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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

Eastena,

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Partly elolldy tonllht. Low
In mid 20s Cbuee of rain 30
percent. Wedllelday, hlch
near 40 •

•
1 Section, 10 PogM

. Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Tuesday, Febrruary 27, 1990
'

SPRUCE LUMBER

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'

KIGHT To READ WEEK- TheMelp LOcal Schoo!Diatrlcl will
o._erve Blpt-to-Read Week March 5-9. Representatlvll!J from
each dlalrlct were present at Pomeroy Vlllag&lt;: Hall on Monday to

I

officially declare the week. Plct\lfe are, 1-r; back row, Jo Dunn,
'VIcki Haley, Marsha Radabaugh, Elizabeth Story, Janet Hoffman,

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Will
'

ROLL

Jon! Jeffers, Kim Oliphant, Paula Chancey, Cindy Allen, Barb
Mathews Crow, and Wend)' Balar. Front row, Middleport Mayor
Fred Hollmaa, Pa&amp; Thoma, representing Pomeroy Mayor Richard
Seyler, and Jim Carpenter, superintendent. Absent a&amp; the time of
the picture was Jeanie Bowen.

¥eigs School District . planning variety
of
.
f!Ctivities for Right-to-Read ·Week March 5-9 J

WITH 4/12 PITCH AND 12" OVERHANG

...

By JUL~ DILLON .
. , Sentinel News Staff
The Meigs Local School District ls,plannlng a wide variety of
activities for Rlg)\l•to-Read
Week which Is March 5-9.
·Activities at the. Bradbury
Elementary School will include a
magician, Marko . the Clown. a
slpgan contest, a game similar to
"Wheel of Fortune" using book
' !jtl@~• . l.l!OOk S!Jle. il movie based
· 9iloi~ ~~leal booll. aJ~d a door
decorating contest. ·
' The. theme at the HarrlsOIIvllle
Elem!!ntary f&gt;chool will Involve
pirates and discovering the treasures of reading and math.
. Students wlll ,be reading all week
and placing the information on a
''coin" to be. displayed In the
hallway all week. Students wl!l
view the move, "Treasure Is·
land" and then have a treasure
.hunt at school: The students will
also be .able to participate In a
book fair . and have sustained
silent reading and math allweek.
.At Middleport Elementary the
week will start' with sustained
silent realllng In a magic cave ·
after the kick off of distributing
magic antenna~ . and a magic
show .by Marko the Clown.
, Teachers will be reading books to
: the students with appropriate
activities with each book. There
will also be a math trivia contest
held throughout the week. A
mystery reader will be selected
each day an\1 students will· be
ilble to guess who the reader was
for a prize. Reading conttacts
and a bOok exchange will be
completed. A plzia will be
awarded to the top ten students
who read the most In grades 1-2
and grades 3-4.
Meigs High School has planned
the following activities, sustained sllen't reading; having
additional newspapers and pa-

- oboolutoly FREEl
A - 1101utol ..9.951

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perbacks In the classroom II· · related posters, and solar system
Salisbury Elementary Is going
brary, book displays and talks, trivia. The fourth, fifth, and sixth
back to the dinosaur era with a
bulletin board displays, reading grade students will be reading to •' theme of "Reading Is Dlno-M·
aloud as a starter for reading, a lower grade and completing an
lte." Plans Include a slogan
Newspapers In Education activi- experiment related to the solar
contest, dopr decorating contest,
system.
··
ties, comprehension, careers.
dally silent reading, book swap, a
ads, charts, graphs and cartoons,
Rutland Elementary will be math-a-than, read-a-than
contest or book · give-away,
marching along with reading a
for multiple sclerosis, math
math. These activities will .cendisplays In the library, announceproblems and brain teasers , a
ments on the electronic bulletin
ter around events that take place read and count button day,
board, dally public address an- durtng March. Monday will be brontosaurus blue and white day,
noqncements aboU\ the week an/1
National Athem Day with three best reading a math student, the
.reading facts In the United
members of . tile ·American Le: · menu and honor roll board will be
States.
gioil to present a program on the on the dinosaur theme, and there
· Meigs Junior High plans to .,Amer)can Flag. '1\lesday Is Dr. will be dinosaur puzzles and
have school wide silent reading,
Seuss's birthday and his books booklet~.
classroom bOok displays, slogan. will be read durtng the day. St.
contests, bulletin board displays,
Pat.rlck's Day will be celebrated
reports on famous Ohioans, II· \Wednesday with students wearbrary skills ·lessons, library Ing something green to school.
visits, donated books, News·
Green treats will be given to the
paper In Education activities,
students and a lucky charms
creative writing, announce·
contest will be held'. Spring Is
ments on the school newsletter,
finally here on Thursday with all
and the Meigs Junior High
activities geared to this theme.
spelling bee. The seventh and
Friday is poetry day with March
eighth grade reading classes will · being poetry month. Additional
feature not only reading bu I acUvlt(es Include dally silent
By United Press International
writing and oral work. There will reading worksheets In reading
Morning commuters today had
also be contests and prizes will be
and math and spring science
quite
a dltferen I experience than
awarded.
projects. Older students will be
24
hours
previously, with temper·
Pomeroy Elementary will be · doing reports on Dr. Seuss,
atures
at
dawn In the low and
Francis Scott Kly, Ben Franklin,
"shooting for the stars and
mld-30s,
as
opposed to single·
counting down to reading' ' with a
and St. Patrtck. Students will
digit
readings
and subzero wind·
reading space station that will also be asked to do. some spring
chills Monday morning .
feature two students reading 1 cleaning.
.
Olllo got some rather light
during every minute of the week.
Salem Center Elementary will
precipitation
overnight' and was
Downstairs classes will be dis- be celebrating countries with
to
get
more
of
the same today.
playing hanging stars with book
reading .and math. A door decoDuring
the
.night.
clouds In·
titles in the hallway. ,students rating contest !rom·each country
creased
over
the
Buckeye
State.
wjll be encouraged to bring In
will be held In addition to art
Scattered
rain,
freezing
rain
and
model rockets for the display
projects, displays, a grand pasome
snow
!ell,
mainly
In
the
case In the library. Each day
rade, a gilest speakers from
southern
counties,
but
where
It
facts will be read about the different countries. During the
fell,
precipitation
was
light.
planets of our solar system OVfr
week students wlll study games,
After some morning preclplta·
the Intercom. Other activities
clothes, languages and foods .
tlon
today, dry weather was to
They will be watching rums and
will Include a bookmark contest,
to the western counties
return
a door decorating contest, story- listening to music !ram o.ther
durtng
the
afternoon. The preclp·.
countries. Teachers and students
bOok characters dress up day,
ltatlon
was
to be mostly In the
guess the number of star candy In
will be reading books from
form
of
rain
In tile south. In the
a jar, story starter writing time, • different countries during the
north
It
was
to be mostly snow,
decorating hallways with space
week.
but rain could be mixed ln.
Highs were to range from the
30s In the northwest to near 50 In
the extreme south.
. ' Tonight
expected to bring
partly cloudy weather to O~lo.
The majority of places sl)ould be
dry, Howel(er, flurrtes may appear In the northeast and 'there
will be small chance of evening
rain In the extreme south. Low
temperatures were to be'10 to 15
In the northwest to 25 to 30 In the
extreme south.
On Wednesday the bulk of the
state Is In !or sunny weather, but
the northeast ought to be partly
clolidy with. a sU,h't chance of
flUrries. Hlths will be mostly In
the 30s.
Lookl~~&amp; ahead through Saturday, It will be fair throughout the
· period. Hlghl will be In the 30s
Thursday, 35 to 45 Friday and In
· the 40s Saturday. Lows will be 10
to 2D Thursday and Friday and 25
to 35 Saturday.
.
; A cold. front that went from
· Mkblgan to.Dllnoll on the eai'Jy
morntugweatber map II forecut
' to eroa Oblo today aDd reach the
Eut COpt by evening. A region
ot blab pri!lsure that wu from
southwest, canada to the north
Plains thiJ ·momlng will fonow
CONCD'IIN&amp; PEID'OBM&amp;NOB - Denver 0., lleld at ·Pemerq EJ...eatarr. Pldure wltb bebllld the front. By late Wednesday, the high pressure region
Rice dl-lntH tile art of plaJiac tbe
Rice are llrl -••· Mel.... H - , Ana
oo..nlaa, u aeoordlab llle m•cal lnatnment · Tbompeon, and Sarall Bo~.
should extelld from the East
Cout to the Rockies.
from Baclud, a&amp; IWIH&amp;)''• Girl loout ThiDldac
~
~

State has
light rain
early today

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•

By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Sentinel New&amp; staff
A Middleport Arts Council was
estallllshed and sleps taken to
proceed with two street Improvement projects partially funded
with State Issue 2 montes at
Monday night's meeting of Mid·
dleport VIllage Council. ·.
"Mayor Fred Hoffman was
authorized to proceed wlthsecurlng the bids !or the $35,365 Mill
Street project funded at $31,828
from Issue 2 funds and $3,537 In
local mon11y; and the Beech
Street-Cottage Drive project
funded at $2!1,080 Issue 2 funds,
and $3.120 In local funds.
The mayor reported that tlie.
Mill Street project will Include
sidewalks and curb replacement
as needed !rom South Fourth to
South Second, drainage on South
Third at Mill and the municipal
parking lot and paving as •
needed.
The Beech Street-Cottage
Drive project will consist of
pavlnganddralnagelnthatarea,
the mayor reported.
Establishment of · the non·
proflt Middleport Arts Council
was given full ~1\pport of Council
_foUowtng. a lengthy dlscusslo,n.
and the flrstreadthg was given to
an ordhiance establishing the
Arts Council as an agency of
village government.
The ordinance provides for a
board or directors of seven
members, a fund within the
village treasurer to receive and
· dispense funds; and for the
program to be a cooperative
effort between the board or
directors and the Middleport
recreation director.
Mayor Hoffman appointed to
the board of directors of the
Middleport Arts Coilncll, Sue
Baker, Jeanette Thomas, Shirley
'Quickel, Mary W,lse, Margie
Blake, Nancy Cale, and Marilyn ·
Meter. He also announced a
meeting of th~ Arts Council to be·
held Thursday at 7 p.m. at
Middleport
.
.VIllage Hall.

COMPLETELY ASSEMBLED

~

REPLACE YOUR
OLD SLIDING

·Council to
proceed with
•
street proJects

"

UNIVERSAL RUNDLE
'

.41
5.12
6.83
10.67
13.44

26 C.nto

A Muttlmec;li• Inc. New!lp8p•

.

.

Prior to gtvmg tnettrstreading
to the ordinance, both Bob
Gilmore and Dewey Horton
spoke In support of the Arts
Council and possible funding
from village funds for a specified
period of time.
Both council members descrlbed the function of the new
village group as an agency for
the teaching of dance and performance, and the Instruction of
craft forms and sales
opportunities.
. In discussing funding, the two
proposed village support on the
basts that It will take money to
get the programs started and a
facility rented and renovated. He
also said that It Is necessary to
establish some sort of track
record before the new group will
be able to apply for grants.
Council voted to suppogt the
Middleport Fire Department's
proposal for the purchase of a
aerial ladder truck for the
village.
Mayor Hoffman talked about
the proposal tor the purchase
noting that ·replacement of the
1960 engine With the aerial truck
could possibly change the village
_from a class 6 \O a class five
Insurance rating, reducing raies
to residents. He further noted
that the last fire truck purchased
will be paid off In June .
According to a letter presented
to Council from Jeff Darst, fire
chief, the cost would be between ,
$350,000 and $400,000 to be fl.
nanced over a 10 year period
using fire levy proceeds along
with lire contract funds.
It was reported that a qne 1'1111
levy will be up for renewal In
November and a two mm levy
levy will expire next year.
Renewing both of these fire
levies would mean no Increase In
taxes, aCCQrdlng to Hoffman.
Darst In his letter to Council
·pointed out that the levy reneWals would assure funding of the
purchase .or the aerial ladder
Continued on page 5

new

Supplemental appropriatio~s
l()Qms in State .·L egislature

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) State law,makers will soon be
looking at a $100 million supplemental appropriations bill,
chiefly to make up a shortfall in
state Medicaid funds :
In addition, the state Office of
Budget and Management has
told legislative leaders It will
reduce revenue estimates for
this biennium by about $50
million," primarily because corporation taxes .have not come In
at the anticipated rate .
Lee Walker, d!rector of the
OBM, said the budget "correc·
tlve bill" would be Introduced at
the same time as the capital
construction appropriation,
probably next week.
.The $600 million-plus capital
bill was to have been ready by
this week, but Walker said It may
be delayed another week.
The House Is to reconvene at 1\
a.m. Tuesday, while the Senate
will not be In session until
Wedne5l1ay.
Officials of the Ohio Depart·
ment or Human Services reported earner this month that
Ohio's Medicaid fund races a $288
mWion dettclt, or which $126
mWton Ia &amp;tate money.
Medicaid is the state's program of health care for those
Wllble to afford lt.
Director Roland Hall'llton laid
the departmeat WOUld lllltt
mWion from otber Jli'IIII'AJIII, but
S86 miUlaD muat be appropriated
by the Legjllature to cowr !be
lhortage.
In addition, the Ohio PubliC
Petender's Office aeedl $9 mn. lion tocompletethettscalperlod;
.the Ohio Department of Development needs $10 mUllan and the

uo

Department of Rehabilitation
~nd Correctlqn needs an unspecified amount.
Some of that will be shifted
from oUter programs, Walker
said, addfng that the net amount '
of the supplmental appropriation
will be about $100 million. ·
W~lker said the , projected
revenue shortage could be ellml·
nated by cutting spending.
The House h11s scheduled · a
vote for Tuesday on establishing
a "linked depos't" program to ,.
help finance the construction of
residential facilities 'tor the mentally retarded' and developmentally disabled.
Under a "linked deposit" program already In operation, the
state treasurer's office deposits
up to $100 million In banks which
·agree to make low-Interest loans.
. to farmers while the treasurer
accepts a retumo!upto4percent
below the normal market rate.
Jn other activity this week, the
Senate Ways a ad Means commit.
tee will meet Tuesday afternoon
to work on a bill perrntttlng tbe
coUecllon of state sales tax on
mall orders or television shop·
ping orders.
Sponsors believe the proposal
ciluld net $100 million for the
state.
A House subcommittee on
coUeges and universities will be
lookblg at )eglalatton Wednesday
afteraoon requlriJI&amp; the reportlag of cunpus crime tfatlstlQ to
the Ohio Board of Reaenta.
tbat nme panel allo 'WUI
conalder Senate-palle4
•.
lion creatlllg a new
loltertq near school ·
and dllrupttng school a
,

•

1'--~~-~--------------~-----------=--~~----~--~

�'

Ponwoy-Middlaport. Ohio

Eastern,.- ·southem clash for

Commentary

-IV sectional ·h8rdwood title
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•

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Sheet
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~rb

.

t!mS~ . F"'J"'Jo,..-1._-r • ....-rEed·~
~11

ROBERT L. WINGET!'
Publisher
·

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Maaager

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller
A MEMBER of The Unlied Press International, Inland Dally PrEss
Association and the American Newspaper Publls~s Asscclatlon.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should he less than 300
words long: All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
name. address and telephone number. No unsigned.letters wlll be pub·
li.o;hed. Letters should be In good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

~ee1ningly

·Keating's life
WASHINGTON - Charles
Keating might have' been the
central figure In tl)e savings and
-loan scandal even If his pet thrift,
Lincoln Savings ,a nd Loan,
wasn't shapltlg up to be the most •
costly bailout of the lot.
By the force of personality
alone , Keating would have
bubbled to the top of this mess.
At the core, Keating is a mass
of contradictiOns -a philanthropist who gave money to Mother
Teresa and politlcans and an
arch -conservative who supported the campaigns of liberal
lawmakers.
·

When he was r~ally tlush,
Keating lavished money on charIties. Yet when his empire
collapsed, It wiped- out the
retirement fund of the Sisters of
Charity,· an order on nuns In
ancilinatl. ·
There was no dichotomy about
Keating the financier. He liked
things on the wild side. He
plunged Lincoln .Into high-risk
speculation, julik bonds and I!JY
-real estate. He bought casino
stocks and Invested money In
uncertain takeover battles.
When federal thrift regulators

Hizzoner's down
but not out
By LEON DANIEL
UPI Chief Correspondent
WASHINGTON- Down but not out, Mayor Marlon Barry could use
a long count.
Indicted on felony charges after his arrest In an FBI dope sting,
Barry publicly admitted alcoholism and haled up In a rehabilitation
center. Now a grand jury Investigation reportedly has turned to
allegatiops of corruption within the city's cpntractlng process.
But, before counting the mayor out, consider the polltlcal
perspicacity of the late James Michael Curley, the Boston pol who
spent six months of his mayoralty behind bars for mall fraud.
The S€lf-styled "Mayor of the Poor" · dominated Boston politics
throughout the first half of the 20th century by · whipping up
anti-Brahmin sentiment.
Unable to win a seat in the Massachusetts delegation to the 1932
Democratic convention, his honor contrived - by means he never
,
explained - his election as a delegate from Puerto Rico.
His success at such shenanigans had less to do with Curley's Irish
luck than will! his considerable_ charm and poUt! cal acumen.
Barry, 53, one of the more charismatic black leaders In the 1960s
struggle for civil rights, has been polishing his own political skills and
building a power base for a dozen years as mayor.
Should he resume the re-election campaign he suspended after his
Jan . 18 arrest; polls disclose he might do surprisingly well. ·
.
Barry probably could count on a hard-core 25 percent or so of the
· · Democratic vote, placing him ahead of four announced candidates In
the September Democratic primary, which In the past'has been
tantamount to election.
Meantime, enthusiasm for the Rev. Jesse Jackson to enter the
mayoral primary appears to be waning, and the 1988 presidential
asjiirant Insists he won't run If Barry does.
A Washington Post survey Indicated that if Barry were not in the
race, Jackson would get only one of four Democratic votes and hold a
slight lead over his nearest rivals.
Despite his grave personal, leg;~! and political problems, Barry
evidently remains the strongest force Iii the mayoral campaign. That
Is particularly surprising because he has been out of the city for more ·
than a month for alcoholism treatment.
.,
.
But, although he leads a crbwded field of potential Democratic
candidates, including Jackson, 52 percent of those Interviewed In the
Post survey said Barry should resign and 71 percent said he shou.ld
not run for re-election.
.
..
•
This suggests that even If he won the primary, Barry mlghtfalter In
the general election. ·The Post poll showed former pollee chief
Maurice TUrner, expected to be the Republican nominee, leading
Barry by 45 percent to 37 percent.
The survey hinted at increasing racial polarization In the nation's
capital, which Is 70 percent black. Nearly a third of the blacks
surveyed -but only 2 percent of the whites- said Barry shoUld run
for re-election.
.
Prosecutors claim to have the mayor on videotape smoking c~ack
he bought from a former lover in a hotel room- alleged actions which
resulted only In a misdemeanor cocaine-possession charge.
Und~r district law, however, it is conviction on felony cl!arges of
lying to a federal grand jury that could send Barry to jail and bar him '
from office.
If that happens, the beleaguered Barry, unlike Boss Curley, w.ho
Inspired Edwin O'Conn9r's novei"The Last Hurrah," maynotlegally
serve as mayor while also doing bard time In jaiL

