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10-The Deily Sen1inel

P011'18iot M:m-aport. Ohio .
I

:Seven people die in
·plurtge through ice

•

MAMMOTH LAKES, Calif.

plunged through the ice to their
(UPII- Seven people , Including deaths, Hysell said.
three teenagers and two would"As of this evening we have
be rescuers, plunged through the
seven fa talities including four
thin Ice on a mountai n lake and
adults and three juveniles. " said
drvwned Monday, au thorities
Brian Miller, a Mono . County
Mid. ·
.
Sh-flort!t's· Department
Five victims were hiking or spokesman .
Skating on Convict Lake In the ·
Miller said a Washoe County,
eastern ·sterra Nevada range Nev., Sheriff's Department
when they plunged through the HASTY .tea m "will begin recovIce. Two men died trying to save ery" efforts (Tuesday•." The
them, a Mono County official HASIJ'¥ ,untl&lt;is a first-response
said.
emergency te11-m trained in waThe youngsters were s raying at
ter and mountain rescues .
Camp O'Neal, a probation camp
Camp, O'Neal is .a group home
for troubled youths about 2 mlles facility for troubled youth. A
from the .lake, which Is situated sptikesman said there were 34
about190 mlles east-southeast of staff members and 34 resident
San Francisco, Mono Coiuity yo
aged 13-18 placed at the
Public Safety officer Rick Hyse ll camp b
urts throughout the
said.
.
·
state.
' ·
A diving team from Washoe
County, Nev., was called In after
The youths and the two counse·
the noon incident bu t no bodies lors "were just walking or
.h ad been reCQvered by nightfall. playing on the ice In themlddleof
Hysell said. . .
the lake about 200 yards off. "They probably won't 6e able
shore," said Margaret Gorski. a
.to go into the water until spokeswoman for the Inyo Na·
(Tuesday 1," Hysell said.
tiona! Forest in which the lake Is
, · Two, of the adults who fell located. The · lake, at the 8,1)00through the ice were camp foot level, Is a mile . long, a
counselors accompanying the quarter-mile wide "and yery
youths and the other two adults deep." she said.
·
were a U.S. Forest Service
·"Some others saw the Incident
11mployee and a volunteer fire- and called for help, " she said.
man from the Lone Valley Fire "The rescuers were with some
.Department, an official said.
other people who tried to save
Two adults attempted to
them. They went in but they were
drowned.,.
rescue tbe others but also

'

·- -Area deaths--Albert Hendricks
'
Albert K. Hendricks,
65, Bear,
Del .. died Feb. 10 at Christiana
Hospital.
Mr. Hendricks, a rail car
Inspector for elghi years at
TransCar Services in Wilmington, DeL, rettred in 1984. He was a
member of the Masonic Lodge
363, Middleport, and Chapter 5,
Disabled American Veterans,
Newark.
He Is surviVed by his wife,
Dorothea J .; two sons, Michael

K. , Hurricane, W:Va. ; and
Steven L.. Scott Depot, W.Va.:
two daughters . Tamara J.
Evans, Bear , DeL, and Lisa Jo
King, Oviedo, Fla.; hls mother,
Eva Ruschell Hendricks Dessauer. Pomeroy; two brothers,
Carl F. , Pomeroy, and Harley F.
Jr., Five Points, and seven
grandchildren.
Muttary services were held
Feb. 14 In the chapel of-Delaware
Veterans Memorial Cemetery
Summit, with burial in an adjoin:
lng cemetery.

New Mexico, Texas hit
by snow, freezi'}g rain
.·~

By United Press International
, Snow and freezing rain.chilled
the ~outhern Plateau Tuesday,
snow squalls howled . through
New England and Californians
mopped up the ruins of hOuses
and businesses destroyed by a
.weekend storm.
·
Snow fell across ihe northeast
highlands of New Mexico as a
storm ·system headed across the
state toward Texas. The Nat tonal
Weather Service Issued a winter
storm warning for almost all of
New Mexico.
Light freezing rain mixed with
snow covered portions of the
northwest Texas Panhandle
while Oklahoma braced for a·
winter storm that forecastPrs
said was likely to produce heavv
snow accumulations.
·
In central Gallfornia,' skies
.cleared folloWing three days of
storms that brought a new snow
covering to the Sierra Nevada
range along with rain, hall, high
winds and snow flurries in the
San Joaquin Valley.
Helicopters patrolled the
Sierra foothills Monday looking
fOr damaged houses near the
town of Paradise, where several
commercial buildings collapsed
under heavy snow during the
weekend storm.
"We have six or 'seven structures here t.h at have collapsed,"
said Mike Hays, town manager of
the .community of 26,000 located
· about 15 miles west of Chico.

Moore ...

'

I

Continued from page 1
Moore stemmed from two incidents. The first Incident was in
July last year when authorities
· found about 30 marijuana plants
but did not know who they
belonged to. In September, authorities went back to the same
place on a tip, and with a search
warrant, and found evidence of
marijuana on the porch of the
residence ·as well as Inside.
Authorities traced ownership to
Moore.
Moore's alibi during testimony
was that he was living out-ofalate at the time the marijuana
wu being grown, and therefore,
could not have been responsible
for the marijuana. However, key
evidence to the contrary as
presented by Meigs Prosecu ttng
Attorney Steven Story, were
welfare department records
Wblch showed that MOOI'f, during
tbe time he was supposed to be
lpvlq out.of-atate, had personally slped each month for his
foOd stamp allotment, and had
ricelved medical treatment In
the county with his medical card.
, Moen il scheduled to appear
before Judge Fred Crow III at 9
' a.m. Wednesday morning for
~t•~ractnr.

"

'

Report says· he8Ith costs fuel labor unrest
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
percentage of strikers who
walked off the job over health
benetlts more than quadrupled
during the late 1980s as soaring
medical costs led to a breakdown
In labor-management relations,
a union study said. ·
The report Monday by the
925,000-member Service Employees union found that disputes
over health coverage motivated
78 percent of the strikers In 1989.
ln 1980, health benefits were a
prime factor for only 18 percent
of the strikers whose motivations
could be determined.
In 1989 alone, strikes over
health coverage cost the econ·
omy '$1.1 billion ln lost wages,
said the study, which was based
on statistics from the Labor
Department .and the private
Bureau of National Affairs.
The study concluded that "both
sides are losing" In the battle

I

over health benefits and called
for united action on health-care
reform.
" Rapidly rising health-care
costs In the 1980s have fueled an
escalattnr breakdown In labormanagement relations, " It said.
" LOOking ahead to the J990s,
continued double-digit healih·
care cost Inflation threatens our
country With escalating labor
unrest and the eventual destruction of employer-provided health
Insurance as the major vehicle
for providing health coverage."
Much of tbe· Increase In
benefits-related strikes In 1989
can be attributed .to tbe walkout
by more than 150,000 workers
against the regional telephone
companies, said John Howley ,
senlot policy analyst with the
service workers.
The pho!le workers represented about a third of tne 432,600
strikers during the first 10

months· of 1989, the period for earnings for health premiums In
whlc)l atatlstlcs were available, 19118. It predicted that 11 current
he said. There were 506,200 trends conUnue, the fig~~re would
strikers In all of 1980.
rise to 27 percent by 1998.
The study examined strikes
Sharon Canner, National AssoInvolving more than 1,000 ciation of 'Manufacturers uslstworkers. Using news reports and, ant vice president of Industrial
Interviews with strikers, It deter- relations, said employers agree
mined causes for walkouts In-· that reforms are necessary to
volvlng 79 percent of strikers In control health-care costs and
1986 and 97 percent of strikers In stave off future strike activit y.
1989. Only strikes for whlcil
"You just can't Indefinitely
causes were determined were expand employee share. ParticuIncluded ln the report .
larly at lower Income, there are
The ~tudy said labor and people who just can't bear the
management negotiated health freight, " she said. "We have had
benefits for 40 years without a lot of conversationS with labor.
serious disputes. But recently, It · I think we a.gree on .what the
said, employers "In desperaproblems are. we dlffer .tin the
tion" have tried to shift risiQg solu lions ."
health costs to workers, fueling
However, Canner said ·she Is
unrest.
worried that reforms would walt
The report said ~orkers co- . until "we get t() a so-called crisis
vered by plans with cost sharing in health care" that forces
paid 6.6 percentof their after- tax
action.
'

'

II

...

f

'

ren

Weather

Almost 2 out of every 10
teenagers use drugs or alcohol on
a daily basis. Reduce the chance
of your children becoming
another statistic by educating
them at an early age about the
·dangers of addiction. Ignorance
about addiction is dangerqus.
Your ch'ildren need to
kNOw about drugs.

Hospital
I•

·~

A Public Service Message Brought
I

news

Veter11111 Memorial
Monday admissions - Irene
Hanson, Middleport; Keith
Musser, Middleport; Claire
Boso, Portland.
MOnday discharges - Clara
Slater," James Bentz, Charles
Cook.

'

•.

To You By.~·· ·

.

Low IID•flld near 41. Cllaace
of rain 18 pen!enl. Thunda,y,
hlp near 40. Chance of rain
100 pen!ent.

6170

Page3

•
Vo1.40, No.200

, Copyrighted 1890

.

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio; Wednesday, February 21. 1990
.

'

.

.

2 Sectlono, 12 Pages 25 Conto
A ~~himedi• Inc. Newll)aptr

"

County."
In an effort to keelf hi ~ pledge
regarding education, Long said
he ''signed on with just about
every education committee
created ln the Legislature in ·,
order to adl(ocate the speclaliZ!!d
needs of schools in rural South·
· Continued on page 5

Rah.n resi.un.s
as Racine marshall

poUcy provisions.
A discussion was held on a
complaint of water running onto
property on John' s Road .
Members decided to borrow a ·
transit and run some elevation :
points todetermlnethe bestroute ·,
to follow to redirect the water. A
reesolution was passed declaring · ,
the old backhoe "excess property" and authorizing It to be sold
by sea;ed bld on April 2.
.
The Increase In landfill fees
was noted and members werP
asked to be mindful of the refuse
collection to assure that the
village does not lose money.
Council adjourned until Monday, March 5. Attending the
meeting we re Mayor Cleland,
C)erk Jane Beegle, Council
member)l. Robert Beegle, Henry
Bentz, : 'Rol;lald Clark, Carroll
Teaford , and Jeff Thornton. Fire ,
Chief Robert Johnson and Street
Commlssoiner Glenn Rizer also
attended the meeting.
·

Janq, §t!,l~r , Racine. Dr. and
Mrs. H'llntl!i"i\a~e 'a ~oi\, Jacob,l7
months old. .
..
,
Dr. Huilter Is the team physician at Southern High.School and
assists with other athletic programs. He also serves on the
board of Woodlands Center.
Golfing and outdoor sporting
activities are among the hobbles
he enjoys when he is not practicing medicine or participating in
.family a.ctivlties.

DR. DOUGIAS ,HUNTER

Meigs Countians to cast ballots on 1.5 mill MRDD operating l~vy May 8

\ The Daily Sentinel

11/I.Jl

•

'

Pick 4

-Deputies probe transfor1ner damage

.r u

Continued from page ~
bly· better aaaptea to disarm
natural carcinogens, such as the
compounds found lndil.l, oregano
and bay leaves, than pesticides
an.d · other man - made
carcinogens.
But Scheupletn said he does not
agree with that arg~~ment.
' " Out diets have changed sub· ~tllntilllly,, over the past 10,000
yfars·; lit•takes a lot longer than .
that to develop protecttye genetic
mechanisms·, " he sa_ld.
.
,

717

Plan meeting

•

Substances...

Jackson

Dr. Hunter files petition for
Meigs County coronor's post ·

•
OUfC"ll
ne,
to

'

Pick 3

Interests of the people of South- Ironto~ Iron, TS Trim, YSK brought more state money to our
ern Ohio. "Over the course of the Corporation, Meigs Manufactur- rural counties, townships and
last four years, we have worked illg, Robbins &amp; Meyers, Vinton municipalities, but we hwve also
togetherdUigently to pursue and, County Timber. Jeno's Pizza. been successful In bringing the
In fact, achieve many of these · DuPont, Nekoosa , Reynolds Me- ·iarg'est share of state tax dollars
goals," Long said.
tals and the Mead Corporation.
to any single highway project in
He then recounted some
In regard to roads, highways the state in this last budget; with
achievements over the past four and bridges in the 17th District , our announcement of the full
years which have related to these Long said that "not only have we development of U. S. 35 in Gallia
goals, Including, creation of the
Governor's Office of Appalachia
.
which has helped focus state
"'C) • "'
attention on Southern Ohio. "We
The resignation of Frederick lion time allowed, lt was decidedhave ml!de sure that when
M.
Rahn III as village marshall to extend the bidding time.
Industries and businesses
Ruth Snowgrass appeared bewas·
accepted and David E ,
whether large or small, needed
fore
council concerning trash
state assistance to expand or Huddleston Wljs hired for the
that
ls
accumui!ltlng in lots and
retain jobs, we were there to get · position at Monday night's meetalong
the
streets. The mayor
ing of Racine VIllage Council.
the ·.attention of state govern·
advised
tl!at
he will be sending
It was noted that Rahn . has
ment," said the Senator. Some of
letters
regarding
cleanup of
accepted employment with · the
the area's business ventures In
sherlff's office as a dispatcher. property in the village.
which Senator Long has had a
· Council approved an ordinance
Following an executive session,
hand In recent years Include
under suspension of the rules to
Couh~il approved the probationl '
ary appointment of Huddleston authorize the Board of Public
Affairs to expend money to
as marshall, effective Feb. 24.
Mayor Frank Cleland reported purchase a new backhoe through
that.the Issue II money has been the Ohio Department o!Transpoapproved for the village for 1989 ration .Cooperative Purchase
and 1990. The village will match Program. Also approved was a '
resolution authorizing the clerk
the $28,400 Is state money with
·
to·
execute the needed forms to
$3,600 ln village funds for hot mix
,
paving of streets. The work Is. make the purchase.
ln other action, council apexpecizd to. be done 'early
proved the repalt of the steering
summer. Since three years remechanism on the tractor. ·
main on the Issue II money
allocations, Council members Mayor Cleland announced that a
· Indicated that they hope to see all representative of the Insurance
company Is to be at the next
of ·the streets hot mix paved.
council meeting to go over the
An Invitation was read from
the Meigs County Park District
Inviting members to a meeting
being held today at the Senior
Citizens Center. An application
to use 'the fire house annex for a
,br,tdal ~ sho.wer. WII,S approyed.
.
Dr. Do,IWI.as !;&gt;. Hunter of
At the i'eq~s1 o~ 1)1,j1Yl/r peRlichle
.lias flied his petition of
land bids on the repair of a dUmp
candidacy
tor nomination to run
truck were not• opep~ with the
.
for
the'
unexpired
term of Meigs
tllne for bidding being exteli(led
to March 3' at 9 a.m. Since there ' County coroner with the Meigs
j
was no mall delivery on Monday, County Board of Elections.
His name will appear on the
and tl\ere was a short preparaLONG SEEKs
credited •
hlmllelf and
May 8 Republican ballot.
Jan Ml~hael Long, center, pledges "condaued
con~liluenla for aay IeiJ)Siatlve suecesses over
Dr. Hunter was appointed to
'
commitment to onr partnership lor success" If he
the paal four·years. Speaklnl With Long following
the position of coroner In June,
IS · re-elected to his seat In the Ohio Senate
the speech are Rev. Attllur Crabtree .and Cecil
1989 by the Republican· Central
The Meigs County Park Dis- Committee ;tfter the retirement
representing the eight-county 17th bis&amp;rlcl. In a
Gillogly. Gillogly Is running lor Meigs County
trict ls sponsoring a special of Dr. Ray Pickens, and has
speeeh yesterday at the public library In
Commlssloaer on the Democratic ticket.
get-acquainted
meeting tonight served since. that time. The
Pomeroy, Long announced his bid for re-election
(Wednesday) for governmental unexpired term which . will be
officials from around, Meigs fllled at the November General
County. Guest speaker wlll be Election. will expire on Jan. 3,
Donald Schmidt, executive direc- 1993.
tor . for the Ohio Parks and
The candidate graduated from
Damage to a transformer of ported, noting that the name of
charges against the seller are Recreallon Association, Inc. The Fort Frye High School ln Wathe Buckl!yi! Rural Elf ctrlc Co. the Individual's name is being
pending completion of the meeting will be held at ihe Senior shington County, and received
as well as to several insulators on withheld pending filing of Investigation.
Citizens Center In Pomeroy start- his undergraduate training at
the power line on Tit us Road Is charges by Buckeye Rural
Another VCR reported stolen ing at 7: 30 p.m.
Ohio St.a te University. After.
under Investigation by the Meigs officials.
on the weekend of Feb. 4 has been
Among matters to be defined at completing Medical School at
' Coun(Y Sheriff's Department.
It was reported that the repair
recovered, Sheriff Soulsby said, the meeting will be the function Ohio State, he did a family
According to a report . from
cost would be about $700. The and Investigation on that is also of the Meigs County Park Dis- practice residency at Grant
Sheriff Ja.mes M. Souls by , Buck- sheriff reported that Glenn continuing.
trict and how the park district Medical Center In Columbus
eye Rural' reported to his depart· Smitb , manager, would have the
. The sheriff again urged resl-. and other local organlz;ltions can before coming to Meigs County. ·
ment that a transformer had transformer tested to make sure dents to be sure that serial be valuable to each other. Also,
He Is on the staff at Veterans
been shot Into and that several
that there are no PtB'~ (hazardnumbers for their guns and other legal aspects as related to the Memorial Hospital.
Insulators had beim damaged ous materials) In the trans- Items are recorded so that ln case park district will be explained.
. · .Since 1988, he has been practic·
Monday afternoon.
former oil. If PCJh are found,
they are stolen the Items can be
Members of the Meigs_County ing ·In Racine offices, corner of
.
'
' A disabled vehicle was located
th.en the cost of cleanup will be entered in the NCIC computer. Park District Include Mary Ponear the scene, it was reported, mucl) more, !)Jilith told officials. For positive identification, serial well, director, and Charles Bar- Fifth and Pearl St .
Dr. Hunter is married to the
and a short time later two · Sheriff Soulsby also reported numbers or other Identification rett, Lloyd Blackwod and Mark
subjects returned there. One of that a VCR stolen In February are needed , Sheriff Soulsby Yoacham, merll!Jers of the former Tonja Salser, a graduate
of Southero High School. Shz Is
the Individuals admitted firing at has been recovered and that stressed.
board.
the daughter of Ronnie and
the transformer, Soulsby re-

Stocks

South Central Ohio
Tuesday night, With a low
bet ween 20 and 25. Mostly sunny
Wednesday, with highs near 50.
. Extended Forecast
Thursday through Saturday
A chance of rainJhl!rsday and
a chance of rain or snow flurries
on Friday. A chance of snow
ffLirrles ln 'the northeastern part
of the state anlj fair elsewhere ·
Saturday. Highs will range from
the upper 40s to the 50s Thursday,
in the 40s Friday and In the upper
20s or the 30s Saturday. Overnight lows will be In the 30s early
Thursday, the 20s Friday mornIng and the teens early Saturday.

eliminate

State Senator Jan· Michael
re~lectlon, I am happy to report
Long, D·Clrclevllle, announ~ed
that there·~ been a change in
Tuesday In 11 serl.es of stops those cammon denominators.
throughout the eight counties Of · Altho~Jgh we· still share a com·-the 17th Senate District that he ls
mon heritage, we now have
seeking re-election. Long made gained a strong advocate for
his announcement yesterday af- SouthernOhloln the Ohio Senate.
ternoon In Meigs County at a
We have gal ned a new dGIIomtna- .
well-attended reception at the
tor to share with you In the
Meigs County · Library ln common cause and desire to
Pomeroy.
work together to continue to
"Four years ago," Long said,
revitalize and Improve the qual"I appeared before many of you. tty of life in Southern Ohio," he
asking for your support ln my explained.
electio·n as State Senator for the
Long recalled his pledges dur-.
i7th District. I pointed out at that
lng .hls first campaign four years
tlme that th.e counties of the 17th
ago, lncl.uding · that he would
District shared two .common work for the return of the area's
denominators -a common her it- · fair share oft'ax dollars; actively.
age and the need f~r a strong seek the Improvements of roads:
voice In the Ohio Senate.
highways and bridges; work
"Today, as I stand before you hard to ensure the quality of
to ask your
for my education; and look out for the

El ght calls were answered on Holzer Medical Center.
Monday by the Meigs EmerSalem ToWI!shlp Fire Depar·
gency Medical Services.
ment was called to a structure
At 4:12 a.m., Middleport went fire at the Bird residence on
to Leading Creek Road for Irene ·. Bowles Road at 2:07 p.m.
Hanson who was taken to VeteAt 3: 21 p.m., Tuppers Plains
rans Memorial Hospital.
·,
was called to Route 7 for Joy
Tuppers Plains. at 5: 48 a.m. Murphy to Holzer Medical
transported Carol Folmer from Center.
an aufo accident on Route 248 to
Middleport Fire Department
was called to a very minor
structure fire at 5: 12 p.m.· on
Nord! Third Ave.
Pomeroy at 5:58. p.m. transDally stock prices
ported
Inez Ash from the Amerl(As of 10: 30 a.m. )
care-Pomeroy Nursing Center
Bryce and Mark Smith
\0 Veterans Memorial Hospital.
of Blunt, Ellis &amp;: Loewt
'
Middleport at 8:26p.m. went to
Am Electric Power .... .......... 30
Cotlage
Drive for Oulda Chase
AT&amp;T"""
39
who
was
taken to pi easan t Valley
Ashland Oil ............ :............ 36
Hospital.
Bob Evans .......................... 12%
At 9:47p.m ., Racine was called
Charming Shoppes .................9
to
Route 338 for Claire Boso Who
City HOlding Co........... ........ 14
was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Federal Mogul ..................... 17J's HospitaL
Goodyear T&amp;R ........... ........ 34¥.,
Heck's ...................... .......... ... 3
Key Centurion ............... .... .13~
Planning session to
Lands' End ............. ............. 17
Limited Inc...................... ... 35
be held on su...day
Multimedia Inc ..... .............. 80¥.,
The 1965 Meigs High School
Rax 'Restaurants ...... .. ............ 2
·Robbins &amp; Myers .... ,........... 15'!4 Class will have another reull'lon
Shoney's Inc . ...................... 10¥., planning session · on Sunday at
Star Bank·........... :.... .. .. .. ..... 19~ 1~ 30 p.m. at the Meigs Local
Wendy's Int'l. ........... :......... .. .4 · Superintendent's office. Anyone
Worthington Ind.......... ·........ 20% with questions concerning the
(Umlled Inc.'s fourth-quarter meeting or plans for the reunion
may contact Donna Carr.
net S:S5/share vs. $.87)

Hays·sald a bowling alley and a
cannery sales outlet were destroyed during the storm. Hays
said the Albertson supermarket
lost about one-third oflts roof and
that the1roof of a Thrifty drug
store also caved in.
One death was reported ln
. Paradise, where a homeowner
was killed by a falling tree while
trying to remove snow from hls
roof. The victim · was not
Identified.
In Las Vegas, a fast -moving
winter storm .dumped almost 1 'h
Inches of snow onto the Las
Vegas Valley Monday, causing
, traffic tle-ups and power outages ·
along the Las Vegas Strip.
A large high-pressure system
sent gusty. bitterly cold winds
into New England as snow
squalls whipped through northern Vermont. The squalls, buf·
feted by gusts up to 45 mph,
caused poor visibility and some
whlteouts, the NWS said.

Ohio Lottery

Long to seek re-election in 17th District

EMS has eight Monday
calls
.

