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Thunderstonns cause flooding, evacuations

EMS has 10 weekend calls

Br V•lled " ' - 18tenailoMI
Thunderstorms across much of
the nation Monday caulll!d flood·
illllthatforcedevacuallonslnthe
nation's midsection and closed
roads In the Southwest, while the ·
mercury soared to springllke
temperatures along the Atlantic
Coast.
.
The National Weather Service
Issued II flash flood watch for the
northern half of Illinois Mouday
as a line of thunderstorms swept
across the. state. Lltchfteld, Ill.,
repOrted 52 mph winds but no
damage or Injuries, and the .
temperature warmed to 64 degrees In Chicago.
More than 200 people were
evacuated from their homes

Ten calls for help were ~a­
wered over the weekeud by units
of the Meigs County Emqency
Medical Services. Four of the
calls were on Saturday and six on
Sunday.
.
At 2: 11 p.m. Saturday, Salem
Township Fire Department was
called to a structure fire at the
Charll!l Jonea residence on
Route 325.
Pomeroy , ·Fire Department
was called to a brush fire at the
Phillip Smith tesldence.on·Route
7 at 3:54 p.m.
·
Racine transported Joyce
Ward from Tanners Run Road to
Veterans Memorial Hospital at
8: 24p.m .
Chester Fire Department was
called to a structure ·fire on
Skinner Run Road at 1:08 p.m.
Sunday at 1:36 a.m., Pomeroy

r

f.;firr-;"A;.:n:ONA=L WEA'IHIR

along the Vermillion River In
east-central Illinois Sunday amid
high waters chumed by heavy
ralnsandthesprlng·llkeweather
front.
Mobile homes floated ott their
moorings and some residents
were threatened with arrest
before agreeing to leave their
homes along the north forkofthe
river. Vermillion County sheriff's deputies said.
A shelter was set up at a nearby
grade school to care for those
flooded out near the villages of
Alvin and Bismarck, offtclals
said.
The weather service, mean·
while, Issued a dense fog advl·
TO 7AM EST

,_,,_eo

WEATHER MAP - Showers and heavy lhuuderslonns will
stretch from the Easter.n Great Lake81nto Eastern Texaaaa a cold
front slowly actvaacea Into llle Mlulallppl River Valley. lOgb
pressure and very warm ·lemperatUI'ell wiD persist over 'tile
Soulileast while the Southwest will experience mUd temperatures
and fair sides. AJi upper level trough over the Northern and Central
'
Rockies will continue to prod11ce a mixture of snow flurries.

------Weather----~
Soalil Ceatral Oblo
Partly cloudy Monday night,
with a low between 55 and 60.
Variable cloodlness Tuesday,
with a chance of showers and
thuuderstorms and highs near 80.
Chance of rain Is 30 percent.
Extended Forecut
Wednesdar lhrourll Frldar
A chance of showers Wednes-

day and Thursday, with fair
weather on Fridi\Y. Highs will be
In the 70s Wednesday, ranging
from 55 to 65 Thursday and from
45 to 55 Friday. Overnight low~
will be between 45 and 55
Wednesday morning, In the 40s
early Thursday and In the the 30s
Frldi\Y morning.

sory .for northern and central
parts of Wlsconslll, where vlslbll·
lty was l'educed to near llll!ro. The
flash flood watch In effect for
northern 1111,11ols alio extended to
southern Wisconsin.
A line of heavy tlluuderstorms
that brought torrential.. rain· to
North Texas Suuday and led to at
least one death.contlnued Mon. .
'day Paul Cooley 13 drowned .
Sunday night afte~ railing Into a
rain-swollen creek In the Denton
County suburb of Trophy Club. ·
A vigorous upper-level storm
system movlq eastward from
New Mexico and clashing with
very molllt unstable air mass
produced storms Monday In
. Oklahoma. Scattered thunder·
storms with very hea"vy rain
covered the northwest third of
Arkansas.
High pressure remained
strong over the South Monday."
extending the fatr and warm ·
weather that generated record
weekend temperatures. Temper·
atures early Mouday ranged
from 62 In Charleston, S.C., to 63
In Atlanta and Knoxville, Tenn.,
60 In Jacksonville, Fla., and 7lln
Miami.
.
Much of New England got an
early taste of ' spring, with
temperatures soaring Into the 60s
near Boston over the. weekend
and Into the 50s · over most
northern sections. .Rain was
expected to make Its way across
the region Monday;
Showers and PIII'Cby fog were
reported In various areas
throughout Pennsylvania, West
VIrginia, Maryland and southern
New Jersey ear.ty Monday. Lows ·
ranged from the.40s to the upper
50s throughout.the Middle Atlantic states.
In the West, scattered showers
fell over most of northern and
central California as the weekend came to an end. Several

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thunderatorms boiled up over the
Central Valley from Marysville
to Stockton. Sierra ski resorts
reported 18 lnchl!l of new snow
from a storm that snarled traffic
over the Sierra Nevada ranae tqr
the third day In a rov;, cloalng
Interatate 80 Intermittently.
Skll!l were partly cloudy. over
macb of Southern Callfomta. A
few showers sprinkled tbemouutalns, and some snow fell above
4,000 feet. Gusty winds up to 40
mph were reported In the moun·
talns and deserts.

Stocks ,.
a

Dai(J IIYck prlcl!l
18:18 a.m.)
Bryce !IDd Mark Smith
of Bluat, Eilts A Loewl

&lt;"-of

Am Electric Power ............. 30~
AT&amp;T ........... ;........ . , .......... .41'4
Ashland Oil ........................35'4
Bob Evans ........................ , .12~
Charmlni Shoppes ... , ........... 9~
City Holding Co .......... ......... 13
Fei1eral Mogul. ........... .. ...... 17~
Goodyear T&amp;R ......... , .........35%
Heck's .... :............................ NA
Key Centurion .................... 13~
Lands' End ......................... 18~
Limited Inc......................... 39~
Multimedia Inc.................... 78
Rax Restaurants ... ............... 2~
Robbins &amp; Myers :............... 15~
Shoney's Inc............. , ......... 12~
Star Bank ........................... 18~
Wendy's Int'l , ...................... 4\i,
Worthington Ind .. ............ , ... 20~

·Seeks divorce

Licenses issued

Timothy Patrick Gillilan, Mid·
dleport, has · ·filed In Meigs
Common Pleas Court for a
divorce from Luanne Gillilan,
Middleport.
A divorce has been grantee! to
Marlsa Ann Gray against Ml·
chael Steph,en Gray.
·

:\.

~·- r

Marriage licenses have been •
Issued In Meigs Probate Court to :_
Bobby Gene Swlaer Jr., 27, and ··
Debra Ann St. Clair, 20, both of ::
Reedsville; . and Leonard Ed-', ,
ward Dalley Jr., 30, and Jennie ·
Sue Burke. 25, both of Reedsville. :

•

DOMINO'S

PIZZA ·
DEUYEIS .

FIEL

CALL
992-2124

Umtt ... O R ~yA,.. ,

r~iiiiiiiijoii-i--,.ra.v&amp;-al•

Hospa"tal neW..
"""'

I

Veterans Memorial
Saturday admissions_; Robert
,
Smith, Syr11.cuse.
Saturday discharges - Arthur
Roush.
Sunday admissions - None.
Sunday discharges -None.

Fire Department responded to a ~
tree nre at the PhilliP Smith ~
re~ldellce 011 Route 7.
t
Middleport at 1: 51 a .m. was ;'
called to North Secoud Ave. for .,
Ersel Blevins whO refused ·~
treatment.
•
Rlltland Fire Department was ,.
called to a camper trailer fire on ·:
Sl¥!ck Road at 7:02p.m. Owner o( ~:
the trailer was James Shuler.
:.
Middleport was called to Park •.
St for Raymond Little at 10: 50 ,.;
a.~: Little was taken to Veterans :
Memorial Hospital.
:
Syracuse went to Bentz Road at 8: 20 p.m. for Michael Bentz ·;.
who will taken to Holzer Medl.c al ;.
Center.
•!
·Racine at 9: 31p.m. treated but ~
did not transport Melinda Par· "
. · ·!
sons, Portland Road.
•

Ulel 16" I !Ia I'IIU

I

PlUS •-16 OZ. SOfJI

I
I
I
II

I ..... PJJP$ wi, ~. .....
I - · Clololo ....... , _ .
I

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sa••
Ph••

PIPPIIOM PillA PIAST

Soc..,.

IJaJdm ·.

.

'

Ohio Lottery

goihg ·b ack
to· Oakland ·

Daily Nuinbe..
301
Pick-4

Page4

•
.· Vol.40, No.214
Copyrightod 1890

·

·

·

Middleport CounCil . vetoes dumping proposal

(At hens ' G allla - Hocklng By CIIARLE!'IE H9EFLICH
. Sentinel News Staff
.
Jackson · Melgs-VInton), Solid
· V~o votes on Pl&gt;,th 'a ~solution
Waste Management District
restricting where jocal trash
which places restrictions on
·haulers can : fllsi?Ose. .of solid
where lndepende"t haulers can
. · w-.,te · th~tY c~lle~t and sur- dispose of trash.
charges on landfill dumping fees
AI the S{lme time Middleport
adoplied by the AGHJMV Solid
Council members voted to veto
Wastt Management District
the dumping lee sur~harge which
· were approved l;ty ullalllmol!s · would· go Into the multi-county
vote of_ 1\llddleport VIllage Couri·
Solld Wa~te Management Disell at a meeting Mopday 11lght.
trict operation raising slgnlfl·
, "Opppses strongl:y," were the
~;~ ntly the charge which haulers
words .of Council in a resolution
must pay to dump at the
passed 'at last night's meeting
proposed new district landfill.
regarding the resolutiqn adopted
Action to exercise Its veto
March .8 by.: the AGHJMV
pQwer
on b9 th. the
and,
,.

the dumping location restriction
was taken ;~fter. lt was IK)Inted out
that option might not be availa·
ble long.
Rep. Mary Ab~l (D·Athens)
has Introduced a legislative bill
which, as explained by Councilman Paul Gerard, the village's
. representative on the district
· board, would take away local
control. ·
Tbe consensus oJ Council was
that some local control is essential and that the village' will do
whatever needs to be done to
retain some control rather than
relinquish It all to the Solid Waste

__
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"

•

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•

.Grace Anderson

Avril reportedly 'leaves Haiti
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti
(UPI) - Ousted military dicta·
tor Gen. Prosper AvrU and Ills
famUy left HaiU early Monday
aboard a U.S. mllltary jet and
arrived in Florida, U.S: officials ·
said.
Opposition leaders announced
a woman Supreme Court justice
had been chosen as the country's
new Interim presldent,bu_t said
she had to go Into hiding ..amid
fears of a possible coup attempt.
U.S. Embassy spokeswoman
Susay Clyde said "there was a
request made" for U.S. help In
taking Avril out of the country
but would not say who made the
request.
"He left the country this
morning at about 6:20 on a U.S.
Air Force C-141," she said.
Clyde said U.S. Ambassador to
Haiti Alvin Adams met with
Avril at the International airport
In Port-au-Prince before the
plane left.
Avril's wife, Marle-Ange, his
daughter Carine, his son Philippe
and a servant also were aboard ·
the Hercules aircraft.
In Washlngton, State Depart.
ment spokesman Dave Denny
co,llflrmed AvrU had landed at
Homestead Air Force Base In
Florida but Denny would not say
where Avril would go from there.
Radio reports from Haiti said
Ertha · I'ascal-Troulllot, a Supreme Court justice, had been
named the country's new Interim

president under a plan caiHng for
her to organize elections. .
Opposition leaders announced
Pascai-Troulllot accepted the
position Sunday night, then Immediately went Into hiding amid
rumors of a planned coup at·
tempt. They said they hoped she
would be sworn In later Monday.
The middle-aged judge from
the northern city of Gonalves has
written variOI!S legal articles and
has a reputation for being nonpolitical.
Ear Her, opposition leaders
struggled to find a qualified
candidate wiiUng to be Interim
.president, threatening the lm·
poverlshed Caribbean nation's
chances tor quick transition to a
civilian government.
Supreme Court Vice President
Gabriel Volcy, the first choice of
the 12-party opposition Unity
Assembly, refused Sunday to
accept the Interim presidency,
and some opposition leaders said
he appeared fearful of the
mllitary, which bas never submitted to civilian rule.

Case dismiSsed

THE WINNERS- John Riebel, Meigs County

·-

coordlaa,tor of lbe Meigs ,c ounty program for
talented and gifted students, P,resenled awards to
the winners of Monday night's annual Meigs
County Spelllnl Bee. From left .to right are top
speller Freddie M.tson, an eighth grader from

.·. H~reretiring,~~~~gjobs,or · 60 days to reinvest your_pension funds in
recemng an earlr d1stnbuttort of your a BANK ONE Pension Protector IRA .
pens!on,you can mvest in a high-yield or they're automatically considered
Pensm Protector IRA at ·
'
taxable income.
BANK ONE and keep
One mote thing. Every
your funds tax-deferred
Pension Protector IRA
until )'011 withdraw them
oomes with something
at retirement.
else extra. ;.a qualified
The interest you earn
BANK ONE customer ser·
really adds up fast and
viee representative who
remember-1t's .only ta~·
can answer all your ques· .
alie When }UU Withdraw lt.
tions about this important
Don't wait to take
financial decision.
· advantage of this special
Stop by and see us
rate ... because Federal
today about a Pension
.regulations give yOO only
Protector IRA.