Letters to the editor
F~ture produdiv~
Dear Editor:
February ll-17 was Vocational
Education Week In Ohio. The
Business and Office Education
students at Meigs High School
were placed in area ofllces for a
!leld experience during this
week. When we began to contact
businesses in the MiddleportPomeroy area, we were pleased
with the response we received
from them. They were extremely
cooperative about participating
In this school and community
partnership.
. · ·
. Sometimes during our hectic
schedules and busy lifestyles we
tend to lose sight of our youth.
This endeavor has shown me as
an Instructor and citizen of this
community, we do have area
businesses and community leaders who are interested In the
future of Meigs County. The :

clerical workers
young people of this county are
our greatest natural resource
and we wish to thank the
following businesses for helping
us to train them to become
productive clerical workers:
Overbrook Care Center; Veteran's Memorial Hospital; Meigs
County· Extension Agency; Serilor Citizen' s&lt;:enter; Associated
· Fabricators; Inc.; H &amp; R Block;
Jim Cobb Chevrolet; Carleton
School; Farmer's Bank;
Chamber of Commerce Office;
Porter, Little, Sheets &amp; Lentes;
Davls-Qulckel .Insurance; Tiny
Tech Day Care Center and Crow
&amp; Crow Attorneys.
·
Sue McGuire,
· Vocational Computer AccountIng Instructor
Becky Cotterill,
Vocational Administrative Se. cretarla!Instructor

MHS band best in years .
In the Feb. 14 Sentinel, Dick monies In this trip at all.
Yes, the board did financially
Vaughan, school board member
made a statement. The state- come through with the uniform
ment was the Meigs High School purchase money. The uniforms
band "has not been up front on will be used many years and stay
the money deal when the uni- property of the school, so why
forms were pure based" !f the shouldn't the board purcha.e
band has money to make a trip to them. The band does represent
. Orlando, Fla.
our school.
MHS band IS the best It bas
Here are the facts, Mr.
vaughan. Money for the buses been In years. Thanks to the hard
and Insurance hal been raised In work of Toney [)tqeu, director,
the laat several months by the stuclentll, parenll and supporhavlna sports carda shows, terl. They look and IIOWid great.
caDdy sales. and other .fund ' The kldl are proud and It IIIOWI.
ra*l. Each student will be Tbey have this chance to enjoy
paytag $166 for the trip, boweyer, thiS trip to Florlda _and they have
IIley bave In the past week had a
earned It!
Keep up the great work MHS
cbace to .ell Items aDd thpl
Jll'll1lt wlll&amp;O to each student tor band aDd have a great time.
Mary Ann Myers
wbat be or llle .ells. The tehool
Langsville.
and the tehool board have no

-.;

a contradiction

Jack Anderson and Dale Van Atta
responded by trying to rein him all chosen for their cbees1ul '
In, Keating went on the attack, attitudes and wholelome appear- ·
First, he tried to remove the chief ances. Keating sat atop a $5 :
federal regulator, Ed Gra:y, by billion ·corporation, yet found .
offering him a j!)b. Wilen Gray tlme tq personally Interview
refused, Keating usembied an each secretary.
Keating loves money. As a·
army of lobbyists and lawyers to
subvert Gray's tough regulatory young lawyer, he collected Ills ,
first fee of $100 In dollar bills, '
Initiatives.
Keating ran his company ac· · took the money home and threW :
cording to his peculiar rules and It jubllsntly into the air. By the
tastes . His corporate headquar- time Lincoln was closed by
·ters In Phoenix was staffed with federal regui&amp;tors, Keating WI!S
ImpeCcably dressed seeretarles,
making too much money to lou. ·
· Untn recenlly, his annuallalary ·
was $3.2 mWion.
·
He owna a walled-off home In
suburban Phoenix and another In
the Bahamas. Three jets ·were
ft::==:=~::::=::~iii once
at his beck and call. He.
regularly lo!lned his hellcepter to
Mother Teresa, to whOm he has
donated more than $1 million. ,
U there Is one word that
describes Keating, bls coi·Jeagues.say,lt Is "driven."
· From small beglnningl In a
Clnclmuitlli!W firm, hl!(c!lmbed·
to the top of a corporate emplte
that at one time · Included a
savlllgS and loan, . lniurance
companies, a hotel group arid
major real estate holdings In at
least Uve states.
But don't get sentimental
about this rags-to-riches story,
Keating, and other high-tlylng
'
thrift owners like blm, were able
to build a fortune using the
federally Insured deposits of the ,
little ,people. His Investments
may have been high risk, but he
knew all along that the taxpayers
would be there -to pick up the
pieces lr he failed.
The bill for that rescue is now
likely to reach $2.5 billion. That
.L.~~::.Ii.J makes Keating a little bit financial whiz kid and a lot recki!!SS.

BenZene bubbles out of·gas tanks ·
WASHINGTON (NEA)- The
,bottlers of Perrier mineral water
obviously are disturbed about
trace amounts of benzene In their
product The marketers of Exxon
gasoline apparently have no such
concern.
Perrier, as everybody presumably knows by now, recently
voluntarily recalled all -unsold
stocks of Its sparkling water In
the United States and Canada
after North Carolina health officials found relatiVely low levels
of benzene in 13 bottles . .
AlthOugh the contamination
posed what a Food and Drug
Administration spokesman described as only "a negligible
risk," Perrier agreed to accept
the return of 72 million bottles of
Its product at a potential cost to
the company of $40 million.
Exxon- alongwlthmostofthe
country's other hiadlng oil companies- has a far more cavalier
attitude toward the toxic and
carcinogenic benzene In Its gasoline, even though the petroleum
Industry has long been aware of
the health hazards involved.
Ingestion of benzene by drink-

.

·

·

Robert Walters

•

} ·

,

Beri Wattenberg

t t
arc?· Ask a_h_u_n_d_r-ed--A-m-e-_r...lc_a_II_S__w_a_s_l_n_d_ec_lln;_e_!_)_Th_e_So"'":'v-le-t
Because Americans want . radc sdean locommemnt tak'es sea long whether they want to be number
empire Is unilaterally engaged In
an
ve
P
Wh ?
number
one,
we
America
to
be
•
,
·
time and we don't know the one, and 90 will say ~es.
Y·
a gal ng-ou t-of· b usIn ess sa1e. So
wont, and we shouldn t, m~ke future. We have other military Because we peddle the American
we can all agree to cut back our
big quick cuts .In the defense
bill I
Idea Americans today want to
military. But by how much? How
budget
responsl 1 es.
· th
ld kinde tier • fast? We can do It In a spasm,
Wh • d A
1
d
h
·Then there Is that other reason
offer e wor a
er. g n
If We play our cards right, wewlli optional, manifest destlny. Whed
Increasing chances that there •
their atetamowlnmsearfcoo.anstbatt"gawm:~
1 pay willbeaworldwithnoleader.Or, .
·
·
be bl 10
f n r
you're number one, peope
They raise a forefinger and yell,
a e
wave our ore nge
..
by cutting our military
. only
"W '
be
'"
•
and say we're number one more attention. •
.
.
~ rel:um -/ one. 1945 t th
militarily and partly because of
We bave an opportunity now to slowly and cautiously, we can
-~8 eoru:r le~~~s told ~ tha~ that. we• probably be first In . be first- and on thecheaAmp. (Just make -If more likely that we·wlll
the
t
ful everything else too
when they were saying
er1ca be what we want to be ~ number
we were
mos power
B 1 IS 11 ood t' be
be
one.
military · force - number one
u
g
o
num r
first In the world- and
loved one? It COlt~ mopey, and It can
to hear it. Then, Soviet military pet;iodlcally get ,¥011 Into trouble.
0~~&gt; balance It s fine. Throughpower grew and poUtlcans began
saying America was "Second to out history, nations that had a
none." J'ly 1980 hard-liners were ch"!'cl\ at It, trted for lt. When
saying· what we did not like to you re number one other folks
heat, that we were "second," or, don't usuallY mess with you In a
In a var iant, "unless we rebuilt serious way.
militarily we would become
Since . colonial times Amerlsecond." Hmm. First. Second to cans have wanted. to be first.
none. Second.
John Winthrop said America
In the 1980s America rebuilt- would be "acltyuponahlll ... the
· and as a partial result, some eyes of all people are upon us."
\
argue the Soviets began self· Lat!lr, Andrew Jackson said
des ~ting.
' '
· America Is "a country manlfNow we mustdecldewhat to do estly called by the almlehty to a
. aboutdefenae. Thedoveshavean destiny .... " It got a little out of
answer: (still in footballese) cut hand; James Gordon Bennett
It back, cut It back, way back ,... wrote that "It Is our manifest
and reap abig peace dividend; At destiny to lead and rule all other
last, the dove cue makes 1010e nations." President McKinley
aenae.1t Ia, after al~ rooted 1n !hit Uled "manifest deltbly" to jusancient hawk precept: ''The tlfy nputnl Hawaii. Reagan
American military budJelilllet qubllll Winthrop.
- In Tbe Kremlin." With the . Wbatdoyou,dowltblt,lfyou're
Sovleta weaker, aay the dovel. numlllr oae? Invade tbe world?
(now), we can cut big and fut
Clone the globe Amerlcan·atyle?
Wily not? How could a hawk
Of coune not. If you bave to _
(like your autbbrJ oppo1e auch uk tile question. you don't
loglc9 'lbere are 10101 rational ullderatand lt. But, If we're
re~DI. And there IS another lueky,· we'll find out wbat being
reuon, mystk!al. yet known to number oae Ia for. Tbe Jlldt!oaimoet all.
Chrlitlan God, · remember, 18 ·a
Rational reuons: Big SOviet , God who reveals ~~ as
defen.e cuts haven't bappelled hlatory untoldl. 'lbat 1 one rea·
yet. Let'• walt and - · It' I bard 1011 the Wett
~waya been
to cut budJels quickly - con- ,oriented to the future.

mld 605

11

it

we

Berry's World ·
.

'

,w

~~

•

EHS .championship season tn revtew

lng bottled water obviously Is far
chemical agent suc!J as benzene
more serious than Inhalation of
that can ind~ce genetic damage (which can damage .the eyes,
the same compound through . or cancer.
liver, kidneys and other organs of
exposure to gasoline fumes- but
"It Is clear !bat gasoline - in . unborn children) and benzene.
unnecessary risks are Involved
Moreover, -they' launched an
all phases.of production, use and
In both Instances.
Irrational "octane race" to sell
dlsposa~ - Is a major source of
In a document with , limited
environmental and occupational more high-octane gasoline 'to
dis trlbu tlon, Chevron provides
carcinogens and preventable consumers whose vehicles are
this warning about the problems
unlikely to benefit from ·· it.
cancers."
Although benzene Is a ·natural Although those premium grades
associated with benzene In Its
gasoline:
component of crude oil, it can be cost only about 5 cents per gallon
"Repeated or prolonged brearemoved during refining. Its more to produce than regular
thing of benzene vapors has been
expanded use In gasoline dates fuel, their price attbe pump often
associated with the deve!Qpment
back to enactment of the Clean Is 15 to 20 cents per gallon higher.
of chromosomal damage In
A recent report Issued by
Air Act of 1970, the federal law
experimental animals and varthat Indirectly requ!J:ed oil com- Citizen Action, a national consuIous blood diseases In humans
panies to eliminate lead as a mer group, ranked gasoline
ranging from aplastic anemia
marketers based on their cata- ·
gasoline additive.
and leukemia (a form of cancer) ,
The principal purpose of lead lytle reforming and cracking
All .o( these diseases can be
was to reduce engine "knocking" capacity to produce aromatic
fatal."
.
by increasing octane levels. A hydrocarbons. Exxon headed the
-Dr. Samuel S. Epstein, a
variety of substitutes were avail- list ofthe "Toxic Ten," followed '
professor of occupational and
able, Including oxygenates by Chevron, Amoco, Shell, Mobil
environmental medicine at the
known as MTBE and ETBE that and other major oil companies
University of Illinois, offers an
raise octane ratings but do not that are leading manufacturers
even more disturbing analysis:
pose a threat to human health.
of hydrocarbonS.
"lt Is the overwhelming conAdded that report: "AmeriBut the oil companieS Instead
sensus or the Independent sclen·
selected· aromatlce hydrocar- cans are dyllig and will die from
title community that there Is no
bons that could be produced at cancers caused_by !!xposlire to •
way of setting safe exposure
their own refineries, including benzene ... that can be removed
levels or tolerances to any
toluene (which can cause mula· "from or substantially reduced In
·
tlons In living cells), xylene gasoline."