I I ' " •• • ! I l l . . . . . . II II II "

Meigs boys

•

Disabilities programs.
we are nbt an agency ·whose was brought up by Commissioner
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
In
Wedemeyer•.s·
·request
to
primary goal is to provide David · Koblentz, with WedeSentinel News staff
meyer reporting that some did
have
the
new
1.3
mtU
levy
placed
nutrition." .
Meigs Countlans will vote on a
and
some didn't. He said that
"We could have cut other
new 1,5 mill levy for three years on t~e May ballot, he.sald that his
for operation of programs of the g&lt;ial Is to Communicate the need programs, such as physical ther- many were on free or reduced
to the public by saying "here's apy, occupational therapy, lunch programs.
.
Meigs County Board of Mental
Jones questioned Wedemeyer
what It costs to run this pro- teachers, aides, etc, but in our
Retardation and Developmental
gram." He said that his board Is thinking, we felt there was no about the savings from ellmlnlDisabilities when they go to the
not
asking very much noting that other agency to pick up mental nating the lunch program With
polls on May 8.
a
$40,000
home owner would pay retardation programs. In other Wedemeyer saying that II was .
The MMRD Board maintains
about
$21
a year.
words, if they don't get physical significant but he couldn't give a
and operates the Carleton School
.
Referring
to
the
nearly
$313,000
therapy, special education, job . figure without checking the
a'nd the · Meigs Industries
per
year
In
new
money
which
.
placi\J'fleni services, there Is l?udget.
Workshop.
To
that
Jones
asked lilt would
would be generated If the levy probably no other agency In the
If the levy passes in May -and
it does require a majority vote to passes, Commissioner Richard CQUDtywho is going to step In and be "In the ballpark of a savings of
Jones ·asked about the 1990 pick those up," Wedemeyer said. $5500." Wedemeyer agreed that
pass -an additional $313,000 per
budget with Wedemeyer explainAs for the lunch program, would be about the net savings.
annum in local dollars wlll be
He went on to state that in his
Ing
that
In
order
to
balance
the
are other agencies who
there•
generated fQrprogramsforthose .
mind
and In the minds of the
budget
for
1989-90
about
$90,000
provide
nutritional
as$tanc'!!
or
with mental · retardation and
administrative
staff and ·the
had
to
be
out.
other
services
which
help
the
developmental disabilities.
board,
the
primary
mission of the
understood
tamUy
with
the
food
budget,
the
Jones
said
that
he.
This Is In addition to the l.ll'mlll
agency
is
to
provide
therapy and
superintendent
said.
that
the
cuts
were
made
so
that
"levy currently in effect which
services
to
people
With
menial
Eliminating tbe lunch probrings about $272,000 a year In the budget could be balanced and
retardation.
"In
our
minds
we
· local money Into the programs. · that this was done by eliminating gram affected everyone, tncl\111felt
that
(reference
to
the
lunCh
This ls the second ,time for the some Pl'OIIl'ams and some per- lng the slaff, according to Wede1.5 mUllevy to go on the ballot. It sonnel 'to whlcb WSdemeyer . meyer, with eveyone sharing In program) would bethebestplace
responded that some personnel the reduction. He w~nt on to to cut," he continued.
was defeated In November.
Jones asked If It would not be
and
the lunch prorram had been point out that if a program such
A resolu tlon to place the levy
true
that a child With a disability
eliminated.
The
superintendent
u
PhYsical
therapy
had
been
on the ballot was approved by the
would
have a harder time bringsaid
that
the
elimination
decreased,
then
the
of
the
25
or
30
Meigs County CommiSsioners at
trig
his
lunch to school and eating
lunch
program
was
the
most
people
getting
those
services,
last week's meeting following a
It,
The
superintendent
countered
lengthly dlscuuton With Lee controversial. He went on to would have had the "cut put on
their
backs."
·
that II could bEl true depending Of!.
explain thl!t the "thinking of the
Wedemeyer, superintendent,
The queStiOn Of WhE'ther the the natufl! of.the disability. "It's
Meigs County Boai-d of Menial .board and myself on the .lunch ·
program ls that It Is an ancillary, stuil~nts paid for their lunches not any harder for a handicapped
Retardation and Developmental

----,-

'

.. .

chlld or non-handicapped child to
bring their lunch, a child with a
specific handicap might have
more of a problem actually
eating, but we provide that
assistance whether a child brings
his lunch or doesn't bring his
lunch," he said.
·
" Isn't a hot lunch program In
today's schools more or less an
expected thing?" asked Jones,
who went on to Inquire about
whether neighboring counties
have such pgograms. Wedemeyer said that he Is sure they
do.
Returning -to the matter of
students paying for their
lunches.• $1.25 a day, Jones gave
ail example. He said that 10800
meals were served during the 180
days of the reg~~lar school year,
and the charge was only 10 cents
a day, then that would bring In
$1,800 a year.
The total amount saved by
discontinuing the school lunch
prorram wu $55()(), It was again
noted by Jones. He asked the
school superintendent If the
board was looking at other
options. Wedemeyer said they
weren't. ·
·
Wedemeyer remarked that it
addltonal revenue Is not avalla- ··

---

•

•

ble later this ·year then ''we will
havetocutmore, wewlllhaveto
eliminate more programs or
services, because we have to
balance the budget every year.
We will have to scale back .to
where we will be operating a very
minimum agency ."
Jones asked about the budget :
and· whether the percentage of :
Increase In the budget over the .
past three or four years has been :
about 10 percent.
Wedemeyer replied " maybe
more" l!ut said that most o f the ·
money was coming from , grant
money.Hesaldthatstateentltle- '
ment money has not been in·
creased substantia lly and'·
neither have levy funds, pointing
out that the state has given the ·
county money for specific' pro- .
grams which can110t be used to :
maintain current services .
The question of food supple- :
ment money was asked with ;
Wedemeyer noting that there .
was nothing other than ;
commodities.
"If someone asked me tonight :
when I walked out C1fi this office :
what your shortfall was for 1990 •
then I would have to answer therti ·
In your words, from $75 000 to :
· . Continued on page 5 '
.

�~omrnentary

Page 2-The

'

WASHINGTON- In the minds
or top Bush administration offl·
clals, a Pal11tinlan state Is no
longer a question of "II," but

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS·MASON AREA

~lb
~v

..

. "when.'"

I"'T""'L-'L.....
....,.... ~c:;t·~

'

ROBERT L. WINGET!'
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General ManageP

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller
A MEMBER oi The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and,the American N~spaper Publishers AssociatiOn.

LETTERS OF OPINION are weleome. they should be less than 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
nal'le. address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be pub·
llshed. Letters should beln good taste. addressing Issues. not personall·

lies.

.

Dozen years.enough?
By STEVE GERSTEL
.
WASHINGTON rUPI)- Almost on the day 87-year,old Sen. Strom
Thurmond. R-S.C., announced he Is running for .a seventh term, a
newly formed group announced it will seek a constitutional
amendJ!lent to limit members of Congress to 12 years of service .
The group, Americans to Limit Congressional Terms, made no
mention of Thurmond. And Thurmond certainly knows his advanced
age makes him unlikely to be affected by any such constitutional
amendment.
The concept of limiting the tenure of members Is neither new nor
novel, but it has become Increasingly fashionable as the American
public expresses more and more contempt for Congress.
Strangely, this hostility Is almost never directed at individual
members , be they senators or representatives, but only at Congress
as a whole. Out of this cont~adlction comes low poll ratings for the
instltutlon and an amazing rate of re-election.
Rep. James Coyne, D-Pa., a co-chairman of the group that seeks to
amend the Constitution, said, "Widespread frustration with
Congress, its inability to act, its preoccupation process, and with
what has become the career nature of service In Congress. have all
combined to create the most dangerous of go.vernmen t ailmentsbureaucratic inertia. ··Coyne said members of Congress are paid too much and are too
concerned with the perks of office and winning still another term .
Much of the criticism is valid. Certainly many members become
arrogant in olfice. Many love the llttle?extras that go with the job.
Many spend a lot of time looking out for their own fu tures.
But Coyne and his coll~agues fall to consider that seniority, faults
and all, does have a place on Capitol Hill.
.
For instance. would it have served the nation or Congress to have
decreed slx years ago that Sen. Sam Nunn, D-Ga., give up his seat in
the Senate because he had already been.in office a dozen years?
In the past slx years, Nunn has become chairman of the Senate
' Armf'd Services Committee and one of the country's experts In the
area of national security and military affairs.
Nunn is only 51 . Would the country be better off to ·have pastured
him off at 45 to farm or practice law and limit his expertise to the
private sector?
Does is make sense to propose that Sen. George Mitchell, D-Maine,
starting his second yeil,r as Senate Democ·r atlc leader, should just up
and leave In 1992 because his dozen years are done?
Sen. Edward Kennedy , D-Mass .. is now the mqst. eloqu&lt;:&gt;nt and
leading voice of the liberal left In the country . Should he have been
muted In 1974 when he had spent 12 years In the Senate?
By contrast, there have been senators - some are still in the
chamber - who should never have come and should never have
stayed.
·
Although the voters slip up, by and large they bring home the
incompetents after six years. Witness the exodus of Republicans who
in 1980 rode Ronald Reagan's coattails into office.
.
Some t.hings do need changing on Capitol Hill. The number of year.s
that a person can serve Is not one of them·.
As long as senators and representatives satisfy the voters of their
stat.es, they will slay . If not, they will go home. E;ither way.it should
be left I(! the v"o ters.
·

Letters to the editot'. ·
National FFA Week
On behalf of it's 53 members, I
would like to inform you of
National FFA Week Feb. 17-24.
The annual salute to the 404,500
members in 7,800 chapt.ers high·
lights the benefits of the FFA as it
prepares young people for more
than 200 challenging and rewarding careers in the agrlcu iture
.Industry .
· FFA is an integral part of
agTicultural education where we
learn the agriscience, markeT·
ing. mechanics. and busines.s
management skills needed to
start careers or continue with
secondary studies. Through
FFA. we develop leadership
skills. foster citizenship and
cooperation which allows us to

play an active and posit lve role in
our community and Industry :
We are very proud of our
organization and the Ideals for
which it stands. FFA partlcipa·
tlon provides excellent training
for young people, while ·out
classes and activities prepare us
to be productive employees and
citizens In this community and
nation.
Our National FFAweek theme
is "FFA·Leading the Chal·
.ienge. ··We invite you Tg join us In
preparing for tomorrow's chal·
lenges. Thank you!
Sincerely, ·
.
David Custer, President .
Racine FFA Chapter

ISOLATION

.,
-~ ----

Offlclaily , President Bush and
his foreign policy aides are still
saying that they . oppose the
creation of such a state unless
Israel Is completely happy with
the arrangement. But privately,
many of Bush's top aides are
saying that it's just a matter of
time.
This change among lntelll·
gence analysts and policymakers at the White House, the
State Department, the Defense
Department and the Central
Intelllgepce Agency has peen
long In the making. The 25-month
Palestinian uprising, known as
the Intifada, has brought the
. change about with a constant,
· low-grade nagging that cannot be
ignored.
Numerous highly . classified
reports have addressed the pr~b­
lem in an attempt to advise Bush,
but we have learned that a single
unclassified report has become
the adminls.tratlon "bible" on the

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta
•

met with leaders In five Arab
nations, Israeli Prime Minister
Yltzhak Shamir, Palestine Llber·
ation Organization leader Yaslr
Arata! and the secret of the
lntl~da.
.
One of our conclusions was that
the Israeli detention of more than
8,000 Palestinians, often without
trial, has fueled the intifada. The
prisons have become a meeting
place !or young recruits and
longtime revolutionaries with
plenty Of time ·on their hands to
plot.
Fuller calls the Israeli prison
syste.m, a "chief breeding
·ground lor new leadership" for
the · Intifada. Palestinians who
only dabbled In activism before
they were arrested, now meet
their counterparts froin all over ·
the West Bank In prison. "Their
sense of solidarity Is Increased,
experiences are exchang~ and .
networiC!!-are established. The
movement becomes more na'
tiona I," Fuller wrote.
He also concluded. that a
Palestinian state could become

very helplulto Israel in combat·
lng a comtnon terrorist enemyPalestinian· lioldolits who would
be disgruntled by whatever land
boundaries were agreed to.
"Inevitably, there will be one
or two Arab states that will be
tempted to ride the hobbyhorse of
rejectlonlsm and claims of betrayal of the Palestinian and
Arab cause." Fuller wrote. He
named Syria as the 'most likely
spoiler, but said that any Arab.
outsider will have trouble.. dis·
ruptlng the state ~nce' the major·
tty of Palestinians ha~ settled
Into their own state ..
One of Fuller's more fasclnat·
lng conclusions Is that a "subtle
role reversal" between Israel
and the Palestlnlaris because ol
the intifada has given the Palest!·
nlans the upper hand. "The·
Palestinians feel they have se·tzed th(' psychological lnltla·
live." he .wrote. · "They see
themselves as the 'peace camp'
that asks for rights and abjures
the use of firearms, whereas
Israelis denying rights. employIng firepower and developing a
siege mentality. Palestinians .
now . see the Israelis as the
besieged rejectionlsts whp react
negatively to calls for greater
flexibility.·'
The Palestinians are basking
In what Fuller calls a new ''moral
authority,'' and, he adds, as long
as Israel .creates more Palestl·
nlari martyrs, the Palestinians ,.....
will retain the moral upper hand.
"This new mentality means
that the West Sank Palestinians
can and probably will remain
committed to the struggre over
the long haul -and perhaps for
decades - regardless of the
punishment meted out," Fuller
wrote. In the process, the Palest!·
nlans may be regaining "the
most precious commodity of all
- their self· respect," he added.
"This Ironically raises their
status In the eyes of many
Israelis who now see them as
'worthy' opponents for
negotiation.''

•

FIELDS SHOOTS - Melp' Bobble Flelda (01) takes
a
two-pointer while Jac:lulon's Cla)'&amp;on ValenUne Jeapa-hllh In the air
to attempt a block durlngTues4a,'s [1081-Huoa toamament game
at Rio Grande. Fields bad 18 points. Tile Marauders won, 48-26.

.

Scoreboard ...
.This week's game~

I

.

·PORTLAND, Ore. (NEA) The 150-bed Power River Correc·
tiona! Facility near the com.mun·
lty of Baker In sparsely settled
eastern Oregon opened only
three months ago but has filled so
quickly that It already Is approaching Its capacity. . ·
To accommodate additional
Inmates this spring, the Hauser
Air National Guard Base near
North Bend Is . belnr. converted
Into a 2IJO.bed state prison that
will open later this month.
In August, a ISIJ..bed addition to
the Eastern Oregon Correctional
Institution in Pendleton will
bring that facility's capacity up
to 1,555 prisoners. Only one
month later, In September, the
400-bed Columb!a ·River Correctlonallnslltutl\ln In Portland will
open for business.
There's more: Construction
has just started on the 200·bed
Clackamas County Intake and
Assessment Center, a joint state,
local penal facility In Oregon City
scheduled to open early next
year. Also expected to be com·
pleted In 1991 Is a new 196-bed
maximum security unit within
. the Oregon St;ole Penitentiary In

Salem.
Finally, there's the piece de
resistance: Next month, con- ·
structlon wUl start on a new,
medium security prison In Onta·
rio. That facility will Initially
have a capaelty of 576 prisoners
- but It has been specially
designed so It can be expanded to
house up to 3,000 Inmates.
Oregon ·Isn't plagued by a
crime. wave that has missed
other states. Indeed, Oregon Is
very typical. ranking just about
In the middle of the !'&gt;0. states .In
terms of both recent growth of
prison population and the per
capita Incarceration rate.
What's happening here Is being
matched across the nation as our
society becomes Impatient with
drug abuse and other crimes but
lacks any soiution except to
Incarcerate offenders in ever·
growing numbers. For six con·..
secutlve · years, spendin&amp; for
construction and opera I ion of
prisons has been the fastest
growing category ot state
budgets. Expenditures for new
local jails and federal penlten·
tiarles are escalating just as
rapidly .

·

.

·

According to the U.S. Justice ·
Department, the. number of In·
mates as or mld-1989 (t,.e most
recent perlo.d lor which rellabl~
statistics are available) totaled
618,847in state prisons and 54,718
In federal penitentiaries ..Collect·
lng data on the population oHocal
jails takes longer, so the most
recent statistics are current as of
mld-1988, when there · were
343,569 prisoners In those
facilities.
That means that our supposedly highly developed society
· has more than 1 million people
locked away in Its prisons an~
· 1ails -and the number continues ·
to increase dally at a pheno·
menal rate.
In Oregon's state prlsohs. for
example, the Inmate population
last year grew at a rate of slightly
more than 70 per month. This
year. It's expected to grow at a
pace ol almost 210 per month.
In addition to being absurd.
this Is expensive. The per-Inmate
construction cost of some new ·
facilities approaches $200,000.
Politicians routinely point out
that it costs less to pay for a year
of education at an Ivy League

· Grand Canyo•lll, RoCk'-llil 13

Sports resu hs ·
No\TIONAL BMilETBALL r\SSO(' .

Sh•wnel!' Slai Ft!MIIa)'

'IV~"

Malore Ill Grow CUy

" •

#"--

• ·-

"*...'-

Marh1&amp;a·HiramJwtn•r l&amp;l Heldtilbet"J

Ohio Xorthera a1 Mu111dn~111
''
Johll C&amp;rftiU·Mt · Ua6n winner at

Ml•••• 17, Boullion II!
lA Laker" 115, &amp;aa Ant onlo Itt, OT

Otk!rhein
( 'upllal aa Blhllrht-\hllacf'

Mllwau Wt lit. Ne•· .Juwy 112
Pbotnhi 11t. BoNonM .

Tllur.d~U, Fe h. 2%"

SacramH~t&amp; tt.

LA. Clipper'* 90
Wtdne!ida)' G llmi'I&lt;O
Ml•nnu 111 :o.-ew.Jerwy, 1: 3ltp.m .

Cine Innllfllll !4oudlern Mht!\lllilllppi
t\hhl~nd al

SOatllern

1n•1~

Dayton at .,_.tk'r
"avlrr at lh-trok

suttk&gt; aa Mt ami. ~: ao p.m.

F'l'ldlt)' , Ft'b. -::a

college !hart to Incarcerate a
prisoner for a year.
At all three levels of govern·
ment (local, state and federal)
the annual budget for the penal
Industry now exceeds $13 billion
- and even. that's inadequate.
Between 35 and 40 states are
operating their .prisons under
court orders Issued to limit
overcrowding or mitigate Its
impact upon Inmates.
Incarceration doesn't do much
for habitual criminals except
temporarily keep them !rom
harming .others. Nallonally, al·
most two-thirds of -all convicts·
released from prison are back
again within three years.
Oregon thought It had an
answer to that problem - the
110-bed Parole Violators Prison
In North Bend where recidivists
spend virtually ail of their time In
windowless, one-person cells and
are deprived of everything !rom ·
television to cigarettes.
But that's apparently not much
.of a cteterren t. Less than two
years after It opened, that special
prison Is completely filled.

flnt · inr~ul at Tukllt&gt;
rlt'\'tland S. •I \\""'lt'rn Oil nob

Da.vtnn ut Dfl.-11

Mron al \hl1hl !U
Xavier at luljjor
\ 'ounptowa ~ l'l Llb.,rty (\' ~t~
,\Khlan d at KeallM·ky \\'•'Sk'}lln
:¥11 Vtrmn Suart&gt;Ar at ( 'todllr\'tlk&gt;
Ohio Dfomonlt'1&amp;n •t {"e-nl,.l S.
\\'alsh at Rio GriUidP

'1\1~~

Wt~Q . G.......S

Thul'lld., Gllmlll

Nl' IMiudtrs al

81 . . . . .
Uillkl•

MAI")''II 71. Fair. Dldllnsoa 71

New Ham ...lrc C•O.IIS. N.E.Collt(t"

57

M~

Brook Cll. Klnp Polnl ~~Of"
!iynu:ullf' lOS. lleKWn CtJIIf'p tit
\\'. Sew. ERJI!lnd 13, " 'ort('llll'r Tech liD

Won!fllilWI' 8t 511,

W~tfll'Jd

81: 57

South
• . EmOry 6: Hf'nry A~. Eutrr n Mll'nMnMt'
1
FlOrida St. 811, Tulant- 17
Mt"ml!hl!! 81. II~. I.O.\tlk' 811
R...-1-·Milt'On 12. 8rldp¥il&amp;in H
Roan* IIIL \ ' lrlll:lnla " .l"lllf')'an Ill
St . Tllornali In, nortda !\lll'mertal 11.
M.liiiiiiii"Kton &amp; Ur r.. Hampde•
sy•••Y &amp;3
'

..

)lldWI'!'t
1\IIHon lftSprtn« A~r 81

......

Ch...........

.

.

WMhlllll . . - IISt.O. Vlrtlnla SlirT114
of WAiihlncton

Transactions '

BETzlNG SCORES - Melp' Cary Betzln1 ( 11) flips In two of his .
10 points In Tuesday's 49·28 Division II Sectional Toumanr~nt
victory over Jackson at Rio Grande. JHS de lender Is Mike Moore

Tul'ftdar 8portM TraoMdHII'II

8ueb.U
, BONon- Slped pttcher Cha&amp;rllt'Puk"(J
toml~~or·lt&gt;~ c."Ottracland ln'Wiled tllm

--:- Sports briefs-

l ·,e•cilllnd ..

Anifll" - 81Pf;d frte arent

.f'

Soccer
Lou Macari. fined last week for
his part In a soccer bettlng
scandal, resigned as manager of
England's Second Division club
West Ham. Macari was lound
guilty of Involvement In the
placing of a bet on Swindon to
lose an FA CupgameatNewcas·
tie In 1988.

Nt'l'· l ' urk (NL) - Slpt• pllcher
Jllalnr Jltall)' 10 lr..r fiUIIr&amp;d.

Ce-nt rid .Mt. n, IIIII ftc. U
O..raul U. :'\iot .. DIUIW t2
Dtfilulct" ta. ~kr II
Empori• 91. IDI, BI'IM'1Icthtt· Hll
Hu•l•ct•n ttl, Gtat'(' 1M
Dllnot" Tn-h U, Baret 7!
lntlano TN"IIII ... lnd·'KokOnlo .&amp;7

'

18

S..tUd•- !11.- pllchtn KrHh Cern·

Ill tiCk. Dt.nlllll PoMI, 01• z .....,... and
l ... f'lder Rich 1\enterla lo l·)e.r
corfrar:t-.
'
'
llaJWtball

MII"1W 11!11 - Plallfd iurintmlln

Pa~~l

Pri!'Mapy P•IIIJII~ IIIli; adi\'IUed ...aaer

Tlto Hort.nl.
Portlalll• -

IExtendd rflllltact of
Coac• Rick .U~mu
JfR.JS.
l'lt!IU60a.

*•••

THH!! N'!. Ml \ ' rl'non 7-1

_Sports briefs_
nlst .James Flanigan writes that Instance, I didn't think I ·should Flanigan pointed out that spend·
, one reason the national economy buy a foreign car just because It thrifts are ruining the economy.
Is In trouble Is that most of us are
So, here I am, trying to save
met my needs better than an
living beyond our means; we're American car. Right or wrong, I some money by not buying much,
not saving any money. We're was more Interested in .the fellow and wondering how my lew
borrowing more to buy things In my community who was purchases will affect others.
like new Daytonas and Le depending on my car-buying
Am I helping the economy? Am
Barons.
dollar to feed his family and I hurting It by not buylnr
So, within the space of just a . accrue a person. J stopped
products made by people who
few pages, I am made to feel
buying foreign cars.
depend on my purchases to keep
Irresponsible for not buying
But I won't be buying a new Le their jobs? Will they stop buylnc
enough of the nice cars made by Baron this year. even though I my newspapers? Will I be the
my neighbors, and for buyl!lg too am pretty taken with their next to lose my job?
many of them! Butthat' s nothing convertible model, and I do wish
There's a new book out on
new. For years I've tried to the people In Fenton could keep "ethical investing" - . buylnc
balance my parents' Depression· their jobs. I'm making my stocks In socially responsible
era parslniony with a modern- lQ.year-old car last as long as I companies. I'm walling for the
day sensitivity to the interde· can because (a) the new Le ·book .on how to spelld responsibpendence of producers and · Barons cost twice as much as the lly, so that when I buy things, my
consumers In a healthy economy car I bought 10 years ago, and'(b)
mopey will help me and other
- even though my, understand· I'm trying to save more money, a
workers Instead ol working
lng ol those dynamlis Is rudimen· decision I made long before Mr.
against us.
·
tary at best. I know that you
deJ!end on me to buy the cars you
make and to take my clothes to
your dry-cleaning shop, and I
depend on you to · buy the
By United PreA lnterllll&amp;loaal
newspaper that pays me to write ·
Today Is Wednesday, Feb. 21, the 52nd day of 1990 with 313 to follow.
this column.
·
The moon Is waning, moving toward Its new phase.
I've tried to weigh this InterdeThe morning stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn.
,
pendence against the .Jaw of
·
The evenln&amp; star Is Jupllel:.
supply and demand, so that I can
Thoee born oti this day are under the sign of Pisces. They lncl~e
come up with the buying decision
Mexican revoluUonary and military commander Antonio·Lopez de
I think is most ethical. For Santa-Anna In 1794.

Today in history

•

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---·-

Olympics
JOC President Juan Antonio
Samaranch says It may be.time
to readmit South Africa to the
Olympic movement. The country
has been banned since 1970
~ause of its policy of .racial
separation. "Something Is moving In SouthAfrlcadurlngthe last
few weeks lind we who are
respo"nslble for sport and the
·olympic movement also hav~ to
move," Samaranch said at a
meeting In Kuwait. "I think !t Is
time, not only lor words, but also
for deeds and Iacts."

