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10--The n.a.. SMJtlnel

Moudlly, Mac•• I. 111()

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---Local news briefs..·. ----.
Co!!ilnued ~om page ·1

9hio expects springllke weather late ·hi week

Bands t presen concert

By Ullltetl P,.. gterutiHaJ
TonJiht and Tuesday there will
t
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Snowandwlnierweatherearly ' be a cbanc:e of Oun'lea ·OVer
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lnthe\veekwlllgtvewaytomore northern Ohio wh~ the rest of
TheEasternlllghSchOi)i'JazzandConcertBandswlllpresent
sprlngllke weather across Ohio the state will be partly: cloudy .
a eoncert In the high school gymnasium at 7:30p.m. tomorrow
later Ia the week.
Lows tonight will be-21'lln the
evening (Tuesday) ·
.
The Buckeye State this inorn- north to the low 301 tn the Sliuth.
Included In the program will )le the concert band's
lng was slttlng .on the southern
HlihsTuesdaywlllbelnthe30s
competition music for district ratings. The eonceri bane! will
elld :or a rn8tslve Arctic high In the north, In the 4011 In the
travel to Newark this Saturday tor the competition.
pressure system, with a weak · c;entral counties and In the 50s tn
Music for their part ol the program Is " Allied Honor March,' '
warm front stl'l!tched across the south.
central Ohio. , The · conditions
Looking ahead through Frtby Karl King; "Landmark Overture," by Jim Andy Caudlll;
and "Ifa,.licta," by James Swearingen.
helped cause some overnight day,ltwlllbedryWednesdayand
Also n the program Is the jazz band perfon'nlng selections
snowfall.ln the northern counties, Thursday, with a chance of
with abOut 2 Inches falling In showers Friday. Highs each day
made Qnious by the "big bailds.'.' of the past, starting with
" Back ~reet &gt;Biues'.' bY, Count Ba!.le. Also on the prpgrarn wlll
Cleveland.
will be 1n the 40111n the nortli and
be Benny Goodman's "Stompln' at· the Savoy" . and Tommy
In the south, It was 'cloudy and · 1n the 50s to low 60s In the SO\Ith.
Dorsey's " Opus One."
·
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considerably warmer, a condl· Lows will be In the 20s to low.30s
The concer!ls free ami t~P~.l!:: 1!,£9,.fdl~lly tn~.,. . ._. .. ._tlon eJ~pected to ,pr.ev'all.lhl:oll$'h,..; ~Wednesclay..,,Jn the 30s -Tilu~
.
'lnost ol the week.
· .
· · and In the rnld-30s to mid~s
~k
·
Northern Ohio's temperatures Friday.
.
8 8V..
W~
C8 8 were only to "reach Into the low
0\lthe early morning weather
30s todaY, while. It will' expected map, high pressure was centered
Seventeen calls were answered · 7. Stella Coleman was trans- to be In the low 50s In the southern north of Lake Superior and
over the weekend by units of the
ported from the scene to Vete- · counties.
extended across northern Ohio. A
Meigs County Emergency Medl·
rans Memorial Hospital by the ·
cal Services. Twelve of the calls Tuppers Plains unit. Pomeroy
were on Saturday and five on
EMS was called to the scene for
Sunday.
W!Uiam Colem!ln, also taken to
Saturday at 1:03 a.m., Porn~
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Weeilead revival
Ttult eea to meet ·
roy was call~ to. the sheriff's ·. ·Middleport EMS and Fire
There · will · be a weekend
The Scipio Towli$hlp Trustees
of{lce for Bruce Gheon and
Department wete called to an
revival
Friday through Sunday
will meet Wednesday, 6 p.m. at
Denise Withrow who were auto accident at the IntersectiOn
the township building In at the Harrisonville Holiness
treated but not transported.
of Routes 124 and 7 .at 7: 22 p.m. Pagevllle,
Chapel.
Middleport at 4:.50 a.m. was. Saturday. Allee and Lewis Revival
The guest speaker will be Rev.
,
called to the Overbrook Center
Kennedy were tra.nsported from
There will be a revival at the J. Stevan Manley, general
for ·Georgia Watson who was
the. scene to Veterans Memorial Victory Baptist Church Thurs- superintendent.
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Services are at 7:30 p.m.
day through Sunday at 7 p.m.
Hospital.
At 8: 43 p.m.,· Pomeroy transnightly and Rev. Earl Fields
nightly.
AtlO: 54 a.m. , Pomeroy went to
ported Tammy Ww!klns from the
The guest speaker will be Dr. · Invites the public.
Route 143 for Walter Blazer to sheriff's office to Veterans Mem, . .
Larry Emery. James E. Keesee, Seeldag ua_llonns
Veterans Memorial Hospital. '
orial HospitaL
'
Anyone
with
boy
scout
or cl!:\1
pastor, Invites the public.
Tuppers Plains at 11: 36 a.m.
Mlildleport at 9:45 p.m. was
scout
.
uniforms
lnterestei!
' ln
Rerballlrls to meet
went to Route 681 for John Hawk
donating
them
may
do
so
to
the
·
called to MillS!. for Phyllis Blake
The River Valley Herbalists
Jr. who was treated but .not
who was taken to Veterans
will meet Tuesday, 7 p.m. at the ·Rutland Boy Scout and Cub Scout
transported.
. · Memorial Hosplta:L
home or Rose Marie Dubltes, 125 Troop.
Middleport at 11:55 a.m. tranpSunday at 12: 14 a.m. , Tuppers
Lynn Cltcle In Ripley, W.Va. Classes to begiD
sorted Mamie Stephens from · Plains went to Route 248 .for
A new series of round dance
Local members are to meet at
Pearl St. to Veterans Memorial · Nellie Connolly who was taken to
Shopey's )n Ripley and go In Instruction classes will begin at
Hospital.
Camden-Clark Memorl'al
the MiiklleportAmerlcan Legion ·
groups at 6: 30 p.m.
Hospital.
At 1: lB_p.m .. Rutland EMS and
hall, Fourth St., Middleport.
Booeten meetlnc
fire department was called to a
'Glen
Anders will be the InstrucRutland at 7:35a.m. was called
The Eastern Athletic Boosters
to Meigs Mine No. 1 for Rayrnol)d
brush fire on the Pat O'Brien
tor
for
the classes which are open
will meet Wednesday at 7:30p.m.
property on Hysell Ruri, Road. At
Manley who was taken to Veteor singles. Tbe basic
to
couples
at the high school. ·
2:27 p.m. , Rutland Fire Depart· rans Memorlai·.Hospltal.
Introduction
classes will be of·
Cheerleadlq.cllalc
ment was called to a brushfire on
At 8: 53 a.m., Pomeroy was
fered
from
.
7
to 8 p.m. and the
Elementary cheerleadlng
the Andy · Dorsci l property on called.OakSt. for George Molden
clinic for the Eastern Local . advanced Classes from 8 to 9: 30
it 'Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Titus Road.
School District will be Saturday p.m. Anyone Interested In enrol·
Olive Township Fire Depart''·Middl~rt at 6:40p.m. trans·
sponsored by the athletic ling may call Mary Skinner,
mentwent to Forest Run Road·at pox'\idl cliPellne Mills from VU·
992-2500.
boosters.
3:30 .p.m. for a brush flte on .Uib · ligi!''' I' Manor ·Apartments · to .
There ts' a $5 sign up fee and To meet Suaday
.
Jerry St. Clair property.
,
Hollier Medical Cente.r
lunch will be $2. Awards will be
The OH·KAN Chapter of the
' At 8:4~ •, )i. m ., Pomeroy was
Tuppers Plains EMS and fire
given.
·
Plo~r Rlvermen will meet
department, and Chester .Fire called'', to Brick St. for Paul
Contact 949-2603 or.667-6269 for Sunday at 2 p,pt. In the meeting
Department , were called ar'7:•2'1 Sfelrinieti$r.. 'tq Veterans Mem- ' lnfonnatlon.
room of the Point Pleasant
_ oS'Uitat · , · ·
p.m. toanautoaccldentonRo\lte &amp;rlaf'H
Free
clothiq
day
·
Library, Point Pleasant, W.Va. ·
"1
'"( "/(It'
There will be a free clothing All fanner and present men and
day on Thursday .from 9 a.m. to women who have worked on the
noon at the old ltlgh school river, and their spouses, are
building In Cheshlte sponsored Invited. A program will be
by the Meigs Gallla Comrltunlty featured and !(gilt refreshments
PhyUis Blake
Margeiit
Priddy . .
. '
Action Ager\~y .
· . will be served.
Phyllis Jean Blake, 54, of · : S'i~~ril survivors of Margar~t
Falrlane Drive, Mtddleport,~dled ' ,~I7.Abeth,f,lfe Priddy. 79, Hysell
wm'
Saturday . at Veterans Meqtgria~A 'Rll~ijojl\li Pomeroy, who died
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Hospital follpwfng an extended ~ Frfda:\1 morning at Holzer Medl·
CLEVELAND 1UPI) _ One
Lottery officials said $690,967
Illness:
.
cal Center, were omitted from
L
h
ld
tl
k
t
worthofllcketsweresoldforthat
1
0
Born. on Jan. 21.1936,at Rav.'e n.·1
li:oll,,ltllar.y'.w. hlch w•• pr,i"te.dIn Super otto Payer
sa c e
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with thesamenumbersaschosen
portion of tl\e game, with seven
Va., she was the daughter of the .the&lt;Suilday Times-Sentinel.
In Saturday night's drawing,
having tlie first five numbers,
latz John Sidney Southetn arid " 'ln 'addition to those listed are
h
k t
th $3
good for $5,000 each. Another 63
11c e wor
Lula Ethel Hess Southern. She four. d. au~ters-ln-law,
Mary
·
making
t
at
.
million
·
have the flr•t four for $1,000; 630
worked as a cook and was a
Priddy ,111! · rgla; Ruth Priddy,
Th ·tl k t h tl\ · be 4
have the first three for $100,· and
member of the American Legtok ,...littandl ''Ho'_pe Priddy, Georgia·,
at c e as e num rs •
5 32 33 34 and 40
6,134 have the first two for $10.
"
Auxiliary, Feel)ey-Bennett Post · 'lillti1Jintif1'Prlddy, Pomeroy; and
'The h~ld~r can r'edeem It at a
128, Middleport.
~
five ' Sllns:ln-law, Roy Newell,
She Is survived by a daughter,
Ml(iilli!port; Ronnie Rife. ~ Al· lottecyofflceandbecomeel(glble
Tammy (Tom) Quillen, and a
bariy
' ·.• •Ch·a rtes ·Buckley, Miners- for S150•000 a year for. 20 years,
before taxes. ·
·
Veterans Memorial
son, John, Middleport; a brother,
ville; and David Jeffers, Middle. Ohio Lottery o'flclals said
Salurday
admissions ·'
John (Mary) Southern. Syraport; and Ross (Bud) St.e wart, Sunday ·that out of the $3,696,708
None.
·
cuse, a sister Frances (Frank)
Pomeroy. ·
worth of tickets sold, 97 tickets
, Saturday dl~ehar1es - Bea·
Trlplztt, Raven, Va.. and a
Also surviving are· five !)roth- have five of the numbers for
trice Rinehart, Richard
brother, Bob (Carol) Southern, ers, Raymond Fife, Cheshire; $l,()()!J each, while another 4,442
Thornton.
Middleport.
and Lewis, Roscoe, and Clarence have follr. of the six nur:nbers, for
Sunday admlllslons - Della
Fife, ,all of ·Middleport; four $75 each.
Besides her parents she was
Coleman, Reedsville; William
preceded In death by a sister.
sisters, Evelyn Matthews, CheThe Kicker game produced the
Coleman, Reedsville; Shirley
.
shire; Katherine Russell. Mason. number 979 506, and there is one
Murial Asbury. ·
Willis, Syracuse.
,
Funeral"'servlces wlll be held at
W.Va. ; Doris Cooke, Point Plea- ticket with that combination. It's
Sunday
dl~ebarcea
-none.
1 p.m. Tuesday at the Ewing
sant, W. Va .~ and Erma Je·an, • wor.ih s1oo,OOO.
Funeral Home. The Rev. Glen
Pennsylvannla.
McMlllan will olflclate and burial will be In Letart Falls
Cemetery. friends may call at
the fUneral home from 3 to 9 p:m . . •
today (Monday.)
,. Dally stock prices
ol. (As ollt: 30 a.m. )
-~ce and Mark SmHb ,.
Francis Andrew . -~- . .?W Blunt,~~~~~~~- ~·:: ..

Squa· d h e }7
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warm front was acra.s .ceotral
Ohio. The hlib preSiure will

Ohio l..9ttery

College
basketllall

Piek 3

roundUp

move alowlyeastand beceniered
north of Lake Oa~o

950
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,HATION.t,L WIATHIR PORICAST To 7 All lilT :1+80
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6737

.·P age 4

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· Copyrighted 1980' .

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Meigs Common Pleas Court

run·"g ticket

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Hospital news

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Meigs County Jail. Bond was
continued and McCloud was
released from cus.tody pending
his transport to Orient on March
19.
'
· In other court matters, Flor-'
shell'l) Shoe Co., Chicago, m., has;
flied suit against Van Vranken
Inc., doing business as Hartley-

~::~~. s~~~:~ge~i). ~~~~ :

roy, and Matthew C. ·van
Vranken, Pomeroy, et . al, for
$3,686.09.
Another judgment action has·
'been filed by James F. Hysel~
Middleport, and Patricia . A.
Hysell, Middleport. against Ro_bert E. Miller, Rutland. '

ATTENTION

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One player has

The Meigs County Health Departme~t
would like to issue the followiqg advi·
so.ry to any person(s) who may be
planning to purchase real estate in
Meigs Co;:.oty on which to build a
home or install a mobile home. Before any purchasing of such property,
the prospective buyers should check
with the County Health Department to
ascertain if the property is served by a
sanitary ,sewerage system, and if not,
whethe.- ,the property can be approved .·
for the installation of a private home
sewage disposal system. _

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RAVENSWOOD ALUMINUM EMPLOYEES:

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Francis H. Andrew: 86, •1.ong..;1 ,Am Sectrt.fiitow~ri:~iff! " ' "'30Y, •
Bottom, died Satuday at Vete- : AT&amp;.~...... ~.~ .... .,, .~ ..... .. .. ... 40Y,
rans Memorlal Hospital follow- . Ashliltd}).lt';, ... :.p.;i;·'j.~:::.""35~
lng a brief Illness.
Bo~·...... r•fft.t, ...... ... 12!4
Born on Jan. 9, 1904 at Charm!l)g Shoptll!s·.. ..... :...... . 9%
Pittsburgh, Pa. he was !lie son of · 'il,t;r;ff ).1 1.,Co. •·•~'" """ " '14%
the late Frank Andrew and Mary Federal Mogul. ............. ; .. .... 18
Ellen Butler Andrew. He was a Goodyear l'&amp;l'l ., .. ....... : .. .. .. .. 34
farmer, and a member of the Heck'$ ......... .... .. ...... ..... .........3
Sacred Heart Catholic Church. . Key Centurion .......... .... ... .. .13Y,
He Is survived by a son Frank Lands' End .. .... ,.................. 18%
(Tammy 1 Andrew of ' Saudi, Limited Inc. ....... .:....... .. .. ...36)'•
Arabia; three daughters. ·Mary -Multfmedia Irie............... .... 76~
Ellen Andrew, Pittsburg, Pa., Rax Restaurants .. .......... .. .... 2%
Teresa Collins, Marietta, and -.Robbini.&amp;.M;vers ................ 15l;i
Catherine (Wayne) · Salkowltz
Shoney'' s Inc . .. :.... ........ .... .... 11
Raleigh. N.C.; three grandchild: Star Bank ....................... .... lB)i.
ren, Brian Collins, Long Bottom, Wendy's Int'l .... .. ....... ......... .4%
Angela Collins, Dily\On. and
Worthlngton·Ind ......... :........ 20%
Derrlck Andrew Salkowitz, Ra(Umlted I!Jc. Ill ex dividend
leigh, N. C.; a sl~ter, Mary
loclay.)
,
Wippel, Lancaster, Pa., ·and a
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·sister-In-law, Mary Andrews;

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parents, he was

SefJb divOfte · ·'·

preceded In death l!Y his wife,
A dlv·o rce
· action has been filed
ellle Mackin Andrew, three
brothers, Charles, John and inMelpComtnonPieasCourtby
Paul. And two sisters, Elizabeth Un Renee Capehart, Middleport, against Gerald Lewis Arm·
. and Ella.
Funeralserviceswlllbeheldat
stron1 Jr., Ia care of Lagene
10 a.m. Wednesday at the Sacred fcArmstrolll. Middleport.
Heart Catboltc Church. Pome- ---..;,..
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roy. The Rev. Robert BOrer wll.l ' · ' · ·•· · · •· ·· '
officiate and burial will be In Our . I811Ued licenee
Lady of Loretta CathoUc Ceme- · '
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tery, Long Bottom. Fritn$ may · A mUTiage license has been
call at the. fUneral borne, 2 to 4 . ~S.UI!II!I Me~E~~·erProbl ~
and 1 to 9 p.m. bilih today and COUrt to rm... ...,ne a .....
Tuesday. Rosary lervlces will be - .s,. and Cyatllla Joan RlclWds,
held at' 7 p.m. on Tuesday. _ .....2t.."J!!I.
tii~J'!Ild\l(~!l0rt;
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Certlft.ed Public Accountant

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Certlft.ed Publlc .Accountant

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•DALLAS KAYSER
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Attomey

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Will Ariswer Your·Question$ On ESOPs, Rollover'S,.
. ·· ... ·IRAs and ReiCJted Tax COnsiderations
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TUESDAY, MARCH 6 - 7:00 P.M.
at

PLES.
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2212 Jackson Avenue, Point Pleasamt
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NO ADMISSION FEE - EVERYONE IS WELcOME!
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The Flotal Bouquet, along '• with
an . adj!&gt;ining building .fonnerly
housing an army Sulprus business,
was ~ned by fire Sunday after·
noon m the Town of Mason.
·
ACCO(dil!i 'P' fire deparllnent
" .p(figals, the ~ - ,Fire Dqlar\·,
.••-r1 '!'~~~ ..fit'; .ca~r ·at...,.P:~·
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Jy 1'p.m. New Haven and
Mitldlepon depantilents joined in'·
the offon to assist in extinguishing
the blaze. '
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The building is owited by David
Rhodes, Zephyr Hills, Fla. Owner
of the Oo\vet shop contents is Bar-

bara Vllli'r1eter'of Gallipolis.
According 1o . Mason Fire C!tief
RosS ltoush. the blaze began in a
middle wldroom · at the ftower
shop. Roush staled each time
firemen felt the .blaze was almost
under control, paint cans contai.ned
in the building e~ploded, causing
the fire to bunt, oqce again.
Roush also noted that the older
building had been remodeled ·
sev~ limes, with many layers of
roofing civerlappi!)g, making ·.it
difficult to extillguish. the fire bet·
ween the layen. .
Witnesses at the scene described
a loud explosion·as
first sign of
trouble.
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''I heard the front window blow
· out," .said Carlottia Boyer, an
SUITS UP FOR FiRE ..._ M.:..Wn Votunroer Fireman Dllnn'le
employee ' Of Vaughn's Cardinal,
Fowler, left, and Scott Casto are shown as they "suit up" to go Into
IOCICd across from the flower
the bumlng Floral Bouquet Sunday afternoon In Mlison. (OVP
shQp.
photo by Mindy Kerns).
·
''Charlie Reed was parked outside the store, and I thought he hit a
car. One ·of the picture. windows
.
Charlie and I anct Reed were just · 1!11flic NQund the area.
blew out and glass went clear into
leaving
the
~
store,
and
were
·
The
cause
of
the
blaze
is
un·
tlie middle of the road," Boyer conthe first to notice the blaze. Janet detennined, but acconling to Marty
tinued.
Y~er of the Mason department, 11
"I called the fire dejlartment. Reed said her husband had just p,ut
the truCk into gear, when the winis suD under invesliption. .
~ was so much smoke," she
dow blew ouL She ·staled she went
The total damage esaimatc is aPcoocluded.
proximately $35,000. Eight ttucks
Becky Pearson, who lives next back into 'the store 10 get someone
door to the shop, said. "I . h~ a 10 call the fire depanmc;nt, before from the Mason, New Haven, and
bi!itg while I was in the kitchen. I she and her husband, a member of . Middleport departments were the
the_!ire deparllnent. begait directing
thought there was a wreck.''
scecte. There were no in.iuries.

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. St~te .proVides mo·re.funds

•SARA WILLIAMSON
Customer 'Service, Peoples Bank
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Mason· firtns . . gutted by fire·..

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for Home
By,LEE J.Ei)NARD
UPI Statehol!le Reporter
. COLU¥!:1US - pesplte nagging misgivings on the part or
some,. llie state Controliing
l;loard, celebrated the fifth ann!·.
yersary. of the Horne State
Savings Bank collapse Monday
by, releasing· anQther S30!J,OOO, to
contlpue pro,secutlng those
rea~lb!e.
,
Release of the money from .the
state's emergency fund brings to
$5.9 million the amount the state
has spent on prosecuting thrift
officials and government watch·
dogs over the d~bacle ;which
began five yeao ago thls ·week.
,Ohio Attorney General An·
tb!lny Celebrezze ~uested ·the
money to pay special prosecutor
Law~nce Kane.Jr. of Cincinnati,
whom he appointed In 1985 under
authority granted by the Ceneral

S~ate

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prosecution ;.

Assembly.
"The question Is, do we keep a
commitment that the Legtsla·
lure made to see this through to
the end," Celebrezze told the
board.
The failure pt a Florida securities firm on March 4, 198S, took
Home, .S~ate, a heavy Investor.
down five days later to the t11ne of
$144 million, and threatened
other state-charterec!, privately
lnaured S&amp;l..s. Gov. Richard
Celeste closed 70 of·thel'l). It took
three months to 1et the mess
stralghteped out and·I!Dme never
·
reopened.
Celebrezze said Kane did an
"outstanding'' job In getting nine
convictions or guilty pleas "from
nine Individuals who orchestrated the m~t complex white
co,Uar crime ever committed In
~ the history of Ohio."

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.FIND YOUR BEST lNVES'flV/ENT OPTION!
. . •DENNIS BRUMFIELD
.
•JIM ROSSI ··

FLOWER SHOP; GUTTED
The
Bo11quet, along with an adjoining build! formerly
housing an army surplus store•. were gutted by

..

ATTENTION

Stocks

By NANCY YOACRAM .·
Se_n ua,l News Staff
Pomeroy Mayor Richard
Seyler gave an update at Monday ·
night's meeting of · 'Pomeroy
Vlllage Council on upcoming
plans by the Ohio Department of
Transportation to repair the
culv'ert at the upper end of the
vUiage near the White House
Bar, and also plans by ODOT to
construct a new section of
highway at the Intersection of
Routes 124 and 33. Just last week,
the mayor reported that a large
. crane was used to lift out large
stumps and other debris clogging
the cu !vert. ·
Once cleared of debris, a
bundle of pipes was Installed to
the river. By Installing the pipes,
even If the culvert continues to
cave-In, creek water will continue to flow through the pipes
and tl!ereby eliminate a chance
of water backing up before
fire In Mason Sunday afternoon. Flremen troin ·. permanent repairs to the culvert
mason, new Raven and Middleport fought the
can be made.
blaze, which caused an estlmaled SM,OOO damare.
ODOT hopes· to construct the
. (OVP pho!o by Mindy Kerns)
'
new road at the 5!1rne time the
culvert is permanently repaired.
Mayor Seyler has seen prellrnl·
nary plans for tlte proposed
roadway and reported that he Is
pleased With what he has seen
·
thus far.
The mayor expects It may he
August before any construction
can begin.
ln another matter related to
... roadways, C.ouncllrnan Bill
Youlli reQuested that -Ppmeroy
. · vmarte provide a backhoe and
operator when the SoU Conservation 8ervice goes to Wyllls Hlllln
Pomeroy to determine If under.ground spr111gs are causing a
slippage problem with the Wyllis
Hill road. Yo\lllg reported that
. Mike Duhl, of SCS, Is willing to
arrange for . eli~lneers tO check
out the slip and !~ate the source

Soatll Central Oblo
Partly cloudy Monday ·nlght,
with a low between 30 and 35.
Variable cloudiness Tuesday.
with highs near~.Chanceofraln
Is 20 percent.
Ohio extended forecast
Wedaesday through Friday
. Fair Wednesday and Thurs-

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1 Section, 10 Pag•

\IJ

25 Centa

A Muhlmedla Inc. Nowopap"'

··· -Pomeroy Co11ncil gets
update on cUlvert job

'

: ,:· .! l ' : ·:·t : .: ! : ·- :~ ·.: : .~ . : • . : · . .... 1" +'

Christopher C. Cole has been
arraigned In Meigs Common
Pleas Court on an Indictment
charging him with unlawful
possession of a dangerou~ ordnance. Cole pleaded Innocent to
the charge. Discovery Wl\S or- ·
dered and a jury trial set for•
Apr1119. Bond was set at $10,000 .
with 10 percent In cash allowed lo
secure Cole's release from
custody.
In· another criminal matter.
Sam McCloud entered a votun·
tary plea of guilty to a charge of
vandalism. McCloud was sent- '
enced to six months at t11e Orient
Correctional Center with credit
for 58 days already served .ln the

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•.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio.• Tuesday, Mar.ch 6, 1990

Meigs announcements

--Area': deitlls--

Partly cloudy toallb&amp;. lAw
near 18. Moally cloudy 'Wed-nesday. HIJb In mid tOs.
Chance of rain 30 perceat.