Mak• ·.Anl • N
mg
e~~! ~

that first game; thatalong with a often called upon to dog opposlnc
By SCOTT WOLFJ!:
ballhandlers with their defensive
The script bas been writ ten, gutsy never-say-die attitude.
Eastern' s four seniOrs have skU IS.
the stage has been set; both
Michael Kincaid had a good
teams stand against t~ach other been Integral In their quest for
game
against KC In the opening
SIJ(:cess
as
all
avera&amp;ed
near
at 1-1. Who will deliver the
double
figures;
Savoy
11.4
points
fOUnd
of the tourney, while
knock-out punch In the rubber
_game,
Fitch
11.1;
Frost
11.4;
per
Jayson
Codner Is a skilled
match In the ''Battle of Meigs
and
Caldwell
7
.9.
Fr01t
IS
the
6-6
sophomore Michael
shooter.
County"?
134
and
leading
rebounder
with
Russell
bas
added
needed depth
];)astern .fans are gulping up
_.
every precious glimmer of glory has slam-durikecl . at least four in the post.
and are at the top of tire this season with Ills slender, l;)u t · Southern Is perhaps better
.balanced teamwise as all . 12
mountain's peak. Eastern Local high-leaping 6-6 frame.
Durst averages 8.3 per game, players have scored on several
fans have hopped on the baiidwagon and have been the ever- -While Time Bissell is dangerous occasions in games this season,
Important 'sixth-man' most of from anywhere with his 5.2 point while Eastern Is perhaps more
average. Mark Murphy Is the balanced in Its top 8 players ..
this season.
At any rate Wednesdays game
Championship hopes have re' defensive wizard, while Jason
Hager,
Mike
Wheeler,
Chris
should
be quite a contest. Game
vlved the contingent of some-_
Adams
and
Matt
Fin
law
provide
time
Is
7: 30 with the winner
what doubting Southern fans ,
to the District Tournathe
depth.
advancing
and has reneWI!d ~al_th In the
Southern
Sr.
Brad
Maynard
ment
to
face
the Valley -sectional
crll$,l.y, faithful diehards. Yes,
wlnner(Portsmouth·
Notre Dame
has
been
a
solid
anchor
all
season
. the .'Front roo,w' Is still Intact and
or
New
Boston)
at
Ohio
Universilong
,
f
rom
the
paint
for
SHS.
Racine-Southern folks are
ty's
Convocation
Center.
Maynard
Is
~
quality
rebounder
excited.
Tournament fever has hit in with an· average of 8 per game,
epidemic proportions in both and has a14.5 point average.
The Daily Sentinel
ends .!)! Meigs County", and the Andy Baer bas basically been the
SHS bread-and-butter man with
'spirit' is alive aild well.
(USPS Ufi.HI)
Eastern has already won the consistent double-digit scoring,
ll Dlvllloa of MuUimecllo, Inc.
major battle, ·ari undisputed bulls more Important with his
Caldweil. Standing - Tim Bissell, Chris Adams,
1989-90 SVAC CAGE . CHAMPIONS. - Tile
Published every arterflOOO, Moaday
ballhandllng and abillty to get
SVAC basketball championship;
Mark Murphy, Jeff Durst, Jason Hager, and
Easlern Eagles of Coach Charles Riley claimed
thrOJgh Frida~, 111 Court St .. Po·
other
players
Involved
In
the
the
something Southern has enjoyed
Manager Sc91t Baker. Back· - Mike Wheeler,
meroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valli!)' Pubthe Southern Valley Athletic Conference baakel·
·
lishing Company!Multimedia, Inc.,
offense.
tor
some
time,
but
It
wasn't
to
be
RAndy
Moore,
and
Malt
Flalaw.
Froah
Chad
ball champlonahlp this season, the acbool'a flnt
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 1192-2156. SeTodd
Grindstaff
Is
an
excellent
In 1989-90. Eastern was elite !nits
Savoy al!IO has been on the varsity this season.
cond ~lass poeta1e paid a1 Pomeroy,
undisputed title In 19 yetirs. (Eutem wu
driver, · while cousin Chris
field.
Easlern
plays
Southern
Ia
tbe
Sectional
TournaOhio.
trl-champlons In 1973 with Hannan Trace aad
Murphy is a deadly three-point
The
tournament
is
always
all
ment
flnala
In
DiviSion
IV
Wednesday
at
7:
30
at
Symmes Valley). Pictured are members of this
Member: United Preu lntematlonal,
out war. There is only one man and defensive standout .
Melp High School. (Shaun Savoy photo)
Inland Dally Press Aucdat lon ~lind the
year's championship team, sealed 1-r, sealors
Senior Brent Shuler always
Ohio Newspaper Au
. oclatJon. Natlonll
winner. One loss and you're
Mlk~ Frost, Shaun Savoy, Scott Filch, Kenny
Advertlllng Represeatallve, Branham
history. Both clubs know this well seems to come th{ough wl th the
Newspaper Sall!l, 733 Thlrd Avenue,
· big bucket and his 6 points per
·and both are ready .
New York. New York 10017.
Eastern won the first game of game, but is among -league
POSTMASTER: Send addrell changes
the two at Southern 92-87 after · leaders in rebounding. Shuler
to The Dolly Sentinel, Ul O&gt;urt St.,
trailing as. much as 18 points in compliments Maynard nicely on
Pomeroy, Ohio «17!!1.
Jar season play with an_11-7 mark game, although not hitt!Qgfor the
the blocks, along with junior
By F . GOLDEN WING .
the third quarter, then SHS went
SU118CBJPriON RATEII
high
percentage
!IS
did
his
Sr
.
.
·
overall,
losing
In
the
first
game
of
Jeremy
Rose. Rose's quick
E11gle correspondent
to Eastern 'and claimed a 71-62
· a,. Carrier or Melw Bolrie
hands and quick release on (lis
the Class A tournament to Star counterparts. Durst, however,
One Week ....... ................... .........$1.10
BASHAN - The 1989-90 Divtriumph.
One Month ............. .. .... .............. $6.10
Washington-Union
Furnace·,
·
was
the
main
spark
when
EHS
tall
frame , make him a fogce to
ision IV reg)liar season . is now
Southern must be patient as it
One Year ... ... .... ..... ...... .. ... ,...... m.ao
slumped.
avPraglng
B-3
points
since consolidated, 75-68.
.
history , including action in the
was in Its win at Eastern in order be reckoned with Inside.
SINGLE COPY
Again becoming a factor in
In 1973 Symmes ended at 10-8 per game and 1.5 rebounds (31 in
Southern Valley Athletic Conferto be successful. Although SouthPB.ICE
Daily ......................... , ..... .... 2!i Cents
and Hannan Trace 16-2. The all) as a sophomore.
ence, which this year for the first
ern' s trademark has always been Southern's success is Chad TayTim Bissell, ·another sopho- an upbeat game plan, fast - lor, who missed a big portion of
league title of Coach Paul _Diltime in 19 years was captured
Subsrrlbers not deslrlng t opay the car·
rter may remit hi advance direct to
lon's (now principal) Wildcats more, tallied 104 points and 1.4 breaklngfuU court press style, the season with a broken ankle.'
outright by the Eastern Eagles of
The DaUy Sentinel on a 3, 6 or 12 month
Taylor
missed
the
first
EHS.SHS
Coach Char)es Riley.
· was the first league title of any rebounds per game, while defenthe same holds true for this
baa II. Credit wUI be giYen carrier each
kind for the Gallia County schooL. sive standout and Mr. hustle
contest, but played a key role In
Eastern ended the season with
week.
'
year's Eagle team . .
the
second.
Taylor
is
close
to
100
66
overall
Mark
Murphy,
netted
Bill
Phillips
was
the
Coach
of
a 15'5 overall mark and 13-1 mark
· Eastern is tough on the break
No subscriptions by mall permitted In
percent now and could be the
points and 1.2 caroms per game.
areas where home carrier aervlce 1s
in the SVAC. Arch rival Southern the Eagles in 1973.
and will take the lay -up if any
available. •
man to watch with his fine
Junior Randy Moore, a natural
Returning " Back to the Fuwas runner-up with a 12-2 league
way possible; also being a
' '
inside
shooter
with
a
soft
touch,
shooting
abiUty.
.
ture", this year ' s Easterp Eagle ·
mark, 12-8 overall.
.
master on the back door, baseMall8ulloc.....lo•
SeniOr
Kevin
Burgess;
a
spot
......
Melp
CoontJ
team combined an upbeat offen- tallied 83 points and 1.4 rebounds
Some confusion had deve.loped
line drive In Its halfc 0urt game.
13 Weeks .. ..... .. .. .. .................... , $19.20
sive game with an aggressive . per game, twice leading the
over when an Eastern team,had
Although Southern has a potent starter during the year, Is super
2ti Weeks ............................. .... . $37.96
quick
on
defense
and
key
asset in
actually won the SV AC ·u tle in defensive style, winning with Eagles in rebounds in crucial
52 Weeks ......................... .... ..... 174.36 · .. '
outside attack In Andy Baer,
O.lslde Ml!lp CouaiJ
the halfcourt game plan as is
much consistency and balance as games to give EHS a dual-threat
Todd Grindstaff, Chad Taylor,
basketball-last. As stated earlier,
13
Weeks ..... .............. ..... .... ...... S'1Jl.80
in _the post. Moore also hit double
Eastern claimed the title out- the following statistics suggest.
and Chris Murphy, the Torna- junior John Hoback, who had a
26 Weeks ..... .......... :.... ... J ......... $40.30
great game at Oak Hill offen52 Weeks ..... ................ ............. $75.40 • ·
Leading the way for the Eagles figures in bench roles .three
right for the third year in a row In
does are better suited when these
sively. Hoback and Burgess ar~
with 228 polnts and an 11.4 point times .
1969-1970, and in last in 1971. EHS
players are in motion and can
Mike
Wheeler
filled
in
the
gap
6-6
postman
overall
average
was
held claim to the title in 1968
penetrate. This has In the past
Mike Frost: The "Snowman" as for Eastern as swing guard,
when it shared the throne in a
opened the blocks for Southern
three w,a y tie with Kyger Creek in Frosty, possessed nerves of while Ma1t Finlaw , after splitting
mainstays Brad Maynard, Brent
and North Gallla to run the strl~g steal with a mild manner to time with the JV's gave EHS
Shuler, and Jeremy Rose.
anchor a solid inside attack for another shooter on the wing and
!o' ff&gt;,ur· y~ars st(aight.
'
Eastern also has a torrid
depth Jnside. Chris Adams and
.
Those· were 'the glory 'days of . EHS. .
outside shooting _assault in the
former Eastern Coach Dennis
Frost collected 134 overall Jason Hager, two equally tough
arsenal of Shaun Savoy, Jeff
Our selection is not the
rebOunds on the year for an competitors completed the balEiching~r and curre11t Southern
Durst, Kenny Caldwell, and Scott
largest, but do yourself a
megtor Howle Caldwell, whose
impressive 7.4 caroms per game. ~nced attack, working equally
Filch. That quartet Is capable of
favor.... STOP In and see
team ironically will face Eastern
Next Shaun Savoy collected 227 well from the elbow or the Inside
opening up any ballgame quickly
the
nicest,
most
in the Sl'ctlonal ChampiOnships points in addition to leading the for Coach Riley's troops.
and also opens the inside for
As a team Eas!Prn hit 49.7
. Wednesday night at 7: 30. ·
teain in three point shots. Savoy
thoroughly conditioned
Randy Moore, Mike Frost, and
· Eastern, however, last staked averaged 11.4 points per game as percent on 481 or 967 attempts .
Mark Murphy.
cars at the best prices in
claim 6n a share of the title in did Frost, while collecting 93 The Eagles rallied 1450 points to
Although Eastern can win with
the area. THE REASON!
opponents 1254. an average of
1973, when It upset league leading rebounds. a 5.3 average.
its Inside-outside halfcourt game
OUR
HOURS
We want to be the only
Symmes Valley at home 69-66 In
SCott Fitch was right in the 72.5 to 62.7.
plan, as mentioned earlier its is
E astern's strong suit was its
thick of lhe offense with 221
the last game of the season,
best when on the run in Its
car dealer you'll ever
throwing , the league lnt'? 'a · points and a iu point average second and fourth quarters.
fulicourt transition game.
need'.
three-way tie between Eastern,
and 102 rebounds for .5. 7 ~r where II would put the game
Foul trouble and defensive
Symmes Valley, and Hannan
game. He hit 96 of 168 field goals away with 383 and 394 points
have been crucial in both of the
for 57.1 percent. second only to respectively , an average of 19.7
Trace.
,.
previous two games, as 99 free
In that memoraqle game, Alan
Frost who -hit 96 of 160 for 60 . and 19.2 points per frame. EHS
throws were shot in the first
Duvall put Eastern on top 67-66
percent. -Savoy hit nearly ·half of averaged 15,3 and 18.41n the first
game alone. What looked' to be
with : 29 _seconds left by hitting
his attempts with an 88 of 198 and third quarters respectively.
Eastern's demise (foul trouble).
Eastern next plays Wednesday
tally for 49.4 percent.
the first of a bonus. That ca,me
Proct LX Coupe I YIO'IIallc ri. M1FM .
proved to aid them in victory in
5
a1· V6 eau1POeO wa~ S 1 2 . 99~
Rounding out the balanced night against Southern at 7:30
after Jene(cg) Myers had knot ted the sdore at 66-66 for
attack was a 158 point effort by p.m. in the Division IV Sectional
LeM1ns
Kenny Caldwell, . the Eastern Chalflplonship game at Meigs
was -sa.A95
Symmes.
On the ensuing rebound , Randy
southpaw, who averaged 7.9 High School.
5
Ironically, the last time EastBoring of EHS fame grabbed the
points per game and 2.7 rebOunds
'' 8 ~~~ ;~,"~'"''
ern went to the District was in
(49 in all) .
carom and drove it in for a lay-up
GL 10. 4 door
5
1985, when Coach Dennis Eichin- .
and
CaldSavoy,
Fitch,
Frost,
with :20 seconds \eft and EHS
was $8 ,795
well are all seniors, who not only · ger's Eagles defeated then Coach
held on for the 69-66 win.
929, 2 ClOOr
(All games)
5
provided 'leadership by example. Car 1 Wolfe's Tornadoes for the
In that game Duvall tallied a
Was $12.995
PF
PA
TEAM
W
L
game-high 23 points, steve Dill but kept Eastern sharp mentally title. Eastern later bOwed to
AcCora. 4 door
Eastern ...... .... 15 5 1497 1406
5
had 16, Randy Boring 15, Tim
and "keyed-up" for ali of its eventual District Champion
Was $10.600
North
Gallia
...
13
7
1454
1302
Franklin Furnace Green.
Spencer 13, and John Sheets 2.
games.
Southern ..... .... 13 8 1491 1276
626. 4 door
5
Jeff Durst scored 166 points per
Thai i'!!ar Eastern enlied reguwas S8.995
Hannan Trace 11 10 1279 1240
Southwestern .. 8 12 1446 1421
Sentra
5
• was SA.995
f-S-Va!ley ....... 8 13 1232 1297
f-Oak Hill ....... 5 17 1279 1557
s,.,
•. 5 ..... ai· .
5
A.MIFM. Was 57.495
f-Kyg.e r Creek. 1 20 1161 1622

SVAC standings

1990 Ford
1989 Pontiac
1988 Chrysler
1988 Subaru
1988 Mazda
1988 Honda
1987 Mazda
1987 Nissan
1987 Pontl'ac·
.1987 Tempo
1986 ·camaro
1986 Chevy 5·1 0

12,500
$7,995
10,500
7,900
11,600
10,300
8,295
4,495
6,495
5 4,995
rs,795
53,695

• doo r. automat ic. au .

f-flnished season
Saturday's final
At Rock Hill H.S. - Chesapeake 78, Oak Hill 42
TuesdQ'a toumeya
AI Unlv . of Rio Grande Hannan Trace vs. North Gallia,
6: 30 p.m.; Franklin Furnace
Green vs. Patriot Southwestern,
8 p.m . .

AM IFM. Was $5.495
T-Tops

Was S7.495

s~~~·~.:~"

•6,795
5 7,995
5 2,195

lroc Z·2B

~··~ntest

Was 18.495

At Meigs H.S. - Reedsville
Eastern vs. Racine Southern,
7:30p.m.

Brown . 2 door

was $2 .4~
·5

1

Chevy
Escort Wago n. grar

1984 Ford
1983 Alliance w:. ·~~~
1987 Honda
198•~ .Nl111n 4X4 '""''· •M?•• w"" 915
Was S2.995

CRK Sf. 5 sf)ftd. AMIFII.
~try ntet. Wat 17,trl0

2,600
51,600
7,400
5
•

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· "THE HAPPY HONDA PEOPLE"
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COINCli!:N'lrRA,TJ()N -: Willi Dllaolll froatmu
Marcua Uberty ( 10) oa hill hlp, Ohio State'l Perry
. Carter (32) couceatratea oli the ballket while
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-·

GENE CADDES
. UPI Sporta Writer ..
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)
Freshman 'Jim Jackson ·had .no
·qu,lms ·about taking over when ·
Ohio State got down Monday
night.
JackSon hlt 12 of 16 shots from
the · floor and· finished with 28
po!n'ts.Monday night, rallying the
Buckeyes. to an 11&amp;-80 Big Ten
victory over No. 17 Ollnols.
"Their Inside people hurt us
and, of course, Jackson was the
kfller:'' llllnols coach Lou Hen·
son said. "He hit 15 of19 shots, He
was just unbelievable. He made
the shots they had to have."
Jackson, who also hit all three
ot his · free throws, scored 16
points In the second half to rally
Ohio State from a 56-50 deficit.
· "Ithoughtltwas llmeformeto
takeover, penetrate and take my
shots," said Jackson, averaging
16.9 points per game on the
season but 19.4 points In Big Ten
'
play. · ·
The Buckeyes, 14-11 and 8-7 In
the ·Blg Ten, had seen a 19·polnt
first balf lead vanish as they
were outscored 23·2 dunng a
seven-minute stretch late In the
first half and early In the seeond.
But five consecutive points by
Jackson, followed by a three.. pointer by Alex Davis -his only
polllls of the game - · put Ohio
State In front to stay 58-56 with

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19-7 and 9-7 In the Big Ten.
10: 30 to play.
"We got off to bad start bUt
' 'It's getting to be a common
after
that. we played pre I ty good
. thing for Jackson to take·charge
basketball,"
Henson said. "I
during the end oflhe game and he
thought
Ohio
State
did a great job
took over during that stretch,"
with
the
pre5s.
This
Is the· first
Ohio State coach Randy Ayers
time this year we 'd idn't handle
sal d.
"Jackson has been strong for the press well."
In the only other game Monday
lis all year, Because of the
tton,~' O'Connor sal~ .
,~.
.Importance of this'game, II had to night featuring a Top 20 team,
Previously, the union released
be one of his most Impressive No. 3 Nevada-Las Vegas was
Cal-Santa
Barbara
figures
supporting Its view ot,
.
upended
by
performances. I thought Jackson
arbitration.
That, pl)ls the race·
7HO.
was tbe difference down the
union
officials
and players are
In
other
games,
St.
John's
stretch,"
.
usually
available
to coml'l}ent,
nipped
Pittsburgh
76.75
and
Ohio State led 39-22 after M~rk
had
produced
a
public
relations"
Southern
Illlnots
.
w
rapjled
up
the
Baker's basket with 4:07 left In
advantage
for
the
Players'
Missouri
Valley
Conference
·title
the first half. But an .11·0 run
Association.
..
~
pulled the Fighting llllnl within with an 81-'7 trlu'm ph over
"We have sincerely put tor·•
41-33 and, after a basket by Ohio Wichita State.
ward our best effort to· resolve
At Santa Barbara; Calif., Car·
State's Treg Lee, Illinois scored
thiS contract over the weekend, -:the final six points .of the half, rick DeHart scored 24 pohits to
O'Connor
said. "We h~ye no ·
help
Cal-Santa
Barbara
snap
a
trimming the margin to 43·39 .
10-game Nevada-Las Vegas win·
Interest In prolonging the locko~t
any further than Is necessary.'
Perry Carter also had a big nlng streak. Eric McArthur
Selig, head. of the . .Player
second halt for Ohio State. He added 15' points and 20 rebounds
Relations Committee', ·defendeil
scored 14 of bls 18 points· after for the Gauchos. Greg Anthony
the .revenue participation prop;
Intermission and also led both led UNLV with 18 &amp;iotnts, but no
teams with 13 rebounds.
osal and other ma.i lagement
other Rebel scored more than 12.
positions.
·
,,
Kendall Gill led llllnols with 23 The 70 points was UNLV's
· "I will predict to.youtod,ay thai ·
points, but16of those call)e In the third-lowest output of the season.
tlils type of plan;" Selig s'a14, ·
At Plttsb11rgh, . BOO Harvey
first half. When Illinois was
trying to keep pace down .the dribbled the length of the court
"every major sport In America
will have In the mid 1990s. . " .,
stretch, It was Stephen Bardo and sank a. 10-foot jumper wtth
who kept the Fighting llllnl three seconds left to lift St.
"There Is nobody who · lovel ,
' John's. Harvey's shot was his
within striking distance.
this. game and Is more ot a ·fi\P
Bardo finished with 17 points, . third game-winner of the season:
than I am," he said. "And so 1
11 of those coming In the final After a timeout, Pitt's Darrelle
undersland how ,that fan ·In .
5:18orthegame, Marcusi,lberty Porter passed the length of tlie
Chandler, Ariz.,. feets. On tll'e
.also scored 17 points for Illinois, court to Jason Matthews. who
other hand, It's also clear that wj
took the ballln time to get off a
have responslbllltles. And' fQt
S~rts
10-foot jumper that rolled around
this game to go forward In an
efficient, and In a com]letitlve
Boxing
'
the Los Angeles Raiders and New before falllng out. ·
AI Carbondale, Ill., Jerry
and a rational manner, there
.Undefeated British heaVy- . Orleans· Saints ·m eet In London;
Jones
scored
18
points
and
Rick
comes a time 'In life .whet)
weight champion Gary Mason the New England ' Patriots and
Shipley
added
17
to
lead
Southern
sometimes· you have to do t~
will try for his 34th victory March · Plttsb!lrgh Steelers play Aug, 91n
Illinois.
The
~alukis
won
the
things you think are
14 against American Everett Montreal; and the Kansas City
crown
outright
when
Creighton
appropriate."
~
Marlin In London. Marlin Is the Chiefs and Los Angeles Rams
Fehr, hurrying his remarkj
only fighter to have gone the · play Aug. 11 In · .Berlin or lost earlier In the day. The
because. he had a plane to calciC
distance with George Foreman ·Frankfurt, Germany. It will be conference title was Southern
said some telephone calls ha4
ln. the fonner world champion's the tlrst NFL game played In Illinois' second since joining the
MVC In 1975, and the 24 wins tied
20-tqht comeback. Promoter Germany,
bee' exchanged and 10111e Jan·
a school record for victories,
guage drafted on · aecoadlllj
Mickey Duff said efforts to entice
·
Btnon
Jose Rlbalta and Trevor Berblck
David Robinson elf San An to- Wichita State was paced by . laslll!l, but no progi'eas had beeli
made on aalary arbitration. •
to fight Mason In Britain fell
nio, who averajred 24.3 points, 14 Gaylon Nlckenon's 26 points.
through, and Marlin was the best re!lounds and 9 blocked shots,
was namj!d NBA Player of the
available opponent.
.
Football
· week, . .. Tacoma mldflelder
Prekl and St. Louis IDBilceeper
The NFL announced four for·
elgn exhibition games:. on Aug, 5. Slobo llljevskl wel'l' namedMISL
the Denver Broncos and Seattle · offentlve and defensive players
Seahawks will play at Tokyo and of the week.
.,

,

UPI ratin8s

~

-~

By

''
Collep ._llelballlte!nlla

,..
,,-··....

con&amp;M&amp; at st. ,JohD:• Arena Ia
Carter
licored 18 poiDIII aad pablled a game-blgll 13
· reboundll to help pllllll the Buckeyes to aa M-80
victory. (UPI) .
.

