period. :.
Tantl' s second goal of the · ,
game, after the ·Penguins had
killed· off a 5-on-3 Flyers advan·
tage for close to two minutes and
with Pittsburgh on a 5 on 3 tied
the score 2-2. Tantl lunged and
poked tn a lose- puck tn the crease
past
tender Ken Wregget.

..

i

.2!~~x~~~~~~ore~:!~ hls. !m~~~y· o~2:~~~e~!?:~~

game·, season· and county-high
36 points to power Ohio Valley
Christian to a 69-64 victory over
visiting Elk Valley Christian
TUesday night.
.
Hill's scoring performance
surpassed the )lrevlous boys'
single-game scoring ·record for
this se.ason ~revlousty ·held by
Southwestern s John Ehman,
who scored 35 agalnstlronton St.
Joe on Nov. 18, 1989.
The first half saw the Defend·
ers, 5-8 overall, take a one-point,
lead Into the locker room at
halftime before outscoring thel~
guests 21&gt;-10 In round three. But
center
Kenny
Hanson, who .
·
·

l/;nton Coun·t y

points In the fqurth quarter, was
Instrumental In Elk Valley's
slicing down the Defenders' lead, ·
but Ohio Valley's 6-for-10 foul
shooting In prime time was just
enough to keep the Defenders on .
top at the final buzzer. .
.
Senior postJn.an E.T. VanMa- .
tre 'chipped In for th. e Defend~s .
with 12 points, while Shawn
Tawney and Shane Sample recorded double-figure offensive
efforts for Elk Valley.
· InMondaynlght'sgameat.Aid,
Symmes Valley survived a 28- ·
point effort by Hill to beat the
Defenders 71&gt;-62. Danny Justice ,

Defenders wlll travel to Hunting- /
ton, W.Va., to take on Grace!
Christian.
.
Score by quarters
Elk Valley'......... 17 12 10 25-64
Ohio Valley ....... 18 .12 26 12-691
·OHIO VALLEY (89) , - Hllli
10-4·4-36; ' VanMatre 5·0;2·12;
Hall 0-2·2·8; Wray 4-l).O.B; Peav·/
ley, J.!l-0-2; Rawlings 1·0·1-3.
TOTALS- 21-&amp;.9-69
· i
From the line- 9·15 (6()%) 1
£LK VALLEY (64)- Harisori ·
13-0-2-28; Tawney 5-0-4-14; Sam;
pte 4·1·1·12· Patton 2·0-2·6i
Burl!ette o.O:a-3· Myres IJ.O·H.
TOTALS- 24-l:U-64

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·

'1990
'TAX

•

SUPPLEMENT

A Special Section
~ Coming February:: 13, i990
•

AD DEAD,INE
FEBIUAIY 6, 1990
.

Contact Your Advertising Representative
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•

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lu1. 112·2417
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992-2156 '

SOUTHEAST

THE DAILY,. SENTI.NEL

POMOY, OliO
!,

Orlando sets records in
129-111 victory ·over Indiana ··

Rangers or Chtca~o Cubl.
. that deal for 1992 and 1993.
Lut year, the llrat baleman
Brett wu one of three players
hit .282- his lowest average lor a who signed so-called "lifetime"
full mljor·league seaa.on -In the contracts with ~nsu City aev·
latest In a ~nt series of era! years age. His current deal
Injury-hampered campaiJns.
Is part of thet negotiatiOn.
But Brett, who hits lettThe Royal&amp; cauled ,a stir last
handed, said, "Ifeel very good. I year when they signed lour
·don't feel36."
pitchers to large contracts. First
Brett and his brother Bobby It was right-hander Mark Gu- •
are part-owners of the Spokane blcza, .wbo agreed to a deal worth
.Indians baseball team and have nearly $2 million a year.
teamed up In a bid to buy the · Shortly after he won the •
Chiefs of the Western Hocke&gt;: American League Cy Young
League.
Award, rlght·hander Brei Saber·
Schuerhotz said . Tuesday he hagen agrel)d to an even mol'@
had been co,ntacted for CQmment lucrative contract.
about Brett s statement. He said,
Schuerholz continued the big·
"George has never exP.ressed deal spree by signing free-agent
anythlng ,llke tbano me.
pltclier Storm Davis . On Dec. 11,.
The general .manager said he he signed reliever Mark Davis to
had not anticipated some players . a deal that Is worth $3.25 million a
asking lor renegotiations after so . year, or $13 mUllan over four
many big contracts were signed years, which was the biggest
Ia~~ fall ~nd winter.
.
annual salary In basebal,l at the'
. ~ . don_.t expect" anyone, and .I time. That ltgure ha·s since been
don I thlhk, a~yone In any bus~- eclipsed. . •
.
ness ever expects to alter the
In November, Saber hagen got
termsofanexlstlngagt'E!ement,." a three-year extension of his
he said. "Nottosaythatltdoesn't co.ntract worth a total or $8.9
happen."
.
. .
mUllan, lnchid!ng $2.75 million In
Brett, \vho has played tor the '1991 ahd 1992, and ·$2.8 million In
Royals · for all 17 years of his 1993. Saberhagen, whose con·
major-league service, · Is In the . tract calls for him to earn $1.4
fourth year .o f a five-year con· million this season, ·also got a
tract. The Royals hold optioll$ on signing bonus of $600,000. ·

ATTEMPTs BLOCK - New Jeney Devil Bl'Jlce Driver
l'ttelJlptB lo block l!te L.A. Khap' Keltla Crowder frlln llae pueti
durla1 first-period action Tuesday ni1h1 al lbe Forum In Los
•
• .
Allgetea: ( UPI)

. .............
T'"r 11

NBA

•
•'

streak goe~ ·on whUe Penguins slide

ratings.
.
North Canton GlenOak re••
Richwood North Union, second malned In the No. 4 spot with 131 " II&gt;
to Heath In Division In the last points, foUowed by Westlake
Continued from page 3
twoweeks, movedlntotheNo. 1 (l&amp;-O)wlth 123andLogan(l1_.) 5-1-2-15
Tom Reed
spOt this week lollowlltg Heath's with 105• Rounding out the list 1-2-1-9, Shawn Speakman
58-50 Joss to Watkins Memorial. .
were Beavercreek In seventh, 5-2-,3-19, Jason Caudill
North Union, 15-0, received 13 followedbyRockyR!verMagnlf· 6-0-2.;...14, Jay Palmer
of 27 llrst place votes and 215 poll teat, Wooster and newcomer S-3-4-25 Jeremy Kempton
2-0-2...:.6 'chad Zlnn 0-0-2-2
points, while Heath. now 15·1, fell Milford.
to second with elghttlrsts and 210 · West Holmes, 16-0, Increased TOTALS Sl-8-17-101.
'
points.
Its lead over runnerup Copley In
MEIGs· _ Robbie Fields
The rest of the Division III list . ·Division 11 ~0 56 points, 250-194. 3-1-1-10, Ryan Lemley
also underwent some shullllng, The Knights leadaweekagowas 0-0-0-0, Richard Peyton
with Versailles (14.0) advancing . . 34 points.
.
0-0-0-0, Cary Betztng
from fifth to third, Springfield · West Holmes picked up 18or 30 4-1-5-16, Juon Wrigl\1
-Kenton Ridge (14·1) slipping first place votes, while Copley 0-0-2-2, L. J . Mitch
from third to fourth !!Iter Its first
(14 -0) got four firsts and Canfield 2-0-3-7, Jay Humphreys
loss and Tuscarawas Valley
(l5-0) two firsts and 190 points.
2-0-0-4 James Howerton
(15·1) falllngfroln fourth to fifth.
Garfield Heights Trinity (14·2l
0-0-1-1.' Mike Van Meter
Rounding out the liSt were sllppedonespottofourthandwas S-0-2-14. TOTALS ....Z.ii.
Wheelersbul'l (1~) In sixth, followe!lln order by Oak Harbor,
followed tn order by Granville, Lebanon, Bellaire, North Royal·
Federal Hockta1, Coldwater and ton, Jefferson Area and Warren
New Lebanon Dixie.
Champion.
In Division IV, where only ~6
points separaies the top three
teams, Fort Recovery took over
BeeaueMRBiock
as No. · 1. The Indians held a
can• aboat JOD~ .
207-192 margin over South Cha·
oartazprepanna
rleston Southeastern, with Wor·
thlngton Christian just one point
• Ha9e comprehensive tax
behind at 191. All are unbeaten.
lmowledle
·Fort Recovery (14·0) received
1986 OLDS FIIENZA
• Recelw yearly tax tralnt"'l
eight first place votes to seven for
Auto., A/C, new tltes.
• Make tax Iaw1 work for you
Southeastern (15·0) and silt for ·
.AM/FM/CaaHitll.
• Can prepare any state or
Worthington Christian (17.0).
local
retum
•
X-cleen.
In fourth place among' the
WAS 15919-1115 MONTH
small schools \vas Middletown
Let ....... , _ ....
FenWick with 164 polnta, followed
NOW S49,19
$99 MO.
~~r·Y tn fifth b.Y_f4cDonatd 1,VIth
Rounding out the lilt were
Berlln Hllalld, Killkla. Buckeye
. Central, SU,arcreell: Garaway
and LordStowll. a newcomer.
The other two . leaders remained unchanpd - Pickering·
tOll In Divis Ibn I and Mlllersbui'JI
West Hobnes In Dlvlslbn 11.
Plekertagton, now:1'4-l after a

.

I'

. ~)

•

The

Ohio

i,

BAD PASS- Tbe Atlallta Haw lis' Kevin WWis
(froat) uad Detroit Plato• .!:ames Edwlll'd.l
(rear) and VInnie Jolaoa (11) watch aa erruat
PllltoDB pus r;o out of bollllllll, u the Hawlls' Spill'
WebI! ( rlr;bt) rubes In vain to keep the ball In play
. '

.

.

BJ' FBEDERICK WATERMAN
UPI Sporta Writer
The Orlando Magic, already a
winner at the ticket window, Is
now developing Into a success on
the court. ·
Playing .before its 20th sellout
crowd In 21 borne games, the
expansion MagiC set a team
scoring record Tuesday ntahttn a
129·111 victory over the Indiana
Pacera. Guard Sam Vtnc,nt
scored 21 points, handed out a
club-record 17 assists and
grabbed 11 rebounds to post the
first-year franchise's first tripledouble.
With three victories In their
last six games, the 13-30 Magic
are ~he most successful of the
NBA s four expansion· teams of
the late 1980s. Neither Miami,
Minnesota nor Charlotte has
reached double digits In
victories.
"Tonight; we ran all game,
played defense all game and
- were intense all game," said
Vincent, a firth-year pro who
became a star at Orlando after
r-ocky slays In Boston, Seattle
and Chicago. "[think running Is
the strong point or this team.
We've got guys who excello the
open-court game.
Terry Catledge .Paced Orlando
with 31 points, hitting 13 of 19
shots from the floor. The Magic
scored a franchl~record 44
polnts In the fourth quarter after
trailing 86-85 after three
quarters.
Orlando trailed 60-44 ln. the
second quarter but used a 11&gt;-1
run In the closing 3:13 to pull
within a point' at Intermission.
Rookie Nick Anderson scored
during Tuesday night's game at the Omnl In
eight ol his 22 points during the
Atlallta. The Plstons'lslahThoma&amp; (11) observe!!
surge.
tbe action In the background. The Pistons won
The 1&gt;-2 VIncent, who is . an
112-95. (t!PI) .
exceptloilal · leaper, ·said of his
..
team-high 11 rebounds, "I think
by sending everybody to the

Hoyas .hammer ,Seton-.· Hall .

Bonaventure 75; W. Virgfnia 78, had 14 of his career-high 29
lly STE~HEN RUTKOWSKI
UP( Sporta Writer
D11quesne 77; Creighton 80, Siena . points.
.
.
Notre Dame 97, Day~n '79
Georgetown's gam'e pl'an · 76 and Texas· El Paso 82, New
At South Bend, Ind., Keith
.
against Seton Hall Tuesday was Mexico_80, OT.
Robinson
score(! 23 points and
Alabama 57, Ftoiida 44
to play better defensively. After
At Un.tverslty, Ala., Melvin · Elmer Bennett added 18 to help
the Hoyas def~ated the Pirates
by 22 points, there was little Cheatum scored 23 points to lead the Irish Improve to 11·6. An·
the Crimson Tide to the SEC thony Corbitt scored 21 points
doubt ·that the scheme worked.
Th~ sixth-ranked Hoyas forced · victory. Alabama improved to · and Negele ·Knight added 15 for
Seton Hall to m!Js It's llrst 12 1~·~ and . 6-3. Hosie Grtmsle~. 'the Flyers, 11·7.
RoutOn 10=, Texa&amp;•113 · ··
shotsJof the game and harrassed .scored 13 polnts·to pace Florida,
At Austin, Texas, ·Derrick
·
the Pirates Into 26 ' percent 1&gt;-10 and 2-7.
Daniels and Byron ~mitb scored
shooting overall to post a 70-48
· VIWutova 96
19 points each to lead the Cougars
Providence
88
(
OT)
victory.
,
At
VIllanova,
Pa..
Chris
·to
the Southwest Conference
Three days earlier, Syracuse
victory.
The Longhorns made
scored 95' points against . the Walker scored nine or his 23
Hoyas, the mostscored against a points In overtime as the Wild· only 14 of 43 shots In the second
cats overcame a 19-polnt, half to allow Houston to Improve
Goorgetown team In 14 years. ·
"A little humility doesn't hurt, second-half " f 'lclt. The Friars to 15-6 and 1&gt;-3. Travis Mays
but we don't want to be too took a 67-48Jea&lt;J with 7; 36 to play scored 25 points and Lance
humble, though, and that's why In the secoi\d hal!, following· a Blanks added 21 for Texas, 14•5
we wanted to play well today · 23-4 run In which Carlton Sc~:een and 7·2.
(Tuesday~," Georgetown coach
John Thompson . said. "I w.as
hoping that our defense would
work well. It hadn't been workhig
the last lew games very well."
Georgetowp, 1~·2 o~rall and
6·2 in the Big East, forced Seton
Hallin to 5 of 28shootlng from the
lleld In the llrst half en route to a
3S.i8 halftime lead. The Pirates
shot only 18 percent In the half.
"The very clear cut difference
In the game was that they played
with tremendous Intensity anjl
aggressiveness and we.did not,"
Seton Hall coach P .J . Carleslmo
said. "We were not able to match
tlli!m at any position. 'rt)ey
played extremely well '8nd 1l'l! . •
played poorly,, but a lo.t of It was
cause-and-effect With their d~
fell$e and their ·a ggresslvenen:"
Mark T!Umon led Georgetown
with 25 points, lncllldlng 161n the
first halt. The Hoyas, rebounding
from Its 19-polnt toss to Syracute
Saturday, gained a tie for the
lead tn· the conference .with
Connect leu I. ·
,
"It's very Important. t!Jat· we
bounce . , back from a . lOili, ".
T!Umon aald. "You dOn't want to
lote a game, .bill you can benefit
frOm a loss and I think we did
benefit !rom the Syracuse game.
Wt came OUt 1\nd did the little
thin&amp;s a!ld that helped us."
' Frantz Volcy led Seton Ha:ll,
10-8 and 3-5, with 16 points. The .
Pirates dropped to 1·8 at the •
Capital Centre.
.
Tillmon scored five points
during a 10.0 run midway
through the serond hall that
opened a 53-27 Georgetown lead.
ID the only othe('fbp 20 game,
No.14 Connecticut routed Massa·
chuaetts 9Hli.
At Amherst, Mus., Chris
Smith scared 22 polntl and Tate
George added 16 to lead the
Hlllkl•, 18-3. Smith scored 14 of
his 22 points
tbe aecond halt
when Connecticut expallded a
37-33 balltlme '-ad to a 19-polnt
advantap. Jim McCoy ·topped
the Minutemen. · 10-8. With .22
pollltl and Harper · Williams
added 18.
1a other games Tllei4&amp;Y. tt
wu: Alabama 57, Florlda 64;
ViliiDIIYa 96, ProvideDCe tB. OT;
Notn! Dame 97, Dayton 79;
HOUlton 102,
93; ArmY '711,
Nlaprl 78; Rhode llland 8'1, st.