Two of those Individuals, how ever, have had their eonvlctlons
reversed - Marvin Warner, the
fanner owner of Home StatE', and
David Schiebel, a one. time pres!·
deitt of the thrift. ·'
Celebrezze said Kane has a
good chance of reinstating the
convictions before the Ohio Su preme Court II the state eontlnues to finance the legal
operation. ,
"We're on our last lew! of
appeals," · said Celt!breue. "I
lee! that we're reaching the end
otthe road."
•
"What's he (Kane! doiae In the
last three months?" asked Rep.
Robert Neutey, R·LaUI'II, a
member oft he board. "How long
are we going to keep pouring
money Into this?"
.
• Celebrezze said Kane hal been
Continued on page 10

of the water. If ne.!ded heavy
equipment can· be provided by
the village. Also, the village must
secure permission from affected
property owners before SCS can
begin the project. There would be
no cost to the village for the
assistance of SCS. Young will
speak to ttie property owners and
themayoragreedtoallowtheuse
of the needed equipment.
Counctlrnember Betty Baron· lck . suggested that the village
conduct a ·spring Trash Pick-Up
for residents. "We're asking

people to clean up tl)l!lr propert!es arid I think we should help a
I IItle," she said. AlthOugh her
suggestion met with the approval
of the mayor and fellow councll·
members, nothing de.finlte was
decided since the trash pick-up
would mean quite a cost to the
village In the way of landfill fees
etc.
· "'-l '
In another matter relate&lt;N,o
clean-up around homes, Mayor
Seyler said he would like to see an
ordinance passed to force people
Continued on page 10

Warmer weather
continues in Ohio
'

By United Press International
Sunshine returned to Ohio's
skies this ' morning, and warmer
temperatures . are not too far
behind.
Light flurries were reported
across the northern counties
during the nlghl. -but most of the
state had dry weather . A cold
front had pushed south of Ohio
this morning and with high
pressure building from the north
there should be· sunshine In Ohio
today.
Temperatures early this moring were In the20s to lowe30s. The
highs foday {Of northern Ohio
. were to be a carbon copy of
Monday 's highs, but for southern
Ohio, it was to _be about 15
degrees cooler than Monday's
high of 62 In Cincinnati.
. ·However temperaJ.ures are
slated to warm ba~k Into the
nild-50s to mid-60s by the begin·
nlng of the weekend.
Tonight and Wednesday will be

partly cloudy and there Is a slight
chance of showers In the southwest Wednesday. Lows tonight will
be near 15 In the northwest to
near 30 Jn the south. Highs
wednesday will be In the 30s and
40s again.
. Looking ahead througq Saturday, there will be a chance of rain
Thursday· and Friday and It will
be dry Saturday . Highs will be In
the 50s Thursday and Friday and
In the mid-50s to mid-60s Saturday . Lows will be In the mld-20s
to rnld-30s Thursday, In the 30s
Friday and In the 40s Saturday.
. On the early morl)ing weather
map. a cold fron~extended !rom
northern VIrginia to the Ohio
River to a low In Colorado. ijigh
pressure centered near James
Bay. Canada, extended to Ohio.
Th!:' cold front will move slowly
south through Wednesday while
the low moves Utile. The high will
drift east and-be centered over
upstat.e New York by Wednesday
evening.

.

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First-class postage stamps
may· be increased _to 30 cents
WASHINGTON !UP!) - The
Vincent Sombrotto, president
can get In this country, or any
of the National Association of
other country for 30 cen(s."
tJnlted States Postal SerVice,
lacing losses of up to $1.6 billion Letter Carriers, said .even lt the
Assistant Posnnaster General
this year, appeared ready to cost of mailing a letter Increases
Deborah Bowker said the rate
announce plans· to hike postal to 30 cents. Americans will gel
hike would mean the average
rates Including the price of a better postal service for their
household would spend about $10
flrst-~lass stanipfrom 25cents to money th~n that provided In more for postage each year.
30 cents. .
other countries.
The rate Increase request has
The Postal Service Board of
"For 25 cents - or even 30 prompted new calls for a privati- ·
Governors was scheduled to cents-youcanwalkdowntothe za,tlon of th'e Postal Service, an
meet on Tuesday afternoon. corner. drop a letter In a metal
Idea advoca~ed by such censerwhen 11 was expected to an - mailbox, al)d within a few days It vative orgamzatlons as the Herll ·
nounce the overall proposal arrives at the home of a friend,
age Foundation and the Cato
calllng ·for an average 19 percent relative or business associate . lnstltute.
prlcl! Increase tor all classes of hundreds or even thousands of
. Som~rotto argued such a mo,ve
mall.
miles away, " said Sornbrotto. would be the biggest sham ever
If released · by the governing · "Tell me what other serVIce you put on the American people." .
board, the plan would still 'need
final approval from the Postal
Rate Commission. If approved
by the commission, U WOL\Id
become :the 15th rate cliange
since the 2-cent stamp became
~ompulsory In 188.5.
A Long Bottom area youtll was Injured In a one-car crash
·The commission has 10 months
Monday
at 10:46 p.m. at Chester on S.R. 248, just east of the
to reach a decision.
junction
of S.R. 7, according to the GaUia-Melgs Post of the
The Postal Service has said It
State
Highway
Patrol.
would like the new rate structure
Edna
Dr(ggs,l6,
Rt.l,.Long Bottom, was taken by the Meigs
to take effect !n February 1991.
County EMS to St . Joseph's Hospital In Parkersburg, W.Va ..
The last Increase was March
where she was treated and released for a cut to the forehead.
1988 when the price of a first· ·
Driggs, driving a 1978 Ford Mustang, went off the right side of
class stalftp jumped from 22
tile road .a nd Into a dltc h h!!fore continuing on and bitting a tree,
cents to 25 cents .
a fence, a u ttllty pole.and a gas meter - In that order.
.
.Pos.tal offiCials said rates must
No citation was Issued In that crash .
be "perlodleally a\ljusted,''
A Pomeroy youth was cited ln 'Ji one·ur crash Monday at 9:45
. The Postal Servl~ underwent
a.m.
In Sutton Toivn$hlp on C.R. 34, 1.3 miles west of S.R. 124:
a corporate-like reorganization
Amber
L. Well, 13, ot34832 S.R: 7, Pomeroy, was cited for not
In 1980 and now functions as an
driver's ll¢e~ · after ner 1981' Dodge Ornnl hit an
having
a
lndepeatlentgovernmentagency
emba11kment.
,
supported , by the sale of Its
Well was traveling west ,when she lost control of the car Iii a
service, not federal tax reveaue.
.left-hand curve and wentoffthe right side of the road, hitting an·
Although It reported a $404
embankment.
.
·
mlllion surplus for the first
•
qilarter of 1990, the Postal
~nee,
Service said Increased benellta
and was'la alld the assumption
'
trom the federal. government of
The Meigs County Cbambef of Commerce will sponsor a
spring banquet and 4aDce party on Saturday, March 31, at
110111e retiree health and coat-of, Royal ·Oak Resort.
.
llvllll packaps ~create a loss
The banquet Is sc~uled to begin with a social hour at 6 p.m.
In fiscal 1990 of between $1.4
with a steak dlnuet to be lerVed at 7 p.m. The dance will be held
biWon ud $1.1 biiHon.
.
from 8:30p.m tp,mldnlght with a mix of music performed by the
In addition to rate hikes, the
Band Crossover.
plan calls for dilcouata tor bar
Ticket priCes an! S25 a couple and $15 for singles and are
codes for first· aad . thln2-claas
available
from Meigs County Chamber Board members Ron
POitaie. Ellprell Mall and aome
Ash,
Lenny
Eliason, Mike Gerlach, Bruce Reed, Mary Powell,
priority mall. Insurance cover·
Continued on page 10 .
·
.
11ee on C.O.D. and Insured mali
would jump from S50&lt;i to $600.

l.ocal new.s

briefs~
. ___,

Long Bottom youth hurt in crash

Chamber plan., ·

banquet

�Mudl8,1890
•

Commentary
-

tJ~

.

Bm~ ~ ......'"T"·~=·"""
~v

.

ROBERT L. WINGETT ,
Pul!i.her

.

CHARLENE ~OEFLJCH
. . ' .G eneral Ma!laser·

'

-PAT WHITEHEAD ,
Asslslanl Pul!llsher/ ControUer
A MEMBER of The Ur\lted Press International, lnllll\d Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPiNION are welcome. They .should be less than 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters wUI be pubUs bed. Letters should be In good tas te, ~ddress~J¥! Issues, not personall-

lles.

The _big surprise_
:
no bloodbath ·
ByARNOLDSA~SLAK

UPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON -The most amazing part of the Incredible events
of the last year in Europe, Latin America and; yes, even China, Is how
muc h the world has changed at the cost of so few lives·:
·
This Is not to suggest that the lives of those who died In China,
Romania or Nicaragua were InconsequentiaL But In comparison to
the massive bloodbaths that have followed some p&lt;&gt;lillca) upheavals
In our lime , the changes of 1989-90 have
remarkably free of
deadly violence.
· ..
Nothing In any of the countries where hardllneCommunlstregtmes
were ch'allenged and ousted In the last18 months hascomecloseto th!'
massacres of that occurred In India when It split off from Pakistan In .
the late 1940s,ln Indonesia when Sukarno took power. In the mld·1960s
or Cambodia when It came under control of the Khmer Rouge In tMe
1970s.
.
Hundreds of thousands of people. In some estimates apprgachlng 1
million , died In each of those countries when they experienced
dramatic political changes In short periods of time.
Some might say it Is still too early to &lt;;elebrate. The potential for
heavy bloodsheq may be just .below the surface If, for example, the
ethnic conflicts gel out of hand In the southern republics of the Soviet
Union oi- the Baltic countries try to secede wjthout ~oscow:s
.
.
'
agreement.
But so ·f ar some of the most iron-fisted regimes have dlssolv,e d like
wet cardboard when they were challenged by .1;Vhat seemed to be
relatively unorganized protests and demonstrations In one or two
areas of the country~
·
· There are several explanations for what happened.
The first Is that the United States and,lts NATO allies, by refusing to
back down before communist expansion after World War Il and by
building up their military strength, finally made It too expensive for
the Soviets to match their effort. ·
When It became clear that the Soviets would or could no longer use
military force to prop up other Communist regimes, their leaders had
little choice but to give In to long-suppressed opposition movements.
In Romapla, where the dictator Initially resisted reform violently, he
and his wife paid the price In the same coin.
Another explanation centers on the failure of orthodox Marxist
economics to prbvlde much more than baste levels of food, .housing
arid clothing.
·
. ·
'
After 70-plus years of trying to build economies without competition
or individual gain, Communists In Europe, 1\sla and Latin Am~:rlca
discovered that people simply will not work hard for a stat{;'. Even
China, which put down political democracy so brutally last year, has
long since conceded that It cannot a bollsh capitalism and make
economic progress.
In this formulation, the Inability of communist economies to make
consumer goods available to their people finally caused those living
under them to demand more In the form of capitalist ventures.
The lesson here may be the most encouraging w~ have heard In
decades : You cando more to change the world with TVs and toasters
than you can with tanks and missiles.

.been

Today in history ·

.·

Berry's ·World

~.

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~lftO.IIYNEA: one

'.'Try not to laugh whim thBY tell you f!Ol to
have a big military establishment!" ,
·

every walrus ·h e shot. In reality,
our source said, he had seen the
other hunter Shoot walruses and
take only the tusks.
• And one Informant told the
't nvestlgatori that he estimated
400 of the 800 walruses laken by
hunters In one vlllage were
traded (or dnigs. ·
The .w alrus population In
Alaska and Siberia Is esttmalejl
at between 150,000 and 230,000.
That Is considered by biologists
to be healihy. But, Labudde-told
us, the number of animals killed
every year Is two or three times
the rate at which walruses
reproduce. · The United Stat.and the Soviet Union plan a joint
walrus could later this year
which would give boih countrl~
a better Idea of hOw the·h untlng Is
affecting the numbers.
.
Environmentalists are wo~'
rled about how the free-for-all
native hunting will hurt otber
species too, Including bell!l&amp;,
whales, polar bears, waterfowl
and wolverines.
'
"The walruses -are just tbe tip
of the Iceberg," out hunter
source told us. "There are either
things going on In the name of
subsistence ·hunting that . most.
Jl4!0Ple would be_-shocked at." '·

•
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·,,

Valvano to stay at ·

· ,.

-"""~-·...

NCSU one ·more year.
WINSTON -SALEM, N.C .
( UPI) - A newspaper reports
Tuesday embattled basketball
coach Jim Valvano will remain
at North Carolina State ·Unlversit)l for one J:DOre se.ason and then
leave~
.. · ·
. ·
The Wlnston' Salem Journal
.quotes an unnamed souree close
to the university's athletic de·
partment as saying the offer
came from "Valvano and his
attorney, Art KaminskY. ·
"He's asking for one more year
as coach, and then he'U leave,"
the newspaper quoted .the source
, as.111ylng Monday. "His attorney
made the offer. That's the fact.
It's the money. They can't getrld
of him because of the money.··
Valvano and university lawyer
Becky French did not comment
In · the printed report. The. deal
·would aiJ!;olve both parties of 11ny
financial obligations. the newspaper reports. ·. . . .
Faculty members, students
and some fan&amp; are calling for
·V alvano's ouster following the
disclosure last week that a
former player received more
than $65,000 from two men,
Including an agent. and a man
who was linked to allegations of .
. point-shaving.
New Jersey au thorltles said
· Monday they ·did not find any
·evidence ofpolnt-shavlngln their .
part of the probe. New Jersey
businessman Robert Kramer has.

Shiftmg air traffic C()Uld be lifesave~alters
.

By Robert Walters'
WASHINGTON (NEA)
Speculation aoout the cause of a
major commercial airline ace!·
dent thatrecentlyclalmedscores
of lives has dovered every,
Imaginable probability _ but
Ignored one major contributing
factor.
When the Boeing 707 operated
by Avlanca, the national airline .
of Columbls, crashed on the
l'jorth ShoreofLongislandlnlate
january Instead or landing at
New York's John F . Kennedy
International ·Akport, 73 of th~
· 161 people aboard were (f;llled. ··
Because the plane was to~ on
fuel, assumptions , about the
cause of the accident focused on
possible mlscalulations of fuel

reserves by the flight crew,
Imprecise fuel gauges and even
algae that grows tn aircraft fuel
tanks.
Other theories relate to posslble communication failures Including grand controllers recelvlng inadequate warning of
the emergency from theAvlance
crew and a reporting lapse
between two sets of ground
controllers that failed to reflect
the plane's precar)ous status.
Vlrtuallt Ignored, bowever. Is
this overarchlng reality: The
three principal commercial air·
ports serving the New York
metropolitan area, the nation's
most heavily populated region,
are dreadfully overburdened.

• As a ,res1,1lt of that, Incoming
aircraft waste pr~cious timeand fuel - because ~~ey a~~
tequlred to fly In
stack
(corkscrew-shaped holding patterns~ that allow only very slow
descent) while awaiting landing
clearances.
The stormy weather on the
night of the Avlance disaster
exacerbated the prol!lem, butthe
delays Imposed upon the ill-fated
AVIance plane as _It sought a
landing slot at Kenn~y are
hardly atypical.
.
The aircraft was ordered by
controllers to circle near Nor·
folk, Va., for 16 minutes; near
Atlantic City, N.J., for ano!her27
minutes, ~nd near Asbury P~rk,
N. J., for an additional 46

It's high Noonan in America

'.

Wednesday, the Southern TorOne key player In the NB
nadoes whir!' Into Ohio UniVersl- line-up quit pryor to the Easteroty's Convocation Center for an Pille ~lar ieuon finale, l&gt;l! t
8: 15 meeting with New Boatlln tn the Boatonlana won anyway . This
the first round of Dlvlllon IV. means two valuable PlaYers are
! Dla trlct Tournament pliy. · .
gooe from tbe normal regular
Southern .11 now 14-8 overall seuon lllle-up.
,
· and New Boston, 11-10.
New Boston plays a comblna~
New Boston flllllhed fourth lila tlonor defenses with Man-to-man
_very tough league behind Ports- one of their strongholds , howlllO~th East, Eastern-Pike, · al!d
ever, as the'Stals suggest defense _
· .Franklin Furnace Green. each of has been a problem of the young
.which Is a S..:tlonal Champion In qulntest all season. The mighty
SHS offense, ool&amp;terlng a potent
.l.helr respective tournaments.
. Despite Its near· .500 record,
72.6 per game average could
New BostOn's young squad was
generate more offense than the
yery tough In the latter sla11es of Bostonlllns would like to see.
. the season, defeating Eastern·
Southern on the other hand has
Plke'79· 781n the last game of the
limited Its foes to a 61.8 av.erage.
regular season. Eastern.P)ke
NB' will go 1-2·2 zone, 2-3, play
,handily defeated Southern earbox and one, and several o~her
ller In the season at tile Convo.
"junk" defense combinations.
They depend on their speed
New Boston's milfortune, how ever, . has become Southern' s · offensively and have a good
possible key to victory u Its top
Inside attack with an over six foot
sc'orer Dale . Loper, a 23 point
Interior line.
average per game player, broke
Southern will match wits and
hl&amp; foot •two games ago and Is oqt
physical capablltles with , stanfor the season:
..
doutguardAndy "Drew" Baer, a
New Boston's first five, how;.. 16.9 scorer; Brad Maynard Is a 14
ever, Is no pushover, as theY ·. point per game scorer With 11
flaunt three double-digit scorers . rebounds per game; Chad Taylor
In a well-balanced attack. New
weighs In with an 11 point
I;loston starts three sophomores
average In just 14 games, while
and two juniors on a . talen~ but
Brenf Shuler has a 6 :point, 6
very young squad.
rebound average In his favor.
Todd Grindstaff has a 9 point
.. Weighing In with 225 poln.t s on
.the season Is Jason Truitt, a , averagepergame.JeremyRose,
6-foot-1 Junior, -averaging 10.7
hot off tbe bench with key Inside
points per game. With 212 points· play has a 6 polllt average, while
on .t he season Is 6-2 sophom11re · Chris ·Murphy 'adds a 4 point
Jon Gose- with 10.1 ,points per
slate.
game, and Joshua Howard, a 5-9
Southern llke5 to move off the
-player with 210 points and a 10
run; an(l when It Is hot ·c an be a .
point average.
deadly foe to defense because· of
The other two starters are
all of Its scoring threats. Soufh·
Todd. Grant, a 5-7 junior and
ern relies mostly on· a comblneci
· Shawn Dillow a 6-0 sophomore.
Inside-outside attack with Baer
Mike Kenney. a 5-10 sophomore
as head artillery man. Baer bas
Is 6th man orr the bench.
long range and both he and
New Boston has tallled 1542
Grindstaff are excellent drivers.
points on the season and given up
Maynard and Shuler are tough
1512, respective averages of 73'.4
Inside, with Rose equally tough
for the offense and 72.0 for the
on the ·bloc !Is.
defense. Most of their games as
Taylor adds
balthandllng
the averages suggest have been
expertise, experience, and also
close.
. has great long range.
.

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta

WASHINGTON- Tbe United C!UTied out 111· a noo-wutetul
States has llanned Imported manner.
In reality, the hunt has "degen· and Wildlife Service says that 418
Ivory to protect endangered
African elephants. But a stmUar erated Into an open season on · walrus carcasses were sighted
slaughter goes on at home, wildlife," s'ald Sam Labudde, a during one slx·hour plane flight
leaving the coastlllle of Alask.a
bloJoelst with an environmental • along Alaska's west coast. The
dotted with rotting walrus car- group called Friends of Animals. report states that three or the
· cas~. 9!11Y. the Ivory tusks are
The· Alaska Walrus ·Commls· aniMals were intact. The rest
missing. ,
. · slon, ·a n Eskimo group formed to were missing only their heads ...
I!1 some cases, the hunters are
,The slaugh~r· ls excused In the · self-regulate . the hunts, den~
nameofpreservlngnatlveAmer- that charge. But a man who has so sloppy that they don' teven get
lean tradltlonalsubatstencehunt- participated In walrus hunts tor the tu~ks . Sometimes they shoot
lng for meat. But 'tn reality, the deiades told us ~ different story. a walrus and It slips under water
walruses are left behind and only
The hunter told our reporter before It can be retrieved;
The myth or traditional subsist·
their tusks are taken, some to Greg Moore that people who live
trade for drugs.
.
along the southern part of Alas- ' ·ence hunting has been perpetuThe method oftlie hunt·ls about ka's west coast, where walruses ated for years. The reality of
brutal hunting for Ivory tusks has
as traditional ·as the motive. ate not as plentifUl, hunt for
Eskimo hunters are depleted on traditional purposes, meat and gone largely unreported because
carved Ivory souvenirs using l!yproducts. But he claimed that many government officials are
their homemade kayaks and hunters from four . northern . afraid of losing their jobs If they
open their mouths.
har~. ButthatprettyplctuJ:I!
towns . - Nome, Gambell, sa·
It lsn' t widely known In the
long ·ago · became an anaclu'o- v.oonga and Diomede - hunt
lower
~. b.u t Alaska's natives
nlsm. Modern native hunters use walruses almost solely for their
make
"
up a powerful political
motorboats to chase the walrus, tusks. The hunter told us that
lobby.
semi-automatic · rifles to kill It those four towns account !or
Congress, too, has had the wool
and chain saws to cut offltshead. about half of the walruses killed
pulled over Its eyes ever since It
And the U.S. Fish ani! Wildlife In Alaska, estimated by biolapassed · the 1972 Ia w allowing
Service -does. little to curb the gists to be aoout 5.000 a vear.
slaughter. In an apparent effort
The hunter said that In those unlimited hunting for subsistto maintain good relations with four towns, only the first 10 or 15 ence purposes.
Our hunter source says he sat
natives, the federal agency relies animals killed eacH spring are
on voluntary compliance with used for their meat. In one at a toea) hearing held by Sen.
federal laws, Those laws say 24-hour period, .he·has seen three .Ted Stevens, R-Alaska, and
native Americans In Alaska are crews bring In a· total of 100 listened while a native hunter
allowe.d to kill ·all the animals walrus heads.
'
assured Stevens that he alwliys
An Internal reooi1 ll:Y the Fish · fdund a use' for every piece of
they need,- as long as the hu!lt Is

·

·
By Unlled Press International
·
'
Today is Tuesday, March 6, the 65tH day of 1990 with 300 to follow.
The moon Is waxing, mqvtng-toward full.
The morning stars a r e Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn.
The even lrig star Is Jupiter.
·
Those born on this date are under the sign of Pisces. They Include
Italian painter and sculptor Michelangelo In 1475, French dramatist
Cyrano de Bergerac In 1619, English poet Elizabeth Barrett Browning
In 1806, Union Army Gen. Philip Sheridan In 1831, humorist and short
story writer Ring Lardner In 1885.

TunCtay, March 8, 1990

slaughtered for tusks ·

- •

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

Souther11 to play ,
Tigers in· district ··

.

Page-2-The IWy Sandnel
Poni&amp;IOY MlddiiPAto Ohio

-.

The Daily Sentinel
1U Court Slre et
Pomeroy, Ohio

.

Rob~rt

·'

minutes. That total of 89'mlnutes
- almost an hour and a half was directly attributable to the
backup or incoming traffic at
Kennedy.
, The epls,o de unfortunately
coincides with the results of the
Federal Aviation Administration's compilation or delays en- ·
countered In both landings and
takeoffs last year at 22 o~ . the .
country's busiest airports.
_T hree of the four fields atop
that list were tile major New
York' airports ,... LaGuardia with
115 delays and Kennedy with 76.
(Chicago' s O'Hare. was In third
place with 88.)

Ben Wattenberg

You wUI enjoy reading Peggy mouth .
Amerlca··s mind about salleqt
' great man; with flaws that are
Nooru.tn's new book "What I Saw
3. That heavy publiCity for outweighed by his virtues. ·
Issues.
,
At The Revolution" (Random speechwrlters was new In AiDerHere Is Reagan talking abOut, ·
Furthermore, Noonan's book
House).
lea. It bloomed with President " ... thos~ sleepy old towns where
Is unlike the "Then I Wrote The
H&amp;re Is a list or Ideas I thought I Kennedy's staff' It continued generation after generation
Fifth Symphony" genre, not
wol!.d write about, back when I
under Presldent'Johnson, butto a lived. And ·then the kids In the
because that' theme Isn't present,
began hearing abOut the book,
lesser extent, because LBJ was Mldwest ·left; there was nothing
but because the best stuff Is about
before . I read It, so now I'm unpleasant to staff whose names In those towns- Lord, that's why
other things, mostly young con·
writing, sitting at my keyboard,
got Into tbe papers, pai'tlcu.l arly I left!"
servatlves with Ideas. A few
In my attle·study, listening to the speechwrlters (I was an LBJ !&gt; Here's Noonan, ~bout Reaga!J:
years ago "young conservatives:
sounds of my 5'f.r•year-old daugh- speechwrlter) . That under suc- "lie. was really acting, but the
with Ideas" would have been a
ter playing below, tap, tap, 'tap,
ceeding presidents It had gotten part ·he . played was Ronald
trt-oxymoron. No longer! ·
waitlllg for the dogwoods to caine · worse (Extra! Extra! President Reagan."
The Reag·an Revolution:·
out (Noonan writes · that way To Read Glatz's Speech
And: "He stands there In his
brought "The Movement" :....·
sometimes, full colons, lists, Tonight) .
tall brown suit." with soft, kind
young smart conservatives like•
personally. a little loopy, and,
4. That, while that Intrigued eyes, and you are surprised by · Noonan -'-Into our politics. ~ght
alter all, she says that"aomeone political junkies, It undercuts a the pinkness, the babyllke soft.
llehlnd them · came the army of.
called her the only living excla- president to be seen as a nesa of his skin. The soft neck;
baby-cons, some of whom are so;
mation polllt):
.
ventrlloqulst's puppet, partlcu· and... the air -of frailty. He
bright It's scary.
·. ·
1.- That she's a conservative lariy so since that's not the way: gleams; he Is a mystery . He is for
When .t he leftists of the '60s:
who wrote aome fine speeches fOr the process works.
· everyone . .. everyone who
matured, they • came to play a
President Reagan. and then·
5. That one senses that Bush, worked with him. None of them
powerful role In our public life, .
candidate VIce President Buah,
like LBJ, has laid down the Jaw,
undersland Jllm. In private they
even as their views evolved. The ·
and that abe received a wild that these days one doesn't hear admit lt. You say to them, Who
day of the once-young conserva- ·
amount of penohal pubUc:lty,
too mucb~ nor too little, about the was that masked mali?, and they
tlve·ls almost here.
:
2. That (becaURJO It WU said)
presldent'll speechwrlters and
shrug, and hypothesize. James
And finally, although It gets;
ber book wu
that It
5
Baker 14ld he Is the the kindest
zany, maybe because of that,
truhed Nancy and . Maureen
now read "ReVolu- and most Impersonal man I ever
Noonan's book flies, even with
Reagan, that It would tum out to
tion," I stand beblnd moitofthla
knew."
It's epidemic of full colona. You I
be yet another book that would be · ust, but with Important
Noonan· says when Rea11an
can put It down, but only
amendments.
llled to sbow that Ronald Reagan
"fell ill love" with Gorbachev, It
because: It's time tot dlnner,lt'•i
wu a programmed, lazy presl·
Thebookshouldn'thannPresl· · "Infuriated" young conaervaFeiJruary, the sun Is Mttlnjl
dent,• that apeecbwrlters, and
dent Reagan; the portalt Ia
t1ves1but Reagi!D tu,rned out to be · behind the apartment halite, or'
others, put all the words tn hla
fuU -bodled and ra~tnatiDJ. In
· ,
·
right. She says that Reagan was · whatever.
fact, Reagan comes across as a
a gtant,lnstrumentallnchanglng .-

ao••tw.