Ohio State tops Illinois ·86-80

College scores

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Dale Davfi-171; O.bl

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Meigs deputies probe complaint
Meigs County Sheriffs Deputl~ were called to Sy~acuse
Monday evening ·when It was reported that two subjects
appe11red to be attempting to break Into a bouse. Deputies
located the subject~and lea'rned there was nothing amiss. They
had just been standing and lalklng near the back door of the
house.
·
,
The wltOI!Ises who notified the authorities were youngsters .
They had noiiFed a lock on the door was hanltnr down .and
falsely assumed the two subjects were attempting to get Into the
boljle. .However, Sheriff James M . Soulsby commends the
younasters for taking no chances and reporting their suspicions
. to the authorities.
,
•'
Oil Monday eventrig, depUties responded to a domestic
violence call at a resld,nce on Eden Ridge above Reedsville.
·. The part!H were gqne when deputies arrived, however, the
complainant called the sherltr·s office tp report that charges
would be fUed at the office.
Michael Burke, Miller Road, Pomeroy,.was arrested Sunday
evening 1111d charged with Improperly handling ·a flreann In a
motor vehicle following an altercation at the Tuppers Plains
residence of his estranged wife. Burke was Issued summons
after arrest a11d Is scheduk&gt;d to appear In Meigs County Court
this Wednes~ay.
,
It was a}so· reported that the sheriff's ~epartment Is
Investigating the theft of firewood from the JackEtvln property
at Salem Center. According to the report, a subject In a blue
Ford pickup .truck was seen loading. the wood around 2:30p.m.
Saturday: The wood had been cut and was lying lit the field next
to Route 124, just west of Salem 'Center. Investigation Is
continuing Into the matter. ·

..

a

f ' •

I

'

EMS has six Monday calls
Six calls were answered on Monday by units of Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services.
At 10:14 a.m., Middleport transported Burnalee Roush from
the Overbrook Center to Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Pomeroy at 12:58 p.m. transported . Franc!~ Roush from
Holzer Medical Clinic to Holzer Medical Center.
Middleport at 3:27 p.m. was called .to Village 'Manor for
Donald VanCooney to Holzer Medlc~tl Center.
At 4: 40 p.m, Pomeroy was called to Long Hall Road for
Ruletta Roberts who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Pomeroy was called at 6:48p.m. to an auto fire at the Foodland
Store parking· lot. No name was lis ted for the owner .
Racine at 7: 21 p.m. was called to VIne St. for Shannon
Williams who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital:

,:: .Autmer Bailey
•

"~~.~

•.;1

.••

,'tiff""-,

.. , •.

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Autmer Bailey, 71, of Port
Richey, Fla .. fonnerly of Meigs
County, died Feb. 17 at his
, residence,
· ; . He was born In Meigs County,
.the son or the late Frances Well
. and' H!!rbert' Bailey. He gradu·
! ated fr!)m Chester High School
-. and served for several years In
the U.S. Army.
• He lu survived by his wife,
' Cora White Bailey, a dau1hter,
,Rita, several grandchildren, a
brother; Howard, Jack$onvllle,
, . Fla. and several nieces and
nephews.
Bealdel his parents . he was
, preeeded In death by a son,
Randy, a sister, Elsie Pooler,
and a brOther, Edwin Bailey.
. FUne~~l services were held at
the Batey Funeral · Ho'me In
_Safety Harbor, Fla.

..
t

Audra 'Thompson

.

Audra DeLay Thompson, 73, of
Columlius, fonnerly or MelliS
.-" i CQunty, died Saturday at her
employment In Bexley,
'
Born on AprU 9, 1916, she was
the daUghter of the late ElmeJI
, . ,and Marcia DeLay. and a graduate of Pomeroy High School In
1934.
.. •· Sbe Is survived by four child·
•
1 ren, several .g randchildren, a ·
brother, Milton DeLay of Mose
' Lake, Wash, and several cousins ·
~: ., In Meigs County lncl\ldlng Mrs.
~, : • Hugh Bearha and Mrs. Mabel
,'

t:r ·: Moore.

,

,t - · Besides her parents, she was

~

IKI Bled·

.

t~:

•preceded In death by her husWyatt Thompson, and a
brother, Walter DeLay.
~~ : • · Funeral services will be held at
~( 10 a.in Wednesday at the Mar~~ · grum Fuberal Home In Gahaana.
Burial will be In New Albany,
1
Friends may call at the funeral
~ ~: home 2 to .4 and 7 to 9 p.m on
. ~; : Tuelday. ·
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Key CentUrion Bancshares,
Inc., announced that It and Its
Charleston Natlonai Bank unit
have entered Into an agreement
· In principle to ai:qulre Farmers
It Citizens State Bank of Clendenin, W.Va. , acCording to the
Investment finn of Blunt, Ellis '&amp;
Loewl.
.
Key Centurion said the agreement states that each outstand·.
IDa sllare of Farmers &amp; Citizens
will be exchanged for $135.87 In
cash, bringing the value of the
proposed transaction to 52
million.
The transaction Is contingent
upon execution of a merger
agreement and approval by F&amp;C
shareholders and various regula·
tory authorities.
F&amp;C had assets of $45 million
and sharehOlders' equity of $2.2
million as of De. 31, 1989.
Key Centurion authorized Its

" ••
Coun.C;l

Annie CuDDlngham Dll~ 89, of
Vll!Bge Mapor Apartments, l'lflddleport. died .Moaday, at vere.
ran a Memorial Hospital follow.
maa brlef·lllnfta.
Born Aug. 14, 1900 at Hartford,
W.Va., ahe wu a daughter ot the
late Lewlt and l,Syra Glbbl
CuDIItnaiWn. Slle was a J1ome.
IDIQr and a · member ot tile

•'

WE'U.

AT&amp;T ................. ; ...... , ........39%
Ashland on .........................36%
rb Evans .......................... 12%
harmma s~oppes ... :: .......... S%
City Holding Co. ............ .....13%
Fedei'al Mogul... ................. 17~
Goodyear TAR ..... ..............33%
Heck's ................................. 2%
Key Centurion ............ ....... .13%
Lands' End ......................... l7%
Limited Inc..... ............... .... 36~
Multimedia Inc .................... 7~
Rax Restaurants:...... , .......... 2~
Robbl111'It Myera ................ , 16
Shoney's Inc. ......... .............. 11
Star. Bank ............................ 19
Wendy'&amp; Int'l . .... ................. , 4%
Worthington Ind .................. 20%

OVEBLOOK

to

management to purchase up
$12 million of Its common stock In
the coming year .
' The purchases would be In
addition to any purchases made
by the company's Employee
Stock Ownership Plan .
Key Centurion said that pur- .
chases, which milY commence
Immediately, may be made In
the open market. or In negotiated
. transactions. Timing, price ,
quantity and manner of any
purchases will be at
sole
discretion of Key Centurion's
corporate officers. The program
may be discontinued or sus·
pended at any lime, and the
actual number of shares, If any,
that will be purchased will
depend upon market conditions
and prices.
The number of common shares
currently outstanding was not
Immediately available.

me

-......., ....... .
... ......... .,.. ..

with council members being In
agreement that this would be a
'definite disadvantage to Meigs
County haulers wbo are close to
the West Columbia landflll. The
amount of·surcharges which will
go Into the management fund of
the Solid Waste District was also
discussed at the meeting.
· Mayor Hoffman reported that
Bill Miller, tbe new vlllage
development director, was In
Columbus last week for training
sessions on housing and revltall·
zatlon programs which have to
be applied for prior to April 20.
He also attended a small cities
economic development program
which may have funding available for local projects.
Bruce Swift was named assts!·
ant pollee chief replacing Miller
who resigned that post to become
economic d~elopment director.
Council authorized Mayor Hoffman to purchase a 1986 truck for
$5,700 from Pat Hill Ford for use
by the cemetery and street
departments.
'
Attending ' the meeting were
Mayor Hoffman, Clerk ·
Treasurer Jon Buck, a.nd Council
member, Horton, James Clatworthy, Gilmore, Paul Gerard,
Wllllam Walters, and Satterfield.

Veterns Memorial
Monday admissions- Dorothy
Gplmore, Middl eport; Sara
Johnson, Middleport.
Monday discharges- Kenneth
Hartley , Keith Musser, Vera
Beegle. ·

"Electrical machinery also
showed a sharp decline, down U
biUlon or 17.6 percent to U8.8
biUlon. ·· the government said In
Its monthly report. "VIrtually all
of the January decrease was In
communications equipment."
In other categories: . ·
-Orders for·non-electrlcal ma·
chlnery lncrea.s ed by S600 mil·
lion, or 2.6 percent, to$22.3 billion
In January.
-Primary metals Increased
by $200 mllllon, or 1.5 percent, to
$11.1 billion last month.
The government also .said
shipments of durable goods decreased by $4.5 billion or 3. 7
percent In January to $117.7
biUlon. Shipments have declined
In 10 of the last 13 months since
December 1988. Most or the
decline 1n shipments was also In
the category of transporlation
equipment.
Unfilled orders for . durable
goods, meanwhile, held about
steady last month at $494.7
billion, the gover nment said.

·weather
South Central Ohio
Partly cloudy Tuesday night,
wllh a chance of rain and a low
between 25 and 30. Chance of rain
Is 30 percent. Mostly sunny ·
Wednesday, with highs near 40.
Exte11ded Forecast
Thunday through Saturday
Falreachday, wlthhlghsln the
30s Thursday, ranging from 35 to
45 Friday and In the 40s Satur·
day . Overnight lows will range
from 10 to 20 Thursday and
Friday mornings and from 25 to
35. early Saturday.

Lottery numbers
CLEVEJ..AND (UP!) - Mon·
day's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:
PICK·S
603,
. PICK-3 ticket sales totaled
$1,218,573.50, with a payoff due of
$570,074.50 .
.
PICK·4
6052.
' '
PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
$235.041.50, with a payoff due of
$82,200.00.

---Meigs announcements---To meet Thur!iday
Evangeline Chapter 172, Order
of the Eastern Star, will meet .
Thursday 7:30 p.m at the ·Mason(!~ Temple. Officers are to
wear street dresses. Initiation
wlli be exemplified. An auction
will be held following the meeting

with members to take Items.
Unit to meet
Big Bend Service Unit Girl
Scout leaders will meet Thursday. 7 p.m., at the Syracuse
United Methodist Church. Leaders are urged to attend to pick up
their books !rom the QSP drive.

COUPON

HEARING TESTS
IN MEIGS COUNTY

frM Eltrtroniu hearing 11111 will bt given by

ltl,tone Hearing Aid (tnt• at

MIDDUPOIT FAMILY PIACTICE CEfiTEI
I: I. DAYO, M.D.
306 Second Avenua
•
THUISDAY, MAICH I, 1990
9 A.M. TO 1J:OO NOON
-~----- ·

BELTOfiE HEAIIIG AID CENTEI
1312 EASTEIN AVE. (lt. 71, GAWPOU$
WEDNESDAY. MAICH 7, 1990
..9 A.M. TO 4 P.M.
CALL 614·446·1.744 or 1·100·634-5265
UMWA and UAW PIOVIDII
Call Toll fl'll Nunilllr 1·100,634·5265 for

h11111jatt GPPOintnJ.It.

THE TESTS WILL BE GIVEN BY ALICENSED HEAliNG AID SPECIALIST
Anyon• who h• trouble ht•rlng or ilnderltilndlng aonverRtlan
Ia Invited to hCIVa a frM ht•rlng teat to aeelf thla protil.m c1n bt
helpectl Bring thla coupon with you for your FREE HEARING
TEST of e76 1111lue. Adulta only, plaua.

Country••.
Pure lA-Z.DOYl
A timeless look that's sophisticated
yet simple... on sale this week only!

YOtJB I'IBST
ACCIDENT

IIIII llr . . . A-. C1 f

;

Ill'

..... ,.IAOIIIJ...,,,_

_.,

SALE!

875900
A. "Cillllberland"

Siguature II'" 88W'

Sleep Sofa
A more tailored country
look, with a cllllllc
camel back and &amp;raceful
slel&amp;h arm atyUng,

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

(lleJ Cea&amp;llrloa lall"'llarw
Inc.'• replar quarterly dhldeet
Ul/lhre paJable Aplfl I, re-

• at4:1c

cord Marall U)

...i?&gt;
a1umeN

Pomliiij' Cliurell ot Cbrtlj.
9urvtvon blclllde a dauglller,
,PJIIIIDe Dill J1tlda, of MkldJe..

"iii.1iii·

s:t:e·~~=:·:
rre•t·
fOUl'
~~ andaev·
fl'll IIICel DGIIIIpbewa. ·
. ~addition to lllr parata, aile

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. '

manufacturer of the 747 and
other jetliners.
Nonnan Robertson, chief econ·
omllt for Mellon Bank In Pitts·
burgh, said, "When you adjust
for this extraol'dlnarlly month·
to-month volatility the trend Is
slightly flat to . downw~rd."
"The tren~ Is toward sluggish·
ness and weakness In the manufacturing factor," Robertson
said- ' .·1 would not take this report
as signaling a recession. I would
take It as a signal of a sputtering
economic growth rate."
Excluding defense Items, tolal
ol'ders were down by 8.4 percent
last month. Excluding transportation Items, total orders were
down 3.4 percent.

Hospital news

Continued from page 1
~~=~;,;:,__ _ _ _

Stocks

Am Electric Power ............. 29i8

tlon equipment fell by $10.6
billion, or 27.6 percent, to $27.9
billion after · 1 10.8 percent
Increase lD November and a 4.8
percent Increase In December,
the Commerce Department said.
·'Aircraft and parts, which had
been unusual~)' hlih the last
fiClveral months, acc'ounled for
nearly halt of the JaniJary
decline . In transportation, althqh motor vehicles and parts
and shlpbullcflnr and (mnttary )
tanks ~rt both dowri sharply,"
the department's Census Bureau
sal4, .
· The · large orders for aircraft
and aircraft parts In November
and DeCember followed the set·
llement of a crlppllrlg strike at
Boeing Co. , the Seattle-based

Key Centurion to purchase
bank, $12 million in stock

truck.
The mayol' noted that both
GalUpolls and Pomeroy have
aerial ladder trucks and that he
Is In full support of Middleport
having Its own. Jack Satterfield .
after expressing appreciation for
the firemen ' s ·work made a
motion that the fire department
proceed with the project by
securing specifications. Council
voted unanimously·In support.
Mayor Hoffman , noted that
once specifications are secured,
then the village will advertise for
bids, and work on the financing
was preceded In death by her
can begin. He said that delivery
husb,and; Homer. E. Dlll; a
take~ 14 to 18 months.
· ,
grandson, Ryan Keith Dlll; one
Joseph R. Wilson met with
sister and six brothers.
council to discuss a drainage
Services will be ,Thui'Sday, 1
problem In the Hobson area.
p.m., at Ewing Funeral Home,
Council advised that once the
with Nell Proudfoot officiating.
area has final approval for the
Burial will , be In the Gilmore . annexation from the Secretary of
Cemetery. Friends may C!lll at
State's office; then tile village
the funeral home on Wednesday
will contact the Department of
· from 3 to~ and .7to 9.
Natural Resources, Division of
Reclamation, for some evaluation as to whether the problem Is
being caused by mine water,
Philip Riling
It was noted by Mayor Hof·
1
Memorial services for Phlllp ftnan .that a copy of the village' s
resolu lion regarding the es tabBoyd Riling, 16, of Pomeroy, wlll
llshment of the Route ·7 business
be Wedtlesday, 7 p.m., at the
Kingdom Hall of Jehovah's Wit- route thgough Middleport and·
Pomeroy has been sent tO Pomenesses, The Plains, with Gayman
roy VIllage Council for
Chambers officiating.
consideration.
The youth, a son or Rick and
Copies of a policy regarding a
Helen Cooley RUing, of Pomeroy,
drug--free work place were
was killed Saturday morning In a
motor vehicle accident on Route · presented to council for consider33 at Shade:·
ation and review pendlnr action
at some future meeting.
Arra~gements are by Hughes
The dliltrlct policy regarding ·
Funeral Home, Athens.
solid waste management was
discussed and It was repol'ted
that the next public hearing will
be heldonMarch21. The question
of a req ulrement that haulera use
the dletrlct landfill was discussed
Dally stock prices
(AI of 11:80 a.m.)
BrJce aad Mlll'k 8mUh
of lluat, EIJIB A Loewl

1;:.. band,

.,•'

AID ll)n • •

WASHINGTON (UPI)
Orders for durable roods
phmged by a record $13.8 billion
or 10.5 percent In January to
$118.2 billion, with aircraft and
aviation parts accounting for a
third of the loss, tile government
said Tueilday.
Durable goods lire Items made
to last three or more. years and
the report reflected a general
weakness In the nation's manu·.
- facturlDg sector.
.
.
The government said the over•
all decrease was the largestslnce
a 9.2 percent decline during the.
recession of February 1982 and
the worst since the Commerce
Department started tracking du·
. rable goods In 1958.
. January·orders for transport&amp;·

-----Area deaths~-r-

,,

Wlull'!l"o AlltO PII'IJ ..• :........................IIO

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IllES liE OUI IUSIIISS

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:zo

3

Aa appeal bu beeB lasuecl for clothllla and household (looda
for the Rd4Dey Reeva famJ]y wbole trailer borne on State ·
Rollllt 181 .... dlll!oyed by tire SaturdiY'
The. funDy had no lnaurance on their personal goods,
aceonlhl8 to a family member. They ..-e In need ot all kinds of
fllmlture. T!lelr clollllua alzea are Mr. Reeves. stile 34 watst. 34
liiiJth, paatl, larp ahirta, and alze 9,% to 10 lhoea; Mrs .
Ri!evel, .._13-14 puts, size larp blouses, and size !I% sboel;
l\tllly, size 10, 1blrlllnd pants, and alze 3 aboel:·Jenny, size 6X
· etotiiJDI, ahtrt and paats, and size 1aboes; and Billy, size 5shlrt
~nd panta, and alze 12 lhoeJ,
·
.
lleml fo~ the tamUy may l!e left with Harold Reeves, 394198
Unlall AVe.• Pomeroy, For further lnfol'liiatlon on the family or
for pickup of ltema residents may call 992-3789.
·

t: ';Annie DUI

TUrAL POINTI
,", • ~~CArry Out ............................ N
~I. Cirry 0Ut .................................. 32

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. Appeal iaued for :clOthing, goods

'ti'.