.

pr~pose

•
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Newark: Wend! R. Bear, 17,
Nashport, In a two-car collision
on a Newark street.

''

WAQt

BANCCIIIEBIOKI!IAGE
Brlln..._, 1-800·874•1536
'

••

Eaton: Michael E. Beal, 18,
Versailles, In a one-car accident
on Ohio 121 In Darke County.
North Olmsted: Barry Howell,
21, SbeHield, when a car
slammed Into ·a group of four
pedestrians walldn&amp; on a North
Olmsted ·street.

. ·Local news briefs·~

r

\. (

IMNK ONE. ATHENS. NAIA PA/fTOI' THI! CAlliNG llrAM
Athena, Ohio
'I

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· Deputie$ probe B &amp; E

Eighteen Thousand People Who Care. ·

III'MI•r

High; Chester fourth grader eighth · grade, Eastern; Brandi
By NANCY YOACHAM
Kellle Bailey; Riverview sixt h Reeves , .s ixt h grade. Ches ter ;
Sentinel News.,staff
grader
Crystal Morris; Tuppers Misty Francis. sixth grade, Rl·
·
Southern Ju'nlor High eighth
Plains
, fifth grader She.r ry verview; Traci Heines, fifth
grader Freddie Matson correctly
Burke; Meigs Junior High eighth grade. Tuppers Plains; Jennifer
spelled the words genetic and
grader Be~ky Williams; Brad- Carman, eighth gtade. Meigs ;
gentlest to win the Meigs County
bury slxtn grader Chris Chap· April Halley. sixth grade, Brad·
Spelling Bee held Monday nlgllt
man; Harronsvllle fifth grader bury; Matthew Durham, fifth
at Southern High School In
Brian .Lee Young; Middleport · . grade, Ha rrisonville; DaVid
Racine.
Grimm, fourth grade. Mlddl!'·
Runner-up in the annual bee fourth grader Rachel Ashley;
Pomergy fifth grader Tara
port; Jessica McElroy, fifth
was Syracuse Elementary fourth
Grueser; Rutland sixth grader . grade, Pomeroy; Phyllis Clark,
grader Evan Struble.
Vanessa Harless; Salem Center Sixth grade, Rutland; Amy CieBoth Matson and Struble reslxth
grader Bryan Colwell;
land, fifth grade, Salem Center;
ceived trophies and are now
grader
Mlnday
Rana Justis. sixth grade, SalisSalisbury
sixth
eligible to compete In the Tri· :
Patterson; Letart Falls f.lfth .· bury; Sandra Morris, eighth
State Spelling Bee on the campus
·of Marshall University In Hun- grader Vanessa Sh11ter; Por· grade, Southern: Kimberly
tland sixth grader Denise Roush;
Roush. fifth grade, Letart Falls;
.... Ungton, W.Va.-· Matson also reand Racine fifth grader Jesse Jamie Rizer, sixth grade, Por- .
ceived a traveling plaque which
Maynard.
·
tland; Larry Wlllls, fifth grade.
will be displayed at Southern
Alternat!'s from the various. Racine; and Jennifer Lawrence.
Junior High for the next year.
schoolswereAmandaBarrlnger. sixth gr-ade.
Syracuse.
·
Over recent weeks, the sevenI,
.
teen elementary and juniot high
schools throughout Mejgs County's three school districts nave
conducted !heir own spelling
bees, resulting In one champion
and one alternate from each
school. Champions from each
recession," Kellner said. " What
WASHINGTON !UPI) room In the school-level bees
makes It eve11 more alarming are
Another month of sluggish autoreceived a certificate of merit • as .motive s~les caused retail sales
the markets have talked about
did each school champion. The
the need for tighter market s •
10 fall bY 0.9 percent In February
school champions competed In
higher Interest rates.
to $146.5 billion, the Commerce
last night's cqunty-wldecompeti·
"This . report suggests the reDepartment reported Tuesday.
lion at Southern High. ·
cipe
for continued economic
The decline was the biggest
Pronouncer for the Meigs
growth
Is lower Interest rates,"
since a drop of i .3 percen 1 In
he
said.
October.
But Rober,! Dederick. chief
Irwin Kellner, chief economist
Judges for the event were Superfor Manufacturers Hanover ·In economist for Northern Trust In
lntendentDanApUng,ofEastern
New York, said the 0.9 percent Chicago, was much more
decline "shows an underlying optlmltlc.
"It's a strong report," Deder·
weakness In the economy that
ick
said. "There doesn't seem to
should not be Ignored."
lntendent of Schools John Riebel.
be
any
sign that the consumer
If the 6 percent drop · In
Meigs County School Supervisors
believes
there Is going to be a
automotive sales - the biggest
Bill Buckley and John Costanzo
and consequently that
recession,
were also Instrumental In organ· since a 26.5 plunge In January
reduces
the
risks there will be a
1987 - were not figured In, total
.!zing the annual spelling bee. I
•
recession."
.
sales of all other goods to
.In addition to Matson and
Auto dealers have been hard
consumers would have Increased
Struble from Southern Junior
hit with sluggish sales over the
by
only
0.5
percent
In
February,
' High and Syracuse, respectively,
past several months, and they
participating In last night's bee officials said.
turned to rebates and other
were .eighth grader, Charlene . · "It's a sign that we are are 'discounts to clear their lots In
teetering on the edge of a
Dalley, from Eastern Junior
December and January.

Retail sales off 0.9
percent in February

. .egts at1on ~:::~~tc:t~l~t.;E~~:;:

a

I

BANKEONE.

SUIII'Ila)'

. . ean

e

• ALLEDONIA, Ohio jUPI) lng to natural gas and l,ow sulfur
will never be utilized,"
:rhe president of the Ohio Valley coal, regardless of the cost."
Murray said the coal produc·
,Coal Co. s.ays the future of his
. Murray, 50, former president · lng regions of Ohlowlll not be the
mine and other eastern and of North American Coal fol· only areas of the state to pay for
southeastern Ohio mines would lowed hl~fatherlntoeaster~Ohlo the proposed changes.
·
be In Jeopardy under the pro- · coal mines when the Industry
"It Is tragic that, a$ a result of
po,sed Clean Air "-ct.
dominated employment In the this Ill-conceived proposed com·
'The w~.lfare of the peopll' in area, but only
few mines promise legislation, electric
our state, .. Robert Murray said remain. Murray's Ohio Valley
rateswlllbelncreasedl7percent
Monday, simply was ~or a Co&lt;!l 9o, In Alledonia Is l~ated to 39 percent for Ohio hoconcern of the people Involved In .aboul 15 miles southwest of' meowners and Industrial custo·
thes,e t Cl;~an Air Act I Wheeling, W.Va.
mers," Murray said.
negotiations.
Combined with the massive
"These Increased electric
Murray. whose mine employs losses In the steel Injury, few
costs will very adversely affect
400, criticized the Bush admlnls· high-paying Industrial job opporall households, and particularly
!ration and Sens. John Chafee, tunltles remain In the region, but
those persons on fixed Incomes,
R-R.r.. Max Baucus, . D-Mont. : Sen. Robert Byrd, D·W.Va., Is , and wll) eliminate many bpslDavld Durenberger, . R:.Minn., trying top attach an amendment · nesses and jobs In Ohio and In the
and Alan Simpson, R-Wyo., for that would provide special unem·
Ohio Valley, " he said
molding legislation Murray be- ployment benefits for miners
"At tile $;,.me time: the presl·
lleves will destroy the Qhlo coal who lose the!r jobs as a result·of dent's native Texas and another
ln~.ustry If It becomes law.
the· Clean Air Act.
·
regions of the country - except
In order to comply with this
"The use of clean coal techno!nine states - will bear little or
bill, many u(lllties burning Ohio ogy-. In which the Ohio taxpayers
none of the cost of complying
coal must swltc.h thel~fuels from . have Invested $100 million, will
with this proposed acid ~aln
high suj!ulr coal ,to nat ural gas be pre-empted," Murray said.
legislation."
and ·tow sulfur Western coal ln . "And the nation's most abundant
·
19!)~.:· Murray said. " The Pres!- lndlge"ous energy resource
dent s ~~~~ ml'ndates fu!)l switch- base, medium to high sulfur coal,
'-"D
,

70

Coolville
867·3115

to .dump at. the proposed district
landfill, the charge would be
$1,.00. This Increased cost, of
course, would be reflected In
charges which trash -customers
pay , It was pointed out.
Gerard announced that the
next public hearing of the Solid
Waste Management District will
be held at 7 p.m. on March 21 at
McArthur, and he urged attend·
ance at that meeting.
While at the meeting, .Manley
reported t hat his recycling busi·
ness has outgrown his present
building In lower Middleport, and
. Continued on page 10

'Mmmg
.. . • JO
• bS JOOpar
•. .
d'ized
b
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· . y ;~~~rg~~!~:e~:~u~rn~:
. - d Cl · Air. I I • ·

t/

Jtuthnd
742·2888

Southern Junior High, and runner-up Evan
Struble, a fourth grader from Syracu~~e Elemen·
tary. The county-wide bee was held .t Southern
JUgh Stlhool. ~atson Ill lhe son of Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Matson, Racine. Struble Ill the son of Mr. .
add Mrs. Michael Struble, Syracul!l!.
'

Su!~!!rlnlendent of ·StJhools, and Kilty Hazier,

PenSion Protector IRA
at BANK ONE.

Tbe Meigs Common Pleas
Court case of the Farmers Bank
and Savings Company against
Mary L. Meredith; et al, has been
dismissed.

Coabocton: Philip A. Haeans,
20, CoahoctCII, In one-vehiCle
accident on Ohio 83 In Coshocton
County.
Sandusky: Lucu Mayer, 5,
Vermilion, when struck by car
atter be daabed onto Oblo 60 In
Erie County.

•

· Opftn a highyield

_Weekend mishaps kill six in Ohio
By U•lted Preulnlernatlonal
Six people, Including three
pedestrians. were killed In accl·
aents on Ohio roadways during
the weekend, the Ohio Highway
Patrol reported Monday.
A patrol spokesman said there
were two deaths Sundayf two
Saturdi\Y and two Friday evenIng. Each of the victims died In
single-fatality accidents.
Tbe patrol couuts fatalities
resulting (rom accidents on the
state's public roads each weekeud· between 6 p.m. Friday apd
mldnlgbl Suuday.
Killed were:
Frl4la7 •IIIII
Ketterilll! Cl!ll T. Jeq, 45,
Ketterfnl, when hit by a car as he,
tried to croesa a Kettering street.

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and cost effect" as to whether
that phrase applies to the district
manageme.nt or to the hauler.
It was reported th;lf Gerard
and Jon Jacobs of the Meigs
County Health O!lpartment both
voted against the adoption of the
District's resolution while Ken·
neth Wiggins and Richard Bailey, other Meigs members,
abstained.
Roger Manley of Manley's
Trash. Service whO dumps at .the
Mason County landfill reported
that he is currently paying $12.50
a ton to dump there while If he
were required to pay a surcharge

_Freddie Ma.tso·n ·wins Meigs
County's .1990 Spelling Bee

I

--Area deaths. --

-sum
our

Management District.
')'he .resolu.tlon adopted by the
Waste Management Polley Committee would require that all
"soUd .w11ste generated In the
District, where practicable and
cost effective, remain within the
District." Gerard as the village's
Solid W,aste , Management Dis·
trlct representative. charges
that phrase Is unclear and unfair
and places unreasonable res·
tralnt on small Independent trash
collection services.
The question revolved around
the phrase In the district's
resolution of "where ·pract.lcal

fw '4.io·ll!«e

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1 Section. 10 Pogoo 26 Conti
A Muttimediatnc. Nawtpapar

· ------------------~~~----~~~--~~------------~----------------~--~--~~~----------------------------------------------~----

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W.Va.; a sister, Mrs. Lula
Rexroad, Dunbar; and six grand- ·
Grace Edington Anderson, 89, children and five great
of 1012 West Vlrglna Ave., grandchildren.
Services will be 11 a .m. TuesDunbar, W.Va., died Saturday at ·
day
at the Keller Funeral Home,
her home after a brief Illness.
1236
Myers Ave., Dunbar, with
A Dunbar resident for 60years,
Rev.
John R. Campbell official·
Mrs. Anderson was a member of
lng.
Burial
will be ln.the Gra11d·
the First Church United Metho·
v.lew
Memorial
Park al Dunbar.
dtst at Dunbar.
may
call
at the funeral
Friends
She Is survived by two daughhome
today
(Monday)
from 2 to4
ters. Mrs. Pauline Horton, of
and.7to9.
Middleport, and Mrs. Phyllis
Atkinson, ot Parkersburg,

·

Pomaroy-Mi,ddleport, Ol'!io, ·Tuesday, March 13, 1990

.

· ·

Parll)' cloud)' t.ntabl. l.Gw
In 581: Partly 1!loudy Wednesday. IDrh near 80. (Jhance of
rain 28 per_cent.