tn

T.-

lf

boards we're more effective. grabbing one rebound. Team·
(Coach) Matty .(Guokas) had mate Mark Price had 21 points
been sending only the big guys to and 12 assists. Miami, which lost
the boards. But we don't have ltssixthstralght,wasledbyGien
any big guys." .
Rice's 19 points and Rony Set·
Indiana, led by Reggie Miller's kaly 's 15.
35 points, drbps to 7-15 on the
Su• 1•, Nets 95
road. Miller hit 7 of 10 threeAt Phoenix Kevin Johnson
pointers but his te!IJllmates con- reglstered30p;,lntsandl4asslsts
nected on just 1 ol their 7 as the Suns handed New Jersey
attempts from beyond the arc.
Its sixth sb'alght loss. For PhoElsewhere In the NBA Tuesday enix, Jell Hornacek added 28 '
night, .Detroit defeated Atlanta points and Tom Chambers bad
. 112·95, Milwaukee stopped Sacra· 23. Sam Bowie scored 16 points to
menlo 109·102, Cleveland out· · pace New Jersey which lost lis
played Miami 1Q6·94, Phoenix ninth consecutlve'road game.
routed New Jersey 120-95, Poi"·
Blazers 122 Jazz 98
tlanddownedUtahl22-98andthe
At Portland, Ore. , Clyd•
Los Angeles Clippers upset the Drexler scored 25 points and
Los Angeles Lakers 121·104.
. Terry Porter and Kevin Duck·
Plsto1111 112, Hawlul 91
worth each had 24 as the Blazers
At Atlanta, James Edwards won their seventh straight game.
scored 20 points and Joe Dumars Porter also had 10 assists and
added 18 to lead Detroit, which eight steals. The J.azz, whose
never trailed· and held a 23-polnt winning streak ended at nine,
lead alter three quarters . were Jed by Karl Malone' s 30
Atlanta , wblchconnectedononly points. The mazers and the
32 of 82 ~leld-goal attempts, was Lakers share the' league's best
led by Dominique Wilkins' 20 record at 31-11. The Jazz slipped
points. Forward Jon Koncak to 29·12.
suffered a tor.n cartllege In his
Clippers 121 Llokers lOt
tell knee.
At Los Angel~s. Danny Man·
Buclul109, Klnp 102
nlng scored 25 points and four '
At Milwaukee, Jack Slkma Clippers r(\&lt;!Ched 20 pqtnts. Gary
scored 23 points and hit lour Grant and Ken Norman had 22
three-pointers While Jay Humph· points each and Benoit Benjamin
rles scored 13 fourth-quarter added 20 as the Clippers ended a
pOints to pace the Bucks. Sacra- four-game losing streak. Lakers
menlo, just 2.·17 on the road this playmaker Magic Johnsori, weaseason, was led by Wayman kened by the flu, played just 25
TISjlale's 31 points. Humphries minutes. Byron Scott scored 24 •
..
finished with 19 points and points to pace the Lakers.
teammate Alvin Robertson
added 16.
Cavaliers 106, Heat 84
SPRIN6 VAl LEY CINEMA
At Miami, John Williams came
446 45Z4
• . ;
off the bench to scor~ 24 points
and Cleveland center Brad
Doug)lerty returned _after miss·
tng the season's first 41 games
· due to a nerve problem In his left·
foot. Dougherty played 15 ml.nutes, scoring seven points and

Malone, Robinson lead
All-Star reserves
NBA
NEW YORK (UP!) - Karl k~ last week. He's currently
Malone of the Utah Jazz, rookie
center David Robinson or the San
Antonto· Spurs and defensive
specialists Joe · Dumars and
Dennis Rodman of the league
champion Detroit Pistons
headed the list of 14 reserves
selected by CO!!Ches Tuesday to
play In the NBA All-Star Game.
Joining Malone and Roblii$On
on the Western Conference team
are Tom Chammbers and Kevin
Johnson of the Phoenix Suns,
Clyde Drexler of the Portland
Trail Blazers, Denver's La·
fayette Lever and Golden State's
Chris Mullin.
· 1 For the East, Rodman and
Dumars were named along with
Kevin McHaleandRobertParlsh
of the Boston Celtics, Reggie
Miller of Indiana, Scottie Pippen
of Chicago and Atlanta's Doml·
nique Wilkins.
All27 NBA l:oac hes were ~ked
to pick two forwards, two guards;
one center and two additional
players regardless of position In
. their respective conference~.
without voting for players from
their own team.
Malone, the 1989 AII·Star MVP,
scored an NBA season-blah 61
points In game agajnst Milwau-

secood In the league In scoring
(31.2 ppg)' and l!flh In rebounding
(11.1) for ,the Midwest Division·
leading Jazz.
-----------~------------....

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�Page 7

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Airport authority _awarded.grant

Low-Priced Sapei'Diarket

Tbe Oblo Department of TranipllttaUoa b11 ewlll'ded an
avlaUoa Jl'llnt tolaliD&amp; U3,200 to the Gellla-~lp Reatone)
Alrpt Autltortty.
'l1le · funds were awll'ded through tbe Oblo Airport
Relurfeclfll and Improvement Grant Praeram.
.
Tile ewerd wiH provide partlel fwldlq fOr the replecement of
medium lntenalty nmwey light, replacement of medium
Intensity taxiway 118hts and the tnslalletlon of a visual slope
Indicator for Runway 23. .
.
• Tolal cost of the proJect IS UB.OOO. Tbe authority will p.-ovtde
the St.MJO balance.
. ' 'We are plelled to be lble to provlde&gt;thelefunds which play a
vital role In the eonttnued IIPIJ'adlnf and maintenance of local
Ohio airports," ..td
B. Hlll'lt. ODOT director.
The grant pfGII'am II dealped to belp Oblo's coinmunltlell
obteln federal and state funding for Jmprovementl et genl!r!ll
·
aviation alrporll.

_.IUU'd

.

Drivers esooj)e injury in wreck ·
Driver• eaeped Injury In two' one-car accldenll yesterday In
Melp COI¥lty, eeonllq to tbe Gallla-Melgs Post of t~e State
Hlgbway Patrol.
.
· Sharon L; Wickersham, 29, Racine. lost control at 7:20 a.m.
Tuesday on tee-overed SR 338, 0.2 of a mUe west of m Uepost 2, ln
Letart .Townsblp. IJer 1987 Mercury went off the road Into a
dltcb .. Oetnlgewaa moderate. There was no citation. .
· The driver ~as not cited In • one-car accident at 8: 15 • ·Ill·
Tuesday on SR. 143 three miles north of SR. 7. The patrol said
Jennifer McKinleY, 18, Pomeroy, lost control on a curve of the
Ice-covered road Her .1975 Toyota Celie a wren! off the road. ·
striking a guide wire to a telephone pole. Damage was minor to
the car.

Tide
'

'·'