If you are iriterested.in learning
about your options concerning
the distribution from t,h e.Kaiser
Alwninum USWA Employee
Stock•Ownership
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\\lulpr• aa Nrw .ler!W')". l'illht
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klap Colli'~ K&amp;. •Mmftrld liM

Poh•d.miii,Nto"· ratt~tll
~on Hi!11116, PIUIIJU ~~~ 81

PtU. . t):h. nll(ilt

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A.ll~lwuyiOI, CNWPkrnll.t
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Pllce II!, Phlla.

Advertising Representative . Branham

Quitw at,Hardo..-, ~:Jip.m.. .
. ,- . . .,. ..... -~ ......... t:ISp.iii.

Collrtt &amp;owked~llll ~~~~!lo
·By ~niid Frw~ bltrrflll knlltl

.

RetiaM !I

NVR ..pr"al o.troit,1:35p.m.

•

St.

Betzlng (II) attempted a short jumper during
Tuesday's tournament game at Rio Grande. The
Marauders won, 49·26.

8:15 the Gallia ;1ocademy Blue
the game aT the foul line hitting24
Devils will pla y the TVC cham·
of 31 for 77'7.. Meigs had 30
rebounds (25 defense ) with
pion Wellston Rockets.
Fields grabbll)g 8, Humphreys 7 . Score by· quarters
Meigs ... .. :....... 6 10 11 22- 49
and Van Meter aild Mitch with 6
Jackson .... ... .. . 3 12 9. 2-26
each.
MEIGS (49) - Jason WrighT
Valentine led the Jronmen with.
8 points, all in the third quarter.
0-1·3·6. Cary Betzing 2·0·6·10,
Humphrey s 2·0·3·7, Robbie
Jackson was ice cold from the
floor hitting 9 of 50 for a frigid
Fields 4-0·8-16. Mike Van Meter
1-0·0·2,
L.J . Milch 2-0·4-8. TO·
18'~ . and 8 of 19 from the line for
TALS- 11·1-Z4-49
42'1r .
Meigs is now 4-17 with Ws
JACKSON (26) - STeve Wal:
second win In a row will play
burn 2·0·2·6, Mike Moore 3-0·1· 7.
Chris White 1·0·1 ·3. ShanP Prater
second seeded Fairland 13· 7 In
0·0·2·2, Clayton Valentine 3·0·2·8.
the the flnalsof the upper bracket
on Ftiday night aT 6: 30. the
TOTALS - 9·0·8·26
winner will advance to the
Convocation Center on Saturday.
The Daily Sentinel
March 3 at 5:45 p.m. Fairland
started out the season red hot
(USPS Hi&gt;960 )
winning seven in a row, but have
A·Divls lon of Multimedia, Inc.
had problems of late wining only
Published {•ver y aft ernoon. Monda y
six of the last 13 games . The
throogh Frida y, 111 Court St .. Po·
Marauders -have some momen·
meroy. Ohio. by th£' Ohio Valley Pub·
tum built up and .they believe
lishing Compa ny1Mul11mcdl a, Inc.,
Pomeroy. Ohi o 45769. Ph . 992·2156. Se·
they can become the Cinderella
cond class postage paid at Pomeroy,
team In the Rio Grande sectional.
Ohio.
The finals or the bottom
MeMber : United Press tnt ernallonal.
bracket will also be played 'on
1nland Dail y Pr es ~; Assocl atlon ,a nd 1 he
Friday night at Rio Grande. At
Oblo Newspaper As soci at !on. National

PIUM!u rr;h I, PII.Dadl"'pllill ~
Bullalo .a, Wlntllipe:J S, OT
Cbtuao M, Sl. Lolli" 3
Boal.oa 3. Cal ..,,. 3
Ed-.cnton .t. VUl'Ouwr 2

SCAC Toun~~&amp;mcont li111h

Mt

playing pretty good defense on
the other side, holding Jackson to
only two points In the quarter.
"I' m really proud of the kids ".
a happy Rusty Bookman commented after the game . ·'Robbie
Fields did a real fine job, L.J.
(Mitch) came off the bench ·a nd
did a real good job on Valentine.
Cary did a real good job helping
.Jason run the. offense, everybody
played excellent defense and the
bench helpe!l by staying ln the
game." ·
Fields led the Marauders with
!6 points. Cary Bet zing added 10:
·Meigs hit 12 of 31 from the floor
lor 42'1&lt;. But the-Marauders won

1'\ATION.U HOCKEY LEAGt.:E

.

LUe Ert. atltlaiOIIl'
o..v .............. ftMh

lo~all,

FIGHT FOR REBOUND - Jackson's Chris
White (30) goti8 after rebound after Meigs' Cary

Atlaml II Indiana. 7:28p.m.
LA Lakfn~ allhonwr.lh:m p.m .
8oM011 a1 t:tall. 8; 30 p,m,
· PhU..delfhi~ al Golden st~~ot~. Ill: :Ill
p.m.
Thunwll\)1 Game.Nev.· \ 'oltl. ~, \\' Mht~&amp;D. ni"IN
Dallu Ill Mllwavlit'e. niP!
Utah ai LA CIIP.Pt"u. nl,;hl
Phornb. at Sacramento. niJiflt

OA(" TOu.,.miPnt lit"miiiMI" '
!Wutdll)', Fl'h. ~~
OhloSt at Purckw
Ohio l: at K.rnl Sot
Bowlin!( Gn&gt;e11111 E:a.. u•rn Mi~hiJian
Miami ut Tol•dn

SltawM• St. 1d Dykl'
, FI..I6f .. Wllmln~t&amp;n

Walter.~

·

Portland lllCinel-d. 7: :ltp.m.
();lando :d lkot roil, 7: ll1 p.m.

S("r\(' TournamNII !61'miH•I?o

.

Rl'll""'

Portknd Ill, O.•kltw U
§eoaU• m, or ~an• 11t
K'Mhlnpo•lll,
101'

OACTo..-ney

College scores

Health economy needs balance

,_, t' · - -- ·

K'et~t

BallS. aUIIImf

Knt Stat Wf'IIMrn MleWpn •
Tolfolllo .a Bowllna Grl!'ca
Akr• at WhK."OIIIIn-Guea &amp;y
IUo Grudr Ill Otl.,. Onm,nlcan\\'llmht~on .. um,U.

Und.-nwood Ill, Grttn\tUt "H

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

Southwef't

Lubbo&lt;:k (;hri!ll. 100. Te•~ f&amp;J.'~J
Okla . Cit)'· l:nh'. IH. Mhlfo'~l. St. 93 ·

Ohio foUe-•e BallktJb WI Schedlllr
'\'M'If'id!Q", hh. 21 ' 1

BhdftH Jt.l D .. fluCI'

•

Robert

W•illter tl. Maryville fMo.) 18

uma.. 111 Tltnn

In 'despair, .the. U•. S.· tut'lts to pnsons ·
•

--- ------- -1

Issue, simply by laying out the
!acts or lite.
Just the other day, when
Defense Secretary Richard Chel!ey was trying to explain the
Bush policy on the Middle East to
another Important olficlal, he
finally said, "Look, just read tl)e
Fuller report."
"Fuller" Is Graham E. Fuller,
formerly of the CIA and now of
the FlA)'lD Corp. His reilort was
commissioned !rom RAND by
Cheney and the State Depart,
men!. It was finished last August,
but the results were not widely
publicized. Only Cheney and a
limited list of others In govern·
mept got ~ copy of the report
called "The West Bank ollsrael:
Point of No Return?"
Fuller has a good reputation
among policy-makers as a Mid·
die East expert, and when he ·
says a Palestinian state Is
"inevitable," those policymakers sit up and .take notice.
Many of Fuller's conclusions
about a Palestinian state are
similar to those we reached last
spring after spending two
months In· the Mldple East. We

.

On the front page ol my Sunday
newspaper, I read that Chrysler
is laying olf 4,000 employees In
nearby Fenton, Mo. Fenton Is the
suburb .of St. Louis where -my
brother directs commercials and
Industrial films for companies
like Chrysler. Once again, . the
lives of people I know will be
thrown for a loop.
Say what you wUl aboutflndlng ·
the strength to start over l!nd not
putting all your eggs In one
basket; these folks will be hurt,
and that hurt will trickle down to
others of us. The United Auto
Workers union suspects the com·
pany Is trying to scare employees
Into making more concessions,
or else Is planning to move the
plant to a foreign country .where
labor Is cheaper.
This may be true, but what's
also true Is that sales have been
ilecllnlng throughout the auto
Industry - Including, the two
modei!J produced at the Fenton .
plant. In other words, If consu·
mers like me were buying more
Daytonas and Le Barons, these
workers might not be getting
their pink slips. .
A few pages over from the
Chrysler story, business colum-

Berry's World

By DAVE HARRIS
OVP Correspondent
The Meigs Marauders com·
blned clut~h lou! shooting with an
excel len 1 defense to down the
Jackson Ironrnel! 49·26 In the
Division II sectional tournament
play Tuesday night at the Univers!ly of Rio Grande. The w!p puts
the M~~Taudets Jn the champion·
ship game against Fairland
(13-7) Friday nigl\1 at. 6: 30.
The Marauders came out with
the' slow patient qffense that has
worked so well for them of Ia te.
Meigs opened up a 6-Head at .the
end of the tlrst quarter . .Jack·
son's problems had already
started as the lronmen hit only
one of ten shots In the first
quarter.
The second per.iod both teams
traded buckets most oft he period
and the Ironmen took the lead
with : 08 seconds left on a driving
lay-up·by Mike Moore . But Jason
Wright brought the Marauder
. fans to. their feet as he drilled a
buzzer beater from 25 feet but to
give the Marauders a 16-15 lead
at the half.
In the Wlrd period 6·1 junior '
Clayton Valentine started to get
Into the flow of the game scoring
eight of the Ironmen's nine
points, but each time the Ma··
rauders would answer with a
bucket of their own. Robbie
Fields led theMarauderattackln
the third. quarter -as ne was three
. for three both from the floor and
from the foul line for nine of the
Marauders' 11 points.
• · In the fourth period the Ma·
rauders won the game a t The foul ·
line hitting 19 of 2lln the quarter.
and athone point 12 in a row. To
add to the Jackson ( problems.
Steve Walburn and ValenTine ·
each picked up their fifth foul on
picture perfect blind picks set up
'by Cary Betzlng, who was also
playing with lour fouls . Walburn
exited with 3:22 remaining and
Valentine with 2: 57 remalrting.
While the Marauders were hit ·
ling the foul ~hots ·

Is a Palestinian state on the horizon

Ill C~urt Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

B m~

Meigs poSts 49-26 victory over Jackson

DaHY S•dinel

Pomeroy-Middhpcwt, Ohio
Wednudav. February 21. 1990

'

The Daily Sentinel

'

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MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NMIIt-•W
Fri.

992-2178

�Pomeloy-MidrJeport. Ohio

With Howard's clutch dunk,

Tuesday's tourney scores
Boys re&amp;Uks

" '.vaw Rh·er.,..~·

a.
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Girls. results

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1WAII.,, Feb. It

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fin 'l'urpin 41, an Purctll
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Ro!i!iiiU'II 17, EaMtwood Ill
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Tol Bowlllher &amp;3, Tol M'llillnw.r
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Sprl"" Shallr1IN•Ii4, Sll";arl,. Gr-o-~h.tm 1i0

~oad trip pairs ·Rio ·
~

·'

I

I

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campaign, the University of Rio
c:irande men's basketba'u team
(:14-15) travels to Columbus to·
rlight for a 7:30 matchup with the
Panthers of Ohio Dominican
i::!-251 '
: While the Redmen will bring a
healthy contingent with them,
fr~shfrom Saturday's93-72home
win over Bluffton. ODC was
working to fill gaps caused by
injuries.
.
- The Panthers' 120-85 Joss ·to
Fleflance Saturday resulted in
· injury to their leading scorer,
freshman forward Kevin Shea.
GDC Coach Lou Sartori said
Tu.esday Shea would practice for .
tpnlght's game. but his partlclpa·
tlon was doubtful:
: Sartori said his only cholctss for .
'!" starting lineup were. as o!
Tuesday, guards Jeff Overmyer
Oi-3. sophomore I and Scott Grun·
'del 16-1, freshman),
: Shea has been one o! the bright
,;pots in the Pant.hers' season.
~hich included an upset victory
over Mid·Ohio Con!erencP title
contender Walsl), This week.
NAIA District 22 ranked Shea
eighth in Individual fleid goal
(lercentage on 151 of 280 attempts
for 53,9 percent.
: Within t.he MOC, which wraps
ltP play this week. the Redmen
are sixth at 4·6. ODC is seventh
with 1-10. The Panthers fell to Rio
Crande. 115-65, at Lyne Ceri ter on
Jan. 23.
: Redmen Coach John Lawhorn
"?ill stan Gary Harrison and
Mark Ersian as his guards, with
Brad Schubert and Jeff Brown
taking the forward slots. John
Lambcke wlll start at the post.
: Harrison. averaging 18 .1
points per game; leads the team
and the district in assisls with 8.6
(ler game. In addition, he ·and
Schubert are ranked seventh and
eighth. respectively. in indlvld·
tlal scoring since Schubert is also
pumping in 18.1 points a game.
S(;hubert was placed eighth in the
(jistrlct in 3-point field goal
percetage (120-272 for 44.1
percentl.
· Brown 112.6 points. 8.1 re'
bounds) is fifth in individual
rebounding In the district.

TVC standings
:

(All Games)
TEAM
WLP
Wellston ... .. ... , 17 3 1461 1
[\'liller ............. l4 6 1277 1458
Alexander ...... 13 8 1343 1250
X· Belpre ......... 12 9 1515 1154
Trimble .......... 11 9 1219 1198
li·VInton ......... 11 10 1330 1265
F.ed·Hocklng .. , 10 11 1442 1402
l"{{elgs ............. 4 17 1140 1478
JO-Nels·York.. .. 2 19 1129 1501
&gt;(.Completed season
Tuesday '1 resulta:
: Meigs 49 Jackson 26
: Sheridan 70 Vinton County 54
· Alexander 70 Nelsonvllle-York

Another starter In the double·
figure range Is Erslan, netting
11.7 points a game, while
Lambcke is bringing _In 7.3
markers per outing. Erslan,
connecting on 82 of 189 trlfecta
attempts. was Usted lOth in that
category by NAJA.
•·
I,lsted lOth of the 16 d.i strlct
!earns, Rio G.rande leads the way
1n team scoring offense 1101.6
point~ per game 1 and in scoring
margm 115.1), The Redmen are
sixth in field goal percentage
with 48.6 (1097-2256), lOth In free
throw percentage at 71.1 (393·
5531 and fifth In team 3·polnt
shooting with· 40.6 percent (3618901.
.
NAJA listed the Panthers sev, enth on team free throw percen·
tage at 71,7 (390·554) and ninth on
team treys at 37.1 (57·151). ODC
is ranked 15th in the district, led
this week by Tiffin at 23·5 . .
Rio Grande and ODC wlll
complete their seasons Saturday
with 7:30 p.m. games. The
Redmen will be home against
Walsh and the Panth~rs travel to
Central State.
·

SVAC standings
(All games)
TEAM

: Federal Hocking 76 Belpre 73
Friday's games:
: Fairland vs, Meigs at Rio
Grande, 6: 30 p.m.
:· Gallipolls vs. Wellston at Rio
Grande, 8:15p.m.
Saturday's Jl&amp;lllft:
: Warren Local vs. Sll«&lt;dan, at
c;~vllle, 6: !10 p.m.
••. Crooksville vs. Alexander, at
Athens, 6:30p.m. .
· Rosa·Southeastern vs. Federal
Hocking, at Athens, 8 p.m.
Feb. !'7game:
Miller vs, Trimble, at Meigs,
7:30p.m.

W

L · PF PA

5
7
8
10
13
12
I6
· 19

1497 1406
1454 1302
1412 1229
1204 1179
1232 1297
1446 1421
1237 1479
11141543

(SVAC games-final)

TEAM

W

L

Eastern .. ..... .. 13 1
Southern. :.... .. , 12 2
North Gallla ... 10 4
Han nan Trace 7 7
Southwestern .. 5 9
S-Valley ......... 5 9
Oak Hill ......... 4 10
Kyger Creek ... 0 14
' TOTAI.8 ........... 56 5.6

PF PA

1068
1068
1037
865
974
836
867
790
7505

913
814
906
807
976
965
1029
1095
7505

(Reserves·flnal)
TEAM

W

Southern ......... 13
North Gallla , .. 13
Oak Hill ........ , 9
Hannan Trace 8
S.Valley ....... .. 7
Southwestern., · 3
Eastern .......... 2
Kyger Creek... 1
· TOTALS ....... ... 56

?Jt ,

5~

.

Eastern .... -..... 15
North Gallla ... 13
Southern ......... 12
Hannan Trace 10
S.Valley ...... ... 8
Southwestern .. 8
Oak Hill ......... 5
Kyger·Creek ... 1

L
1
I

5
6
7
11

•

,,

By TOM WITHERS
17, LeRon·'EJJis had 16 and
John"s on the road,
UPI Spol18 Writ~
Notre Dame's, schedule Is Step}len Thomp!On chipped 111
One game after he danced an
much more demanding with wlthl3, Fre1hm4JI David Hinton
Irish Jig, Notre Dame coach dates with No . 1 Missouri and No. led tbe Eagh with 18 poihts.
Digger Pbelps may have seen his 6 Georgia Tech at home and road
At Baltimore, La Salle's Lionel
learn's bubble burst Tuesday games at Dayton and Kentucky. Simmons scored 34 points, movnight.
Ing past Oscar Robertson Into
DePaul coach Joey Meyer said
DePaul's Stephen Howard that his team and l'fotre Dame fifth- place, on the NCAA's all·
dunked In a rebound as time shoul~ be judged separately on time· scortitg Jl&amp;t, leading the
expired, giving the-Blue Demons their worthiness tor NCAA play , ExplOrers In a rout of Loyola of
a 63-62 victory over Notre Dame
Maryland,
"I don't think .what we do
In a game thai wlll have a should aff~t each other, ... he
Simmons made a reverse
, significant lmpa'er on the two said. "If we deserve to get It, we
layup with 9: 18to play In the first
team's NCAA tournament get It There shouldn't be just one
half that moved hlm past Robertaspirations.
son on the ;lll·tlme Jist. He now
Independent. It should · be who
Last Saturday. the Fighting · deserves to get ln.''
has 2,997 points In his career and
Irish stunned Syracuse when
In games that involved . Top should become the fifth player In
Elmer Bennett canned a three· Twenty "teams, No .' 9 Syracuse
NCAA history to surpass 3,000 .
pointer at the buzzer fQr a 66:65 demolished Boston College 102·
points. Robertson scored 2,973
victory, As the ball went in, 69, No. 14 La Salle routed Loyola
points at ihe University of
Phelps broke Inti&gt; a celebratory of Maryland 110·81 and No. 15 Cincinnati.
dance on the sideline.
Pete Maravlch set the carrer
Louisville was upended by Mem- ·
But there was no celebrating phis State 82·68,
scoring record with 3,667 points
Tuesday night, as the Fighting
at Louisiana State, followed by
At Syracuse, leading 43-39 at
Irish, considered by many ex- ·halftime, the ninth-ranked Oran·
Freeman Williams of Portland
perts to be on the "bubble" for a gemen upped their defensive State with 3,249 points. Harry
tournament Invitation, saw · an pressure ·In the second half to
Kelly of Texas Southern Is third
18·polnt Ilrst·half advantage come away with the lopsided with 3,066 and Hersey Hawkins of
evaporate into a 'damaging Joss . . conference victory. Syracuse,
Bradley fourth with 3,008.
Howard, who finished with 26 19-5 overall and 9-4 In the Big
The 6·6 Simmons was removed
points. was lett alone underneath East, went on a 23-5 run at the from the game with 8:23 remainwhen Notre Dame center Keith start of the second hall to forge a
Ing as the Explorers Improved to
Robinson moved to help Impede 6644 lead v,:lth 12:44 remaining.
23-1 and 13·Q In the Metro Atlantic
Chuckle M11rp1ty, who wildly Boston College, 7-16, J.12, shot 56 Athletic Conference.
fired a three-pointer with two '·percent in the first half io keep
Kevin Green led Loyola, which
seconds to play. The shot fell the score close. but made just 10 fell to 4-21 an\1~·12. wiih 21 points.
short ·of the rim, and Howard field goals in the second half.
At Mell'\phis, . Tenn.. Ernest
grabbed the easy rebound and Derrick Coleman led Syracuse Smith ~cored 18 points and Elliot
scored the game-winning dunk.
Perry add.ed 15 to lead the Tigers .
with 21 points, Billy Owens added
"I kr\ew the shot was a couple
feet short," said Howard, who
kept DePaul, 15-12. in the game In
the first half .by scoring'l6 points.
"There was no one around me. I
didn't know it was in time until I
saw everyone jumping up and
down. I'm just.Jucky."
Notre Dame, 14-9, dominated
early but fell apart when Phelps
benched most o! his starters with
7: 19 to play In the first half and
the Irish holding . a 29·11 lead.
DePaul responded lm!ftediately
with a 9-1 run.
' 'We wanted to g ive some
;WITH FRIES-........ $1,84
people a rest. so we went to the
bench," said Phelps, whose substitutes accounted for only three
points. "You warit the bench to
give you positives, and they
''At !he E.id of the P0111oroy·Ma1CH1 Bridge"
didn't do that." ·
·
Because Notre Dame and
POlURbY, OliO
PH. 992-2556
DePaul are independents,. their
head· to-head matchups hold a lot
of weight with the tournament
selection commlitee. The win
can only help·tHe Blue Demons.
DePaul cah finish with 20
vl~torles WIt wins Its last five
games. which-lnchide a Marc\110 , ·
regular season·ending home date
with Notre Dame. DePaul plays
no rated teams and plays only St,

over the 15th· ranked Cardinals In
a Metro Conference game. The
Tigers Improved to 16·9 overall
and 7-5 In the Metro while
Louisville fell to 20-6 and 9·2.
Louisville was led by Felton
Spencer and Keith Williams, who
scored 19 and 18 points.
respectively.

..

10o Valuable
To Lose!
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able to manag• the
. mongage payments if
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·
·'

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Call today for all the
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PF PA

704
688
657
601

494
510
583
544

595 571
540 653

12 518 691
13 399 656
56 47M 47M

Tuesday's action
At Rock Hl)l H.S. -Oak Hill 58,
Symmes Valley 54
This week's tourneys

Wedaelday - Ironton· St. Joe
vs'. Hannan Trace at Uni*. of Rio
Grande,, 7 p.m. .
,
Thursday - Kyger Creek vs.
Racine Southern at Meigs H.S.,
7:30p.m.
. .
Saturday Oak Hill vs.
Chesapeake at Rock Hill H.S., 7
p.m.