5227

Mem/Hir FDIC

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· Deputies of the Meigs . County Sherlffos Department are
Investigating the J:lreakln'g and entering ot a trailer on Nelson
Road.
'
According to the report, Steve Russell, Dexlj!r. reported that
1 he left his trailer Saturday evening and returned Suuday
morning to find that the trailer had been entered. The report
went . on ro say that three guns and casl1 were mtaslng, 1The
'lnveltlgat.lon Is continuing.
, ·
.,
Clarence Alberson, Long Bottom.- reported Monday that
, (jurll!g the past two weeks approximately 35 gallons of gasoline
were stoleri.from. his alrplape.
.
·
Sherlff ,James M. Soulsby reports that deputies were called
for a disturbance In Harrisonville. Sheriff Soulsby reported that
Elmer Bowles was arres.ted fqr disorderly conctuctJ He was
·
. .
.
. , .
1 lodged In the co11nty Jan. ,
Continued on page 10

v·lrgtllla
..

teachers still
out on strike
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (UPI)
'"7 Gov. Gaston Caperton and
teachers union leaders a~ to
meet again 'l)lesday and try to
resolve Welt VIJ'glnJa'a nrat
school strike, which the itate
attorney general has declared
Illegal.
"We want tQ keep this dlicusalon going because we think It's
been worthwhile to thta point,"
Caperton's (&gt;ri!IB secretary, Gor·
don· Morae, said after 'the aover·
nor engaged In seven hours of
talka Monday that broke.up at 11
p.m.
Kayetta Meadows, president of
Continued on page 10 . ~

ec:~~.:CIIA.IIPI

-

'Pdclputa Ia &amp;M
C'A-.&amp;J .8pdHq lee wen tiiICIIool chunplttal, Hated left .. 1'1111&amp; In front,
llrlu Lee YoiiJII, HantaoaYIIJe; Tan G.,..-,
PomerO)'; llrJan Colwell, Salem Center; Kell

uma.J

Battey, Che.ter; Raebel "-hleJ, Middleport;
Vane••• Shuler, Letart Fallll; and ;resae MBJ·
nard, Jtaelne. In back, left to rtaht, are Freddie
.
.
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• I 11, 1111/ II illlr Rip; a.rtl ClllfiiUIII,
Bnllliiii'JllliWf) llarte, Tuppers Pial•; MIDdy
Pa&amp;tnn., Balillliarr. Van•• Rarleu, Rutland;
Charllllle DIIIIIJ, lEMiera Jutor Rip; Cryalal .
Monll, Bin• lllew; Denlle Ba t,., Po111ud;
Becqo Wllllllll'll, Metp Junter Hlp; and Evan
Struble, Syncuse.

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Ohio
Tuaidlry. MM:h 13, 1990

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Ill Court Street ·

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE IN'l'ERESTS OF THE MEIGS.MABON AREA

~lb

Bm~ ,..,...,_,....,...,~=·­

~v

ROBERT L. WINGET)'
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manqer

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publlsher/Control)er

AMEMBER o'!The United Press International; lnllind Dally Pl-ess

Association and the American Newspaper Publishers ASSociatiOn.

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be leu than 300
words long.' Alllellers are subji!Ct to editing and must be signed with
name, address .and telephone number. No unsigned letters wtll be pUb·
llshed. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personal!-

t!es.

.

-Back to the
regulated 30s? ·

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By ARNOLD SAWJSLAK
UPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON- Perltaps It was an accident of timing, but on one
day late last month. the business page of the newspaper looked more
like the blotter of a precinct pollee station than a chronicle of
commerce and finance.
-One story was about Texas Air Corp. selllng part ofthe air travel
reservation system It bought from it.s subsldlary'lj:astern Airlines for
a $JOo·mnllon note a few years ago. Texas Air got$250 million for half
Interest In the system, but denied it had .fleeced the now bankrupt
Eastern In the original deal it Imposed on the alUng'air carrier.
-A second st.o ry reported that Drexel Burnham Lambert, In the
months immediately before It filed for bankruptcy because of a cash
flow crisis, paid out $260 million ln bonuses to Its executives. The
company said the bonuses had nothing to do with the cash shortage ·
that forced It to the wall.
-A third story reported that the management of the Cummins
Diesel firm was being sued by stockholders on charges of a) lowing
the company's founding family to reap a lN!ndfal~ from a stock
purchase the family described as a self-sacrificing way of saving the
company from a hostile takeover .
This lis t of alleged holdups, mugglngs and scams makes one
.wonder whether the i&gt;eo!&gt;le in charge of these enterprises ever read
the commercial history of the United States In the 19111 and early 20th
centuries .
It was behavior of this very sort that provoked a wave of revulsion
against '"robber barons" such as Jay Gould, John D. Rockefelle't,
An;lrew Mellon and Henry Ford and brought down a deluge of
gdvernment regulation on hitherto unfettered American
busl'nessmen.
.
Federal regulation .hit a peak In the i930s be"cause It was popular to
blame unethical business practices for the . Depressil!n that
devastated the country In that decade.
It took 40 years of assiduous propagandizing .by business groups to
turn the tide of regulation, which finally began ebbing when Congress
drew the line over the readily ridiculed regula lions · of the
'
·
Occupational Safety and Healtll Administration.
With political conservatism on the rise, the argument that
over-regulation was crippling the mighty engine of American
enterprise gained new appeal and soon Congress was deregulating
one business after another.
Air-lines, railroads. broadcasting • stations and a list of other
buslneses were freed from various levels of gover~~rr~ent oversight In
the 1980s, with more promised by the anti-Big Governbment zealots;
But then some sour notes were heard. The great Bun Market of the
1980s turnt!d up some Inside traders who weren't playing by tile rules,
and some of the bonds Issued to ·finance the takeover mania of the
decade actually iurned out to be junk . Then, at an Immense but still
uncounted cost, large sections of the deregulated savings and loan
Industry went broke and had to be balled out by an Inadequate
goverMlent Insurance fund .
All this was punctuated by &gt;Stories about a junk bond .dealer
··earning" $500 million In a single year and a billi!)nlilre publisher
flying hundreds of people to North Africa for a blrtllday party.
" Free" enterprise ws getting a self-Inflicted black eye.
What is going to happen now? Don't be surprised If we see the
regulation fever of the 1930s revisited. and In the process watch four
decades · of efforts to free business from the heavy hand of
goverM!ent go down the tubes.

Today in history
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By United Press International
Today Is Tuesday , March 13. the72nd day ofl990with 293 to follow.
The moon is waning. moving toward its new phase.
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn.
. The evening star Is Jupiter . .
Those born on this date are under the sign of Pisces . They Include
English chemist Joseph Priestly , the discoverer of oxygen, In 1733;
astronomer Perci val Lowell in 1855; publisher Walter Annenberg In
1908 (age 82); L. Ron Hubbard, science fiction writer arid founder of
Scientology. In 1911; CIA Dlrector1 William Casey and bandleader
Sammy Kaye in 1913; and singer-songwriter Nell ~daka In 1939 (age,
51) .
.

Berry's' World

WASHINGTON-Tbewilldlof
dem()Cfacy blowta1 from Berlin
are notlllng morw tllan a breeze
when they hit Bepln.
The poor Weat African country .
of 4.5 mllllon people has sUffered
under a Marxist dictator who has
only recently renounced commu; '
ntsm because It appear's to be the
t h,.w
t do .
.~,.o
.
Benin's dictator, Brig. Gen.
Mathieu Kerekou, didn't have
much choice. His 17 years of
experimentation with commu·
nlsm read like a Third World
comic strip pn how nl!t to run a
country.
Kerekou was ·a mere major In
the army when he took over the
country In a 1972 coup. He
changed tlie name of the country
from Dahomey to Benin and
began provoklpg diplomatic fistfights with the "lmperlallstplgi"
In America.
·
He InsUlted u:s. Ainl&gt;assador
James Engle one too'm any tim~ .
and, In 1976 then-President Geraid Ford downgraded the U.S.
mission to Benin and called
Englehome.
Kerekou could dish out the
Insults, but he couldn' i take .

.

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta

.

I~ GL~D AIRUNEIS HAve eUMI~ATeO .
SNPKIN6 DURING ~LIGI-ITS. NOW IF T~ .

10\

C"ULD ONLY DO SOMeTHING ASOIJT
C.R.«&lt;ING

~IQS

troop!l from Chad to be shuttled
tllrolllh Benin to training campa
In Libya to help fllht Ubya's war
against the •overnmenl of Chad.
The trlendahlp escalated to the
point where Kerekou was. giving
aid and . passage to Libyan
terrorists. But tile trlendlhlp
betWeen blm and Ubyan leader
Moammar Gadhafi has faileD on
hard times. Gad hat! has grown
tired of Benin's warming rela·
tlons with tile United States and
Franct. He . tried to uueat
Kerekou with a coup; but ICefJ!"
kou discovered the plot and tolled
lt.
.
Kerekou Is so afraid of being
overthrown ·that he has stashed
almost every bullet In Benin
under his .two houSei. Kerekou's
soldiers haven't shooting any .
strikers or demonstraton lately
because the dictator has all the ·.
ammo.
·•
Without buneis, the soldiers •
have been toSsing dlil,!dents In •
Jail, earning Benin the honor .of
having the largest number of
plottical prisoners of any West ·
African country last year. (Many
of them have since been treed .:
during Kerekou's more recent
liberal phase.)
·
The Benin economy has suffered •b.adly at the hands of
Kerekou. It Is one of the poorest
nations on earth, with a per
capita. alll)ual Income of abOut
$350.
That may explain why Kerekou Is oneotthefewfool,soneartll
who Is welcoming toxic waste. He
secretly signed a multlmnllon
dollara contract wltha British·
American finn to stockpne as
much as 50 mUllan tons of toxic
waste over the next decade.
T.oxlc waste and democracy
as Ide, the economic prospects for
Benin are .grim. Ketekou may
not be a Marxist anymore, but
accordinjt to U.S. intelligence
sources, he Is stlll corrupt. More
than $300 million Is believed to
have. been socked away . by
Kerekou and his clique In West: '
ern European banks.
·

The ·de-otherization of America Be~ Wauenbe~g ~
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It gets complicated, but please Asian-Americans, because that's
note that there Is an "oilier"? where most of the APis come
Maybe, Indeed, you are an from. (Anyway, where are Pa''other.''
cific Islands like the Marianas
Until now that's how8.5mnlion and the Marshalls - . In The
Americans were described In-the Bronx?)
regularly .Issued U.S. Census
In 1980. there were 3.8 million
. population estimates. "Otllers" Asian-Americans. By 1988, there
(whole name, "Other Races") were 6.5 million. That's an
were those Americans who were Increase of 70 percent! In eight
described by what IIIey were not. years! It's twice the rate of .·
They were not "white," "black" Increase of Hispanics (34 ' per- ·
or "o.t Hispanic orJgln." .
cent) and vastly greater than the
In short, they were either ·Increase of AEIAs (19 percent),
"Asians and Pacific I~landers" . blacks (13 percent) or whites (6
(API) or "American Indians, percent) .
Eskimos or Aleuts" (AIEA).
About two- thirds of the growth
Striking a blow for semi-clarity,
of Asian-Americans came from
tile Cens~ Bureau has wisely
Immigration, and the greatest
de-otherlzei! their popqiatlon es- number of Asian Immigrant
. ttmates (previously, only the
were trom the Phlllpplnes, South
decennial census categorized
Korea, China (including Taiothers by their otherness.) Now,
wan), India, Vletllilm, Ca-mbodia
APis are counted as APis and
and Laos. Newer Immigrant
AIEAs as AEIAs In estimates as
streams are also now coming
well as decennlals.
from Thailand and even archThe big news from the just: competitor Japan. (Why are
Issued estimates concerns the
Japanese coming here Is everyAPis, who ~hall
be
called
here
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American kids who trulY ru!ed
intellectual shock treatment to
understand that the days of
academic coasting are over.
But that's already a cliche;
Aslan-Amerl~an scientists, engtn!!ers and doctors. It's going to go
far .beyond that. The largest and
richest new markets In the world
will be COII)ing from Asia In the
years to come.
There are those who say that
the next century will be called
"The Pacific Century," or ''The
Asian Century." That Is supposed to be a threat to COIJtlnued
Ame_rtcan global hegemony. But,
hold on, we are a Pacific nation.
But, hold on, we are a Pacific
nation. In fact, we are the only .
Pacific· nation that has subs tan·
tlal numbers of people from all
the other Pacific and Asian
nations. We may turn out to be
the common denominator nation
In the Pacific-Asian world, thereby extending Pax Americana.
For a long time to come.

Robert Walters

CODY, Wyo. (NEA)- 1\t the
Ice ~eam case In tile IGA
supermarket here, shoppers are
confronted by a chaotic ~5ort­
ment of conflicting product
claims tllat ·hardly encourage
rational declsion-maklnr.
Meadow Gold Light promotes
ttll!lf as "93 percent fal ftee."
Breyer's Natural Light clalll)s It
has "one-tlllrd less butterfat tllan
Ice cream." VIva Ice Milk says It
contains "less tllan haltthe fat of

.