U•W Preu lllter..&amp;lolilll
skies and sub-zero temperatures,
New Englanders c;lug out Wed·
while skies were partly cloudy
nes4ay from a ferocious storm and temperatures In the mld·20s
tbat dumped up to 28 Inches of along the southeast coast.
·
snow end caused the roof of a
In Vermont, which recorded up
department store to. cave In,
to 28 Inches of snow Tuesday,
while snow also blanketed the skies a.lso began to clear as the
; Rocklea and much' of the Pacific
mercury was In the low 20s.
Northwest.
Snow was expected to continue
Skies were generally clear
over the ~ockles Wednesday as
throughout the rest of the nation,
the National Weather Service
with temperatures j:llmblng Into Issued a snow advisory. for the
the 60s In Texas. Oklahoma and
southern mountains In Colorado
Arkansas but diving close to zerq and In Utah. Snow was forecast
In ~rts of the Mldwes t near the · elsewhere In . the state, and
Canadian border.
·
Montana expected periods · of
In Dexter, Maine, the roof and
blowlrig snow.-A snow advisory
front wall of Reny's store caved was Issued for the mountains of
In with e roar under the weliht of . Utah.
more than a foot of snow'Tuesday
Northwestern Washlnaton had
afteriloon, just minutes after
lleht snow Tuesday nl8ht, with
flrefl8hters ·evacuated about 10 the temperature dropping below
people from the store.
zero In some areas. A storm
Tltree people still Inside the
passed through northern CaJUorbulldlne on Main Street, lnclud·
nla Tuesday, dropping some
lq one of the firefighters, were rain, While 10 to 121nches of snow
slightly Injured . Authorities was reported In the Sierra
blamed the weight oflhesnow for Nevada mountains near Lake
the collapse.
Tahoe.
Northern Maine reported clear
High waves jlounded the ·
northwestern P aclflc coast Tues·

~~~S · ~ll ... _c_o_n_ti_nu_e_d_~_mn~p~a~g_e_1_________
· plea of guilty to a chllrge of
to Middleport for ariy damages.

·Pomeroy Court news
Tim Davidson, Chester Road,. light vtollillon; and Mike Hlndy,
Pomeroy, was fined on five Middleport, $63 and cost,. disorcharges when he appeared In the derly conduct.
Forfeiting bonds In the court
court of Pomeroy Mayor Richard
· were Charlotte Dillard, Pome.Seyler Tuesday night.
He was fined $313 and costs for roy, $49, speeding; Richard Le·
resisting arrest, $63 and costs on bert, Belle River , Ontario, $63,
an ·open container charge; $63 traffic light violation; Carl John·
and costs for disorderly conduct. son, Hot Springs, · Ark.. $4~.
$375 and costs on DUI, and $63 Illegal left turn; Paula County ,
and costs, dr iving under Middleport, $48, speeding; Wll·
llam Kauff. Racine. $375, DUI ;
· suspension. Others fined In the court were Russell Errett, Lancaster, $46,
Donnie Freeman, Pomeroy, $46 speeding; Carl Johnson, Gallipo.and costs. speeding, and $213 and lis, $63, driving under suspen·
slon; Timothy Ohlinger, Ashcosts, assault; Jeffrey Wilson,
land, Ky. $45, speeding; and
Little Hocking, $46 and costs,
Michael
Gray, Racine, $63, drivspeedlq; Charles Workman.
Ing
under
suspension.
Grove City, $63 a)ld costs, traffic

· vandalism, a felony of the fourth
The prosecuting attorney, who
degree, acconllq to Gerard.
had recommended the one year
, Schuler was Indicted In No. sentence, Indicated that Schuler
vember of last year by the grand
had p~lously been convicted of
· Jury ; PFosecutlng Attorney
a felony theft offense In 1981.
.steven L. Story presented the Schuler was remanded to the
·case In coJUJeCtlon with an · custody of the sheriff until he Is
" lll!jjdent which oecurred In Septransported to Orient Correc·
tember of 1989 at the Middleport tlonal Reception Center.
)all in which Schuler, who was In
Schuler was represented at
custody on another matter, set a
Tuesday's hearine by Pomeroy
fire. No one was hllrmed, l!ut a
Attorney John R. Lentes. Prose·
· . blanket :was destroyed en~ there cutlq Attorney Story represwas some smoke damage. The ented the State or 01110.
:Incident was recorded on videoIn other. court news, the grand
tape by a security camera at the
jury wu In se$slon this morning ·- - - - - : jaiJ,. according to Proseou tor
(Wednesdey).I!anylndlctments ·
· story.
are returned, It Is expected that
· Ru88ell\ Barton
Judge c.·o:w accepted Schul·
arraignments 1Initial appearan- Mary Stanley
er's pte.. of guilty and sentenced ces by clefendants). will be held
Russell H. Banon, Sr., 78,
Mary Jan~ Stanley, 57. Mason,
him toa.o neyearprisontermand . .early next week.
died Monday, Jan. 29, 1990, in the Mason. died Tuesday, Jan. 30,
ordered .hlm to Pl&amp;ke restitution
1990, in SL Mary's Hospital, Hun·
Veteran's
Memori;ll
Ho~ital,
tington.
Pomewy, Ohio.
continued from page l
B()m June 10. 1911, in Syracuse.
Born Sept. 26, 1932, in Mid'
dlepon, Ohio, she was a dau~hter Ohio, he was a son of the late Char.merely a bad habit, but It Is a day, have a death J.ale of 90 of the late Robert and Mmnie
les T. Banon, Sr. and Clara Ann
. :major health threat with every percent higher, and· those who (Fink) Jackson:.
Diehl.
. , cigarette smoked tak~ 5.5 smoketwoormorepacksaday,a
Survivmg are her husband, KenHe was a chief engineer with
:mlnutes off of the smoker s IUe, death rate of 120 percent above neth L. Stanley, Mason; four Consolidated Coal Corp., and was a
~ §~$Bid.
.
.
nor!'lal.
..' , ·
daughters, MrS. J.D. (Marilyn) member of the Mason United
Surveyuhow that m~lol~S of . Cli!t~tte smoking Is a maJor Clarke, Mn. Mike (Carol) .New- Methodist Church and Mason
. ,
,,:iliiokeol went t~ give- up cl- ,. ruk "fiictor,~ not only roi" neart' - Dciiy;~Nfts': Tl!iTy' (BiirtMiia) Biim- Senior Citizens.· · · - ·
~arettes but they continue to
attacki. but also for high blood gamer, all of Lelart, MR. Raben
· Survivors i~lude his wife, Julia
.;~moke beceuse they think that pressure, tung cancer, emphy- (Rebecca) Stewan. Hartford; four
Helen Barton, Mason; two sons,
! the damage has been done. The sema. chronic bronchitis, mouth sisten, Carmen McManaway, Russell H. Banon, Jr., Columbus,
,tl'l!th Is, unless Irreversible dis· cancer, urinary bladder cancer. BucyJWI, Ohio, SteUa Coleman, Ohio, WiUiam B. Banon of Vienna,
: eae11 hu begun, stopplnJ smok· and pancreatic cancer, Ms. ·Keno, Ohio, Esther .Johnson and - W.Va.; three daughters, Elizabeth J.
Betty Foresman. both of Columbus, Ricketts · of Carmichael, Ca.,
, lq begins to .pay lmlnedlate · Torrelsald. :
,l!ealtl! benefits. After one. year,
She went dn to point out that Ohio; seven grandchildren and Patricia M. Lepro of Latrobe, Pa.,
there Is an Important drop In the pregnant :women who smoke sevcml nieces and nepbiws.
Julia H. Flagg of Syracus, Ohio;
risk of heart attack among those have a greater . number of still
SII'Vices will _he conducted three brothers, Charles. T. Barton,
;who llll!t. After lO·years, death births and tbefr Infants ar~ more Thlil'sday,l p.m., at the FQ~!lesong Jr. of Surfside Beach, S.C., .Roben·
l ates of ex-cigarette smokers llkel!r to die within the first Funcml Home, Mason, wtth the W. Barton of Middleport, Ohio, and
, ~om all causes are al&gt;proxl· month of life. Their babies, she Rev. - Rankin Roach officiating·. James E. Banon of Newarlc, Ohio;
.mately as. low as ~?seat people said, often :welgh .less than five Burial wiD follow in the Graham six sisters, Clara L. (Oats) Manley
· ;
.
who never smoked, Mrs. Torres .pounds which Is cOnsidered Cemetery.
of Clainon, Pa., Mildred E. Garvin
pointed out.
premature.
Friends may. call at the funeral of Monongahela, Pa, ChlOe M.
She said that those who &amp;moke
So 'wheJl It comes to S!JlOklng, home today from 1 to 9 p.m.
Hill of Hende~nviUe 1 ~ . C., Edna
less than a half pack a day have a the· quitter Is definitely the ·
·
·-· ·
F. Poskon of ElizabeUI, Pa., Mar.death rate of about 60 percent winner, 'the health nurse
garet D. Swift of McKeespon, Pa,
higher than non-smokers. those concluded.
and AnnabeUe Butler of Ken. ;who smoke one to two packs a
nebunkport,
Maine;
16
•
· grandchildren, ' . seven
greatContinued. from page 1
grandchildren, and several nieces
and nephews.
•
· ·for their efforts In obtaining the sdcco. however . reporied Dally stock prices
A
memorial
service
will
be
held
slate fundlq. An original re- David Baker, human resou!J:es (Aa.Of 10:30 a.m.)
Thursday, 3 p.m., at the Mason
quest of $380,000 from the state manager for the company, that Bryce end Mark SmUh
United Methodist Church with the
had bejm denied due to lack of number has 'decreased some- of Blupt, Ellis 6 Loewl
Rev.
Ben Stevens and Rev. Lowell
·funds. Long and Abel then what since seve~al miners have
Keeney
officiating. Anangements
· became Involved In !he procees been recalled to other mining . Am Electric Power ...... ... .... 30%
are under the direction of the
and :were finally able to secure dlvlalons within the American AT&amp;T ..... .. .. .:.... ... ................ 38
Foglesong Funeral Home of
staie approval of tile 1200,00Q. ~ Elec.t ric Power . system which Ashland Oil ................ .. ...... . 36
Mason.
Bob Evans .... .. ....... ......... .... . 13
.
Also credited with helping to oWnl SOCCO.
Tbaeker and Denny Evans, Charming Shoppes ...... .. ...... . 8'4
l!rlne. abOut the (P'BDI were local '
and district leaders of the Unit~ reprHeaUng UMWA Local1857, Cjty Holding Co ............. ..... 14'h
' Mine Worke~s Assocla,tlon, as end Or)ey Vore, representing Federal Mogul ......... ... .... .... 19'4
well . M Southern Ohio Coal UMWA District 6, whiCh Includes Goodyear T&amp;R .. .... ........ ...... 35
Company officials, for working all of Ohio and the northern Heck's .... ........ .. .................. . 2'h
d from page 1
CoJltl
Key Centurion .. ... .. ........ .. ... 13'h
together for the good of the panhandle of West Virginia,
miners :who lost their jobs. ''I agreed that the tareet number of Lands' End....... .... ... ......... .. 16%
tlon for vis! g Brazilian Pres!·
believe we've reached a miles- lOOPllnl!rslse ~ 'falrnumber"of Limited Inc . .... :.. ... .. ...... ..... 32 % dent Fernan Collor de Mello.
to!llllln this area by :working displaced miners to be helped Mulllmedla Inc . .. ; .. ...... ... ..... 75
A report carried by the &lt;Cable
Rax Restaurant5 .... ... ........ .. . 1Jis
Ul(llller," old Geo!1e.Thacker, through tbe program.
News Network Tuesday said
Any displaced miner, who Is Robbins &amp; Myers ....... ... ...... 16% · Gorbachev was considering re·
, president of United Mine
Workers I;ocaJ1857.
Interested In the program should !;honey's Inc . ........ ....... ..... ... 10
signing as general secretary of
Star Bank ... ................. ....... . 19
the party because of frustration
Approximately 170 miners In contact their local C.A.A. office.
Wendy's Inti ............. .. .... ..... 4\1 with lmpleinenlallon of domestic
. all were: leld off last fall from ~
·.
·
Worthington.Ind ..... ..... .... .. .. 20% reforms.

Area deaths--..;.....

FOODLANDIDEL MONTE

:Public...

ADDRESS: ................................................
PHONE: ..................................................
No Purchaoe Neeeooary. Muot Be 18
Yean of Age.

WIN A SHOPPING SPREE
AT FO·ODLAND
BOB EVANS
Farm Sausage
MT. DEW, DIET or
REGULAR

PEPSI1-LI.
ROLL

COLA

LB• .

TENDERIEST PORK BOSTON SJYLE

THORN APPLE VlLLEY WHOLE

Shoulder Roast

_Turkey Ham

s

12 PAK

$

$ 49

19 '

LB.

..

•

FALTER'S

JOWL BACON

BACON ENDS &amp; PIECES

$

99

$

LB.

Senate appro~es
replacem~nt taxes

6 LI;BOI '

F.._Y PACK

ARMOUR
. TREET

TENDBST lONE-IN

BONELESS
ROUND STEAK
CHICKEN BREAST

S189.LI.

$26.9 LB.

BOLOGNA
12

Ll.

uno DIPPED

GOLDEN~

MOUNTAINEER SAUSAGE

COD fllLOS

TURKEY BREAST

·~~ Sl 095 ':O't SJ495

' . ·LI.

eWe ...._ The Right To " - a.-tittle. •l'rlall EHeotiw thru . 8111Unlly,
.

-·-

,..:_

--·:- -

-·

99C

9~

ANGEL son

CREAM
COOKIES
14 o.z.

,_b. 3, 1110. •USDA Food
.

PARKAY ·
QUARTERS

DELICIOUS

$119
---.---.-

oz.

CAN

89&lt;

4lD eHOT

Stocks

:Grallt...

12 OZ. CANS

-- I -

lATH
nsSUE

99

.. 1011

•Not lleepouelltle For

enciWIC

---· _,

109

__

---- (___ .

~-" ~

COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPl) Delptte WII'DIIIp It will ralle
taxes on wwltdlc. votera, the
,Ohio sen.te pallid llglslatlon
Tueldey permltlilla replacement tu ,l e9lel fOr &amp;ebooll,
lleelth and park dlltrlcte, and
alcobpl, ~ eddlctlollend metltal beaitll aerv~ee..
: The bill, apoJIIONd by Sen.
- Robert
R·Bar-VIUe,
)llellred on e 29-3 vote tlld wu
&gt;lellt to tile Hou•.
· It 1110 atleetl eltlldren'a aervl·
.cea ltYiel alld aervlcea for the
~ty fi!UFded and 4evalop-

N.,..

ICE
. CREAM

~:·.$39.9

·~tllly ~ All levlel
m tie ....... ID tbe votere.

•.

9eaate VP.fln.OIIIIy MDI
to Qov,Rlellanl Cllllllle ~
· prvd biD pel'JIIItllar lfGUP
~ lllnraJice ·cowraae tor
pat't•' :dl btiGI ....... and
'

recluclni frorb _, to 40 the ._
number at. boun of ecluCatlon
n~qlllred fOr an lnsuranceaJftl's
llceue.
.
.
Tbe Jlou• leD! to tbll aowrnor
a pair of seilate-ap~ bllll:
-Fol'blddSIII diii:J:tlblllatlon In
hlrlq aealltlt anyone .,... 70, In
federal Jaw . .
lbte wttb a

1•

-Permlttlnr tonllllp poUce

uftlcera Ia e towuldp of more .
than

eo,ooo

to mllce arre111 on

lailrltate hllb"'Y•· .
eur-tiy, rtp""*'WDI tax
llvl• _. lllowld cflilV for jolat
VOI!atloDal ~bollll and emil'·

..., mUical eervteea.

CluifLJiaft

Bretlde 't.ltiiidalpb ol. Racllll,
marrllld to a-Randolph, Ia
DOt Ute Jiilloa wbo fllld 'for

1Uvorce ID tile ....._ Cowaty
01111111011 Pteu Court IIIII week. .

i'

day and a coastal flood warntne All!lnta, 56 in Charleston. S.C., 59 ;
Wll ISsued for seven counties,
In Jackaonvllle, Fla. and 74 ln . ;
from just soul)l of the Oregon MI!lmi.
Clear skies domlnlted the '
border to Monterey Bay.
Clear skies prevailed over Midwest with the exc.e ptlon or:
Texas, Oklahoma, i\rkansas, Michigan's upper penlnsul!l, :
and mUch of New Mexico and · where areas reported nurrles ·
Louisiana, with · temperatures and snowshowers. Merquette, :
mostly In the 50s and 60s and a Mich. , saw flurries and the·
few readings In Texas over 70 coldest temperature In the state:
degrees. despite the passage of a at Just 7 degrees.
·:
temperatures
were
also·
Colder
Pacific cold front.
Forecasters Issued a dense fog found In WisCOnsin, where Eau :
advisory for southeaSt Loulsl· Claire, Ill the northwest part or:·
ana, Including New' Orleans, as the state, dipped down to 1· ·
visibility dropped to a$ low as 116 desree.
·
Mostly clear sklee prevailed;
of a mlle.
HIgh pressure brought gener-. over Pennsylvania, although·
ally fair skies and.cool tempera' colder air pushed temperatures:
tures to the South. A cold front Into the teens In northeutern·
gave Mississippi some clouds. areas. Southern New Jersey,'
fog and scattered rain while . Delaware and Maryland also had.
clouds also settled over F1orida . . clear sklee. with lows ranglneln
Early morning temperatures the 30s. Patchy fog was reported:
were 32 at Knoxville. Tenn., 381n near dawn In many arees.
.
.
NAIIUNAL Vr'E:J:i'HER StRVICE FORECAST TO 7 AM EST 2·1 ·90 •

REDWING WORK.SHOES •

Sl
0
OFF
..
.

SIZES I, C, D, E or EE

20°/o OFF

MEN'S -L.A. GEAR TENNIS SHOES
TI.SDAY, FIIDAY &amp; SAIUIDAY ONLl
.'
••

HOOD
FAMILY·
SHOES
110 USI Ulll
, POMaGY, .01.
991·6154

.

OPEN .,ONDAY THRU FRIDAY 1:00·8:30
SATURDAY 1:00-15:00

•

P &gt; ISNOW

FRONTS: "

Warm

-RAIN
"
Cold
..

D

SHOWERS

St~tic fW o~~~· "l"''

Map sl~o..... s minimum temperature$ At lea~t50°·~ of any s!"l 21ed ~·~:~o :1 ;C":
!O rKP1ve prP.ctoil;:t!icn indicated

.•

;

···1,..,,_ -,~ ,
UPI

WEATHER MAP - Durlna: early · Thurscley momma:,
raln/ahowen are forecaat lor parll of·tbe mid to aorthem Peclflc
Cout States and tbe mid Mlaalaslppl Valley with abowera and
thundentonns. forecaat lor ~Ia of the aoutbern Pial• and the
lower .Ml•alsslppl Valley. Snow Is forecut for pii'IA of tbe centrll
and no ribera la&amp;ennountala Repoa, the upper Ml•lllalllppl VIIIey
and the upper Grea&amp; Lakea. Showers and lbunclentonna are
possible Ia moot of the GuH Coast.
·

•

•

------Weather-----South Central Ohio
· Increasing cloudiness Wednes·
day night, with a low between 35
and 40.' Showers Thursday, with
highs In the mid 50s. Chance of
rain Is so ·percent.
•·
Extended Forecaat
Frtqy tbrOIIJb Sunday
A chance of rain Friday and a

~

chance of rain or snow Saturday,
with fair weather on Sunday.
Highs will be In the 40s Friday.
b~ween 35 and 45 Saturday and ·
In the 30s Sunday . Overnightlows ·
Will b'e between 35· anel fO early
Friday and In the 20s Saturday
and Sundi!Y moJ:Dings.

.
€mation.Offers~ou

'

Now, when .you buy Carnation products, you'll
get something great Fn!e milk Just pick up
Carnation Products the next time you're
shopping, and we11 give you milk for free.
.
... I it~
.
A
M
1

t

..

p

.r r:===::::J.
t.
J.

p

•

At'

.. 1990 Eat
Home and Saw.

�... .. .

Wulnndly, .a.nu.ry 31, 1110

pagi 8-The Daily s.rtinel
announced. A song workshop will
also be held. All leaders- are
urged to attend .

Community calendar.
PORTLAND -The Lebanon
Township Trustees will meet
Wednesday, 7 p.m. ai the town·
ship building.
THURSDAY
POMEROY - Big Bend Girl
Scout Service Unit will meet
Thursday. 7 p.m., at the Pomeroy United · MethOdist Church.
Final pl11ns for the Feb. 24
Thinking Day celebration will be

WEDNESDAY
RACINE- The Southern Boos·
)ers will meet Wednesday, 7p.m.
at the high school. All parents are
urged to attend.
. MIDDLEPORT- The Middleport Literary Club will meet
Wednesday, 1:30 p.m. at the
home of Mrs. Dwight Wallace.
Mrs. Richard Owen will review
the book, "My Russia."

POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Group of A.A. ,and Al-Anon will
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
Sacred Heart Catholic Church.
For more Information call
1-800-333-5051.
POMEROY -The XI Gamma
Epsilon Chapter, Eeta Sigma Phi
Sorority will meet Thursday 7
p.m. at the senior citizens center

In Pomeroy.

:Wed! sst-v• .J8nu.y 31. 1880

fill! caller will be BID Skidmore

IATUBDAY

RUTLAND - The Rutland
Township Trustees will hold their
regular meetlq aDd I!Jidpt
bearing on Tbunday at 6:30p.m.'
at the Ruuand Fire Station. The
public Is Invited to attend.

SYRACUSE - 1'llllre will be
Jitney supper on Saturday from
5-7 p.m. at the Carleton SchOOl
Iii Syracu~e 1poiiiOI'ed by the
Meigs Aasoctatlon for Retarded
qtlzens. The public Is Invited to
atteDd.

RACINE - There will be a
regular meeting of the Racine
American Legion Poat 602 on
Thursday at 7: 30 j!.m. Retreshlllenta will be served following
the meeting.

HENDERSON -The Gallla
Twirlers Square Dance Club will
hold a duce Saturday from 8-11
p.m. at the Henderson Commun·
tty Center In Henderson, W.Va.

l

aud the dance Ia open to all
wet tern square dancer a.

SALEM CENl'ER -Tbe Star
Grange and Star Junior Granae
will hold tbelr replar nwelllll on
Saturday at 7:30 p.m. at the
grange hall located on County
Road 1 near Salem Center. A