GOOD USED
WASIIIS, DIYEIS,
llf-IUTOIS, TYs,
GAS &amp; IUC. UIIGES

COUim

APPUAICES

621 Jnl An.. Gt" 1111
P1L 446-16ft.
•IOIMIIS.:-· I AJL-6 P.M.

JEFF WARNER INSURANCE
302 West 2nd Street
POMEROY, OH,' 45769
Ph. 614-992·5479

~I NATIONWIDE
U. ~~!~~~~c~
N111onwiC1e

L11~ lnsu11nc;e Co;,p•nv

Homt Otf1ce Columbus . Ohio

PAY

FOR

$299 MINIMUM

$90,000. lJ that correct? " ~mmllaloner Jones asl(ed.
Wedemeyer said "yes :"
''T)Ien," continued Jo..es
"they would foUow that up bY
saylna to me, 'well if that is the
case, they &lt;WOUld need approxl·
mately $100,000' .
'
So why 81'e you asking for
$312,000? .I think that'.s 11 fair
question."
Wederiteyer repUed that the
$312,000 "gives us money. to
operate Qn and\we don't have to
go back to the voter&amp; for years:
. He explained about the need
for some carryover to get
through the first quarter until the
tax statement co~s through In

ever be able to regain by saying person, Is that right?"
In conclusion, Jones stated
adult workshop and office com·
we need the levy to repJace those
Wedemeyer added that one plex, He described the contract that he has always taken the
services:·
administrator had also been as a "revenue producing con- position that on matters or Items
"I think you have hit at the
reassigned .
such as the levy and Its amount,
tract for Meigs County."'
heart
and
soul
of
most
of
the
"Now
if
I
understand
you,
then
·
The matter of enrollment and that the publiC shOuld have the
families here,"' commented
the only way the lunch program how malnstreamlng Into the right to decide.
Jones.
will be Instituted Is the passage of public school system will affect
The board passed a resolu tlon
Both Jones and Koblentz said
this levy. Is that correct?" Jones the MMDR programs was dis·
to have the three-year 1.5 mill
that they had been getting asked.
cu'ssed . Wedemeyer stated that
placed on the May ballot.
telephone calls and bad been
"That's a decision that the as for the school age program. in
approached on the stl'eet about board will make. If they say five to eight years, he sees It as
the discontinuance of the lunch reinstitute the lunch program, having less enrollees .
SPRING VAlliY I;IN(MA
program.
. . then I'll do it," Wedemeyer
Returning to the lunch pro446 4514
"I would think that the school
responded.
gram, Koblent'z said that what
;p .t&gt;J
____,_,,
would be well served . and the
"Are we talking a bout alter the · we're hearing on the street Is
administration well served and passage of a levy," Jones questl· "look what they've done up
this community the benefiCiary, oned with Wedemeyer replied '"J there, they've cut the lunch
If a hard look was taken and some think that's the thlnkt,ng now. program out to get us to vote tor
way ,the Iunch program relnstl· With the passage of the. levy we the levy , That's kind of what Is
tuted," commented Jones.
will reopen the lunch program going on."
Wedemeyer 's response was
and try to restore the other cuts
"Now
when
you
throw
out
the
continued fr= page 1
that the board would never do
Idea that you have tocutanother we've made.
Jones ·again asked "I don't anything to hurt the enrollees,
program which I know Is a vital
ern Ohio, .. such as the problems and dealt with them accord·
service, therapy and things like know what other cuts you have that their concern Is always for
that many rural dlsrlcts face lngly," he stated. Examples of
the benefit of the enrollees. The
that for the children, th!!il !hat's a made?''
with respec;t to being abletoralse past challenges, as listed 'by the
commlsslone'rs
agreed that they
real
pro.blem,
and
I
understand
The
superintendent
responded.
, su!flclentlevels of!undlng at the Senator, Include tbe ,rescue oft he
have
the
"utmost
respect" tor
"We
reassigned
an
administra·
that,"
Jones
continued,
"but
1
Ioc;al district level.
Ohio ValleY Area Libraries
the
board
me!ftbers,
Bob Eason,
tor
to
·
think
what
we
have
done
here
for
the
adult
services
program
'Buttherelsmoretobedoneln (OVAL) and Implementation of
president,
Nora
Rice,
Jean
$5500 Is gotten Into a lot o! grief and we laid off clerical pasltlon ."
educattol) and our efforts cannot the Eldercare Options Initiative,
The discussion continued about Weaver. John Lentls. John Rice,
stop here," Long stat!'Q. "I · Among challenges which Long . right down the line."
Jones again questioned · just . a contract which the board has John Karschnlck, and VIckie ·
assure you," he c;ontlnued, "that expects will confront the 17th
I Will not stop until we have Dis trlct In the 1990's are the . ho\v the $75.000 to $90,000 had with VInton County for about Gloeckner.
been. saved ~o t·h at the budget $9,000 with $2,000 of.that going to
devised a system that allOws rlsll)g costs o! health care lnsu·
Wedemeyer. The MMDR admln·
MUBI ~ducatlomtl opportunity,
ranc11: the continuing skyrocket· , co.uld be balanced,
"As l · understancj It," said
lstrator, wno said he spends one
Certainly, as we enter the decade lng costs of medical care; and.the
Jones. ''one person was laid off, day a week there, explained that
of the 1990's; no principle Is c6ntlnulng Jack of assistance
so
ther 'Was that salary, and. the· his role there Is to help obtain
greater In our system of public 1rom the federal goverrunent yet,
cook
was traded Into another state capital dollars tor VInton
IDS\I'UCtlon than that of pursuing the continuation of federal man'
position
Instead of hiring a new County so that they can build an
the goal of equity In funding."
: dates of regulations upon state
'
Long credited the "partner- · and local goverrunents.
'
~hlp" between constituents In the
· "Although the challenges to us
17th District and hlm~lf. for any will .be many. I believe that our
legislative successes In the past ·commltrpent to seek solutions
Robert Ea~on, president of the sloners recently approved a
four. years. "You have been the wiU be ~ually tgemendous," he
Meigs County Board of Mental request from the Board to place .
ones that have .Identified the stated. "I pledge to. you my
particular problems that needed continued commitment to .our Retardation and Developmental . the proposed 1.5 mill three-year
Dlsabllltles, called a special operating levy on the ballot again
our attention," he said. ':·vou· partnership for success and look
meeting of the Board to discuss In May .
have fanned the coalitions that forward to working with you not
recent
cuts In the agency's
The Meigs MR·DD Board and
enabled us to advanc!! and . only for a victory In 1990, but
budget.
·
The
meeting
was
held
administration
will continue to
advocate your needs, You have successforallofSouthernOhloin
Friday
evening
at
the
Carleton
provide
a
full
range
of services as
attended our meetings and
the decade of the 1990's," he
School·Melgs
Industries
facility
dictated
by
enrollees
needs, and
helped us to convey to stall) and concluded.
In
Syracuse.
·
in
respect
to
funds
made
avalla·
federal officials the particular
Long was Introduced at yesterBased
on
1990
revenue
pro}ec·
ble
by
local,
state
and
federal
.Problems that we faced and the day'sreceptiorrbySueMalson,a
reasons we needed asSistance.
local Democratic leader. Several !Ions and the failure in November sources, stated the release. ''The
"Together we have responded other prominent Meigs County of a bid for a three-year 1.5 mill board fully realizes, and wants to
to challenges, met them head on Democrats also attended the levy lor Meigs MR DD pro· assure those Interested In this
grams. the Board, at Its regular Issue. that sound management
reception.
"
meeting In December 1989, took and fiscal practices will rise to
action to make reductions In the .forefront If additional fund·
expenses In support service lng Is not forthcoming In the ilear
areas. The board took·action to future. Lack of new funds will
·Michele
Jr., and Robert Esco.bar, both of
.
delay
Indefinitely the hiring of result In additional cuts In the
Michele Denise Hendricks, In· San.Francisco, three daughters,
two
lull
tiQ1e administrative program 's budget,"' the 'release
rant daughter , of Harley Martha Jeffers of Albany, Dora
positions, explained I.:ee Wede-• concluded .
·
''Chipper'' and Crystpl Carhart Lewis of San Francisco, and
meyer,
Meigs
MR-DD
superln·
The
release
did
n.ot
Indicate
If
Hendricks of Hu!llington, dl'ld ' Nonna Robel, San Jose, Calif., 20
Sund:i.y In Children's Ho'spltal, grandchildren, and 13 tendent. Furtheunore, 1 action workers would be, rehired to
290 North s-nd, Mlddle.,ort, Ohio
was taken to reassign one full - Implement the hot l4nch
C9Iumbus, Ohio.
great-grandchildren,
Also surviving are her mater·
Services will be condu~ted at 9 time administrator to the Adult program .
• nal grandparents. Linda and a.m. Thurs.day at Valente Marini. Services Program and also to
·Gary Stewart of I,.etart, W.Va., Perala and Co.. 4840 MissionS!., eliminate cafeteria service and a
and Terry Carhart of Gallipolis; San Francisco, Calif. with burial cl~rlcal support' position.
paternal grandparents, Harley at the Holy Cross Cemetery~
According to a news ·release
E, and Jl4ary .v. Hendricks of
eel - /
tr= the board, ln the time since
Point Pleasant; paternal great·
IU ffi
. ,
those decisions ,were Imple· grandparents, •Sarah Foster of
The Tenth Congressional Dis·
mented, some parents and Inter·
Mason, and Carl and Dorothy trlctDemoeraUcActlonClubwlll es ted citizens have expressed· ·
Hendricks of Pomeroy; mater· hold Its regularly scheduled concern .of t.he closing of the hot
nal great-grandparents, · Olen meeting . Wednesday (today)' at
lunch program. Although provl·
and Pauline Neal of Pomt Plea· the Ohio University Inn In Athens slons have been made to enable
sant, and Francis Stewart of beglnnng at B p.m.' The Inn Is supervision o! , brown bag
Maso11, and John and Marjorie located 011 ;t !hland Ave., south lunches, and facilities have been
Carhart of Gallipolis, and pater· of the Ohio University campus.
made available to heat food
nal great ·great.grandrnother,
The featured speaker of .the · Items as necessary, many people
Eva Dessauer of Pomeroy.
'
evening Wtll · be- Ohio's 94th have expressed a desire to see
Graveside services will be · District Representative, Mary ' the reinstatement of the proconducted 11 a.m. Thursday at
Abel of Athens. Rep. Abel, graQ1, the release stated.
Lone Oak Cemetery, Point Plea· · appointed to the seat to replace
• ''After niuc11 deliberation, and
sant, with Rev. Michael Chap·
Joiynn Boster Butler, has' re- In response to those concerned,
man officiating,
cently announced that she will the Board voted to reinstate the
There wlli.be no visitation and · file as a candidate to succeed hot lunch program, with full
arrangements were under the
herself In this year's elections.
realizatiOn of Its Impact on the
direction · of the · Crow·Hussell
agency's fiscal stablllty In the
I
Funeral Rome. ·
near future," the release
Plait reunion
continued.
Walter Heatherly
. The news release pointed 011t
Walter E. Heatherly, 87, Route · ' ·The 1965 Pomeroy High School
that
the Meigs MR·DD Board
1, Little Hocking. died Monday at Class will have another reunion
"has
made the reductions of
his residence.
planning session on Sunday at
non·dlrect
service expenses as
Born In Murray City, .he was 1:30 p.m at the Megs Local
an
attempt
· to avoid drastic
the son of the late Charles and Superintendent's o!tlce. Anyone
service
reduction
If future levy
with questions concerning the
Amanda Baugh! Heatheriy.
efforts
fall,...
·
Mr. Heatherly was 'retired · meeting or. plans for .the reunion
Tlie Meigs County Commls·
from Monongahela Power Com· ,may contact Damna Carr.
pany as a street car motorman In
Parkersburg, ·W.Va., He was a
member ofthe Belpre Lodge No.
SOFA &amp; CHAIR
LOW CASH PRICES
. 609 F and AM, York Rite In
110.95 wk
Marietta, Aladln Temple In Co·
~ DRAWa
IEPO DINEnE
Jumbus, a charter member of the
CHfST ,
4 CHAIIS
suo wk.
Bel pre Shrine C1 ub, and a 65·year
1149.00
11M
member of the International
•os
Order of Odd Fellows In Parkers·
1)9.10•.
!&gt;urg, W.Va.
.DIIOOM
QUlin .....
He is survived by his wife,
SIITES
CoffH &amp; £nd Tabln
Josephine; two step daughters, ·
•ao mo.
Mrs. Eliza Garrett and Joan
S191.00 HI
• Parker, both of Bel pee; one
brother. Russell Heatherly, F!Or·
Ida; five grandchildren, 11 great
grandchildren, and one great '
great granddaughter,
Services will be held Thursday
at 2 p.m. at the Whlte-Ethrh:jge ·
Funeral Hoine{ 125 . Lee St.,
Belpre. with he Rev. Mark
McClung officiating. Burial will
be In the Rockland Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
(Childbirth and Women's HeRlth)
home today (Wednesday) alter
2:30p.m. where an International
Order of O,dd Fe llaws Lodge
CompJete Pre-Natal Services
service Will 'be conducted at 7
Annual Gynecologic Check-Up ··
p.m.
March. He then went on to talk
about the propoled tax ~uallza·
tlon biU which will require
counties to come up to two mUls
In order to tully partlciJj~ite In
state tundlng.
"That biU may or may not go
before the lull House this year,"
Wedemeyer said. .
GOing back to tlie elimination
of tl)e lunch program. .the commissioner. said that he knows
.most o! the people ort that board
and has the greatest ~espect for
them, but "It's my opinion, and
I'm sure It's quite unllke yours,
that there's been more animosity
created over the elimination of
the lunch protirarn. than you will

"2----·-

Sen. Long.. ,

20°/o OFF

WITH APPROVED CREDIT

AND

.;__.-Area
deaths----Hendricks ·

·You will soon have to make an mportant
decision regardi"g ·the ·rollover options on '
the distribution of cash, and stock .from
your company's retirement' plan.
DON'T MAKE THAT DECISION UNTIL YOU:
• Get the facts
• Review Your Options
• Understand the Tax Implications
• Get ·Your Questions Answered

RENT ·
TO OWN

.......

'

.

Benjamin J.

!PRINS WIU.
!OON BE HERE...

~ol, ~.D.

FARMERS BANK and ADVEST, INC.
Cordially Invite You To Attend Qu. of
· Two Free Seminars.
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 23; ·1990
10:00 A.M. and 6:30 P.M.
MEIGS COUNTY PUBLIC ·LIBRARY
Main Stnet, Pomeroy, Ohio .·
RSVP

Obstetrics &amp; Gfllecology

NOW IN SlOCI

•GAIDEN
SEED
•GUSS
SEED

LADIES' ZENA JEANS

Lunch program reinstated

DAC ....

NEW YORK tUPI\ -Baseb.all
owners said Tuesday they will
offer a new contract proposal,
bidding to end a spring training
lockout that · has already imperiled the start of the Grapefruit
and .Cactus League schedules.
Chuck O'Connor, who · rep res·
ents ·' the owners, refused to '
elaborate .on the proposal he
plans to offer Wednesday. It
would p'rObably try to improve
salary for young players without
offering them the leverage of
salary arbitration.

Bobble Butcher o! Meigs JunIor High School Is one of eight
girls selected to the AllTournament Team by ·the
coaches of the Third Annual
Miller Junior High Seventh
Grade Girls Basketball
Tournament.
Others named to the team were
Nelsonville York's Jill Shafer
and Lindsay Shumway, Miller's
Jenny Plant and Julie Lanning,
Holy Trinity's Molly Starr, St.
Rose's Aillta Saeger! and Kelly
Snider.

~~oote~ · ~ll~mk~ .. -~-~-~-d~-=-~-ge-1----------------

New Sp,lnl APP•'el Now On
Dltpl•gl

Owners to
.new propOsal

Butcher on
tourney team

The Daily Sentinel-Page

THURSDAY, FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY

S1.19

'.

ohiO

New Exciting Styles

CHUCK WAGON

.. ADOlPH'S D_AIRY VALLEY

Pomeroy-Middleport,

ROCKY MOUNTAIN JEANS

SPECIAL OF THE WEEKI

With Ohio Dominican
~ In the last stretch of the 1989·90

.Wednaadey, Februarf 21, 1990

DePaul hands Notre Dame .63-62 ·loss

M Holme; It

Dh·t.••lll

•J•Oia'-IIIPStiiNI&amp;..._ .....

.

lll ,

'

Wu• ndey, Febru.-y 21. 1990

.

:For More Information Contact Roger Hysell or Bruce Reed at 992-2136

Mareo Escobar
Relatives bere havE! received
word of the Monday evening
death of &gt;Marco A. Escobar, Sr.,
83, ot Daly City,' Call!.
He died at Mary Setton Hospl·
tal In San Francisco, Calif ..after
an extended Illness.
Born In San Salvadore, El
Salvadore, Central America, In
1906, Mr. Escobar was a retired
railroad worker restdllllf Ill the
San Francisco area since 1945.
He Is aurvtved by his wife,
Marla, two sons, Marco Escobar,

S.. U1 Today On
~I Your Seed Needs

·.

'

PIC lENS
HARDWARE
IIASOII, WY.
"

•

Pap Smears t Breast Examinations
Family Planning
&amp;t Other 08/GYN ProCedures

(304) 675-3400

''

·F armers
Bank

Your.Community Owned Bank
MEMBER FDIC

Pieu.ll V*t lloipltal Mid'* Olb Bulcing t Sullo 215
V*t Drlw. Pain! I'll 1rt. WV 256SI

9.92.2136
221 WEST SECOND
POMEROY, OHIO

985-3385
·STATE ROUTE 7
TUP.PERS PLAINS, OHIO

:Advest
u ,t .

rna•••· -.a
•I

•,

�one 20 15-year-old
A recent national survey revealed
that three out of five adult women
don't know when they arc most
likely to become pregnant. The figure is four out of five for teen-age
girls. They don't know that ovulation occurs in the middle of a
woman's menstrual cycle and that
pregnancy is most likely to Occur
when inter~oursc lakes place 14 days
after the ftrst day of menstruation.
Another reason for the high rate
of preg~ancy among teens is that

Ann
Landers

....... ..........
n ..... "'_..,..,.
ANNLANDDIS
~

aad

c........ ~..lf'lh'

Teens
~t risk

they are reluctant Ill usc any method ·
of binh control ... .even condoms.
They place themselves at risk not
only for pregnancy but a wide range
of sexually transmitted •diseases,
including AIDS.
Many teens believe it is not passible to get pregnant the first time
they have sex. Many believe they
are "safe" if they have sex standing
up orunder water. They dO not know ·
how to use contraceptive devices
properly, which means they are not
protected. Another common miscon-

nm
have an orgasm there can be no
pregnancy.
Ann, lhei'c is so much ignorance
out there, it is frightening. When I
was IS years old (I lived in Fort
Wayne), I sent for your bboklct on
teen-age sex. It was the bas_is of my
sex education. The paper I read you
m now does not menuon xourbook·
lets..
.
~ ·
If you are sull offenng those
booklets, I wtsh you would let
people ~nnw TMn-a~ers today may

be street-smart. but they are terribly
ignorant about sex and Jeproduction.
The more surveys I read, the worse
it gets. I worry about these kids.
Please help them. Sign me -CONCERNED IN D.C.
DEAR C. IN D.C.: You have written an excellent leuer, and I thank.
you. The booklet you referred. 10,
"Sex and the Teen-ager," has been
revised seyeral times since you read
it For those who arc interested, send
a self-addressed, long. business-size
envelope and ,a check or money

Go climb a rock or two -Indoors
CORVALLIS, Ore. CUPil The difficulty with mountain
climbing during the winter is
driving students at Oregon State
University up a wall.
That's because the school this
week opened one of the nation's
largest indoor rock climbing

...~
"
~~

~

'
~

Chicken

•

10'1•
UNS

or

·

---------..,---Torndo
The National Weather Service clasa tornado as a violent rotating
column of air In contact with the
ground and pend1nt from a thundercloud, notes The World Almanac. II is
usually recocnlzed as a funnel-shaped
vortex accompanied by a loud roar
from rotat.lli1 wi~ up to 300 mpb.

•SPRiTE •DIET or REG.
.CLASSIC or NEW

•REG. •HOMESTYLE
TROPIC ANA

1°/o

Coca!" Cola

Orange Juice

Milk

lh
GAL.
CTN.

6

·~oz.

JANS
ROCKY

$

49

,,,

•

p=-=o==NDER=-='-Os=-=-Jt

Christopher Doug Darst, son of .
Danny and Sherri Darst, celebrated his ninth birthday on
Valentine's Day with a party at
his home.
Attending were Christopher's.
brother, Corey, Bud and Wanda
VIning,- Goldie Graham, Terri
Smith, Shannon and Matthew,
and Rita Smith and Whitney.
Earlier in• the day he shared
cupcakes with the second grade
class at Pof!leroy Elementary
and also was taken to Show Biz
Pizza in Parkersburg, W.Va .

99&lt;

CITRUIIIU

JUICE ............}.!~!~·..... S119

KING AND, QUEEN- Manuel and Hazel Grady, residents of
Overbrook Center, were chosen by lhe stall as Valentine King and
Queen. They were presented a dozen pink roses and a radio
cu&amp;ette pi~Q&gt;er.
.
·'

~hedd's Margarine~....................!.!!.•••• 59C

..
'

u. s. #1

White
Potatoes
'

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10 LB.
BAG

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Red Delicious Apples ..................~:..,••• S9&lt;

SUPERIOR IlEA If AST

PAGE
HEINZ STRAINED

BY FOODS

~

$

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rt--::::-4~:..-J

Bathroom
••
a

ISSUe
, Marcal Facial Tissues ..........;...... 3 aom S1

VALENTINE COURT following were votsd as the
valentine royal court al the Melp Junior High School valentine
dance. Front from left, Danlelle Gray, Joy O'Brien, Tracy Fife,
Danlelle Crow, Lee .Henderson, and Heather Hudson, queen. Back
row, Adam Wyatt, Eric Wagner, Kenny Napper, al!d Hea&amp;h
Hudson, king. Absent from the photo were Kevin Whoebrey and
Brad Amderson.

HAM LOAF •••••••••••••••••••~..... S2 .79
SWifT ECKRKH
TURKEY BREAST••••••••••• !~~... S2.39
CRISP AND SERVE VACUUM PACK
SLICED BACON ••••••••••••• !~~!•.. S1.39
HoMEMDE
MEAT SALAD ................~••••••••• 89&lt;

SWIET lOSE

HEAD
LEnuCE ••••••••••U.st........ 59c
CALIFORNIA
ORANGES ........~1.9.·.. 2/59 1

MARGARINE •• J.P.L. 2I 49'
MOUNTAINEER

GRADE 'A'

itions.

PORK
$A USAGE

BREAST
QUARTE

Padded Comfort,
Sandal

·'

-

79~

For a sandal so comlortable..you'll
.lee! like you're walking on air. SJ)ecial
padding plus : .. you gel the stylish
good looks that .
come with any
shoe that says
AudKions,

1-LB.

ROLL

QUAITER

$

PORK LOIN .......~.. 169

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YOURSIZ.E
IS IN OUR
ST,ORE

.....

...White; led
Only 25!)
Calorill ,.,
3ti.CIIIIkld
Stnlng. Jun
llaht for Y...'911's Uftltyle.

•

lied-··=·
.......
"'-•
'"""
WutJ;

"WIIr "\::'" - -.An

f
Ill ..
Of *:rd~
ThiiA .......
olaln F.l I ' 1111 In lloilll;.,.
"w..t I 01 •• 11t "' Mr

lpultluOn

llanua 1011111 I Ill
111M. "Hoi Ollie" , _ 1'111
, ''MDI~··

:~p.m.

• ' ' . . ,., IIDN?"

•.

; A reception will rollow at the
: Salem Center Fire House.

,.

-.

PlUS:

' Geai&amp;Ma 91e.t"
BEEF Fresh &amp; ltan
...

-- ---~

,•

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~

•Ava VALLEY

GRADE A
LARGE EGGS ...'!!m!t. S1.29

IDAHO

lAKING
POTATOES .......lU!... S2.69

HUFFMAN'S SUPER SHAIP
CHEESE ............~11-....... S3.39

WITH COUPON

Complete Chopped Steak Dinner Offer!
Clip coupon below &amp;save.
·

•••••••••••••••••••
HURRY/ Coupon Expires 316190
·'

WDCH'S

GRAPE JUICE ••••••••••••••• !~.~~. S1.19

FRESH-LIKE

CUT CORN ••••~ ••••••••••••••
!~.~~~. S1.49
MOUNTliN TOP
,
CHERRY PIE ••••••••••••••••• ~!.~z•• S3.09

Dinner

Special offer Includes
ChQpped Steak with potato, plus
Ponderoea's AII•You-can•Eat
Grand Bullet.•

PONDEROSftA® · :O:*=~~.::=cwt~~
•••••••••••••••••••
•••••••••••••••••••
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l*lloP*IQb:*lns Prqu..-,w•1

SHOIIJENING

CRISCO
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DINTY MtOIE .
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BEEF ·STEW ••••••••••••••·•••• !!.~~•• S2.29
,
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.BOUNTY TOWELS ........!!.CJ•• S1.19
KD10GG'S
. SHOWIOAT
40'/o BRAN FLAKES•••~.~~~!-.. S2.49
.
Y
AMS
••••
~ ••••••••••••••••••1.·.~~ 2Is 1.39
CIICUN STAI
·· .
CAMPBELL'S. SOUP ••••••••• 2/S1.79

PLU #5L

130 '

JUMIO

a,allalil. ••

To wed Saturday
: Troy ·L.' Bearhs and Gloria A.
· Barrel! will be united in mar'.rtage on Saturday.
The open chureh wedding will
be held at the Pine Grove
Holiness Church In VInton at 4

oJ..... - .... - ..

QUAITIIS

The Rev. and Mrs. Floyd
Shook, and Mrs. William Davis,
Columbus, spent Wednesday
· with Mr. and Mrs. ,Jason Gilmore
and Mrs. Tina Jacob.
Mr. and Mrs. ErnestVanlnwagen, Bradbury, visited Mr. and
Mrs. Clifford Jacob on Wednesday evening.
Mr. a~d Mrs. William Jacob,
Coltlmbu.s. is spending a few days
with Mrs. Tina .Jacob.
Mrs. Sandy Gilmore. Dee Gil·
more and Debbie were Saturday
·guests of Mr. and Mrs. Jason
Gilmore.
Mrs. Mabel Tracy hosted the
Laurel Cliff Better Health Club at
her home on Thursday evening.
Dennis Gilmore. who was
injured -In an automobile accident recently , is recuperating at
the home of· hIs paren ls. Mr. and
Mrs. ames Gilmore .