Those last two claims require
knowledge of the fat content oi
tee cr~am. Th~ JGA boule brand
says It hilS &amp;eVen grams of fat per
cup- but how many people kriow
what that means?
Breyer's Natural Light also
lists Its fat content - but as a
percentage (27) of total calor!H.
The Dartaold packa~ provides
no InformatiOn whatever about
the fat content of the Ice cream
Inside.
There tan• t much more clarity
In the breakfast cereal aisle,
where products made trorn corn.
oatl, wheat and rice elamor for
couumer attention wttb "high
fiber," "whole grain" and "vitamin fortified" claims as well as
hints tllat IIIey confer at least
limited protection against everything tram cancer to heart
attacb.
_Food labels tllat coilfpund
rather than clarify are hardly
'

variety of oils - both high and
limited to IGA stores. From
low .tn the saturated fats that other foods - but the FDA has
Ralph's tri Los Angeles to Waldraise blood cholesterol levels baum's In New York, from
not made any major changes In
that might be used In a product Its nutritional disclosure requireWlnn-Dixle In the SOutlleast to
without specifying which one was ments since 1973.
Fred Meyer In the Northwest,
actually
chosen. Thus, a label
shoppers are constantly assailed
As a result, the package&amp;
might
say
a packaged food containing thousands of products
by contusing If not contradictory
contains "soybean oil, corn oil still otter detailed information
lnfonnatlon on food packages.
.
. and/or palm kernel on and about the content of B vitamins
Some examples:
-A "light" (or "lite") claim · c6conut oiL"
almost nobody cares about - The U.S. Department of rtbotlavtn, tlllamlne and niacin.
can refer to . a ·rood's texture,
Agriculture requires that "lean"
taste, density or even Its color
At the same time, tile FDA
meat cOntain no more than 10 doesn't require - and f~ food
ratller than Its caloric content.
percent fat and "extra lean" producers provide - data about
Similarly, there are no standard
contain
a maximum of 5 percent how .much fat, cholesterol, sodefinitions of such overused
·
fat.
terms as "natural" and "high
dium, fiber, sugar and additives
But USDA has auth·ortzed an are Included In products being
fiber."
exemption to that standard for offered to Increasingly health- "Low calorie" p~oducts can
the single largest source of con~eloua consumers.
contain no more than 40 calortes
animal fat In the average perper serving or 0.4 calories per
While the federal regulaton
gram (does. anybody know how
son's diet - the ground beef used abdicate their traditional role,
much that Is?), whne "reduced 'to make hamburgers. It can be the Industry proc;l~ms tllat no-&lt;
calorie" foods must have at least called "lean" or "extra lean" thing Is amiss. A few year&amp; ago, a
one-tlllrd fewer calorlel than the even If It contains as much as 22% senior executlv~ with a major
percent fat.·
product• for wblch they
trade association, tile National
'USDA regulates tile labeling of ·Food Processors Association, ,
aubltltute.
,
-"No cholelterol" or "choles· meat, poultry and eggs, whUe the declared that current labeling
terol free" producls can be high
Food and· Drui Administration "Is not perfect, but It Is pretty
Ia saturated fall tllat elevate es tabllshes standards for all close."
blood cholesterol levels faster
tban cilolesterolltii!U does.
- "Enriched" foodl 'have bad
some, but not necessarily all; of
In 1933, In the depths of the Great Depression, banks throughout the
their or'IIIDal nutrlentl added
back after belnl lost during United States began to re-open after a week-long bank holiday
procesalng. "Fortified" foods declared by President Franklin Roosevelt In a sutcessful effort to
,
.
have had nutrients that were not stop runs on bank asll!ts. .
In 198!1, the Food and Drug Administration quaranUned all fr)l!t
original C!)mponents added dur''
Imported from Chile after traces of cyan Ide are found In two Chilean
lnr procesain1.
- Food producers often list a grapes.

On .this -day in history

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FIVE TIME WINNERS -These Syracuae alx&amp;h
grade"boya coached by Marvin McKelvey udBob
Crow were wlnnen Ill flve 111U1'118111en&amp;l durlnJ the
· baaketball seuoa,' Ill ~-n to trophlea, eiiC,II
. one received apoliter llbe 1114lvldual picture frem

· Bank Clelalld. The team memben, le~ to rl1ht,
front,are Kevin Deemer, Jay McKelvey, Paul
Chapman, ud Beth Bill, ball Jlrl; ~econd row,
Ryaa Bill, Jay Day, Cus Clelud, Gobby Crow.,
,u!l baek row, McKelvy and Crow.

PRESENTED TROPHIEs "- Lauren Riffle,
coach of Syracuse. girls basketball, presented
trophies to the team l)lembers al Saturday night's
banquet. Pictured left to right, they are Carissa

Alb, Bea IJsle, Jennifer Lawrence, Jesalca
Chapman, and Kerl Caldwell, front row, and
Amber Tholmas, Samml Sisson, Mandy Mllls,
and Goehelle Jenkins, second Row. Becky Moore
Is ~~~ a member of the team. ·

Marshall basketball program·
..
placell on tw~y~ar -:prObation'
"

thing Is allegedly so great (lver
there and allegedly _so terrible
over here?)
Today, Asians make U:p almost
3 percent of the U.S. population.
In 20 years the figure will be
about 5 percent.
•
· The Asian lnfiux represents'the
last step In the universalizing of
America. In substantial numbers
and proportions, Americans can
now be said to come from
everywhere. No other nation,
ever, could have made that
claim.
·
·
.
. It wlll stand us In good stead as
the Yll&amp;rS roll on. Nineteen of the
forty newly announced 1990 WestInghouse Scholars are AsianAmericans. The Westinghouse
awards are based on . the most
prestigious high-school-level
science competition In the United
States, It not the world. Not a bad
contribution from Immigrants to
a nation (ours) that allegedly Is
going to need all the help It can
get to compete In the world. And
not a bad boost · to some lazy

Food labels confou·n d and confuse

ice· cream."

(,

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them. In 1915, EneJehad wrltll!n
a tcpaeclt!t meuare to Fol-d
warntnr a1alnst anyolle maklnr magazine In 1!188. Benln~dlpJo.
tun of little Benin: •"We would
mat Cormellle Mehlnou told us
caution u.s. government offl- "notlllng like that ever hapctala to take cae In mat.ntslnlng
pent!d." Benin has mnntary
the distinction between the. Jllanes, he said. It's Just that
'Benin Republic' on the 0111! hand
they're all broken.
and 'bailana' or 'beniiJI' republic
After Ambassador Engle left
· eotiler.n
1 E ngllsh,we
...
Benin In 1976. It was seven more
on 111
pronunciations·are very stmnar, years before the country saw
and offense could be taken If the . another U.S. ambassador. In the
nuance 1s missed."
Interim, Kerekou learned to be a
Apparently Kerekou couldn't better host. He 1\0 longer dresses
take a joke. That's Ironic, be- down American diplomats. The ·
cause one of ; tile best. interna- affection he once had for Marxtiona! Jokes 1n cirulatlon 1s about Ism Is gone. As a direct result of
Benin. It Is tile story of an tile changes lin Eastern Europe,
amateur golfer whose slice des- Kerekou renounced communism
troyed the entire Benin air force.
last year and Invited opposition
. As the story goes, the golfer parties to help him write a new
was practicing his shots In a field · .constitution.
.
next to the air base when bts ball
He is m,aktng all the right
hit a bird 111 ttUght. The stunned
noises as far as ' the . U.S. Is
bird plummeted into tile open concerned, .but Kerekou's old
cockpit of a trainer Jet taxing
friends don't like the sound.
down tile runway. The .pUot lost
Libya, North Korea and CUba
control and plowed Into a, line of
were the countries that be·
planes triggering a explosion · friended Kerekou when no one
tha• wiped out tile whole fleet.
else would have him. The relaThenewsmadeafewpapersln
tlonshlp . With Libya has been
Africa and France In 1987 and
paartlcularly stormy· In the
was repe!~a~ted;1__!!1n!...::"Go~l~f_2!!;;:!::,._;;19~80~-·!s,:...!K~e!!:r~ek~o~u~a!!ll:!:owed:::._:re,:be::l

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (UPI)
·"The fact we ourselves de- ball for at least one year. . ,
- The NCAA placed the Martected Irregularities ·within the
· Moreover, the NCAA could
shall University basketball probasketball. proeram, commlssi- . have demanded that Marshall
gram on two-year probation .oned an .Independent lnvestlga- · forfeit as much as 90 percent of
Monday ove r 10 Infractions the
lion, reportl!d the findings to the •net receipts earned In the 1987
school acknowledged In a shaNCAA, and took 'remedial siep~ .. NCAA Tournament.
keup last year that led to the
helped to lessen the sanctions."
"Intercollegiate athletics, ·as
departure of coach Rick
Among 10 ~olatlons Marshall we know them today, clearly are
Huckabay.
acknowledged In Its report to the at risk," Nitschke said. "Th~
Marshall President Dale
NCAA last year -were the giving vlsablllty of athletics remaining
Nitzschke accepted. the sancof cash and gifts 1!&gt; former an Integral part of higher educatlops, and served notice that
basketball players, a $2,000 loan tlon In the future .;will 'depend
Intercollegiate sports on campus
for a recruit who was Ineligible tQtally upon the commitment and
" clearly are at risk:"
,
· forttnanclal'ald; freetransporta- ability of each Institution to
He said Marshall would gain . lion , and lodging for student police Its own behavto,r." ·
nothing by appealing the sancathletes, and free lodging for the
Nltzschke, who reviewed the
tions, which rule out any presea- families of players.
NCAA report while en route to
son or posts~ason competition In
The violations occurred during Israel, said the penalties came as
the 1990-91 season; and force the
the tenure of Huckabay, the 21st no surprise.
return of $42,241 to the NCAA.
head coach of the Thundering
"By Initiating positive and
Two other sanctions- already · Heril. Huckabay led Marshall corrective actions, we were able
Imposed by the school·- call for from 1982 until this season, when
to lessen the severity of the
reductions from 18 to 15 expenseDana Altman was given the job. penalties which might have ~n
paid recruiting visits and the Joss
Huckabay led Marshall to Its
Imposed," he said.
of one grant-In-aid for 1990-91 and
first 20-vlctory season In , a
"W~ accept that and.will m6ve
two grants-in-aid for the follow- decade In the first of his seven toward building an even stronger
ing campaign.
.
sea5ons, dl!rlng which the Herd
basketball program within
"Although we'r e certainly not wori four season titles and three
NCAA rules. Virtually,!lllinslituhappy ' with the ·penalties, we tou'r nl!ment crowns In the South-. '!Ions of higher learning In this
realize they could ha.ve been ern Conference.
country face major problems
much more, severe." Nltzschke
HllCk8,bay resigned under · resulting from the' financial and
said.· •' .
·
pressure last April and Is now competitive pressures pf lnter• &lt;..
co'achlng at South Point (Ohio)
collegiate athletics .
'
"It's Important for all of us to
High School. . .
The NCAA .!Ould have Imposed . recognize our prlrpary mission of
T~e Daily Sentinel.
I.
harsher sanctions, lncluCitng the providing quality educational
(UBPsllii-tN)
·, Joss oftelevlslon !IPJ,Jearances for . opportunities for the people we
.t Dtvlsloa of Mu.Kim..,la, lac.
at least one year, and the serve."
elimination of ott-campus rePublished everv afternoOn. Mcnday
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Pom«oy, Ohio 151119, Ph. 992·2~ Se-

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POS'IMASTER: send addrel&amp; chanll!'l
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No aubscrlptton&amp; by mall permitted In
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CHEERLEADERS - · Trophies were awarded
to tile Syracu~~e Cheerleil.den at Saturday nllht's
banquet by Joyce Sisson, advisor. They are, left
lo rilhl, Jessica Chapman; Kelly Swisher, and

JennUer Lawrence, and back row, Mrs. Si8110n,
Samml Sisson, Mandy Mills, and Rochelle
Jenkins.

Syracuse, #ade school teams are honored
The annual basketball banquet
of the' Syracuse Elementary
School was held Saturday night
at the school with trophlea being
presented IQ team members.

James Lawrence, principal,
· gave the welcome, and Stephanie
Ash qad the Invocation be!ore the
potluck dlan,e r. Coache&amp; ,were
Introduced and presented tro-

••=••·"'·

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.......... -Nn. ... ,.......
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lt.IAIIIIUa.ll.lt!U • .•.

phies to their team members.
Hank Cleland also presented
poster size individual pictures to
the sixth grade boys team which
won five tourna.ments during the
season.
.A green and white color ,
scheme was carried, out In the
decorations of the audltorlu~
with the walls featuring large
lamlnaied cartoon characters of
basketball players.

Sports briefs
Boxln1
Roger Mayweather of Las
Vegas will face Rodolto Aguilar
of Panama on April 5 at Bally's
· Las Vegas !OF the vacant WBA
Americas super lightweight title.
Dog Sleddtnr
Musher LavQn B!~fve of Wasilla, Alaska held the lead as the
1,161-mlle Iditarod dogsled race
reached the coast of the Bering
Sea and prepared for a two-day
sprint along the northwes!frn
Alaska Coast to Nome . The first
racer to Nome wins $50,000 while
the next 19 finishers divide the
remainder of the $250,000 purse.

FIRST PLACE TEAM ·The Syrac111e Ralden were tbe Jriaaers
in tbe Second An•ual SPe-A·Lot Biddy BuketbliU tounu.-elll, beld
recently ill Point "-nt. Pk:tved an flootlt row, left 10 rtJ•t. Kerilt
Deemer, J•y McKelftJ, -llelll HW, manager; aDd P1ul tlla~~·

Second row, C• Clei!JIIII, 'Ryta lfW, J17 D1J1 .iDd Robbie ,.....,.•
Back row C01cll Marvin McKelvey, Mike ManaboDt, owner tl SIYe~-Lot, atid Cilae!allob Crow.
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NYBu.,ollTorolllO,aiJtll

s............. ..