potluck supper will ·follow the
meeting and · all meinbera are
urged to attend.

&lt;

•

Ponwoy-Midrl'eport, Ohio

.•

•

Open house notes years of servic~
The Amerlcare Pomeroy NursIng Center observed Its lOth
anniversary on Monday with an
operi house at the center.
During the open house the
· ten·year employees wen: honored for their years of dedlca'
tlon. and service to the center.
Each employee was presented a
pin for their service and also a
cer'tlflcate from the speaker ot
the House of Representatives
which was also signed by State
Representative Mary Abel. Five
year and one year employees
were also presented pins' The
ten-year residents ofthe facility
were also honored.

'·~

..lt

\

'·

•

AIMRnSlo mM I'OliCY-Eaeh of ' ' - - • rtemo il roquirod to bo
· readily aV8ilatM for ule in MCh Kroger Store, ••cept 11 lpKifN:81y noted in
this ld . If we do run out of an Hven~ Rem, we wiN offer vou vour choice
of a comparable irem, when available ; refttcting the ume 11\'inga or 1 rain·
check wl'lich win entitle you to purchue the edYerti8ed ilem at,the 8dvertiMd
. price within JO days. Only one vendor coupon wil be accepted per ilem

purchased .

.

~ COPYRIGHT 1!19() ·.THE KROGER CO . ITE"'S AND PRICES GOOD SUN·

DAY, JAN . 28. THROUGH SATURDAY, FEB. 3, 1980, IN POMEROY.

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT

our
Dollars.
Go Further
w 1.t h
Low ·Prices. An.d ·Mor.e •
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The honor rolls for the third six
week,!' grading period for sev·
eral Meigs County elementary
schools, Meigs Junior High
School, and Meigs High School
have been announced.
Making a grade of "B" or ·
above In all their subjects to be
listed on ·the honor roll at tlieir
respective schools were the lol· ·
lowll\g students:

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DEALERS .

'·

300 SHEETS PER ROU.+PLY .

Sealtest Chilled
Orange Juice

.Cottonelle
Bath Tissue

Gallon

FROZEN •

Banquet Meat ·
Pot Pies

4-Roll

\

7-0L

KROGER -GRADE A LARGE EGGS
18 CT
2 FOR S3 .•00;;,.~
· ---. . .~

--.

'!EXCEPT LASAGNA OR
SLICED BEEFI FROZEN

IN THE DELl-PASTRY SHOPPE

Kroger
Tomato Soup

. Banquet
Family Entrees

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10.S.0L

28-oz.

Deli Fresh
Pepperoni Pizzas

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· 12-lnch 211'oL

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Sealtest 2% .
Lowfat Milk

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Gallon

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.... ,. ...,

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U.S. GRADE A PERDUE

Pick Of The
Chicken .............. .

employees ,are Pll&amp; Hlady, Marilyn MIUer,
Mwrela Houduhelt, VIolet Walker, DotUe Net,son, and Frances ·~. Not plcttire4 was Lewis
WIDiams,
.aJSOJ a len' year em.,toyee.
, . '

Burch, Austin Carr, Jessica
Second Grade: Jake Birch·
Johnson, T.J.King, Patrick Mat· field, Brandon Collins, Heather McDonald, Chris Neec·e, Missy
Nelson, Jenny Peyton, Spring
tin Josiah Rawson,
Michelle Ferrell, Tl!lany Halfhill, Amy
'
Reed, Aaron Sheets, Krls ten
Watkins.
Hysell, Mandy Miller. Matt Slawter,
Joseph Smith, JennUer
Fourth Grade: Rachel Ashley, Peckham; Shawn Workman.
Taylor."
Amy
Wagner, Stepbante
David Grimm, Jenny Hayman,
Third Grade: Kristin 'Brown,
Walker,
Amy
Warth, Jennl
Sheila Neace, Matt Williams, Robbie Diddle, Ben Fowler.
Werry,
Teresa
Wines, Dare!
Gary Acree. Stephanie .Burton. Justin jeffers, Mathew Justice,
Wolfe.
.
·
Mellssa. Copplck, Ginger Darst, Alyson Patterson, Clayton
"rwetth
Grade:
Nancy
Baker,
Mary Dartt, J.R.Deem, Natalie Tromm, Cl;J,rk VanMatre.
Tract
Bartels,
John
Barton,
Granda!, had ,Hanson, James
Fourth Grade: early , ChasHudson, Collln Roush, Nancy teen, Brandee Gilmore, Nathan · Steven Bass, Melanie Beegle,
John Betzlng, Angela Black,
BRADBURY ELEMENTARY
Whaley. ·
Halfhill, Jill Lemley, Melissa Trlcla
Burke, Heldt Caruthers.
Fifth Grade: Nathan Goodwin, . POMEROY ELEMENTARY
Titus, A.J.Vaughan,- Mellssa Wil- Jerry Cleland, Barbara Cole·
Ricky H90ver, LIJ?by King, Ste· . First Grade: Ben II Call, Andy liams, Sandra Young.
man, Walter Crook,!, Lisa Darst,
phanle Stewart, Amy Clonch,
Fifth Grade: Chad Bartrum,
Davis,
Nicholas
Dettwlller,
Ash·
Angela
Donohue, Kelly Douglas,
Anna Fink, Kristina Grate, ley Hannahs, Curtis Hanstine, M!chelle Miller i Beverly Ste·
Kimberly
Eblin, Amy Epple,
·Amber Slaven, Darrick St.Cialr, Melissa Houser, Julla Kennedy, wart, Jamie Williamson, Morgan
Lisa
Gray,
Lara Hall, Patti
Stacy Stewart, Chrissy Williams. Andrea Krawscym, Aja McG!o· Vanaman.
Hetzer,
Cecil
Johnston,
Melinda
Sixth Grade: Jill Burch, Ml· thin, Derek Miller, Autumn Phil·
Sixth Grade Phyllis Clark,
K~e. Daniel Kennedy, Kristin
· chael Franckowiak, Alison GerlCleland, Jeremy Coleman,
King, Bracy Korn, Amy Mann,
ehrls Pickens•. Justl!l Rob- · John
. ach, April Hal·ley, Mark Mills. Ups,
Vanessa
Harless, Angle Powell, Kim Masters, Timothy Molden,
son,
Clara
Sanders,
Brenna
• Nicky Mills, Tanya Phalln, Paul Sisson, Maggie Smith, Emily Lori Russell, Clndl Stewart,
Jennifer McKinley, Roberta
Pu11lns, Kenda Reynolds, Ste· ' Stivers, Chrlstopijer Ward, Roxanne Williams.
Napper, Rebecca Napper, Shan- .
phanle · Wood, ChriS Chapman, Terra Barton, Thaddeus Bum·
SBH: Daniel Morrison.
non
Newsome, Carl Nicholson,
: Bren1 HansOn, .Jeremy Hartson, gardner, Jessica Chapman,
LD: James Chapman.
James Reynolds, .Heath Rich·
Willie JOjil!SOn, . Dodger. Heather Foreman. Home Grlf·
mond, Terra Schoonover, DarMEIGS HIGH
Vaughan.
flth, Breyden Haptons.tall, Tl·
lene
See, Cheryl Stevens, Natalie
Ninth Grade: Debbie Alkire,
DH: Scott Autherson, Michelle mothy Heldreth, Sarah Houser.
Tromm,
Melissa Wells, Thomas
cllsto, .Vickie Dolby, . ShaWn April Large, :Jeffrey Moore, Ketl)o Doidge, Eliza beth Downie,
Werry,
Sandy
Whaley, Derek
AlltSon ~Gannaway, Mindy HarLeach, Michael Reltmlre.
Mandy Powelt, Shanncin PriCe, ris, . Sherry ~ Johnson, Rand.a ll Yonker.
l
Tiffany QuallS, :Jonathan Ru· ·
HARRISONVILLE ELEMEN- nyon; Alex Shuler, Brandy Johnston, LQri Kelly, Gary Kerr,
Charles King, Kevin Lambert, . ·
TARY
" Smith, Ashley Thomas, Chris· .
SALEM CENTER
First Grade: AdamBulllngton, topher Yeauger, Melissa Young. Robert Lucier, Lorena Oller.
First
Grade: Jessica Marcum,
Tammy Queen, · Steve Swatzel,
Joshua ClArk, Christopher Dodsecond Grade: Tod Daniels, • Jtusty '!:rlplett, Katrina Turner, Brian Tarleton, Brian Searles,
' _sq.n,, ~icha'll Lambert, Jo,nalhl!n Melissa Davta, Sean Fahner,
Amber Roush, Bradley Ritter'
.. Maue, Dusty Smyers, Patricia Tim McGraw, Michelle Pafnter, Michelle Yo'ung.
Tenth Grade: Barbara Ander· beck, . Dustin Erlewlne, Kendra
: Walker, Dawn Yost ·
· • Wesley Thoene, Adain Thomas,
.
Second Grade: Ralnil Bennett, Whitney Ttiomas, Ryan Well, son, .frank' Blake, Julianne Cleland.
Scott
Colwell,
Second
Grade:
Denise Cotterill, Stacy Gilmore, Michael Wllltamson,-Grant Ab- Buck• .Misty Butcher, Heather Jeremiah Smith, Jeremy Smith,
Amanda Hamon, Crystal King, ,bolt, Amber , Blackston, Jaykie Davenport, Evelyn Esqualbel. Stephanie Kopec, Laura Payne,
Jason Miller, Tiffany Richmond, Buck, C.D.El Us, P.J .Erwln,.An· Tara Gerlach, Stephanie Haggy, Orion Barrett.
·
Kyle Smlddle, James Stan ley, ,drea Neutzltng, Amber Perkins, ·Jeremy Heck, · Pe1111y Klein,
T.hlrd
Grade:
·
Bridget
Darin Logan, Terry Lyons, Roamtaii wtit.
··
Ryan PJ:att, :JennUer Shrlmplln, bert Marshall, Tammy Miller, Vaughan, Andrea Dunfee, Lori
Third &lt;Grade: Erin Dillon • . ,Julie
Spaun, Christian W\!lker,
Kinnison, Jessica Priddy.
Kristina Kenrtedy, Jennifer Lam· " Third · Grade: Missy Darnell, Jose'ph McElroy; Becky Ocker·
Fou[th Grade: Leigh-Ann Can·
· bert, Jason Preast, $liannan ' Jessica Matson, Bonnie Smith, man, . Roger Partlow, Lof\!tta terbury,.
Amanda Napper, Jesse
~.
Sievers.
Reltrjllre, Michael ThoJ7~as,
· Kasey jVIUfams, Chrlssa Bran· Bobby Vance, Christina Weaver, Ward, Tina Fraley·, Todd
Fourth Grade: Michelle Bls- ham, John Da.vldson, Jennifer
Marcum.
. sell, Scott Dodson, George Heck, Aniy Johnson, Sean Po· Robby Wyatt .
· Fifth Grade: Adam Barrett,
Eleventh Gracie:, Teresa
Miller., Kevin Nee!.
well, Cortney Scarberry, Brandy Deem, Raena Eblin, Robett Jenny Ervin, Carrie Harmon,
Fifth Grade: Brian Young.
Snider.
Fields, Mandl Harris, candy Tim Le)'IIS, Andy Myers. Jo
Sixth Grade: Amber Bennett,
Fourth
Grade:
Michael
Bethany Cohee, Gary Stanley, Brown, Dantelte Grueser, Ro- Harrison, Burt Kennedy, Angela Sandy. ·
Sixth Grade: Jake Gannaway,
Donald Yost. ·
·
Larkins, Bronson LaudermUt,
nald Hirth, Stacey Hubbaryl,
Shepherd, Melissa ErieEddie
Leach. Shawn L!pscomb, wine, Angle
Michelle Ramsburg, ·Amy See, MIJiSY
Hale, Michael Jar·
Jarney Little, Amy Might, Tina
MIDDLEPORT ELEMEN- Adam Thomas, Jessica Wright,
vis,
Bryan
Colwell:
TARY
David-Anderson, Wendt Daniels, Molden;. Mary Morton, Jeanette
. First Grade: Heather Boyles, April Foreman~ Steven McCul·
.Marjorie Bratton, Jason Cha11ey, Iough, Scott Sellers, Wendy
Tara Fllchpatrlck, Abby .Harris, Shrlmplln, Amy Smith.
Derek Johnson. Carrie Lightfoot,
. Fifth Grade! Taryn Doidge;
Amanda Neece, Brandl ·Smith, Paul Epperson, Joe Hill; Sha.wn
KIMilty Taylor, Cassie Vaughan, King, Erlp Krawsczyn, Kim
&amp;
Britnt Bevan, • Muff Davidson, Petrie, Jodi Sisson, Tara
fdlchael Hawkins, C.ilel;i Jones, Grueser, Whitney Haptonstall,
'Driving Force AND filii Press
Jeremy Jones. Leah Morrow, Jessica McElroy, Stacey Price,
Shawn Jtoush, Amy Sarver, Stacie Reed.
Brooke Smith, Ian Story, Rachel
Sixth Grade: Travis . Abbott,
Taylor, Amber VIning.
Anne Brown, Corey Darst, La·
Second Grade: Seth Baker,
Bethany Boyles, Charta · Burge, Deana Grover. Cynthia Cotterill,
Israel Grimm, Suzanna Hender·
Brant Dixon, Mindy Halley, Scott son,
Heather Knight, Jessica
Johnson, Shane Leach, Jennifer Stobart, James White, Lee
Nease, Nlcholas..Michael, Ryan
· Pierce, Davey Reyno1ds, Brandy Williams.
D.H .I: Stephen Grueser,
Stevens, Renee Stewart, John Brooke Hart, Prlacllla Lilley.
Ambrose. Steve Chapell, April
D.H.II: Carllsa .Barton, Lisa
Blankenship, Ash lee Vaughan, Taylor.'
·
Melanie .Bieylns, Max Bratton,
Stacey Brewer, Ashley Burton,
RUTLAND ELEMENTARY
Janje Compton, Celena Dillard,
First Grade: Jennifer Allen, .
Chris Gilkey, Joshua .Hayman, Derrick Bolin, zachary Bolin,
Brawn Herman, Bridget· John· Noah Chasteen, Mathew Cotteson, Joshua Jones, Se~h Rawson, rlll, Skip Dodson, Jus)ht Gil·
Tommy . Roush, Joshua Sorden, more, Alison Hays, Billy
Brandy Tobin.
•
Aaron Krautter. Be·
Third Grade: Donny Carna· Kennedy,
tbany McMUUn, Paul Michael,
han, VIrginia Howerton, Joshua Tiffany Priddy, · Nancy Rife,
Price, WJlllam SCanlo!l, Mellsha Elizabeth Smith, Susan · Tobin,
Swisher, Sara ·WIIllami, Philip Zachary W!Utama, Nancy Wingo.

.

113 SIZE

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE
GRAIN FED BEEF

California
Navel Oranges ... each

Boneless Top
Sirloin Steak: ..... .
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S.CT . SENSOR BLADE REFILLS .. . 13.49

BASKETBALL SPECIAL
THURSDAY, FRIDAY · SATURDAY

•Inter.Clearance Continues ·

{

1 GROUP FOR .N, WOMEN &amp; CHIDREN '

S1 '5 PAll 01 2 .~. S2500 .
1 GROUP-S20 PAll 01 2 PAll S3500
YALUIS TO *60.00

Nair Spdnl Shoie.Arrlvl•l Dal~f
. NONRETURNABLE BOTTLE,
C"FFEINE FREE DIET PEPSI,
CAFFEINE FREE PEPSI,

U.S. NO. 1

~lb.SJ29
Potatoes .. ~ ......... . Bag
Round·White

IG-LI. lAG fl ....zO-LB: BAG t3.•

Kroger ·

BUY ONE
GET ONE

• Brea d... ....20-oz
Whita
Loat · FREE!

.Diet Pipsi
or Pepsi Cola ...... 2-Ltr.

Pomeroy Amerlcare Nursing
Center having a five star rating.
Following the preseptatlon of
service awards refreshments
were served to a crowd oT
approximately 50 people.

Legion members attend
mid-winter conference

Boosterr to meet

The Meigs Local Band Boos·
ters will meet Monday at 7 p.m .
In the high school band room.

The American Legion I~ . the
world's· largest veterans organ!·
zatlon with over three million
members. Ohio Is the fourth
largest state with over 155,000
members. Lancaster resident,
Sam Barney , Is the state com·
mandf;lr. Barney Is asking legion·
nalres to raise over $155,000 for
the "War on Cancer" prolect. ·
The Ohio American Legion wlll
hold Its state convention In
Columbus July 13-15.

Woodmen to meet

The Burlingham Mod~rn
Woodmen will have a potluck on
Feb . .10 at 6: 30 p.m. al the hall.
Those attending are to bring a
covered dish and are encouraged
to bring a guest.

'

25°/o OFF

ggc
lb.,

Abel spokl' on her experiences
as a young woman working her
way through college at a nursing
bornE' and how things have
changed over the years. She at~
noted the significance ol the

Members of the American
Legion Drew Webster Post 39, ·
Pomeroy, attended the Ohio
American Legion Mid-Winter
Conierence. on Sunday at the
Radisson Hote l North In
Columbus.
Speake~S· at the open house . Conference speakers Included
Included Blll Bias, nursing home · Mil~ s. Eplt,ng, National Com'
administrator; LaRue lllll, nurs· mander of the American Legion;
lng director at the center; Nancy Myllo Kraja, Executive Director ·
'van Meter, the first nursing oftheAmericanLeglonWashlng·
director at the center when ll ton D.C. Office; andPeteRadem·
opened ten years ago; Jeff acher, 1956 · Olympic Heavy.
Ashcroft, a representative of the . weight Boxfng Champion.
Americare Corporation; and
State Representative A~el.

Meigs County honor rolls .· announced

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OHIO

NONE SOLD TO

•

EMPLOYEES HONORED - 'Rese ten year '
emplo)'ees were honored MoDCIBJ nlll:bt II&amp; the
· · PomertiJ Amerlcare Nursing Center's lenlb
annlveraary open .house. From left to rlpt, tbe

The Daily Sentinai-Paa• s.

.OPEN FIIDAY NIGiiT UNTIL I P.M•

Chapman Shoes
PHIIOY'S QUAUIY •01 STOlE

'

THURSDAY EVENING 6-9 P.M•

LOOK FOR TJIE RED TAG!
EVERYTHING WITH A RED TAG

l/2

IS

PRICE

VISIT OUR SALE ROOM
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ALL TENNIS SHOES

20°/o OFF

6-9 P.M . ONLY!

ALL WINTER PURSE.S 40°/o

OFF .

hmta~t houst
'7h

SHOE PLACE
MIDDLEPORT

DELl MADE

BOILED .HAM ................~!-. ••• S1. 99
ECKRICH

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TURKEY BREAST ••••••••••• ~!·•• S2.99
•

HOMEMADE

MEAT SALAD................l;~~·...... 89c

DAFT SlKfD CHEESE

VELYEETA .........U.!!~,. '2.69
DAFT PIILADEIPHIA

CREAM

.

NEW GREEN

CAIB·AGE •••••••••'!.......... 49&lt;
CElLO PACI

CHEESE .............Ut •• Sl .39

CARROTS ..........1~.!!1, ••• "39&lt;'

.A¥11 VALLEY
GlADE A

3 LB. BAG

LARGE EGGS ...P.9.t... S1.39

YELLOW ONIONS ......... 79&lt;

FIESH-UIE

·
2o oz.
. S1 •69
PEAS ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
· IANQUET
'
$
BOIL-IN-BAG ••••••••••\.cn••• 2/ 1.19
.IDSEYE
COOL WHIP •••• .'•••••••\.&lt;!~·••••••• S1.39
JOLLY TIME MICROWAVE

.
10'11

·

oz . S1 89
POPCORN · ·
DEL MONTE UNSWEETENED
GRAPEFRUIT JUICE .~~.~~•••••• S1.69
DEl MONTE
.
$ ·
SLICED CARROTS •••••u.%. 2I 1.1 9

········-:················· .

DEL MONTE WHOlE IEINAL

CORN ••••••••••••••••••••••\t.~! •• 2/~ 1.3 9

RPASO

REFRIED BEANS ••••••u.~t•.........99c
RPASO
.TACO SHELLS ••••••••••1~P}.-••••• S1.49
JOHNSON'S SPRING FIBH

$

PLEDGE •••••••••••••••••••~~-~!...... 2.' '
awr•
$
BATHROOM TISSUE .1.~...... 1.79
BOiaY ·
.
..APPLESAUCE •••••••••••tt.t!........~.99.(

�..
Ohio

tillli ,.
II jU il

STORE HOURS
Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

If I I

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298 SECOND ST . .
POMEROY, OH~

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PRI.CE$ EFFECTIVE SUN., JAN. 28 THRU SAT., FEB. 3, 1990

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Hemlock
'
. .grange

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l·•t.J 1=1

We J!eserve The Riehl To
Llmil Quantities

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meets

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POLICIES
,
' Ad$ outsid e Meigs,_ Gallia or Mal on wunti1111 mual be pre·
peid.
•Receive f .fiO diacounl for ad1 Jaid in adv an ce.
"free ads Give tw8T Jnd Found ed1 und• 15 words will be
run 3 d.,- i at no ch•ge.
' Pricetof ad for ell cap'fta llette rs is double pri ce o l ad con
' 7 poiPt line type only UMKI:
.
' Sentinel i1 nol rnpon1 ibl l!l tor errors etter tin i d.,. . !Check
far etrors lirsl day ad run • in paper), C1ll b etort~ 2 :00 p,m.
· d-vo
pubhcltion.lo make con•.::tion.
"Ads that mu st be P~Jid in 8d.ven ce . ,..,
Card otTh~ttks
H~PPv Ad•
I ':"I Memoriam
V~td hht~

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• A cl•sllitd adv e rtile mW~t placed in The Daily Sentinel (ell ·
cept · cln11fied dis pl.._. . Busin MI Card al) d legal notices)
will also eppe• in 1he Pt . Ple•e m Aeoiuer and the Gallip olis Deity Tt ibune, reKhing over , 8 .000 homn.

C:i

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l8.

$ ,.

I

Steaks/Roast....... .1(19
USDA CHOICE
·
.·Round. s'te.a··k•••••••• $2:~9

COPY DEADLINE MONOAY.PAPER
lUESOAY PAPER

WEDNESDAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER
t-HIDAY PI\PER
SUNDAY PAPER

1

LB .. '

USDA CHOICE BONELESS

Chuck Roast •••••••• $199
Ll.

LONGACRE

Mixed

Fryer Parts •.••.•• ~~ .. 49&lt;

CHICKEN

.

·

Breasts~ ...•••••••••. ~~.

Ground Turkey ••':•• 89 (

$

1cken Breast

18

DRAFT 'PUBLIC NOTICE
· Tha Byracu11 Vlloge hOI
llllod to monitor for rodlo·
l~glcel octlvlty in tho drink·
lng water ouppty. u requu - . the otote'o life drink·
lrif. Wiler lawo. Rulo 37411·
I : 28 of the Ohio Admin·
l11181hie Code requlr81 o
cinftmunlty -tor oupply to
ca!loot' lour
conoocutlve
quorterly umpleo for doter·
rrilrtltlon !)I compllll)ce with
1ft radlaloglcl) mixlmum
cant•mfun• .,..,.... Upon
being notlfiod of thlo vkoto·
by the Ohio Environ·
mental Protlllltlan Agency,
the Byrocu• V!HIJit hoo
""da orrori..,.emo for the .
di'ltlking wotor to be on•
IY,Ied at the above mon.
. tlclnod lreq-cy ·tor rodlo·
logloel ootlvlty. Tho lyreVltllllf wil tako otepo
to onoura thlt the roqulrod
monitoring wll continuo ·to
bo perlormoct.
(1) 30, 31;
1
-~Ptjbjitlij'Qtiea-1

30 Eoat Brood Street .:.
.
3&amp;ito Floor
Columbuo. OH. 432811-0403

$

39
2 ·
STARKIST TUNA
61ft OZ. CAN
.

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Words

D•v•

16
16
IS
15
15

3
6

10
Monthly

Roto . Ovtr 1 ~ WprlfJ
t4.00
,•
.20
t8.00.
.30
e9.00
.42
n 3.oo
.6o
$1 . ~0/ dov
.06/ doy

Anno unee 111 ents

Serv1t:es
('(l t 'f'r

lht•

Meigs County
Arae Codee14

M•on Co .. 'wv
Ar. . CodeJO•

"46 - GIIipolis
-367- Ch•htre

99Z - Midcl_,grt

175- Pt. Ple. .nt

Pomeroy
981 - Ch•*

458 - leon

245 - RIO Gr..de

84~ - Ponlond

773 - Me•on

256- Guv-n Oist.

247-- Letart hils
941 - Ruine
742 - ·Rutlend
607 - -Coolville

882 - New Haven

381 - V~on

g

143- Ara!MaOiat .

379- WIInut

15 - Sc:hool• &amp; lniCJuct io n
16 - R edio , TV. CB RepaW
17- Miscellan eous