Edward .F. King recently celebrated his 87th blrthdav at his
residence.
•
· Guests were entertained bv
King In the afternoon on hi·s
guitar with his daughter, Ear line
~re on the accordion,
A poHuck dinner was enjoyed .
by Kim . and Andrea Hysell,
Powell: Ear Une and Rollie Bare,
Ed, Nancl. Katie and Hilary
Hysell, Mark. Mary, and Caleb
Hysell, Gary, Dianne, Drew and
Lauren Hysell. all of Columbus:
Kara King. Diana. Sam, Ben,
Ronnie. and Mandl Carpenter,
,Racine; Kenneth and Marcia
;King, Kay Koehler. 1\!!lddleport:
an!! Gene, Judy. Kevin. and
Kristin King, Pomeroy.
Following the dinner. birthday
cake was served · to all in
· attendance.

" We've been getting calls from ·
all over the country from peQple
Interested In learning more
about our center." s~ld Peggy .
Douthit, coordinator of OSU's
Outdoor Recreation Center.
OoutJW. said Indoor climbing
centers are popular in Europe
but are just catching on in the
United States.
"Climbing Is pretty big (In
Oregon)." she said. " But In the
winter, you just can't do It
outdoors."
Wood paneling Installed on the
walls was surfaced with textured
paint to simulate rock. Real
rocks are used for some holds.
said Kevin Pogue, manager of
the climbing center.
The traversing rock also could
be of use for geology studies .
"I'm a geologist, and .I just
couldn't bring myself to use
run-ol·the-m UI rOcks for the
wall," Pogue said . " Our rocks
have come ftoin Pakistan. MexIco, New Zealand, Canada and a
few other places . ·

PlAStiC
GAUON

Morton Frozen 'Dinners.....

Laurel Cliff
happenings

King birthday

78

HERITAGE HOUSE

I

Darst birthday

Vocational Acr!Cullural Food J,.ab was colld~cted
as well as the viewing of the small and large
woodcooken of the department. A dinner,
featuring chicken prepared In the woodcooker,
wu served to all attending.

MEIGS .FFA OPEN BOUSE- Several people,
lncludlnc representatives from the Meip-Gallla
Comm11nUy Action Agency and the Meip Local
School OJ strict Su perlniendent's office, at.teaded ·
Tuesday's open bou&amp;e of the Melp .IDgli School
Future Farmers of America (FFA). A tour·ofthe

o'

Sentinel-Page 7 :

CRISToPRER D. DARST

..

sifi~

Tammy Ball was honored
Monday with a baby shower at
. the Victory Baptist Church in
. Middleport. She Is married to
Bob Ball. ·
· Refreshments were served and
the cake was baked by Wanda
Ashley, who coordinated the
shower.
Games were played arid gifts
were won by Melinda Keesee and
Julie Young.
Attending were Tammy Ball,
,.Audrey Young, Phyllis Hudnall,
;'Lucy Hendricks, Kathy Young.
-Julie Young, Melissa Young.
"Stephanie Keesee, Alberta Hv·
sell and Eliza bel{!, Melinda Ke.esee. Angie McClure. Ada Keesee.
Mar~aret Nunn. Rita Radford,
Ella · Jane Me Dan lei . Eva
: Schreiber, Martha Mayer, Hazel
;:Ball, · Linda ·Keesee, Wanda,
:;Jennifer, and , Joshua Ashley,
-Angela Hall, and Heidi and · .
~Ashley ·Smith. Also stopping by
was Past.o r James Keesee, Charles Hall carried gifts out for
Mrs. ·Ball.

facilitieS .
The 3.200-square-foot center,
which opened Monday, was constructed entirely by volunteers
on the site of two former
racquetball-handball courts. It
offers several climbing walls,
with varying degrees of difficulty. One route allows climbers
to hang from the ceiling solely by
their fingertips.

The .Trinity Church of Pomeroy Is having a "soup by the
quart" sale.
Homemade vegetable soup
and chicken noodle soup will be
.available for $2 per quart.
Orders for the soup can be
made by caiUng the church on
Thursday at 992-3172 between the
hours of 9 a.m. and noon on that
day . Soup will be available for
pickup that afternoon
on
Friday . Arrangements should be
made upon ordering.

,

'

5

DAilv

Quirks in the news __________;

order for S3.65 (this in&lt;:ludel pest·
age and handling) ro: Teens, C/o Ann
Landers, Box II S62, Chicago, 01.·
60611-0562. (In Canada send $4.45.)
DEAR READERS: The followiJ18·
quote b~ Christopher Morley de~
serves to be clipped and taped ID
your bathroom mirror: "If everyo~
was given five minutes warniqf"
·before sudden death, every teiCJlhot!l
booth would be occupied by ~­
trying Ill call up other people 10 sa,.~
'I love you.'"
So why wait for a catastroohe'r'
•
'
't.-P

Soup sale

Dear Ann Landers: I am a recently married 24-year-old woman
working on my Ph.D. at Georgetown
University. As a longtime ieadcr, I
am 'certain th31 the best way to reach
ihe greatest number of teen-agers is
through your column. If you will
print these factS and ligures, you will
.do more good than all the clergypcrsons, dOctors, nurses and teachers
combined.
According tO a repon from the
University of Califomta at San Fran··' cisco entitled ·· Ad0lcsccn1 Pregnancy
· and Parenting in California." sex ual
activity among adolescents is on the
rise. There is no. indtcation that this
' I(Cnd is slowing down or rcverS.ing
· itself.
National statistics show the average age of first intercourse is 17.2
· for females and 16.5, for males. By
age 20, three out of four girls and
five out of six boys will have had
sexual intercourse at least onGe. as
will one in six 15-ycar-old boys and

Baby shower
held at church

The

21. 1990

Sentinel

JUST,.,. ...

MANY NEW SPRING STYLES AND COLORS

••.L 20°/o OFF

THUISDAY, FIIDAY &amp; SAIUIDAY

SHOES
•

••

STOIElY

•

•••••••••••••••••••

101-Puidl4ou, tnc.

APPLESAUCE ••••••••••••·~ ••• !!.0.~••••• 98&lt;
TOP .101
CLEANER •••••••••••••••••••••• ~!.~z•• S2. 79
(

·

·

GALLIPOLIS
UPPER RIVER RD.
(Aero88 from the Airport)

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Peg a 8-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy

Community calendar
WEDNDDAY
POMEROY - .The fundra lslng
and l&gt;ubl lclty commit tees of the
Pomeroy Sesquicentennial co mmittee will meet Wednesday at 1
p.m . a t the J. T.P .A. office In
Pomeroy.
SYRACUSE - Tlrt, Th,lrd Wed·
nesday Homemakers Club will
meet at th e municipal building in
Sy racu se on Wednesday at 10
a .m . Bring bandanas . . ·pony
beads, and sewing eq wpment.
RACINE -The Southern Booster s will have a spaghetti dinner
on Wednesday from 4: 30~6 : 30

•

p.m . Following the dinner there
will be an alumni basketball
game.
COOLVILLE- There wlll be
begi nning karate clas5\'s at the
Coolville Elementary School on
Wednesday at 7 p.m. Call Mlck
Howell at 992-6839 or Tim
Jenkins at 992- 9920 fo r
Information.
POMEROY - Persons inter·
es ted in joining a County choir to
present " The Crucifix ion"
should meet Wednesday evening
at 7:15 p.m. at the Trinity
Congregation Church In Pome·

Middleport. Ohio

roy. The cantata Wtll. be presented on Palm Sunday afternoon.
Donations will go to the Meigs
County, Ministerial Association.

W•dnnday, February 21, 1tl0
Youth League on 'l'lluraday at 7
p.m . at the old American Legion
Hall in Middleport.

brook Center Will be held Thursday ;l.t 2 p.m. Family and friends
are Invited to at tend.
MIDDLEPORT -The
Women's Fellowship of Meigs
County Churches ot Christ will
meet Thursday at 7: 30p.m. at the
Middleport Church of Christ.

THURSDAY
RACINE -The Racine American Legion . AUJ~Illary will meet
Thursday at 7 ·p.m. at the post
home to vote on gii-ls state.
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
group of A.A. and Al-Anon will
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
Sacred Heart Catholic Church In
Pomeroy. For Information, call
1-800-333-5051.

REEDSVILLE -The River·
view Garden Club· will meet
Thursday at 7: 30 p.m. at the
home of Pauline Myers. Co
has tesses will be Marlene Put.
. Nola Young. An auction
man and
Will also be held.

MIDDLEPORT - A birthday
party for residents or the Over·

MIDDLEPORT -There wfll
be a meetln~ of t!!_e MlddlePQrt

'

Valentine Dance
held at rchool

Heath Hudson was voted kllle '
and Heather Hudson wu voted
FRIDAY
queen at the Meigs Junior Hllll
POMEROY -The Senior Clti·
School valentine dance held
~ns Dance Club will have a .
Saturday night.
.
dance . Frlday from 8-11 p.m.
The king and queen are tilt 1011
Music by True · Cquntry
and daughter ot Mary Hudson,
Ramblers. Admission. $2 per
Pomeroy.
person. Bring snacks for the
The dance was sponsored by
snack table.
the Junior high cheerleaders. ·
The court consisted of K~n
POMEROY -The Meigs
Whobrey and DanielleGray, firth
County Church Women United
runner up; Adam Wyatt and Joey
planning session will be held
O'Brien, fourth runner up; Eric
Friday at 1 p.m. at the Pomeroy
Wagner and - Tracy Fife, third ·
United Methodist Church. All key . runner up; Kenny Napper' and
church women are urged to
Danielle Crow, second runner
attend.
up; and Brad Anderson and Lee
Henderson, first runner up.

Classifie
• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace
R.ATES

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY I A.M. to S P.M.

Day$
1
3 .

I A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

6

1o
Monthly
'

.

·~ee~Wwe I fi0 d1t1COUMI for iiGI Dltc:l ,, ldlo'lr'ICe

•f,ee.acb - G•veaway and Fo u nd ads und., 1 5 wotds w•ll
run 3 d., 111 no c:h•oe

Clas-sified

~e

• Puce ot ad for all c•Cuul i-'t•n tl double pru~e ot ad COli
'7 Po'"t hne tvpe only IJMd ' ,
·
.
"Stntinet "no1 rett~onttble ior errors after fJrlt o ... [Chide
tor error • fotlt 11-v ad run• "' PIIMir ' Ca ll bf!t o re 2 00 £1 m
a~ Jtter gubhc., ton to mike correct tO!"!
" Ads th81 mu11 be patd 1'h ldvlnet .,~
Card of lhtnkl

In

Memor~am

,

11app~

'r'lfd

Acit

the advertised itt1m at the advertised price within 30
.daYs. Only one vendor coupon wili be aCcepted per .item
purchaaep .

COPYRIGHT 1990 . THE KROGER CO . ITEMS
PRICES GOOD SUNDAY,' FEB . 18,
HRIOUI&gt;H
SATURDAY. FEB . 24, 1990, IN POMEROY.

-

[)

:

PKG .

Hygrade's Ball Park
Meat Franks
GET ONE .

FROZEN VALUE PAK 5.7-0Z. MINCED
FISH STICKS OR 6'0Z. BREADED

24-oz . BOX

Mrs. Paul's
Fish Portions
GET ONE

FREE!

FREE!

WE RESERVe' TH~ RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES.
NONE SOLO TO DEALERS.

-·- -

BUY ONE
12-0Z. CAN
Hormel Canned
Ham Patties
GET ONE

BUY ONE
1 LB.

-----~~=~ ~lfSMilS.
t

•

.

Sunsweet Breakfast·
Prunes
. GET ONE

FREE!

BUY ONE -. •, ..f '.:
FROZEN 6-CT ·PKG.
Freezer Pleezer . .. .-·::.
Ice Cream SandWiches
,.
GET ONE
·;

FREE'

BUY ONE

· ·: .

BUY ONE

:~ '&lt;&gt;"'"'f . ·.
FROZEN 26-0Z. 8-INCH .... ·-%1 ... ..

ICII

E.-wu.

..

POMEROY. OH.

Mountain Top
Cherry Pie
GET ONE

. s
.'

FROZEN 13-0Z.

. ..

.

SuperPretzal Soh
Oat Bran Pretzils
GET ONE

NEW LISTING - REEDS·
VIllE- 2 bedroom. I bath,
ranch type home sitting on
\l acre. carpet and screened
in rear porch. I car garage
and a building lor produce.

.. ..

.,"~ ~

·l.,o

~

...' : ...

$19,000.00.

.

·

REDUCED - RUTIANO -

One l\o01 plan with 3 bedrooms. l'h billhs. dining area,
large level yard, garaga and
wood shed. $32,500.

FREE!-

FREE!

SYRACUSE- Nice mooular
on corner lot. 3 bedrooms, 1

bath, carpet, f~undry room.
Patio and close to school.

$21,900.00.

POMEROY - 2 story frame
house with 2 bedrooms and
bath. with wood floors and
some ,vihyl coverint ASK·

$4,800.00.
Henly E. Ctuul-~191
Je• TrusStll-949·26&amp;0
Ja iti11..:..915-44&amp;6
lNG

Ofli ce-99~·2259 .

~
·
t2-0Z. BOX
.f'
s'
&lt;
"/
.,
. Kroger \ '~a;~ }
Zips Crackers -~ ' 1 •

YOUR PROpERTY COU ID
BE IN THE NEWS!! PROS·
PECT IVE BUYERS READ
THIS AD. WE CAN'T PRINT
IT IF WE DON1 HAVE IT.
LIST WITH US!!

ONE

48-CT . PKG .

Luzianne
Tea Bags
.GET ONE

2-PACK. 60 OR

too WATT

Cost Cutter
Light Bulbs
GET ONE

GET ONE

.,FREE!

843- Port .. nD

643 - Arabo.t Oost
379 - Welnut

84i - Racone
742 - Rutland

..

2o47 - Letlrt Fells

882-New Hlven
815-Letart
937-Buftllc

PUBLIC BID
ADVERTISEMENT
Pul'alllnt to the provilions of
Section 163.08 end 153.07
of tho -Ohio Revioed Code,
public notice it given thllt
••led propoull wll be r•
Olived by tho De.,..-tmont of

Admi~lve S.Vtce&amp;, Di·
vltktn of Public Works. Of·
fico of Archiloct ond
Englneer. 30 EDt ·aroed
S - . 31th Floor: .Colum:
buo, Ohio 432B6·0403 until
Thyr.,liy, M•ch 1. 1990, !II
3:00 p.m. &amp;otorn Standard
Time. ond - " " lmmadl•
toly
for furnilhlng

II•-·

County Court Hou•. Main
Strllt,
McArthur, Ohio
46161 for public viewing.
Written comments and / or

•sHRUB 8t TREE
TRIM and RE·
MOVAL ·

.

•LIGHT HAULING

•FIREWOOD

BILL SLA~K
992-2269.

..

••

&amp;Auction

' PUBLIC AOCftOI
SI7URDIY, FD. 24, 1810
10:00 A.M •

ROSES'
EXCAVATING
&amp;-T-UCKING

· TOP SOIL
·-.FOR SALE
'

949-2493

3rd Str•t, Roci111, Oh.

LOCATED 6 MILES WEST OF. I:IOLZE~ HOSPITAL
ON RT•.35,3 MILES'EASTOF BOB EVANSFAC!MI
ON AUTUMN HILL ROAD. WATCH FOR SIGNS.
FARM EQUIPMENT· WILLSB.l AT 1:00 P.M.
· 1981 FORO 3600 dleiGt tractor. 768 hours
1971 ALLIS CHALMERS 175 ciesellractor. 3125 hours
JOhn Deere ·aModal Tractor. Ne\;, ld~Ma1nur•t St:~ectder.l
N.H. 256 Hoy Rake. N.H. 310 Baler, N.H.
Rake. \IIcon 410 Dflc Mower CondfHoner: Ill"'"" &lt;1-llltJAef
Hay Tedder, Bulh Hag 51!. Brush Cutter. John Deere 10 lt..
'M1991 DIIC. John Deere 3-14.Plows. lnternaflonal Madel
1300 71!. Sickle Dyne Bait Mower, 360 Galion Tonk Wheel
Mounted Boom . ~oyer with Pimp. Massey Ferguson
Hay Wagon. f'i8W bad; N.H. Hay Wagon. Ford Grader
Blade. Boom Pale.
·

'

1·1-19-1 mo.

FURNACE .
'FUINACE

PARTS AND SERVICE
ALL MAKES
GAS OR ELECTRIC

kEN'$ .APPUANCE
_SERVICE
9'2-5335 .. 915-3561
Aoross ,,_ Poot Offko
'217 E.

Soc~ Pa~d¥

11/13/'89 !In

Dodge Reports/ SCAN
. Cleveland. OH : _
441 1II
BuRdero Exchange. Inc.
Clovofsnd. Ohio 44131

+-..________

leg wofr'lut I able. DulcanPhyte drum lobla. 2 pc. carved
lfllflg room uta. oofa, oak player plano ; completely
rebult. mahogorlV dell(, 31t(l(:k mahogany bookcQJe. 4
pc ..1930's poatli'r bedroom 11.11te, very laney maple IWin
bad,
rocker. 19:Jl's table. maple chest, EolfV I
cttawer walh stand. bookcase. oak seWing mOc:hfne,
beaUI!fiJ lfag Qtoalamp. piCiures and frames. 2 brau
IamPI. U.S. ems of 20th Century Collecnon. 1011 of coatuma Jaweiry.llone jars. crocks. copper bailer·. ~on pot,
l":afE•s. air compresoor; 2Bogan A.M.P.. gas heoler.llghts.
Wire. Two Man Auger (Sf alii e)
'

' 9-6·89-tin

90 DAY WAIIAIITY
. _.ASHER5'-SIDO up
DRYEI~S6!up

FIEIZER&amp;-$125 UP ·
MICIIO 0¥EN5-S?I 'up

iop

.

KEN'S · APPUANCE
. SERVICE
992-5335 Df' 915-3561
lorosa FNIII Post Offke
POMIIOY, 01110

I0/30/'891fn

NEWLAND
ENTERPRISES
•.

DUMP TRUCK
Sand-Stone-Dirt

20'1. OFF ON ALL ·

pcm.

nr.

8lllln·

. CHESTER, OHIO
•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT

SALES &amp; SERVICE

flohing Suppll•
Phone
Blll1 Here

•ANYTHING

IUIIIIBI PttONE

AT ALL

,,listl 41iN',CE'z-•sso
11
"'
PttONI

SEIVICE

742~3018
•Tire Selaa
•Front End
Algnment
•OH Ch•nge • Lube
•Braka Work

MAIN ST., IUilAND
.

I· &amp;-'10-tfft

•

·Deli Fresh Sliced
Turkey Breast 1.'1~

*2··~

REGULA~L Y

BUY

'

.. . LB . M .99

U.S. GRADE A

.

Holly Farms
Whole Fryers ·

-- -----

Selltnt ·
Sldm M• .

.....

.•,,.

PMII

ec

2-Uiar

KROGER GRADE~ LARGE ~S 11-CT••. II ••

I

c

1-PAK 12-0iE. CANI • .. •2.01
NOT A IUY ONE--GET ONE FREE ITEM
j

:-.:etiiiC,
,.....,.......
PH. tfl-3561 ·
•u• f:'!un:...

j'

Buying

7:30·1:00
Man. thru Prl.
7:30-4:00

'-•roy,

EUM HOME

•-11

•- &amp;
for
Senior Clti1- and
Good Rot..
T.L.C.
27 Yrs. Exp.
Referencea

992-6873
209 Soulh 4th St.

"'ddleport,

Oh.

"LOW INCOME HOME"
' 1-1

Repair Work

. 985-3365
36629 517
POMEROY, OHIO
2-6·'90-IIIID.

NewH-hllt
'"Free Estlmltes"

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949·2160
NO SUNDAY

Television Listenin1De¥ices
. Dependable Hillring Aid Sales &amp; StrYJi~
Hearing Evaluations For All Aees

zClJ tiSA M. KOCH, M.S .

a:

j:i

Licensed Clinical Audiologist
1(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104

.417 Second AviiiUe, Box 1213 · .
.Galtipolis,.()hio 45631 •
.
or at

z

Veterans llemliriel Hospital
.Mulbeny Hit$. Pomeroy.

STREET
PIZZA

LOWEST PII!ICES
IIGHm QUAUTY
FlEE LOCAL DELIVERY
· -POMEROY AND IIDDI.EPOIT'S ONLY
. LOCALLY OWNED PIZZA SHOP.

Pizza-Subs-Salads-Daily Specials
.
t92·2228
. ~
'
.

IAGII .

fill DIPI.

W,

Coca Cola Classic

ll!t. 33 North of
Ohio
1-12-'U-tln

GUN SHOOT

WAIIl'ED

Diet Coke or

99l!·J~rl

IUTUND TilE
SALIS and

992-621
IN THE DEll-PASTRY SHOPPE

JOARTII AND SERVICE
For Ma~:nz. .•-::: 4 -cycle

985·4422
'
1·11·80-tfn ,

1

V. C. YOUNG Ul

In IIIIWitpert, Oh.

992-7479

BISSELL
·SIDING CO.

(6141915·4110 '

CAIPENTEI SERVICE

~otV...rLuonltor ·

•Lot Rentals

Custom Built
Homes.
Ramodaling &amp;

lltfero b p.m. Loan ..... a

-Room Addhfono
-GUIWWork . ,
-Eflctrlul • Plumbing
- con--Roofing
-Interior • Exterior
Pilntlng_
·
!FREE ESTIMATES!

DAVE'S
· SMAU ENGINE
REPAIR ,

Rentals

CHESTER, OHIO

Ann' P.M.

YOUNG'S

949·2168
2'1 ·'911-1 mo. pd.

•Mobile Home

FREE ESTIMATES

1·13-tlc

. KLUB

FREE ESTIMATES

'Parts

INTIIIOI IXTIIIOI

and rl•

Middleport. Ohio

Painting

•Mobile Home

PAINTING &amp; CO.

R. L HOLLON
TRUCKING

992-2196

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

tt-11-'19·1 mo.

PAT HIU FOlD

NEW- REPAIR

COUNTRY
MOBILE
HOME PARK

ERWIN
CONSTRUCTION

4-25-tfn

core
and
heater cares. We· con
alto acid boil and rod
aut rediaton. Wt also
repair Gas Tanks. ·

ROOFING

PH.

VIIY IEASONAIU
HAVE lmiENaS

Now locDtion:
I bl Nerth Socoacl
Middloparl, Oltio 45760

L Wrlttstl

Grant A. lltttrl

paioting.
lol us do it for you.

HEATING

Howard

(614) 667-3271

Taka ,._ pilin out of

PlUMIING

SAW LOGS
$160 Th!!'-s

1/ 8/' 81/ t mo.

SJoak '/;ria for
Honiiiilte, Woedeoter,
Tecumaoh, lrlgga •
Stratton.

UNDA'S '

or 992-7121

, ...,Jr

DOZER
SIT£WORK -..ROADS
ClEARING

AUTO &amp; TRUCK .
,- REPAIR
~lao Tfllltllluloa
PH. 992-5682

. iugbarrai.Rugermtni22.S&amp;Wmodet 19.357Rugermotk
22. ptstot MK2.
.
·
MOTOIICYa.ES: 1975lUIAII and 1971&gt; &amp;.tzUd (RE 5 Rotary Engine): 2 7!!0 !lu!Ucl engines and flomlll ptua

Olllce desk. chah. cablnell. small IOfe,

Factory Chok!ld
-12. Gauge Onlv

11. 124, Pomoroy Ohio

dr-.

RACINE
GUN CLUB
GUN
.SHOOT
•

USED APPUANCES

WIGIS-'~as-Eftc.-$125

LOW GUDE OAI

POMEROY, OH.

1 mo.

Starts at 1:00 P.M •.