~!~g

(

I

The Daily Sentinel
•,

.·.. '

&lt;VSPStti-HI)
A DMolollol Mlllllni&lt;dlo. he.

•

PubllohedFriday.
every altern0&lt;11,
Moadoy
llu'CIIP
Ill COurt St.,
""me-~. Ohio. by tile 0111o Valley PubU.hln1 Com~yiMUHimO!Ua. Inc..
POmorO)'. Ohloi!'T811, Ph. 992·1156. ·Second d011 pootaJe paid at ,PiimorO)',
' Olllq.

•

,

~mber: :1/nllfd Pr111 Iniernatlooal,'

SEC110NAL CHAMPIONS. The Southern 'I'omadoes or Coa•h
Howle Caldwell were crowned Dlvlslon IV Sectional Champions
at L
R
las I week by claiming a 98-80 triumph over Eastern
arry ·
Morrison Gymnnslum In Rock Springs. The win gave Southern a
berth In the District Tournament at Ohio University's Convocation
· tN ew Bos to n.
Center on Wednesday, beglnnlog at 8:15p.m. agalns
Pictured are cheerleaders and team members, front, kneellllg,lelt

s;;;;;;;;;;.i;k;·~;top;pot in UP! poll
NEW YORK tUP!) - Oklahoma , the No . 3 team In th ~'Big
Eight much of the season,
climbed to No. 1 In the national
ran kings Monday In voting by the
United Press Inte rnational
Board of Coaches.
The Sooners . who knocked off
Big Eight rivals Missouri and
Kan$8s In consecutive weeks
while those schools were No. 1,
vaulted from No. 7tothetopspot.
All six tearns ranked ahead of the
Sooners las t week lost at least
once.
Oklahoma received 26 of 35
first -place votes antl totaled 51J
points. Kansas; which fell to No .- 2
arter losing at Oklahoma, collected four first-place votes. No . .
3 Nevada-Las Vegas picked up
three fir st-place votes.. while
Georgetown, Michigan Sta te and

La Salle obtained one each.
this ·week's l:llg Eight tournaSeven coaches did not vote this ment. The Kansas City, Mo. , site
week. Next Monday marks the favors .both No. 1 seed Missouri
final UP! ballot of the . season. and No. 3 Kansas . The Sooners
Voting Is based on 15 p&lt;&gt;ints f? r · are seeded second. Those Bi g
first place, 14 for second, etc.
Eight teams are the only ones to
hold the No. 1 national• ranking
The rest of the Top 20 Included:
the last nine weeks.
No. 4 Syracuse; No. 5 Missouri;
For the second s traight week,
No. 6 Georgetown; No.7 Connecthe ranklngs underwent consld-·
ticut ; No. 8 Michigan State: No.9
erable upheaval . Only six of the
Purdue; No . 10 Arkansas; No. 11. Top 20 went undefeated last
Duke; No. 12 La Salle; No. 13
week.
Georgia Tech; No. 14 Michigan;
Syracuse climbed five places
No. 15 Clemson; No. 16 Arizona;
olf Its overtime victory against
No. 17 New Mexico State; No. 18
aeorgetown and ga_lned the top
Louisville; and co-Nos. l9 II Uno Is
seed In the Big East. Michigan
and Minnesota.
.·
State, which will play Purdue
Oklahoma benefited from playSunday (or the Bi g Ten iitle,
Ing Missouri and Kansas at home
leaped from No. 13. .
late In the season. The Sooners
The stock of Duke and Michl- ·
iost to both teams on the road,
gan tumbled after double losses
and that's where they 'll be for
for both teams . The Blue Devil s.

admitted he Joaned sol)'le money
In 1987 .. to former ','Volfpack
basketball player Charles Shackleford, now with the New Jersey
Nets. ,
'
By United' Press 1uiernai1Qnru
109-105 victory over the San
• An ~nonymous man who said
Akeem
Olajuwon
led
the
HousAntonio Spurs. The victory ~Im­
- he was a teammate of Shackleton
Rockets
to
a
rare
road
victory
proved '!he Rockets' road record
ford's In 1987)old ABC' News last
Monday
night.
.
.
to
just 6·24 this season.
week that he, Shackleford· a~d
14
oi
his
·
Olajuwon,
scored
Olajuwon
played a key role
two other Wolfpilck players were
game-high
37
points
In
the
final
down the stretch as he hit a
paid to shave points to help_
quarter to rally . Houston to a
turnaround jumper at 1:·40 for
gamblers win games. The State
·Bureau of Investigation Is looklpg Into the North Carolina
aspects of that charge.
·
The . sticking point In the
·negotiations between Valvano
and the university Is a buyout
c-lause In the tO-year contract
Valvano and the school 11ego- •
!lated In 1983,theyearN.c: state
won the NCAA Tournament and
the national title.
, Each August, Valvano;s ·pact
rolls over Into a five-year agreement. It lnclud·e s a $500,000
buyout clause for the protection
of both sides.
Valvano would get the $500:000
If fired for any reason other than
knowledge or partlclpat ion In a
major NCAA violation or criminal act . The school would get It If
Valvano wanted to leave for
another job. The buyout was
· among the ·reasons Valvano
didn't go to UCLA In 1988.

Houston tops

I

San

'

Southern traveled-to Wahama
recently tor a freshman basket·
ball contest to find that there
•. were no offlclallliJili thus picked
1
;. up a forfeit frOm the WHS squad.
• Next Raveo*woocl raised Its
record at the hands ~ the Bend
area crew • 10 boost their reeord.
to 10·5. Southern dropped to a
' very .respectable, seaaon-endlng

,

you let ones like this get away ,
Houston's first lead of the final
quarter , 105-103.. The Spurs '
especially at home. "
Willie Anderson tied the score on
San Antonio held a 95-9,0
a right baseline turnaround shot
advantage as ·Terry Cummings
with 55 seconds remaining.
hit a free th row · and Rod
Olajuwon then· hit a 10-foot
Strickland hit a layup at 6: 14.
turnaround shot with 38 seconds
Olajuwon and Mike Woodson
remaining to give Houston a
dropped In back-to-back baskets
107-105 advantage. Mitchell Wig- and Houston closed to 95-94 with
gins, who was fouled by David
5:35 remaining.
Robinson, clinched it with two
free throw with 11.8 seconds left.
"We let this one get away."
"We just didn't give up to· · said Strickland, who finished
night, " said Olajuwon, who, also wl.th 14 points a11il nine assis ts.
pulled ' down a game-high 14 "We just can't do that. I think we
reboundS.· 'We kept IJiaylng hard rushed some shots when we were
and hung In there and won the ahead when we should have
game."
taken some time off the clock."
"Akeem played great, '' said
Otis Thorpe added 17 points for
Robinson. ·'He made all the sh.ots the Rockets. Floyd had 15 , atid
down the stretch. It's tough when Wiggins added 13 . .
Robinson led San Antonio with
29 points, andCummlngs contrlb·
uted 28.

SVAC standings

(All games)
TEAM
W L
Eastern .......... 15 6
Southern .. ....... 14 8
North Gallla .. . 13 8
Hannan Trace 12 10
Southwestern .. S 13
5-Valley ........ . +g 13
Oak Hill ....... ..r 5 ·17
Kyger Creek.·._. 1 20_

' '

,

' : ••.

,

MAX HILL'S
COUNTRY CORVETTES
. AND

FIRFSmFINN

''

446 4114

This week'1 tourneys
Tuesday- Beaver Eastern vs.
Hannan Trace at Ohio University, 8:15p.m.
Wednesday - New Boston vs ..
Racine Southern'at Ohio University, 8:15p.m.

Spo_.o bn"efs

a

SPRING VALLEY CINfMA

PF PA
1577 1504
1589 1356
1512 1367
1344 1298
1496 l492,
1232 1297
1279 1557
1161 1622

bold - sllll In tourney

Inl.lnd DallyProuAuoclatlonaDdthe
Ravenswood defeated SHS 61-H!Irnels'
(8) pula up
Ohio
New~per
Auoctatlon.
Natloaal
,
'
54
In
·
a
l)ard-fought
friendly
·
a
a
screen
by
Richard
Anderson
(center)
Warriors
· Ad,...rllolilll 114preoentatlvo.Btanhlm
rivalry
·
88
• Newopoper llleo, 7!3 Third A""••·
·
,
.Manute Bollf'les to block It In first half action at Oakland Monday
N!!W York, New York 111017.
. RHS jumped out to a big 18-4
nlglll. ( UPI)
·
I'OS11WITER: Send •clcllM chanp
~all In the first frame over-cold
•• 111e Dallv SOoltael. m Court st..
shooting Southern and Increased
·a ~e
· -~· Olito e'lell.
•
Its lead- to 38-20 at tlie half.
Doc Racing
lllBBCaiPTION IIATEII
Southern came out playing more
A moose attacked a sled dog
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Pl. ?
a, Carrlft.,: - · .....
aggressive lnt he second balf and
team on the Iditarod trail but the
One Week .................................. J1.40
cutthe lead to 13 pollltsgolng Into
fate of the musher was unknoWn
NIGHTI..YENTERTA
On• Moalh
.................................
H.lD
the final quarter.
and clouds of volcanic ash made
One
Year .......
J.... .. . . ........... .. ,. •• $12.10
IIARCH 1rH • 11"1
SINGLE coPY
Southern got as CIQS~.as three,
an !llr rescue Impossible, Idl·
~ • D..l. Randy Smith
• PRICII: ·
57·54, with 30 seconds left and
tarod officials said.
tp.m.·2Lm.
· Dally """'"'"""'"""" '" ":.... 25 Centl
was forced to foul.
Golf
Subs~rlbersnoldeolrlngtopay.tbecar· , RHS 1\'al able to capitalize and ·
. Mutual of New York (MONY) ,.
wec!MIIIIay • Ct.rle Lilly ·
rter may remit br Odv•nce lUred to 1, "survive 1 61-M wtn.
citing a refocused national mar·
t p.m. ·1 a.m.
The Dallv Sentlael on a 3. $or 12 fliOillh I •
••
. ..
~ ..
Ih
d.....,ded
t 1
bull Credit wut be lll••n c.r,..~
... ,..teflael EVtJtl led SHS w t a
ketlng program, ""'
no o
wee.c:
·
- game-blah 23 points. while Mark renew the sponsorship It held Tlnnday •. "~"
Starting at • p.m.
No sublcrtptlons by mau pennltted In
Allen bad 17.
.
with tbe Tournament of Cham- _
ar,.. wit- home carrier oervtre 1o
J;UIS wu led In aeortng l!y
pions for neartr two decades. The
Friday • D.J. Alncly SmltJI
available.
·
J - S.lll with 2'.1 and Brad Tot C, lhe firllt event on !he PGA
SlltrtJnt If • p.m.
· Hunfs 11. Southern flnlibed the
Tour held annually In La Costa,
-Metpc...Q
II!- wltll a very good 11-4 Calif., Is the only event In which
13.WHIIs ..... ............................. l19.24
Slturday • D.J. Randy lmltll
26 WHIIs ................................. SB7.96
record, with a sbedule of tough
the field Is made up of both
. •• ..,. ... p.m.
'52 WHIIs ....................... ........... I7C.S
us
AAA,
AA,
arid
slnale
A
,
regular
and
senior
tour
profes·
-eMelpC..IIJ
,13 w................ ,...................... ao.•
schools.
• slonals who won on the tour
lknlay=:~-=-fllnglr
:IIi WHIIs .................... ......... ..... NO.ao
.
lttp.m. '
Tile
Tornadoel were coached · during )he previous calendar
-52 WHIIJ ........ ,.... ,................ :... m:to I•
by Jimmy Caldwell. ·
year.

__...,._

No. 4 las I week, lost to Cleinsop
and North Carolina and dropped
from the top 10 for the firs t time
In six wee ks.
The defending national champion Wolverines, No. 8 a week
ago, lost to Michigan State a nd
Purdue. They fell from the top 10
for the first ' time since the first
week of the regular season.
Clemson, Arizona and Louisville were the three new teams In
the Top'20. Clemson made It for
the first time this season after
clinching the Atlantic Coast
Coilference regular season title.
Dropping out were Louisiana
State, Oregon ,State and Xavier.
LSU. r anked a ll sea son, hobbles
Into the Southeastern Confere11ce
tournament seeded behind regular season cham pion Georgia.

Antonio l 09-l 05

·Southem freshmen
win tilt by forfeit

'fl-4.

Amber Cummings, and Robin Stout. Se~ted,second row-John
Hoback, Kevin Burgess, Michael Kincaid, Chad Taylor, Chr..
Murphy Jayson Codnet, and troy Hol!ack, manager. Back
· row-Coa'ch Scott Wlcklllle, 'Kenny Clark, Todd Grlndslaff, Roy Lee
d A d B
Bailey, Jeremy Rose, Brenl Shuler, Brad Maynar • n Y aer,
and Head Coach Howle Caldwell, Up from the reserve team, but
t let
d Is 6-S sophomore Michael Russell. (T4dd Grindstaff
' no P ure
.

"THE FRONT ROW"
WISHES ·THE
•

SOUTHERN ·TORNADOES
'

BEST OF LUCK
WEDNESDAY IN
AIHEIS, OHIO! ·
I

•

•

�-

.

The Daily _Sentinel

Explorers decide to play; win title game
Pro -.dings

_...,

NA'IIQIII:AL IIOC.IEV LE.\GVJ:

....... ,.. ... ~ru •••

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a. ............. ,Jf IS I 7t tU tit
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Stlltde- Slped pttdun Erlk8u110n
· outn~dtr Mike
KI•III'Y ud c.atlter Bill M&amp;.'Gilre to
l·,e•tollracta: ruewedca ..rsdawllll
otMflfll•r Gre~ Brtlf1 allll Moft•op
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Dtt..,.
Ill••

OIA1m to a IHQ" colllnct: wah·cd

BostM M r.!ld..... a. 7:U p.m.

Hartford at·NY .......,.. 7: S5 p.m.
Ban.auaW.,..qtoa.1:11p.m .
St.
at Nn ,-..,_,.,-::a ,.m.
Ptl..._rrllat ,.........li.I:Up.m.
. • ...._.., GIIIIM!I.
q.Hibl!f: at ............. ...
Clllc.PMMia-.ota. .....
I"MhMI'Ib at Caii\U)'. alaflt
Me.ft ......... AalfJ~. • ,....

reold~ par4 Ike\'~ lack•ll.

.
Sut .-.-. - 81..-d -lree-a1ent
forward lltalie WilHam• feu; tbe 'l'l'maliiiH II ~lte llf!I&amp;OIL
·
CeUep
P.ulllnlllclllpa - Alli'IIJHl'ed re~lr­
..alo• of wornet~'l .wvlmminl 4'•cll

t..•

MarpMahe~~ty.

NaUt.al -""oclatlon ot Colle~ate
Dlrid.an or Atllletlca - N~Amed Rltk

· Mi~ll dlr.ctor oll'Ommualcatlu•.

I~

Padftc

lA CllppKII IG3

hn•JIWI•Ia- l'liaund Tom Gllmo,..

-.e

Dft'"!

.....

dtfMIIn M

LA Lllken&amp;lll Hou•on.11: 31p.m.

Plt.ddpllia- Namrd ~· Csrpf!ftiH

·

NEW \ ' ORii (UI'I) -Titl'llnldPI'fta
Board of Coaellll!ll' Top !t

ln~er.alo.al

eoklt' b•dball rallnp. wllll lint·

'i*Cf' viiiM ull records •rCMIII h lllard11 -t
Ia ,.,_._., '&lt;IW polllts Cb..ed •• U
pol•• for ftr!l pllllce, 14 lor !llll!colll, etc . )

uf lui w.ek's ruld1r.
Tum

Point•

I. Ota.IUHIUI (H) tls-4) .. ... .... ,, .... ,111 1
! . ~ . . . . (-1) (U.£1
I
3. tlNLV Ul (JI.$J .... .. .. ......... .... .. .tll 3
1n-t1· • .-...... ... ..........
........... .. ...... . . .

1.na •

S. MM.oari ,.,SJ ....... ......... :.: ...... 111 !'
(t!'-$) ~ ............ SII

5

1. C.awdlntl (!'1-S) " ................. ,Hf t .
fl. MlcW ... Stair fll fUll .......... Utl:l
! . hnlu~ {'CJ.I) .. ......................... UIIIi
II . t\rllan. . (U-1) ""'"'" "'" :..... ,r Zit I!'
II. Dnb (tl-'7) .. ... .. .. , ................... 171 -1
It: La Salle l I J (tl\-1) ....... . ........... 151 I-I

11 OeoJ"'Ia Tec:ll (2l.t) ................ 1-11 II
1-1. ~ldllllpa Ut·TJ ............. ;........ 131 II

15. ae~nf!U) .........., .. ....·........ Jt &amp;
II. ,\rt&amp;o• {!1-1) ............ ,; .• ,..........-11 z.
17. Nnv Mexlt.'8 Slate fiWI ..........31 I!
IK. Lo'*"tlle (U.71 ....................... .! ~ ,
lt. CIRI Dlllllehl 1a-11 ..... ...............11 17
)1. (lie) Ml•nettot. (a.':') .. ... .... .. .... llto
Z.'il . . . . led
.

Collese scores
lulrtb.U Rn ..h

To umamf'DIM

......

o\AMtlatiOn •I MI,.Colldnenl llnh"ersi-

,,

Un CollllitrellCe

W.Wr11 Dl. . . :U, Euler a DIIIIOifi 31

N•rll•r• .... II. 01.-0tlt:AfO ll. 301'
Wk-Gren..,. N, Valpu•IMo ~~
Atlallllc II Collf!f"l'nce
Semlfi..J•
MM•('....._b U, PPIIII Slale 51

H. Rllfltn n
ColoNal Co.Werenc.o
('h.llllplo•Wp

77.

oi~UMM

Madfllloll7!

Mttro All•lk Athletic Confertnt'l'
Chllllllp6o ... lp
La Satll' ~ 1. Ford llam II

!iouthlud Coll~ace

80111111
Norll Texu""''
!W.I1.
Mt•Nl'l!tlf' Sl. i2
No,.wentrnSI. IIt SM. TftU St. Ill
Nontw T.._ 81. t~. Mt!N ..(M ~- 12
S• Belt Colllrrelk'e
~uCh

Champlo•hip

Florida Ill. UNC-Chrlotlfo ~-1

SooOII
So¥Ch Carolh• 5-I, CIPtMOD 53
MIIWftll ~
Noh't' O.mf' Ill, ~ld.ck)' 1'7

.

SoudiWHI •

lh¥1ion S-1, Tn~&amp;~~ 71

Toumeys~es

Bo,.. 01111emp
k._. • •·tetball
*Ill lit', Mah:lti

To......... .,.,• •
•.
DMa .. •l
Vp.-r ArltnJioaU, Mj , Ver.On-12

•

.-.,....,.. Howi.U U, Nile Sl

W'ftlfontlle S 71. Col Lladea •

'

rced\lrrscoat'h.
Flltllbu rKh RMd)' Wlo"rllht.

UPI ratings

Rl~lllllrMolld

Peter Sltorlllo all lree

~oa~:IL

l'li••

lA Olpp!'F!Iat
olerllf)", •I PI
St!tl· VorbiP... ddpiiiLnl~
rltoeftli at " ' uhlftlto.. IIIPI
OrUclo at Miami, niPt
Denwr at Mln.,•Oia, nllhl
LA. -Lalwn a1 Dsll&amp;ll. nlfrlll

T~m.-

llne~lller~t

N- F.n&amp;tand - Named Jimmy R~e
olnllve ~l ..tor and q-.rterhad's

Su~ile,

IG_p.m.
"' e~ IJ' Game.
Portland at lo•lo11, •1...

C.l~rr

Slpd.

Da"ld " 'ani and .lerey Mc&lt;:atw- lilld

Clt..toltr·al De•wr, I : !I p.m.

t. Geerre&amp;.- ell

F_.,hiLII

• • • Ott· -

" 'aihlftKioftal lndiMA; 7: 30p.m.
Cltkqo a1 Mllnukre. "p.m .

' "'' sy ...-.e

SIIIJI~

ulllul fo~all coach.
San D1e10stat.-- Ext.!.tedhiWkflbal.l
ceach .l!m BrandtnhurK'"' to•ract OIW'
J'UI' throt~~h Ita-IS.
Starttltrtl- Named " "lllle Shaw .lefenI.'MI'dl•tOr.

Tuud It¥ Gam~
P.J11Md•l !iliewVork, i :Je p.m.
Utah IU Orllndo, 1:• p.m .
Phonlx Ill Atlanll. ':: 31 p.m.
Sacraml'IJto a1
1 't:30 p.m.

H

Samrd 1111

(Oft . ) -

heM folllball coacta.

Howllton IH, San Alll-'oJD:I
Goldea Stalf' IS8. Ulartou.r m

Oe-velud al

·

NC..U - rta('H Mar)'lalwl bllll.fdlldt
Prwvam on lhret ·year• : .,...Ilion,
inel.,..tq a ban ~· pOMW!UOn t~ur•­
mnt•la lltl and It

N..tTIONAL BASKETBALL M!mC.
Mula)'~IIM8
•
Mbml Ill. Utatl 114
New .Jer..ey 128, Sacrame.-oiiJ
P~pll'a

SJped ... plkher M.,.lll·

· lUI•• ~ellkller. O.•le O'lrlellto
l· )lle• Hllraotl ..

No.-Didl ...
T~

r...._ ...........

1M ...... - ll . . d.alllflel ... CluU
Gw,_ Mill pltW Du. O,periMII &amp;o

n w ttt

Qlea- ............ 11 •
'7 ... Itt SJ!
• t•
CIJII ....I C..-.eiiCP

'

IJTOMMJ'HCBI

Tran8adions

·

Sealtt. -

neu. He was 23.'
the team play today or tomorrow
UPJ 8porta Writer
'1 thoqbt II was a character or ln three days ... we wouldn't
Twenty·four bours after his
win for ua," said La Salle coach play. Our concern rlgbt now Is
deeth, the La Salle Explorers
Speedy .Mon1J. "'Fordham gut· with Hank and hts family."
honored Hank Gathers tbe way
·l ett It out. It wu a real battle."
Last seuou. Gathers became
he would have wanted.
LaSalle, 29·1, also received 10 only the aecond player tn NCAA
Uonel Simmons, who along
polllta !rom OouJ Overtoa - a h!Jtory to lead the nation ln
with his teammatea decided ..to
bleb acbool teammate ofGatbers ~ring (32.7) and rebounding
play their cbamplonsblp rame
In Pblladelpbla - and 11 !rom (13, 7). Hee had 28 points Satur·
despite the death of tbelr close
Jack Rurd. ·
·
day against Gonzaga. and his
friend, scored 26 points and La
Fordham, 19·12, and ~eell:lng tiDal dunk Sunday gave him 2.222
Salle earned its third stralgbt
an NCAA tournament bid for the points for his college career.
Metro Atlantic Athletic Conferfirst' time · since the 1971).71
In Top Twenty action, No. ,15 .
ence title and an automatic bid to
season, ,resorted to foultnr down Clemson was u~nded by South
tile NCAA Tournament with a
the stretch. But the E~rers CaroUna 54·53. ,
71-61 victory·over Fordham.
were able to convert the'W free .
At Columbia, S.C., Jo Jo
·"Hank would have wanted us
throws In the final miDute.
Engllsh"s Jumper with one min·
to play." said Simmons who
Damoo Lopez \ed Fordham ute left gave the Gamecocks the
started sluggishly .Monday night , wllb 18 points and Jean Prioleau victory over state-rival Clemson.
buf· had 18 second·~alf points. to
baa 13. Andre McClendon; the The. 11th·raliked Tigers took a
belp the ExplOrers gain their 21st
Rani's leading scorer, made only 53-52 lead with 64 seconds left on a
straight victory,
two out of 19 sbots and finished David Young baseline jumper,
"I definitely wasn't l!ltO the
witb just eight polnta.
·
English then hit an elght·foot
· ·game early," said Simmons.
jumper , In the lane for .the
"It wasn't like coaching a
·~e best thing tbat happened
game·wlnner. Stefan Eggers
regular game." said Morris.
was when ,c oach took me out. It
scored a career-high 18 points
"lllfe goes on. They're going to
gave me the chance to concen·
and grabbed 12 rebounds to lead
have tragedies and adversltjes.
trate and get Into the game."
South Carolina, 14·13. Elden
The one&amp; who make It thrciugh
.T he crowd at Albany's KniCk"
Campbell had 13 points and 13
those tragedies are the ones wbo
erbocker Arena observed a mo.
rebounds for Clemson, 23·7.
ment of silence before the start of, ate successful. ••
Elsewl'lere, R-Ichmond earned
After Gathers' death, : the re·
the game honoring Gathers. The
malnder of the wee Tournament
La Salle players, five of whom
was caqceled.
grew up In Philadelphia with
Conference offlclals anGathers, wore black bands on
nounced they would offer the bid
their jerseys and several had
to Loyola, the league•s runaway
marked "Hank 44"" on their
regular·season champion. The
sneakers ln honor of Gathers.
Fotdham·s Samford Jenkins ·of NCAA tournament begins March
Philadelphia also wore a black 15,
band.
·
Loyola·Milrymount players
have yet to decide whether they
Gathers, of Loyo,la.·
Marymount. t)le 11th-leading will except the bid.
"'The fact that we haven"!
scorer ln NCAA history, col·
made a decision ls because we
lapsed Sunday during the semlfl·
onal of the Weat CoastConfere~ce haven't raised the question."
Loyola . coach Paul Westbead
tournamertt and died at a hospi"If the question was. would
said.
tal without regaining conscious·

.

.

Page

Circle
'

Sl pd Hill! baiebr!' Dave

AlltH1 Md M'lllk! Bou)'rr, dpt end Ro•
Keillor .... wide ""''d\'rr Rick,- Andre-ws,
all free ••"''~
Ho(:key
Ctalcap - TradH ~~ wtnpr• nan
Vl•·elellt ud Enrett Sulfa•• ud
dd~man Mario Doyo• to quebft for
h!ft M••r Mlcllel Go¥tel, aoaJte••r
Grer MIIIH anlla !lllxtlt-rouncl dnl plclll
In I HI.
Hartlonl - Tradl'd IJoilllellder Ml•
Llut ·~ Wlllillllflll•• lor lrh '!'IDKer ·\'yo.