18 ~ W an t ed To Do

..2 1 - Bulin•• Oppoftunity
22 - Mon&amp;y 10 Loan
2 3 ~-Prot• aiona l S ervi cEII

896 - Letert

937 - Butfl•o

alice ·

handling.
thio invitation to bid.
Contractor•. "'qulring eo·
No bidder may wlthdrow
olotance in -.ring bldo hlo bid within llxty (80) doy•
from Ceotlflod MBE oubcon· oltor tho octulol dolo of tho
tractoro ond 1uppllero may opening therool. The Do·
Bulldero Exch.,ge of
Central Ohio
contoct the &amp;toto Equal Em- puty Dlrootor, Dlvlolon of
Colu'1'buo. Ohio 4321 6
ployment Coordinator by Public Worb, roierveo tho
calling 16141 488-83SO or righttowolvoonylnlormoll·
the Minority Bulin•• De· ti01 or . to rejoc:t 1ny or oil
Dodge R..,ooto/SCAN
wlopmont Divlolan by col· bldo.
Cl-ond, OH. 44116
THE DEPARTMENT OF
ling (8141 468-8702 o• Toll
Buldoro Excho~ge. Inc.
Frlli on 1 · 800·282-1085.
ADMINISTRATIVE
SERVICES
• Eoch bid mull b• accom·
Clevoland. Ohio 441 31
DIVISION OF PUBLIC
ponlod by a BID qUA·
. F.
Dodge
RANTY meeting the require·
WORKS
Columbuo..Ohio 4321 6 , montl of Section 1 63.&amp;4 of
Co role J . Olohevsky,
Deputy Director
Copleo of the Notice to Bid- tho Ohio Rovlsod Code.
the Bid Guaranty and 111 31 ; 12)7, 14, 21 . 4tc
derO. Form of Propo..l, Fonn
of .Bond, Fonn of cont...,., Contract Bond mull be lo· ·
EEO Bid Concltiono.lnotruc- ouod by a Surety Company
P bl' N .
tio~o to Bidden, O...ol
meeting tho roqukemento of
u IC ot1ce
Condltlono. PJ.,o, Spoclflca. Articla2olthelnatNCtlanto
llano ond other Controct
Documento together with bldd•a.
Bido aholl bo oooled .a nd•
NOTICE
lo NOTICE
hereby given
PUBLIC
eny furthM Information cJo. oddroued to: DEPART- thlt on Soturdoy, Februorv
,lroct, moy be. oblolnod by
MENTSERVICES,
OF ADMINISTRA1UO.
10:00
o.m..onI
..._ Cont•otoro from TIVE
DIVISION 3rd,
public
uto II
wHI
bo held
tho Office of ASBESTECH. OF PUBLIC WORK&amp;. OF· Btate 'Routo 143, Pomeroy,
INC .. 328 Front Street. Mo- FICE OF STATE ARCH I' Ohio to Hll for cooh thelol·
riette. Ohio 441750.. TeloENGINEER
, ·30 lowlngclilllterol
phone (814) ;!73-0714. All TECT
EAST AND
BROAD
STREET,
191B PONTIAC :
FLOOR, COLUMBUS, Chief !!llobHo !lo""'
1..,.Piiiii:iC~r"'.-l bo
blcklng
wll· 31TH
forwordod SHIPPING
OH. 4321111·0403.
#4812PA32138
C!i~RQES 'COI,LECT upon
1 Tho Minimum Wogo Rota
Tho Formero Bonk ond
, ADVERTISEMENT
P\jr1140nl to tho pr'011illano of rocelpt of I .cleplltlil In the · Requlremonto' of Revlood Bovlngo Com)lllny, PomoSection 15;!.De and 1113,07 omount of UII.OO I * oot In Codti Ch8ptor 41111 and tho. roy. Ohio, -orvoo the right
of the Ohio R.-llod Code, :avcw of ASBESTECH, INC. Equol Employmont Oppor· to bid It thlo oalo, ond to
ft4bllc notice le ~ that The depooil wll bo relunclod tunlty Bid Condltlono ol Re· wlthdr- tho obovo collot·
IMied prllfllllllo. w11 bo ro- to blddero wioo return tho vlood Code Sectiono 1 53.5B eral prior 10 oala. Fuothor.
oolvod bt tho 0..,. bilont of plono and opeclficotiono In and 153.581.ondtheOoVIr· The Farman Bonk on~ Sov·
Admlnlotllllve ......lcel. D~ good condition within ten nor'o Eucutlvl ' Order of lnp Company - - the
viSion of Pubic Worb. Of· 1101 dayo otter receipt of Jonuory 27.- 1972 oro oppll· right to reject ony or oU bldo
lice of State A r - and bldo. The colt of reploco- cable to thlo bid Invitation.
submltt&lt;ld.
Engin-. 30 EoOt Brood mont of ony mi111r)g or doT!iE' ' MINORITY
SET.
tho oboya colla.
StiWI. 31th ·Floor• . Colum- mogad docum.,to wll be ASIDE REQUIREMENTS.ol
oold I~ the con·
In with no exbuo. Ohla 432111-0403 until deductad from thli depooil. Amoncled Subltkute Hou11 l'dlillon It
1llo,orllloy. Mlrch 1. 1110; 11 The low bidder moy oatain Bill 6B4 of the 1 13th Regu· prooood or Implied ~rrln·
3:00 p.m. hltern Stancfaod the pleno ond lpocification• lor 801olon of the Ganorol till given: .
For oppolntment to Time, ond oponoil .lil!modl• ond the dopooit will be r• Ao•mbly, ond opoclllcolly '
lily -oofter, for lurnlohlng tundod.
,
tho requlremenll of Reviood mobHe homo ond dlroc:tlano
tho m-ill and perlonning
Sqbcontrectoro ·ind mo- Code Section 123. 1611c) to the pr-rty, contact
thio llbor lor the execution terlol ouppllero moy acquire (21ond (3), oelatlngtomlnor'
Scon Sh.,k. 882-3293.
ond QOnOtructlan ot.
. lor their convenience, Pions ity BuolnoooEnterprloaSub• 11) 31 ; 1211 , 2, 3tc
·
ma'-rl..
ond S~llcotlano or. por· contl'8ct• •nd
Prciject'No. 1.'7D·B8·1l1 9
AII&gt;Ntoe Abatornont ond
tl'!n• thereof by JIIIYing for purchooo and oorvico 1upply
lnoulltlan Roplociment
the coal ofraproduction and . contrecto. oro applicable to
S-Ide Hoalth ond
Safety Program
11. Help W!~nled ·
Dlotrict 10. Phoo•ll
- Ohio D~p~rtment of
·
Toenoportatlon
101
Separoto bldo wll be
E. - ·loo.l:t.lil
receJved for:
Part time polition Ia available for a Medical
POMEftOY, OH.
EST.
Laboratory Technician .to work rotating
CONTRACT
OFCOST
991-22&amp;9
'
ahHta (all ahift1). Requiraa independent
Albeot01 Abotoment
...
NEW. LISTING - CHESTER
orfd lniUIItiOn R..
worker with capabilitlea In allareae of clini·
· pll!anlent ....... f83,231 .00
-NEW
HOPE ROAD - A
eel laboratory. Excellent fringe benefit..
A PRE-bid confwence wll
newer double wide, 3
be' .held ot 10 :00 o.m. on
Please c~ntact: .
.
bedrooms. 2 bath home. on
. F•bru•rv 21 . .1890. o.D.o.
Cecelia Lisle, Laboratory Supervisor
over an acre lot. Electric FA
T.·Diotrlct 10 Headquortero,
heat, rural water an~ cabl.e
Vetarena· Memorial tioapital
Mill)dngum ·Drlve, Morl.ua,
TV.
Call for appointment to
116
E.
Memorial'
Drive
OhiO.
see this one. $31.000.
Copi• of the Notice to
Pomeroy, Ott 46769
liddon, Fptm of Propooot,
(6141 992,2104, Extension 216
NEW LISTING ~ MIDDLE·
Form of Bond, Form of Con·
EOE
trict. EEO Bid Condltlano,
PORT - 2 story home lhal
lnotructlono to Biddero.
shows the work thai' has
&lt;len- Ccihdltlono. Pleno.
been done. Nice k~then , 3
54 Mltcellllneoua
SpeCHI-Iono ond ot._
bedrooms. dining room, attic
Cqntract Document• ere on
Mercllandllt
area and much more!
fill and IIIII' be -mlnod 11
$18,500.
the fot--.g affl-:
Depertnl.t of
POMEROY - 2 lots w~h
Admlnlotmtve Seovlceo,
l)lvlolon of Public Warko.
possibilities! , Seplic and
PUMitiCit SEmS-- ........................- ............. 13.97.lb,
Office of 811te Archltoc:t
elec. available. tots ol shade
IIGELEON HEIIAL TEA ............................. S3.51 bail
and Englntrees. $3,000.

w.

REGULAR OR DIET

DR•.PEPPER

••

24 PACK 12 OZ. CANS

FLAVORITE

2% Milk .•.•.•••••:!~. Sl ~9 ·

$499

GRADE A

LUCK'S

Large Eggs ......~0:!".~. 79(

PORK &amp; BEANS
l5 OZ. CANS

3/~1

SEASONED IIEAD CIUMIS ............................ 80• 'lb.

5

$2
99
Ice
~Cream
Snacks •••••••••••• ~!!!~ •• 69 (
••••••••••••
.
0~.
$119
9
7
Ruffles Chips •••••••
51
·to.,y's Pizza •••••••:. · .. : '.S2f;·
KEMP'S PAIL

LlnLE DEBBIE

'

'

Hapj)yAdl
to cele·

•

5 QUART PAll .

REG. S1.99

.

/ROZEN .

10

.. ·

of a

REGIUR OR.DIET

'

PEPSI COLA

CAMPBELL'S SOUP

10~4 o~.

3fSl

Gootl lhilr At Powoll's Sup« Yalu

Goe4 Sun., Jan. 21, thru Set. Foil. 3

36
-4·1••

39 OZ, ADC.

MAXWBl HOUSE

PE1K or lEG.

COFFEE

$499
Gee4 Only At Powoll's

S.,. Valu

. .... s.... ..... 21 tin set. fll!. 3

(HAIMIN

TOILET TISSUE
' 4ROLL
PAl

99&lt;

Good Olllf AI Pawtll's S.,. Y• .
Gaatl Sun.. lin. 21
. lhru S.t. Foil. 3

w.UNSCENTED ONLY
.
TIDE DOERGENT
.
.

,..

'= ~;.~:~~:;::~

REGULAR

1470L

$629

.

EAT &amp; LOSt

~

your IOokl It'• true

.

1

hew changed a
bit;
.
lilt the love .In our
hHrtl heen't yet.

:DID SUPPlEMENT ·
JO OD 'IWIIPAI

-

Meny Happy

Returnel

Good on~, ~· ...... s.,. v•
Gee4 S.... Jan. 28
.sat. Foil. 3

. HAIIPV 78th
PAf,IUNEI '

*•

Your

.,

(

I

ANTIQUITY - One ' story .
home wtth 3 bedrcioms, toal
furnace. Would make agreat
summer place. Has 3 lots.
indudine river lrontaee.
$11,000.
MIDDLEPORT- 6.09 Beau· •
IMul tounlry ICies close to
town. 3 bedroom mobile
home, small barn, and a .
12x65, 2 bedroom mobile
home wHh 111 hook ups. Live
in one, rent the Qlher.
$21,900.
.

..

CHICKEN NOODLE

JliNIOR PIETZBS ................. . .................:.s1.09 lt.
SUGARED PUFfED WIEA T'. ...................... I 1.84 lb:
WIITE IIINIAfUIE MARSHMAllOWS .. ,;....,.11.29 • ·
MEIGS COUNTY HONEY .... 1!1\'i!~~.!!:U!~~~l ... 12.10
WIIIG WATER-.......~............................... 72C Gol.

.t (
1

'

I

'

46 '- f urnished.Roomt ·

46 .... Spa ee f or Re nt

· 48 - hulclment tor Rent
49 - Fpr Le•e

,

Merchandi se

71 - Aut os t or S81e
7 2 .....:f ruc: ks for Sal e .
73 - VI nl &amp; 4 WO ' t
7 4 -· Motor cycl e&amp;
76- Boall &amp;. Mot or• tor Sale
76 ..:. Aut o Part s &amp; Acceuo ri•
. 77..-Allt o Rep air ·
•
1 8 - Cempiny. EqUipment
7 9 - Campeu &amp; Motor Ho m es

Serv ices

51 - Hou• hold Good1
52- Sporting Good•

81 - Homelmprovemenh

PUBLIC NOTICE
Notico is given that o hearing will be held on the 2111
doy of February, 1990,
Haering Rm 1. 10th Fl .. 369
S . High St.. Columbuo, Ohio
43216, upon a potitlan for
oelz uoe of the properly
ond/ or contrabond: one 111
electronic vidoo gambling
mochine. Said property woo
oelzod on Auguot IS, 1989,
by Dept. ol Uquor Control
from Blue Torten Inc.. ot
80~ S . Third St .. Mlddlo·
port. ·oH . ond io prountly
hold by tho Dept. Any peroon having an ownilrohip or
•curlty lnter01t In the
above·d•cribed propony
moy cont•t the petition.

8 2 - Piumbing &amp; He • ing

54 - Mis.c. Merchandiu
56 .. -Building Su ppli1111
56- Pe ts for Sale
57- Mu sieel lnatrum ents
5 8 - Fruits • Veg&amp;'abl •
5 9 - for Sale o r Tra de

Public N alice

Public Notice

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On Jonuory 18, 1890. in
Cth.:,otM,elgo CouNntyo. Probo to•
2 6 48 1
Ct01 0
Ollto F. Heighton, S11 High
Street,
Mlddloport, Ohio
4&amp;710. oppointod Ext·
cutrix of the Oltate of
Fronceo J. Lowlo, deceaood,
lite of 118 South Second
Btroet, Mlddloport, Ohio
46780.
. · . Robert E. Buck.
..
Prolllta Judgo
Lono K.. Nooilllroad, Clork
I1 l 24, 31 ; 121 7, 3tc
•
. /1.1. A

8 3 - Exc avating
84 - E iectr ie~l

&amp; Re h ig tn t ion
85 - Gu n eral Hauling
86 -Mobile Hom e Re pair
9 7 - Upholstery

Public N alice

Public
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On Jonuory 18, 1990. in
tho Moigo County Prolllto
Court. Cooe No. 26490. Ka·
thryn Knight, BMCh Stroot,
Mlddlopoot, Ohio 45780,
woo oppOintad E110cutrix of
th!J ntate of Fran en Cleve-.
land WHoon. dace•oct. lote
of 677 Oliver Street, Mid·
dlepon. Ohio 45780.
Rolllrt E. Buck,
,
probate Judge
Lona )(, Neu olroad. Clerk
(.1) 24, 31 : 121 7, 3tc

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On Jonuary 17, 1890. In
the Melgo County Problte :
Couot, Cooo No. 28493. Jo· .
cob E. Schuler. 1110111 Stato ·
Route 1 24. Portland, Oliio ·
45770. woo oppolntod e ... :
cutor of theatate of Paul M. Schuler, deceued. lite of ·
56068 Stote Route 124 ·
' :
Portland, Ohio, 45770.
Robert E, Buck, ·
Probote Judgo •
Lona K. Noll!ll ;oad, Clerk . :·
(11 24, 31 ; !217. 3tc .

"AIJJ

11/H• 71.- UIJIHr

IU I'll/,

·

Iliff ,1'1/r/"

Bus·····D·e 8 8
s·ervl·ces.

t~l1!)!3~1;c12~1~2c·~2t~c~-~l~~·~·~;:r.~•:M~Il~ltl~lll~lll~l l~.l:lli~II'A~li:JI~I1l:~:itM=Ill=lhl=~~~:~~ :~u'I I I HI!.: :"':y•:" 'l /l l.··~~~~
=l~ r.h'l'l~W.~r""'f:"~'"'~~~=J '

FURNACE
, FURNACE
FUINACE

PARTS AND SERVICE
ALL MAKES
GAS OR ELECTRIC

kEN'S APPUANCE
.
SERVICE
992·5335 or 915-3561

Acrau From Post' OHJao
217 E. Sec. P0maroy

lVI3t89 !In

SER~ICE

We can r,.-ir and rt·
core radtators and
hlattr torts. We can
also acid bail anct rod
aut radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196

Middleport,

Ohio
1· 1'3-tfe

1/2

DAVE'S
SMALL .ENGINE
.EPAII

LIMESTONE

.. llitlolleport, Oh.

AND DIRT
SPREAD

PARTS AND SERVICE
For.·Moat 2 end 4 -cycle
engines

Stock Pooto for
Homelite. Weede•ter,
Tecuma~. Brigg• •
Stratlon.

PH. 992·3922
·

742·3018

SALE$ and
SERVICE

.TOP SOIL
FOR SALE
949-2493

3rd StrMt, Racine, Oh.
•

1·1-1,_1 mo.

COUNOY

MOBILE
HOME PARK
•Mobile Home
Pert a
•Mobile Home
Renhlla
oLoi Renhlla

992-7479

lt. 33 ltlrth of
P-ray, Oltle'
1·12·'11-llio

1o Ton Minimum
1600 Gallea Wat1r
Dtlhrery
,.

992·5275
1·24· '9lnjn

BUILDERS

CUSTOM IUU
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

MAIN ST., IUTLAND
1-15-'!M).Ifn

CALlS
.. NO SUNDAY
'
· 4-16-K-Hn

GUN SHOOT

USED APPUANCES

Bashan

luldlng

EYUY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

. , Fac1orr choke ·
12 Gautt Shotguns lhilr

Strlcktly Enforlld
10·9-tfn

PH. 949-2101 .
or Res. 949·2160
Day or· Night

·

90 DAY WAIIANIY
WASHER$-SIOO up
OII\'EI$-$69.ap
REFIIGEIIATOR$-$100 •.P
IIAJIGIS-Gos-Eiec.- $125 up
FRUlER$-$125 up
IICIO OVU$-$79 up

liEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE

LOW GlADE OAK

SAW LOGS
....
s160 .....
IIIIYDD TO

OHIO PALLET
COMPANY ·
POIIIIOY, OH.

.·

' 1/ l /'. / 1 mo.

•VINYL 'S IDING
•ALI.IMINUM SIDING
•SLOWN IN
INSULATION

•.

*SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and RE·
MOVAL
*UGHT HAULING
*FIREWOOD

BILL sUCK

992-2269

EVENINGS
4-l·l•tto
J&amp;L '"

INSUUDON

BISSELL
SIDINI
._. CO.

Wilier ltplal 0•

PH~

FREE ESTIMATES

....

.. F,.. !ltllnlrttl''

949-2101 .
or IIi. 949·2160
. NO SJINII4YCAliS

. .

4-IS. 11ft

YltYLSIIIING
VINYL IEI'LACDIENT
~

992-2771
1l-IJ.'It-l•o.

Roger ·Hysell
Garage
lt. 124, ._..., Oltla

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Alu Trt•••llllt•
PH. 992-5682
.or 992·7121
4-25-lfn

YOUNG'S ·
CARPENlEI SERYICE

- Roam Addltfane

- Gutter Work
- !loob luof a Plumbing
- Con-. Work
- Roofing
- lnt...... aE-Iao
Point Ina
(fRE! !ITIMATES)

Y. C. YOIING Ill

992-6215

·

992·5US ar 915-3561
Atrau FNIII Peat .Offlg
POIIIIOY I OliO

'--=:::::::::::
'.
DOZER
10/30/'lt tin

t--

-WANTED

.• ·

•

."At ·Rea~le Prien"

RACINE . ·
FIRE DEPT.

. ..

BISSELL

•Tire Sales
•Front End
AUgnment
•Oil Change 8t Lube
•Brake Work

' 9·6-89-tln

.ROSES'
EXCAVATING
&amp; TRUCKING

· 6-21-'lj.ffn

GUN '. CLUB
GUN SHOOT
Factory Choked
12 Gauge Qnly

. ALLEN'S
HAULING ·

located at Y. .y LwoJocor

RUTLAND TIRE

Starts at 1:00 P.M.

2nd St., Mido!ltpartl

Far Appt. Call
992-6717 •

RACINE
EVElY SUNDAY

---

HEAD

Transuortation

53 - Anttques

ti71 - Apple GrO\Ie

Public N alice

65 - Sead &amp; Fen iUzet

HOultl for Rent
Mo bile Hom• for R"e nt
Farms to r Rent
Apartmen t to r Rent

14 - Buliri ee i Trai ning

LivP. st uck

6 4 - Ha y &amp; Grai n

36 - ·R811 hlete Wanted

41 4 2"4 344-

SUIJIJ IIe s

6 1 - far m Equipm enl
62 - Wented 10 lu v
63- livest ock

47 .:..w l!n1ed tO Rent "

11 - Helo W anted

1.2- Situation Wanted
13 - tnsuta n ct

Jollowinl{ wlephon.(~ excha'n!{l'S ...
Gallia County
Aroa C ode 614

32 - Mobile Homes for S.1le

33 - Fa rml tor Sale
3 •.- Busin•• Buil dings
3 5 - Lots • Acr e.. e

8 - Pultllc S al e • Auct iun
9 - W..-.ted to Bu y

Employment

qassifit•"tl pai{('S

I)

31 - ·Hom n lor S .. e

3- Annoucementa
4- Giveaway
5- H. ppy Ads
6 · -Lo t t and Fou na
7 ·- Y• d S.ae (~M~i d ' i(l adv1nce1

Alit" •• lot conwcutiv• runL llrolwnupd-v"awill bech•ved
tor each dl't 11 • ..,.,ate ach.

Farm

Real Estate

· 1- Card of Th1nk1
2- ln Mem Ory

. MEDICAL LABORATORY TECHNICIAN

,
2/: $1
Lett:uce •••••••••••••••

brlng 11 covered dish. AI ) vaoaes
of the county are invited to
attend .
T he meeting closed ·with a
contest and a song by the v oup.

RATES

clcJCiu-•·.

Drumsticks ••••• ~ •• ~~ •• 39C
FROZEN FILLETS or PATTIES
1:·!~~~

Public N alice

Garderen from Holland as the
speaker. Hl.!l topic will be cus·
toms of the HoUand. A potluck
dinner will precede the meeting
with Hemlock turntshlng tlie
meat. Those at tending are to

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

d.!n

TURKEY
TYSO~

Public Notice

·'

..

•

•

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
~ · 1100 A.M . ~ATUAOAY
2 o00 P.M . MONDAY
· 2 o00 P.M . TUESDAY .
- 2 :00P .M . WEDNESDAY
- 2 o00 P .M . THURSDAY
: - 2 00 P.M . FRIDAY

convepilon held In Columbus and
attended by herself, ' Maxine
Dyer,,and'Opal Dyer.
· A announcement of the March
17 meeting was made with
exchange student Danyel Zan

•

'

TO !'lACE AN AD CAll 992·21'56
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
· CLOSED SUNDAY

I
I

'• I I J6

PORK Bun

The lecturer' program theme . meeting conducted by Zlba Mid·
wu "A New Be&amp;lnnlng'' with kltf, masler. There were 15
readings by Muriel Bradford and members and three guests
Jessie White at the recent meet· present.
lng ot the Hemlock Grange 2049.
Patty Dyer , state delegate,
A potluck dinner preceded the gave a report ·of the slate

Classi

i

The Dally !-•tlt•el.:....hgl 11

Pom•oy-Midci.Poet. Ohio

'.

SITEWORK • ROADS

•'

ClEARING

NEWLAND
ENTERPIISES

•

DUMP TRUCK

•

Sand·Stone-Dirt

(6141

667~3271 '

Grc.t I.

rt,~~

CIIPWOOD
WAllED

"·.t,..••:l:~l.11.,,
OM.

Pl. ··2·1161

sus•
...
Buylngt:'u~
7:30.8:00
MOn. thru Fri.

7 :30-4:00

'•

•

�Sentlnll

•

Ohio

31, 1980

13

,.PIIIUI
....,

LAFF-A-DAY

.,..... """' al llle
• .
lour ocra..lod Mrdl below to """' four . . . -.~~.

_...,._...,...._IIIIa.
~- ..... ""' ....... 11......

---.-._
.............. _
,• ..z....

'...... f.=•::••

I

I
I

M=l

• . .......
Hlaii:'"In .........
CAll

11~_. .

1

·· ~t~==~
pnnl1i lpfit up,

I

LGet • Found

llr.l1t1•2211.

And .

~ ,~.'l&gt;···

0

_""',.-...,. I.

a

I
I~1111 r
I t i I~ t I
ELKIIYE

IJ

-

-~

'"Look,

•

11\e Ia 1oro1c1 10 llilkl 1
chOice. Q
III~~ 1 One TV Q
.11]1
Clrlfftllr

,.

'fES.MAAM .. A DOG BREAK 15
WHEN 'I'OU SET TO 60 HOME TO
SEE IF 'I'OUR D06 M155E5 'I'OU
OR NEEDS '(()U FOR ANVTHIN6 ...

..............
-.
~--..--·

•

~

I

L

:'l
1::--~

1:01(1) ........... .. ,,

Lrw ,.u _ _

PDiniM ·
a.. ..,...
mister, I'll ask you Off
Chapel AIL. ..... d '
one more time! Are you 114 IMII74orl14- 1'714..
laughing WITH me or .
AGAINST me?"
j • . , •.

w·•

1:30 •

I

..

I
I 1 I I' I I

'

7

A Complele lhe ' chuckle guotod
~ by filling in the missing ' WOt"dS
L,.J.I-.J.-.L.-'-·---1~ you deveiOj) lrom otop No. 3 below.

NIC Nightly -

!tliO.nYiie~,..,. ...

1;1

A
V

i IL~=.'i,
1:2·1 Cenllict

AU.---·PIIolln

.....
-.~~--=

Buiii'IHI '
· Tl'lllnlng

p.m.
.... ..,- ...............
..

Adu!ZIDII. IWADIMI: 2::10

..........

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• YldiOCou;ibi
7:05 (J) ......._.
7:30 • W PaiiiiiJ ,._

75 BoalS • MoiOrl

; forSIIe

t

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11 2
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. ~ut~ph¢'•

Wllnted to Buy

Junk . . . -

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Colll1.-11111. . 7:GO ......

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21 L . . . I - . • ""
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a I :me.t111111Dt.

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42 Mobile Homel

1710, 11-1....

torRent

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Help Wllnted

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111 ........ .

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UTili

F111anc1al