REFRIGWTOR5-SIOO up

WANTED

OHIO PALLO
COMPANY

u'""· 2nd Sl., Middleportl
f91' Appt. Coli
992-6717

EVElY SUNDAY

Roger Hysell
Garage

ANlKlUES: Drop leoftablf ond 4 rose back chairs: gale

motorcycle

Builders Exchange of
Central Ohio
Columbt,., Ohio 43216

DEUYEIED TO

FURNACE

(LRSSIFIED RDS

GUNS: Ruger223 Daisey case tau mOdal; V.l. 2211fownlng
12 ~ge. Remington 810 12 gauge. WW'lgmQI!er with

;;

Articto 2 of tho inotruetlon to
bidder a.
lido oloall be ooolocl Md
odclr•oocl to : DEI&gt;ART- ·
MENT OF ADMINIITRA·
TIVE SERVICE&amp;. DIVISION
OF PUBLIC WORKS. OF·
FICE OF STATE ARCHI ·
TECT AND ENGINEER. 30
EAST BROAD STREET.
35TH FLOOR. COLUMBUS,
DH . 43Zfli,0403.
The Mfnl'!'um ytage. Rote
Requir - t o of Revloocl
Code Choptor 41 1B and tho
EqUIII Employm.,t Oppor·
tunity Bid Condition• of Ro·
viaocl Code Sections 163.69
ond 1113.111 ond tho Gover·
nor' 1 Executive Ordllf of
JonUIII'/ 21. 1972 are oppfl·
ceble to thia bid lnvlt8tion.
THE MINORITY
SET
ASIDE REQUIREMENTS of
Amondod Sublthute Hou•
Bill 584 of the 1 13th Rogu ·
ler Seuion of the General
A11embfy, and apoclflcafly
the requirements of Reviaed
Code Section 1 ~3. t5 1 (c)
121 and 131. reloting)o minor·
ity Buaineu Enterprise Sub·
contr.cla and . material
purchue and aervk:e suppty
contn~c:tt. '"' •pplicable to
thit" invitation to bid .
No bidder may withdraw
hlo bid within af•tv 1601 daya
aft"' the act~•l dete of the .
Opening' thereof. The De·
puty Director, Oivition of
Public Workt. r"""'' the
right to waive anv informali·
liea or to reject any or all
bida . ·
THE DEPARTMENT OF
ADMINISTRATIVE
SERVICES
DIVISION OF PUBLIC
WORKS
Carole J . Olahavtky ,
Deputy Director
111 31 : 1217. 14. 21 . 4tc

Buslness S~rvices·

elched glall81, vase~. cups.
pflcher. pitcher and baWl.
ware.severot p!aces
and etc. Bicentennial
serving plecet.

•

ony further Information doaired. may be obtained by
Primt1 Conti8Ctoro .from
the Office of ASBESTECH .
INC .. 321 Front Street. Mo·
rlott~. Ohl~ 45711Q, Tel•
phone 1114) 37~0714 . All
bidding clocumonto wll
be torw.rdocl SHIPPING
CHARGES COLLECT upon
receipt of ' depoo~ In tho
amount of 1211.00 per 111 in
favor of ASBEITECH. INC .
Tho dopook will be rofunclocl
to bidders who return tho
pl1n1 lnd spedfiCIItiona in
good condition within ten
1101 doyo lifter recoipl of
bfda . Tho . colt of ropfoco·
mont of any mloaing or da·
m~Qed document&amp; will be
deducted from · the deposit.
The low bidder mev retain
the plena end apec:lficeti011a
end ·the deposit will be re!unbid.
·
.
Subcontroctoro and · mo·
terial suppliers may 1cquire
for their convenience, Plana
and Spocificationa or partiona thiKeof by paying for
the Cost of reproduction and
handling.
Contractors, mquiring U ·
aiatence In aecurlng bids
from Conlfied MBE aubcontractors and suppliers mev
contac.t tho Stille Equal Empfoyment Coorcllnotor by
calling 16141 4611·83BO or
tho Minority Bulin•• Dovofopment Dlvilion liy cal·
ling (lt4)41B·IP02 or Toll

----------+----.:.,_____

Public Sale

'I

EST.
OF COST
CONTRACT
A-too ·Abltomont
ond fnaulltion Ro·
pf-rnent ....... S83,Z31 .OD
A PRE-bid conferoilce will
be held ot 10:00 a.m. on
Febnoal'/ 21. 1980, O.D .O.
T. Diatric:t t 0 Hooclquonero.
'Mulldngum Drive. Marlett~~.
Ohio.
Copi• of tho N9tlce to
liddera. Form of Propoul.
Form of Bond. Fonn of Con·
tract. EEO Bid Conditiono,
lnatructiona to
Bidclero,
G111eral Condftlona. Pt1111.
Specificationt and Other
Contn~ct Documentt ere on
file end may be IJUimintd at
the following offices:
·
Department of
·
Adminiltratlve Servlcea.
Diviaion of Public Worka.
Offic• of St.te Architect
and Engin.er .
· 30. East Broad Stroot · J•
36th Floor
Columbus, OH . 43286-0403

:::-':!..,J:.

992-2J$6
8

Public Notice

acrea and fa located on the requeato for an informol ~=
":!"..:;=~ Coiu!:O: g~o:32U
Frr.:hn ~dB~~-! 8.! ~~::.;..
Wlfk•viffo 7'11 mfnu18 U.S.
confl(tnCI moy be aont to and conotructfon of:
Copi• of the Notice to Bid·
ponied by a BID GUAG.S. guodrongle mop, e•·
the Dlvilion of Reel emotion. · Projact No. 770-18-019
clara, Form of Propo•l. Form
RANTY mooting tharequira·
tending Weat to tho VIllage Fountain Squot'11, BuMdlng
Aablltoa Abatement and
of Bond, Fonn of contract.
menta of Section 163.64 of
of Wlf-lflo. and 0. 76 8-3, Columbuo. Ohio 43224,
fnaulltion Replacement
EEO Bid Conclitiono, lnatruc• tha Ohio Reviled Code.
mlloa Eut of tlio VIllage of within 30 diiVI of tho flit dM~
Stoi-i~o Hoofth and
tiona to Bfdclers. Generol
Tho Bid Guaranty ond
Wllk•vlffo. Tho application of pUbliCIIion of this notioo.
Sofoty Program •
Cond"iono. Plano. SjMC!fic• Contract Bond mull be it·
propo- to expend lho (2) 21 , 28: (31 7. 14, 4tc
· Diatrict 10. Philo II
tiono and otl* Contract auad by a Surety Company
area for room ·e nd pillar un·
Ohio Department of
Document&amp; toglrther with meeting the requirements of
dorground m!nlng. provide 1
.j..;;;~;;;;.;,..;;;._.;__~-.L..-...;;__;____
for pHier rem~v•l on tho,• • t•rut. end t~ permit ere•
lor tongwalf mi~fng,
Tho application il on fifo lit
the oflicoo of t~ Meige
County
Recorder, Melflll
County Court Hou•. Second Street. Pom•oy. Ohio
43719 Recorder,
ond the VInton
County
Vlntnn ~-..__ _.;__ _ _T'"_ _ _ _ _ _~_T"________T"_______- ;

QIASSWJ\IIE: FOIIarla pilehar,

FREE!

Public Notice

Read the

.?'

~

576 - Apple Crovt
7?3- Maso n

98&amp;- ChMter

245-Fho Gtencle
2!i6-Guven 0•11

Reel Estate General

teal~ neat home with low heal·
ing bif~ at asmall price? Th~
3 bedroom I ~ slcry home ~
wa~1ng fur you.Call tlr app&lt;intment~ Just $19.500.QO,

j'

67&amp;-P I Pltlltn t

•se .... Leon

Pomtrov

EVENINGS,
.
4-6·19-ffn

--~

..

992 - M•dctllt()on

W \/

Public Notice

THE FAMILY OF
CHESTER A. YOUNG
Would like to ex18nd
their heartfelt thanks ,
to friends, neighbore
Compt~tly, Meigs Mine :NO.
and
reiltill•
for
2, P. 0. llo• 490, Athena,
the beautiful fl-ers.
Ohio 4170 I. his aubmitted
cards. food. pn~yera
an Appli-n to Revioe •
end kindness during
CCNII Mining ond Aeclomotion Permit numbered R·
our lou. Also &amp;pti!Cie)
0366-20 to the Ohio Do·
thanks to Dr. Witherell
partment .of ·N•tu,..l Re·
and hio otaH;.
to
aourceo. Divioion of Reel•
the nu...,. and suff.
motion. the propolld coal
at Veteran• Memorial
mining •rid recl.mation op·
.erotion wMI bl conductocl In
Hospital. Vary specie!
Mligo County, Salam Town·
thankalo the Extended
ohlp, Section 34 ond Vinton
Care Unit olaff end raCounty. vyllk•v•e Town·
aiden1o who spent lha
lhip, Section 4. The propelt five months with
pOMd und•ground mlnln'
Dad; also to Ewing Fual'llll
encomou ... 11.4
neral Home; to lhe
ITiendot and nelghboro
in Long Bottom and to
anyone we may have
unintenlionally
forgot18n our thanks and
appraciltlon.
Ken &amp; Betty Young
and Family

NlW LiSTING - IIDOLE·
PORT - Are you looking lor a

S..q

A46 - G'tll•p'ohs ·

· Public N Dtice

982-2268

..

Area Code 304

16?- Coot .... ill•

AOOENDUM TO PART f.
ITEM E IIi)
SOUTHERN OHIO COAL
COMPANYMEIGS MINE NO. 2
LEGAL NOTICE
· Southern
Ohio
Coal

With -Lo . Prices. And More.-

Mason Co

Area Code 614

3111&amp;-'Wonton

Daily- lflbune. rt~~chmv over 11.000 nom••

C&amp;rd of Thanks ·

e.tchan!fe.~ ...

Metgl County

367 - Ch•twe

s •••

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDOCIAIIY
On JMuory 30, 1990, lri
tho Meigo County Problto
Court. Ceso No. 281t2,
Meryl F. Hou4•"""• At.~ ­
llodcllfl, Ohio 411170. wu
appointed admfniltrotor of
tho •te!O of Holfla Edwio
Midkiff, -•ocl. lote of
Rt. 3, Cherry Ridge. Po·
mtlroy, Ohh&gt; 41788.
Robart E. lluck.
Probate Judgo
I.e~• K. N•Miroad, Clerk
(217. 14. 21 3tc

corer the

Arte Codt 614

' GaH•• C ounJv

!•• ·

·I

paJ!e .~

: follbtdn!fiPIPphone

' A Cl lntfted a1tvertr1ement gl1ced m The OltiY Sent•n•
eept - el•tift«&lt; dts~-. . Bu,•n•S Cerd •nd Itail ncit1Cttl
""''" 1110 IPPIIr '" tne Pt PleMJnt flle. . . .r en &amp;I trte Gelh·
poh~

Rate
Ovor 1 5 Worda
14.00
.·
.20
18.00
.30
19.00
.42
a13 .oo
.
.eo
51 .30• d•v
.05 t day ·

Aa1" •r• i or c:on .. culfllle runa. orol!ltn 1.10 Clay s w tll be charg.t
tru ••~n n....
HD1r11e ad•

aut11d1 Met;&amp;. Gall•• or M11on countt• mus1 btt p r~ -

PIId

Words
15
15
15
15
15

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

u
AovEIITtSfD ITIM PULIC"I
Each of these advertised items ta required to be reldlty
available for sale in each Kr.oger S1ore, ••cept 11
specifically noted in this ad . If we do run out of an
advenised item, we wilt offer you your cho'c:e or •
comperat»e item, when available, reflecting the SliM
savings or a raincheck which will entitle rou 10 purchna

. The

Ohio

HOMES &amp; GAIAGIS

lptllt:• ........

EYDY

"At Inn lith Prius"

PH. M9·2101
....... 949·2160
Day • Nigllt
NO SUftDAY CAW.

'4-1'-l&amp;.lfn

SAl, . .HI

6:30P.M.
J•ttn dtlllt

1t

a..
~:::cw,
Strickllr

Cl1111
WIIUY
ITAIITIII•.

30.1990
70C per 11.:
Cene, MC per lb:
IATTUIII.
lTC.
·'to-"'

�Page-1 0-lhe Daily Sentinel .

Pameroy

LAFF -A·DAY

32 Mobile Hamil

44

1m ar, KlrllWood, aooc1 oond,
II I
CDualt, Cliillr, ....
Rtllla, V1n11 U!... pirl:llng,
Ptroli • ... ..... 1111111 ...
11,100. ·~· 411 l?lf.
I

I

:

•

1m---.o111itc,

,_

graund

-

-

and

... :104o871ot712.

lloi1J Port 14170, .,.

Giveaway

7 puppltl mtud t.r..ll and

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

- · :IOW7&amp;-1753.
ILab,
- 112 Conte.
old putiW15112
.....

,- ..

··-- ·· ~ ·

R._...

"PlE•ase, Do(· , · I'll . raisf' thP

115,100.

Nlot 2f1!1 4 112 mlloo Go~
lloolft. "" pOlo, $231/mo. 1144411031.