5Ut&amp;lt 1. . Or ..... Ill
O.Nn liMe Ill, LA 01.,.... IH

NATIONAL

Rupe, Peter S!IMa,IIIICI Mattllew AU, aad ~~econd
row, Alan Moore, Erica An10U, Jaeon Co!IDts, and .
Mlcbael Alb. Not preseat for tile buquet wu
team member, Scooter Fryar.
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FOVRTB GRADE TEAM .I. Troph~ were
preaeated to these fourtll . pade boys at
. Saturday's banquet at the Syracuse Elementary
School by Coach Mlck Aab. On Ole ~aro left to
· rl1ht~ front, are Jack Day, ~erry_ Frlen~, Bobby

Television
USA Network has signed a four-year agreement to cable-:
cast regular seasori and posl
season games of the World
League of American FootbalL ...
Turner Television· Networ~ has
announced It will feature 2• '
soccer matches, lncludtnc ·an·
U.S. g8111ea. live from ·the l~ ·
World Cup between June 8 and
July g_
l'acbtlnl .
. French yachtsman Titouan
Lamazou was expected 10 arrive
In France on Thunclay with a
victory In the solo, round·.theworld Globe · Challenge and a
, record for a nons lop circling of
the world. Under current
weather condltlona, Lalnazou
would arrive on his 60-1oot
Ecureun d' Aqllltalney after 109
days at sea, shaving 16 days oft
tl)e record 11!1 by Frenchman
Olivier de Kersauson.
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·slOO. ..REWARD
LEADING TO THE .ARREST
AND CONVIrnON OF
PERSON 01 PE.SONS WHO
HAVE
AtiDAUIItiG
·raE

·aND THEn

AT
FACEMYii LIMIER CO.
· ST. II. 7
101101, 01110

CONTACT .992·5965
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Winter athletes honored by Meigs Athletic ~ters Club
teamflnlShed wlthareeord¢148
T\!resa Oetm1 Aimee Rupe, Kim less, Mike Welch, Terry lell~lng rebounder, Most ValuaThe Melp Athletic Boosters wins and 59 losses. Burt Kennedy
Eblin. . All· ACademiC awards McGuire, Shawn Hamon, Mike ble Player and leadll!i ~rorer
bonored the winter sports ath· recleved the Most Improved
wert prelftted .to Dare! Wolfe, CremeaDI, Jamt!8 Howerton
Cary Betzlq. Molt Valauable
letes with a banquet Monday Wrestler award, Kennedy went
Amy Wartb Rlld Krllten Slawter. ·John Ben dey, Bob johlllon.
' DeJmtiVe Player Jay Humph·
night at Meigs High School.
23-6 on the year. Aaron Sheets .Aimee Rupe llld Amy Epple
Menibei'Jofthevaraltybullet· reya, Humpbreys and Betzln&amp;
Master of Ceremonies of the and Eric Heck received first
recelv~clletllor awards.·
ball team were Introduced by recleVed senior award• and
banquet was athletic boo~ter team AII·TVC and Ali·TVC Aca·
Relei'vebubtballcoachRick Coach Ru1ty Bookman. Betzlllf . wu named Ali·TVC
president Jim Soulsby.
demlc awards. Sheets finiShed
Alb Introduced members of the Membenofthlaye4U'steunwere Honorable Mendon and to the ·
frelbm111 ~I In the ab- Robbie Fleldl, Richard Peyton, . All-Academic TVC '!eam.
· Wrestling coach Kevin Shep· . the year 3~2 and was the Most
pard and asslstalnt coach Jim
Valuable Wrestler In the TVC .
sence of coach Gea, Wile. Juan Wrlabt, Jay Humphreys,
Glrll reserve- coach Kim Ad·
Sheets presented awards to this
Kathy Doidge presented
Members of the 1•2 team were Mike VIII Meter, Trevor llarrl· kina Introduced member• of the
,years wrestling team. Team awards to her cheerleaders. Jay CremeiDI, Bobby Job01on, ~n,RyanLemley,CaryBetzlna, 17·1 TVC · co-cbamp!On reserve
members Introduced were P. J . Freshmen cheerleaders lntroMlklt Welch, Kyle91mp10n, Scott L. . J . Mltcb, ·James Howerton, team. Members of the team were
. Chadwell, Bryan Molden, ChrlS . duced were Mlcbelle Youna, Whltlatchr Todd J:)W. John Ben· Terry McGuire and Shawn Haw· "Verna Compston, Heather FranSwanson, Joe. McElroy Brian
Stephanie ~Ice, Lorena Ofler,
tley, Shawn Hamon, Bill Glue, ley. Also Introduced were llatl.s· covlak Kelly Satterfield Yvette
Hoffman, Burt Kennedy: Aaron
Kelly Doidge, Abby Blake and Kevin Lambert, Gary A~arps tlclans Barbie Anderson, Bobble You111: t&lt;erl Black, Miry CreSheets, ·David Swanson, Eric
Holly Williams. Varsity cheer· andTonyRousb, · .
Vance, Julie Buck ·and 'Mary ,. means, , Miuy Sisson, Katrina
Heck, Jeremy Heck, Scott Bar- leaders Introduced were ~Y
Coach ,Aab theJi lntroducl'd StelnandmanaeersMIIu!Parker · Turner, Wendy· Clark and
·ton, Kill Van Meter, GeottCogar
Warth, Amy Epple, Kristin Slaw· members ot the reaerve le81JI. and Chris Neal. Awards were Chrl.ssy Weaver.
and Lori Hayes statistician. The
ter, Dal'l;l Wolfe, Missy Leacb, •Team memben were Bill Har- elven to Robbie Fields for
Roger Foster Introduced
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m1111ben of tbe ·YU'Itly teun
· that flnllbed 15-a on the year.
Team membei'J were Trlela
Baer, , Delila HallY. Marllba
Klq, SbUJDml Newane, Kel)f
Smith., Kim EW!q, ICJm Han·
niDi, Mluy ~Amy Rollle
and Jellllifel'Taylor. Team 1lal•
lstlclana were SuiAII Ho~~ehlnl
and Jennifer· Buell. Foall!r tben
presented awards to Slwlnon
"fewsome and Trlcla 9¥r tor
most Improved, Jennifer Taylor
Most Valuable Detenalve pllyer
and .KellY Smith Most Valuable
Ottenslve' player. Mlas_y NelaOD,
JennlferTaylor,KellySmlthand
Trlcla Baer were named to the
TVC Ali-Academlc'Team, wblle •
Smith and Taylor were named
first team Ali·TVC.

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y
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Ljd.fa. Council plans for banquet
Plans lor the mother~aueb.'
ter banquet wen filial lied wbetl
the Lydia Council of tile Bradford
Church of ~t mel recently.
Karllta ~tump pl'tilded at tht
meeting and ·reporta ·'ot !ht
secre
. tary and treuurer WI
\ re
alven.
The biiiQ!I!t will be held May
11, 6: 30 p.m . The theme 1.s "God
Loves · a. Happy Fact." Clown•
· from the Galllpoill Christian
Church will preaent a proaram.
CleUJI!IIdJYattllechurcbwas
set tor Marcii '2 9-31 . The men'•
prayer · breaktaat will be held
April 7 at the cliurcb.

. tl\;1,~;e :.~ .... tbi dalel

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Cathy Spencer, and Debbie
Pickens to those named and
Diana B!ne, Madeline Panter,
. Frances Hysell, Charlotte Han·
lng, Suzie Will, Gerry Lightfoot,
Cherie WIUiamao!l, Jackie Reed,
Paula Pickens, VIcki Smith,
Nancy Morris, Janice Fetty,
Sherry Smith, and Carolyn
Nlcbollon..
The next meeting will be held
April 2 at the home ot Karllta
Stump.

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Me1g
•·S pomona
Grange meets .
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Arthur Crabtree, deputy; said
Tbe Melp County Pomona
the
annual grange banquet wlll
Granee met recently at the Rock
be
at
the Salisbury Elementary
Springs Grange Hall with Pau·
line Atklnl. worthy master, School on AprU 20. The mutera
ot each grange will have tickets
presiding.
The meeting opened In ritual Is· for purchase. Adult tlcketsare$6
tlcformand "TbeRiverotGold" and children 13. Patty Dyer,
wu 1ung with Pat Holter as lecturer will be the speaker and
accompaniSt. The pledae to the Denver Rice will provide the
tlai was given and. the tint muslc.1
Patty Dyer Introduced Wll·
stanza of the "Star Spangled
lfotd
Liz Smith from Waiblngton
Banner" was sung:
County.
Smltl! Is · the district
wesuna . ·crabtree ' reported
·
membership
director , He
that 67 stuffed toys were taken to
. Veterans Memorial Hospital, stressed the Importance ot being
and that the 1989 cerdtlcates ot a member of a grange and that 11
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merit were given to the CWA 's of was a good place tor all family
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TRISTA A SIMMONS
each grange. She also noted that members. He went on to say that
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the blackberry cake contest will granaes mustworll to obtain new
.'
members.
be held at the May meeting.
•
Doris Eastman and Zlba Mid·
Pat Holter reported on the
klft
Invited
tbe
public
to
Hemlock
..
. Trista Ashley Simmons ob- atutfed toy , display at the
Grange on Saturday tor an open '
served ber tin~ birthday on Feb. m~~~~· Barrows, legislative meetpng. A pOtlucll meal will
•
10 at the home of her parents, chairman, reported on the social begin at 6: 30 p.m. and Hemlock
Tl!omas and Dee Simmons.
security tax l.ssue, saying the' will furnish the meat and drlnkl
Attendlbg were her twin llroth- soclal 'securlty fund should not be. with ea.c b person bringing a
ers, . Tbom~s . and Tyler Slm· applied to the n.a tlonal bUdget .. covered dish. An exchange stu·
mons; ~eat grandmother, Ellie· He also urged members to write dent from Holland will be the
Sanders, great grandfather, their congressman regarding the speaker. He Is 17 years of age and
Theodore Cremeans; grandpar· cbange of attitude with Russian will be here for a tu Uyear .
ents,. Mr. and Mrs. 'rommy people
Crabtree gave the grace tor the
Simmons, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Opal Dyer national youth food and the benediction. The
Sanders, Deleab and Jonathan. chairman sa'td work Is being Harrisonville Grange served
Sanders,• Melanie Duddlna. done on 'the state fair booth refreshments.
Kathy and Ama11da .)etters. proJect
Mindy and Tl!tany McDoDIId,
Lee Morrl.s, Danny, Judy, Angle
and Danny Jr. McDonald. ·
f V f "· J
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Sendlna gifts were great
Officers were elected at the
Necklace orders are still belna
grandmother, Lavina Brannon, recent meet In&amp; ot the XI Gamma· received and members who .
Mr. and Mrs. Mille Holbrook and $;psllon Cliapter, Beta Sigma Phi · complete necklaces should turn
Ben, and ·Edna
Sorority held at the senior them In as soon, as possible,
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citizens center In Pomeroy.
A donation was also sent to a .
1
Elected were Darla Staats,
high school student to be a
president; Sue Malson, vice representative for the Goodwill
president; Connie Dodson, treas- Ambassador from Ohio this
urer; Patsy Ogdln, recording · summer.
,
It was decided to purchase
aecretary; and Susan Well, corresponding secretary. Cbalrper- shoes for the needy family for
aons are Brenda Hill, newsiet ter;
Easter.
.
Patty Plcllens, service; Kathy
The n.e xt meeting will be held
Cumlnp, progam; · Ju!lf Gibbs Thursday, 6 p.m. at the. senior
and · SopYa Wolfe, ways and citizens center. Pizza wil1 be
means; and Rbofida Ketchum furnished, and ilecklaces will be
.and VIcki Ault. ioclal.
made at this meetlfll.
·A thlllk you care was received .
The tea on April 5 will lie held at
tro111 the. Melp Health Depart· . the home of Jenny· Smith In
ment fo~ a donation from the
Galllpolls. Refreshments were
sorority to help purchase the
served by Kathy Cumings and
. · cboleaterolscreenlng machine. · 'Patty Pickens.

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Skate-Away for their aanual •atlnl partsr lll'~oll
11 held Ia coajunctlon with Girl Scout Week,
Marcb 11-1.7. March 12, I!! the 78111 anDlversary of
Girl Scoutll, tb&amp; world's wreat voluntar'
or1111llallon lor glrll. ·

. · BOW LOW CAN YOU GOT - Melp County Girl
Scoull try tllelr lkUli at the Limbo Stick - roller
lkatla1 style. Scoutll tlirou1bout the B11 Bead
• Servjce Unit, Wblcb aervell all of the county,
'1ilthered Satlll'day afternoon at tbe . Cheater

School from 9-11:30 a.m. dal,ly.
An '·oreanlzatlonal meetlne will
be held on March 14 at 10 a.m.
A tatl!er-son banquet Is belna
planned tor June 30 at 5:30p.m.
at the church..
other buatness discussed was
that VIsitor cards were dlatrlbuted and sunslilne basket gills '
were .collected.
DevotloDI were glven'·by Debllle Pickens and refreshments
were ~erved by Delores Frank,

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btrt'hday
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BOYS Baalretball awUd wlllnera at Monday nlgbts aporia
banquet were aeated from left to rlgilt Cary Betdog All-TVC
Aclldemlc teun, Honorable Mealloa AIJ.TVC and Most Valuable . ·
· Oflel,llllve Player Blld Jay Humphreys Most Valuable Defenalve · ·
Player. : S&amp;andiJ!r Mike Parker senior ill811ager. Absent, waa
Robbie Flelda reboUDdlai award.

AARON Sbeets (L) and, i!:l'lc Beck (R) bolh received awards lor
Flna Team AIJ.TVC and TVC All-Academic teiunl, Sheets wu the
TVC Most Valuabie Wrestler. Absent waa Bun Kennedy !\lost
Improved.
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TAI~II'iiO A .REST - Melp County Girl Scouts

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MEQERS ol the Marauder cheerleadllll ·

squad ·lhat received awards fo' AII-TVC Aca-

Gallia's Kristi

demlc. team were from left to rlgbt Darcl Wolfe,
Amy Warth and Kristen S.l awter.