A catered dinner was served to t 'ollles group who gave a prothe Alph8 OmiCron ,Chapi~r. gram of songs and jokes .
Delta Kapps Gamma, when the , , The Invocation was given by
,
group met recently at the Bundy Violet Getties.
Elementary, School in Wellston.
The business meeting was
Jacquelyn Fain, WellSton Ele- conducted by Rebecca Zurcher.
mentary music teacher, pres- Nellie Parker, secretary. real a
NEW OFFICERS- Edllh SIDon of Pomeroy,
advaace tbe klloWieclge of gutrolateellnal and
ented the Wellston Junior High tMnk you note from Maxine
third from left, Ia tile new pretlldeat of the
urolocleal dileues, uti to laform the publiC
Phllson. The group signed get
Galllpoll Area O.tomy Association. Other offlc,
about ostomy surgery. Public meetlnp of the
well cards from Barbara Litter.
ers are lriiU the left, Doria LI!Bco, vice prealdent;
p-oup are lteld the third Sunday of each month.
Mary
,Houser, Beatrice Rein·
Nellie Myers, treuurer, • and Ruby Clark,
AddlUoaal lnfonnatlon may be obtained by
hart.
and
Harriet Wood,
aecretary; Purpoaes of .ll!e Auocatlon . are to
ca!Ung Pllyl118 Browa or Denlle Phel .. at Holzer
A program on child safety was
VIola
Get
ties reported on legisprovide support aad r hiformallon to · penou
Medical Center or Joy Cline at Pleasant ·V alley
and
presented
by
Kitty
Darst
latlon.
Teachers
reported thjjt
undergoing ostomy surgery, to promote better
HOtlplta!.
•
· Tracey O'Dell when the Middle· the greatest challenge to educ"a· ,
method&amp; of• oaltlmy care and manatremept, to
port Child Conservation League tlon ls dlsclpUne and that school
for Its February meeting at
taxes ~ar~ wldl'lY. She noted that
the home Peg Harris,
State' Representative Mary Abel
• The hostess gift was won by
Is sponsoring a reading recovery
Kitty Darst and the traveling
program.
.
.
~Y John C. Rice"
stum In the mineral mix during with selenium, 26 pounds of · prize was won ·bY Nancy Morris.
Fern Grimm. chairman, con·
Co. Ext. Agent, ·
the winter months. Don't gra~
magnesium oxide, 20 pounds of
Hostesses for the meeting were
ducted a personal · growth proAp-Iculture
grass pastures too early In the dlcalclum phosphate or blofos. or
Ann Colburn and Corky
gra·m , She distributed personal
spring, Lactating cows need to 4 pounds vitamin prer:nlx·
Kennedy.
About spring calving time Is consume two ounces of magne/steamed bon~? meal.
Plans were made for busat so grass tetany time. Grass · sium oxide each day. Dally
Need to add a category to your .band's night ln March.
tetany Is a lack of magnesium ln Intake of magnesium ls very · private pesticide appllcator: s , Attending with those named
the blood. Grass tetany usually Important, especially after card? There will betestlngby the .above were Helen Blackston,
o~curs within two months ilfter . c!llvlng.
Ohio Department of Agriculture
Nancy and Holly Broderick. and
calving. Cows are more vulneraThere Is little or no storage·of on ThurSday, March 8th at. the
BecKY Br~erlck.
ble at this time because magne- magnesium by older cattle. If Athens County Extj!nsloli Office.
sium If fouJ¥1 ln the milk of a you have experienced problems,
The testing wUI start at 7 p.m.
prOducing cow. Cows grazing here are tWo remedies. Feed 2·3
The Ohio Beef. Expo wlll be
' -rGe. .
grass pasiure or consuming pounds of ground shell corn with held from March 15 to 18th at the
Wiater Ia here and
grass hay account for most'o!lhe magnesium oxide each day. To
· Winter II gone.
cases. Cloudy, 'Wtrtdy, rainy get two ounces per head per' day,
· The &amp;etlle bave lert
the frozen pood.
weather with daytime tempera· mix one pound of magnesium cattle will be . displayed and
The cloudl are lull of
tures between 40 aild 60 degrees oxide with 6 pounds of- ground shown. There will be a trade
whtte Outf It appears
F. seems to affect both the cow shell corn. Or. lf hay Is poor. mix show, judging contest, and se- lo look like IJOWI!...Y stull
aa the aeeae fly swth
. and the grass she consumes.
~00 pounds of soybean oil meal, 50
. mhtars. There wlll , be 13 pu·
throulf,b the whl~e snow
· Prevention; Include magna- pounds of,trace mineralized salt rebred shows and sales with over
They apread their open
wlngs through the winter snOIN
175 bulls and 350 females selling,
. as the wt_nter beKtns to blow . .

Grass tetany time nearing for fa'f71Js

~m,

:Maryland calls action too severe

•
COLLEGE PARK, Md. (UPI)
- The president of the Unlver·
; slty of Maryland says the school
• will appeal the stiff NCM
: sanctions Imposed on the basket·
:·,ball program, saying the punish: ·men! Is ··more severe than our'
· infractions warrant."
Reacting to "'major viola·
Twlnlbufl ChamberUn 1JO.O vs Roa
: tlons•• of Its rules during Coach
Maynard. Fattfltld IJnlal 1:19-jl: Shawn
Rust. TlppCityTippecanoe 126-IOivoMike
: Bob Wade's three-year tenure at
Br.ad Kersten, Oak Harbof CJ6.4il; Adam
Wllllll. Byesville Meadowbrook 121-91:
McKinney, Clennonr Northeastern (25-3~
: Maryland. the NCAA Monday
John Coler. McConnelsville Mort~an t29-51
vs Jesse Wheatm, Edtsoa South 131.:0)·
••··placed the Terrapins' baskelball
vs Darren Kuhn. Goshen 130-2); Wayne
Mite Pat~rSCI'I, Cambrldge(30-4) vsChad
Murl'ly, Bryan f3().2j vs Carsm Gainey,
Auto
:. program on probation lor tbree
He•~ Springfield Kentm Rldl• (3~1·
Y~unQ"slown Ursuline £224,11 .
Indy car drivers AI Unser Jr.
: years an~ banned the. team from
D•n Stoll, Milan Edlam 1:!11.3! VI DonNye:
181Poa'
n
il
Daimy
Sullivan,
and
sports
Rldlfleld Revere (22-12): Rick GI~Mr. St.
- postsea&amp;on tournaments for the
Terry .l.owfo, lrmtm (43-0l vs Malt
Paris Graham (30-5) vs Marlo lncorvela.
car tltlist Geoff Brabham were
Linger. SprtngfiEid Nortltwestern 130.91:
next two years.
Parma Padua lJO.il; CharUe S.mpam,
Marty
Sima~. Olmsted Falls 12041-11 vs
named to the field for the Dodge
Marlingt111. 129-2) v• Jeremy Pase.
Mike Groves. Sunbury BlaWatnut 123-21:
Unlventty President Wllllam
Inter'natlonal Race of Champions
Swantm 12l-7): Dan Sml!h. Lexlngtm
Scott Dur1ewc. Hebrm Lakewood 1~11 vs
(26-.1-1) •• S!~cy Lana. Breckavllle 124-21;
Kirwan said Maryland wlll ap·
starting May 51nTalladega, Ala.
Jaaoo Blackburn, Mlraer"'a 130-4):
Kelly Shleldl, Greenfteld McClain 1'4-21
Dwayne Smith, Catlllle (33-1) vs Jasm
peal the sanctions to the 22·
The three·event IROC series will
•• Shawn Ent'liht, l.ebanm 12&gt;1-81,
Kamale. Mopdoft' Field 121-121: Jan
member NCAA Councll. which
match 12 of the world's top
lithRalu:ny, Parma Padua (36-3) VI Matt
Brian Taylor. Clyde 132-11 vs Scott , Hayoo. Teoya Valley-132-12); Ben Bale·
has authority to reverse the drivers ln Identically prepared
Avm Lakf 126-lli: Rldl
man, Edllal Soullt 121-8) 'vs Rex Ro:rmua.
'punishment Issued by the NCAA
!ROC Dodge Daytonas. . .. The Eloenmann.
Randall. St Par to Grabam t~) va Scott
Urbaoa 133-91: Scott l)9ntey. Mllllll·Unlon
Committee on Infractions.
International Automobile Sport· McDaniel. Claymont tli-61; Jeremy Mo12Ui vs Chelf Peters. Claymmt 12f-7);
New l.exiqtlll 131-1) va T.J,
In addlllon to the ban from
Federation said that the Brazl·
Luke FlcltEII. COIWitltualleSalt!li32-0) vs
Nat loa. C.rlato t:ll-11); Doug Wr1gbt.
Bob Hunt. Kenstm 12M).
posiSeason tournaments, lnclud·
llan &lt;:rand Prix Interlagos clr· ?.J:antua
Crettwood (~)VI Steve Butter·
liig the NCAA and NIT tourna·
c'llt at SaQ Paolo bas passed an ftl tid. Betrl~ 1211-10); JohnNoblo.Lobanm
l'llft~~ va Scott Bowen, lloclly River
Inspection by FISA, which had
ments, during the 1990·1991 and
Brlan
Watua.
PannaPadlll I :!i-ll voCal
lUll: Dave Smllh. ttldnltm (~I ••
InitiallY questioned whether It Kurt
1991·92 seasons, the NCAA
Dtttz. ShElby 127-el: BtlaA Egletm.
Miller. Caul Funm N o - t
Miami Traeo t 24-91 vs KeviD Schulz. Ut He
met requlr~?ments for an lnterna· 12Hi; Tod!l HilL Medina Hlahland 121-21
banned tile Terrapins ,fr~ live
Mllftll t 2H 1: Rick Jenldna, !Julian Lake
v1
Chris
Meoea1tu111,
Milan
Edl~a~
t:ll-11),
television br()jldcasts during the
Ilona! event.
·
132-7) VI Nonnaa A~ra, Bellaire 128-l):
RlcRor. Byoovllw¥ea&lt;Jowt&gt;rllok 134-5)
1990-91 season, took away two
Otoatba WaUJb. Whltl!hall (:JB,l) VI Eric
Chril Ander1111. Doiytllt Carroll (22-8) ,
Dool. Lorain Br-Ide 120-11; Bill Miller.
World Cap
, scholarships and ordered the
ntPoWBt llolmeto (31-0) vs Darin Edwards
Scott Trunck, Eatm f25-l)
LfMY
. Former Yugoslav soccer star
schoOl to return $407;378 In .
Cincinnati Pun:en Marian t:!&amp;-21: Mati
Sdlork.
Solal127-6);
Clw'los
Humphrey
earnings from the 1988 NCAA Vellbor Bora Mllutinovlc was
Campbell. Minerva 131-4! va Jim AequoParma Padua 1».:1) •• Brian Ker-·
viva. Van Wort t29-5!: Roy WOQIIIdo;
tournament for using Ineligible named coach for Costa Rica's Ook Harbor·l21-f.2); Bob Neddei!I&gt;U.
Falrfteld Uat• 135-1) •• Roy EdmCIIda.
MArys
Memori_.
(28-5-1)
VI
Don
LoBllliC
•
World
Cilp
soccer
team,
the
players.
.
.. ·
AkrCII Hoban (211-3); Sllanncia WIUhs.
Cltanlon t22-6); Jolllel Y..,..-. BellalrO
Atlantic Coast Conference Costa Rican Soccer Federation 122.a1 Yl O..let Pulltllfl. ClfiCttUIIII
Sttrlqllold Greenm !311-2) Yi "llm Hunter.
WarJenlville Helaltta !:561,
announced.
Commlaloner ' Gene , Confgan
Pu"'ell Marion tU-3); Jum Zlmllka.