~~~~

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Merchlndlll

BUIIIIHI
Furnllhld 11110, 2 llldroouc,-"

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1'nlllr ,_ ,.,. lit lit 1111 an,
Ohio. CAIItMtlltM.

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. erv1ces :-214.,..l'.r.:-ciHw::..~ ...,..,_ar, .rJ:;·......
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- ....
~----~--·---------ICMH II ON IIIULTWIILUON
e
DOI.LAR RIIIARCII. ,_lnlop:

-

CHES1Q, OliO
•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE

•FILL DIRT
•ANYTHING
AT ALL

985-4422

4712.

a, LMIIII. ...,....
lnfoniAI-., ...... .......
• lll\lln!lr Door;Dincst IUfAiroiiiD, lnlll. U. 44

.!•nSr 1

R. L HOLLON
TRUCKING

·- -:

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97

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.
.. ·Ia' t ,,.,....

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BUYING ALUMINUM CANS, GLASS,
PLASTIC, COPPER, BRASS, SHEET
ALUMINUM, $ADIATORS AND MORE

I

__.. ·-

HUUR8: Mon.·FrL 12:0010 I p.m.
8l1unlly 8 o.m. 10 12 noon

fOI I.HMA1101 CAll 991-31f4

.,.::- ::.::.. . "'::=

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:.'1"lion,
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D1wo I A.IL IIi I lUI.

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Ill Crook I ChaH
t:oo •TheIIlUltlotr
• • a Olltato on
a ft I II (l) Q ·
(I)Calagrllalkalball

--

~lt','l, \ --,

AI

.

dlractor Milos Foimlin 11
work on hla molt recenr
· production. Q
·

lor NIO,

11.00. 1'14-141

-

-

lur - t Llllhor

- ·-··' - - -~~~~~~~~~
,.~-~-11,
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a--• .... cif Hor,,1-·lo, IJal
55
Building
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·
. _.. Clilllol"' ll!aol&gt; •'
Suppllel
f:..,.::, 'ltw .,;z:"'.::''t).
brloiJ, -

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Cou!Wr
Aapa:""'lno. Goetl 58
.-d111pttii1Dt1,
T.V......
0..

1m
UIIOU.