111 4tf 0233

4p.m.
mnrwv• somf'how!"
3111.
~~~=.J.s~: 1-----.-----,--------~ 33 Farm• tor Sale

onor

'

·

11

:tt~.... dog - . -

ft-···-· A -· -• r:rt· t~
Port ·-·
~

·

s
~:~:

12

---In

fiDM

=. .

!:..Bl'
~
~A:
r.cotonato ..nh chlilhn. Liller

our WIMing ...... W't'rt
lootdng lor 101fnlod, lrolntd. IIWI2-"'""·
lll.. loillc atylol who ho .. lilt
lo loom In • - . Wt
Wllllo WJih'
cago
'
ond ollor hourly ro!O. oupt&gt;IIN, 304-175-7711.
oommlolon, fNOI bontlhol &amp;_InJOU Mon-Frl,
honwnot
roue,ColtHAmy
to.m.·M
6, Lost&amp; Found
&amp;p.m. 114-7111-1313.
FOUND ornoll black -dog,
~-Rood, 304-175-1121.
. FOUND: Cl~rylllor li.y on Flrot
· ,....,.,., Ooiiii&gt;Oitt. 01011 In to
-ltv at: T~buno Ofllco, azo
Thlnl Annue, Galllpoh, OH.

'"'"'"'

-ro

FOUICI: lllaek -ldiHII!a' doa

Cor CoN - h •nd WU opoclal
$21.1111. Coil lor lnlormoIN.a75-IOIIO.
I!.IR T,.. Strvlot. Topping,
lrlmmtna. ohru"!'L-~- lr•
romovoCPrunlng - · 1144418415.

GICI~ Port1ble 8aW Mill.
Do.n't H1ul Your Loa• To Mill,

We'll como to youl 304.a751857.
.
.

pono

&amp;

-·

air cond, 304-1'11-2434.

;

Chan•• In Charge
~:011)) lltve~y Hlllblllll•
1:30. (J)
NBC NlghUy Nowo

118. Bronco II,

Mtcry. 114-247-3104.

ALL Yard Saito MUll It Pold In
Advance.. DEA.DLINE: 2:00 p.m.
tho dty bo.... 1ht od lo 10 run.
&amp;lndoy odhlon • 2:00 p.m.
Frldty. - y odi!IOn • Z:DO

NtWIHour

111121 18 Whetl Of
l'orluneC

1.25 ocro lot on AI. 110, 4 mil•
from Hotara, exc. view of thli

AIM. traTier ap1ce. AU hook.-u~.
Coli oftor 2:00 p.m., 304-775-

a I[)) Night Coun 1:;1

lllt , lla.on WY.

11J Moneyltne

iiJ Miami Vice Tubbs helps

::r

l.o!oi-~lo,

.,......7471.

ForLeaae

1111v.moila,vt._, _ _ l

:;rvlcod ,•

- · tlr•
boll:.'~' 5 7.
11,100
0 .8.0a. 114-

1. . CAZ50 Hondl, IIC cond, '

75 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale
11172 17 ft. Slo..,oft Tri-Hull
- · 121, HP, Evlnrudt Engino, ,
complale top, new uphol8tery. ,
eou 114-2111·1311 oftor 7:00p.m. .

,....; Vllld

.....

21

76

to hoy. 11100-lb. bolto. AI·
lolfa and oiohtnl _ . mlaod.
- r ..... no bito. 114-117·
307• or 11 t Ill 337• -nlngo.
Com tor •to. -ltd bldo will
bl
pled fDr ~bu mora
or loto; JOIIOII ~ ••

buill.--

- o r Ponl•, Doy!lmo: 114441-2107, Ennlngo: 114-3111-

----· -·

en

0tn.

"-'!•112-IIIII SuMo 2110 l l o -

_.,.., COil Lorry U¥fly 114-

3111303.

County
-.Ct.-P-Inolude A
-dtrtla:
A public ~ of
oloell .. btlr'li by lliion
County Wtt.,. Touro. tno. to
..,... an n· ailion .._..
~tho
Ohio and
_-...
. . A,_.,
R•

I'lL-.

LGW gndt oak - togo. 1110
por ,...,_nd, Dtltvorod lo Ohio
Politi Co. P-oy. OH.
autno
Pro 1140 quint. Any - l o n.
cath Paid. Coli 814-111:1-8157 or
814-&amp;112-2411 .
Utod Mobllt Hornu. 114-446-

...- "" _
&lt;&gt;nly. lloton

.

Employment Serv1ces

•ora.·.....--.
·lrom:
.......
ltdlot. ,_,..,

APPLY HOWl
....., jobo ovoMol&gt;lo lhlo monlh
whh good ttlory oncl btntfllo

ln1ont/j1n1-,~r- .

,-.c.

petite

or
cMftcsu Milaerablc,

PICk-of. Open to H.S . . . .

,

gorlt,-

dOiollt.

p 111 • - l i l t : Full . .....
AVON I An ArNo I Slll~oy l*t time PGihkM• •v•tMtn far
Spoora, 304-875-1428.
AN tnd LPN all olllllo
AVON • All or-. Coli llorltyn - - • j,jj/ ttnw .., bo 10 dtyo In • ""' DtriOd. ~
w....,,_2145.,

U.~ht Mlnlolurn, Anno Kltln,
81 Mlcl!lll,-:\!1- llov,
Lovl,
Hllli, Lff!li
,~

.....

'i':"'..t

-·--·
t
l
f
t
w
-ronllol-.. . _..,. ·=
otlllr weekri Oft NuiMra •

!;IN! ~~ Nlrlatrolor •nd olovt

2 lidlDOCii apt CWipol.. F.rry,

304-lna..

lor-

'i1f'~·

lllturn,
,tiD.Con

r. lloiphll (404)

,_own._..

Dom
or.,_
..
_
·
lrom:
bwiii:IMnt
...,..
J 'I a
....
1...- - . Lodltt, .......
wltl knowtickle of eldn 11M,
- · . or Mt....,lly Dfllt.
..... lloy olilll _,., O..aawriAerollla, 1r1c111 Un-

...-._.............
.....

21, 18110. A•t.mn . . lo M

..-.torO\I-10:u.-. Third
Cltrk, St.,- · of
SVFIICUM,
01145779.

a,_...,

Tlnot

.....

....

~-.. u. -·

,.,.,.oil ..... a. ~ ··-lon _.... • tho oil.

llollyoi11tr lor lnlonl • 4 yr. old,

gorto, Sllop or L.P.I( ...., .........
l n n d - Uz
-~~-.-­
lo ..... .. ...., Cloltiarno ~ht Mlnltlu....
QOIIN.IIIOH
SHOPPERS 17.41111our.WIIh 1M
.._ Kiiln, 81
for .., . - . Ctnteol
•EDED tor national lh atpl iQ ~lo~.;.~C. ovor
11rm. lnttrttllng port...,. lht Dltwtot of - ·
tlgiNMnll; no _..., no. 1ft.. · P I - CoN eontor, lA 2000 olio, ..,.1 !lor
PIU,
~ru. can ,.., "' een,
41111 .114-446-7112.
I.O.It OH
come to 1M lUI ...... -

home. I14-3U W13 .

-•IIIII

Joe- Gal-

.

ULTRUOUNO

A ' I .. •

LPN ., _ lw .,._,, • cxsudc&amp; CallliNdUwe...., n

~

. NOIOQIIT

INhnllam

TECHOhio

Ph,et:'un ~ PIHIIOI Ill
.........
~ &amp;Mra lannd leah.
.
-.
.
,
.
.
t;
1110
bonolllt. - · .. ~ ..,..... rn''llu•

10 11o1ao. Heolih ltMoe, P.O.
tiGtA Dtotl) .._011 , . . . .
.... ME.u.E.
.... "'"'"' "'· Oh. 114-fl2. .. ... utn. ......... Ttolt , _ .
1101.

... ..'"'i ·~:=~·

ptiRIN.
In llrl!fntl
c:Wl'Niwneto:
Clinic.,._
-l)opl. P.O. . . 144, 0111-

Cnh -od lor.
CIMIIon ond •Ito of d l'lr&amp; .......
I Ia •• I
- - Clll JMI It tM I 3 ...... lpolt OH - · lquol Oppora - Ctmt Monl.llrv Fri. I to tunllr lmpiO) IF.

u-...==

County Appll•noo Inc. Good
uotd oppll•nctf, T.V.- . Open.
I a.m. Ia e p.m. llon..a.t. •14-·

-111!1• IZ7 3rd. AM.
llpoh,""

r-;::

tnolao d pot!o. 'Ciooio lo
• - I oltopplng ...,.
for, · - . .... _ 1rltll
t;~~{ S2lli-. ""'' ll4IIUIII18UDOETFUPLR~"!fllM~!IfSCKIOHAT
~ ~· •~
UTATEI. 538 -.on Plu
.,.,_, to """" a
movlot. Ctlll1t ttl 2111. ECIH.
fl'or Ron!: booulllul ono

t::r.=::,a:=- ~~

Ga~

........ brick, ........ win·
ct- 1n1•, .tc. ClaUde Win-

, _ 'Rio Orondo, OH Call 114245ol121.
.

APPLI~NCES

UTILITY BLDG. ' SPECIAL:
30x401r10' wfth 15110' olldlng
- I oorvtoo doilr.l5777 • ttd. 1 - HORSE tLDOS. 114-

Avo., O.lllpolll

0000

55

relllg,ll!':.
· 1llvlna
, 71~

lllto.
· •wlbacf
room aulte,

~:

2br,
.... · ·. - · clop. roq'd.
11~21
.

USED

.

3324741.
~ - . ,Sol: Couoll, cllotr, 56
Pets tor Sale
co11oi !obit, 2 ond • - · 2 1~::-,.:-;,:.;.;;.:.;;;~~;_.,....,
lompo,l250. ll4-381-M21. . AKC Cockor lponlol pupa, buft

PICKENS FURN11UAE

,

NowiUHd

Ho&lt; nhold · lurnlohlng. 112 mi.
Rd. Pl. P I - , V(V,
0011304-175-1450.
AENTTOOWN
Top Quolhy Brond Uvlng -m 0\lhtt I10Nk.,
ow1ri1 rockM 13.10/WII, dt..tt/4 chain 17.10/Wk.. bunk
- . comploto 110Nk., Low
- llffh prlott om-. VI'Ro
Rt. 14,, 4 - !Jpon
7FumNuro.
dtyo a - . •on. lllru 81il. t
Jorrlc:ho

Lm. • 8 p.m., Sun. 12 Noon ·I

and wltfto, t11o111 and ....,nod,
$UO. ooch, :IOW7MZIS.
AKC Ngiol- Rod aa-, 10 monlho old, vory
·~- ... •7• ·-·
;;:;;:;,:: -=~ Ktnntl.
PorSion, · · lllmott .
ond
-yon ldtlono. ~ otud
- · 114 Ill !Ut olltr 7
P.""
E::--::'-c=--c:--::=:-:--:---:-Floh Tonk, Z4i3 .Jockoon Avo.
-nt,IN.a75-20A, 10
... •• up I14.M and 1o 1f1

Bu-

::':"""' w:e'l:·

prlllngcl---........ -· ...o.

.

.

.- ..........,. .........
lbt-.-..

=t,.':;-

"'*•·

":..,..i

•:r-c

tf.g_

Mullcal
lnatn.ment1

31 HOIMI for Sale

-good , . . .

~&lt;Wk.

c:oaa.
1iiiM Moraury
DO ~ --~ - t~•-

i,
1•

l:--=:-:1 imj:-'-''~:-::--.,--··,....·...,...-_,.-~

a

·'

wAft:=.NO

UOCondh-1 ltltltmo guoron- ,

t-. lacll Nfarancee furm.hed . ,

F- wtlmoloo. COil oollfcl 1· •
f14-237-o485, dty ... nigh!.

Aoaera
BINfnliM
W.Toup,_llng.
• ,
Joe'a TV Service. 304-e75-1724.
I

82

1172 Iuick Umltod. PSG. 114-

84

a

about term inating their affair.

gFlying Fo~Noo: A Tribute
a

._..,wmc':::,....,-·,.,....-,....,.-,...-"1171 Lollono ltlorl, -

t-

good-·

now oto~or.

brlkM. ind 11/C oomproooar,
$115, 114 411 oen.
.

/:!'..=-- ~·1m.
.::,
ruMeao,t1,100.

Clrter'a Plumbing

ondHMIIna
Founh and PTno
Gallpollt, Ohio
114-440-3888

-.
11144.

1u11y - . :I04o87lo

••

Qll On Sligo

11:00 (l) Harelcalllt And

:~:,(':/.~ m eo

-nlltl . or oommorclol
wiring, ftrVIco or ropotro.
~ tloolrlclan. -..ur

EltctM&amp;I, 304-175-1711.

1111 - · oloyl. ofopd, runo
-'o pOrlo. - ·

lrf~-~:!~wh~o~OI~or~,now;c:t~l-~l~II~DI
·
I'"
Ill 1111.
1 - - k lltgll Ulnfttd, ...

improved their communities'
environments and
·
economies.
• I[)) Crtmowatch Tonight

85 General~llng

*'·

~
.,...
• rW.O.
RJ.I1441'7·77110.12.000

AS'I'RO.QRAPH

do to make the .relallonshtp work . Mall
$2 to Matcltmeker, P.O. BoK 91428,
Cleveland, OH 44 101· 3428.
ARIEl (lllarclt 21-Aprll 11) Material
mollvallon will supply you wtlh lhe Inc:enliva you need today In order 10 be an
ach-.. II the stak"' warrant your Intertii, It wll eniWic:e your IIKge lor

selasldeyourmaterlald81lmlortoday
and foe,. your lntanllona on your oocial
life. Surprfllngly, IIIII will be·your
grealesl opportunllla reside.
UIRA (lept. 23-0ct. D) Don'! let any
BERNICE
sltuallona that are meanlnglullo you II·
nanctlllly hang fire today. T - can be
BEDEbsqJ..
c"!1Cff..ded to your Ntlllfacllon If you'H
' IUcc.l.'
· put forth tho ellorl.
• TAUIIUI (April :Ill ..., •1 You're not ICOIIPIO (Oat. M No e. II) Your great·
to be llfrlld lo make
declllona oet allrlbuloe today .,. your 18llderaltlp
· today, becauoe you'l have lallh In your ,Qualltlal. You'll lnltlnctlv.ly know how
judgment. Your llrat lhOUg/111 aren't to get whal you wanl lor yourN!I and
••ely to require too muclt revlalon.
othera withOut creating Chaot.
QI..NI (lllr 11..,_ ID) You have a .IAGITTAIUUI (Now, II Deo 2'11 Heed ,
r8jll _,Illude loday tor 1or11ng out 11M your 11unc1111 today n you come up w1t11
probllm of olhert 111e1 Mlplng to ,... , ~ thougltt1 Ngardlng ways to
structure their aHalrlln 1 pcllltlve lull- edello your raiOUrc.. Your lnltlneta In
FelL 22,1110
.
~ lon. You're able to unra... what ap- 1 lflnlnGI8I mat1era.,. belterlhan , _ .,
.
•
J1MFW to be 111li0Mble to llllln.
' 'OA IUCOIIII (Deo. ...,_ ,., Your
Many new Infer~ and lnvolvemenll CMCIII (..,_ IWliiJ ., lnVIIM P~llblllllll lor lullllllng ,UU. ...,....
COIJid be In 11M olflhg lor you In the year ' youFIIII In aa(Mtlll IOday 1n1t llfmll. 1. _ anclhOpaa tocllly iOGII ~prom.
aheed. Opportuilltillyou'w- ~ !ale you ...... but IMo .... you a 'fling, biCI Ill you'l . . lfultllortl ..
viOully
wiN Cll\llop III18IICI t o , _ around pltyllcaliy u . allattcall}l ancl not ll1rougll ron cOloNel
lhrough 1 ' - , . . , cllemlll
.... Dorl'l pull! yourMI! loo hard,
PilCh (PW. • M oil •1 Strlvti lo ltollOI*·
' GUAIIUI (.IMI. • ,_, 18) In oom·
vllulllln lmpor1lllt _ . , tociBy ending &amp;:10 ("""a-A,. 111 11 you !eel condl· ·, peti!M dftllopm1n11 today you'll h ln a pOiitlw , . , _, YOAII irMalnatlon C'-can belmprowd*hereyoutworllf a bit mont !Ill ... upon whiOh to Clrlw
II 1 villi lltetor In dill• mining ihe bot· ,o il -...cl,lmptemerrt thiN changM , 11tan 111011 tliho wiH COfnll4lle 8QIInlt
1om Une. Trying to PIIICh up a btOkon you...., lnltlld 01 walling on co-work· you. Thll II a crlllc:al dllfet11101 tltal
1
tomance?The Allro-Qraplt Malchmek• . . . to dO 10.
·
' Q~ V0U Ullghl edge. '
,., can help you ICI undlrlland Whallo ¥IIIQO lAIII· a.llepl. 21) Temporarily
·
'
·

an_,

ifl•lii••lilill•• _,,

....

lAM IIOIII!Y Rnl • . _
IIIIRrt ........ ..........

Dlllllo.
y.
·-.
Read the Best Seier
Readlhe
(LftSSRD N&gt;S''

9:50 (1) MOVIE: Novoda Bmllll
JNR) (1 :30)
10:00 (l) 700 Club With Pat
Roblrllon
D (2) Ouanlum Loap
Sam lands as a hit man
who's romancing the
godfliiher's girlfriend. (R) r;1
IIJ Newowatch
CD I[)) New Twilight Zone
1!21 Evening NIWI
@Ntwo
10:30 IIJ One Stcond ltloro
SunrtM: A Starch For
Solution• This program
presents Inspirational storln
ol how people with
innovative ideas have

Plumbing &amp;
'Hsatlng

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

(1) . . . . . . . . .

= ·

..,.,.ICed

'

.,. ... ,

_

_....,....,,....,S..112.
~···
... _

-·

..,

·-

'

a

plans to confront his boss

RIGHT NOW!!

.......

- \, ~.it

~ ..: • ~

·u.--.

·~ -

. '·

I

'I

a
e

Nawo

I]) SporttCtnler
I[)) A,..nlo Hall

tiJ.._yll..
i1J Mt.ml VIet Freelall, Part

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the twa O's, etc. Single letten,
apostrophes, the lengtll and formation of the words ue all
hints ..Elich day the code letten 1re different.

~.!.:: Bt Forum

..

~~·~~.,_
.:::
Ill Crook I CMN

.,

a IIIIIINet ......

V

MOVII: Nlgltl 01 Tho

~T ·

L N

.

,

12:30et2l 8 Lite Nlghl With
. Devld L.eblmltn

YNH'L

IHNO

OFCH

DCAA

IHNOD.

iiJ The New ..,.. IIMtmer
Tho Return Of Mike H1mmar

(Pt I)

CIIYPTOQUO'IE

IHNOD

~

a Nalllvllle Now

..

..

'

'

. ....

-.
... ,.....

.

.- ''.

IILONGFELLO,W

........ (2:00)
11:30DrJJ a Tonight Sltow
I]) Caloga Btllletllall

.._

'

•

AXYDLBAAXR

i 1:2G IJ) MOVIE: 8tnta Fe

IICAftlrllotn
DNiwaNWat

..

'

w111t Dinah
aa Con•Corntcly Tonight

.......

' NORTH
+1086
9QJ5

DAILVCRYPTOQtmES - Here'lhowloworkll: 2121

2 012 Slerto.

1t.OII ill

.,

ACROSS
DOWN
1 Spoken
, 1 Took a
seat
5 Cut
10 Word with 2 serving
score
· head or
heart
3 Song from
11 Ell
"Kiss Me,
12 Duck
Kate" .
13 Reprieve
4 Cross out
14 Barely
5 Gardener's
warm
tool
16 Picnic
8 Make
18 Jason's
mistakes
vessel
spoiler
17 West of
7 Ballplilyer20 s-ar
' Blue .::. 22 "Picnic"
movies
playwright 34 Fish hook
19 ~:.ood 8 English'
21 Royal trim
llcllool '.' ~4 Famolls 35 Finished
perhaps ' 9 Torn ,
campaign 38 Expansive ·
23 Kind
1 ~ Village ·
slogan
38 Un •
of squad
landm~i1c . 25 Detective's -lcomad
27 Talent
perttaps
aid
job
28 • 40 Fruit
promoter 15 Gasp
17 Main
Alder"
juice
28 Ficllonaf
Street
course, 28 Eat
42 Noise
often
formally
43 Relevant
29 Secret
society
30Dog
star
31 Actress
Moran
33 Anthem
writer
34 Curtsy
37 Mountain
ridge
39 Ffy
41 Egyptian
heroine
44Become
flushed
45 Omit
48.Related
· animals
47 English
county

Stereo.

HE'S GOT HIS

.: '

by THOMAS JOSEPH

lljl N11hvllle Now
9:30 • (2)
Doar John John

HANDS FULL

.

CROSSWORD

iiJ MOYIE: Nlglttllle (2:00) .

c R.AC,Ka;!!

I

I'
I

.A

disfigured recluse. (2:00)'.1:;1

I"'L.LY WANNA

•

...

11J Larry King Llvel

POU...YWANNA
CR.-ICKcR!

I

Painful though it may be to open
with one ol a suit when you have a bas·
+096
ketful of aces and kings, at least you '
+Q8 71
get a natural response from partner,
EAST
makin&amp; it easy to Judce the potential WEST
.J875
t32
ol the deal. And what could be better • K Q ·
I
for today's South than a heart raise? 1 • A 10 8 6
.J752
South simply bid six. giving up on the :}0985\
+108
occasional tiands that could. produce a
SOUTH
grand slam. }le conaratulated himself
on a good decision when the dummy
.K971U
was tl!bled. When he played a heart to
.AK 3
the queen, l!e had second thoughls. Ap+AK
2
pare~tly West held two imprei!Dable
trump tricks : But declarer kriew apVulnerable: Both
Pealer: South
pearances could be deceiving. So
Soulh trumped a spade, played i club
Well
Nortb ·'East
to dummy's queen and trumped anoth· Sootb
Pa..
29
Pass ,
er spade. Oops! West overrulfed with I •
All
pass
6
the eight of hearts, and the slam was
•
' ;
one away.
Opening lead: • K
Declarer can succeed. To make the
slam , he must eliminate all West's
cards outside the trump suit and eome
.. -- .
, ..
·
down 1.9 the same trump lenglh as ~pades , Instead, alter aummy's hear( ·
Wesl. Jl,n odd card can then be played Jack holds, he should ruff one spade, ·
. from dummy and ruffed with the then pia:,: A·K-Q of clubs_. When Weal
heart king: West may overtrump but .shows wtlh four cards m that suit;
will be forced to lead from 10·8 of . South ruffs dummy's fourth club. Next
hearts while dummy has J - 5 and de- ~-K·Q of diamonds, wilh West follow· ·
clarer the 9·7. Since the success of this mg. The Wtnnmg end posrhon has now
plan requires lhat West hold at least been at~ained, and declarer can ruff
three cards in each minor declarer dummy s last spade wtth the hear t •
should be in no burr¥ to ' rufl two kin~ and claim his slam.
· ·

once· handsome man, now a

Stpllc Tonic Pul!llllng IIO,_!Jtlllt '•
Co:- EVANt ENI1!RP"'8ES,
Jockoon, OM 1-.374521.

11111 Ford Ottuydo':..:YI onglno,
uo - · .._,
• :104'87511101.
I::;;:==-:==-::-==..,.-,1111 ~If ..... block !Ito
loolory . omoll blook now
-"""
S8 -runo- aood
· A lot
of
OICiro ~.
nttd

EAIIN IIIOIIlY ~-1
101117
....,:
' 10f&amp;

.

Home
Improvements

=::.ltup,

·
- · ...., 1"' 'llluN
112 Thlnl
••
Polnl
or l'rl,
1:00 11111:00.
.

Dlf:K",.

81

--V.O

na •••ry,mullhlftawnhmd

...--

Serv1ces

I

Choler - Flesh - MOuse - Rocket -, SLACKS
Overheard in me"'s clothing store: "Every ~me t l)uy
new pants, I find I'm in a different SLACKS bracket!"

a
·a

tn.k - .. Ford 1175. .
Chtvroloiii2DO. 304-17114073.

12 13

.SCIIAM-Lm ANSWUS

Los Angeles
CD liD MOVIE: HouH (R)
.(2:00)
1!21 PnmoNewa
0 Murder, She Wrote When
Thieves Fall Out
Convonallon With Dinah
College Btokatball
1:05 (1) MoVIE: Tho Llw · ~nd
, Jallt Wado (1 :45)
1:30 IIIII. ct (J)' Heed Of The
Cllu Charlie offers Arlslotle
and T.J . on having a
successful relationship. Q
Crook a, ChaN
9:GO II (2)
Night Coun Dan
beCOmes the host of a tate
.night talk show. Q
I]) College Baakitball
8111 It I)) 'Tho Kannody•
Of MeiNchU- (Pt 3 Of
3)' ABC MI-rto• (2:00)
(!) American Pt.yhouN
Clalnet Montrose, a

=·,

3. 1111tl ••••
~ ......lc.- ........

..-nc.

Or1mmy Awards Live From

•

Complete oorvloo on m001
mokH ol\(lmodtll.
Hauuhold
Molnlononn: .
Roofing, nfW/ropolr, old!ng, ,
ntwifoi&gt;Oir, cor!lfnlry, odd lobi. •
3~111.
Mtl~at... 114-37too2120, aalc tor
Nlct hoy lor ttlt, 11.00 bolt, Mhch:
.
1144.,..2552.
Pointing, lntortor and oll1•rtor, :
, . _ r Saod Corn, 143 por boa trw . .lmat•, :MM-17S..2111 .
a up. Vol- dl_,nl ptuo 1&lt; Ron'o TV Strvlct, IIPfCitllzlng •
lo Fob 111h. Bob I Nttl Taylor, In ZonHh •too •MC!ng moot ·
114-4143-2215, or 114-4143-2214.
ott.r bnnd1. Hou. CliTa, ar.a
.orne •PPillnce NPtira. WV
IN-&amp;7'&amp;-2318 Ohio 814-4462484.
Trunspot tJI ion
:;,Aot-7a"'ry-or_co_blt,.,-...,lool
-:--drl=lll-ng. '
wollt complelod umo
71 Autos tor Sale
"'""" ..... and ..vlot,
1114102.
1112 cttovr llllu1, Four Door,
Dovlo
Strvlc.,
~'ow*' Oldt. Good condlllon
- 1 1 - 114-11Wt53.
' ~ e-ll Rd. pa~o. •liP' ,
and dtltvory. 114- ;
1115 OMC plcko&lt;lp, runo a

lcooo~mp51~ol~o~t4r3.21~.~~~~ ~ bMI onr J1 ,100. 304..
I :175-:::::::-1::-7'c-:=:-:-==-=-~

p.m. 114-44141111.
IQ- and
lllop Pot
,...,_ -~~~ Apl. In- lltlrigorttor, 2 dr
115 o-tng. AtllrMcli. AI oiYift.
:!!::.•~ Aolltvwol'!f! 2 dr. ~oothw; ltmt Pol Food Dotltr. Julio
no pol'o
. ·-~
l1ou. Elfc. n - 30 - · Ctlll14-tti-OZII.
151 il
1 -~ ... ~~pool·...-.floodlt puflllltt. AKC. Cht.,.
-Fum~ opl. 154 Flroo Avo., ~ioi-iofd':-·...
........,. a
outomolfc - · 1110. F - r Ollon · blood Anoo. Coolvlllo,
.....~
aeo.
0111o. 114-117-.
.....
tool
"""'"'.,0..
5 ,_
11200: ~-:!.! cu. ft. 11., i
......
..,....
. . .2110
10·
114-4t~o1115,114-446-1243.
o:Jiip:;."i 1 ~73...• ~
';:t,~;:
~nd ....ng.
11t tDsiN1 .
Ole. Con 15 dfP. llrr.
Lot¥11111 11~~-----1.
10 buy - o ....
SNAFUIIl by B.,ce Beattie
·--,llbtrfon ~- 1ft AKC
Rral hl.1tr
roS7- tstlld,--1111.

=r.

f10M II·

Lorge A - ltlto of Hoy, 110
lolo. WIN load, 114-441-&amp;*.
M- hoy, IMIUOrt - . , 114-

11tadroom, 2 1J4 ml'- out llncl

Alto multi , ... prtolng d -. 2br, lltlum!tNd. Ollrptltd. No
1122 Tlllnl AvL 114-446or
lomny
- · Olort.,_-top
•
prtan
unllellenllt•
,114-2111-1101."
....., 0.. :1110 llrondt,
:iiOO OIJiot. •11.100 1o eae.aoo: 31 W. opt, 2 br., 1 bOth, privltlo

.Anornatiol10 lady ·ntodod · tor
p.- and bridal o11o11 30U75- bo onr -with - . . , M
2et3orLGWo-l~.
·
Stllrtinl . . .~
-...
Allllllcollono lor 11180 Pool 1 7 . lor R.N.
IIOiltaor, tlfeguonlo tnc1 • - L.P.N. •
mlng lnolnoc:lar ol Pool
~wMIDt occoj&gt;lod !llrough Fob. 110.-

--~tlllllt ..... •
..._

--..

I

Hoy tor alt. CAIII14·742·2GI3.

IIOI!t
'-*'• lloblte Ptrw,l14-441-1102.

44,..., mntt. dtrnogod,
tit. 30U75-:Ion.
.

___ _

1llroualt Fob 24th.
Centtlll ,..., ...... 11o14712711, or - • -.: 114-4467211.

~.~.~1bt, Nil.' DIUfbu~ fl....-1,
lumlohtd, •• ullllllti pold, ln........ ooblo.ldwt tor ,ono por·

'

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessor lea

,..-Ocl

.11% -

tiiOp, o r eartH
Add u.
ooiOrClolbOmt,
•t~~J•
lnnd ......
_,

17-24. Coli Mon-Thlft
lo.m.-2p.m. 1-.zez.1314 tor

traditions , from Pilgrims 111
now. Q
ill) Ill 1!21 32nd Annual

1115 Ford, 8 cyt, olllo1 J'?, PI, ,
LW!11 _wllh 1 - ~ - Unor,

M"""Bouthtldt, WV,

S7'1o11R

County

own

Help Wanted.

,...

~

.... .., ...1

·wator
Toura, Inc., P. 0 . 11oo&lt; Z43,
Honloni,WY25247.
CASH IN ON IIULTf.BILLION
DOLLAR MARKET RESEARCH.
FNOinlo.J.- t•~ lor ..N.
Wrllt P. u. Bo~ 254 O.iOpollt,
01145131.
Own your
opportt or ihot

John

- . 1 Form
8:00 AM llo;;;i. 13, 1110. For
mort In-lion on oorn or loo'
bid,""'"" 01111 Nttl Muncy 304175-7331ar WV Dtpt. of Agllouf.
turil 304 341 2210.
'
For Solo: Good mlaod con·
dltorwcl Hoy 11.00 bolt. 114-

.-.

11504.
Junlc cara with or wtlhout

Hay&amp; Grain

84

Bullneu
Opportunity

VInton Ptu oantpollo, OH
INO'IICEI
45131 . Woodl.r.i Coni-, Inc., OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO.
II • pmato nor&gt;piOIII OOr• rooornmondt tho! yov do
porollon
ond .., -~
pooplo you~-..
oppilrl,.,fty/alft.-tvo oct1on
NOT 10 •nd monoy
om-. W-nd Ctnloro, and
tnc:, c1oto net -mlnoto on lhrauah 1M moll until you hovo
the -... of age, ootor, oreN, ln-.jdod lht oHortng.
Nlllontl -In, - . ""' or Aponmtrll houtt tor fflt or
typo of cllttlillhl.
Po~~tmo &amp;lrvoy ma- -pormonlh.Orwlllto•
r 11 'Ch. For MdltkMIII Into. tor I1UCI. ..... month. F1rOI .....
to: , _Ho_ .... monlh - - . · 114-11112- '

to Buy

a lour or American eating

Alvtroldt Marino, AI. 7, O•~

llpoh1 liCfOfO lrom K·U.rt, 114441-2•24, 1-IOO-Z71-0274.

but

lo Cenlerl,
lloPilrlond
WaaIIMCI
Inc., 412

the clffwl!nc ..,
Llcenood Oh!!,_l!_onrucky, woot
VIrginia, 304-(r.H&gt;781o·

~

a

11.100. 304-1175-2148.
.
KX 125 dl~ blko.- plotono &amp;
)IJtl. $450. 114-441-001 •.

='"

-· _--·-

aertenc. l'nl!kta

c.ttllld

e
a
e
•o a

porto, - o. Coli

-

~~- or

Rick Potrocn Auc- Compony
now -lng OUCII-. H•

Ext.-

Castillo lnvestlgale a major
coca1n.e smuggler. Stereo,
CD VlcleoCounlry
.
@ Abbott And Collello
7:05 (1) JeHenon1
7:30 (2) Family Feud
II EnlertaiM!ent Tonight
(J) Mama'• Family
·
ill)
Jeopardy! Q
CD@ M'A'S'H
'IIJ Croaaltre
Nlghl Court
7:35 (1) Sanford And Son
8:00 (JJ MOVIE: Night Of The
Qrluly 12:00)
II (2) 18 Unlolved
Myotorlea A bizarre repor! of
a fugitive Seattle man , Q
II a Cll I)) Growing Paino
Maggie has a grisly dream
about Chrissy's teenaged
y~ars. 1:;1
CD Counldown To Zero
C!l Smllh10nlan World Take

R - 33, North of Pomo,.,.

thiW ......

II .....
nol ,.qulrod;
I

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

~to

II a Ill)) Current Affair

1 raom oNiot lor Nnl. $100 por
.-., All utll"ltt lncludtd. Coli
Lolo)'fllo Man: 11.4-441-4222.
Co!inlry Mobllt Homo Pork,

..

by filling in the missing WOtdt

you develop from step No. ,3 below.

BRIDGE

a..ketblll

(I) (!) MacNoll Lehrer

weekly, non •• :klc. 304-

Joe-

p;m. Salurdly.

0175.

(II Colloge

46 Space tor Rent

Compl;lo lho chuckle quored

Clllocly Eltctrtc

G(J) PM Mogaztne

•

,_1

. GallipoliS
&amp; VIcinity

Want~

XLT, IGW •

.l wrolti · -OI'monlh.
8!ortlng ol 1120/mo. Qollo

458-1111i .... 7:00pm .....
-•nd numlltr.
do yord ouch tt
PART·TIME -nlory , _ . In Witt
roklng ......_ oltonlng up
tho 0111111&gt;0111 or Pon•o1 o... bnloli, . planting
..- . Fltllblt dty ........ No olnnlng wll)dowo. 15,00 hr. Col
- n d t , No HP. - r y , 114-112'2001 ollor lp.m. or 11"'
'
Cor - · Call I.C.C. Dojll. 11112·7411.
,._,
1-717-1015 lo.m.·
&amp;p.m.
.
-..g TD World WID - h wl,..
lnoldt I oui. Hard
POSITIONS
AVAILABUE: Do odd Jobo. 11+441Cllnlotl ·-lttlnl tor 24-llaur
- n · o progrll!l tOcotod In
-my. Elporlonoo In
F1nollCIJI

Yard Sale

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS II
IN THESF ~QUARE S
I

1:35 (1) Andv OriHtth
7:00 IJIScerocrow &amp; Mra. King

mllelge, mutt. eell. 114-441- t
7720.
·:

Nttd bobvoll1er In my ....,.
~. (2 .,...

A

. a Hangtn' In .

I~1~~~
. ~~~~D~11~S·~----- ·

l"ttOM

L..--I.L-..J.L-..1.-..L.~.

W

. ·I IIII II (J) ABC New11:;J

, . _ ,_.,. wftl\ -king.

Rentals

L.-

Ill Top Card

1M7 Y•maho :110. 4 - ·

Utart .,.., .,...,. to

a
~IPortoLook

35 Loti &amp; Acreage

Hout
-Y any
'""'\:."c:~
unwanted
lemt.
A
roiM. ."-lablo. Coil on!llf14-2&amp;MU1.

I

.. SAKIRE
lr-r'
1 tl7r-lr"-,lr.-rl-'-.,--; 0

a

ill)

12 ..... land Long Rood. 304-1-8.

pluml:&gt;er found out that my hus·
,.i.· -~-:---~-......., band had tried ID · -· the ··-.

e
IiiJ He·Man

49

LOOI: bltell ond lnwn - l o

11

FAI'fi.IFVl. D06 tN
'(OUR l.AP...

My husband had nfl'ler fell
more humble than when our

L.._,_
_ __,_...._,_
_ -'-·__,

QrtHIIh

·IIJ World TodaV
iiJ Jem

...... " 1 4 .. OliO

- · 15,000. 114-441-

I

C!JIQua,. One TV 1:;1 .·

(!) 3-2·1 Contacii:;J
11:11 CIS New1 Q
I[)) Tlwttl'a Company

bl10ll1op
dmo, lrUII ,...., ~po htrbor,
• . . .- . N6rtltup, Ohio,
\'L:ppolnlmtltl only. 114-446-

country
an.

I

..

L I Q U L ~.l·
1--. "'1;:-;l,;~:!...iils;..::lr--1 .

c

.• I[)) Andy

.

LOol: WhNo Foalbtll -

9

51TIIN6 WITH '!'OUR

.

1111 Ford Ronaor, 4 cyt, outo,

TUIS IS MURDER ..
M'f 8ACK IS
KILLI N6 ME ANt'
ALL FOUR LEGS
, ARE ASLEEP!

COM~OICI'JN6 ~N

1114 l'onl F-110, PI, PI, AIC,
304-175-2484.
1117 a_, S·10, pickup. 114- '

boylriencl.

• 1111rooa -

on· Wolf Pon Rd. l'eb. 1f.
v.-•rlng totoa roc1 co~tor. t14IP·1222 ,...,tngo.
llilg. 0 - l n •. ~ ..... of
Fourth Av&amp; A...n far 1'
1
114--2.....1371' 4tl . . ...

Ntwo

Scott 1eems the perfect

NOTf.!iN6 15 MORE

I o; ln-

·.~Rotd.l14-aa.

I I I I

Il l)) atJ • G2l

druma are coming true,

pool, 11132, -

111m-n
·
, • or :...,..m.

2

Moto;cyclt Aaooclation

1-"'111--lng
=
-oln~.

1~ 1

~

m Dlgrla11 High Kalhteen 's

~at-dlnlna-:~wlt.:.,!..~:l

ft-•
l:.ll:i::
~- - 11,._.~·4::!re:.'r.'M. doa· lull
=:tt*..:it:XUio
.PAU,.J: :=.... .:";... :=1;
1 (Por1~..,.1 olyllot,'~~ l:lli 304-&amp;~11 .
•---

8

w

AC.._P_B, PS, cruiM, outo, INno. ,
72,...,11'1
-111
· 1137.
Auno a - .
.....

.

NEHXUE

I]) hat Of ~mtlican

s - with o11rt aooc1 """· 3

W-

·

:..:i..!li'4 ~.=.

Help Wanted

Eo-·
tor llnw Will do bolwt!ltf!ltlln my homo.
~. EUy it ........ lion. thou l'tl. Diyo only. Coil
No .., . - - · Col 1· ' 114-112 5101. ·
aot.et1·7771 Ext. 5214 0pon lM
t&gt;ouro.lnctudtng.......,.
t8 Wantedto·eo
Hair F•lllano. • ..., Bob'• LoWn eo..,
cunt~.
•lon thol-1
•
...

OU!oldt doa·to glvo -y. Coli
114.ft:!-l.

'1

.a

T.V. W-. 114-446-

~

d~

• (J) • •

1111 CMoy ...... S.1D, I oyl.

.For Salt: 12Jcll0 mobllt homo.

nlghlo.

McCannlck Q

1m ton ctto.- lruok,
:t10t47W11211.

""'-=

•

I:GG (JJ Hanlca•llt And

truok, 1400 080,

1m f.7DO -no.
...-. •
. 111 ltall11.

WED., FEB. 21

loorrango · itiiOII of tho
four ocramblod wordo below to form lour IIIIIPlo -do.

•

E~ENINQ

3044-.

•

Ll"' 1 I 2 lllllroom tumlehed ·
Qlo,120J.I23&amp;.
ulHhlot, ~· ra1u
.
, . _ Volloy llttily, '30U7541DO dtyo 875-5411 or 17Ht11

newly ramad1l1d on 1.1 •en tot
.. edfl of town. Aa.o • houM
on thO lot, ·In of ropolro.
u.. In ono and - 1ht othor.

'! :•

1171 -

tnd
ADM-- In ' ' f M ...,... Fram
1114. lhrough 15.
Ftroo mon111 - l n t to who quollly. Coli 114-tl2-7717.

EOH.

8

114 ••• . . ,.

· - - ....... 1 and 2 bodopo~- ol VI-·
..... rontodloL A,OOO. ... tnoludtd, •12,000. or
304.a1NI46.

4

-

luii.W.
p0ue olfcl.
plld. Uppor
rtf.• dtp., -

llo-

. Viewing

1M DDflllt ........... I ll olllo.f
. . . IIOfilol ....... Good ..... '
dllon. . , ., 11444..2110.
1174 a_, 4i4, aood ...,. r
dillon. -Good· oondklon.
Alto 11171 Chevy
,.ton,
11000.

carpet, air
1.......,
,
w-

m.-.

- . . *"'· ,....,_ •

'74 ICM:x•• ti'8Dtor, iiDI CUm- •,
,IOO."

mini......,, ~ oOIIId, P
~-1714181.

., (tmlnt of ~ 1 bfd.
NOII'I,

21. 1990 .

72 Truckl fOr Sltle

Fumlthtd
olltoltncy,
-·
IMilh,
d lolllllt'pUI, 110/mo.,
111 ltoond Avonuo, Oo!tlpolll.
114 4113141. .
.

l21fl,
,_
· tor
-.c
oHot
i i -- 5:00304JIIHI41.
1m eo.-.~ 12111 - . a bod"'""::d -

¥IT' N' CAilLYLE~ by 1.-ny Wflallt

Apartment'
for Rent

tor Sale
3 Announcemem.

.
.
Wednaaday, F

Middleport. Ohio

-

UNQ'PC

CPBR

R

TRP

PCRYU

5 .Q L

V L

SNBSCTI

•

.

YMia •.,•• C.;pl111••••• IF WISE MEN WERE
· HAIRS, 11tE WORLD \VOli.D NEED A WIG. -

. SOURCE OBSCUIE

'

•t"·

'

FNO

VL

_.

t'

C) 1etl0 by King F..,_ Srlldlcalt. Inc .

•

....

�Pomaroy-MicHipot1. Ohio

Ohio Lottery

Wlldcats
adVance ·in

RC COLA

&amp; RC PRODUCTS

l'h'.k 3
732

Pick 4
0143
Superl4to
17-18-26-30-33-38
Kicker 885732

tounlament

U-12 01. CANS

We Reserve The Right To
llmit Quantities

P~3 .·

STORE HOURS

.

I

•

•

8 AM-10 PM

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH~
PRICES EFfECnVE SUN., FEB. 18, THRU SAT., FEB. 24

'

'.

.e

.

SUNSHINE

'

DOG

•' vol.40,
·;,

Chucl&lt; Roasts ••~••••
FRESH PORK BUTT . .

LB. . . .

RC COLA

Sl 39

LB. .

'

ground In finance, having served
"No area of the state has been
as Executive VIce P,resldent of more. neglected than Southeast·
both the Farmers Bank and ern Ohio an!! the 94th District,"
Pomeroy National Bank for Jones said. ''Today, we find some
nearly 20 years prior to being .of our counties and townships ·
elected CO!Illllissloner.
bordering on baAkruptcy; vii·
In addition to the commission- Iages and cities flndlngltdtftlcult
er's post, Jones has also served to provide peeded se~vices and
as the first president ofthe Meigs unable to meet state and federal
Local School District Boatd of mandates; and school boards
Education. He was a member unable to fund adequate educa·
and served as clerk of the tiona! programs . While other
Pomeroy Jloard of Education, areas of the state get new
and was also a member · of . h\dustry to provide ·jobs. our
Pomeroy Village Council.

$. 69
Chuck Roasts....... 1 .

·SUP~RIOR'S

. .

FRANKIES · . . .

Wieners ••••••••••••••••

A

WHOLE
CHICKEN

LB.

$

12 OZ. PKG.

Pork ·Sausage •••••• $1 39

Coupon

$.
199
Fdiets I Patt1es •••••

199
.
Potatoes ••••••••••••••
10 Ll. lAG

to add more ·workers

.

CHARMIN
TISSUE
4 ROLL PIIG.

$

U.S. NO. 1 RUSSET

99&lt;

.

Good Only at Powell's
Supermarket

$1
8
9
2°/o Milk ••••••••••••••
L
I
I
! 2°/o MILK !
La~ge
Eggs
•••.••
:::~
••.
6
9
&lt;
.
. . L
Jeno's Pizza ••••••••• 79(. I $149

FLAVORITE

.

·.•

--------------·

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

. GAL.

I

GOOD FRIDAY
FEB. 23 ONLY

I

HANGING ROCK GRADE A

·1

I

I

FLAYOIITE

I

I

7·4 to 8.1 OZ. FROZEN

·Crackers ••••••••••~••••• 79( MOUNTAIN TOP
Gala Towels •••••••••:59( Cherry Pie

'

ROU

1

GALLON

1·

Good Only at Powell'•
Supermarket

·- ___ ..,.___
1

-··--·--·~

GRAN. SUGAR
4.4 Ll.

MAXWBL HOUSE

$119

$499

Oily At l'ewlll's s.- Yolu
s.. ftll. It thru Sat.• , •• 24

~
~

I

cOFFEE

Gootl OI!IY At Pow••• Suptr Yalu
GOIII s..i., ••• II thru Sat. Fell. 24

•

'

GOLDEN WHEAT

MAC. &amp; CH.EESE
7.25

oz.

5/Slv•

Gootl 0n1y At ,..••• s.Good Sun...... 1I thru Sat., Fell. 24

BOLD DETERGENT
1360L

$599

GOIII Ollly At Powlll's Slpw Yalu
&amp;.ad SUn.. fell. 18 llwu Sat. f .. 24

r

Hieronimus
seeks
Local news briefs-.....,
.
Ohio Senate seat
·Deputies probe valdalism reports
'

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•

'I

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r. .

,

-

Deputies of the MeigS Councy Shertrf's Department are
Investigating two reports of vandalism taken on Wednesday.
Sharon Durham, Vance Road, Pomeroy, reports · she
dlscorered that someone had sHt the rear wheel cover on the
.
spare tire of her vehicle.
The second report was taken from Carl Nichols, Wolf Pen,
who repOrted someone had entered a house he owns and
·damaged the doors· and ·windows. No estimate of the damage
was gl\ien. .
,.
·
.
·• Sheriff Jamell M1 Soulsby reports that 31-year old· Paul
Hatfield, Bra'dbury Road, Pomeroy, was cited toMelgl County
' Coui1 on an old warranffor disorderly condul!t, Because of the
minor misdemeanor, ·a ·citation to court wu llsued. He will
appear next Wednesday.

,,

'

36 OZ. fRENCH ROAST
39 OZ. AD(, ELEC. Pill, lEG.

insurance coverage for food
stamps was accepted by the
commls~ioners, based upon !he
recommendation of Michael
Swisher, director of the Meigs
Department of Human Services.
The bid was from the Downing,
Childs, Mullen, Musser Agency,
Pomeroy.
· If desired, the agency can
provide a three-year policy for
food stamp coverage, butdld not
list exact terms. A three-year
policy would be acceptable to
Swisher and the commissioners,
If the three-year premium is
satisfactory.
A bid from Smith-Nelson Motors for a leased vehicle for
Chlldrens' Services was also
accepted by ' the board at
Swisher's recommendation. The
lease agreement for a GMC
Safari van is for $384.90 per
month, with a $400 security
deposit. The security deposit will
be returned at the end oft he lease
contract.
Both the insurance bid and the
bid for the vehicle were lone bids.
A request from the Southeast ·
Ohio Regional Council for a
donation to off set costs to
SEORC associated with the re·
cent printing of a publication to
promote the area for industry,

. Sidney Edwards and David
Gloeckner, of the Gallia·Melgs
·Community Action Agency, met
Wednesday with the Meigs
County Commissioners to give to
the county a check for approxl·
mately $16,000. This amount
represents about a 10 pereent
share of bonus money to the local
JTPA program.
The bonus money comes
through
the regional district
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) . LotteryDlrectorRonaldNaba·
which
overseesJTPA.
TheJTPA
The state . Controlling Board · kowskl said the commission will .
program
receives
bonus
money,
au thorlzed the Ohio Department spend $1.7 million more than
based
upon
the
effective
yearly
o.f Transportation Tuesday to lnidgeted for this; fiscal year to
opera!
Ions
or
the
prograin.
In the
hire imother·200 employees dur· . purchase G-Tech s new system
case
of
the
local
program,
"we
lng the ttext iwo year-s, using an which can process Instant lottery
met or exceeded all our goals."
automatic ·gas· tax hike which tickets and give faster weekly
stated'
Gfoeckner.
accounting of sales agents's
takes effect in July.
The
10
percent in bonus money
• ·the board agreed to raise the transactions.
to
the
county
may be used by the
ceiling on . the number of emNabakowski said ticket sales
or.ly to generate
commissioners
ployees, set in 1981, from 7,640 to are up by $140 million, and that
employment
opportunities
In the
7,840. The department said it the commission also Is upgrading
county.
needs the extra workers becauSe Its computer terminals.
. . Edwards, Gloeckner and·· the
of a heavy construction schedule . The excess lottery profits are
planned by the Ce·leste being shared by schools. The · commissioners also reviewed
other aspects of the JTPA
administration.
board voted to release $44 million
program, includillg anticipated
·T he money' \vin come .f rom a ·In excess lottery profits from last
fu(Ure
cuts In funding, and the
2.2·cent a gallon Increase In the year to 612' public -school disrecent
lmpk!mentatlon of a progasoline tax as of July 1. The trlcts, 49 joint vocational schools,
gram
to
provide retraining for
increase is part of a 5.2-cent hike 59 county school boards. 722
area
coal
miners who lost their
voted last year as part of the non:public schoolS, an.d87mental
jobs
In
lay
orts last year at
. slate transpor~&amp;tlon .budg~t.
retardallon boards.
Southern Ohio Coal Company.
The , board also approved a
The money must be used for
In other matters, a bid of
change In ·the Ohio Lottery textbooks and equipment, and
$16,000
a year fpr $400,000 of
Commission .contract with G- may not be used for salaries.
Tech Corp., Providence, R.I.,
James VanKeuren of the Ohio
which operates the lottery.
Continued on page 6

·Highway ·departme'!t

:Savi"gs
'

PUlE SWEET

coach.
Asbesth, Marietta, was employed as asbestos management
consultant for the district at a
charge of $2200 a year.
The board ,approved the pur·
chase or a printer for a computer
to be used ln .the business office
education program at a cost of
approximately $500, and also
gave approval to the Racine Ball
Association to use the ball fields
at both the junior high and high
school for summer programs.
Anthony Paul Frederick was
employed as substitute custodian
and the resignation of Bo~ble Ord
as transportation supervisor was

accepted.
Members of the board. Supt.
Ord. Treasurer Dennis Htll and
his assistant will attend the Ohio
School Boards Association's Sou,
theast Regional spring confer ~
ence to held March 13 at · the
Sportsman In Athens.
A discussion was held on House
Bill 140 which deals with the
secondary enrollment option and
the delay until '1991 , of its
implementation: ·
Attending the meeting were
Charles Norris, president, Denny
Evans, Gaty · ,Willford, Susie
Grueser, and Scott Wolfe, and
Treasurer Hilt.

.·eheck·'"for JTPA· 'program

TY!ON CHICKEN BR~AST 9;10 Oz. Box

&amp;actions, 1 6 Pages

25 Cenu

ahead, I look forward to meeting
troubled'' about this continued
neglectofthlspartofthestate. "I· with the people of this dlstricl
and diSC\ISSing their concerns. "
W()Uid like to be a leader In trying
Jones. who Is a . life time
to reverse this trend. INs f.o r that
·resident
of Meigs County , resides
·reason that I .. shall seek this
with his wife, Donna, on Laurel
position.
Cliff Road. They are the parents
''Experience In finance, experlence in educational matters, · of three children; Kim Quinn, a
music teacher who lives at
experience In all types of local
Hartford, Conn .; Brett, of' Pomegovernment, four terms as a
roy; and Susan, a student at Ohio
county commissioner and a deUniversity . He and his wife are
sire to serve are the credentials I
both members of the St. Paul
will ~ring to this off)ce," Jones
Lutheran Church, Pomeroy.
stated. ''In theweeksandmonths