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. UPINIIf' I I ..... IIIWrltw '
NEW YORK (UPJ) - Talb
receued lndeflllltely on DiJ Ubi
the lprtna tralntna lockout Melli,
· day, endaqerbla 0peahl8 DIY
and proJoqiDa wbat .11 I!MJ:·
no.-. . liave called "a natloaAJ . ·
disgrace." .
*
Apparently decldllla 110 pto~tte~s could come tram anotller
lllellting, union chlef Don Fehr
lett t9WD for what could be a
!~~!tiel ot brletlnp. Owneri' tepreaentatlve ·Chuck O'CoiJDilr
agreed with the action, saying, ;
' 'We have reached li point where
It Is appropriate to separate for a
while."
.
. Baseball Commlasioner Fay
Vlucent. admitting he feela, the
p~sure even In the "grUiy
spoon:· where he eats •.called the
situation "tragic to the point of
absurdity."
. ·
.Maryland's Gov. William DOnald Schaefer went even furthel'. · ·
Schaefer and 14 ·other governors
from states with teams sent
letters to VIncent and to orranl·
·zatlons representing the pJayets
and owners, urging them lb
settle.
..
. .
'"This continuing dispute Is
natlo01ll disgrace. ... BasebalJ,fs
too lmporlan 1 to our country - ·
both economically and cultw:allY.
- to allow this to drag ·On;''
Schaefer said.
""
O'Connor said that over ·the: .
weekend VIncent and depu~ ·
commissioner Steve .Greenlle~ .
made lnfonnal contacts with the· ·
union, seeking a bridge on Uie
arbitration Issue.
. ..
"They were unable to ellclf 'l
·
proposal," O'Connor said. :
Owners staged a public rela- ·
tlons display, releasing a three.'
page list of Its postlons. Mllwau•
kee Brewers owners Bud Sel!J
spoke passionately Ia favor of the
owners' )losltlon, asking, "Where
have we been unreasonable?" · ··
Management's proposals Include minimum salaries of
$85,000 In · 199!! .e sealallng to
$100,000 In 1993; a benefit contrl·
butlon averaging $44.86 mtlllon
per year; co Duston. protection;
· and a provision to reopon the deal
after three years. ,
•·•1 guess I'm learning In this '
process that .It's better . to 'be
getting out some or this lnfonna·

The Daily S 11intl P1111 I

-----Ineal DeWs briefs-- Durable goods orders plunge $13.8 billion

IJMIK•ftiLLY

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

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talks halted

lloya leoi'IM

1

,....Y 1:1, 1110

•

JION••fll. •••
DAILY 9·5

�Paa•

.

@!I

,

Phil. Dirt, Dozers to perform
Four Seasons, and many more.
The Dozers perform approximarely 200 sbows a year,
traveling coast-to-coast perfomiing
shows for such diverse groups !IS
national conventions, fairs' and festivals, charitable organizations, and
other prestigious events.
Locally they have a strong following of fans since perfonning at
Mason, Meigs, and Jackson County
Fairs as well as other events in GalPOPularity.
lia
and Meigs counties.
· • 'fhe Dozers transport their .
Prestigious
events at which the
· audience back 10 the days of saddle
Dozers have entertained are the
shoes, pony tails and beach parties.
Featuring their strong vOOal bar· ' New York City Ballet FUild Raiset
monies and contagious sense of at Lincoln Cebler, Walt Disney
humor, an afternoon with the ·World, HBO Expo, New York's 21
Dozers is an afternoon you will Club and . the RCA building's
l!lng remember. Their musical style Rainbow Ropm, In addition, the
Dozers have opened for several naappeals 10 people of all ages with
the !ound of all your old favoriteS - tional acis such as the Beach Boys,
Drifters, Danny and the Juniors,
· Dion and the Belmonts, Roy Or·
bison, Isley Brothers, Little · Roy Qrbison, Gloria Esrefan and
Miami Sound Machine, Kathy
Ri:hard, Chuck Berry, Beach Boys,
A benefit concert wiU be held on
Sunday, March 4 at 2 p.m. featur·
ing Phil Dirt and the Dozers. The
concert is 10 benefit Wahama's "Ar·
trt Prom Party" and will be held at
the Wahama High School Gymnasium in Mason.
: Phil Oirt and the Dozers is a
five-piece Columbus, Ohio based
"Rock 'N RoU Oldies" review that
has
achieved
unprecedented

Matea, and many more.

·

Phil Dirt and the Dozers are a
class oct They enjoy what they do
and am cnthusias~ about doing it.
That enthusiasm is contagious and
accounts for the good ·time the
Dozers have shown hiiiHimls of
thousands of ~lc tJiroulbout the
U.S. If your musical roots JO back
10 the late fifti~. early sixnes, you
will not wantiO miss this concert.
TICkets may be pun:hased at
Peoples Bank - three IOQtions,
Fruth's Pharmocy in Gallipolis,
Point Pleasant and Middleport,
Dairy Queen in Middleport' and
Chapnlans Sboes in Pomeroy. Also
Heath Aid Pharmacy, FOxy Locks
and Wabama High School in the
Bend Area.
.'
'
The cost of the tickets is $7 each
in advance and $8 each at the l!oorTickets am also available by sending cash, checks or money orders 10
Wahama Arter Prom Paity Committee, P.O. Box 371, New Haven,

W.Va. 2526S..0371.

"Who Will Roll the Stone
Away" was the theme of the
program presented by Mary
Nease when the Forest Run
United Methodist Women ,m et at
the home of Carrie Grueser.
'The purpose of the program
was to Inform and encourage
women to participate In the
ecumenical decade, help women
to Identify and work to remove
obstacles that llm~l their full
participation In ·c hurch and soclety, and to let them· share
spltltualtty, 'by telling personal
stories. ·
·
The scripture ,reading was
from First Corinthians, 12: 4-13,
Matthew 16, 1·4 and 28, 1-2; Luke
24, 1·2; and' John . 20, verse one.
Those having· parts in the program were Kathleen Scott, Faye

.

Cruisers Club.narnes officers

....

'Am ou,5Hic

·There will be a reception for
Mr. and Mrs. John Vinson; the
former Helen King, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil King, on
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the
Carleton Churcjl located on
Kingsbury Road.
Mr. and Mrs. Vinson were
married recently In Athens, Ga.

Garden Club .
to riJ,eet

WAHAMA, w:va. - Phil Dirt
and the Dozers will be In concert
at Wabama Billh'School Sunday
to benefit the ICbool's drUil. and
alcohol free after prom party.
Tlcketa are avallallle at Fruth
PbiJ'rnacy for $7 In advjlllce.
.They will be SB at the door.

Wandling birthda,y
Matthew D. Wandlln&amp; celebrated his fourth birthday recently with a party at his home.
The party was hosted by his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dave
Wandling. A "Batman" theme
was carried out with cake and Ice
cream being served to Mr. and
Mrs. Don Roush, maternal
grandparents,' Mr. and Mrs.
Jerry Stobart, paternal grandparents, Amy Leach, . Terri
Tucker, and Sarah StQbart, Dave
Leach, and Jolhua Wandling. ,
Others presenting gifts were
Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe Fl~. great
lll'andparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Dave Fife and. children, Steve
Fife, Heather Woods, Julie Wandling, and Randy CarL ,

COPY DEADliNE
MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER
WEDNESDAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER
t-HIUAY PAPER

Xi Gamma Epsilon
meettng h. e/d. . 1

•
Shelly DuBose was honored
recently as Valentine Queen of
, the Xi Gamma Epsilon Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority when
the group met at Sebastian' s in
Parkersburg, W.Va.
.
She was also featured •In the

------~--~IIID~---------~
· .
3 S100

LACE I EYELEt EDIItG ...._.......

,. .

IAaNI DEPAITMEIT ·STORE

1• SIMI
'

.

Mt-tiOO

1101.. OliO

..,...._ ... - ...... IICiftl

. .

. ,.

I

~I

16

t&amp;.OO

. .30

15
15
15

$1.00
t13.00

.42

.60

.0.6 / dav

11 .30 / dav

1t 11

2

( .'/ru.~ifil•t/

IIUfl'·~

,,

In MIMnOIV

o;v,..,....

' Gallia County

Me•ei.County
Ar•• Code 614

MISonCo , wv
Are• Code 304

441 G01Kipolts
367 Ch•Me
381 Vinton ,
Rio Gi.nde
2&amp;1 Gu.,.n Ditt.
143 Ar.a.;eDist

992

175 Pi Pl•••nt
458 loon
576 Apple Bro..-•

' Wllnut

742

, Are.a Code 614

z•&amp;

986

~:~

PIKtiMd

713

letart Fetls

882 New Haven
196 Let•'
137 Buttlla

949 fbdne

&amp;&amp;1

2 00 PM . FAIOA't'

Mldlll~

Pom•ov
Ch•ter

Rullwul
Cuoldlr:

..

Y •• SM• ~IM•d •fl Hvancet

7

.·

36

Rewl Estate W111ted

.,••.3
••••

Housttl for R•nt
Mobtle Homalot Rent
fatma h~r Fhnt
Apartment fot Runt
Furnish" Rooms

I \1 [,

11180. /

P•toid the 12th day ol Fe-

bruory ·1 880. ·

Altlllt.i Ji&gt;n P. Buck

Clerk
/.
·
J ~ Bewey M. Horton

,Prooldont of Council

121 20, 27 2tc

HetoWMted
lituatMn W.-wt'wll

13

lnst.trMce

14
1S

lutfn•• Treirttng ,
lchools &amp; lntuuct"'"

1i
11
18

Radio. TV &amp; Cl A•Jl&lt;'••
Mtsc..t.n1_ , ,
Wentlld to Do

71
72
73
74
7S

Autos lor S.t u
lfllct..., for Sill tl
V•ns&amp;4WO ' s
Mot ortyCi tlli
Bo•a &amp; MotOrs lo r S&lt;tlu
76 Au1o P•rt s &amp; Ace• li()• IO!i

55&lt;

56

Mason

21

lu,in•s Opporttmri,

22
23

Mon.,- to lNn
Prot• lion .. StrllltC"

77
71

Serv1ces

Hou18hold Goods
Sporhne Good•
Antiques
Misc. M•(;hand1se
lu.lding $uppll111

.

,.

LEGAL NOTICE
Duoto·the lock oltlrno ond
no mall due to Prooidlnto'
Dey. fi-e VII- lo o'X·
tonclng '' blcklna· timo tor
body - " On the F800
1114 Font Dump Truck.
(Eorller ,bl• - • held. I
Work lo to be done on cab
..... •d . . to "" ••
DMved by I A:.M. S.turdoy,
Morch 3. 1110.
Tnrak 1o IVIIIIIIIo lor inectlon 111 tho Woter luHdgotthe-ol3rd-

=

···-..

i:f

lnt-tod In two pr- :
·, 1:1 Uolng now 111d/or
~d pll'te ond llbor.

;. 2.1 Utiing """' tnd
1/lbor.
(i&gt; """" tho folowlng repolra:
· 1 . Front ond llboralooo.·
rijJt inaludlngthe erll fnt111
(on honcll.
· • 2. Loft door; 3. Right
Door; 4. Right' hncler; II.
Loft .... dor; I. H-; 7.
Wln•hletd: I. Door glooo
""'MOd •and In worldng'
onter,ltn-.
AM .... tobeln ..... tnd
l~propor~gorder.

· Sorlclbldlbyl..,n.Bitu,.
dly, Moroh I, 1110 to VII·
.... of ,..... '· 0. lox
3711, lleclno. OH. 411771.
Malic 1111 elape "1.. for

. OurnpTnrakllopelr".
1,1 23. 21, 27. 3ea .

GUN SHOOT
IACIII

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

Ifill·
, SAl'. liGHt
6:30P.M •
F•tery cheltt

12 Gautt SltotpM Otolr
~tric·tlf EnfonH
·tht

CAIPENTII SEIYICE

-11- Alltllliono

s1ma

Fill DIPT.

-G-Work

-liooblall • -blnt
-Con&amp;IUIW Work '

742·10..

-lloolng

•TnlttiH
•frOnt 1114

-~raE...,Ior

~IIOnmDnt

..ST.

·Roger

YOUNG'S

IUTUIII11U
SAWnd

(f'lll"::t.TIMATIII

V. C. YOUNG II

•011 Change • Lubjl
••rake Wortt

. Garage ·. ' ·

.TOP SOIL
FOR SALE

REPAIR
~·.. y,....l..l••

949-2493

992·6215

IUrull

3rlll Str•t,

1-15-'M-11

Hysell ~ t

EXCAYAnNG
&amp; BUCKING

Oh.

'-ey Ohio
AUTO &amp;TRUCK .
lt. 124,

PH. 992-5612
or 992·7121
4-25-tfn

•'
• c

s•ICE
We can r~ and ,..

lle*.-IIIILWrtt..a

PAiNtiNG I CO.

WAN11D
LOW GUDI OAI

MIIMOI IITDIOI

SAW LOGS

IOOFING

fi;IEE EITIMATEI
Te.. thlptiln .., ,,
ptilntl... . ' .
Letv• ~ it ftr ·yev;
YaY IWONAILE
IIAVE uRIIIIKES

•• rad11ten IIIII
heatH car11. We c111 ·

a1141 acHI boil .n rid
out rttdiat... We aha
repair Gas T...._

PAT HILL FOlD

Ami 'P.M.
(61.()915-4110

992·21H

hi•••

Middleport, Ohio

1-11-Hc

PubliC N Qtict

SITEWOIIC
• .lOADS
'
CLEAIIHG

FINANCIAL III!,OIIT'
OF THE itOAIID OF

UIRAIIY TIIUmiB

NE._MAND
ENYEIPIISES

For Fltcit · - being
On ember 31, ·1 111

MEICU COUNTY

PUBLIC LIIIIAIIY
County of Melli

DUMPTROCK

GOVERNMENTAL FUNDI

.............
Sand-Stone-Dirt
(614) 667·H71

RI!CEIPTI-

To- ..............313.101.00
Potron Fin• ond

F-.................1.140.00

""f-11-' ..lfl

Eorntnae on ln-t·
-

...............8,H1.00

,.

160 n.••••
DIUYIIII TO

OHIO PAW1
COMPANY
POMitOY OIL

FUINACE
FUINACE
PUIIACI

I'AIITI AND IIIIVICE
ALL MAttEI
GAl OR ELECTRIC

Oil'S APPUIIICI
SIIYICI
992·5135. 915-1561
acr.
- Pill Offlle
211 L·Sec.
'

Ill

lEW- IIPAII
Gutters
Down.pouu
G~Jtter Cleaning
Painting

*LIGHT HAULING

. CUSYOM IUI.T
liOMES &amp; GARAGES

*FIREWOOD

"At

992-2269 '

,949~2161

MfiiNGS .·

.........

2-1-'10-1 ...

Day or Nilht
NO .SUNDAY CALlS .

SAlES I UIYICE

l'llltl
•Mobile Hom•

PH. 992-3561

Co&lt;ry , _ . lupt&gt;ll•

$1510,., ...

Your Phone
IIIII Hero

llena.lt
. •Lotll*"''lll .

luylng Haura;

7:30-8:00

n ..,...
,_.,,
.....
tt2·7·7t

1t.

Mon. thru Fri.

et

Rooelptt ............ 4,217.00
TOTAL
Contrlbutlont, Ollti ,.
a Donotlont ....... 2 . 711.00
iiiECEtPTI.... 400.110.00

·7:30-4:00 Satunley

DIIIU1181Mt!NTI-

'

Step In and S..

. DAU HILL .
At

New'-llotllt,
"'Free Eetlm.tN"

PH. 949·2101
or ln. 949-2160
NO SIIIIDA Y CALLS
4-16-16-tfn

_
-=-=-.. .... . . . .
lllto ...... l.410.00

IUM HOME

·-,~·­
SIDler
Cltl•- 111111

........
ft2·6171

27Yro. Exp .

"

I

F10tory Choked
' 12 GBuga

CI~.........18Z.II?.OO

•

Slitll ..... St.
....... rt. 011.

"ww•a•••--·

1-U·"I0-1 - ·

TOTAL IBUIIII· ·
• MENTI .. ......4M.211.00

........

I

~IP!!r·

•,¥:RZ.'im

.'

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

T.L.C.

~twhethOIP.&amp;

Ullmy Me'-1111 •
lnlormetlon .... 21 ,?11.00

J

•BLOWN IN
tNIULATION .

G-R•*

IAT HILL

IYDY SUIDIY

Puroh8Md. CaiibWIIiHt
. . w'
.........1&amp;,100.00

. ' -:.

•ALUMINUM 8101NG

1-2-'90-11110.

RACINE
GUN CWI
GUN SHOOT

IIIIrieiMd
........ ......... 78,2U.OO
...................... 2.24100

,.,

1· 11-IO·tln ,

•VINYL SIDING

....,.,....

.......tiM .
, .. ltertll SeceH
. . . . Ill.' Ollie 45760

985·4422

4-16-16-lfl

. WAIIID
W. !:·.~~'te'l.'nc.

IUllfiG

•Mobile Home

•GRAVEL '
•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT.
•ANYTHING
AT ALL

Pricts"

c•PWOOD

•o•u
HOMI PAll

c•ma,ollo

Pll. 949-!101
or IH. 949·2160-

IILL SLACK

FREE ESTIMATES

he111 ..1t

R. L HOLLON
TIU.CICING

'·

MltceiiiiiiOUI

Otller

$

BISSELL
BUILD.IS

.. SHRUB • TREE
· TRIM •nd RE·
MOVAL ·

992-6669
271 .,.. Second
Middleport, ~o ·
.

E lec:Uietl &amp; RehtgtKtt llon

'.

,..., Celh ..................

.

Plt.tmbmg &amp; Hellttny

85 Glinwal Haulmy
16 Mobil• Humu Rtlpilln
17 Upholslery

Dtellmle......... (BI.I~!
Celli Ill ............

·'

Homr: ln,ptovemenh

82
84

t:-IIIDIItoten"" .f·

SHOP '

81

83 Eac11111ing

l".t1 tor 5 .. •
57 Mu1h::t1 lnstrum8flt5
51 fruits • Yeg111t1bl•
59 Fof hie 01 Trade
,

..

Auto Rep• ••
Catnpino Equ1pn1ttnt

19 ·CIImf)fts I. MoiOr Ho111es

MerLildlll11~r
51
52 53
54

I

Trans ortalion

''

Public Notice

HANGING
SU BASKETS

bw d li O ~

64 Hey &amp; Gr~m
65 Seed &amp; ferhl iLe r

'B usiness ·Services

Ecoriomic o.vet-t 01- r
rector lo horoby -blllhed.
s... II . Thot the dut._ of
· the Economic O.Volopem
.Director Mill M to piGiiiOIIIII
· dovolopmMit ond lrn-mentt within the communIty ond to ....., out wtlotover
duttoo are 101igned to thlo
pooitlon by the moyor lnd
council.
~- Ill. Thot thlltlory lor
thli ~oitlon ohell be te.et
plifhour.
Sec. IV. That thio 0«11nanco lo haroby declored to
be on em.-....,cy In !hot
chongea.,. •-•rv In the
otructu~-of v i i - ~tltlont
to proYide ·for the p r condul!ling ot vii- builnooa ond to provide lor the I'

vUI.
· · Ordinence
Bee. Vj-Thit
thell tlke effect ond be In
Ioree froln ond eftar Fob. 12,

SHIPMENT OF
SPRING AND
EASTER SILl
FLOWERS

63

s,.ee tOf Atnt
47 Wanted to Rent
48 Equ1ptn.m tor Attn'
For Lea..