PaiS tor Sell

I ILII. lo I p.m.
14- I old ..... AKC ,.:
~- m 1n1. - . A I • - r.111mo ..,.. ,..
........,111
hill 11 - . , want11d
.100.1113111111.
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McCIIbeAncl
fleet

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...

,llolll
_ .illlln
..._ W

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~Mtae.

certlln dHih when til Ia held

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1=.":'!~

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Devices
, Dependeblt llelrinc Aiel Sllu &amp; s.mct
H•rinc Evelllltions For All Aps

,loi, .
.,

Cllllt 1111. ..... -

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

&lt;Witltiw~ld (GI(t:45)

.

[~'"!:~!~
hll pllntlnga

~· ··~····, ...

lions lor the Y4!ar ahald by mailing
$1.25 ro Aslro4raph, c/o lhla newt~paper, P.O. Box 91428, fi:fevetand, OH
«101·3428. Be aura to alate your zodl-

i2 ·Licensed Clinical AuclioiCJiist ·
BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

:l2 Mobile Homes
for sale

be

approve,

.

·t

..
Ill

...•·

=;:'::"acfi=
.... ...,.

"

be

producer roday, you mull
methodical and lhlnk our all your IIepa
ahead of time. Before you llart awing·
lng lhe hammet, knouuwn.e you're golng to drive lhe nflll1.
VIRGO CA... 21-lepl. 22) Changea
over which you'llltave no control CQilld
occur roday In a malter fhll Ia of per·
sonallmporl8ncle to you. Bide rour time
until lhlfllll gel beck to IIOtmll.
L-A (hpt. II-OoLII) Your lnttre111 .
might have to tiki a beck to t ' of your componlont today. H COUld
Uke ~ ltM
for doing thlngo 1 -'lin way lhlll you
· do.
ICOiiPIOIOeUI Nou.II)Sulldua.ln·
1oday to try ro mance Olhll'l
_, mold.• you a.n't liP-

a--

far;:;" !Mr - . ~

11£:"''t

II!'IOf I 4 Ill
whO try to IIIII you Into
III8DIII*M rllkl ~- I ,lla

ltNolouiiCIIWH10 good, ... .,_, do " Ill thalr
AGUAfliul (olin, :Ill l'all. tl) Orglhllza- C.UCIII (,_.It~ II) lomllhlng OUUII.
_ _.
-'111 today If' or _ , . mlghl ~ yout pro- . CAI'fiiCoM (11M. 1N111. 1t) llrtng11ng
your olljaallvel. g,... toller .lind dony you the Ull!eJa · InO otlilr per aona Into the plctln reVpur polllbllllllforauccm when do- rntlntoh hard, lOri goal. If you Ill your . o-dlng a llllltw you 0111 -~~~~~~~~~

.

"llhOuld have k - M - going to
chMt when MIIIOICid up WMring I
bulletproal VIII."
.,

.

.u.1 (Manrll 21·Aprl11) Don't tlke
1'*'111 out on 1 ~one today n you
fall ovllpo•lrld or ouCmanetiVWid regarclng your lnvol&gt;-11 with lho out·
lkM ~- ~-II 1101 at fault.
TAUIIUI(Aprll • ...,II)Thllllnoll
flOOd day 10 like lin : . . _.. you.
~Mw llflln8 In ......... your ecope,
J1,·• Tlrln'U p IIIIIIMICr you mlgllt 11M to
.,~_what.::do·
A number oi thlfllll you'w llilan - - II II ~ ~~~ . , You COUld
lng for alonG long ttme fiiiCIIII ba adllad 811d.up ............. -*'111111 tetci your holdl.ig. In 1M v-" llhMd. Thla1 day II you lhn time wlttii*IQII~ whO
coUld come lliOUI In a ......., mr-1- , - IIIII to IPIIIfl more thin you 0111 for

'I·

•J

.., llgn.
PIIC:EI (Flit. 20:Mwah :Ill) Conditions
conllnue ro
a trifle tricky for you
again lodar - • your f i n - 1111
concerned. oon·r mike any _,lrY
...-of -~ a pruden! blllktr won'!

eh~llve

1110 lhlnQIIn 1 hll-mlll 111111on n 1111. temper get out 111 tMdllJi, M.,.. anly 1 on your- COUld ba • biD mlltlka·toAquartul, ...., yourMII to a birthdll!' makn bad lltuatlon - -· .
,day. Don'l llddla yourll!l wllh '
~- ~for your Allro-Gr.ph precllc- ~0 (JtriJ D-~22).:n_orcner to be~-~~·):

I

'

3+
4

Pass 3+
All pass

+

Pus

Opening lead: • K

1-----------...1
contract will eas;ly be set. It is impor·
tant to remember that the hilb·low
signal with a doubleton is a useful tool,
butJ·t should not be used when the defen .er knows that the defense should
proceed along different lines.
Jamn Jacoby 's books •Jacoby m Bridp " 1nd
wltb 11#/atMr,
the ~le Oswald JAcoby) .1re now •v•Jllbltl "
boobtolft. Boib are publilbed fiT PMM BooU. ""'
~Jacoby on ~rd Gjm~ - (writlftl

@ , ., NIWIPAPIIII INIIIU fUll Ala

1~=

acrosa

'
·,

DOWN

1 Dental

story through
~~---and

1ll.-. ......
- l141tll411.
II lllo Gnndo on

Pau
Pus

(1975 film)
33 Dislodge
38 Mishmash
40Nawe houf
41 Polpourri
42 Revamp
43 Word after
tabla

10:30 CD A lllrglrrg ltrW.n
·
F18tdreclll lie La'ndla lamHy
who cornblna 1lillr uniQue
musical glfll. rellgloul lalth
and 11m11y rrlidltlonl Into 1wo

.._.

Eur

1•
2 NT

'

111:20 Cll MOVIE: lllda In The

"

~ : usA M. KOCH, M,S,

~ ·1614) 446-7619 or (614) 992·2104 ·
417 SICCind Avtllll, Bell 1213
z Glllpolis,-Ohio 45631 '
ont
,Vtteranl lltlorlal HOIPi~!
.lulbtny H&amp;IJ, PollllriiJ,

.

what to do 1bou1 her ·

. . . . . . .....

Norrb

Pass
Pass

15 AHentlon
18 The Shrew's
_ city
Yeelerday'a Anil-.
14 Minimal
17'Tennis 23' See 4 Down 34 Building~,
1a Bookworm . greal· ~7 Golf club
part .
U! Fall guy · 1B·Bum
28 Scottish
35 Were
21 Taste
a bll
explorer
introclueed
22 Nimble
11 Shrub 31 Steven's
37 - king
24 Genesis
or tree
parlner
38 KnightlY
place
20 Gaze 32 interlaced
IIIIa
· 25 Wavy (her.)21 Oenoml· 33 Carloonlat 39 Gardening
:za Healed
nation
Gardner
need
28 Jolly29 Make lace
30 BOok buyer
32 "The
Stapford

~~~=~
vendor Holly mull daclde

-m;

TV . . , .... IPIOIIIII!na

In -

.

West

Pass
I+

chain

,· •.

10:00 I]) 700 Club Will Pit

. . . - W't
W. 4 .....All
.......
-'tiii.... OIO......1MM Ohio
lftlllp.ln. . .
2114.
.
•

Dolt. -

Now

Soulll

12 Resound
13 Sea bird

• (J) Anrll*lalut Love
Wlf!l Hanneh· end Merty In
tow, Holly rune into her
ex.fluablnd.I;J .

,llaUal
__
.,,2
lor_
- _1111
- ........I

I

~~~~

11 Mounlain

9:30 Ill

I

_,,,

not """ -

....

Untoll, o1G. Cllildo Wln-

a 111""

., •••,..,... ~....., ....... 2
,.~~

10 Good .

Muldera J:i.OOI S18reo.

PEoPl-E WITH &amp;MLJ,..
MIND!S ARE:' EAe&gt;ll..Y
AMU65D.

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South

snooze
II Latvian ·
7 Bobby II Rich rock

vessel

.

l8l MOVIE: lacllfltV Rlak
(1 :00)
1D MOVIE: The China Lalta .

..

.14-l'

.

· 1 Talon
5 Sailing

This
lreah, Insightful comedy
lo!lows 1 young men haunted
I?}' his _
mom. (1:30) Q .
IIJI Larry King Uvaf

u,

+AU

5 Sonor(l ·

ACROSS

CD Anie11c1n Maltlll Follow

84 H!IY • Grain
llr fl(llll, =~~
'~'::·~=::::::::r
1 ~--·
....an, ..nnureM,
4x4 round......_
Stored lnlldl.
..u

+A9853

.10 12
.53

by THOMAS JOSEP.H

io?. aaag11 Ho.._,

ad ..............-

11,000 new, win
11W4W201.

SOUTH

CROSSWORD

I hiah.~ HX clall. Q

..... - . 1114-211-

Dllanclo, · c . - I I - IIIII wlh
Pandt • • ~ 114-411- -·,_....-·IRON
7472.
HOII8E ILIICIS. IIof.IA.I74ll.

Mon.- .•

eiJl DDCCI'I - ·

(f) AIMrle8n fllllytrouH

IIOi -

llfoh.

gave

M.D. Doogla flllreel to INch

.-.-:=

..........
1 . . . . . . . . ,.~
.... D111Jr1 lwlohor'I'Uiod
Ape

2lir ~-• .,~old,

1:301l)