I

P,oet's _corner

VICTORY. BAPT.IST
CHURCH

~~~u~~~6~~~ag$:~~g: ;;a(lctr

525 NORTH SECOND

•• .,
·vz.
~

~.

, ~I

-·

; •

"''·~·.··
,..., .' " ,,J
,!' ..

~

, : ·A skating party was held
~ecently at , the c'tlester SkateAway for members arid friends of
the ' Victory Baptist Church In
• Middleport, ,
' Attencllng were John and
Penny Harrison, Misty and
, Brook Hart. Wanda and Dwight
Ashley, Patsy Cornell, Brian
'Yo\!ng, Josh Harris. J.D. Keesee.
r
,

TVC standings ·

(All Games)
·
TEAM
W L P OP
x-Wellston .,,,lB 4 1473 1224
Miller ............. 15 6 1335 1515
x-Aiexander,. , 14 9 1464 i359
x·Belpre, ... , .. l2 9 1515 1154
x·Trlmble . , ,, , 11 10 1276 1256
x·Vlnton .... ..... 11 10 1330 1265
x-F -Hocklng , .. 10 12 1493 1480
x-Melgs .. ,.... ,., 4 18 1203 1567
x·Nels·York ,, 2 19 1129 , 1501
x-Completed season
Saturday's result;
, (Division II District)
South Point 70 Wellston58
Tonight's game:
Division IV
.
(At OU)
Miller vs. Green. 6! 30 p.m.

'

;:TB clinic
~ 5cheduled

A bullneta ln~UrMQe pack·
fiOII, that is. lt'a SERIES
ONE. 1
b~--.ge. ·
competitlwly-prlc.cl plan
for retail 110..1. omc...
churchea. apartments end
drug m ..a. Cell 111 ·for a
proposal If~!~ quotation.
.

NER\!!/

nMelenteet.

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY

992-6687 .

.........
~" ··=
~

L.uke,T; Lowery celebrated his
first birthday reeently with a
party at his home.
The party was hostl'd by his
mother, Rilla Lowery, A ··cat••
; theme was carried out with.cake
, and Ice cream being served to
• t-ester· Lowery, Vicky Dent.
· Chelsea ~n-t, 1111d Robin and
, ·Casey Hubbard.
,
~· Others presen'tlng ·gifts ' were •
.. Con!lle. Tara. and Kim Boston,
n ctm Davlsi Bryce 'Davis, Linda
:·: t;:;Ukey, Carolyn f'raley. Mr. anci
·Mrs.
Eldon Barrow; Mr and
~
•
r·Mrs. Joe Rhoades.
· : Sending ~llrds . were Betty
: ·Spencer. . Pat.- Thoma. Linda
: Glleky. LesUe Gtlkey , Shane ·
Gllkey, Wesley Gl1key, 'J(Istle
; Molden. Mr. and Mrs. Orville
: Phllllps, and Mr. and Mrs. Eldon
•' Barrows.
•

..;...Sports briefs-

TIRES· ARE OUR BUSINESS

and After

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Darlene Joye Connolly, daugh·
ter of Erma Jean Connolly,
cele!Jrated her sixth ·birthday
recently with a psrty at her ·
home. ,
·
Refreshments of cake, Ice
cream · and pop were served to
her great grandmother, Erma ·
M. Connolly, 'Ashley Hagerd.
Tina CQDnolly, Brian Chadwell,
Corey Young, Debbie, Mls ty, and
Travis Lyoni. Arlene, Jason, and .
Amanda , Parker, Steven and
Chrla Barber. Sheila, Mike.
jerl!"l¥· and Christopher Connolly; and Kay Hunt.
Sending 'gifts were Mr. and
Mrs. Ted Connolly. Mr. and Mrs.
Warren Connolly, Mary Grace ·
Cowdery. Nellie Connolly, and
Doris Deeter.

·.·.~·-·.·.·.·.,,1~. ·~•.

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•,,,,., ~ , · ili:c; , .•. ,.....,. ;,. . ·'; .,, ,,

WXE T. LOWERY

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Norma Jean Coleman, parciels, · oeull!rt M. ,Balltnw. rtpt of
C~ll, parcell, to Jack R.
to Norma Jeu Colemu,
way, 10 Mupret M. Bomnpr Carroll and Mary E. Carroll,
tee, Olive.
Wood, SuttoL
',
Ol!VI!.
Trusreorp Bank, Ohio, 'oert. of . •RoaakJ Black ud Barbara
Vtrglnla E. ~riley, !ka, Virll·
amend. af InCorporation, Sbclety 'Black, SA, to Terry D. Napper
n!l E. Vltatoe, tOM A., to Roy
Bank llld Trull, Melp.
and Sudy Mapper, Salem.
Roeer Hunlft', Rutllnd.
Sarab Mablman, tracts, to
Edaa M. lltltmell, pareel, to ·
V«llli
Howery. by ruarcl·
sarah .Moblman ud Homer P.
R. HaO.n IDd Jolin E. 11n, Fr~ Howery, parcell, to
Parker, Lebanon.
Hullllllll. PomftG)' VUJaae. .
Dolpltu~ Burke, Jr . .and Wanda
J•ek R. Carroll llld Mary E .
Burke, Columbia.

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-'o!Ut

· PUBLIC INVITED
PASTOR JAMES E._ KEESEE

$399

w.

"the AlifWIQif' ~arw !Myoe
~I tMtltb¥1. A. . . . IS
a Redini·Roc:ker Rec:tiw or n •
Redlna·Wty Will en..I

CUSTOM
ORDER
"
' AT
SALE
PRICES I

DARLENE CONNOLLY

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~ -io -s. ••.,

DR. LARRY EMERY

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SPECIAL SPEAKER

The Racine Youth League will
have an organlzatlopal m~tlng
on Sunday, 5: 3() p:m. at the
klnder,arten building ln Racine,
Alll.n terested coaclles are urged
to attend.
,

Connolly.

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MARCH 8th thru 11th
7:00 P.M. EACH EVENING

MORE
THAN
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ACHAIR SALE.

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Racine Youth
League meets

M'DDLEPORT, OHIO

~Z-BOY~

;~ ~eigs Co~nty p~operty trarisfers,

WE DO FIOI1 IND AUGMENTS

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There.wUI be house shOwer for
Jim an~ Allee SchUler on March
12 at toe Scipio Senior Citizens
Center at 7 p.m.
· Mr. and Mrs. Schuler lost.their
home to fire and more informa·
lion. may be obtained by' call
Nancy VanMeter at 742-2268.

Lowery birthday is celebrated

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House shower

Kimberly Cornell, Misty Jeffers,
-'ulle Young, Jennifer Cornell,
Melissa, Young, J_osh Ashley.
Joseph Cornell. ·-'ames a~td Stephanie Keesee. Jennifer and
Jessica Ashley, -'enny Horverton, Kevin Riggs,. Brian Buffington, Ryan Qualls. Kim Dent.
Charles and Angela Hall, Donald
Goheen. Chad Bu.rton, 11nd Tan·
gle LaudermliL ,

The lunch menu for the East·
ern Local School District has
( There wlll be a community skin
been announced for · the week of
: testing clinic at the Pomeroy
March 5: The menu will go' along
• Fire Stat·lon Monday 4: 30·6: 30
! p.m, sponsored ·by the Meigs , 'with "'Right to Read Week. ••
Monday: cowburger (ham·
·• County Tuberulosls Office:
.
burger).
corn, riCe pudding;
: • All area residents. Including
apple
and
milk.
; boosters clubs. PTO" s. chuiCh
Tuesday:
wild turkey sllce.
, groups and other residents who
gte~n beans. Texas cake (brow·
; are In food servi,c e are urged to
nle), fruit and mllk,
• take advantage of this free
t
Wednesday: western hash
, service.
·
·
(goulash),
garlic bread. lettuce
: ,There will also , be a blood
salad,
fruit
and mllk,
, pressure clinic during the same
Thursday: chlll dog. baked·
, hours, sponsored by th~ Pomeroy
beans.
fruit and milk,
~ firemen and emergency squad
Friday:
no school. parent
members.
.
•
teacher
confl'rences.
. Further lntormatlon may l!_e
: obtained by calling 992-3722. ·

AN~

Q.allty Service Before, During
the Sale.

- -.,. ..0111plll olohn La)'ne

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· Eastern menu

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-Sports briefsf!oxlng
Michael "The Silk"" Olajlde
began training at Kutshers Resort InN ew Y'ork for.hls title fight
with Thomas Hearns April 28 In
Atlantic City; N.J. Also that
night. Michael Moorer fights ,
Marlo Melo.

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Victory Baptist skating party held

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RISEY DJtJVES FOR TWO- Soulh Florida's &lt;;hris Rlsey (43)
goes up for a layup In Monday's champlo118hlp g~e araJnst .
UNC·Charlotte· In the Sun Belt Tournament. (UPI)

Division It St~te High
.School .ivrestling pairings

••o.

met

biography sheets for members to
complete. These will then !onn
the basis of a biographical bank.
Sandra Nodruff. membership .
chairman. read membership ap·
pllcatlons which wlll be voted on
at the March meeting.
Mrs. Grimm thanked the soclety for the donation of paper
products. This mon.th's donation
will go to Serenity House ls
GalUpolls.
Mrs. ZuiCher announced that
next month"s meeting wlll be a
joint meeting at Christ United
Methodlst'Church In Jackson on .
March 16 at 6: 30 p.m. Election of
officers wm be held.
Attending from Meigs County
were Rebecca Zurcher. Rosalie
Story.FernGrlmm,PaulaWhltt.
Sheila Bevan, Marjory Fetty.
and Nellie Parker.

Revival · eating

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Asked lf the PRC meeting
reflected urgency, , O'Connor
sal d. '"It's a slgnofnotwantingto
lose tlte two days.~· ,
0' Connor said there was no
particular reason why Green·
berg, and not O'Connor himself ..
chatted with Fehr.
"All of these negotiations have
a rhythm,·· o·&lt;;:onnor said. '"And
I think there's a relationship and
a tierception between Steve and
Don that goes back a long time.lf
that helps Identity the Issues and
slit through the Issues, we're
going to use lt. .. ,
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"I don't draw any particular
significance."' Fehr said, point·
· lng out that • Greenberg has
attended several meetings.
If the owners' meetings come
and go with no pact. then most
chance would vanish of starting
the season on time. An unofficial
timetable calls for two to five
days for camps to convene. 10
d11ys for pitchers to prepare for
game duty, and three weeks of
exhibition games. Fehr said the
eventual agreem~nt would out·
line the timetable.

the Vacation Bible School Open
House at Mlll Street Books on
Friday and Saturday.
The next meeting wlll be April
5 at the home of lila Murphy.
Marge Purtell had the program using a poem, ·•·crowing
Old,"" and an article. "Spring
Came Euly" as well as two
,'
games.
The hostess· served refresh·
ments to those named and Hazel
Stanley·. Dorothy Reeves. Grace
Warner. Evelyn Thoma, Susie
Warner. Chelsea · Young. Clnny
Wyatt. a!ld Kathrin Johnson.

Delta
Kappa Gamma dinner held
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hang around outside meeting
rooms," he sal d.
The owners on the !&gt;layer
Relations Committee are Minnesota' s Carl Pohlad, Milwaukee's
Bud Sell&amp;. and the White Sox'
Jerry Relruidor! In the American
League, and Houston's John
McMullen, St. Louis' Fred Kuhl·
mann, and the Mets• Fred Wilpon
ln the National.
'"It was worthwhile to bring
them In and bring them as close
to the process as we could with
the hope that out of that group
,there may come some Ideas that
will help' us get to a solution."'
O'Connor said. "It's their responslblllty. lt"s an Important period
of time, and we'd like to have
them here rather than at the
other end of the phone on the
conference call.··

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CCL meets .

1990 baseball season
openers in jeopardy

NEW YORK (UP I) - Owners'
negotiator Chuck O'Connor, with
corme ...
time running out for saving the
l'Yadelplllll.a. - Traded d~HIW!IIIIl•
·scht;9uled
season opener, said
olq WrU. and a lourth•ro.d JHi *aft
pick to Buffalo for rlfhl wi•K ~Ia
Monday he has shifted a Player
Maplft' 1ual.a seconll·rouod IIIII pick;
Relations Committee meeting
..,...d Miami COblo) center Crail
fllhrr.
from Dallas to New York and
St. LGuia - ~Whrllfd eenter Mictwl
moved lt up 24 hours.
,
Mon~t• to Peoria ollhe lnter•l»•l
Hockey !A que.
O'Connor said the PRC. ln·
· Toroato - SU•prndl'd r11111 'Iring J•hn
stead of convening Wednesday ln
Kordl c lndeflnll:ely .
Sorur
Dl!llas before. the quarterly
Cotla Ric's - Named Named Vellboor
owners· meetings. would arrive
BoN. Mll•tino\ltc roacll of W'orld CUp
tum.
ln New York by Tuesday. afler·
TenN11
V.S . TenrU Altaoelatlon - Saml'd
noon, He said the group. which
A.n.-.e r\.K..t. llrrad Gllbrrl , Rick Lf'acb
Includes six club owners, wotdd ·
and .Jim Pilch lot~ Davh Cup teun
qalllll C~~Pchol!lowakiD..
hold lnterna,l meetings. He said
't least some might sit at the
This week's games ,
bargaining table.
Oltlo C.ltt'1e BuilelbaiJ ScMdlilf'
"If we get something going
·WEDNESDAY, MARCH':
her~
In NewY:orl\, we can spend a
So Jamf'll•••ted
. .
TIIUUD,U, MARCH 8
,
couple
of. days here and still
Ohkt Stale at f11dt ...
make it 'down to Dallas Wednes·
At U•twr..IJ o I DQ to• .\reaa
Mldwnl Celleat• Coni. Toun.y
day
evening for the owners'
·
FRIDAV, MARCH t
At Collo AreM, Detroit
briefing on "J'hursday," O'Connor
MldoAmerlcM lv•I'IW'J' Qua.rterOM11
1
said:
Ml111111l VI Tolledo, I p.m.t
IW .. SW~\'11 CeMral Mlddpa, I p.m.
Neither side repori;l!d any
SCAA: Em orr \'t Cal \It• at " 'IUenbu 1'1·
progress
but both said talks could
li:Up~m.
Ball Stat• , .• Ohio Ufll\·erJM,, 7 p.m.
take place Tuesday, which will
NCAA: Avery"" M'ltlenburJ, Jt 3$ p.m.
mark Day 20 of the spring
Bowllnl Green \'s EMiern Mlehi(M. 9
training lockout. ,
. MCC ToWill')' Semlft•la
O'Connor and union chief Don
.. SATURDAY, Mart'h II
Min_..~ at Ohio SCM.,
Fehr held no· fac~to.face meet·
MAC SPmHhal11
ing , Monday. Deputy Commls·
&amp;JI State-OtJ winner "'hwlln~ Gret"a
E...,r• Mlthlpn winner
stoner Steve Greenberg re·
MlamJ.Toledo •1n~~er VI Kent st·C•ntral
Ml chl~~r:an wla-.r
viewed t~sues ln the lnornlng ,
MC(" f11al1
with
Fehr. then did the same ln
SUNDA\', MARCH II
Mo\C f1ral•
the afternoon with o·connor,
Fehr also said he chatted briefly
Calendar
with Commissioner Fay :Vincent.
'"I can not report any' meaning·
1\ll'llda)" Sport~&gt; Call'ndar
suu••
ful progress was made."" Fehr
llalllai, No\.. lk:eda - JIM Wortd
said. As for the status of April 2,
Flp"' a1tat1n1 e•IW,WJahips
Sldln•
•
the ,, schj!duled season opener.
stowe, \'t . - NCAA CbarnptoMIIIp~
Fehr said. ''the fighter Is down,!
Soecer
MJ8L
suppose. He might not be quite
St. Lolli• .at Baltimor., ~ : 3$ p.m.
counted out yet but It's getting
Teads
.
llou Raton. F1L- U$0,100 Vlrllala
l'i!al close. Something would 1\ave
Sltnut of Florida.
ladl• Wl'lll, C•IU. - 1. 1 million
to happen. for sure. ln the next
Ch amplo111 c. p
several days."
fehr would not rule out going
,,
~
to Dallas !Or the owners· meet·
lngs,. but stressed there would
have be be , something of sub,
.
said Maryland wlll not be able to stance 1o discuss.
play In the 1990·91 ACC tourna''I'm not going to go .just to
ment because of the television
, ban.
Kirwan said '"the imlverslty
deeply regrets an~ Is embar·
rassed by Its violations of NCAA
regulations:· but ~e expressed
DIVISIOND
"'great dlsappotnunen t at the ,
103Poancb
severity of the penal tills. ••
Jim Boardwlne, St~euboro (25-11 vs

of Helping· Hands meets

Hela Eblin ll!rved as hostess
It was reported that four
for !he March meeting of the comforts, one baby comfort and
Circle of Helping Hands when the a set of sheets and pUlowcases
group met at the Zion Church of had been sent to Peggy Russell.
Christ.
Mexican Christian . Chlldrens
Lucille Allen presided at the Home.
meeting and roll call was ansThe mother daughter banquet
wered wlt.h a Bible verse using was announced for May 11 with
the words spirit or saint.
)he theme ''I Remember
,, Unda Lambert j'ave devotions Mama:·
uslnr Geiii!IIJ 32:10, · Matthew
Kentucky Christian College· ·
15:30 and I ·Tlmothy 1:15. She LadlesDaywlllbeMarch29wlth
read an &lt;article, "Remnants" ,. the theme '"Lord of An:· There
comparing pepples lives to the will be. a ladles rai~V ·at the
making of .a· qUilt. She iilio Beverly ChuiCh on ;\prll10.
showell 1!11 aRtlque quilt.
Members were urged to attend

Siped qaaarlerhtck

.1----------:----"'"":-----l
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a berth In the NCAA"• wftlla 77·72
over James Madison In the
championship game of the Colon·
lal Conference champloMhlp.
In the · Sun · Belt Conference
Championship at Blrmlneb&amp;m,
Ala:, Radenko Dobras IICOred 24.
po~J~ts, lnclitdlng a key Jumper ,
and four free throws In the final
two minutes, to le'ad South
Floridl,l toan81·74wln~rNortb
Carolina-Charlotte and an auto·
malic berth In the 64·team NCAA
field.
.In the Atlantic 10 Tournament
semifinals, Temple used rebounding and defense to make up
for a spotty offense ·and earn a
cnance to win Its thfrdAtlantic iO
tournament championship In the
last four years.
The Owls will host Massachu· ·
setts ln the championship game
Thursday nlgbt The Minutemen.
who lost twice to Templi! this"
season, reached thelf first 'Iitle
game with a 64·59 victory over
Penn State.
.
In , other action. Houston .
downed Texas 84·79 and Notre ..
Dame bested Kentucky 80-67.

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ONLY LIFESTYLE AND LA-Z-BOY®
COUlD PUT SOMETHING THIS GOOD TOGETI:;IER!.
It started out as a chair sale, now il's much ")Ore! Save on La-Z-Boy·home furnishings!

LOVESEAT

S599

i::=:.·~- ,.::.~

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TWINCLINF.I~SOFA $759

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-."' l-.-"'

()pelt Daily

9 to S

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COIINEI Of Ut &amp; OUYE

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Pa;a 6 The Dllity S ltiuh1l

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Tunrtey, ~ 6, 1880 .

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Poster
named
. contest winhers
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· Alfred
happenings

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Dental (IOIIer contett wtUen tary, fourth plaee.
wereJilWifatedplaqllll.aadcuh
Tile fint place prize wiDDer
prizel In a coatest IJQIIOI'ed by received $15 from Melp County
. the Ametlcu Deatallfyeieallts. Commillloner Manning Roush;
Auocatlou811d111eObloDeaprt- the second place, $10 from · · Dinner guests of Mr. ~d Mrs.
ment of.Health.
Wllllam Wlcltlllle, the .Meigs • Clarence Hepdenon od eb. 21
Takin&amp; first place In the County Auditor; the third place,
were Mr. and Mrs. qalr Follrod,
CODte8t wu
S.llh, a 15 from Greg Kaylor, CoatlllanJocal: Bertba Wood. ZanesVIlle;
atudent ·at the ~Drt £!eo . lty or care, a~for fowib · Edna ltarmon. Tuppers Pial~~&amp;·
mentary , SchoA Tbti other. place from Jon J btl, Me!P · Ja tbe afternoon, Mrs. Follrod.
wlanen were Heldt Lepr, Sll.ll· County Health
ent.
Mrs Henderson, Mrs. Harmon,
bury Elementary. secoad place; .
Tile first place winning entry . ""lmd · Mrs. Wood visited their
Bllly(iYoq, Syracuse Elemen- will now be placed In the state
molller, Edith Harper. at Ve~
tary, tlllrd place, .and Sarah competition.
,
pns Memorial Hospital. !\J·
Par10Df; 'Harrisonville Elemen·
tended Care. They also visited

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• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

ar;:;

Baseball
~rd show
scheduled .
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TIM! MliOn County 4-H Horse

TO PLACE '" AD CALl 992-2156
MONDAY thru FIIDAY I A.M.. to 5 P.M.
_ I ·A~M. uqtil NOON SATURDAY
,
ClOSED SUND3Y
POL.C.U 1 •

05

~.:e:d~~:;d, chesterville,
and Josephine Lamb, Toledo,

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lourlll.

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Rutland Church celebrates 'birthdays

visited their parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Arthur Spencer. '
Mr. and Mrs. Clair follrod,
Kathy 11/at.on. Stacy and Alan, .
Edith Hai'JIIlr, Clara FoUrd, and
'Ni!ll Robinson attendell the fint
birthdaY part¥ of Kaltlyn Folii'IJd
at the bCJI!Ie of l)er pal'i!ntl, Mr.
and Mrs. Steve FoUtod, Athens:
Joe
received word of tile
death of bls uncle, Joseph Poole,
In Mobile, Ala.
Mrs. Wilber Parker called on
POMEROY -Thefundralslng Im&lt;~gene and l.eSier Keaton who
.and Pl!bliclty committees of the have)een Ill ·with the,flu. ,_ ' ",
Mr. and Mrs. Delbett Ste•rns
Pomeroy Sesquicentennial C~m­
mlttee wlll meet Tuesday 7 p.m. returned from a trip to Fairborn
at the St, Paul Lutheran Church · wber~ they ,visited their daugh, _
In Pomeroy.
·
ter, 1-prU Neely and family .

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··Children need to know
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Ann
Landers

ctraunstances sometnnes
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Dear Ann Landers: A woman said, "Your dad committed suicide."
wrotetoyouandsaidherhusbandhad
Since that disclosure,. my llfe· has
committed suicide many year.&gt; ago, madealotmoresen!&gt;e.lnolongcrfccl
when her children were young. She thatthcrearomissingpieces.lurgeall
nevertold them the truth and asked it' parents who are withholding from
perhaps she should You said, "Tell thcirchildrcnthefactthatamatedied
them, but don't be surprised if they. by suicide to tell them. They arc enalready know." You were IOOpercent · titledtolhatinformalion,BDdit'syour
right. .
duty !O give it. -· NO NAME
I am 19,and it was only a short time
DEARN.N.: Thank you foraleuer
ago that !learned my falherconimit- that will help more people than you
ted suicide four months before I was will ever know.
born. My mother pever tallced about · D~r Ann Landers: This is a bekim much.! grewupfeclingthcrewas · latea· response to "Southern Di.somcthing about his death that W!i&amp; lemll)a, • who was honest enough to
beingkcptfromme.luscdtomakeup · admit that she had no mateJ;Ilal in·
wild stories about the way he died. _stinc!S and was feeling guilty.
My schoolmatesweremystifiedwhen
I have always had~·inten~dislike
they compared some of the tales I had for children and can barely siand my
t!Jld.
.
own. The boys, now 1l and 16, are
: A few days before llefl forcolfege, excellentstudentsandhav~nevi:rbcen
I decided I had the right to know the· in any trouble. I must have been born
truth. I demanded of my mother that under a lucky star, because I married
she tell me exactly how Dad had died. a man who is n&lt;JI only a terrific father
She ·said, "He had a nervous break- but a wonderful mother. He has told
, ·. ljown."
.
me many time5 that I shouldn't feel
· · Later, when I asked a teacher how guilty about my lack of maternal in' this could be, she said, "People do nor . stinc~ because he has enough for both
die from nervous breakdowns." I went of us.
·
back to Mother again. She said, "Well,
I have always worked downtown.
·dear, actually, your father had a heart . Aftcrourfarstson wasbom,Icouldn't
attack after his nervous breakdown." wait to get back to my job. I found a
I knew then that she was hiding competentwomantocareforthcbaby, ·
·somcthing,andidecidedtogoscethc ·BIId my husband rushed home after
woman my fqtlier had been engaged · work to take over. Why I had the
to before he married my mother. She
~ccond child, I'll never know, except

4NN

Township Trustees will . meet
Wednesday at. . 7: 30 p.m. at the
township building.

. POMEROY' -The Ladles Aux:
·Jllary of the Fraternal Order of
Eagles 2171 Will meet TUesday, 7
REEDSVILLE -The Eastern
p.IJ\. All n\emllers are urged to · Athletic BQosters wlll meet Wedattend a!ld bring .a covered dish
nesday, 7:30. p.m. at the high
for·,.the p(\tluck.
school. ,

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UNDER~

••1989.t.o.. ..t..... ""'
Tim.. ~nth,..,.

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[pp. . . . ~~·lldif'... .

SYRACUSE -The Syracuse

THURSDAY
POMEROY
. -The Pomeroy
Vouth League wlll have an
;yliiiiSI:iaiilfili~~::;i~~
we
organtzatloiurl meeting on TuesChapters of A./'&gt;.. and J\.1-Anon
a brother or sister. He day at 7 p.m. at Syracuse
will !Deel 7:hursday, 7 p.m. at the
promised· I had another baby, he'd Elementary l)chool.
Sacred Heart Catholic Church.
For more Information call
take care of it, and he kept his word:
~EEDSVILLE _The Eastern · 1-!ro--333-5051.
I spend many weekends away on Local BQard of . Education wlll
my motorcycle, and nobody com- meet In special session on TuesCHESHIRE - 'Free clothing
plains. Thehousehold-firnctionsalittle day at 6:15p.m. In ihe highschool
day, Thursday. 9 a.m. to noon,
hapbazardlyal!imes.butwearehappy caleterla to deal with personnel old high school building, Chewith the way we have worked things matters.
shire, sponsored by Meigs Ga111a
out. I'm sure many of your readers
Community Action Age0 cy.
will thrnk I am some kind of screwMIDDLEPORT -There Will
bali, but I am' truly c:Onterit, which is be a regular · meeting ·of the
MIDDLEPORT -There wJII
morethanmostofmyfriendscansay. Middleport Lodge No. 363 F and
be · revival Thursday through
-- FREI&gt; TO BE ME (MINN.) . · AM on Tuesday at . 7: 30 p.m. Sunllily at the VIctory Baptist
DEARFREE:You'vewriuenavery Plans will be made for lodge Church at 7 p.m. nightly. Guest
frank lcucr. foro which you deserve to Inspection on April~- Inspection• speaker Is Dr. · Larry Emery.
be complimenJed. Tl!ke good care of will be In the fellowcraft degree Pastor James E. Keesee invites
your husbantl,' dear. That mBD is a and refreshments will be Served.
the public.
jewel. ·
'
Gem ofthe.Day: Assume nothing.
Inside every dumb blonde there may
be a very smart brunette.
. ·
spokeswoman, Lealie Goodman,
F~e/ing pressured UJ ha••e sex? How By UPJied. rt-ee, ..ter.Wional
STALLONE
IN
ClAY:
There's
said Atwater was already joking
we/1-ill[ormcd are you? Write for Ann
· anotherSylvesterStallo~~estatue
on
his way to the hospital and she
lAnders' booklet "Sex and the TeenIn the news- a 12·foot nude one.
denied
reports that Atwater had
ager." Send a s~/f-addressed, long, . Last week officials In Phlladel·
been
on
a liquid diet. "We'll just ·
businus-sir~envelopeandachecl&amp;or
phla saw fit to remove Stallone's
lake It one day at a time,"
money order for $3.65 (this includes "Rocky" stat.ue from til front of Goodman said. "As soon as we
postag~ and handling) to: Teens, c/o
the Philadelphia Art Museum but
have a doctor's report we'll have
Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11562, Chi' another monumental llgure of more details."
cago,/11. 60611-0562. (In Canad{J, the actor Is going on exhibit In · GLIMPSES: The Starlight
s~nd $4.45.)
..
New York. The Jarger-than-llle
Foundation. a non-profit group
statue will be Included In a show
that grants the wishes of seof 60 paintings and sculptures by
'
riously ill children, has a starllguratlve artists at the New
laden lineup for Its March 13
York Academy of Art starUng
fund•ralser In New York. The
Thursday. Sculptot ~art111e Vau" theme will be "Best of Broad1el !laid she was commissioned
way" and Carol Channing, Nell
'.
by
Stallone
and
his
former
wife,
Carter
and B.D. Won~; will
By BOB HOEFLICH
H,e
knows
that
because
tile
Revolution
Is
looking
for
desBrllftte
Nlelsell,
to
do
a
double
perform. In addition, Pebble
; Five bank robberies In one !lay
cendants of · Hel'n\an CQolly statue of them but she removed
Glbeon will sing and Emma
:... last Friday -lnColumbuaand ' Pomeroy Firemen will get lpto
their first public chicken.- barCowdery and Maude Dutton Nielsen after they were divorced Samma, . Joan RIYera, Mary
tJie big ques lion
becue
this
coming
Sunday
at
·the
Cowdery. II seems that these and used the extra clay to make Frana, Dr: Rutii'Weslllebner and
is whether to
tire
station
with
serving
to
starl
.descendants are related toone of Sylvester larger than life. Vaugel Jac:k Scalia .are $Cl!edule to
erect a statue of
at
11
a.m.
By
the
way,
the
the signers ol the Declaration of calls the statue "Age of' Steel."
· attend. Donald Trmnp_will presJames Buster
firemen
have
added
ribs
to
the
Independence.
They
might
be
In
MONEY
JALK.S:
BAN,K:
ent Carl lcalm, chairman of
'tlouglas, new.
menu
also.
the
Olive
Township
area.
If
you
Bruce
WIW.
makes
a
better
deal
··
Trans World Airlines, with the
world heavy Geez,
and
I've
been looking to
Trump.
WIUis
put
in
than
Donald
are
the
ones,
plea~
give
Keith
a
foundation's man of the year
weight boxing
the
robins
for
the
announcement.
call
at
992-7874.
three
or
lour
days
of
work
In
only
award .,
cihampion.
providing the voice for the baby
• Aren' t you· glad you live 100
Robert Wells of Wilkesville has
If you are a talented high . In the movie "Look Who's talk· .
inUes from the Big Cilywithallof
·been
~lected
as
one
of
the
eight
school musician and want a little lng" but It's going to earn 'ttlm
Its problems? Can you Imagine a
the
Ohio
Lottery
contestants
on
excitement
In your life this ·· some '$10 million even though
city in which robbers feel so safe
up
at
7:30
p.m
.
Show
coming
he's never seen In the 111m.
sumrrier. J!erhaps, you'd be lnter- or else so brazen - that they
Saturday
night
on
ChannellO
.
.
accordllll
to Piemjere maga~sted
Jn
Investing,
t!U-~e
·.weeka
march Into banks In llroad
Wells
isn't
from
Meigs
€ounty,
Instead
of a ilat salary,
zine.
with
the
All
.
Ohio
Stahl
Fair
daylight five times in .one day to
Band.
·
l ~ ~
of
course,
but
we
can
allroothlm
WIUis
agreed
,
to
take a perCenrip 'em off. Maybe they should
on.
After
all,
Wilkesville
seems
The
band
Is
compOsed
of
000
tage
ot
tl)e
mpvie'Nirou
and
spend that million of our tax
as
about
as
close
as
we'
re
going
when
"Look
Who's
Talkllll"
high
school
mulliclans
and
bu
doUars they wlll UJe to help the
became a surprise lilt, he reaped
been a ·feat tired attraCtion at