11
12

h-fl.llfetyond....,~lor

NEW

Fonm Equ1pmtm t
W•nl ftd to 8uv

'

ll,.,__....l;!!,;,!~,:::J

CAN WE TALK?
eee'SP.RING'f . .;

&amp;1
62

1;1411111

...,

!

I f

Form Supplies
&amp; Llvestnck

Eslole

Jl Humn tor Sale '
J2 MotMitr Homes tor Soli t!
33 F•rms lor Sale
3 I Busmeu luddtngs
J5 loh• Acr•-t•

I Public .S M• • Au~tton
9 Went• to luy

,.,,..,.r ·r J,, .

jul/l"~'ill/{ I"'''llhlllll' ••xdtrlll!{l'·~---

~Ba i

~. I . Thotthe~~lonof~--------------.~r-~·~~--------..--r-----------------r--.~--~~~~---r.__..___.__.____-r-----------------r--------------~

~~~~· ~~~~~n;::?nterna~lo~l,

CASSADY R. WILLFORI)

. POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Group of A.A. and At- Anon will
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
Sacred Heart Catholic Church.
For more Information call
1-800-333-5051.

POMEROY -:The . Meigs
County Board of Elections will
meet Thursday at 12: 30 p.m. for
an or ganizational meeting, valldation of Petitions, and re.-ular

11,

, 111

l Annouc .... enu •
4
' 5 Hap" Ads
6 ·Lett and Fo..nd

;, I

379

POMEROY -The Salisbury
Township Trustees . will m eet
Thursday, 7 p.m. at the township
b\llldlng. The public Is Invited to .
attend.

POMEROY -The XI Gamma
Epsilon·Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority will meet Thursday at 7
p.m. at Ute Pomeroy . Senior
Citizens Center. Officers for the
new year will be elected.

1 Carll at Thanks

f Ill i ~~II .,,

~ :gg ~ : .- ~:s:sf~2,~v

(21, 27, 1111
r

3

Economic Dovelopm..,t Director.
Be It onMined by the
Council of the VIIIIL!IO of
MiddiiPOt:t • follow1:

'

J

.20

6
10

ORDINANCE NO . 1221-90
An Ordln111ce to ootobUoh
the -itlon end AllOY of

1

.·

14.00

f

OAV BEFORt; PUBLICATION
11 .00 A .M . SATURDAV
2 00 P M~ MONDA'(
2 .00 PM . TUESDAY
.

SUNDAY PAPER

Ann

Over 1 &amp; Words

R1te

15

Monthlv .

l"'"•

THURSDAY '

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

.Ratet ..-e tOt tonM&lt;:utr.~e turu. broMnr.~~pd~awlll be cti•gMf
tor •.ch d., •• Mperete ech.

Galli• or MUon counties •nusllllll pre·

'A cl&lt;~nthcd attwurli~t~nlunt pi&lt;~C tJd •n Ttlt! O.atly S1mtnuM !" .. .
ctrpt . cljjlss•hud d•spliiy, Busmoss Ccutt mtd IIJ(Ji!l nottcn.l
wtll ;~lso appe• .,, the Pt Phmsam RentSter and the Giillt
Dt~~ll~ TubutUJ. mach•nu nvm 18 .000 honuK · \

world Day of Prayer on Friday
at Pomeroy United Methodist,
Spring Retreat March 30 and 31
forAthensDlstrlctUnitedMetho·
dlst Women, Camp Francis Asbury at Rio Grande.
There were 68 sick and shut In
calls reported.,
Eefreshments were seGved to
11 members an.d guests, Jane.
Harris and Marcia 'Arnold,
·

Words

1

'Pt•ctt ol i!d tot all capilallette rs 1s duublu pn~ ul.ad cost
• 7 poml llnH ~~~ outy uled
• Sl!nt•'el '' not responstbht lot errun t~ftttr first d., , JO~wdl
tor errors tKst d., ad ruitl in pipurl . C~tlllu~tor• 2 .0 0 p .m·
diff ahm pubhcalion to make corrt~ctlun,
"Ads that must be patd .in advancu o1r•:
1
C;ttd of. Tha'nk!&gt;
H&lt;tPV'I Ads •
In Mcmur iatll
Y;~u,l S ill.w
•

Wt"llford 'birth

.-----------COUPON--:--•------,
.·
I
'
I
I ' 1OOJo OFf ANY PUICHASE I
·I OF •s.oo or MOlE W1111 .
I

~e1g$ ,

busilii!Ss at the Board of E lections office at lOS Mechanic St. In·
Pomeroy.

L

Days

"Accltfllr! $.,50 discount tor ;tds p111d 1n o~dv;mcq,
'free ads
G•vealNIV ftnd Found ads undl!f 16 words w1ll btt
• tun 3 d.,.s at no ch•ge.
•

Ray and Kimberly Willford are
announcing the birth ·of a son,
Cassady Rayne on Jan. 25 at
HolZer Medical Center.
The Infant ·weighed nine
pounds and four ounces and was
211nches long.
Maternal grandparents . are
Howard and Marie Birchfield,
Rutland. Great ·grandfather Is
Noan Birchfield, Dade City, Fla.
Paternal grandparents are Bill
and Charlotte Willford, Rutland.
Great grandparents are Bernice
Willford, RuUand, and Emmett
and Goldie LlgJJtfoot, Middleport. Great great grandmother Is
Mae t.lghtfoot, Middleport.
Mr. and Mrs. Willford also
have a daughter, Jamltha Marla,
three and oa_e half years old.

Concert to
benefit party

Milton HOOII, Mr. and Mts. Dave
Darst, · Mr. and Mrs. JobD
Metzger, Mr. and MRa. Don
Wilson, Flora Marie Glblon,
Sarah Fowler, Maxine Tucker,
Lillie Hubbard, Faye Wallilce
and her guest, Betty Brag of
McConnelsville.

POucu;.s

09066.

Thl! Middleport Garden Club
will meet Monday at 7:30p.m. at
the home of Mrs. WIIUam Morris.
Hostesses will , be Mrs·. Morris
and Mrs. David Bowen. The
program will be by Mrs. PB)II
Haptonstall, and the arrangement will be by Mrs. G.E.
Scllaekel.
·

Valentines were exchanged at
' 1M February meeting of the
lleiJ'dlatone Qunday School
Clul of the First Baptist Church
., Middleport held at Dale's
a.taurantln GaJUpoUs.
Af 1 «tq were Rev. and Mrs.
' t I Seddon, Mr. and Mrs.

· TO PLACE AN AD CALl 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRill AY 8 A.M. to S P.M.
., 8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
ClOSED SUNDAY

Garden l:lub wUI meet Wednesday at 1 p.m . at the home of
Dorothy Smith.

.

•
·classi 18

possibilities for a savings or
Necklaces were given oil! at
checklt1g account
the meeting · to be !X)mpleted.
Kevin VanMatre will check on They need to' be completed and •
possible locations for car shows returned· as soon as posslblt1 so·
and a cruise-In for the month of that orders can be fUled.
·
May.
'
'
ThThednext mteehtlnSeg wlloll be held
A committee was fonned to ·
urs ay at e
n r Citizens
meet and create by-laws to be Center In Pomeroy at 7 p.m.
votl!d on at the next meeting.
Election of new officers for the:
199().91 year will be held. . .

'

Valentine exhange heklby class

JUNG· AND QUEEN -Harvet J!:rlewlne 11114 Edna Mae Swick
were cr-ned V81•dae Klq ud Qul!eD M Amerlc-Pomeroy
. durtar a cudlelllbt diDDer for .-td•tl ·and funlly o• ·Vllleilllae
0.,. Tbq were cbNea by the nsldeata u• l&amp;aff.

Officers for the 1990 year were
announced at the third meeting
of the Big Bend Cruisers ·Car
James E. Synder Jr., of the Club.
United States Army is, In the
Officers are Kevin VanMatre,
·hospital 'in Neuremburg, Ger·
president;
Gary Willford, vice
many alter beiQg wounded
Ann
,V anMatre, secte.
president;
Wednesday.
tary; and Mandy Russell,
Synder Is reported to be In
treasurer. · ;1
serlo\1$ by stable condillon.
Dues were set at' $10 per year
All notes and cards can be sent
to James E. Snyder Jr., 295-72··· with a $10 mernbersl)lp fee for
3360, C 26 lnf., Box 5723, APO, NY every year after the first year. ·

Reception set

STVDENTOF THE WEEK -Den lie SheneOeld wanelect~d u
the allldent of the week at Melp Junior Hlp School lut week from
Mlck ClaiiU.' Amerlcu History clqa. Her aelectloa by Childs wu
llued on academic achlevement"and cooperative spirit In the
,cluaroom atRIOiphere.
..
.
'

Wiggins, Carrie Grueser, and:
Jane Harris. Several other
members read parts about "God
Is One," regarding Muslem
women.'They observe five pillars
of faith, Creed, Prayer, Charity,
Fasting and Pilgrimage to
Mecca. ' .
·
There was also a skit about
women who are too busy to
belong to UMW. .
Edith Sisson presided at the
meeting and read "Month of
Presldenis."
· Devotions were by . Evelyn
.Hollon with the topic, "We Don't
Know How ." She read a poem,
"Reassurance," and closed with
prayer.
'
Officers reports wet'e glyen
and the following meetings 'an·· nounced Lenten Breakfast at
Trlnltv 'Churrh on Wednesday,

TVBSDAY .
be reviewed by Mrs. ·ROberth. POMEROY - The Oblo !:ta Flsher. Members will answerPhi Cllapter, Beta Slllma Phi . roll call by te!Uqg what their
SQrorlty, will meet Tul!ldi!Y, 7 pyramid wolild contain.
p.m . •t the Graee Epllco)*l
POMEROY -There will be a
Church In Pomeroy.. ·
.
·
Lenten breaktaslaad quiet hour
RUTLAND -1'he 'RUtland at the Trinity CoJI&amp;I'eratlonal
.PTO wilt meet Tueaday at 7p.m. Church In Pomi!rpY In obserat the Rutland Elementary vance of A,sli' Wednelday on
Wednesday at 7:45 a .m. The
School.
'
pub! Is Is Invited and enco11raged
to atlll!nd. Reservations would be
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT -'the Middle- ' appreciated but are not
. port Literary Club will meet necessary.
Wednesday at Overbrook Ceo ter,
RACINE - The Wildwood
1:30 p.m . "Woman ofEIIVPt" will

.

Forest-_ Run UMW meeting held

Hospitalized

HONORED - A ~ertUica&amp;e of racognltlon wu presented to
Larry Rutter by Debbie MIDk a teacher at the Meigs Junior High
School recently. Rutter was the "Student of the Week" Ia MIDk'a
c18111 for reading ud language arts, being selected on the buls of
bls .e xcellence In classroom work and behavior.

. Community calendar

Mn. Elmer Grui!ler wu the
.
.
d d •guest speaker wileD the Retlll'll Europe and took the plAce of provide&amp; ec:onomlc aJI
e....DR
Jonathan MefpCiaapter, DaUJh·
lifts.
aid to all the countries In NATO
ters of the Amerjcu ReYoludon
In the eiJ'Iy 1100's valeatlnes and that Japan, for . e~mple,
held It's February meetln11at the
were made commercially for the . spends nothing on It • own
Heath United Metbodlst CbliJ"Cb
first ttme, Mri., GI'UNet atated. defenae, depending entirely on
In Middleport.
They were very fucy In 1840 the U.S.
Mrs. Grueser Is · presently
paper lace ·In 10111 atrlpa .,..'\1
Mn. .Eileen Buck, history
servfnll h11r third term u Cba·
millie to 4ec.m'ate tbe vaii!Dtf ea c)lalrman, reported two winners
rleston Area Extensl!ln lfome: made ff!llll:"· allk. satin with In the county. Thewlnntngesaay.s
makers rep~ntatlve· for .nJne
feathers, lad spun lllu•- By the are now al state.competition. She
coiiiitles In the southwestern part ~nd of the 18110'1, valentines could reported a good reaponae from.
of West VIrginia. Sbe Is Mason
be purehased tor-pennies. ·
high achoolaenlors this year.
County's · Extension Homemak- · Iii clllonlal ttme. valentines
June Ashley will accompany
ers Public Relations Chairman
weredellvm!dtlybllldandtbere Mrs. Reynolds to _ the state
and Is a member or' the state
were' ' many''propo~als of mar- ·· convention March g.;,12 at Indecommlttee.
,
riap on Valentine&amp; Day.
pendence. Lettersofthankswere
Her topic was on he!lfts."She
'Mrs: Grlieier told that many received from the schools for the
sal~ the l)eart symbol 1s a . wedding symbcill were estab- receipt of soup labels and from
lished throqhout the years by .the wounded veterans for stamp
decorative motif used In many
ways and' found . ln. tradltlona~ veraes on valentlaea. Sbewenton collectibles.
.
crafts. It .came to this countr-Y to say thai cupid goes back to
Maye Mora acted as chaplain,
l'fllh lmmlgran~ from ~1/ery Roman times. She was the Eleanor Smith led the pledge to
, . . . • .
. cheerful dallghter of the IIOddess allegiance, and Ber~e Carllfn•
country. .
Mrs. Grueser said t~e inost Venua and liked to make people ter Jed the Americans Creed to
fJ!m!llar ,is the valentine which happy . She shot arrow t!ps Into open the meeting.
.
evolved frOII) the Rllmans: ·Bethe ' hearts of humans to make
MaryPowellgavetheplansfo~
cause St. Valentine .married them, fall in love• She also broke the sesquicentennial. There will
couples secretly, he .was put In her mothers mirror Into millions be three weekend celebrations !n
prison and executl!d. Roman of plec~ which made the bloom• , April, June, and October. Pllms
soldiers were not to be married.
of the Venus Looking Glass inc)ude a bell choir, appalachian
• PeOple ramernl&gt;ered · his kind flowers.
,.
arts and crafts, hlsto_I'IC tll'1r,
deeds and In the year 496, St.
Mrs. Grueser had a display of' pioneer costuming, plays, herlt·
Valentine's Day was set for Feb. sevenil handmade Items with age days, german bands and
14.
valentine designs and gave d:mcers, parade of natiOJ,Iallties,
Romans put men's names into scented valentines to the craft •. quilt, and flower shows,
an urn and he then bE(came the members and their guests, Helen world . walker Steve New~t~an,
servant of l!is valentine through- Maug and Kathleen Scott.
and many musical entertain·
out the year.
Mrs. Rae Reynolds, rellent, ment groups as well as period
Valentine parties were popular gave the national defense report. displays. The DAR and SAR are
in French homes. They put She. noted that ban~ loans inade al$o celebrating their tOOth ann!~
verses Into a box, drew them and
to the Soviet block nations were
versarles this year·
read them aloud. The rich bought
uncolleetable debts. She read
Hostesses were Mrs. Roscoe
.expensive gifts for their loved· that American tax payers may Wise, Mrs. Wilson Carpenter,
one. Then the giving of paper be stuck with the debts. She also Mrs. Daniel Thomas, Mrs. Nan
valentines. spread throughout stated that the United States
Moore, and Mrs. Pearl Mora.

j

PfiiL DIRT AND THE D~ZERS

Tutldiy, _Felllwly 27, 1990

DAR topic is heart, symbolism

'

•

/

Tulill'l~. F I• wy 27, 1980

Pomllov Mldlll~ Ohio

&amp;-The o.ily Selitlnel

PH•
, \,

J.. ,

.... r ;

., . '•'

,. ,

....~

·-·~

·

.

~ .. •

t •

: .. . ' ::' _,&gt;!.. .. ~

'

I

r•

'

-.

,. •

'

'

-

'

�3 Announcements
..._toDicl'alo~-la

-lny. Wrtlo: For F - eon.
- 1 . dolollo t o - -

P.O. Box 1Ga; Qolllpollo. 011
41131.

I, Bonnlo Aupo -

no1 bo

.. _oolblo
tor Rupe.
Honia
Fr ~trick

4

\

bJ

-

I:OOL'=:•~ And .
. ..
ell)
• eo

ea~Cil

_....,_,_
-........ .......
..... *'&amp;'.,.=• . ,
.....

:~~w. ..,.. _2 ::..,.111olh,.,......
• alnld
CIMI ' to

Lost&amp; Found

6

..,_,._,.......,.nu...,.

t-

1«,

.....

-

1m,.... ,..1., 4114, 1 - · •

.,.,... -

prWidllf. . . , . . , ~ 114441.o21S.

L. .: Whllo "':f.':d H.. dog ..........
k doa. llot~
w~h oro,. .....,. oncl'
Ma ol tM~=ocd Ad.
ondlor At. 211.
. coli """

boJond

... ,_,... .,... Could bo
""fwl-. PI- coli Po.......,
81 4:511 1580, 114-441-1511.

7

Yard Sale

-----G-a-l-llpo.-1-ls-----

• ·· - · • ~ ~ · ,. ,~

ALL Yard S.loo lluat Be Pold In

Acmnco. DEADUNE: 2:00 p.m.

tho doy bolore tho od lo to nm.

Sundlly odHion • 2:00 p.m.
Friday. llondoy oclliofl • 2:00
p.m. Sllurcloy.

Help wanted

EARN IIONEV ..-.,.
E l l - - . , - o l.
Dotllllo. (1) __,..aado Ext. Y·
4112; ,

·

·

CloiUpallo,

11111 Clloill' Dolutr, " - Dow,

111t

lraaco · II,

XLT,

1III_Qo_,.. , . _
110 ...... lfl.,.nililllll, ~
~.

....... .• • . _. Aiotol
..... """"' .... ..... 1)0011
f1,100. ~111110.

nn-. - -

SWAIN
AUCTION I RIANI'TURE. 12
Olivo lit., Oollpi&gt;llo. - . llood
lumiiWO,
- , _ !_l'•orn ·I
Woot _._-114-4..,.18.

KX 1:11dlol lllko. -

Jul. $110.114~41-llll1t.

.

75 Boats &amp; Motors
for S.la

t/2

··::a

~

lnlo&lt;llllllon
Anyone
with a used car-top p.tlent lift In
~cond ........ ...
~-t'IS-1337 ori'IS-4107.

2 ~~....
:104 4811131.

•

3 lndrool:-.' PQOI, dick. 171
South Fourth, lllddlopart
lloial Jr. High). 131,000. 114-

c-r

cu

........
-...
poind.,., 10111, or ontlro coli COllect 304-tZII 3215, or CiwnM
Ona 10 Alnllon
inonltt Plnot with
304-623-ell54.
M7l. Ona I ·11141
Colon T - . •100. Colll1wa.
54 Ml.cellaneoU.
11320.

tll:l:nzs.

Foroolo..,- I - 2

.... - ............ 1-.
fromHuntl.....,.