MARAUDER girl&amp; team receiving awards at
Monday nl1bt bUJquet were aelled from lett to '
rtchl..tennlfer Taylor All TVC Academic team,
Ali·TVC Flrst:Team and Best Delea.ave PlaYer,
Shanaoa Newsome Most Improved. Secelld row

Thoinas named

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from left to right Missy Nelson AIJ.TVC .\cademlc
team, Kelb' Smllb AIJ.TVC Ac&amp;demlc team,
AII•TVC First Team UJd Most Valuable Offensive
Player lind Trlcla Baer Most Improved 111d
AII·TVC Academic teun.
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Van Reeth top
Division II coach

to UPI's First ·Team All-Ohio
By GENE CADDES .
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Garfield
Heights Trinity's Vonda Ward, a
6-foot-6 package of agility and
ability, heads up the 1990 United
Press International girls Dlv·
lslon II AII·Ohlo basketball team·.
Ward, only a junior, was the
overwhelming choice as the
Division II player of the year In
balloting by coaches from
around the state.
Joining her on the All-Ohio first
team were seniors Charlene
Gibson of Goshen, Lynn Holi:man
· of North Royalton and Krist!
' Thomas of GaiUpolls and junior
Christa Wells of Millersburg
Welt Holmes.
Ward, the only first team
repeater from a _y ear ago,
averaged 23.4 points, 13.5 rl!·
bounds, 3.3 steals, 4.4 assls ts ahd
4.8 blocked shots this seasOI) as
Trinity J101 ted ·a 17-3 regular·
ieuon record.
"Sbe (Ward) Is a great athlete
whO juat happen• to be tall," Is
the way Trinity Coach Pat Dlulus
descrlbel hll 18-year-old 'star,
who alao bas an equally lmpresllve't.4 Jl'lde point average.
Thoee figures , along with her
size, make Ward one ot the moat
eoveted player• In the natiOn by
·
collep coaches.
"Riaht now, she's being recruIted by the ruung cla.ss of

women's basketball," said Diu- points per game the past season,
COLUMBUS, Oblo (UPI) Ius. "She can't make a bad while Holzman scored at a 25.2 Jack Van Reetb, wbo guided
decision. Wherever she-winds up, averaee and Gibson 24.9. .
Millersburg WI!SI Holmes to yet
It's go!ngto be a great
and
Five Ienior• made up the .another unbeaten regular sea·
a great program." ·
All-Oblo second team. Tl)ey were son, has been voted the United
Dlulus said Ward's ll.st 11 down 6-4 Sylvl@ Crawley ot Steuben· Press International girls Dlv·
to 10 schools right now 'a nd she • ville, 5•fl Marti. ·Dunlap of
lslon II coacl) ot the year.
plans to have It trimmed tb five COpley. 5-11 Kory Flelltz of
by next fall when she will make Richfield Revere; 6-toot Alison Senior, 22.0. 'l111BD TEAM '
her official visits.
· ··
Oolnlck of Oak Harbor and 6-toot
Debbie Blazek, Bellaire; ~7, Junior,
. Among those seeking Ward's Tracy Lynn of Warren 18.!.
Krl~ll Echelbercy, Mantua Crestwood,
services are · national pOwers Champion.
6-o, Junior, 18.4.
Tennessee, Texas, Stanford; Au•
·, Named to the third team were
Jenny KuUca. Can Geld, :HI, Sophomore,
bum and Loulslans Tech, along 5-10 Kim Kraft of Hamilton Badin 20.5.
Kim Krait, HamUtanBadln. 5-10, Senior,
with Ohio State.
and 6-2 Shannah, Mcintosh of
.
" All have told me Vonda·could Preble Sbawnee, both aenlors, 5-7 21.6.
Shannah Mclntoah, Preble Shawnee. 6-2.
step In and play for them right Debbie AUazell ot Bellaire and
Senior, 25.1.
,
8PII:QAL Di'mON
now," aald Dlulus. .
&amp;-toot Kiiatl Ecbelberry ot ManBelinda
Cer10r, Pl&gt;namoulh; Heather
To emphasize Ward's excep- tua Crestwood, both juniors. and
O.nnll, Shelby; Tract. Knapke, TIIJP Clly
tional agility, Dllllus noted that, Jenny KI!IICB of Cantjeld, a 5-6 11ppecanoei Jenaltl!l' M111. Nortb Royal·
tm; Shorrlf!Dpn, Urbano: Lora Vanden·
as a 6·3 freshman at Trinity, lhe aopboll,lpre. ,
bark,
Oroadoo Tri-Valley.
.
played mldflelder on the school's
COLUMBUS, Olllo !UP!) - Tho '19!Kl
HONOILtiiLE Ml:i'mON
,UnHed Prtoa lnternatiGIIal DlvlaiGII 11
soccer team, , i poiltlon wh~re
Comella AuaUn, Toledo Ubboy; Cindy
llrla . AII-Dhlo bu•etba1i team, with'
Baker, Elida; Melllaa ilu)Ofl, Av111
agility Is a must.
lielpt, ~&lt;hod }'IIIII' ud 1&lt;0~01 avera1 e:
Lake; Tracie Balaol, Bellalrt; Fraaclrle
"She certainly Is a great JIOit
ftUTD.UI
Clculo, Strutboro; ·Amy Co !bum, A.lhvllle
up player," said Dlulils, "but abe
Charll!lo Clla111, Comm, 5-8, Senior, Teays Valley; Erika Fryer, Ketlll'ln•
2U.
.
.
•Alter; Kim Fair, M l - ' 1 Weot
runs, the floor very well. It. sbe
LyM llolllnal!, North lloyaltGII, 5-11, lfolmao; Monica Carnn, ColumlNa Htr·
ateala the ba14 abe'a able to go the
lealor21J,
u,y; DlaneClnB~Woad, eo..,....., car~u~
tu II lengib of the floor and lay It
iiiils ft.-. Oll ..lllt, I-tt, ........ Hariman. WarrwnCitampton; Loltllemll1-. Clal ..lllol Allly Hambtl. PbUo; Karla .
ln. Co!Jeae cotchel Jutt looll at
VOIIda WII'CI, Glrflald lfellltta 'Malty,
Kllf, Willard: Kim Kldnor, Udtlq
ber In awe."
·6-e,Ju-.21.2.
Vallty; ShaW!III Moen, EciiMl Soulh;
West Holmea' Wells, at 5-6, wu
Cbrllta Wtlla, MIUerabufl West
JOIIDY O'Co-1, Clnol-tl Mown Notre
llamt", Ott RltCIII', Callm; Cooy Still·
the top scorer on the Ali·Ohlo Holmtt. S.e, Jnlor, 21.0.
IUOND 'l'hll
aan. ...utGII; Kim Sd!lllf. Carfleld
lint team, averagl.q 28 pobtta
llytN Cra•ley, SteulloiiYtllo, H S•
HtllfllaTrtnlty; Cindy SINmakll', Parma
nlor, 11.0.
. .
per game In leading the Knights
PadUa: Jtnnlfii'Whltloy, Lebuan; .Taqy
Mlrti Dunlap, Cbploy, 5-11, Bootor,16.7. Wllllama. DaytGII Cltamlnade-Juu.,ne;
ot coach-ot.tbe;year Jack Van
Kory n.uta. Richfield RIIWJ't, 5-8,
JtMI Yonta. TbomYllle Shll!l'ldan.
Reeth to a 20-0 record and tbe No.
Setttor. 21.0.
·
PltnHH·~,.ar.:.VooU Wanl, Gar·
Allllll COIIUdt, Oak Harbor, 6-0, Soolor.
1 ratlna;
.
laid .......a Trllllf.
The 5-10 Thomas averpd 2U 17.1.
Clo•'* ,...,~,........,... Vu • - ·

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Tracey

1'

LYnn.

war,.n CltompiGII, 6-0,

held Ia March aa aa activity of Girl Scout Week. .
Thlt year's skating party was held Saturday
afternoon.

of aU
lbelr moma and tllelr leaden, always
, enJoy '
annual skaiiDJ party at Chester
Skate-Away. The annual county-wide pari)' Is

"·

Ml-11 Weal
·~

Bt-.

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Club meets ·

Hollen birth
, Mr.

·se:

~.~gsch, Wcoelllt~unn;
.Mrty
. an4.d.H~'hne\Dal~w·Isnd.

EMva

· ' · Call or visit you nearest
Central · Trust office for' details today.

Sl 0,000 MIN.UM DEPOSIT ..
Mu imum depoait 199.999.99. Subarantlll penalty for e11ly withdrawal
\
lm&lt;rar paid 10 principal and mmpaunded wwlrly.lttea effective Mirth 9 '1990
1nd 1ub1ect to change wirhout nocft. Yield,•urn• rh• Jtated ract r~ain 1 '
oonsanr for a ' fuU year wirh no withdnwtla of inr~rm or prilkiptl.

THE CENTRAL TR:UST COMPANY
The Bank That Make• Thin!• Happen.

982·1881

441-0102

Ml!l!lleport .

Galllpola

.u.rdl UVBftOCII &amp;.. CUJII ·:.

·

•.

M.mb" PDIC

Buzzard
in pageant
Kerb! Jovonne Buzzard,
daughter . ot Kermit and KeJiy
Buzzard, Middleport,· recent~
competed In the 1990 Oh lo Tiny
Miss Coveratrl Paeeaht held In
Grove City.
·
.
·
Sbe recleved ~ 27 out ot 35
possible points In ber first
pageant. Sh~ was &amp;J10naored by
P.D.K. · COnstruction· ot Pomeroy; People's Clio lee VIdeo's and
Feeney Bennett Post 128 Amerl·
can Legion, both ot Middleport.
She Is the maternal grand:
daughter of John and Delores
Tyree. "''.tlddleport; and the vat·
ernal granddau&amp;hter of Carl and
VIrginia Buzzard , ·Newton, ·
· W.Va.

h
r a',.,ter meets
'1'

'McPHS to receive certification
The Meigs County Pioneer and
HlsiDrlcal !ioclety, Inc. bas completed all requirements for or·
aanlzatlonal certification by the
Ohio Alaoclatlon of Historical
Soclellea and Museums.
Certtlcatlon Is awarded by
O~SM to historical organlza·
Ilona In Oblo that have achelved
bulc professional standards In
JOvernance. finance, collections
management, and educational
pi'Otfl'ammine.
The Me_!~ C?unty _Pioneer and

Historical SOCrety, Inc. will receive Its oltlclal certification
award at the OAHSM region 8
annual meeting to be held at the
Vinton COunty HIJtorlcal Society
In McArt~tur on March 24.

IIAIT TO HUIT EIING
THUISDAY, IMICII U-71G0 'p.t~~.
I'I.WANT VAIIEl IIOSI'II'Al

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Curl

.

trt

can

304 675·4340

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~~~j,::::e~t ~:r:e~rtbC:.U:~

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.

Feb. 23 with a party'at hll bome
~~.=ta::..
~.... In Dearborn Hetabta, MlciL
":'&amp;': lft~ •oetirl .,::~ , Ice cream cake de!:Orated like
Jaret ,._. _ • train wu . ,ser.ved to thQie
Tile~~~ or liMo club ..w bt 011 attehdlng,
::'aa."U'Jin.fa'l'111:'~eda~~
He received m.UJY cards ~nd
.hl!l'f dtCIIdad 011 Wllat Pl'llltell till!' ... • altts.

~~esting

.

.Uae .t. JUtDRICK

.. . . r;::;;~:~::-:-:::-;.1~.s.:,.;-"'"'-N-O~W-:-S:-1-:::-1:-:,,~

· Teltlna

of llldiVtcluall lnter'et.-clln worldlll wlth the 1990
ceal1ia wtll be belcf M81'Cll :13 at
tile Melgt County Public
Library·
·
Tlltlqtlmeswillbe&amp;:aoa.m.
aDd 1:80 p.m. and tholl taklnl
tlletett muat brln&amp; two foflll!l of
ldtnUflcatlon.
More Information may be:
obtained by calll.q the Meigs
Co1IJlty Public Llbpry.

,.

·

11111

CUSHION TOPS ••••••••••'-•·..-·•·•-•..-....

IACIN•1li
-

11•1

You'll
Save 25°/o OFF
.
This Wttk On Any Item
·With A GrHn Tagll

65 C

,Spring Merohandlel
, . .. . .:.
Leu markup. 1.. more rueona b1 a prloes I

•••
'

· Marc Aaron Hedrlclt, son ot
Jeft and Marcy (Sexaon) Hed·

Jltilllllu41afiiJOIIIOII',Lerllfl.a•dero.

.·..•

TOPIC. Eot s.-t .._ ..... 0111.
F• Metro lllf••tlen

H..;...]_ 'ck. b' hda.