Son of Heaven exhibit to recoup .• to get.
a
windfall that's double what be
-------~
Oltlo: State Fairs ·since 1925. A
its losses on some guards at the
earned
for starring .In "Die
superior slaff of 15 music educaMaxine and Kar.e n Griffith
~ks .
·'
Hard." Premiere says Willis's
tors !run ~~ Ohio Will help
· And While Columbus and Ohio eajoyed a nice outing to Clnclntake exceeds what it cost to make
nail
over
the
weekend.
n,ey
got
gel.
YOII
ready
for
the
personal
should feel pride In l!elnl· tlJe
to
see
talented
Lily
Tomlin'
In
appearances,.
.
the movie and Is more than the
home of the new heavyweight
on
stagedolngTheSearch
.
Interested
muslcans
may
obperson
produeers will make.
champion, isn't a statue a lltUe
for
Signs
of
flltellJient
Life
In
the
tala
appUcatlou
from
their
local
ATWA~ ' PAIIR' OVT AT
much at this poblt In time.
Universe.
Tiley
,thought
It
wu
band
dlnictor
9r'may
write
to
the
PODRJII:
Lee AtWater, the
What's It been since Douglas won
sensational.
·u!y
has
come
a
10111
director
Omar
P.
macltman,
51$0
chairman
of
the Republican
the crown, a month?
National
Committee,
underwent
'
way
aJ
an
entertainer
an4
seems
.
Weal
151&amp;1
Sf.,
'Cleveland,
Oblo
Feel good about yourselves. Of
a
round
of
testa
Mollllay
after
always Involved In worka which 441422-170.
Deadlln' tor .
eourse, we don't have all that
are a little out but deliver some appUcatlona Is M'arch,'24. ,
.
fahltllll In the middle of a ·
ctllture. but we do eeem to live In
speaklq
enga~nt Ia Wuhln·
pretty
clever
measaps.
·
We
·
·
.
aprettygoodplacedon'twe? We
IIIII·
Atwater,
39, ~red
mllht
lei
Tomlin
make
It
a
My,
but
·
that
dull
certain~
dOn't even have to do television
quickly
after
Putlni
out at II ,
founome,
and
only
Maxine
and
shows
up
In
the
aunlilht
doesn't
.
commercials to get our people to
· fUnd-raller·forSen: Pldl Gramm,
Karen.
understand
about
that
It?
TbOae~
·k,
cloud,ydaysw•
'
ljlke time to care.
_____ __:;
u advaa ·
after all. Oh well,
R·Texu, and wu ualsaect by
doctors
In the audii!IICe before
Keith· Ashley of !be Ewiq Juat keep .
draperlet, clOIId
John Blutlllar 18)'1 that
being
taken
to a hospital. A parJY
Chapter of Solll of 1lle Ameri,Caa " llld do ltiHp ~· :.
.
spring hu apnllli.
I
.

]3eat of the Bend

People:· in ~the news

.

far away from the big city

--------

Homes.

.

Tlie semi-retired mortician-,
has been uSing
turn-of-the- .
· century, horse-drawn hearse for.'
years, but only recently has he
begun res torlng hearSes for other':
funeral homes.
With a partner·. from Easterrf
Montana Carria'ge, Stevenson~
has delivered horse-drawn
hearses to funeral homes Ill
Wyoming, WISConsin and North
Dakota and has orders from
several other states: ' ·
"We have orders as fast as we
can turn them out, which Isn't too
. fast - once every six months;"
said Stevf;!nson, who sells each_
hearse for $7,500.
,
;
The .Creel- Morrison-R&lt;:tz FurH
era! Home In Lewis town has used:
Its hearse twice so far. according:
to owner Jeff Morrison, and.some;
people have put In reservations•
for future funerals.
:
"We've had liD awlullot of the;
old-tl!ners ~ay, 'By God, th11t's :
what I wan!. I've told my famlly •
that's what 1 want,"' Morrison :
said.
:

a

.

CASH lAIII

I

COMIINiiD ANNUAL
FINAN~lAL REPORT
F R
Fl8C YEAR

e~Dm

c.

tt. 1t89

'"INo liM u-hod
· Flnonal81 ltotornent"
C~ NTY OF MEIGS, OHIO
1 . R. Wlcldlft!, Audhor
·~ovt. TYPE •UNDS
. . '
·
RIVENUe:·
ToJCit .............. ,.,1,883,442
CIWI'llll For
·
'lervlcll .. .......... 646,541i

. u - •')! ·'· .

Prmlto :.rA~.... ... :.... 3,279

Rrilland , • ~

Gall•• County
Area Code 61•

County
.,,.Code 614

J)\AiocoiiMMUt, ...... ISI9,431
8ond Prlnolpol
Payment .1. .. ........ 20,121
TOTAL DIIUIISE·
MENT8 ........... 8,788,181,
Exq. RCPJI. Ovor (Under) · ,
. Dlob ................(8:11,0821
OTHER FINANCING
·•
SOURCES' )USES):
Opor~tlng T••not.ra ,
-In .................. 18:1.822
Oporlllng Tranofero
-Out ...... .......... 343.013
Advanceo-tn Not
"
Ropold ........... ~...109.81~
Advonceo-Out Not
.
R!lfiOid .. .............. 1 B7,8z1
.·
Otflr Financing
8oure11 .............. 410, 12i
Other Fln.,clng

UCINE
GUN CLUB:
GUN SHOOT
EVERY SUNDAY

AU Other
' ,
Rvonuo ......... ::·...... 8,998
TOTAL RECEIPTS
8 196
...... -0'
liXPENDrrUREB .....
Eao. llcpto. Ovr (Unclor)
. Dtab..................... ,.8,998
OTHER FINANCING
SOURCES IUIESI :
Oporlling Tr:onolero
-Out
29 721
'TOTAL
SOURCES
(29 72t)
........
'
Eac. Rcpto,/Sourceo Ovor
(Under) Dlob. and Other
ul20 7251

OTHEA'FiN: '

Fun~ ci,;,;i; ' jj~·~,;;;~

'

HUMPHREY'S

YOUNG'S

CUIUIE

CARPENTER SERVICE

-Room Additions
-Gutter Work
-Eitctricol • Plumbing
-Concrete Work
.-'Roofing
-Interior &amp;. Exterior
Pointing
.
(FREJ ESTIMATES)

CONTIOL -

H•fint, COoling,
. hfrigtratlon
Senlct

a.

Startt •• 1101 P.M.
Factory Choked'

CALL

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

9,2·5589

Ponlerov, Ohio ·

·

.

GALLIPOilS-I ._,
_fr• .,., .....
., ·

~

..I........
.,.,

.Jain lhf
446·7133 2- •· • 1 mo
&gt;

I

••

'

FURNACE
FIINACE

PARTS ANQ SERVICE
ALL MAKES
GAS OR ELECTRIC

IEJI'S
HIYICE

Francis Andrew, Long Bottom, Ohio,
died . Marqh 3, 1990. Mr. Andrew passed
away at .Veterans Memorial Hospital followIng a brief mness.
,
Although born· In PI tsburgh, Pa., Mr..
A,ndr!!W 11-rrived in Long Bottom, Ohio at the
·age of siX:weeks and spent the remainder of
his 86 years as a loc'al farmer, rural mall
carrier, employee of the State of Ohio High·
way Dept. and an Olive Township Trus~·
He ¥las a member of Ou[ lady of -Loretta
Catl!ollc Church at Long Bottom and the
Sacred Heart Catholic Church, Pomeroy •
He was well-known In the area for his
love or music and his lnvolvementln local affairs. He was an Individual who was continuously IOUJht out by frlendaand neighbors as
a maA. wUJ!ng to devote his time and energy
for !be benefit of others.
· ,
.

'l

I
I
'

.
••

....,
•
l
I

i
!
!

•'

I
e
;'
•
••

r

Plt~•ant

182
896 leta,t

937

I

Bulin••Opportumty
Mon.,. lo Loan
·
Protte:•onal Ser,tcn

21
22
2J

•

~ulf•o

~

•

5$.

Auto1 feN Sal• •
Truclu lor Sotle
Vans I. 4 WO ' l
MotOfc~cl•

But~ts &amp; Motors to, Silht
Auto,.,,,. A«;c:•501'Klll
77 Auto RepMf
78 C'amp•ng·Equ1pn1tont
79 Clllmpers &amp; Mtat or Hot,~ ~

Serv1r.es
81 liomelmp•owe•ntnlli ·
• 82 Plumbmg &amp; Ht~•mu
83 E JK:IVIIImg
84 Elee111C:III5 Retug.,uwon
85 Gun!:!f•l Hauhny

.•··

ForSai~Oflr.•d• 1.

.

86

M 0b1le Hum13

87

Upholsu~ ry

Rt!~»-.t

.

•

.

Doc. 31 , 'B9 ........... 4.073
Reo. lor Encu mb..
Doc. 31, '8 9 ... ......... -0AGENCY FUNDs
,_
Oporotlng Trano..rs
- In .... .. .......... . 1,190.00
Other Ffnoncing
,
!lourca .... 18.7411.103.20
Other Financing
U111 ....... 18.899.080.00
TOTAL OTHER FIN.
SOURCE$ ... .148,243.20
Exc. Rcpto./Sou.Over (Under) Dlob. and
Other Uo11 ... 148.243.00
Funil C..h Balon ..
Jon. 1. '89.. , .. 382.680.00
Fund Cuh Bolon..
Doc. 31, '89 .... 630,823.20
Roo. lor Encumb.
Dec. 31, '89 ............ - 0TOTALS
REVENUE:
TIKos ........... 1.883,442.00
CHargee lor
· ·
S.rvic11 ..... .. 548,545.00
Upcono~ an
3 271 00
"'"'" .. .. ........... •
·
finH and
89 73 00
Forfefturoo ....... .6 .
lntergovornmantol
Recoipto .. .. 2,338,404.00
All Other
Revonuo .... 4.301,464.00

TOTAL RE·
TOTAL OTHER FIN.
. CEIPTS ..... 9,1&amp;9,897.00
SO.URCES ... ,871,1114.20
DISBURSEMENTS:
Exc. Rcpto./Sourooo Over
LogiolotiYil and ExeculUnder) Dlob. ond
tlvo ........ ... 1,078,094.00 Other u-....... 61,116.00
Judicial ... .. ...... 381 .422.00 Fund Cath Bal•nce
Publi.c
Jin.1. '89 ..... 1,909.737.00
Sofety ... .. ..... 428. 706.00 Fund Caah Bal•nce
Pubtfc
Doc. 31, '19 .. 1.1181.732.20
Worko ....... 1,888,895.00 All . lor Encumb.;
Hoolth .......... t,6d'1 ,140.00 ' Doc. 31.. '89 ....81,707.00
Human
Fu~d Cooh ·
Sorvic11 .. .. 3.818, 102.00
Balon co .. ' ..... .. 1 -!129,278
ConJervatlon-Aecra~
Caoh on Hond .. .. 2. 180,423
otion ................ 38, 749.00 Leoo OutMioc .......... ... .. 669,431.00
1111ndlng .......... (281, 146)
Bond Principii
TOTAL
Payment ... .......20, 1 28.00
BALANCE ...... 1 ,929,278
TOTAL DIBUIISEAo-lld VoluMENTS .... .. 9,788.868.00
otlon ... ....... 208,48B,51B
be. Rcpto. OV8r )Under)
lnalde 10 Mlll .... .. ..... .. 4.30
Diob........... (826,989.00) Outaldo 10 MMI .......... 8.10
Operating Tronoftro
Eltimated
-In ......... .... 884,712.00
Populotion.......... .23.841
Oporatlng Tranofors ·
Filderal Cantua
- Out ........... 372, 734.00
Populotlon - 1980
Advane~~~ - ln Not
I certify thfo report to bo
Roporld ......... 109.818.00 correct and true. to the beet
Advancas- Out Not
of my knowledge. · ·
Roporid ......... 187,921.00
WDiiam A. WicWiine• .
Other Financing
Audltor-2-27-90
Sourcn .. "1 9, 196,229.20
Maiga County, Ohio
Other Fioancing
u.... ........18.761.140.00 13) 8. 1tc 114-992-2898

.

Roger Hy~ell
Garage
Rt. 124, ,....,., Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK .
REPAIR
Al.•o Tr••••lllle•
PH. 992-5682
or 992·7121

Read the Best

' Readthe

Clf\SSIFIED RDS

~

ROOFING

fiiW ...;.IEPAII
Gutters
Downspouts

Gutter Cl.. nlng
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

'949-2168

2-Fto-1 1110. pl.

'

..

lOW IVIUIU
Exptri.._.ln Typing; FlUng.
,ML 1IMI

PARTS AND SERVICE
For Moot 2 and 4-cycle
lnalnll
Stock P1rt1 for
Homallto, Wttdtator,
Tacumooh, Briggo •
· Stratton.

PH.

'

INSULATION
Wl•ter Special 0•
VINYL SIDING

V!NYL REPLACEMENT
.WINDOWS
FREE ESTIMATES

CUSTOM IUIT
HOMES &amp; GARAGE$
"At

Prkts"

PH. 949-2801
or t.S. 949•2860
Day" Night

NO SUNDAY CAUS

CHECK tHE

90 DAY

WAIIAIIT~

_.ASHER$-$100 up • ·
OIYEI$-$0 up 1
l!niGEIIATOI$-$100 up
IIANGIJ-Gis-Eioc.-Sl25 up
FIUlU$-Sl25 up
-IIICIO O'IJN$-S'It up
.

lEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
992-5335 " 91S-3S61
Acrou F.- Peat Offlcto
POIQIOY, 01110
10/30/'19 tin

•Mobile Home
Rentalo
•Lot Re~1e11

SER~ICE · .
We can r~ir and rt·
•• radiators and
heater corn. We
'aho acid boil and rod
out redia tan. We also
r1pllir Gas Ta..s.

992-7479

PAT HILL FOlD

MOBIU
HOME PARK
•Mobile Home
Parta

,_,.,,ow.

lt. :13' ....th •f

992 ~2196

1-12-'11-tlo

PAINTING &amp; CO.
ltmiiOI IITIIIOI
FREE ESTIMATES
Taitt tho poin 0111 of

pointing.

Lot us do II lor you.
VIIY IEASONAILE
HAVE llffiEN&lt;ES
Ana' P.M.

(614)915-4180
ltfora 6 p.n1. l.ttrwt . . . . .
11 -15-'18· 1 mo.

PlUMBING

OPRIS 3 LOCA'IIONS TO SOYE YOU ....
POMEROY, OHIO: Rt. 7. S.R. 143
ALBANY, OHIO: At. 50 &amp; S.tl . 143
HENDERSON. WV. : At. 36 Adj . to Sicloro Equipment
NEW HOURS:
POMEROY: 9 o.m.-7 p.m. 7 Doyo
ALBANY: 10 o.m.·6 p.m. 8 Dayo. Ctootd ·:::~~~ ,.1
HENDERSON: 10 o.m.-8 p.m . 8 Dayo, Clolld I
PAYING AS OF TODAY, JAN. 30, 1
#1 Coppar 70C par lb.;
Claan Dry Aluminum C1n1, 31C
WE BUY All NON FERROUS ICR~P.

01

STARTE~I.

ETC .

,.MAIN STREET
PIZZA

IlEATING

Now Lemtion:
16&amp; North StciiMI
Mi . . . .,,, Olio 45760
Ftolllng luppll•

Phone

992~6873

HM'e

2,- Sot,th 4th St.
Mitlflllplrt, Oh.

PIIOIII

GUN SHOOT
lAONE
Fill DEn.
.· lalllall luldlng

EYRY·
SAl. NIGHT
6:30P.M.
,._, chob

12 011111 . . . . cw,

·-··A.

.

I.L . . . .

liUCIIIG

cllfta.•o
•GRAVEL ·
•UMEITONE

•FILL DIRT '

•ANYTHING
, ATALL

91

LOWEST PIKES ·
IIGHEST QUAliTY
FREE LOCAL DELIVERY
' POMEROY AND MIDDLEPORT'S ONLY
U)(lU't'OWNED PIZZA SHOP.
· Pizza.Subs·~lads-Daily Spec:ials
,...~

'

. 992-2228

"LOW INCoiu lOIII"
1-12-'10-1 mo.

(6141 667·1171

Middleport,

Til-COUNTY RECYCLING

·. UNDA'S

&amp; SERVICE

DUMP TRUCK
Sand·Stone-Dirt

•Th .....
• , , . lnd
AIIMIIIIt
•01
• Lube

R111~

' GoodRateo
T.L.C. " •
27 Yrs. Exp.
Rolor""-

SITEWORII • .ROADS
- CLEARING

, •••1011

USED APPUANCES

EUM HOME

DOZU

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

99lP.!4tU

BISSELL ·
BUILDERS

IHMI._IIfor
Snlor Cltll- an4
lantlcalll*f

NI.,WLAND
ENIEIPIISES

POSITION ··
.AVAILABLE IN

*"

L__.atValoyLu
In .....,.,. 011.

J&amp;L .

H -'90-t mo.

low.-dLWrlt
....
•,

DAVE'S
SMALL ENGINE
REPAIR

.

H5-tln

992-2772

Well Know Area Man Dies ·

I
•'·
'
••

I

Apple Grov e
Muon
New Haven

773

FUIIACE

&lt;

l

571

!-30-'89-2 mo.

2•2-'90-1 mo. d.

'

l

P1

~

ReaKierltial
C0!11merciel

12 Gauge Only

_,

ns

468 leon

71
72
73
74
7&amp;
76

For Le•e

51 Houuhold Goods
62 - Sporting Goods
5 3 Anhques
&amp;4 Misc. M., rchend•se
66 Building Supph•
,6 6 Pen.tor hie
67 Mu.llcallnllrum~JQ1S
58 Fru111 &amp;. Vegtrt~bl•

Mt' C..I4IIIIJOU
Wantltd To Do

ltviii!Oek
Hay &amp; Gr•m
St~td • fertthlln

1rnns~orl~'.lon

Hou•• tor Aent
Mobde Homn tot Rt&gt;111
farms for R•nl
Apartment tor R•nt
Furnis.hed Rooms
Space fo1 Rent
W~ted to Re nt
Equtpmenl fot Runt

Merchandise

*

17
18

&amp;l
64
65

W~t~ted

Business Services

..

DIAMONDS

Ohio 43266-0573.

Sltu•110n Went ad.
lntur.,.ce
14 - Bus•n•s T•••ntng
15 Schools &amp; Instruction
1&amp; Radio. TV. CB Rt:pan

AfiUi Code J04

441 GaM1poha
992 M•ddlepon
Pomeroy
36~ Ch•lwe
381 Vtnton
98&amp; Ch• .. ,
246 ._.o G,.nde · 84J Portl.nd .
261 Gu.,-n Dr•t
24 7 lelar1 hlh
643 Arabia Dill
9•9 RaC'If'le
379 Watnu1
742 Rutlal'ld
86? Coolville

.

'

41
42
43
44
45 46
47
48
49

1l

Mnun Co , WV

R ul £st1te

I;Mitnl

12

I'Xclrauw•s ...

Me11~;

Jon 1 · 5 t
· ' - ............. 3• 79
Fund C11h lllonce
Doc 31 'B9
32 4
•
'
...... ... ' 64
Reo. lor Encumb.
u- ......... ,........ 182,oto .Doc' 31 ' '81 ..... ....... - 0 TOTAl ·
........ '
TOTAL OTHER FtN .NON-EXPENDITURE
RECiiPTI ....... 9, 141,614
BOURCES ........ 810.442
TRUST FUNDS
All Other Revonuo ... .3,127
EXPEN!)rrU~ES:
Exc. Rcpto./Soiuceo 0 ...
TOTAL RECEIPTS ... ,3, 127
Lealollflveond
' Undorl Dlo~- ond
,
EXHUI.... ::,, ... 1.0715,094
Other Uo11 ......... (78,860) TOTAL DISBURSEJudlclll .•. .~........ ... 38 1,422 Fund Cooh Balonce
MENTS .................. -0Public
Jan. 1. 1918 ... 1.473,032 Exc. Rcpto. Over (Under)
8ofety ., ............. 421, 7015 Fund.Cooh Bolonoe , •
Diob.... .. l .... , ... ....... 3,127
I'Ubllc Worko ..... 1.815.8911
Dec. 31. '119 .... 1.394,382 Exc. Rctpo./Sourceo Ovor
(Undo&lt;) Dlob. ond Other
.
- h ................ 1,191,140 RH. for Enaum,b.
Uo01
3 127
Hun~~n '
"
Dec. 31. 1881 .... ,.81.707·
ci,;,;i;'jj~~~~;;.;·"·
'
Fund
. _ '· lorvlcoe : ........ 3,81B,102 FIDUCIARY EXPENDABLE
Jan.1, 'II .... ......... .... 946
Con81rVMion,TRUST FUNDI
REVENUE:
Fund Cuh Bolance
RocrN1~ ............ 38,749
Forflitu-............ ee,573
lnq,_nm,.tol
RICiipto . ...:...... 2,338,404
AI OtMr
" ·
Revonuo .... :i&gt;,.4,2SI,331.

•

36

Faun Equtpmunt

62 WJntt dtolu¥

Public N ot ice

'

•'

.

follull1ill}!: l!•l••tlhlnw

&amp;1

3 I •u••n•• Bulldlngt
35 Lou II A cre~ge .

Help Want ud

11

Ad ~o

Yotrd S idl.'S

.RESliTS
liKE . ·

.

I

H•PP'¥

ADS8fl

-------

'

Card ot lhank~o ,,
In M"mor•_.1

•
'

TAX TIP OF THE 'WEEK

I

Cla.~sijil'll ''"~'·-~ &lt;'IJI'('r rl11•

'Adl thltl "'ull be ~ld I'! ildViiiiC:C 11r•1

li. l r·.n.l ,Lk

31 Homn tor Sela
32 MolMI•Homftfor Sillc
•3J Farms tor Salt

In Memory
Annoucem8tus
Gtve.war
Heppy Ads
Lost end. Found
Yard s.ae (pa•d '" actvau ct!l
Put*c Sale• AuctiOn
~anu~ to luv

Public N atlce

•

All interested parties will
be gio~en an opportunity
to be heard. Further infor• ·
mation may be obtained
by contacting ihe Commission at 180 East
·llroad St., Cqlumbus,

CMd of 'fh.nks

2
3
4
5
6
·1
8
9

Sf:r~ ll.t:,

OAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
11 00 A. .M SATURDAY
2 00 P"M. MONDAY
lUES DAY PA,ER
2.00 P M TUESDAY
WlONESOAY PAP£~
2 .00 PM WEONESOAY
THuRsDAY PAPE~
•
2 00 P "' THURSDAY
"ttflJP,Y PAPER •
2 00 PM . 'FRIDA:Y
SUN0AV PAPER

•

The Public Utilities Commission of Ohio has set ·
lor public hearing Case
No. 90-01-EL-EFC, to
review the fuel procurement pra~tices and
policies of Ohio Power
Company. t,he operation
of its Electric Fuel Com- ·
ponent, and related matters . This hearing is
scheduled to , begin at
t30 p.m., on March 12,
1990 at City Council
Chambers, 218 Cllweland
Avenue, S.W., Canton,
Ohio 44702.

30 /da~

1

Fr.'ll! Sllp;/'1"

Real f sidle

F11qlloy•:re111

COPY OEADLINE
MONOAY PAPE~

.,

LEGAl NOTICE

'

• A cl ;.a~tf•otl arJv.,rhs•"'"''' plill;\!d 111 The Da1ly Stlltlu) 1111 I•-"
tept
t1111.tted tltspl;~y , 8usmuu Ca!d otnd IU!;till nOIIC,tl$1
wilt itl1u iiPPe.., 111 lht! P1 Plnllt" Rttf)tSim ilild ttl lit G.alh
pohl Oa1l'¥ Tr.t&gt;t•nu, lllil(~mg owr 18.000 honuf's

ttiESDAY
·I'OMEROY -There will be a
weekend revlv'al at the Faith
Tabernacle Church on Balley's
~un Road with David Wedlund,
Columbus, as evangallst. The
revival runs through SundiiY and
services start. at 7 p.m . .nightly . . ' .RIPLEY, W.VA. -The River
Emmett Rawson, pas tor. Invites
.valley Herbalists willmeetTues·
the public.
day, 7 p.m. at the home of Rose
,.
'
· ~arle Dubl~s In Ripley, W.Va.
RUTLAND -Meigs Area Holl- , . Local members should meet at
ness Aysoclatlon will hold Indoor
Shoney's.ln Ripley at 6:30 p.m.
camp, through · Sunday with
and ~o .In grbups . ·
services nightly at 7 p.m. and 6
p.m. on Sunday .- Special speaker
·.
WEDNESDAY
"
Is f!ev. Gene Grljte l!nd song
,PO~EROY
- . The Meigs . ~JLES CI'I'X. Mont. 1UP]) _ I,
evangelist Is' " The .pumlres"
County Salon 8 and 40 No. 710 will The newest trend In the funeral
from Tennessee. The public Is
meet Wednesday 1 p.m. at the business 15 , a return to an old! . ·
Invited to attend.
home Iva Powellm Pomeroy.
tradition: maklngone'sflnalexlt
by horse-drawn hearse.
'
RACINE -The Southern Local
PAGEVILLE -The Scipio
"A
lot
of
these
ol'
cowboys,
,
Scliool District chapter I ProTownship -Trustees wlll meet they won't go If you don't haul
gram 'wil be sponsoring a NewsWedneday, 6 p.m. at the township
them to a cemetery with a·
paper In Education Workshop to
building In Pagevllle.
horse," said Dale Stevenson of,
be held ,.,at tlie !joutltern High
and Sons Funeral
SteVenson
SchOOl cafeteria on Tuesday
PORTLAND -T)le Lebanon
ftom'
.,. ' 6-8' p.m.

t i.OO

113.00

n

Alllluull r.t ill c l'lls

.20
.30
.42
'.60
.06/ doy

·s.,....,....

Horse-drawn
hArses ·
come back

Attending were Ray and Klm
The Rutland Church of Christ maintain a healthy heart. She
Willford,
Jamllha and Cassady;
·celebrated the birthdays of Eu- spoke on cholesterol and the need
Edith Lambert.• Judy and Robert
gel)e Underwood. minister,' and to keep It under control.
Binda Diehl; age 91, during
Suzy Carpenter led the respon- Snowden, Lorrl and David
Barnes and Tyler. Joe and olanet
February family night.
.
.slve_ reading on love and Joan
Bolin, Joan and Bruce ·May,
Janel ' BQlin and Pearle Cana- May read a poem from Ideals.
Donna
Davidson . . Jane, Wise,
day presented th~ program. The
It was noted ffiiilbelie have
Binda
Diehl.
Ann Elizabeth
theme centered around hearts been seven additi*" to the
Turner.
Slierrl
Might, BQb
and love.
. church membership sincP
Musser,
Tom
Hysell,
Suzy CarFollowing dinner. members of October. ·
·'
penter.
VIcki
Kenpedy,
Pearle
the group found par!ners by
There was group singing and at
Canaday,
Richard
Grueser,
matching halves of heatts.
·
the close or the program, a
Greg VanMeter, Kathy Stewart,
Mrs: Bolin presented Informafriendship circle was lormed and
the benediction was given In and Jim Bill, Beverly, Eugene,
tion from the American Heart
Ruth, and VIrginia Underw\)0(1.
Association on choices fa make to
unison.

lot$

.

...00
t&amp;.OO

Aal" •e fOt con•cut""e runs. brohtnufl!d.,swlll be dt•gvd
lor e1et1 d~ 11 •.-•••• ads

'frH .-&lt;11
Giv•.wrt and found ads undut 1&amp; wOtds WtM bli'
run .3 d.,5 at no c:hwu•
'P11c. uf td tor •U Cll)tlelletten '' doubh: ~r•ce ot ed cost
•1 pOint t.n• type CH.tlt uMd
t1 ~101 , • . . , , . . . tor etrOts 11ttur tu11 d., I Check
for «trtOIS tiC II dill( ad fUUIIU papurt . Call befDI41 2 ,QQ p i'll
dllf at111r pubhc:~ton lo m.wlut C:DHeChuh

Poote

wlnaers, Brandon Smith, lint, Heidi Lepr,
"'coad, Billy Yolllll!;, third, and Sarall Parso.-,

Monthly

Ov..- 16 Worda

Rate

16
16
16
15
15

6
10

'

"Re~ tt l 50 driC04.11Jl t01 ads fMIId tn advance

Words

3

'At1 5 uu'~" Me• AI· Gall•• q r Mas~-th counh.-; rnu$1 be pu1

adults, $1, children, 50 cents, and
Team II sponsoring a baaeliall there wllJ be a limited number of
card • • Saturday from 9 a.n:. . tables available at- $10 each.
to 3 p.m. at the Point Pleasant Reservations may be made with
Junior High 'School In Point'· ~bble Sayre, 304-895-3319. ·
Pleasant, W. , Va.• Admission Is .

WINNERS - Jon Jacobli ol tbe Melp County
Health Department presented plaques, certlll·
cates and cash prizes to the deatal.poeter contest

.

,

D•v•

2-l-'90-1

Stop In and See

CONSTIUOION
ClllnR, OliO
Cuatom Built
Homes,
Remodeling •
ReJMtir Work

.•,

DALE HILL

985·3365
1661987

Strklrtly W.IN

0-

*IHRUI. TReE
TRIM and RE·
MOVAL·

-UCJHT HAULING
*FIREWOOD

IIJl.S&amp;ACI
992·H69
EVMIGS

4-l-lf.lfoo

1110.

IIOINO
•ALUMINUM IIOINO
aiLOWN IN

INIULATJON

IISSIU.

...
..........,
._ co.

"FNe Eltlmatel"

...........11..
MOSMAY

•NEW HOMES •SIDING .

•GARACJI8
•REMODELING
•GINERALCONTRACnNCJ

�•
Sentinel

lAFF-A~DA
~-yaw

The Deily Sentinel- Page 9

......................
No.1•1W Ill. II .......
flit. S.Two · ' l
I ll(lf,

raMIMie

~. -: P'ar"-0...
fldoniiOI.- .. ·~; .....

' '

.0

_....,....,__
Glv•way

1yr. o7c! ~Cot.--.
hal hldlhola a 4t :I W&lt;id. 11 ...
387o0201.

/

~(

su- Clormln ...........

• ' - " pup 7

Jm' coun?ry

mo Old. -.,.,..

home, . . . . _

No-~

C..Om point _ . , . , . to..lo
Cll. To a Hoi lor

Lost&amp; Found

loll: - ...- - lponlol. On 8•
Ad.,

(

. 417hftw4:00
p.m. 27. 114-115"""*"Y· FolltuarJ

vard
.,_...,
,,
_,.

7

'

~

FUO? oil tanll, 30M75-ZUI.
Wood of - t - lor tho au?·

6

12U7R

.

a..-.

.... • 11000. , _
, • .,~ 1112- · - .
....
Clly lllallllo ., .... 1110.

~'y}(.4

i~

terrible!' I've got to'.
start wrapping myself . in
lighter t9wels. "· ,

I-

Hoe

P spar_tDr A.A.

tor1:00p.m.

a~

~

=Allor::.:::':!·trt:.: .._. ...
le'

f1enlals

N

Public S&amp;le
·&amp;Auction

.
.
.
"
"
'
=

rr ~a mnwndl ,._ rou

--

Wtth or w!?houll
· Can Lany Llnlr ..,...

Low . . . . .- - - 11111

pwt~.llo??veNdiOOh~

Pa?lot Oo. - . , 011.
Clul?a

do

blllln. . wlltt ,..,.. JOii _,_,
and NOT to -.nd money
yo;, ...
• . - a d tho allortnlCAlli II ON IIULll-ltLUON
1107.1AR MARICET IIUEARCH.
??a tape "' nh.
P. u. In 214 Clolft...lo,

Junk ..,.

.

,

47 Wanted to Rant

euer..
.... ~a. Colt••
HP, ~ lli?IIM. . -

.

:u.
7471.

_4,.M.

. (Pt

.,

oondlllon. $110. 114·MIMI

.. ;
I'

'

).'

'

49

Forleaae

'

(J) lpiiotsCsmar

--....

e a • (I) CurNntAflalt

42 Mobile Homea

a

vkleoCounfrY (0:301
0 Abbott And Cottello

1.

7:01(1)Jefhwsoloe
7:30 eill Family Feud ·
(J) Colage . . ...,..

--

' ~­

....... --..

I----

e

011+

Ploa, 1414 (I I I - , "'*'!
---~-­
PI
.,......,.....

51

I' '

II:S t.="l!~
! '

I

lltarns a valuable Ieason

•

when he cliaata on his
aptitude tall. Stereo. 1;1
11)1 Cro11ftro
·
0 Night

•

z bad""'"' ....... - " " ....

Sand HI!? - · ~7WI3o\.

Court

2 I:! alii oom tmiiM' fDr ~ 1 !!!_o
~ (loll) lor ..........,..

Employment Serv1ces

=ra

Md~

2

Help Wanted

7:35 Cll Sanford And Son
a · Mlotlock. Matlock

.i:OO Gill

fumiMid, AJC,

?ot, al? a?~rto. •4 -

assists Julie Marcil when she
tries to deland an old friend.

illoea?
a •Tony iaWho'•
concerned

2br ooourlty dOpooelt requlrotl,

ttWM-1122.

AVON • AI? .,..., Co?? llar71yn
. . . . . . 104 . .2141.

=

Ennol? ..- lor

?n tho Adutt Fooa
....-- ond c;:ottrtng
Pi_FOii.,ift;m Trf.Countr
at Tho Adu!t _
E,. cotlois
Cenlar
_,

s.iiOOI. wo novo a ..,.,

fund?ng
- a..
- ,_
""
thoao - -quol?iy.
Cal?
117-a/101. c;a- loogln ....,.
28, 1tl0.
Couplo 10 71¥1 !n nice -

,...,. ....

,.. ......

EARN MONEY Roacl!ng _ ,
, . _ ?noonoa llolantla?.
Dalalla. (1) IDH87.aot)O Ext. Y·
4112.

.&lt;

1 1 ' Gam, 111dlilar•ld 1pl.

-

to ,.,. In wlh ~

Wri II IIIITAL DITICTOit8

,..,, ...-..... ... ...... !Iorio

~~1-4217. . . . . .....

1br, .... -bumlng

JIOJ'

utMioa,~-ondln
on
a.cty, .....,.,..
,...!ratl,
7Jo4ll7 or Sat I
Sun 171·2418.

-.

Apanment
·for Rent

o1

12

Mn, ........

ft-.

.... . .

Palll,114-44e-1102.

011oo•• Filii Rota Clll7tl car. 7n
iny-. - - M7·7440.

Ron

2 k I OOdl apto. IDr

.

1 2 1 0 - Aft.

•• aw

lito=

Tr J'1Sporf.l!IOii

UtiD

APfiLWICIS

..__. saaa.
dryara,

-

· .,...

w. apl. 2 br.. ,

beth, pr!vala
enc1a11d pada.
Cloel to
a-r ...,. ' a?oopp?ng .....

311

• IDIIIIIIy Qrohllll CruNde

r..,

......

~vldld.

441o0211.

__...L~- .....,
114-

Ul&amp;'mo.

i1J Murdst, 8loS Wrots

=·

"'--'-- UTILITY . BLDG.

Murder Through The Looking
G?ass

Church "'"'
0• MOVIE:
Pa,ctooSlatlon
II (R) ,
(2:00)

iPIC?AL:

1:05 Cll Portrait 01 Oro11 '"'-'"'
(Pt 2 012)

llovl1111 Balo: a- · - · :101401rt0' 111ir10' ~
StiO; ~oCu??Oiilfo
~
-. -·-•--1177717
1111
:~:o~Js~· · ?ral?ar, • l14- tad. ; - HCIISI II.Da. 114:132-1741.
PICKENt FURN!TUU

a:31ia • •~ 111e wonc~er

--

YNro Paul and Kevin have a
tight and split up. (A) Q
• Croak ' Chao ·
1:00 eill a In The Hall 01 The
Night Amadam of a
traveiHng bordello is
~~&lt;spectecl of murdering a
prellcher. C
D. II ROMonns The
Connor family competaa In a
H1No-n hOrrOr
competition. (R) D

.... tt?oolcl tumltoh!ng. 1/Z MI •
.?arrlcloo Rd. Pt. P I - , YN,

oa?? :104-171-14111.
RENT'IOOWN

TopQua?ltrlrand-

I.Mnti- ......,-.,

(I)

........
4-..
7-·-·-tlorullil.l
tat4
iiWI¥OI.- ,..

17~""""
..
- . · -·

- . oomf!?ate 11

, LR

~&gt;Mao-- VI'Ra

-a. . __

Flock Crusade

IIJI PrlmsNewo

ooom ou?too. :?I?IW7II4HI - r tn,
- . 011 Col? 114241-1121 . ,
1:00PM.

.

Furn?t-111.14),

(D

Jolin loaz In toncort

Guest Jackson erow"" (1 :30)
(!) The Fanteay Film Worlda

• I p.M., tun. _
12 -__ • I
114-4414111.

01 Oeorlll Pol (1 :33)
1111 e C MOVIE: 'RUMWIY'
Cll TUHdloy Movie (PG13)

!:! "'= -

lfiiDIIIC. 4 II•*•••,· I fill
1oo11oo, 3b4l
In, ·
Paint
PI I , ~ _.,

1:1~ P.,an NdDn Geot:ge

WHO'S ,

:104-171-7114.

goee undercover to contact 1
Newcomer who mates and
kills. (A) ~rao. Q
.IIJI ~,King Uvill
MOVII!: ,._..... (2:00)

THAT .
FRO~

---~~~-.

117,000. 104-727-1010.

MAW .

R
I Mallo- Now Country

.._n.
"Cd1-11t•ll14.
" - 112 47ft •• -

music's hotllat atarl ara
fllatured live.

Little things ·
are Worth Alot
. zn
the Classified Section!

Ovsrheard at airport walling room: "Nothing has done
- more for hOme cooking than the taste of a vending
machine SANDWICH'

1::10(1)(JJ Tlllo

..

·a e

aucceaaful data, Luther asks·
a woman to marry him. (A)

=

~i
••t#...-11111711
Mlehlll and Hopi&lt;IICUII

t

ouit=t·
--or
or

&gt;

lllatlll£ L F'l ww·

~1711.

.'.

Q
10:00 (I) 700 Club With Pit
llobarteon
•ill Qll Midnight Coller A

militant mlnlator lovela
Chllrgaa ol racism against Lt.

Eleclrtcel lo
.....-. . .

A~

Coltegs . . . . . . .u
-~ Cotoh Alter one

'

Aahlgellllon

·

lhe

BERNICE
. BEDEOSOL

.,....

and killed 1..,_-ofd W.ndy

.........

111:01~=-·TIIe
'·
(PO) (2:41)

tNO(!)W. . . . Ooanlte
- , _ the liMOfY Of the

-e. We 811111 Overuatne.

AI lnci.S....Mtllt1'lnci&amp;CIIn
the woadl wtllt -...
nl~ aanov~- IRI

.:1:'4

u•1• - e&lt;ll• • •a

.,....

•o Arwnla ...

I

EAST

:EST
4

: ~::: &gt;

+7 6 3

.AJH 2
.K7 2

-.

+Q2

+AB 2

W:,

SOUTH
In
of East's opening one-spade
.KI063
bid
led a heart. When East
.AJ3
·played the kine. declarer could see
+A 10 o
that taklna the ace would ensure two
.QJ
10
heart tricks. So he won the ace and
tben played queen of clubs. East took
Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: East
the ace and returned the heart seven.
West played low, and dummy's hea rt
Nortlo Eolt
· 10 took tbe trick. Declarer next tried a Sooth
spade from dwnmy, probably intend·
Pass
2NT
Pass
· lng to let the ellht ride, but East 1 ~~
All pass
grabbed the ace to play his last heart. ' s.
West quickly took three beart triclls to:&gt;
Opening lead: • 6
set the contract·
·
Althougb It ts a natural play to take
the king of hearts with the ace at trick fo- out the club ace and later play :
one, thus ensuring a second trick, de- •.clarer m?ist suppress this u;sbnct so . East for the jack of spades to make :
he can destroy the opponents' commti- nine trlclls and his contract. It is logi- nicatlon. Let East win the heart king. cal to play in this fashion, since it is
Declarer plays the heart jack on the quite likely that West is leadina from a return. West can take the queen and five-card suit, and even more likely ·
clear the sui~, but he bas no entry to that East has the missing aces plus th~ •
take . further tt'icks. Declarer will spade jack.
·

I.

Island's
recipienl
mollo
2 Palm leaf
5 Bar or days 3 De_
ep · ·
10 Spiral
plac~
11 Papal cape 4 Pul ?nlo
12 Speechify.
achon
13 Type
5 Kmg
of cake
,01 Israel
Bauble
6
Anc;enl
14