~~~!Y ge\~4 · ~l6,~ ~!.lu~

BALLARDS 1~LB. ROLL or 10 Oz. LINK

ZESTA,

welfare rolls continue to grow .
Others get new and modern
highways while we get promises
at election time and then watt 20
years for construction," Jones
stated.
"SIInply put," he added, " we
continue to be the forgotten area
of the State of Ohio. To those who .
would advance the Idea that our
state is doing so well, I say come
to the 94th District," challenged
Jones.
Jones said he Is deeply

A contract for roof repair at the
Racine Elementary School In the
amount of $6,628 has l;leen
awarded to Manuel Gheen of.
Gheen's Painting by the South·
ern Local Board of Education.
The board, meeting Monday
night at the school also employed
a teacher's aide for 11.0 hpurs, to
' provide as sis talice in tes ling
special education St\ldents. The
. teacher will be paid with federal
· Title 6B funds, It was noted.
Also hired by the board was
John VanReeth as director of the
pep band, Bill Hensler as reserve
baseball coach, and TamJ11y
Chapman as reserve softball

FARMSTEAD

GRADE

~

A MuttWnedia Inc . New,apfH'

Gheen firm ·awarded rOOf ·
contract by Southern ·boam

.

9
2
Sliced BolognO •••~ $1

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Pomeroy.. Middleport, Ohio. Thursday, Februairv 22. 1990 ·

2 LITER BTL.

Steaks/Roasts...... .
BROWN &amp; ~RISPY SQUARES
$
Cod F1sh ...............

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I

'"By NANCY YOACHAM
•.. Sel!llaei'Ne"eStaff •
Meigs County Commissioner
Richard E. Jones has announced
,that h!! will seek the Republican
nominatlonforstateRepresenta·
Uve tJ:om the 94th Olstrl.c t. Jones,
)Vho also serves as Meigs CQunty
Republican Executive Committee Chairman, was· first elected
, to ·the'· oomintsstoner's post In
1976 and IS ~ently servi~~~: his
fourth· term, . • .. . .
,
...Jones al~o has a, broad ,back.

$299

$). CJ 9

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J'()~es see~ house seat ·. on Republican ticket

20 LB.

U.S. D. A. CH_OICE BONELESS BEEF

No.zoi

Copyolg~ 1890

FOOD

.

.

.

Monday thru Sunday

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF

Low toalpt Ill
48a.
Chance of rain 100 percent.
Friday, hllh near 50. Chance
of rain 60 percent.

. Police probe ·three Dcc~nts ,
•

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Three accidents were investtaa~d by, Pomeroy pollee

Wednesday.

·

·

. A~ 7:27 p.m. at the lr\leUectlOI\ of,Uncoln Hill and LiJICOin
Terra~. ca~• driven~ !lt~ ·Fred S.loy, Hlah Street a~
Micbael Mullen, ,Li~~CDbl Hejgh~, coWcle4. ·
Baloy wu traveltq doWJI J.lncobl Hill when Mu,Uen. going up,
wenUeft or cen~ ~ •lrliCIIJhe Baloy\oe~lcle, pollee reported.
Mullen was Cited for lett of ce11ter.
•·
Continued on page 6

. Lawrence County Sheriff Dan The district Includes Athens,
Hleronimu&amp; annnounced Wed·
Gallla, .Jackson,' · Lawrence,
nesday his candidacy for tbe
Meigs, Pickaway. Ross , and
Ohio 17th District Senate seat
Vinton counties.
now held · by Jan Michael Long,
"AI a llfelpng resident · of
D.Ctrclevllle. ·
Lawrence County and southern
Hleronimus, a Republican, has Ohio, I understand your conbeen sheriff since 1981 and made cerns: your needs and your
a Wednesday morning an1101111ce" values," Hleronimus said. "If
ment in Athens. He traveled to · glveri the opporllinity tci serre as
Ironton and Chillicothe In the
your representative in the Ohio
afternoon.
Senate, I pledge to flghtfor safer
•Tbe llsuee I plarn to focus on nelihborhoods, quality educa·
durln1 the upcomiDJ campaitn
tlon for our children, securtty·for
are crime •.education, taxee, the ·our senior citizens, and more
economy alld HlllDr cltlzeu,"
jobl and lncreued opportunity
Hlerontmua said. "I want the
for the people of the 17th District:
opportunity to be a ,part of the
"I look forward to a campalp
Ohio Senate and to take an active
based on solid lasuee and atrong
· role In cjeterminlng the future of
values," Hteronimua Concluded.
our great state for alt Ohioans,
"Voters will !lave a clear choice
and espem.IJy for the cltlzena of
to make on the direction of the
IOUihern Olllo."
Ohio Senate and the future of
If succeutill In Norember,
Ohio thla election."
Hleronimua will serve In the
Hteronimus has two children,
m•Jorlty party In the Senate
Danll!le, U, and Tyler, 11, and
where, he said, he ~II be able to
realdes In 'Ironton with his wife,
accompllah more for !he i!lltrict.
Janet.

'

was welJ.recelved by 'the commls·
stoners. Appar.ently, copies of the
publication were taken to Japan
In a recent visit state d~velop.
men! officials, .as well as being
dlstrlbu ted throughout Ohio and
surrounding ~tales. Commls.- ·
stoner Richard Jone~ described
the publication as "excellent"
and said It would be well worth it
for Meigs County to do Its Share
in helping tQdefray the costs . The
commissioners wlll be cl!ecklng
with surrounding counties t~
ascertain the size of their dona·
Uons, and will then try to come up
with a comparative amount from
Meigs County.
·
County Engineer Philip Roberts and Highway Superintend·
ent Ted Warner were at the
meeting to discuss upcoming
State Issue II projects. Roberts ·
arid Warner were also questioned
by - the commls~ioners about
minor road problems througtiout
the county. The two men re·
ported that som~ f,epalrs have
been made, while others will be
taken care of as soon as !Vi! ather · ·
permits. Roberts also reported
that the county's mowing tractor
Is back on the road.
Finally, the COJ11mlssioner's
approved a request from County
Recorder Emmogene Congo to
attend a continuing education
seminar which is · being sponsored by the Ohio Recorder's
Association.
·
'

"Y

IDEAS SHARED - ··Donald
Schmidt, execullve director of
tbe Ohio Parks and Recreation Association, Inc., Colurn·
'bus. shares Ideas for develop1!11 recreational programs ·
t!O'ou1ho\Jt Melp County. .
Scl!mldt·- ..,.,It~ W,dnj!s·
dily n..IK au •JII!elal meetlnl
which wai 1po1119red by tbe
Melp COunty Park District.
Tlie meet1n1 ns held at the
senior citizens center In
Pomeroy. ·

Park district
.
r,mprovements.
are discussed ·
'

Area reslde!l'ts may not know
It, but Meigs County has its own
Park District.
,
And although relatively new,
the Meigs County ParkDlstrkt is
working diligently , and on a
lbnlted budget, to !levelop plans
for Possible recreational projects
throughout the county.
The park district Is also trying ·
to get Information out to government officials thl'o~ghout the
county, that they want to work
hand· In-hand with Interested
people in the county to bring :
recreatlonalfacllltles to the local ·
area: An effort to Inform govern· ·
ment leaders took place Wednes·
day night at the Meigs Senior-·
Citizens Center In Pomeroy with '
a few local officials taking
advantage of the chance to hear
from Donald Sclunldt, executive
director or the Ohio Parks and
Recreation Association. Inc.,
Columbus.
Although SchJ11idt shared
much Information with' those at
the meeting regitrding ways to go '
about develdping recreational
·,:'.' projects, of major Importance,
· , ' he said, Is the need for the park :
COLUMBUS, .Ohio (UPI) .-' · district to better a~uaint Itself·
The Ohio Department .ot ~eallh ' · · with area offlcta:ls. Schmidt :
. says an outbreak ·or 'l;Ype:A · explained the many types or-:
Shanghai flu is n!J . longer at . things that a park dlstrlctis able .
epidemic levels in.,the s'tate.
to accomplish, especially When u;.
The state healltl ·dl!l*rtment· Is supported by local residents.-·
Wednesday clas$1fled tile oilt- ,. ;' as well as by local governmen{
break as ''regional," meaning
le!l&lt;lera.
·
.:
less than half pf ' tile slllte!s'
Schmidt encouraged park dis· '
population Is noW vulnerable' lo •... ·.trjcl board members, not to stop ·.
the virus said Tony P.Ytoll. the · with local officials either, but to •:
departm~nt's health plainilng begtri no\V to talk with state ::
administrator.
'
Cl)ntlnued on page 6
.·

•d •
CanceI .epl ermc.

'•

.Indep~nd~n~ ~1tdidafes have :
Ullti~.~qy.: 7 to, file petitions ·~
Candidates wllo.flll! lnclepend·
ent or the Republic~ qr Democratic Parties havell'ntll May7 at'
4 p.m. to present their petitions to
the Melgl County Board of
Elections, ac:cOrdJng. to, Jane ,
Frymyer, director.
'
By· flltng as an Independent,
candidates by-pass the primary
election· and !Ia· riJht Into the

reneral election In November ·
she explained. P4!tltiona requlr~ ·:
the signatures of 70 registered :
voters.
· '
·
·;
The deaciUne ror fllinl petit Ions •
of candidacy within the two 1111rty ~
syste"' or resolutions to place tax
•Issues on the May 8 ballot Is 4
p.m. Thursday (today), Mrs.
Frymyer noted,

·r

.,

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