11:::!:*it' J:::'•~•;;i'lt.~r::r.:_

=•=

Th.e 7-Day-Premium CD
is another example of our
Commitment To Customers.

a

on the bluejay, noting It has a winter eating. The bluejay Is
The February meeting of the
clear musical whistle-call un- member of the crow and magpie
Wildwood Garden Club was held
like the notes of any other bird.
recently at the home of Dorothy
family and Is known for robbing
other IJird's nest by eating the
Smith. .
. ·
The meeting opened with devoShe noted,that they build their young birds and the eggs.
tions by Held! Elberfeld readfng
nest of sticks, bar.k strips . .rags,
Peggy Moore reported on the
"SeasoningS" taken from Psalm
paper, or any handy material. wren stating thalfewblrdsare as
71:6. · Roll call was taken with . She went on to say that they blilld friendly to people. It Is known for
everyone showing an evergreen on low branches of a bushy tree · Its busy nest bUilding and cheerand prefer evergreens. They lay ful song, They create a nest In ·
specimen they had brought.
The club will save all glass
four to six greenish but! brown any cavity, a hole In a tree trunk
Items for recycling as a 'money
spotted eggs. The birds feed on or a crevice in a rock, using small
ants, termites, grasshoppers, twigs, pieces of Iabrie, patches of
making project.
.• For 'the program, birds were crickets, and worms . They hide paper and string. They lay tour to
discussed. Doris Grueser spoke acorns under the bark ottrees for six white eggs speckled with ·
brown There are 63 species In the
world. The wren Is valuable to
gardeners, because they feast on
,,
grasshoppers, beetles, spiders,
'and Mrs. Mike 'Hollen
ticks, and plant lice.
(Sherry Holtz), Cincinnati, anFollowing the program, games
nounc~·. the birth of th~lr second
were conducie~ per talnlng to
child, a daughfer, Sarah Catbe- ,
birds, wttb prizes going to
.
Pauline Eynon, Dorothy ~mltb,
rlne, ' q.·n Jan.~ 25 at Betbeada
Hosp1141 In Cll)!:innatl.
. '
· .. and Juanita Will.
Tb~- 1ntanl· weighed tour
For the arrangement or the
J!OUnd ~nd 14 ounces and was 18
month, Doris' Grueser bad an
inch Jpng. '
.· . '
· arrangement using pine cones,
·Mr. ! and Mfs Holli!n have
. a·r borvltae and a red bird tlgu~noth1r daughter. Laut;a"Alexrlne In a wicker basket. ·
ander, 18 m(ln~· ,
.
Evelyn Hollon bad two flower
. Mat rna! gloarldparent$ · are
specimens, a miniature rose and
nd Mrs. : Mli!f SJvl&amp;er.~
fee follies daffodils'.
·
!lYra
Paterbaf;• gr.a, ~pa,r~ ·· ·
Following the meeting, a des- ·
ents · rl! Mr. ,. and Mgs, Blili;
sert course was served by Mrs.
Powel tlnclnnatl, and Mr. and
, SUAH c. HOIJ..EN
· Smith "to · the members · and
,
· ·
. Evelyn Hollon won the hostess
Mr. a, ~ Mrs. Larry ·Hollen,
1
Ml~ta .
Mn. Harold Swleer, Core, · gift.
.• ·
Great· grandparents are Mrcs.' W.Va.; $lid Mrs. Dorothy Myers,

Mr.

Enjoy the flexibility and liqNidity of a CD
· which is automatically renewable and redeemable
at each 7 day anniversary •
·

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AIMEE Rupe (L)· 111d Amy Epple (R) !'!Celved aenlor
cheerleader awards at Monday nights Melp IJlgb Schoo' Wiater
Spqrta 8aJ!quet.
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271 tn
lwlll
S•c•••
Middleport, Ohio '

�Ohio

Community
calendar

TJi:ETll
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TVESDAY

POMEROY
Phi Chapter,
Sorority wtll
·. p.m. 'at die
Church.

...
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• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

-The Ohio Eta . .

Bela Sigma Phi
~ 'J'IIel4ay, 7
Grace Epllcopal

TO PLACE ~N AD CALL 992·2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY

POMEROt ....:;' .-Tile Melp
CoUIIty Cbalnber of Commerce
will bold Ill
·IUDCheon
meeting 011 Tue.day ,IIOon, at the
seniOr cltlzena center In Pome- · ·
roy. Guest speaket will be Roaer ·
Manley.
··

,;/

re.utar

'

POUCIU
p ... .,

CHECKING OUT. THE ENTRIES - 1 Bernie
Anderson, left, and Bonnie Althouse were among
the '280 people tbat attended Monday evening's

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Approximately 200 people attendedMondaynlght 'sacademlc
fair at Pomeroy Elementary.
A total of 198 entries were
judged by· Linda .Warner, John
Costanzo, Darlene Ryan; and
David Strang.
·.' ·
. A new award this year, the
Bonnie Marlene Fisher MemorIa! Award, went to Stacy Reed.
She recleved trophies · plus her
name on a plaque that will hang
In the front hallway. Each year,
the best or show student !r.om the
academic fair wUl have his or her
name added to th~ Pl.aque.
Erin Krawsczyn won the best
social studies award. The best
science award was won ·by A.llne
Brown. Winning the bes danguage - arts award was 'Thn
McGraw .
· ·Winning In the morning kindergarten class of Mary Carolyn
Wiley were Charlie Gilmore,
J.D. Jenkins, and Carrie Abbott.
In the afternoon class, the
winners were Kerry Bartle!,
Chuck Aelker, Kimberly
McDaniel.

Winners In Jamte Blaettnar's
first grade class· were Nicholas
. Dettwlller, Andy Davis, and .
Emily Stivers. In Carol Ohlin, ·· ger's class the winners· were
Melissa Brewer, Shannon Price;
and Julia Kennedy.
Second grade winners In Julia
, Vaughan's claws were Jackie
Buck, Julie Spaun, and Amber
Blackston. In Suzy Carpenter's
class the winners were Tim
McGraw, Wesley • ThQI!ne, and
Todd Daniels.
Jennifer Lamber, ·Jessica Matson, and Ben MOlden were the
winners In Kathy .Haley's third
grade class, and In Linda Zarnoch 's. class, the winners were
Sean Powell, Courtney Scarbzrry, and John Davidson. ·
In Judy Carter's D.H. Grade
Level 1 and 2, the winners were
Priscilla, Lilley,_ John Cleland,
and Jeremy Brlckles. ·
In Bryan Zirkle's fourth grade
class, the winners were Adam
Thomas, Cl:lay Crow, and Jerica
. Clark. In Marjorie Gibbs, Class,

the ·WI~n!!rs were David Anderson, Steven McCullough, · and
Scott Sellers. · · ·
Stacy Reed, Heather McLain,
and Jes.s lc a McElroy, were the
winners in Linda Stanley's fifth
grade class. In Debbie Sebert's
class the winners were Erin
Krawsczyn, Taryn Doidge, and
·
Julie King.
In the sixth grade class of Julie
Hubbard the winners were Anile
{lrown, Ladeana Grover, and
Palma Wiles. In Becky Triplett's
class the winners were Suzanna
Henderson; Bert · Mash, ·and
Heather Knight. •
.
In Mary ·Stewart's D.H. Level .
Class _two; three, and. lour, the ·
winners were Rex Flowers '
Rocky Sharrer, and Dwayn~
Madison. In the L.D. class for
grades four, five, and six, of
Betsy Horky, the winners were
Mike Klein, Andy Kitchen and
Russell Robinson.
·
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The academic fair ·was under
the dlnictlod of sixth grade
teacher, Becky Triplett.
'

. WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - A representative from Congressman Clarence
MllieF's office will conduct an
open door selsion from 11-a.m. to ·
1 p.m. Ia the COurt House.
Anyone with questions concernIng the federal government Is
encouraged to attend.
MIDt&gt;LElPOR~

-The Middleport l:lterary Club will meet
Wedpl!llday at 1: 30 p.m. at the
home of Mrs. Eileen Buck. Mrs.
Daniel Thomas will review the
book '!Fatal Shore." Rollcall will
be answered with an unusual fact
about Aust;ralla.
POMEROY - The license
bureau In Pomeroy will be closed
Wednesday and Thursday due to
ronstruction inside 'the building.
The bureau will reopen Friday at
!I a.m.

POME~OY -The Willing
Workers Class of the Enterprise
United Methodist Church will
, meet at the home of ~gnes Dixon
on Wednesday.
•
RACJli!E - The Southern Local OAP:&gt;E·453 will tneet Wednesday at 7 p.m. in the high school
cafeteria. '

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MIDDLEPORT -The Middie~rt Amateur Gardeners Club
meeting scheduled for Wednes- .
day has been cancelled due to
Lenten services.
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There to pretent the award to Stacy were
members of Mrs. Fis)ler's (ll!fllly, frOm left,
Larry F1!!lbei', son, and Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
(Pete) Shields, parenl8.

FiSHER MEMORIAL AWARD- Stacy Reed,
froat, wu the recipient of the Bonnie Marleae
Flliher Memorial Award given at Monday
evenlnc's academic fair at Pomeroy Elementary.

Are you lark or owl?

Ann
Landers
....\111111
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'7 IJIIII11 lllltt IVPlllllll¥ 1.. 11(\
'S t"nltlll~ IS !lOI tfUoi)OIIIIble lor 1711 011. :.her hfSI

tur 111trurs hut CIM\1 ad 1111"

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f

Dar Aaa I a'llerl: I read- with·
i n - yru- rc:aponse 10 die woman
inTOil*ewhowrolieaboutmoming
JIIICIPie.llld .niaht pqlle. y qu called
dian "lllb" IIIII "owiL" You cers.illy~younc:U'whellyousaid,

"1'111 • owl, IIIII I don't give a hoot

who knows iL; .
l can't inlalinc: why myonc: would
1n1 lbout such a thing. It's people
lib you who can't pa up Sunday
IIIOCIIlngllld ao 10 chun:ll or •to it
tblldleirchilchll hive a hot bmkt'ast
IIIII a popal) chucd l'or ~ehool.
I do believe in illtallll clocb llld ·
• . - lhlt mellbotilm can be a
f.:lllr illlllliljj OUipll, bulM awful
lot- il il if* pllin hlbit,llld habits

· After 12 yc:m ofhalinaiD heir die
alann so off andlhgjna IIIUidhalf
~ lllllil noon, I liked to be Jill on
. the IWillg tlblft. Ani, ilimpmwd my
life 100 peac:ent. I could jal&amp; die d
ltappillell.

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IN SPECIAL SERVICES - Blaine aad Chrlatlne Bowmlin will
conduet apeclal aervJCel at lbe Rejolclnl' Life Cbut:eb In
Middleport 011 AprU 8 Md 7 at 7 p.m., and AprilS allO a.m. They
will conduct servlcee wtth music and preachlnlf. Their music is
moderm cilunlry and llchtcontemporary style music. Pastor Mike
·Panpo Invites the public lo ·at~nd.

STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
NOTICE OF HEARING
CQNTAACT SALES
LEGAL COPY NO. 90-380
In eccordence wtth the
PfOViaiono of Chaplor 51111
of tho Ohio Aovleed Co~
tho Director of,tho OhicrDe·

Star Grange
meetin:g conduct~d .
Several acllvjtles Including ine1 "
state sewing contest and the'
grange banquet were announced
at the recent meeting ot Star
Grange held at the hall.
. The sewing contest ·Willl be
held on Aprll7 and the banquet on
Friday, April 20, at 7: 15 p.m. at ..
. 11le Salisbury Elementary
School Patty Dyer wlll be ,the
speaker and there wllihbe enter- .
tal.nment by Denver Rlce.
. Tickets are $6 tot adults and $5
for children and are available
from any . subordipate grange
.
master. .
A work . session was set for
March 25 beginning with a
potluck·dinner at 1 p.m. followed
by clean up around the grang~
haiL
Katherine Riley conducted the ·
literary program on the theme
"Brightening of Our Days."
Readings included "Sylvia
Would Not Take the Garbage
Out" . by Opal Dyer, "To a
Dandelion" by Christina Napier,
"Problem with Peanut Butter"
by: Katherine Riley, ' 'The Foolish
Gllrdner" by Patty Oyer. "A St.
Patrick's Day" by Evertt Holcomb, "Story of the Snake" by
Ray Midkiff, ''Snakes St. Patrick
Drove 'Out of Ireland" by Katherine Riley, "First Love" by Neva
Nicholson, ''Spring's Prayer'' by

partment of Traneportation

seFnlce Midkiff, . "lrl_sh· Blesslng" by Wald Nicholson, and "Ail
Old Irish Blessing" by _.;,Rick
Macomber.
.·
It was announced that beginnlng· In April tbe meeting time
will change back to 8 p.m on the
first Saturday of each month.
catherine Colwell was presepted with a women's activities
certificate. There were 31
members and juniors present for
the meeting.
·
·.
·
. Fun nl&amp;ht activities will be held
March 17 a t 6:30 p.m. at the
Salem Center fire station: It will
begin with a potluck supper
followed by games and acllvl.ties .
·

will hold a public .hearing 11
1:00 P.M. Tuoodoy, March
27, 1980, ot the VIllage
Gymn•ium, 320 E. Moin
StrHt. Pomeroy. OhiO for
the pu.._ ofholfinglllt•

menta on the prooo•d 1m·

provement1 of • portl6n of

I get euctly the lllllllllll d
sleep
thl&amp;
I...SID
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III&amp;Iao_,.
I*!Wbi'*'•
.
Y•'D lfi_,lal*l wllc:n the: rat anive a ... jDIII!eeiiJ Mb .y.l
now cleMU.O.ODDliiiiCiclollundly
hleeJO crawl ilut d
II MilOt ID ~ ID
· bidaiiiOIIIOI,-ALAIUCINSlOOX Iller
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up
lljll
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tor
tbe biL Too bid I
PAU-l
.
tllllll't
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on
to
die lrlt-owl synDIAl SICUX PAlLS: You m1111
wjrp, lady. dllllle,aaiiCJ.