llint••- 4410.I II. piollup 114
~ fwg
I 110 OIIMI
- . -• . . - . ..... 1m
~~~~--UJCft
. . . . . t.;M;
f*:
.._._., . . . . 'II
dlie, - IIII-a:;;,; .......110;

+932

I IIA9f·fr"rdyii;J

Home

121 • ldng .::: UMd

lloll!flli-'1,

Hom•• tor sale
,_.,
.................. ,
.--. ,.
----. c... ....
.

I

SPECIAL ACCOUNTS FOR
NQN..fiOfll 11011$ ·

.. t 1:.r.:..~­

Goo

31

'.'\

1111

1111.

by Peter Kichline - is available from
Granovetter Books, 18 Village View
Bluff, Ballston Lake, NY 12019. Kich·
. line is an entertaining writer, who has
OCroaefiN
some 1ood examples of situations in
. 9 Night Coull
which it's righl to 11nore some tenets
7:35 (J) lailfold And Son
of play and )lidding. Look at today's
1:00 I]) MOVIE: Fllf ·llllkH Out
deal and put yourself in East's position
.· (2:00)
defending apinst four spades.
(2) G Unaolvecl
Aller the king of hearts lead, a rig·
. Myiiii!H Aulhorlllls ...
idly scbooled East may decide to show
balllad by the creation of
bis doubleton heart by playinl high·
odd·llh-cn wheel cropa. C
low.
West would continue with a'ce and
Ill e (J) Olowlllg Plillll Af a
a
heart,
ruffed by East, but that woul~
roat1uren1, Jul'- mull act 11
be the end of the delense. Declarer
Kate and Mlka'l wal1re11.
would draw trump, and later the po-CD (f) AIDI ~This
tentialloslnl diamond would go away
ldhlon features 1
story
. 011 the flnenclno of
s •
on the 1ood queen of hearts. Here is
how Kie~ll~ describes East's play of
;,•;~~Slim
the
heart nine at trick one: "I coniider
Gomez becomel a tuapect
this
typll of mistake intolerable, be·
In thli murdlr oil car thief.
cause East aeted like a robot when he
tbe hip-low heart signal, instead
1111 MOVIE: Dea1lt Wllh .II
of noticin&amp; his natural trump trick."
IR) 12:00)
oPnrnaNewo
Of eourse the righl play for East is
lUI MOVIE: Triel Without Jllry
to simply play the three of hearts. This
11 :00)
dlllCOt!l'liglilg card should cause West
1D Murder, Slit Wrote
to make the logical switch, through
- III~WIIIOinlh
dummy's A·Q of diamonds, and the
1:05 (J) MOVIE: Dull At llialllo
(2:15)

__ l!oil ........... -

- - . . 110 ...... All . .

3 .,. 4 • J ••• _., IIIII

----~~-

3114.

'

Clmpen&amp;'
Mo1orHOm11 · . ·

&amp; . . . . . . ._....

-

. 1· 11·10-tln \

..ANLEY'S RECYCLE .tENTER

211-1221.

I . - IMf!ll raom ...... lor

_,*"~~
.
:::.:-=..... . . . . . ~ .-.

~

...,.,

m.-----:.:m...: a=r:...-...:
-

--lonl

:1 ..... door OGINfiii'OIII ooollr.
R11111 _.t, In
· -. . . . 114-21111110, ....

lorq,.i a - l l k o -. 304-61S-2041,
IIW....._II I .,..11.711. ,._

tor top . . . .

·11

=:·:..-~''\1..-

7i

I

I .... . . .

rr::.k-.............. ·,·""!,

• tylll. ...... to lll,ttiO: ...
,1lrta.._
. . . . pI . . . etow.

-

llllllal141 .. to

Ullulii.Cdlll 411

·-Over--·.......
......
IIIII

~-'"ii'*"
" 01111 ~to ·
-

h

or
fI _ _ _
.....,.,._

'*

to tla IIIII •'•" . . . to
to tl7l.

.... luln.e -

-

Aplrtrnlnt .

1.11 Clolooine, -

· ·nbella:

Qoodl
LAYNE'I PUIINITURI!

=

'""·

Jolin liMN, J010 - · """"
tllwp, W/John s ,I:O.,PII. .
looltom~roiroomplonlw,

.Ji084
+10164
"Bridging the Gap"

• (J) Molrna'a l'amly

·

'i

ltftpt•fllllt• ...,_

. . . . I:ON:OO w , ,

- I f ,1w...:il -

:sfti;;;;;;;-..;_Ho
hiOicl

'ldryor,
_...... ..... 51
n-I
'oo.,1112.,_M,
- • · ....,.. • .,.,. no

-~

«1'14-87-

• J 10 1 2
.93
• K 962

. • AK6 5

1;1 ·

whlll ,......, 1lfflonl. fllewa ad.

Zllr, .,_..
- rwqulrM.
........
Nf.
.,.
11.......,
0127.

21

•

•

A new book -

EAST

WEST

+t

e

~pttJION.
• ,,,., ;;,,, ,~ \HAV-!5 I· 31 '

..... ..... __ .,,.........
__ ....

51 Finn Equipment

. 11

;\ ~ GiTTII~r(; up 1$
· JAP News AN~' l:
WA~T A\ $fG0 Nf&gt;

75 Auto P8rt1 l

Acceuar111

Emplovmenl Serv1ces

I

By Jamn Jacoby

+A Ql

+K QJ

i l ) l _ . . _ Tonight

~-

I

NORTH
. 1·31·tt
+K Q&amp;
.Q J 8 4

No job ·
for robots

9 AIIIIDft And Co11111
.IIJ Miami Vice

. l Vlc;lnlty

9

BRIDGE

'

" ·~~~ liS WhMI 01
ll.:..c-1;1
.

Pomeroy,

I I I

Grandma always told .us Chat opportunity knockS buC
sometimes It sneaks up and Cht;m SLIPS AWAY. ·

1 .

i5
()) PM M•••ltlf
(j) Call II laakatllliH
Ill e Ill CIIINII1 A,....
CD (!) MllltiiN Lehrtr

'

ITH~ I

SC:IAMJ..ITS AN5'!WEIS
1-:ro
Halves .. Weave - Sheep - Misery- SLIPS AWAY

Qrtlflth

7:00i lca.DW ·· ~·King

Galllpolll
'VIcinity

PRINT NUMBERED ....
LETTERS IN SQUARES

D ~~~~t:m fORI I.

9 "" Oft The Wit-.
IIJHe-MM
IIITopCald

1:35 (J) Andy

YUC
5

1...: : ·: : : ·: : : ·

~~(0:30)

I

r 11-

0

The after dinner speaker l:lad
talked lor quite awhile when
I I 1~-:;:·~-, someon' muttered, "The beet
,..
· Wfll he could end his speech
N A wp 0 E
is to say he will ~.. . Che ·-···."
H

loumlll llld by Pller

insertion
2 Extend

80nllaga

3 Oklahoma
city

~~noe;S.waldi T_,..

4 Greallobl

11:00

1131

DAILY CRYPI'OQUOTES- Here'tllow 1o worlt It:
AXVDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

,,

•

One letter stands for enother. In this umple A is tiled

fcir the tine L's, X for the two O'a, etc. Slll(lle letlen,

a~. the length end fonnation of the words are ell
hints. ~ch day Lhe code letters are difrerent.
'
CDmJQOOTE '

....

BE~VE

QL

'

WQ LG,

'

QWREBMV

BZO~U

HV

XVJEL,

.

UB

UCJl

XVAA

UCV
UB

UB· SB LUV

w.

••

..
'

.

RXJUV.- EVLV
GVAS.IEUVA
Yea1n.~Ca;;l•llll•1u HUMAN SOCIETY IS

UKE AN

•

I

ICEP1' FROM FAI.l.ING BY ntE

MUTUAL PRESSURE OF ITS PARTS. - SENECA
~ 1110 fir

ICinfl F - S,1

7 II , Inc.

.

·'

�F'ag I

•

14-The Daily Sentinel

'

Pom&amp;oy Middhpor1. Ohio

V:'ldnlldlt'. January 31,

'*

Ohio I~Jtery

Purdue
'

topples
·Michigan

·Pick 3

131
''ick 4
"'736
Super Lotto
4-10.20-23-34-38
Kicker 572854

_Page 5
.

•

.
'

GREEN
BEANS

SHURFINE

GOLD MEDAl

TOMATO JUICE

FLOUR

46

REPSI
$149

'

I

'

oz. ins.
~'.:"'n.::~~:

JlftOZ.

6 9C_.·~!I!!!""!'!J!I!I!!II~......,IIIiioiiiii.~.....;~•GENERIC COFFEE.' CREAMER~.....!.~.~!~.. 5129
.
CHUCK COMBO .
.
·
SIRLOI·N PATTIES
PACKAGE 'ROAST •STEAK . t •. l.'·.9
'CHOPPED
.· •GROUND CHUCK f.
1

r

~139

..s

- . -. WESTERN STYLE
: . SPARE RIBS
~-

HOT DOGS
'

A. ·

BULK.~LICE I)
3 lb. or more
BACON__ •••••••••••••••••••

CRACKERS

uoz69C

1·9(

CHICKEN LEG QUARTERS

, .9.C

$ 599
SAUSAGE ••••• !~Z.~~...
_·
3 LIS. ORl'ORE
$179

' BALLARD

1-lL lOX ,

S lB. OR MORE

~

$699.
5, lb. pkg.
.

SUPERIOR

I 89(
•CAMPBELL'S TOMATO SOUP.,.,;.,...........!!:...... 2I 79'

•CAMPBEll'S .CHICKEN NOODlE SOUP "..1!: ..:. 2

UNK

' '

LL

.:

GROUND CHUCK...

1

;LI·

'

S liS. OR MORE

s1
Sl 69
; ...

.GROUND BEEF'

PKG.

•••••••••••••••

s1·29

·L,OI ~ ...••.•...•..•.
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. . $149

HAMBURGER HELPER ••••••••••••

A Meigs Grand Jury Indicted four individuals. in a sesslqn
'which bl&gt;gan Wedll~day mQrning at 9:30a.m. and' continued
until. late in th~ afternoon; rep'ort~d Meigs Prosecutor Ste\.en L·.
Story. The Indictments on the four should be fU~d In the Meigs
Clerk of Courts office some lime on Friday, at which tlme
names of those Indicted may be released .
The same Grand Jury will reco1)veile later in February to
complete some unfinished business from Wednesday's session,
Story said.

Po~roy

has power outage

'

.

Sheriff probes accident .
Meigs SherUf James M. Sou!sby reports that his department
Investigated a deer-car accident Wednesday evening on Route
124, just west of the crossroads . According to the report, Deloris J. Winebrenner, Pomeroy,
was traveling west around 7:50p.m. when she struck and killed
I· Continued on page 6

JACK RABBIT PINTO OR

ROBIN HOOD

LB,

Meigs grand jury indicts four

-

,r BROCCOLI

S1
99 '
NAVY BEANS •••••••••••• ~.~~;.!~!.
3/
S1
PIZZA CRUST MIX .......:..... . . ·

$
BAKED ~AM .............·••••• 249
.

STORE BAKED .

..

LB.

SANDWICH SPREAD.••~~•• 99 (

I

ARMOUR'

·FRENCH FRIES

ICE CREAM

· 20 OZ. PKG.

2/99'(

5 QUART CTN.

$349

DONUTS
-n'

•

LARGE EGGs ·

ICED

ROYAl SCOT

-· SHEDDS

RAISIN BREAD

MARGARINE

'MARGARINE

'

$199 DOZ.

$1'19 LOAFLl.

4f$11-LI.

By OVP News Staff
Before a crowd of more than
100 people, the Gallla County
Local Board of Education rescinded a, motion It approved last
. week -tq ··negotfate. a . settlement
With a •dismissed teacher and
principaL
· ··
The action came Wednesday
night In a. special board meeting
called specifically to rescind
actions taken Jan. 22 to reach a
s~ttlement with
Larry Cre·
;iheims, who has filed suit against
· the board In Gallla County
Common Pleas Court.
The suit Is In regard to
Cremeens' termination as cadet
principal at Hannan Trace Elementary and as a teacher at
HTHS •'for gross immorality and
.other good and justcauses."The
board terminated his contracts
on March 27, 1989.
;
Included In the settlement with
Cremeens would be rernstate·
ment, back pay and the expungemen! of all records of · the
termination.
Last week, the board approved
. on a 3-2 vote action lo negotiate a

$199 :o~

DIICU88 GRANT- Orler Vore, lfDIBII'W hUIIe Ualecl Mlae

Wcrbn Auocla&amp;loa, lit left,lllld David Baker, ........ JWULW
-rerforSoaUlenOhi:CoaiCompuJ,d!rawa-.•lflld
froill the Ohl: Bureu of J:mplDJIIIent lervlcee to provide
retnt.,. for dllplM,Jed coal mlaera who Jut fall lwt tbeff loba
wiOI BOCCO. The retrallllill Pftii'IIJII will be eo~Mh~de41 bJ CommlliiMJ ~lea AaeaciM tllroqhl t1lelr nPA oflleel. Tile
wu u - M WedlleedQ bJ 8ta&amp;e Sea• .ru Mlehael Loq,
• D-CbiJIIcothe, aDd IMIIte Rq. M1117 Abel, D·otihnl, Ia a p .....
eoufenuee lit Athea1. Von ud Bak• were ~~near lleVeral who

pu'

•lie

lit tlie Prell couference.

··

settlement with Cremeens. re- ·
consider lhe termination of his
contracts and dismiss Richard
Ross, the Columbus attorney who
Is representing the board in the
Cremeens suit.
The vote aroused a confltci of
Interest controversy because
board member J .E. "Dick"
Cremeens, father of Larry Cre- ··
meens, voted In favor of lhe
motion.
Following presentations by at·
torneys for Larry Cremeens and
for board members Fred Deel
and Phil Skidmore as individu als, a motion to rescind the
previous order passed on a 3-2
vote.
The motion to rescind last
week:s action was made by Jolin
F~Uure and seconded by Deel. ·
When it came to Cremeens' turn
··lo vote, he said ' 'no, .. but he was
immediately advised by Skid· ·
more, who Is the board president,
that he could not ' vote on the
motion. Cremeens did not comment, nor did he nullity his vote.
Joining Skidmore and Dee! In
an affirmative vote was John

comes up
with idea

Fellure, while Bllley Halley and
Cremeens voted against.
Following the meeting, Cremeens was converged upon by
reporters, and g~ve no comment.
Blanche scraggs, ag!l !M?, a ·
However, Cremeens told the re~ldent at Overbrook, came u'p
Tribune this matter was.far from with an Idea for a fund raiser for
over, and would be ·brought the American HeartAss6c!atton.
before the bOard again. He also · She has a doll named Lucy and
said his personal attorney, Mark 'she thought It wo•!ld be nice' if
Foley, Is a member of the same Lucy could help In a fundratser
.law.' firm, Clopper!, Portman, for the Heart Association.
Sauter. Latanlck &amp; Foley, Co· So Blanche got busy and made
lumbus, which is representing a shawl for Lucy. On this shawl
his son. Larry Cremeens Is she would place hand knitted
.represented by Bill Steele,
hearts. 80 of them, and when
GaJlla Local Schools Superin- someone donates to the Hearl
tendent Nell Johnson said It's Association they can take one of
beep ho secret supporters of the hearts. To make the hearts
Larry Cremeens "want my job," Blanche called on the talents of
meaning . to see him removed . Miirtha Childs, · age 85, from
frolJ1 his position.
Middleport.
·
"I have lodo what lfeells right
Scraggs has done something
tor the school children of Ibis for the Heart Association for the
district," he said after the past four years
meeting. Johrison said that willie
Lucy, he r shawl, and her
ihe content of testimony In the hearts will be located at 111e
matter was private. he heard It
Middleport Library where the
and read the transcripts.
donations can be made, and
"I don't .think he (Cremeens)
where those who donate can gel
one of the hand knitted hearts .
Continued on page 6

Mason County residents
air_ views on highway project
Mason County residents were
joined .bY Putnam and Kanawha
represen181ives to express discootent in the change of the fourlane · highway feasibility study
being conducled by the West Yuginia Department of Transportation,
Division of Highways.
During Tuesday's public hear·
ing at the Armory, more than 175
residents took advantafe of the opponunity to apin tel DOH their
concerns for safety; agricultural and
historical loss, distance and din!ct·
ness for trucll:ers, and the continued
unwritten commitment of a new
Shaddle Bridge. .
•· ·
DOH has scrapped the findings
of the SIUdy.lhus far to broaden the
SC?JIC to a regional netwod:,
believed by many Mason County
residents u an act of politics in a
non-political projec:L
Accolding to John LaqciiSitl,
project coordinator and assistant
~ or planniq and ~h.

S149
DAIRY LANE

architect will be evaluating pres- the building 10 Middleport VIlWarner reported that the winent office needs of the depart·
lage which then leased tile . ter freeze and thaw process has .
ment, as well as future needs for
building lo the county. The damaged county roads only
the next 10 years. The architect . departtnent started moving out minimally, mainly on the edges
will review case load growth at
of the main building tohother of roads.
Water lias proven somewhat of
the d~partmenl and certain eco·
office units in 1982.
a
problem, Warner said, by
ilomlc Indicators within the
Swisher reported thai Jackson.
carrying
debris wlllch has
county. Based upon findings of
Vinton, Perry and Ross Counties
caused
quite
a few culverts to
the architect, a delermlnatlon
have · also been Involved in
become
clogged.
Quite a few
will be , made as to whether
feasibility studies.
·
current off.lce accommodations
culvert~
will
need
replaced, he
A resolu lion w.as passed l!Y the
meet the needs of the depart·
commissioners approving a said, as soon as the ground h.a s ·
ment, whether enlarging or rechange in · mileage on Bedford dried sufficiently .
Two representatives from
modeling of the existing main
Township Road 243 , also known
building In Middleport would be
as Hart Road. The change was · GTE North demonstrated a leleneeded, etc.
.
a'pproved to correspond with · phone system which might be
, Currenlly. the department
measurements by the slate ml· suitable for the Meigs Sheriffs
leases the main building on Race
leage man that the road Is 1.02 Department. The sheriff's deSt. In Middleport and three other
miles In length, not Including a partment has already seen the
office spaces on Second Ave.,
middle section of the road which system. The representatives
also In Middleport .
Is right-of-way only. The reso- presented pricing options as well
The main building was con·
lution was passed at the request as features of the system. Final
structed In 1966 by a group of
of County Engineer Philip R~; delermtnatlon on whether to
lnves tors. After paying off the
berts and Highway Superintend· Ins 1811 the new system will be'
. Conllnued on page 6
mortgage, the loves tors deeded
ent Ted Warner .

'

By Marga~t Caldwell

1112
.
• . DO~EN

LYNDER FARMS

2 Secttons. 12 P•gn 215 Cenu
A r.4ultimadia Inc. Newip•per

.Gallia board rescinds action to Overbrook .
.
·
·
·
l
resident
C
nego.
t
wte
remeens
sett
ement
·
-Local news· briefsLIS'l'ENING ~ GaJDa County Local School Board member J.E.
, (Dick) CJremeens listens Intently l1!i attorney James Foley speaks
to the board on behalf of members Fred Deel and Phlllp Skidmore
last night concerning his vote to reinstate hlsson, Larry Cremeens,
l1!i a teacher In the system. ( OVP photo)

About 158 Pomeroy customers of Columbus-Southern Power
were without electricity for' approximately four hours
Wednesday, reported Ron McDade, district manager of the
electric company. McDade said that a wire broke on Ebenezer
, St. In Pomeroy at about 10: 18 a.m., affecting Ebenezer
customers an&lt;! the rest of the Monkey Run area. and also
• Lincoln Heights. It was about 2:30p.m. before power could be
restored. McDacle was not sure What caused the line to.break,
however, a falJ!ng tree limb Is a possibility. ~
·

I ICY GREEN

TUNA OR

By NANCY YOACHAM
Seadnel News Staff
The !.fe!gs County Commissioners !n' Wednesday's regular
·meeting, authorized Michael
Swisher, d!reclor of the Meigs
Departtnent of Human Services.
' to begin interviewing architects
to carry out a feasibility study to
explore the possible need for
a,dd!tlonal office space for the
departtneilt. Tlie commissioners
··must approve the architect before actual hiring.
The commissioners au thor !zed
start of the interviewing process
based upon Swisher's report that
he . received a letter froni the
district director of tile Ohio ·
Departtnent of Human ·s ervices
authorizing the feasibility study
in Meigs County. Costs for the
. study are totally. reimbursable
· by the slale, Swisher explained.
In . the feasibility study. an

.

'

. ,_,_ 3I 99( ::.:h'lt,ll:~~~·---- S1 39

PORK BUn
efliU STEAK •PORI ROAST
COMBO •WESTEIN
STYlf

at

'

County authorizes Swisher to
liire architect to study request

POTATO CtfiPS '

· 99(

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, ·Thursday. February 1. 1990

1110

MISTEit BEE ·

16

•DELICIOUS SALTINES ............!:~~~~.~~ .......

Val.40, No.1811 '
Co

qqc

SLB.
BAG

oz. 79C
···,.

'.

mid..._
Chance of rain 88 percent.
Friday, high In mid IIOs.
· Cbance . ol rain near 100
percent .

bridge 10 replace the Shaddle
Bridge.
One concerned expressed by
residents which was initially
misunderstood was pinpointing the
shortest mule.
· Bill Wood, studying the locatipn
and cost, poinled out what appeared
to be second to the longest roule as
the most direct rou1e.
Looking at the engineering view,
the soonest IJ'8vel length includes
. existing roads with the consuuction
length measuring what needs 10 be
builL
. Lancasler, Jrying 10 explain the
difference, coofessed thai the shortest 'route on lhe ma'p l!'Ould be the
one most similar 10 the one
proposed by the Mason County
Commission, down through the
Chief Cornstalk Pubtic Hunting
Area.
Mason County Commissioner·
Kenton Sheline re-emphasized that
safety, bidden in the sllldy under
c,osl measores •. should be the number 01.1&lt;1 priorily.
Jack Fruth, or the Point Pleasant·
Mason County Chamber .of Com· .

the members of the Ohlilv IIIIJ
chan~ the stud roc'iiJ.'cqu·
cally as 1 rault ~ wllal wa being merce I'OIIds commiaee, SUDilQitCd
said at publk: meetlnts.
that fact'
"We were looldn• at Cabell ''We want to ICC the m0111 people
County from the beg{iuun,.· Lin· wllh lhe 'ulolt benelits with the 1eut
Caler llid.
IMIImmi 0( dam~ Ill Jhe 1eut
MIR lhaD 30 res!dentl poeM amount or people. . Ftulh lllicl.
· quest~Qns on how the members
Bob Wallu1011o a former truCker,
. were IOCJtina Ill faclon or ccacern 1101 only backed up the commis-:
that 1101 c:lart)' shOwli 111 the lion's piority, but elabariiU:d on
scale IIICid In the lllldy.
·
tho imponance of die most direct
~. DOH !Iliff lllelllben of n1111e 10 OIIIUI'C llfety.
the feaibllity lt1ldy p-ve few t11roct
'"Truckers want to 110 with the
answers to quellionli and concerns. shortest toute. (11)e present u,S •1
Conthlued
.including the constriiCdoa .of a new ·
.
. on page 6 ·

AOOC)D IDEA- Blucklcl ..... lell, a
Ceater, ud Marlla &lt;;JIIIdt, Mld•IIP•rt. calalllralell•u
Blauche'e for a fudraiHr for tile Am~ Heart
The dqD &amp;hilt &amp;craap 11 holdllllll aamed ._,, IH
Lucy'• lhawl cu be ob&amp;alaed bJ lilaldilla . ......_ to
auoclatlon at Ole Middleport Ubrary.

#'

•

. I

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