~~~~

15 F[ee scope 7
17 L neage
B Beverage
18 Much
9 German
money
article
21 Seg1'!1enl
I
10
Zesly
24 G I
ra ng
16 Bard's
cheese
adverb
26 Expect
17 Agilate
01
28 Type
18 Short or
orange
permanent
29 Abm~lrlcan 19 Over
·
an one
.
31 Salamander aga?n
32 Pheasant .
brood
33 ~ut
faith •
in
35 Manumit
36 Dracula
on lhe

'

-

.
r •

-..

Yesterday's Answer
20 Numskull
21 Chess
piece
22 In reserve
23 lnli equent
25 Goodly
group
27 Earthly
30 Born (Fr.)
34 Robin · 35 Fuss over
36 Company

.

37 Belore
·• (Lal.)38 Philippine
peon
39 Wing
(II .)
40 Basenji,
e .g .
41 Seraglio ·
chamber
43 "Teacher's
p t" 1
e s ar

'

"

.

"

.
'•

"

..
'/

. '.'
.'

wing

"

39Worship
42 Turkish
cily
44 Heavy
fabric
45 Long

'

..
.

.. .,_

poem
division
46 Playing
marble
47 Stevenson .
characler

•

'

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES- Here's how to work It:

'''
'

318

AXYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW
One •letter stands for another. In

•
•

..

this sample A is used

for the three l.'s, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are diffe'rent.

•

'

S-6,_

•

and Cllllorllllll lmjiDitanCI

'I Ii • •

I K 843

.K9H

CIIYPTOQU01E

lo ... civil rtglots -~­
(t:20)
'
• 0 Ill tl d 'MIIICUJ ••

Mrs. Kina

•1o 4

band?

;.n;e'~I:'L
Sue Torr. StariO,
~J'Iwnfng ,....

''

.Q98

It's aot hard to lind an excuoe for
overbidding. Even though South had
only ~ bigb-i:ard points for his notrump overetll, w)len North invited
game he became mesmerized by aU
his t•-spoU. So be bid on._But ":hat ex·
cuse did be have for m;splay;ng the

pros lllld cons ·ot having

WIMICI Jlmle Nasi lhOt

'

-NORTH

BRJDQI

by THOMAS JOUPH
DOWN
ACROSS
1 Medal
1 Rhode

·MJNIVorl. Q
·
(!) The Kr,r Csotoon1:
Toz Avery
Ill! lilY Clro m Crunde

H'

Beware ...,. Mushy - Icily - Nodule - . SANDWICH

R - Novo chronic?tla lhe
tragic splsode of a herd of
whales running aground on
Cape Cod Bay. and the elton
to su&amp;taln lind re?eaaa the

schOOl prlnclpel carries·hls

~wrviC t··

~

CROSSWORD

job too far. (AI Stereo. 1;1

ADiWiot , •• 55
Building
IIOiad. N?co -Ina, ?aundnr
'""""""'"'"'
loo??Kioa aval?ablo. Cillet+llf· Upt~ar Rw- Aa. ...~ .....
s·
ppiiH .
3711 EOII.
~ _,_ c:art114-4*n&amp; ,.....,....,...;::;u:!::;,;;;;~~~
2 b•*oam~ tumtlhect. Maplo k K - - wlh - : ' . :171111
"..:
a..._•. . . . . :
10
11111. 1171 plua &amp; ""''" !ool. Hutoto. Fill boo1Cloiodl
dapoolt. l14
llrO?.

~-

~ A Nova Special: Whllle.

e!IJ) 21 Jump 1tros1 A high

,_. $1,100,'W lor
.
. . In ....... •oteoo, 114-4*
GOOD

when Samantha becomes
manager oi a roek group. (A) ·

Lltt?8

WoocloreoM....,_be
uaot1 troa etandllia or

HOme

rant. Cllr-

A-

O.ll11al•, i:ikett

tum?ohotl, a?? u!l?ltlao pafd, ?noluct?na oalill. WMl tar - ,_.

SHuaiiOn
Wanted

The

(I)

A?oo 1171 Font 3/4 ton plcto...p.
t14-ltz.7471.
Ntoa 1 ill'. ?ra!!ar, Stl'Siono.
La ~lt8dln town. 114-441-GI02.

r.;.=. =~"'to:!
lltorina
-

-

-~lor-or-.

.. In Donooond. Food .......
"" .... oltho,.,.

•1!-lntMnt Tonlgltt

e (I) - · · Family

"tl · · - ... ,_

tor Rent

Clltt Pakl. C.ll 814-lt2 11187 or

to pers111de his all·s?ar son
to throw a baaket~ll gems.
Stereo. . .

.I-

J t:.l

Oil .st.

114-1712-2411.

I0. .._,
Miami Vies A judge lrllts

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ei!Z eWhMIOI
~":£Court Q .

,

..

SCIAM LETS ANSWIIS

1 01 2) (2:30)

(D (!) ?WaaNaM

TO GET ANSWER

'

• C2J I'M lbtalnl

'

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yra .
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prefw.-~~
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. 114 4. 1125,
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f1tt• l U
-orlo?a:-3or4br
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- . 11/Z llolfto:t21......
dap. '*!'~- 111 ~

.::.

~

S210. . - h $111!. - · FOR LEASE: Two II -....,.... ~ unlu.,.hod -w, .,.._ar87J.G17....-re:OO.
. and ••••lfa!ator. No pel&amp;
o.oo.ll and ,.,.lfiOII ,._
llir homo -r - h Ga77li H.S., -qulrotl. ($111 ,....

Pro 1140 quiRa. /urJ condM?on.

11

J

I' I' I' r I' r I
I ·I I I. I l 1
--

. . UNSCRAMal.E ABOVE lETTERS

7:00 I]) MOYII!: The Far Counlry

Apple I C Plul CqW Cotlilr

--t..:.,.. ..__
:\Wi. 1121~ - ~ 01?1.

Olf"•

lpm.
3 bldroom hoUM In .....,..,

'
?NOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUB~ CO.

want'ad to. Buy

~1...,.._,

2 7o Sbr, . . . ... ?n tho
area. 114 t4111af.
ltft!Ka.·A-blo
110ft.
- a- l......
- at.!y.
""' Galllpall•,
For ..
,. ... -u~~. , 1
a21 """""· 11-5-1114 altAir 7wl:10p.m. •
oat,
EnawahJ&amp; dl1

EIUIIIIIIS
Opportunity

7

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IR ._.., Ill I

.•

Complete !he chu&lt;kle quoted

A PI?Nr NuMBERED lETTERS ?N
'1:11'
THESE SQUAJES
·

0 HMgln'ln
1:35 Cll Andy Qrtffttll

Coo "'' llob7lo ...,...
-·
'-*.,...::da?a, ,.....,ol- ' " "c.t?

.,

41 'Hciulll for Rent

Ft!day. - · atiKion . • 2:00

Jltlalld.l14 ••

A mother has only to step ·
into the lub to be inslanlly reminded thai she is indlspensa·
bfe io her-entire ......1

~y l Ul ing, In the missing wor~s
L-..I........L-'--..1...-L....I you develop from soep No. 3_below.

Top'Cord Conteetantl
combine slltartainmsnt trivia
with the luck of tfto draw.

-rw:,Hfl\,._a

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Nlglitlr-

ae CUNswsQ
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i1J lts'Min

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1
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(D
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81 Fann

NJ rldtntl-

,... - ,.

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?non .... IIP!L . _

,....., -on • 2:00 p.m.

9

1::10§.: ::;.

qoUnty '

~

ALL Yllnl 8o Paid ?n
Actvanoa. DEAOUNE: 2:00 p.m.
tho •r .,...,. tho otl lo 7o run.

''

to.-

'

........,. c.n lt4-1824aa

Galli poll a
&amp; VICinity

.!IJ) Alldy Qlllfttlo

Room a

L"•otl 7100 101 -m??ao·
8oulh
o11- Dam. 11+2111774,.1o_L......,.

18 Wanted to Do

..

RA .WEY

(J)NIATod8y
(D "-to Truth: ,_ 3·2· 1
,
Coni8CI Extoa ~phanilt Yu
tells lhe rottsn \ruin about
gsrtJoQe • liOW much lhsro Ia,
.mer. ~ (joss lllld what ~
doei to the environment. Q

.
..

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I
I l I~ I 1
F R l DT I
I I I ~~ I . ~

.......

OIWOIIdfod&amp;J
01 ......
0 CIISIIss In CMrgs
1:06 (I) loveriJ, Hlllblllleo
I:2CI (!) $-2-J Confl!cl Q

35 Lots • ACI'MG•
2 1/Z -

'

T

eCJl ••~~• ea

WE AAVE A I.EFT·FtELPER
-MIO 15N1T TloiAT TAU. .•·

tAM I

U7oM lsy -Ct.AY I. 1'0UAN

I I~ 1IM , I I

I:Goi ::-w··-

Fumlahed

,_

wanted
'

45

R - lor Ron!: Clro?a llote?.
Schull , _...~~ ... S?riglo 1 or 2 poopto, 117.111 plua
pandc!. _..,
• up.
i'N.Ind, fr.nott QIJ' lfob6le C.W. T.V. (14 ~171.
D1.
HolMe. Itt • • • •

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l-:========-r:::=:::::::::::=:::::===1 ...-v.?lo¥--.
~

B

MEASURE NO MORE TMAN TWEI.VE
FROM TOP TO &amp;OTTOM : .. .

,.lund.

....... 111·~· ..17.

!lng 6 oloanup. 114-4*7111.

ACfi.OROII!o16 TO me IWLE5, A 6L.OVE MUST

... -

--·
yo;,- poy lo tu
ond tKio
. Ill
to
oha r U. ~ tu
Col? &amp;-. Centw. 1 -

•

.0low r::":."mb':""
-~ ::
10 form fovr IIIIIPio words.

IYININO

'o

-1-yo;,IOO-. Id.

Ilk 6

_ _ __,__

&amp;:..T~tl:fiiiMI

P.O. lox 1043, .,;;;::.,, otf
41111.

4

....
':~::.' '0~\\illA-4£1/iS•

Television
'
·viewing

MoblleHomll
for Sale

' ,-'
..._ te

Machi,

Ohio

.

OFRL

OC

TR~~

HNL

LFC

LFC

DLRUVHE

JRV~QPC

JRAAVHE

. WVTIJNPY

YNOH,

...

Y N 0 H.

...

VD
SQL

•

'•

BRPU

. Ya•UIIIJ'• CIJPI••••tll If YOO HAVE MADE

: MISTAKES, EVEN SERIOUS ONES, 11UE IS
· ALW~YS ANOlliER CHANCE. - MARY PICKFORD

,,

�Pta•

10-The Daily Sa 1tinel

Pomero~

Ml •rar ort Ohio
'

,.--Local news briefs---.
Continued from page 1
Bill Nease, Dave Baker, Dick Owens, Chuck Kitchen, Dr. Nick
Robinson, Tom Reed, and Joe Clark.
'
Tickets are also available at Royal Oak, Simon's Plck·A·Pafr,
Mlddeport Departt'tlent Store. Jennifer Sheets, Bahr Clothiers,
and The Meigs County Chamber of Commerce office. Add! donal
Information on the event may be obtained by contacting the
Chamber orrtce, 992·5005.

Immunization ·dates changed

•

The Meigs County Health Department . wlll give free
Immunizations In March but. the announced dates have been
changed, Mrs. Norma Torres ..R. N. nursing director. reported
.
today .
The change was necessary to allow for other special $!riles
With physicians from Children's Hospital.
The shois will be given i)!ls month on March 16 and March 27
and Include measles, mumps, rubella, polio, tfffi, dlptheria,
,
·
pertussis and tetapus.·
. Mrs . Torres reminded that since kindergarten and first grade
registration will be taking place soon, parents should be
thinking about bringing their children's Immunizations up to
date.

Deputies probe theft of items
The Meigs County Sheriffs Department Is Investigating a
theft report from Roy Pierce, ol the Racine area. Pierce
reported to au thor! ties that he had disCovered that someone had
stole.n a spare tire and wheel from his 19!!3 Foi'd. The date of the'
theft Is unknown.
'" ·
·
On Saturday, Jake Holman , also of'!he .Racine are!!. reported
that sometime early Saturday mol'l!ing, a .set of new brake
shoes was stolen from his vehicle 'Which was parked at his
residence near Racine. This incident is also under
Investigation.
'

Haggy sentenced to prison

Walter J . Haggy II has been sentenced to prison by Meigs
Common Pleas Judge Fred crow III on charges of forgery and
grand theft. Haggy had p1eaded guilty to the charges In a
previous appearance before Judge Crow. Haggy was sentenced ·
to six months In prison on each charge, to run consecutively,
with credit given for six days previously served In the Meigs
.County Jail. He was fined $200 and ordeted to make restitution
In the amount of $600 to West VIrginia Chipping; Inc. Haggy was
remanded to the custody of the Meigs County Sheriff pending
transportto the Orient Correctlonallnstltutlon.
,
·
In another court matter, Kelly Spaulding waived rights to
trial, Indictment and counsel, and entered a vo)untary plea Qi
guilty to a charge of aggravated assault as contained In a blll of
Information. Sentencing bas been scheduled for April 11 and
Spaulding released from custody on a $5,000 persQna)
recognizance bond. Spaulding was referred to Adult Probation
Officer Phillip McKinley for preperallon of a pre-sentence
_Investigation.

Abel fund raiser set Friday
StatP Rep. Mary Abel's campaign committee wlll host a ·
political lund· raiser on Friday, March 9, at the American
Legion Hall, 520 W. Union St., Athens.
Vern Riffe, longtime' spea·k er of .the Ohio House of
Representatives, wlll be on hand, along with other dignitaries
,
from Columbus.
Abel, a Democrat, is 's eeking to retain a seat in the State
House of RepreSentatives (94th District) . Abel has emphasized
education as a top priority since assuming the unexpired term
of JQylnn Boster Butler last year. She has also Introduced
legislation dealing with the
problems of solid waste
management.
,
The fund raiser wlll begin at 5 p.m. Tickets are available for a
$25 donation and can be obtained at the door.
For tutther Information, contact David Frey, campa,lgn
tl'easurer, 594·3574 or 592-4007.

T11

din/. Ml!ch I. 1!!0

.'

..
'

'

'

Ohi9 Lottery

Snow forces. ·schools to close in· Northeast
.
.
.
By United PreM lateraa&amp;IDul
morning commuters Jn parts of l"ay) 80 along the 1011th shore of
Snow closed schools II! the Connecticut and cau!M!d schoola make road travel euler.
Northeast and blanketed I'Qids ln . many communities to either
A snow1torm •struck Utah
along the Creal Salt Lake In Utah · ~ancel classes for the day or open
\he Creal Salt. Lake Is DOW·
Tuesday, while shOwers spread . later .than usual. Up to 3 Inches packed and' very •lick," NWS'
across the southern Plains and wu reported in New Canaan.
forecaster David Carpenter ald.
dry winds tossed sand arourW In
Salt and ~ding crews were
The snowfall began decr¢ulng
California's Mojave Desert:
dispatched ~11 befot:e dawn to around daWilllut Carpenter s&amp;ld
The National Weather Service overnight MOnday, dumping tile addltlonalacewnulatlons ol ~ to6
Issued an advisory for. freezing white stuff In ·the state's moun·
Inches )"ere possible In ,t he
drizzle that It warned could Ice talns and valleys. Nlne•lnches feU l mountal1111.
roads In northern Indiana. Rain·
In Little Cottonwood Canyon,
Skies were gen~rally clear
showers covered eastern Mls· east of Salt Lake City.
souri and southern Dllnols.
''The. Utah·' Highway P.atrol
reports that Inters late (High·
Snow made roads slippery for

alCIIII the Cf~l Lakl!l, with
temperatures falling to the llells
Ia Wleconsln and below zero In
MlchigaP.
I
' Scattered ralll fell aci'Ois aor·
theast New llbldco aad part of
the Texas Pan~le early Tues·
.day, and '!be weathe~ sen.Jce~­
.lssued a saow advisory tor ~h .
of the region. IJght rain also, ·
·. covered parts of Oklahoma and
Arkansas.
·

.rouDdup.·.

• PiC!k 3
562
Piek4
2112

•

----~------17eallier-.---------­
South Central Oblo
Partly cloudy Tueselay J!lght,
with a lowneai'30. Mostly cloudy
Wednesday, ·with a chance of
showers and highs In the mld .40s.
Chance of rain Is 30 percent.
Exleaded f'oreetp*
Thursday lhroql) S-*urday
A chance of· rain Thursday and

Frlday, with fair weather on
Saturday. Highs will be In the 50s,
Thursday IIJid Friday and rang·'
ing from the mid 50s to the mid
60s Saturday. Overnig)lt lows will
range from the mid 20s to the mid
30s Thu)'Sday·momlng, In the 30s
early Friday and In ihe 40s · ,
Saturday morning.

'

Vot.40. No.21 o

.. ,~ 1880 •' '

•

.'

EMS has 16 Mo~day calls -·
Sixteen callS for assistance
were answered · on Monday by
-. units of the Meigs C9unty Emer·
gency Medical SerVIces.
At 2:01 a.m., Rutland went to
Meigs Mine No. 31 for Carl
Thompson who was taken to
Holzer Medical Center.
Pom,eroy at 7: 28 a.m. treated
but did not · transport Todd
Norton at the scene of an auto
accident on Route 124. .
At 8: 58 a.n'l., Racine was called
to Trouble Creek Road 'for Mary
Kerns to Holzer Medical Center.
Middleport at 11:13a.m. trans·
ported Georgia Watson from the
Overbrook .Center to ' Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Racine Fire Department at
11:26 a.m. transported F1orence
Circle from an auto accident on
County Road 35 to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Rutland Fire Department at
11:45 a.m.hwa~ called to a brush
fire on Side ,Hill Road. ,Salem
Township Fire Department was
called at 12: u · p.m. to assist
Rutland.
Pomeroy at 11:50'a.m. went to '
Butternut Ave. for John Houck to

COUncl"l

'

•W•·

Aptnlicattons
• , , ·j Or prODTQ'IJl
·
"ll.·
.
W
l
r
be' acce,nted
unt;l
r,
. "' March· 22 ;

.

.

~75: WiDiaiDs •

~venues."
COLUMBUS, Ohio CUPI)
About 93 ~rcent of the pack·
Gov. Richard \Celi!S.te's $945
age
wlll be flnanced 'wilh long·
·
' million ca~ltal ' Improvements
term
revenue bonds. Interest
plan began rocketing through th~
, Ohio lf9use Tuesday, on Ita way payments on the bonds ·are the
to possible passage ~Y the end of onlycurreritobltgatlonslilcurred
by a building program.
'
the week.
Nedeff said S422 mtll!on of the
. The state Office of Budget alld
Mana&amp;!i!ment presen~ the two- appropriation would go toward
year building program to the malnllilnlng existing state
.. 1
.,
House Finance . Committee, facilities.
·or
.the
total
package,
$566
whlc)l scheduled a vote for !at~
Wednesday. That coul9 P!lt the mUlton·tsearmarkedforeoUeges
a 11d universities _ $89 miiUon
~pproprl;ttlon on the Ho~se fiiX!r
~ore
than ' the 8Qard of Reients
·
Thursday.
~uested.
., ·
Veroitlqa Nedeff, ~sslstant dl·
Rep.
Pat.
rick
'
sweeney,
' D· .
rectOr of qBM; told the commit·
tE:e; 'the governor's package Is ,Cleveland, chalr~an of the com·
" 1 "affordable, within
current mlttee, wryly observed that! !the

.

regents are not satisfied, "·they
have no shame."
.
Rep. · Daniel Troy, D·
WIUowlck, queatloned. the tnclu·
slon of $13.5 mUllon · for a
biomedical' research project In·
votvlng Case Western ~rve
University, a · private college In .
Cleveland.
Troy· said the state has not
awarded capital funding to prl·
vate· universities, and tl)at' the
University of Dayton and other
priVate colleges might want
!und!Dg Ill ihe future.
.But . Nedeff pointed out that
other Cleveland . publiC health
,facUlties are Involved In the
research, jus t1 fyl ng th.e

'

~,,-r-

'

~puties
'

aaa

To

'•"W

mar

,

,-, ''

Jtlarria8e · ._ .

.

•u;

'HIItellnlal
cni!'D *-• '"1'1 111"'" Rec!IJea of tile
arrived from ·
&amp;lie Jilin I rt. Pldtlnd llere Iii M&amp;rJ
rlpt, c:balrman of the '
J ... p'ee••nlal OOI!IIIIIItlee, dlllrtbulln1 tile flnl cookbook to
)IIIUie MJ41dft, Only a lbnl&amp;ed numbet of flnt onler cookboolla .
nraa111. ·A eecoad erder ollbe cooldloGkllhould arrive later IIIIa

mtn&amp;b. ,

· Loc8l.news briefs---.....

. ·' Boord hirel par~·time teacher

w••

' , Joyce~Ott~
employed u ahalt·tlme le~nlng !llsabllltles
'' teach« when the •Ealtern l.ocal ~d of Ellucatlon met In
weclal ses&amp;lori at Eu•rn High School Tuesday night.
The 'new jJosltJqn.wa• reQlll~ In order to brlna the district
Into complia~ With alate replatlona and was neces&amp;ltatzd
)lecauae of ei!J'I!Dme11.t lncreul!l, It !!'• explained by SupL Dr.
Dplel ..lllhli·
.
,,
c
•
· In olber aCtion the board adopted a resolution requesting a
one Y¥l extension of lhe.Potl Sel.'ondary Enrollment Option of
. ' Senate Btli 140.

, EMS ·hs. three ~Us i~
I

'

f

•

.