- ·1:11,000.
I -114IIW741.

388-BSIM OVWIIngo.

Employment Serv1ces

'*' -

1/2. .H.P.
l ..........
blo
pu
withIIYolo
fank, plpo
I wn
.-1yr. ~- &amp;IW?I-II'III.

J:;-"C"-

ca.. 311 "'SI". •100. 114-247·

=""

411dt.

2 Poii·Timo - - In Aolall
S.loa.Roq-o-: lhot
ono .... bo poo101•ble, Nu
poap\0, - · • wllllngn
to
1Nm
to .....,..
rtlp a.llllllltl... bl able to work

and
--·and--

~- . .h 1 2 d D - 12d4
oddltlon.
trlllor -It a, .....,
on laC. - Phone
·114-741.JIA cloyo; 114-742·

Houll: Approlt-ly 111-20 JIO'
WMk. Sirid rwume to c ..Box
027, c/o O.Pipolo Dolly,._,
1125 Third ..... Qolllpollo, Ott

2114--

!lpooll, 30W71-1421.

o-,

AVON • All
Coli llorilyn
Weaver 304-8124845.

For-1-mollllo-.

and .........

Woraod In tho T""" of Hovon, • Clool II .....
Will•
,.........
_.-or.
bo
wiling
, _ _ Will oat .......- to

MWty Nil

' ' don 1.1 acnlql:

oniMiaC,In_ol...,...._

Boi&gt;Jolttor lor lnfont I 4 yr; aid, to Town l:::plop n ~lily ,..
prelwiabty to come to the
hOme. 114381
••
fo: T""" ol Hori#i Box
217,-HoMn,WV,
Corow Orlonlod lnclvlduol ...,..
lod. ........ ry.

Llvlln - 114
.....411.
- Iill
till ·
tii,IOO.
after
4p.JO.
_ .. _.._ Quo!lly
ot - b t l
2
....
~~'!''~'
771Rt.l.
:10447W1fl: Jal.,~

llluo commloolon, -

ICIHDIII'RY

.....

S.loln....-~lelory

,_.,.

lo: P.O. lox 1. . 1-1. ott
&lt;15114.

-

HDIII

lALII.

.'

-rtfE L,A.UGtl T~AC.IC!

e

IHe II In dangar 1111
tries
a clllerM

10 IIIIi

•
• • Wllo'an.,
lioN? Tony and Anglie'a

·-·­
--~~1 _
,_

fun-loVi'lg CQUple tum IOUI'-

/il (J) Nova NOVA covers

ff1

the E!u&lt;on Valdez oil spin

from a naw angle. C
111 eo R-= f11
eov.raga of the ,._Of

.loll·--..
l o l l~rlol,
I
, 8144.. am, tlnllltcl ap1nlltg~.

-711 .

.....,.

0 Murdar, lila Wnlle
Trouble In Eden

1120/mo.

1:01 (J) MoVIE: Logan1a Run IPGl
(2:30)
•
1:30 e Ill e (J) Tile Wonder
YHIS Ka¥in draads his
~ wtth the bOyS'

.........11 '441 • • .

-ln!llor·-

Qol ..
'

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

it~·fc:Mee
1:00 e !l) • In , . Heal 01 Tile .

• llna "". - " " '
All ..............
C..t . . . 2:00 p.M.,
IIM-7'1'3-o
111111,- wv.

Night Bubbl linda a baby

48 Space tor Rant

w:~'*==';11
Aoaeanne and JIICkla try 10

lor-· •100 por

1 ,_ -

ull._baldt C.U
' ' ,ane •1.
114 1• '???.

~~

mend a rill In their

relationship. C
(Il Fronlllna F'aleatlnlsn

-LOla
n . - "'"-·
. . -. .......... Coli

11

laadar Yaaaar Arafat

74111.

Pill....... l'otnl ..... -

47 wanted.to R1nt

~ peaoalnltiallvea.

In

s lladFOOII tto.e or tn:Mtr. PI•,Mt4 JookiOIIAva.,Palnl
Pnllr lllddlapafl location. Pl-.~
Cloan,
-• •tanl1bt•
- 2
_,....... RC

a or 41ood- -

1fi Fronlllna For yaara

MORK MEEKLE AND
'
NOPE
.

Manuel Noriega realalad
-mptaiO oust him frol'n

I 'v\ON1T... WHaoi IT
COOLS OFF, I'LL
CHAN6E 'THE~-

;-;·a

MOVIE: 'II IJI't,
One Hut~ I til' cal TYI 7 I

~~;~l;ll.lval

Golllpollo,

LPN - Compotltlvo
lor buoy,
·........._
-ry

bonofltL

0 MOVll: City ~ (2:00)
ltNIIh.aNow
1:30 (J) Calaga leallallall
·
ea e Cll Coecll Hayden
fears tllal the naw collaga .
praaldent II an old ona-nlgllt
atllnd. Q
10:00(1) 700 Club Willi Pat

dH'-- -y bv ....... 1,1110
to 11o1ao. HMith Sorvlao, P.O.
eo• 100.Pomorov, 011. 114-1112-

0 E.
11101. E.•

'

Choir diNCtor nMded, peJ4
choir dlrldor poehion, lend
'"""'" lo TrtnltY
UnHod
llo111odlot CII~_P.O. Box Z!l,
Point PfNI8nt, .ft'Y 25510 or. fd
lriOI1IIngo 304-t'IS-2220. .

Cttfto

woraod

-

-totlvoln-on~
~Mfr. •kiN hoew· wo~ r i

:aaldng. 11 ....742-813 bllw•n us lot on At. 110, 4 mltM
I:DD lllltl a:OO ovonlnp. - r y fromHoiiMo,OD.
VIowoltlll
flll ~ . . . . .

12

"""""'
an. - . 11.000. a1.-

SitUation
Wanted

far:

c-Ion ond •lol ol flinl

. ~- llotoll OlporloNIO I
Col _ . ot tho Lalafoll•
O.rden C.nlw' Man thru Frt. 1 to
3. 11t 4111111.

35 Lots • Amlge

[,lerCii.li ill lSI'

Wll do boilrollti!IO In 17Y - -· t1t1U F~. Di111 only. Coli
ett·~4::!1111!!:!1!!10t!!;_------:::-----

IS THAT· ALL
TH' NASTY NAMES
YOU·CAN THINK
Of.CALLIN' MY
MAN SNUFFY?

41 Houl881or Rent

OE..,.._

•o Mew Twtlght z-

Don1 mloo Eoolor ond - ·
Doy prollto. Soli A-1 OWn

Avon oonv.nw.tly and .. oo.t.
114-1112·7110.·

10:30 (!) l'arum .
• «&lt;I CWCrill..llli•oowalllclolla Tonlatlt
• Funny lut'rtll With
.ChMIII Cline II (A)
10:31 (!) MOVII: Tile - Of n.

EARN IIDNEY -lng -

-"*....-...

11311,000/yr. Dotollo. (1)

1111111.

Ext. Y·

r 'Elm
tiOO IO f500 ..... A-ng hOmo. Coli
ot

ats-tn.744CI Ext. - Help Wnted: I Qllti!OUU to put

-·p•nd-oroundlonn
prall ta. 11W4M571.
HcK llhllpiT nMded OM day'
..... ...... 304-t'IS-2100.
INYENTORYIIUPPLV CLERK
(Port·'"-)
20hourtporIEDIIII, Ina. lo 10o!!in1 lor on
~Jdlvllk•l

Ou'rgll; Portubl -.
Don't HaUl Y- . _ To IIIII,
w.•n lo yoUJ - - .
1117.

11:00(1) ........ And
MaCoiiiiiOit (A) D

Houlowoyonyt111~~ I

unw~nltcf 11.....aunal.ii

··-

"lea
C.. - llfll. Poulo'o DoyGt:'
tffolldl...

(Ill!,.. On Tile P11U

0

..

lor one

40 Piano

workman
office
41 Firat word
12 Calif.
in tales
7 Item in
baseball -42 Oklahoma a stream .
leam
city
8 Noteworthy
14 Plerre's 43 Gaze
10 Muted
salt
DOWN
color
15 Child's
1 Elected 13 Spoken,
pie
2 Shack
biblically
ingredient 3 WWII
15 Wire
18 Spot in
movie
measure
a deck
4 Diamond 21 Batman
17 Deer
state
&amp; Robin,
18 Cornell's
(abbr.)
lor
league
5 Adept
one .
11 Often
8 Neighbor
(or two?)
split
of Ire.
22 Isle of House

--

Yloe Amartoln
double agent allla Catllto 10
hTa flusallln fllllity.

.... Olear-

32 British
coinage
33 Rage
38 Prefix
with
cycle
39 Dip in
liqui&lt;!

AXYDLBAAXR
One letter stAinds for another. In this sample A is used

fo~ the

ttvee L's, X for the two ~·s, etc. Sin11le letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnatton of the wC!f\Js are all .

..

.•• "
' .

CIIYPTOQ001E
DJS

POSQDSWD
.

21

11),!1)( I

DOQTWRXD

,f

au.ln8ll
~ortunlly

.

xw

J

11110 1W, ...... __.,.,.._
L1 I lln-,11_....._

-

Aplli • • •
for Rent

'

44

Rule N~mber One: There 111 no ruiel.
'·

.

=~E~;a...~~.u
=
Ill ilL lU.

.

\•

•,I

li

2

DC

KQHFS

MS '' LQT

CFO ' LJXHYOST

D JS.. K Q H f S C Z DJS

SFTXLS

~STTSYI

.v.......•e Crftlt.....•s

ZQ ,R X HI.

WJOXKSO
WISDOM IS THE

-. ABSTRACT OF 1H! PAST, BUT 8I!AUTY • 111£
PROMISE Of THE FUTURE. - OLMJI W. ..,._.

'

..

. :~
' .

1·17

f

•

-.

1127

hints:Each day the code lettersare different.

~

Golt-. ""

contoct: John 8 - , 1!011!1!1
Routo 4, ... 144,
48131,
114 4.•• lifO
br
F....ry 21, t IIIII.

... .....

lsLONGFEL·LOW

0

lA

..-

28 In debt
30 Cut back

34Golf Item

eo ArNnkl HaR

.._.,

23 Gambling
game
24 cordiale
27 let down

DAILYCRYPTOQUOTES-Here's how towed It:

II

Ill=
..
.
.
C.

.BERNJCE
BEDEOSOL

•

•

are pu1 to the 11111.1;1

~
111011111'-_. I ;log
aJJ"DIIftlll

Moses
37 Guarantee
39 Lied.

Anddlaorimtnatton lllgal rlghll

...

I LIIL • 1:10 p.m. 2 ....10.
....., d • IIDhaa[ Dlup I•
a I me. 11t 111 IDI

wfth ., OhiO IIIT•A

........ ,_..........,.I
......

.

e&lt;Jl e• eCil• eo

,.,.., :·:~:···· c.ll ...,.....
1144!
•
.

Inventor
10 Devilfish
11 While

. •'

siruck
38 Number for

book
expletive
31 Reeorl
hotel

Wootdl (1 :45)

oartllloallon to • .... p J lid Oft
of Alld OpllllkM• Cllrlc. The

of Vllhafle
lfllerwNcl

Mldlilgl. Caller

(f) Ne411141111Ch
(I) Dnlltlin Amallcll

Slt.DNit. II

Vulnerable: Eut·Weat
Daaler: Weal

work
22 Expensive
coat
23 Waiter's
offering
25 Star!
the kitty
21 Figured
· out
27Drawn
out
29Type
of degree
30Comic

• • • (l)lllkiJID•wll!k.
Mollaaa and LH -.y 111at
their relationahl_e oonalatll .
molnly ol aax. Q

SHIF'LISS

.

..

200ut of

Jack appears llaadad for a
prilon aen111n01 on a
manalllughlor charge. D

'

AN' HE'S
A WUTHLESS1
NO-'COUNT,

.

tQS
+QIOI4

Item

Nalnrtlon

e w•

c:oatncl

nation
5 Dame.
Myra9 Famous

a c-ct~IIIMIIItllllon

_..,...,..-or_..h.

••••

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
35 Word with.
1 African
SOIT18 or

eoca11ua
a,, ..,.,...".,.....

IU,~-·7Siup.
Clltll tV. f14441-2101o
~

+AQJIOHS

CROSSWORD

Charla Stuan. C

-Tiourt.lot.

SOU'I'II

·

Eat II vtlblerable, and 1111 partner . SHill
plllllll artpalllly. Eut can be nearly '
Pli:ertala· dial Nortb-8outll will eventu- I I +
Dbl.
lov apadel. No - will be
s+
Poa
-.11 under conditions of
le nlilerllbillty to 811Cl'ifice
()pelllnl laad: \' K
...
ltiCb a .c:oatract. But wb:Y will procted u before, But what a dff. ·:
Eaat'at least make 11 practl· lereaee tbe di•RM!Dd lead makes! Tile' .
bid dial w111 lift bllllide the belt defenden will quickly tate two dla· :: .
cbaDce of defeadla&amp; well apiallt . jmoad tricks. Declarer 1,1 later tmlucky wblltever mmhir of trlc:kl South eon- ·•~~ace bolb black klap are badly alta- ,
witlo apadea u tnmp? U atetl, but that bad luck II Immaterial. •
· :
· two dlaiiiOIIdl, lhll bldcllnJ wltb a beart lead.
.
·- · ::r:-t=

attomal-

.,......m:z.

Cor1111od _ . . , - • or

.,

·

wllelllill part.!' llad bid tbe ault? U•
lort.alely declarer =Y llbed a .
JoaiJ1C lfiamoad llld
made hll

•'

.10171&amp;
t.\J54
+K7S

kill&amp; lrom K-Q of bearta, particularly ·

.
7:31 (J) lllljlwd And Bon
1:00 (I) MOYII: Alhinlng
. • ..... (2:00)
!l) Ill lletiNk MIIIOCk'a

4p.m.

-.
·_ __ _ - -·--Pork.
.......................
------...
=
-----p-· -.. .and. .

4M31 .
AVON I All " - I Slllrtoy

Auto Partl &amp;
Acc8111Jrlas

Who can fault Welt lor Jeadlnfl tbe '

OCrnalft
D lllgllt c-t

.=.

llriglo1ar
117.00- ......
lor2 pooplo,
Clroto

fiiO Dorwtllo 14172, 2 br, 2 fuol
bolito, talol oloctiJO, •• .....
nllan, CA. dllt:u:MIIIfi rock
under Jllnnlna, 111 4• 1187,
11~.~m11 11

1-11"'!11
......we:.,...
- - ·,
......_ iNI A.C
.a, 114 4. 0177.

76

+1

J0ate1t lltlit, bearts. As ez., ·

peeted, Soutlo duly cot to lour spades.

I 11..'1-f.IDP I dfl ...

CUoiGm bulft roolng ao Corl 1
HP, lieugoool
ooftdldan. 11~ .,..,

-=

oflloo or
ion WOI!Iod.
20-dolo
, . , .M*y
...
r:::;lt~orlt4TECH-

a.1ort,-

~ bid bla

ellortiiO belrlend a

BellY bod
- oonllal.
CUIIIIo
MMftll
21""·
TV, ,_....
1 tt. lllellfte cllh, ,. a 1111• a
niW diCDdlr• .114 t41 tiM or
304-e'/W21111.

11

.:..no

Abbotl And ClllliD

. e(J)MIIM'al'amllr

S&amp;A/.f, JVT :t
GOULP J&gt;O WITHoUT

IWT

llllllde. After tbe tlouble and redouble, · • e 5 2

eat......--TIIftlltllt

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airy

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.

MerchandiM

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117,000.

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buy: - · a
ponloo. Itto.
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dllyo, 114-

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'1'111 lint~ of bkldiDc Is to lbow
yav 1oap1t aultl' lint. Aad lbat rule I
WMid eertalaly to apply whea
maUl a takeollt cloable I WEST
:you to bid. Bllt abould WI al· · +X 5

maa a m1111111a. s --

.,

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BRIDOB ..

Yloe Arroglln1
Frank Mooca'a baCk:
Crockett wab for 111m 10

1i12 17 •. 'M-Hutl
- · 121 HP, E - ~na.
.
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Colll14-:111'1111
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=

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FRANK ANI) ERNEST

•

11111111

Gambol- 8Bnch - Fllval- Prance - COME IN
Didja Ever Notice Department: A nelg~bor will stand
at your door for 20 minutes because lie has no time
10 COME IN. .
_,.:.·-_.;...
· -------,

1011- I MR. King _

•vadeo~

•

SCUM liTS ANSWIIS

~IIIWIMIIOI

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UNSCRAM81.E FOR
"NSWER ..

NliweiiDIJ

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Wanted to Buy

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PRiNT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES

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&amp; Auction

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Melfi La'C:I,Haur

(I)

Ol MA'I'8E '(OV NEVER DID
LIKE US .. IS TI-IAT TRUE.
C14UCK ?T!.IAT VOU NEVER DID
LIKE V5 '? ~0~. CHUCK'? HUH

1 •

Bull1!811
IIINhloo pd. 114 4• 4411 ollor
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2nd. From lllddloport Hill pool
FWiclo .tatlon tum left, mobHe
homo on hill. Wogon - l o ,

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.

lnoldo movlna Nllllltn:h 1• I

American L~lon Hall,

(J) NCAA !'k* 1'lllgllgl:ta 18711-lndlanll•

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"Well, if I've been shaving
with whipped ·cream, then
what are we putting on our
berries?"

11

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uette1att.lpm.

II.S.blo I ""ho. Loot

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vicinity a 1111• and a,... Ra.d.
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Mltllpo.""- Ohio

· Coping 'Yith older children problem for 'stepmom
,
De~r ADD .Lucien: The 1ssue
, here IS stepcluldren. Bolh my husbm_KI and I ~ve them, and we are
uymg.to beflllr. My chi~ an;, lOis.
and '!iS are coU~ge·!l&amp;e· Hank has
to adjust to havmg lillie ones around
again, and I must adjust to having ·
kids old enough IOdoas they please.
Th' · here ha ll'liuble The
•

ISISW

we ve·

:

• b1g guys have never been asked to
lake OUIIhe trash, clean a bathroom

or
hang up their clothes. When Hank
asks lbem to stick around and help
. out, they always have plans and
• leave.
say~, "Oh :-"ell, they're
grown. I say, If !hey re so grown,
how come_lbey ,an; s~ living with
us and paymg ~ng?
.
Hank says his kids have a nght 10
live here just lilce mine. I agree, bu1
his aren't youngsters anymore. I'm
only eight years older than his old,
est son.
. .
Why doesn't Hank see that hiS sons
aren't learning how 10 function in lhe
real world when !hey enjoy all the
privileges of ~ul~ and ~pi none
of the respons1bibt1es? Their dad has

!fe

tn ed to get !hem II? pay S10 a wtek
to helpw11hgJOCenes,
.
The 20-year-old has never g1ven
m dime, and "!s dad hasn't p~
11. One day last week, Hank lost his
temper and lhn:atened to put the kid's
belongings on the porch if he didn't
start helping oot. Ten minullls later,
he
t
· after h'nl and nnnl
. wen runmnp; . ,1 . . :-r-ogized because be didn t want h1m 10
be mad. What can I do besides be

patient and .hope they leave before
I'm on Social Security? .. STEPP~D
ON IN FLORIDA
.
_DE_AR A.OR!DA: If ever I saw a
SltuabOII that cnes out for coonseltng, it's _yours. As thing~ stand, eve·
rybody IS sure to lose. S!"'O the rna]Oilty of second· and lhird-marriage
failures we caused by prob~s with
the SlllpChildren, I suggest that you
llllike an appoinanent w_ith a family
therapist IS soon IS posSible.
Dear ADD LaDders: Please say a
word on behalf of aU the lonely and
rejected children who pever get in,
vited 10 birthday ~arties. Children
.
to aslc:_ attractive and popular ,

r:oo

cwsm~~~e~, beclll!lelhey want 10 get

ontho~sideoCihese "Slalll." In
a way, It's a social bribe.
~arents, please encourage your

10 marry a

woman OYtl' 40 bec:al

Ann
Landers

k.d-tk

a

Pick 3
472'
Pick 4
9030

Tl_.,_..... ...