·T hree oalll ...e adswered on Tuelday by unltl ot the ~igs ·
County Ealerp~ey Mldleal Smllcea.
·
Mlddlllport at 2:01 p.IJL waa called to Clles ter for Keith
Coatlnued on paae 5
·

menial Center to the Wayne ·
County Fire Rescue Association. :
The association would pay $1 :
to~ the 56 acres and in turn ·
provide fire safety training wlih· :
out charge for center staff and :
the staffs of other such centers. ·
Before adjourning until Wed·
nesday, the Senate also approved
leglslatioq making It a minor
misdemeanor to violate a dog· .
control ordinance or resolution '
adopted by county commission·
ers or township trustees.
The bill was passed ' 30.0 and :
sent to the governor.
·:
Both · the .House an~ Senate
adjourned untll 1:30 p.m .
Wednesday.

I

~

Wolfe refraining Iron! a. vote' oil. noted that workers .wm not
the lssl\e since the bid was from a continue to clP.an up spilled trash. :
relative.
Marshall David :E. Huddleston
Jeannetie Lawrence I!P~afed
lit~ present to request purchase
before council concernlng)ltt~r·
bt a:shlrl and trousers which was ·
lng and disturbance on the street aia tho'rlzed. Councilman Bob
by her business. M•yor Cleland
~ie .was also autho.rized, to
adVIsed that she coytd sl,gt~,. ,a
cli,!!Ck on prices for a portable
complaint against the o!tenelers. rjldlo;
Ditches which neeil ' cleaning
Several Items needed
by the
,..,_.,
'
were discussed by.councll and It
s .. .,d commissioner were au tho·
was decided . to authqrlze ,,th~ tized for purchase but requested
street commissioner \0 get a
reiialrs on a weed eater and
crew started on the project right mpw"' were tabled until a later
away.
,
meeting.
Representativa, from Buck·
Fire Chief Robert Johnson was
eye . Adminlstt:a'~ , Insurance, · Jll'S:!I)ed permission to purchase
· •. Ir~IIID •. Jf;!!f,f present at the ~ ~alr-IICJI.fpr the'(lump~n·one
tn:eerltlli' 'to' diiCUII the new ·of the fire trucks.
Insurance cove~age of th.e vii·
It was reported '!hat !he natural
!age. Arrangements were made . gas bill for the fire department Is
by council to ,lnclqde -the !Ire·
too high and the chief was asked
men's gunshot buDding on Lo~g to confer with department
Hollow Road.
·
members on how that . might be
DISCU14lon on time which reduced.
,
workers are haylni to spend . Jeff Thornton was appointed to
cleaning up at certain places head the shade tree committee .
when picking· up refuse )lias which will also be In cl)arge of
.discuSsed and It was decided that li.ndscaplng projects. The next
residents muscit place all refuse meeting was set for April 2 at
Jn suitable containers. for easy ·wlilch time bids will be opene&lt;l
handling by the workers·.
. , for the sale of the backhoe.
CouncillldVIsed that according
Attending were Mayor Cleto the ordlna11ce, the contaJners land, Clerk Jane Beegle, Council
are to be of a suitable strength to members, Robert Beegle, Henry
withstAnd the elements .and are Bentz, Ron Clark, Carrol Tea: '
to be placed at the curb. Coopera· ·lord, Thornton and Wolfe, along
tlon of the customers Is being with Fire Chief Johnson.
requested by Council and It was

COLUMBUS, .' 011,~ (UPI) It also contains .$1 million 'as
The admlnlltratloil· of Cciv. Ri-' tliesulle's shareorthei:ontrover·
Opal Conger, qf Route 2,' chard Celeste has Introduced a
sial "Son of Heaven" Chinese art
Racine, notified the Meigs $150 mUllein supplemental approCounty Sheriffs Deparlment on priations bll~ mainly to bead off
Tuesday that her outblilldinl Oil • a projected lhQrtfallln Medicaid
..
· Sharo1,1. HoUow Road had beett f\Uids.
In
offering
the
bill
In
the
Senate
entered and a chain saw and·
Tuesday,
the
state
Office
of
numerous hand tools taken.
Budget and Management also
'
According to the re~t, the ·reduced ita revenue estimates
rear door . of the building was lor fiSCal 1990-91 by S37 mUllon,
kicked lntogalnentry, Invl!ltlga· matniy because of a lag In
lion Is conllnul!lg II! to the matter. co~raUon toea: · · ·
The supplemental approprla·
· Brenda Woodruff, Ebenezer. tion ' Is scheduled' for a hearlnc
st., Pomeroy; reported Monitay Wednesday ill the Benate Fl· .
to authorities that' her autbmo- nance Committee; and Is ex·
blle had broken doWII · ancl wu "pected to move lwiftly thrqh
parked at a residence at 'Antlq· the Legl.slature.
ulty: When she returned to' the
The bill will require oo add!·
vehicle on Monday, ·she dlseo- tiona!' revenues. Financial holes
vered that the radlocauetie will be plllfil!d by shlfllnc
player, a radar detector and the unspl!nl money from Other areas
battezy had been reiiiOved.
of tilt! budret, 111d Lee Walker,
. ' '.
director of the QBM.
Deputles are alJO lnvettlptlng
The . ap)II'OP,rlatlon shltts $116
tbe reported theft of three bap of million more to the Ohlo Depart·
Pro-Mix potting lou from the meat of Human Servlcet. Of that,
:fohn IDII fann at Letart Falll. $92.7 mlllloala nee !led toofflet an
The theft occurred Friday but . bnpelllitnaahOrtqe In the Midi·
wu nbt r,pc;~rted until Monday-.
cald aceD~~~~!, wllldl provtdu
The department II cllecktna llealltl care tot t11o11 unable to
· Into the report of a t!Dielt calf pay.
Ver0111Ca Nldeff, alalltant dl·
from the Macle Qeek fann at
rectar
of the OBM, Aid tu.l
. Great Bi!nd. Act.'ordlna to !he
report, the Hereford bullcalfwu .m~loa Ia added to tbe Depart·
meat of ftellallllltatloa ud Cor·
Ito~ OB Thunday.
rec:11oulMipt for an llliCetl of
.
Ctlldy ~. . . . . . liNd.
Ntltft .... tuA . . . . . .
Loq Bottom, , ..... li111 dlllt let·
Dr•l I •,
urday night. - - tclel! a addld to llle
~- . 1114 a~ llound · ~- fer ··~ .. liNd
frGm ba' )lh...il:y.
' . . ' crllllll!aJI ..................
dltfly . tor 41'111
ADd- ...... Sberjlt , . _
,
M. Soullby wanta ~ 111'!11 tile ~
A.Gillill QI.JefM!MIIIUIJ
bnpcll'taiiCe of l'tlld•ta neerdlq tile Mrlal nlllllllln for IUM. for
5 -~ 1ollu
clilin . Aw,, VCR~
It ·II ......... 1'111. . . . . H • .
bnpartut that 110111e IMilll ,llf
•IDiot far An~ert~ora
ldendtlcatlon beavallablethotild bawaano.l Oaa a iiMw to be
the ltemJ be atolen.
tta~r&gt;ed Ia Columbat.

.

.

n
1
·::. 'u r.·., uante .

.

26 Centa

A Multlmodil Inc. NtwiPAP••

·Supplettaent81 budget is introduced ·

of tools .

··-:

r••••••'•'• •••••••••••••••

w.

'

probe theft

_ _ Area -deaths _ _

R. Trent

•

paving projects to be
carr)ed out, wltl), Issue 2 monies
were. discussed . at Monday
·, night's meeting of Racine VIUage
.. Council at the Star MIU Park
building.
· The need for JIOislbly stripping
. the pavement jllo"' Tl)lrd Street
so that the street will not be
, h!lher than the sidewalk was
discus~ and Mayor · Frank
Cleland was autliOriZed to cheCk
· with Cpunty Engineer Phil ·Roberll for a recommendation on
someone to do that. T~ Street
Is one of the Village •.treets
.IC~led for bot mix paVIni
some\lme-.tllll.siiDUIIi!r,lt.was:
polniAidouttlllt tblrlwlll~·
. bly be enouah Issue 2 money over
the five year period to resurface
all of the streets.
Clerk Jane Beegle ·repOrted
that the slate tax commissioner
baa Jll'&amp;nted tax exemption for
· the five acret of !and •recently
purcbaledfOI'theStarMIUPark.
·It wu noted that there Is now 11
acre~ for the Star Mill Park as
well as a buffer zone for the
Village water system's well field.
Sealed bids from D. R. ~ush,
Portland, and Wolfe's Carage at
Racine submitted bids on the
repair of •the Village dump truck
were opened at the tneetlilg. ·The
bid oftbe Wolfe's in the amount of
$2,943 was accepted for partnnd
labor, with CoUJI(liJman Larry

.~j,eUmg ~olitest·

Mein .anno'uncemen•:o ·

.

2 Section,, 1 8 Pogoo

expelldlture.
would Increase by a , specific
Jan Skunda of Owens Tech1!1· amount or percentage each ;vear.
caiCoUege,aslred,thecommlttee
The biU gives school districts
for an addll1ona112.75 million for · lacking real estate tax growth an
a new building on the college's option for offsetting Inflation,
Findlay campu. She said enrol·
said the sponsor,·Sen: ,Richard
lment Is Increasing by M p,e~t Finan, R·(;lnclnnatl.
t"ls spring over last sprinc. and
"Probably 90 percent of the
that · studenta are sitting In the districts won't even want to
balla between classes because of consljler It," said Sen. Cooper
a lack of space.
Snyd~r. IJ.·HIIIsboro, chairman
In the Senate, leaJslatlon was of the Education and Retirement
approved allowlnc vQters to Comnilttee. ·
pass, In a single election, up to , . The measure was p~sed ~1·0
five property tax levies that
and sent to 'the 'House.
would be phased In over a period
Sen~ tors also voted, 30.0, to
of time.
.
·
concur,ln House amendments to
Voters also could approve a a · bill transferring state-owned
single property tax levy that land at the Apple Creek De~elop-

~treet

Stocks ·

..

.

Issue II funds for street
.projects Racine C~yncil topic ,

.

to mow their lawns at least three ment . at MO. $75 and
;
times a year, at specific times. deperidlng uPc)n'&lt; the tyjle' · of
·
:
·•
,
,
• '
Such an ordinance eXIsts In other perml~ ·w 11 nted .• ' ·•
. ·. ·
Becky. Williams, datfghte~ · or'·. · ~ky ~eler~ Kelley Crueaer."
communities the mayor pointed
Coun:c,lllnlln . :r'hom¥ Werry ~nlse and Randy ,William$ • . S•m ·CowU. Rll:hle Hagen; l,ll·;r
out. Councilman Larry Wehrung reported he.ls still checking Into LangsVIlle, Is the Meigs Junior ·' chelle Ward, .Vanesssa Camp-··.
suggested that "something of training classes which are proHigh SchCl\11 spelling champion..
ston, Ronda · Raymond, Andrea
this type coUld be specified In the Vlded by the Ohio Bureau of
Runner-up Is Jennifer Car·
McDonald, Jnon Ceorg'e, Jer!:'od':'.
proposed zoning ordinance" Criminal Investigation cBC!) to man, daughter o1 Dennis and
Douglas, and Billy Eakins . .
whlc.h Is presently under review law enforcem!!nt personnel who . Sarah.Carma11, P.omeroy.
Cookbooks IIITive
for the. Village. ·
wish to update their ltriowledge of
· Becky will now 09mpete for
The Pomeroy sesquicentennial
It was reported that. parking firearms and related Jaws. BCI
champion In the Mejgs County
cOokbook$, "Treasured Recipes •
meters ate being replaced provides_ the training free; with spelling bee to be held on March ;of the Past" ,have arrlved.·ftorn' .
'
· throughout the vllll\ge and that the only expense to the Village 12 at 7: :j9 p.m at Southern High
the printers.
continued rrom page 1 .
new yearly parking permits are being for ammunition.
SchooL
Those who have ordered cook·
available from the p&lt;illce depart·
AlsoWerryreportedoncoststo
To win at her school, Becky
books may piCk, them up at the .
preparing to rake the state's case
Netzley also questioned a two·
the Village for a gasoline tank for corrected the ·word ''le·s lon"
,
to the Supreme Court. "It' s not a year '$30 million contract entered
0
use
by
village
personnel.
CounciL
misspelled
by
Jennifer,
and
then
-~
~=~.o~rcbym:O~~:tln~l~~~:
:;
matter of Mr. Kane sltting.on his
by the Ohio Lottery Commission
, agreed to lmitall. )he gasoline w~nton to spell the next word, "II· ' Dmon at The Dally Sentinel.
•.
hands and billing the state for it,"
with Marcus Advertising Inc. of
tank
uolE!III·
It
fs.determlned
that
able"
to
become
the
school's
:
For
~ole
whO
wish
to
purchase
'.
he said .
Clevelal)d, for advertising and
Dally stoek prices
the vlliq'l! clllnot- affOrd
.
the
champion.
,
.
kbo
.
ok
h
1
$6
50
~
Netzley Indicated the state · promotion,. without . competitive
·
Th
111
b
a coo
, · t e ·cost s . . •
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
required Insurance for the tank. ·
e
spe ng ee was con· · More ll)fol'l!latlon may IN! .0 !). •
should Mnslder.ending the legal
bidding.
Bryce'and Mark Smith
Clerk .Brenda Morris Is to check dueled by 'the reading ·and
tal ned by conlactlng 'Mary Pebattle. since It has recovered $135
Ronald Nabakowskl, director of Blunt, Ellis 6 Loewl
on
the
lnsurancecosts.lfthetank
spelling
teachers,
Suzanne
.
well at the Chamber Qf Vom·
mUllan - more than the $129
of the lottery, said Marcus had
l.
s
Installed,
It
will
be.o
.
'"'
.
r.
a
ted
by
Bentz,
Carla
S!lelens,
and
Jeanne
·
mUllan It spent In balling out the
done "excellent" work since the , Am Electri~ Power , ............ 30\&lt;J .
,.,..
·
merce Offlee in p omeroy,
a
·
switch
Inside
tl)e
pollee
depart·
Bowen,
Debbie
Brel!nan,
princl·
thrifts.
·
lottery's Inception and was tak· AT&amp;T ........ ......................... 39%
merit..
'·
'
pal, su(lerVIsed 'the competition·. ' 992 ·5005 ·
"So you will let Mr. Warner
lng only 11 percent as a commls· Ashland 011 ........... ............. 35%
The book conlalns over. 400 ,;
The other par tl c 1pants were
touncllman Larry Wehrung
"oldtlme" recipes from famUieli ,.
and ·Mr.' Schiebel walk away
slon Instead of the advertlsln~ Bob Evans ............... ,'....,. ..... 12%
.rejleried a request frotn the car Allison Lee. K~nny · Flowers.
of the area, as well as old 1
from· prison when they stole
industry standard gf 15 percent.
Charming Shoppes ..... .......... 93;4 clubat'Chestertousetheparking Tony Brown, David Pierce,
money from the depositors of the
"We don't want to ~tart from
fashioned ret)'ledles and cures . . ,;·
City Holding Co..... ... ........... 13
lot,
possibly
both
the
1,1pper,
and
:
.
.
.
state of Ohio?" asked Cele·
1
scratch with a brand new Federal Mogul ............,. .. , .... 17%
brezze. pointing his finger · at
agency," said NabakoWski, ad·
lor .a car show later in
Goodyear T&amp;R .. .. ... .... .... .... 34')1 lower-lots.
the year. Council approved the
-e~
~
NelZJey. "That's excactly what
ding that "It probably wouldn't . Heck's ...................................3
request
but
sugaested~
that
car
.,
_.
•
.
•
H
1
you're saying."
be' nearly worth the trouble."
Key ,Centurion ..... ............... 13\&lt;l club officers ·discuss possible
PennU. av~lable ·
exception or ,the $tiO area; and :
Lands' End .......................... 19 · dates with members of the
. ·Signs are going up to designate $175 to park !ifany parking meter · !
Limited Inc......... .... :., .. ......36% Pomeroy Nferchants Association
the west sldeoffomeroy's lower anywhere In the Village.
•
..
Multimedia Inc .................. .. 75
arid Pomeroy's Sesquicentennial
parkll!g Jot for "permit parking
Rax Restaurants .................. 1% Committee, before . making a
only." Anyone wishing to pur· To meet tonlcbt
· .
,
Robbins &amp; Myers .... .... : ...... .15\&lt;J final decl,alon on a !late.
will
lie
In
Keebaugh
Cemetery.
chase a permit may, do ·so at the
·.PomeroyChapter •l86, Order of . '
Arthur Spencer
Shoney's 111c ........................ . 11
Frjends may .call at the funeral
Pomeroy Pollee Department the Eastern Star, will meet at ' !
Council is looking for anyone In
Star
Bank ........................... 18\&lt;J PomeroY who might be Inter·
from7a.m. to3p.m.Costsforthe 7:30 tonight !Tuesday) at the · :
Arthur L. Spencer, 71, of Rout!! home 7 to 9 p.m. tod;~.y and 2 to 4
Wendy's Int'l. .... ....... ........... 4% es ted in laying out ball fields for
and 7 to 9 p.m Wednesday.
annual perrplts are S69 for the MasoniC , Temple "In Chester. 1
3. Pomeroy, died Monday at
Worthington Ind ...... ............ 20% use by the younger ball teams In
west side of the lower Jot; $75 for Then! ~Ill be Initiatory practice. ;
Camden Clark Hospital, Par· . ,. • f ., ·-r
·kersburg, W. Va.
··
the Village. Anyone who would
anywhere along the river side of Members are not required to : ;
like to assist with the fields ' the upper and l~r lots, with the wear c.Hapter dresses.
!
· He was a retired employee of'' ·.'Defyl Northup
Kaiser Aluminum Co. and , also · ~
·
......_ __ , North 78 Clif
should
Councllnian
·Bill'
1 ....,.,~
was a farmer.
up, ,
•
Young. contact
Co)lncl~· hopes
to develop
Veterus Memorial
Born on May 27, 1918, at ton, • ·early today, ~h S,
fields at the· Monkey Run P!U'~ ,.
Monday admissions - Car los
1
t:::\ .:_
r
•
and
also bt!liind the old tennis •, . '
Btdwe11 he was the son of the Ia te .. 1990,.at Plcasarn Valley Hospual.
Snowden, Pomeroy; Jolin E.
CO)lrl on , Ei!Sl Main . St. The
Kirtley ' Spencer and Tressle
BOrn' June 1, 1911 in Harrison Houck, Pomeroy·.
Meadows Spencer. He was a County, he was a son of the late · Monday discharges - Robert village ,would provide the grad'
lng arid ' put in ·back stops If
member of the St. Paul Metho· 'I'ItOmat ' and Mary (Canlerbury) Beegle, Guy Thoma, William
volunteers
would just place the
dlst Church at Tuppers Plains.
Northup.,
. ,
.
Coleman, Dwight Spencer.
fll!lds.
Youngpolntedoutthat
the
Survivors Include his · wife
Sumvmg are · his wife, 01;\lbiC
work
needs
to'be
done
as
soon
as
Margaret Spencer, Pomeroy; (Rickard) .Norlhup: two . sons llld
Library
new8
possible In order to J;le ready for
'
five daughters, Sarah Josephine · daughters-m-law, Thomlli lnd RDib
,, , Family Practice
this year's ball season.
·
Shone, Toledo; Audrey Jean Northup, Gallipolis Ferry, Gary llld
Let the hunt begin!
· The probiein of dogs running
..
Spencer, Columbus; Connie Bal· Donna Nortbup, Clifton: dlree
'
'
March Is Fine Free Month at
loose ln•. the Village was dJs ..
lard, Chesterville; Brenda dlualiten and sons-in-law, Lucy
,
the Pomeroy and Middleport cussed, buiJ!odeclslonwaamade
.,
Weber, Pomeroy, and Loretta and Gerald Johason, ~. Miry
Libraries and loealllbrary users on bdw to el)mtnate the problem, ~ . ,
·
Brown, Pomeroy; 10 grandchild· and John Lilchlicld, New Haven,
are
being asked to hunt out all .other than the mayor wd. he
Monday~ ruesday, 'Thursday and Friday
r e n , and four great. Carolyn lllld John Beaver, Pomeroy,
books that might belpng to the
9a.~. • 5 p.m.
•
grandchildren.
Obip; 14 pndcllilcbn, llld aiDe libraries. There wtn be no would advise Pollee Chief Jerry '
1
· Rought to contact the county dog
Also surviVIng are four sisters, gn:at·pldchildreo.
charges for returning overdue warden whe~er loose dogs are
.Wednesday
Eunice Ml\lklff, F1orlda, VIolet
He wu preceded in dellh by •
books during the entire month.,
. '·
,
. 9 a.m. • Noon
Parker, . Long Bottom, Mildred infant sm, Mi:IJKI ~""'
However, the fJne.free IJQUcy seen.
. A propolal · to give Village ·
Holler, Mansfield, and Mary· · two graadsoDs, Mic:hao1
applies only to printed materials, employees a five percent across'
l
.
•
'
Jane Osbourn, Washington, W.
and em, Northup; four 1i11er1,
not Videos. There wtllltlll IN! a $1 the board ralee was' ta bleil until ·
:, Appointments ana :Walk-in-s·Welcome
va.; one step-sister, Jessie Me;~- Jie .Yestcr, MD Fowler, B!Juhedl
a day!lnefot'eachoverduevideo.
the
next
meeting.
·
•
dows, Spence,
Va. and five
Wauah. and Nellie ltcAierll; IIIII
And finally, themay'or'sreport
brothers, QueDton Spencer, New two bnJiben, Sh.._ ad Dlnlis
of'$2,538 1t1 fi~~N and fees to the
Mexico; Cuy Spencer and Rl·
Northup.
·
Office Staff:
village for then\onth olFebl'uary
cbard Spencer, Tuppers Plains;
He WIS a member cl tbo. LAtbor
.,
Lisa Thome, LPN
The Meigs County Common wu approved. ·
V!rill Spencer, Somerset; and Lot:al S43 iD IJt~, W.Va.
.,.
·'
'
Kirtle)' S"ncer, Crow City. .
Service will~
1:30p.m.on Pleas Court CUI of' Tamara
Gail Hoveatter
Hawley, a minor, by .her next ·
. Belldft hll parents, he wu ~.. ""&gt;' It llio Fclllu
end
p;wceded In death by two broth· Fuacni Home. willa die Rev. Llny belt friend, Unda Hawley,
'
l:.inda trent ·
era. Earl and J~trry Spencer.
GWand oM
Burial will be M against Jeffrey Acree, hu been
Steplien R. Tatterson, Po!ll•
'
'
settled and dllml&amp;led. The c.,e roy, ..-ct JIQbyn D. Tatter1011,
Fuaeral services will be held
tile Orllilm Cemlluy.
Tbunctay at 1 p.m at the Ewing
Ailll*
Clll 11 ille funml ' , was mIlia kenly rep:~rted as Hartford,; W,\fa., have fllell to
.138 Main St., ~~w .Haven, WV • (3Q4) 882-31,~
'Funer~ Home. The Rev. Don ·llome 1'uesday mniaB from 6 10 9 Hawley against James Acree In :M:eJ&amp;S comlnoli'Ple&amp;S Court for a ;·
Formerly Bend Area MedicaH:enter
Sunday's Time-Sentinel.
Arder Wll otnctate and burial p.m.
dissolution of their marrtaae.
'--------:--...:...--.......-~------..,-

Hospital news

•

Pomeroy~Middl&amp;pon, Ohto, Wedn-.ley. March 7. 1990

State ..-.

l

·,

Celeste's capital construction bill on the move

Veterims Memorial HosJ)ltal.
Chester Fin! Department was
called to a brush fire on Keno
Road at 1: '07 p.m.
, WEATHER,M AP- Alate wtater lltQnn wtU.pnad a .mjxt,ure ci{ ·,
· Rutland at 1: 27 p.m. went to ' rain aad freezlnc rain acr0111 lbe Norib'"' Pl~a Balli ,.W ,)
Route 684 where they treated but • }lreceed the system Ia the South . .A seeoDd wealller 1)'8&amp;em. Is .
did not transport Gerald Domovlnc ollllllore In the Paclftc Nortbwesl, brlqiDJ ram to IOftr ,. .
nahue. At 7:22 p.m., Rutlanc!
'elevatloos aDd saow to the mouatal•. Cool and dry coildltlo• will •
transported Joe Reeves from
ecintlnile over'the Ohio Valley aad New Englaild
(UPI)
•,
Meigs Mine No. 2 to O'Bleness
Memorial Hospnal.
At 10:14 p,m.. Chester Fire •
Depa~tment a,Jid Tuppers PlaiD!'
l' "·
EMS were called to an •·auto
accljlent op Route 248. Edn;~ ·.
, .
Driggs was taken from thescen.....
,
,
•
to·St. Joseph's Hospital. .
Applications for 'the multlflora Conservation District and. the '
TUppers Plains Fire Depart.'
,ose co&amp;t-share prokram will~ Cooperatl'(e -Exte~lcin Service. Is ~
mentat10:18p.m. was called tea
taken by the Meigs SoU and a requirement.
·
.
brush fire on Success Road.
Water Conservation District ~
Control of the multiflora rose '
Middleport at 10: 54' p.m. went · ginning Friday and continuing must be maintained for a min·
to the Overbrook Center forOkey .. through March 22. •
!mum of two years following the
Cart to Veterans Memorial
Rules for the program will be year of the cost-share treat·
Hosplt;~J.
..
the same a_s In .previous years. ''m ents, 11 was reported.
·
Pomeroy at 11:11 p.m. trans· ' Thoseapplylngmust•beacooper:
According to the rules, resl· ,
ported Jared Ridenour from a
ator of the Meigs SoU and Water dents . must have at least one
car,. a~ldenl .. on Route. 7'· to · Conservation District , a,nd be equivalent acre of multiflora
Vete~ans Memorial Hospital.
·,,willing to follow a conservation . rose to qual.lfy and the cost-share
At; ,ll: 32 p,m., Rutland was · p!an 9n' th9se i~lds · In which rale Is $100 per equivalent a~re ..
·
Residents may slgn 'up for the
called' to New Uma. Road for · treatme11t.ls 'appcoved.
Rl&lt;;hllrd Conkey to O'Bleness·
Attendance at a work$1J9P on ' Prolll'amattheMSW~D.o~eop
Memo~lal H011pltal.
, multiflora rose control span·
the ~nd floor of 't~e F,a p:pers .
sorejl by the ~u : and Water
~nk bulld·l ng In Pomeroy ::''·
t
• • ~ Cohtinued from page

f .'•

.

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

.d...... .

*·

eu

=

"'"'L ....)

w. ..

display which lost $1.7 million
during a six-month run In Colum·
bus last summer and tall.

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