~~--••••IIIII••~~!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~-------.
·: ·
~

MOM
DEAR MOM: You have made
splendid suggestion, one that I hope
will be tal!-en seriously by aU parents
who read this column.
Children need to be taught kindness at 81! early age. I can think of
no better way than by pointing out
that lhey must include classmates and
acquaintanCes who aren't especially
good-looking or popular. .This can
make ~ big difference in lhe way a
child thinks about relationships
throughout his or her life.
Dear ADn LaDders: A man · I
work: with has a lovely wife who is
about 35. He keeps saying if anything happens 10 "Erma,• he's .going

•

Jayhawks

"They don't ' yell . .,_, ~L w~~C::!~~'"'
· ?HowCIJII""ll
They don'tsweU
'te
··
,.. """'
""
ANN LANDIII!
"19tlt,W.4....
fulls hell.•
&lt;10 you~:! ~=:f ~:::::;:.~~{.
children 10 invite two or three class- this creep's reasoning? _ SOI!I'H How 1o Deal
.
\viM lr, HIIW 111 Con· r en..... w,....... .
mates who may not be at the top of BEND
· ·.
·
•
their friendship list. It would mean
DEAR S B . The cree 1 •
q~r
It"
will
giw
'JOII
1M
~rs.
' I~;.---~::;~;~~so much IOtbe ywilgslm who ateil't ·-~en Th..:.. da
..
P 15 m•s· s~nd a s~lf :ttlrlrrqcd,)olll. busi· ~
""' •
ys women over 40 'ness-siz~ ~11Vdope 111111 a cllet:t. or c/o ANI l..twlers, P.O. Box •"'M
outstandingoracoomplished.I~ yeU, they teU and they aiso sweU
trWIIe•ortkr"'·$3.65(1/W)/u:htMs
· chicago,/U. 606Jl.()562. (/11 Ctut•
1 "'
because my 11-yw-old son is Cine ·And ofrt:n tbeir
'tude 15
·
essecj
'
,.
of them... CARING COLORADO
gnlll
ex~ postage and /uwJlillg) ro: Alcollo/, ada. send $4:115.)
•

Whai

Ohi«l .LOttery

Sooners
roD over

'

•

..

STOll

'101•40. No.205
, Copyrighted 1180

OM.YI

"

-

.

I'CI

By CHARLENE llOEFLICH
Seatlnel News lltaff
Meigs High School graduation
was set tor· Sunday .afternoon.
May 20, at 'l'uesday night's
meeting of the Meigs Local
aoaril of Educatlon.1
It was noted durlng 'the meetIng by_ Supt. James Carpenter
that school will continue through
May 25 but due to the ·M emorial
D!lY activities of the weekimd

~
iiili

&amp;!!

Pomeroy-MiddlePort, Ohio, Wednesday. February 28. 1990

following· that date, the May 20 .
date was recommended: The
superlntendent !\ISO reported
that like last year, seniors will be
required to attend school on
Momday and Tuesday after
graduat!on.
Treasurer ·Jane Fry reported
lo board members on the !!nan·
c!al· condition of the district . Sbe
sald that unless something un- ·
foreseen comes up, the budget

'j

17 oz.

17 oz.

...

SUD.AFED
1

••

NASAL .DECONGESTM(T
24's

REUEVES NASAL AND SINUS COI\'GESTION DUE TO COLDS OR HAY FE.'VER

Two Year Test
Drive •••
.
'

'

,,

.;
leadership "to
on track. "
He says !nforma!lon coming .
out of Columbus ts that things in
OhiO are bet~. ''Things are not
better," according to Volnovlch.
maay years Ia p11bllc ornce, Volnovlch says the
GREftiNG A FRIEND - OeoJ'Ie Volnovlch,
who quotes ' such statistics as
one
of whlcb he Ia most proud Is tile Homestead
for
69vernor
of
Ohio,
lakes
Republlcaa
caadldate
,. Oblo ranking "46th In creation of
ExemplloD
Law which benefits senior clllzens
a
moment
foUowlng
his
speech
lhls
momlnl
In
long term jobs, 42nd in creation
and
which
be
was lns&amp;rwnenlalin get ling passed.
Pomeroy
to
greet
GeDevleve
Well,
Pomeroy
of short term Jobs and 47111 In the
BLAST OFF! -The space shuttle Atlantis rille~~ from la11nch pad
Vlfllble
In
the
background Is Meigs County
rHidenl. Volnovlch spoke to approximately 90
.length of time It takes to put an
39-A at .the Keaaedy Space Center early Wednesday. After a
En~tneer
PhUip
Roberts.
people In a ~~-to~retber at tile St. Paul Lutheran
umemployed person back to
post-Challenger record of five delays In stx daya, tbeshuttlefiDally
Church. Among his accomplishments during
lifted off carrying a five-man crew pn a secret military mission. :• · work."
(UPI)
.
Volnovlch admit ted It w!ll take
·the votes of Democrats and
He pointe(! out I hat for the first government. There's a right way
If the Volnov!ch-DeW!ne
Independents, as well as votes of
tlrile in 25 years, a Republican and a wrong way. And the people team wins in November, Voino·
Republ!cans, to put him in the
candidate fo r governor is ahead who are In charge now are doing vlch promises to have " the
governor's offici&gt;. Buthefeely he
of the Democral candidate In the It the wrong way. The people who . toughest ethl~ laws in the,
can get those votes and pointed
poUs . "And those are Independ- are part of the problem can't country." He says 'he w!ll not
out that he has done it In lhe pas I
ent polls, nol my polls," he solve the problems ," he said. Se allow his cabinet members to be.
''because voters know George
laugl)ed.
then pledged his " loyally to the paid lobbyists for outs ide consatellite payload to fly over more Volnov!ch is a good'-governCAPE CANA VERAI..;, Fla.
But he also stressed that people who put me in public cerns and he w!ll ·"just about
than 80 percent of the Soviet ment man; an honest man and a
(UPI)- The,m llltarycrewofthe
"there's no Republican way and office' ' and not just tci the eliminate no-bid contracts. The
Union.
.
shuttle Atlantis blasted into orbit
man of Integrity."
Contlnu_ed on page 5
Democrat way to . run state Repulican party.
" It was tbe brightest object In .
Wednesday, streaking up "the
Eastern Seaboard like a fiery
the sky," said Mike Robertson,
~
comet In a spectacular nighttime
launch visible from F1orlda to
was the space shuttle."
Delaware.
Said Officer Jeff. Edwards of
A manhunt was underway in a Involved In the hunt this morning
son, VInton •. Athens and Meigs S.R. 7 at the junct!on of Little
Carrying a top-secret military
·the
Mur!reeslioro,
N.C
.,
poUce
four-county
area
,today
·
for.
a
and
aircraft
had
been
brought
In
Counties are searching the area Kyger Road.
satellite In Its cargo bay, the $2
department:
"It
looked
kind
of
Wilkesville
area
resident
beto
assist
In
locating
the
suspect
for
the suspect.
·
Larry Stanley , 45, was cited for
b!Uion spaceplane vaulted away
l!l!e
an
airplane
only
quite
a
bit
lleved
to
be
a
sus~t
In
a
according
to
the
sheri!!.
The
In
other
patrol
news,
Mathew
not
maintaining assured cle.ar
from launch pad 39A at 2:50a.m .
brighter, with a tall, kind ofllkea shooting early this morning In name of the· victim was not . C. Davison, 16, PSR, Gallipolis, distance alter his 1979 Ford F-100
EST, six days . and five ·delays
comet."
·
which a woman was killed.
released.
was cited for failure to control piCkup truck hit a 1980 Mereu ry
• behind · schedule. and majest!- ·
According to Melgs County
A spokesman at the Jackson
after overturning h!s ' 1985 Ford Cougar driven by Zachary s.
cally thundered loward the heav- . Just 8 ~ minutes after liftoff,
after
passing
about
10
miles
east
Sheriff
James
Souls
by.
the
local
Dis
trlct
Patrol
Post
said
around
LTO and causing heavy damage Taylor, 18, Rt. 1, Gallipolis, and
enS atop Incandescent jets of !Ire.
of Cape Halleras, N.C., Allan- department has several men in
11: 30 a.m. today lha an Oak Hill to It In a one-car wreck Tuesday caused a collision between Taywoman was kllledbyanunkn.own
at 10:20 p.m. In Green Township lor' s Cougar and a 1985 Chevrole t
t!s's three powerfulmalnenglnes the area searching for the
"Roll program, Houston!"
1comrnander 1 John
shut down as planned lt'h th
suspect.
assallantWednesdayat6:50a .m . on S.R. 141 at milepost 15.
Blazer driven by Catherine E.
••J .O."
w
e
The
suspect
a
·
llegedly
shot·
his
dl
about
100
m!les
east
near
Jackson
at
the
junction
of
Davison
was
hea
ng
east
Workman, 34, of Middleport.
spaceplane
·Creighton radioed , mission conor
Atlantic
C!ly,
N.J
.,
and
more
girlfriend
in
the
head
with
a
U.S.
35
and
S.R.
32.
when
he
slid
off
the
left
side
of
the
Stanley and Taylor were dr!vtrol!n Houst9n as the 4.5-mllllon100
miles
up.
shotgun
after
she
got
out
of
his
The
woman,
whose
name
has
road,
hitting
a
culvert
before
lng
north when Taylor slowed .to
than
pound spaceship wheeled about
C,reighton and co-pilol John car near the Intersection of State
not been released pending not!fl- overturning and corning to res lin turn left to Little Kyger Road.
to line up on a trajectory
Casper later fired Atlantis's two Route 35 and Route 321n Jackson
calion of her family, was shot by
a ditch.
·
Stanley.rear-ended Taylor's car,
carrying it closer to the East
o,rbital m·aneuverlng rockets to County, the sheriff said.
a man said to be ftorn Wilkes·
A Racine man was cited in a forcing Taylor togo left or center
Coasl. than ever before .
•
TheOhloStateHighwayPatrol
ville. The patrol and local law
three-vehiCle crash Tuesday at andh!tWorkman'sBlazer,wh!ch
put the spacecraft In a safe,
" Roger roll, Atlantis," replied
circular orbit.
from &amp;.four-county area was also
enforcement agencies in' Jack·
7: 40a.m. in Addison Township on' was traveling south.
astronaut Michael Bakel' at lhe
'
Johnson Space Center.
Joining Navy Capt. Cre!ght~
Running exactly two.hours late
because of rain and low clouds ,
Atlantis knifed through a thin
are Marine Lt. Col. David
cloud deck and arced northeast
H!lmers, 40, Air Forc'e Col.
But C&amp;ln responded that the sector would benefit minimally.
rate to nonprofit organizations
COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPI) over' the Atlantic Ocean toward ·· Richard "Mike" Mul!ane, 44, and
Meanwhile, a select committee
Involved
in
the
construction
of
funding
of facllltlell for .the
·
Tbe
'
Ohio
House
of
Representa·
. ·,an orbit allowing Its hush-hush
Navy Lt. Cmdr. Pierre Thuot, 34'.
dves passed 'l'uesday, 89-7, aDd facilities for the mentally re- mentally retarded Is a public rewriting antl·drug legislation
Continued on page 5
forwarded to the Senate a biU tarded and developmentally purpose, and that the private
aimed at helping finance con· dlaabled.
,.
' 'This Increases the abiUty of a
struclloa ot residential factlllles
county to address Its needs," said
for the mentally retarded.
CAin,
pointing Out that more tlian
· Sponsored by Re!l. Madeline
Cain, D-Lakewood, t~ biU per-. 7,000people are on waltingllsta to
mill couades IOestabllab "linked . get Into suctr residential
• · WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
In a preliminary report !asued depollt" programs so that mo- facltltlas. , ,
A Rlltlaad niall Q t cited lri a two-car craah Tuesday at.3: 40
Commerce Department, ,In a
Ill January, the Commerce J&gt;e.
Rep; ·Ronald Amstutz, R·
aey II available at low IDitrest
p.m. In Rutlaad Towublp OD S.R. 124, just ea1t of milepost 14,
· revised gross natiOnal product partment nllmated U.S. eco- rates for tbe coaatructlon.
w-ter. objected to the propaccording to theGallla·l\11111 Poatof tbe State Highway Patrol.
·· estimate, Wednesday .r~ Domlo growth stood at 0.5 perc::ent
UDder a llftked depoelt pro- Oial, nYfDg It creates presaure to
Kevla D. Tboma, 22, waa oltl!d for aot malntaiDIDg allUred
economic growth plodded alont for the quarter, aDdat2.9perceat aram, tbe couaty lnweta a 1ncreue tu rates without fulfil·
clear dlatance after hit 1968 Buick Skylark hit • 1977 Buick
at 0.9 percent In the final quarter tor all of 1989.
certaiD •mount of Its lllactl\oe IIIII the needl of everyoile who
. Skylark driven by Steplwale A. S.Okl, 17, of Rutlaad.
Of 1989 and at 3 percent for the ...
'Tile world lan't going to tuncll wttll a oommerct.l bahk . seek placemellt.
Thoma aad .Jiaakl were driving - t wbeD Thoma tried to
''What we're realty doing Is
entire year . ·
ohange on this revisiOn." said and agrees to accept Interest
pals s.ntca. But Thoma saw aD eaat!lqiiJICI c• comlag, and be
paymenta at up to 5 percent arbltrarUy giving away eal'lllnjs
Analysts had predk:te4 a tower Robert Dederick, chief economade aa attempt to retum to the wead:louild lane, butlaatead bit
on public fundi to do IIOmethlng
below the market rate.
'
estimate of the GNP, wblch tn!at for Northern Trust In
the left rear of Banks' car.
In the prl,vate sector," said
In tum, the baak agrees to Joan
inea1ures the country's tolal Ch'l cqo. ''The economv WAJI a
. CoDt1Dued on page 5
· ContiDued on page 5
the money at the aame lnierest Amstutz.
output 91 goodi and services.

off safely
for' secret mission

BIG FOOT

GS

EASTER BUNNY
'
. SMALLSIZE
WHITE PLUSH

s

j

Atlant~

·T OPAZ

Lcae F.or Onl)'

ball coach and Rick Edwards as
March 23 and 24. They w!IJ go adopted a job description tor the
the junior high track coach for
there to participate In cornpell- high school and guidance secrethe 1990 season at the approp,
!Ions. Sul,lt. Carpenter noted the . tary and lunchroom cashier .
rlate place on the salary sche·
Increase In number of students in
Following the meeting the
· dule. Charles Riley was hired as
vocal!onal programs who have board went Into executive sesadvanced to regional and state slon to discuss OAPSE negotlaa substitute teacher fo r the
·1989-90 school year. He Is C\!rtl· .contests this year.
· t!ons and personnel. ·,
fled tnelementaryeducal!on. one
Tara Wolfe, a senior, was
Attending were Supt. Carpenthrough e!ghl.
accepted as a tuition student at ter, Treasurer Fry, and board
· The board approved a field trip· Meigs High School. A dock day members, Bob j:larton , pres!for three Business Office Educa- was granted to Juan!la Lambert de nt, Robert · Snowden, Larry
lion students to Columbus. for March 2, and the board Rupe, Richard Vaughan, and
.
, · Jeff Werry.
·

By NANCY YOACHAM
Senllnel News Staff ·
'.'tf· people In Ohio are going to
work, we have to have a state
government that works," said
George Votnovlch, former
mayor of Cleveland and Republican candidate for governor.
Volnovlch was in Pomeroy early
this morning to speak to area
voters· and ask for their support
in the November election.
Although Voinovlch did not
state spec!llcally how he would
help Southeastern Ohio If eleCted
to lhe state's highest office, he
did say that he realizes that
"people In this area !eel they've
been forgotten for t09 !llany
years. But I intend to work with
this region to bring back Jobs and
to provide a better education for
the area 's young people."
Voinovlch pointed out that
between himself and U. S.
Congressman Michael DeW!ne,
.hts running mate for lhe position
they
ex1uerien''" in "' .

s~oa$100
at Pomeroy Elementary on Saturday afternoon.
Two lrvop members pictured are ·Laura Fryar,
left, aad Stat:ey TbeiM. 'lbe tbeme for the
aflernooa waa ''Tie11 That Blad."

will be kept In lhe black although
there is still ' borrowing on the
spending reserve. She also noted
that the foundation money Is up
by $54,000 but that · $52,167 was
lostlnvocatlonaleducatlonfunds
~ause 1.19 vocational units
were not funded apparently
~ause the program did not
meet enrollment requirements.
The board voted to employ
Terry Adams as assistant base;

Voinovich campaigns in Meigs County

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