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H&lt;11J,P V Ads
V~rd S illm;

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::'o!:::~!::t:lym-:~r:.'l.:~

from o ito (unction wHh
Slota Route No. 1 24jlridge
; · thencil In o· ooulh·
· Btr
1tlrlctlon alonll ex·
loting
allouta No. U. 8.
331ift' State Aouto No. 124
and .:8 new alignment, •
tangllit ond 1 curve to tho
right• to ita propoaod junelion with State Aou• No.
124: '! hence in a weolerly elireclion along I tongant (exiotlng Stall Houta No. U. $ .
33) to a poinhndthoralerminote. Sold point of terminotion being 0.11 ole mile,
more or lets, •• me•ured in
o weotorly dlroction from ito
existing junction with •tete
Houta No. 124. Sol~ de·
ocribed Improvement heving notolllngth ol0.18 ofa
mlle. more or IMo.
PROPOSED, THE
IMPROVEMENT OF
STATE ROUTE NO. 124
SITUATED IN THE
VILLAGE OF POMH.OY.
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO,
BY THE
RECONSTRUCTION OF
THE ROADWAY .
And being more fully do·
acrlbed eo folowo:
Beginning It a point in the
' cenlerline of exioling Steto
Route No. 124, Aid point
being at ito junCtion wHh the
improved State Route No.
U. S. 33: thonce in an aoo·
terly diroction on n- olion·
mont, • curve to the right
ond continuing to. a point in
the .centerline
of Stele
Route No. 124 .a nd there
torminete. Said point of tormin~ion being 0. ~1 of o
mil. m~&gt;re or leoa, 11 mil·
oure~ln 'on -terlydil'liCtion
from • its exilling junction
with Bille Houta No. U. S.
33. Sild daocr-lmP&lt;ovemont (\wing a total length of
0 .01 of • milo, moro or lou.
At , Chla hwlng, mtpo
ohowlrig
the propolld
chM- end alternate locetiono (to tho Jllta highway
"VNiil be diaplayed.

STATE AUTO
OffER~.:

SOMETHING
SPECIAL
' '

It's tile SERIES ONE .
Buslneu Polley...
packaged protection for'
retail stores, offices,
cllurclles, apartmentS,
drug stores~ SlmpUfled'
In content, convenient
In format and very
··
affordable.
.

Beginning at I point~ the
centerline of e~r.i1ting State
Route No. U. S. 33 and
Stote Route No. 124. uld
point . .lng 0.07 of a mile,

.

OGAN ~
RNER\.~
.. nnce~wlea

·. 214 EAst Mllll Sl.
' POIIIIOY

991-6617

a ....... .

~ ._ • . 5

l

I
!

1Jn Memory

2

IN MEMORY OF
' Ol.lA MOTHER

ANOWIFE
LORI!NA G. AULT
ON THIS. HER

BIRTHDAY,
MARCH 13 1990
We often ·'81t and
think of her when

=~

tor,;,I!R·
I!IT. Your"- IIIOftllllift. .
teNit on 1 prln a'p II Mel •
oond ....,. le
ful.
ly decluctlllle. t1o IIIWf. for

we are all alone.

'a:i:*

For

morta••
... out .... O..
taller

11. 1117Kihl dldUCIIIon

- .. lllillled talll .........
11on ...- ··~ ••• ., ,DDO;aoo

.. " ........... ~-.. ·
.......,00.1100.
lll••••t

••'

.,,leilllll ....

.,-, l"'bdtotlleemount of nit bwiNbl.,tlnaotM plua. for1-.•
2cn. ,_.out llllount.
· ·
·
Do you havto qu. .loM about -the 1M '-allffMI your 1'81um~ Colli

.,.,ory is 1111

only friend ' 1hat
grief can call Ill
own
Like Ivy on the whh··
erad t oilk, whan·
Oth8r thlnga de·
cay, '

Our love for her wjH

"*·

ltlll 'knp graan
end

never fade

away,
Mlllld very 'much
by Ill and e klde:
Chry, Celllt-., Kay.

•

'

. '1

D111nla, PINk, Mtrri
a thalr flmlllea

Jan. 1, '11 ....... 42.131.70
Fund Cooh ........
· 12/ 31/81 ....... 31,124.12
NONEXPI!NDAILE
TRUST FUNDI
RECEIPTS
C....... lor ller·
vlceo ........ .. ........1.110.00
MIICIII-uo .... ......... l .lll
TOTAL liE·
CEIPT8 ............1.111 .H
OISIUHIEMEIIITB ....- 0Tote! """" Over/Un·
der Dlob............. 1.111.111
Tranofwo-

Security

Pro~ ......... 184, 1911.39
LelauN mo
Activit1M ............ I ,080.49
IMio Utllty
S...,lceo., ........ ll1.188.62
Tronoport.tion .... .. 311 ,141 .99
Gen...l Government .......... ,.111.182.39
Peroonal
·
Seivlceo ........ :189.926.81
Contractuol

ftr'A~=u·ioii'E3:811.112 To";~~;iiui:ia'l-· 12&amp;.87 . -.:o~i."oriiiiii' i'iiil'.'~gJ:~ sS.:.:;l:"o;;ii·ilil~'·zaua

M~NTI ........ 871,741.81
Total Recalpto 0..,/
Under Dlob ...... C8,110.1151
OTHER FINANCING
SOURCES (UIEBI
lalo of Fixed
A-o ................. S72.00·
Other Sourcoo/Nonoper•
otiflv RIIY ........... 3., 17.30
Tranofero
-In ............... 711.ii21.41,
Tranalero
-Out ........... C78.817.231
TOTAL OTHER FIN. SOURCES/(USEB1 ....... (701 .44)
Exc. Acptund Other Fin·

MENTS .... .... 323,340. 14
Total RICIIpto 0-/(Un·
darl Dlob ........ (20.1171.84)
NON-OPERATING
AEVENUEI/(EXPENI£8)
Mlocallanaout ...... II.IU.38
Other Bourcao/Non· ·
operotlng AllY .... 8,128.00
Tranofera
-In ............ .. ... 28.1113.,11
TronofaroOut .............. (21,014. 141
TOTAL OTHER FIN .
SOURCES/
.
CUIESJ ............ 16,1117.38
Exc. Rcptoand Othar

CEB/CUIEI) .. , .... 1103.23)
Exc. Acpto and Other Fin·
ondng 8ourcM 0-/CUn·
der Expocln. Olob .• 011.U-/Net ........... 1.408.32
fund Cuh Balanco
.
1/1188 ....... :.,:72,718.88
Fund C..h lleiM•
12/ 31/81 ....... 74, 111.00
AECEIPTS·T._OTAlS

Trono..,.oIn ................ 101,034.10
Tronolero·
Out .... .......... (101.034.101
TOTAL OTHER FIN. SOUR·
CES / CUIEI) .... 1 I , 7417.89
EAxc. Rcptund Other fin.
Sour- OvaroCUnder) Expend . Dlob . • Other
U-/ Net ....... (13.123.21il
F~nd Coohlo181101
1 / 1/ 88 .. ..... :.517,478.7!1
Fund Caoh Balance
12131 / 88 .....104,31111.114
Tr-ury
, Bolonco .. ... .: ...97.1177. 79
1owoa1mento .... 437,878.78
Bolonce ........... l38,11114.117
~~~~ndlng .... (31. tel.o31
· BALANCE ... ,.. &amp;04,31111.!14
SUMMARY OF
INDEBTEDNESS
OUTSTANDING
JAN. 1. 1881MortVOI!e ·
Aovenuo .......120.000.00
G.O. Not... .... 214.3S3.44
TOTAL ............ 774.383.44
NEW ISSUES 1888 ... -0~
RETIRED 1889Mong.go
AIIVInue .. ,... ..... 30,000.00
G.O.Notao .... ... .. ll.821,42
TOTAL.- ............1!1!.825.42
OUTSTANDING

Mortgage
Revenue ....... .. 410,000.00
0 .0. NotM ...... 114,1ti8.02
TOTAL ............ 174,11118.02
THIS IS AN UNAUOITEO
FINANCIAL STATEMENT
I certify thlo report to be ·
correct ..,d true to ..,. be.t
of my knowladge.
Jon Buck, Clerk-Tr-.
3/ 10/ 90
237 Race St..
Mldcfloport, OH . 41710
1114) 882·1424
(31 13. 1tc

•

. Public Notice

arlelo .............. ,.77, 128.87
NOTICE OF
Coplbll'
APPOINTMENT
:?_ubttlo~ .............. 71 ,1108.31
OF FIDUCIARY
DAY BHOAE PUBLICATION
.,.
On Morch 7, 11110. In the
11 OQ A M SATURDAY
Service ......... ...73,9111 .112
Meiga County
Probate
2 00 P M MONDAY
TOTAL
0188UIISE·
Court,
CuoNo.
28551,
Eorl
2.00 PM TutSbAY ,,
MENTS
..
...
1,200,088.71
A.
Grimm,
11334
Aodwood
2 .00 PM WEDNESDAY
Total Acpto Over/ Un·
Rood,
Columbon, OH .
2 .00 PM TH...,RSt:&gt;AY
der Oiob........ (28,870.841
.43229 Wll oppointecl e...
2 IJO PM FRIDAY
.
OTHER FINANCING
cut~ of the Htlll of Hirold
SOUACEI/(USES)
B. Grimm. docoaoecl,loie of
Locel taxoo ...... 218,11111.13 Mlocll·
848 Broodwll'f, Recine, OH . ,
lnt-govornml!ftlal
.
loneouo ............S,932.38
46771.
!lovenut ......... 381. 112.12 Solo of Flxod
Robert E. Buell,
Chargao for
Aoaoto .................. 672.00
Probot.e Judgo
Mopo, drewingo, W1VIron·
S.rvlcoo ......... 371,493.46 Other Sourc•INonLena K. NHoelroad. Clerk
l.!o~it:;!dn~g!.S~o:u:::rc:!eo~O~-=/~(~U!:;n-;,J.,:~!!;Sou::_::rcM:;;.g;~~;j~F~In::•:;.·!LI~con=-=:..·
.L;o~p:er:•~tln~g~A~IIY:·;.;·;;;
.. -!9.~2!43~-!30~~0~E~C~.!3~1.~1~9~S~8=-~'--_J~(~31~1~3~.~20~.~2~1~.~31&lt;::.__..;_
mental
doto, other
pertinoi\t
informetkm
dBVeloped
by 1•
tho Tranoportat!on Depert·
ment. 'lnd any written corn.

s
·
u
8 n
.
:~~~nr:=~".:!=~~~~~
1 ess ervtces
~;::;:::::::::::::1:::::::::::::::::1~:::::::::::::::1~::::::::::::::;-r;::::::::::::::~r.::::::::::::::::
GUN SHOOT
J&amp;L
i2
'INSULATION
!•___

e

.'

Plonning
Fedarol
mureM, JIOonClao.
Rnr.nmn,
and
AgondM.
Locel
Public Officialo ond Agoncloo, and Publc Advlaory Groupo will be

-IIAilPOUS-2 doors
lr"" f'Oif office
·~
MllftNOS.:

madll avlllllabla to the pUblic
for vftiflg at the tranepor-

tation 11ilportmMI' o Olotrict
Office, Mu*ingtum Drive,
Morlltta, Ohio.
Anyone wlahlng to oubmit
a written eutement or ••·
hlbit concer~lng thlo ·ProiiCI
moy do ao by p,..,ting Het

~~~

•

1,. .....,

6138 ~

.Join Ull
446·7133 ·2- ••
1 mo
·

'

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Wtater Speel1l 0•

3-5.'90-1 mo.

667·3271
Grant A. •wl•rd

7-II.'19-lln

.::~~g~~~IATION

CASH
•VINYL BIDING
DECEMBER 31, 1981 ~
•ALUMINUM SIDING
Total Depoolt
•8LOWN IN
.
. 'Bolen- . .'...: '88.329.00
INSULATION
·Tew irf Oullllndinl
laW..- Md Chedca eo of
12/31119 .......... 884.00
Total of Bel•nca ,'
12/31/89 ..... 811,486.00
SUMMARY OF RECEIPTS.
EXPENDITURES AND
"Frat E11imotea"
BALANCES FOR FISCAL
'
.
YEAH ENDED 12/31/89
949·2101
BOARD OF HEALTH-• .., .... 949-2160
Bai.1/1/I8 .... U1.066.00
Haceipto.......... 210,448.00
.NO SUNDAY CAlLS
4-16-16-tln
Tolll Beginning BaiMce
Plua Rcp11.... 231.503.00
Expondltureo ... 218,338.00
S.lancee
1 Card of Thanks
12/31189 ..... 13,184.00 ;======~::;
TRAILER PAR I!.S &amp;
CAMPGROUNbSThe family of Janet
Bal. 1/11BI ........ 2,131 .00
Aacoipto ................. 800.00
Mitchell w~liaa to
Totti Beg. Sol.
,
thank their many
Pluo Acpto.......... 2,731.00
Exponditureo ...·....... 126.00
frlilnda for flowers,
Bal. 12/31/89 .... 2,808.00
gift•. donations
FOOD SERVICE
and prayer&amp; that
Bal. 1/1/88 ........ 7,693.00
Aocoipto ....... ... .... 6,371.00
were sherld with
Totol Beg. Bol.
them
during their
Pluo Hecpta ..... 12,884.00
Expondltu,. ....... 3.079.00 ,
lou.
Bel. 12/31/88.... 9,815.00
Vernon
Mitchell
STATESol. 1/ 1/89 ...... 67,870.00
and
Aocalpto .. .. ...... 188,4111 .00
Mrs.
Victor
Dent
To~ Beg. Bal.
,
PluaRcpto ...... 248,161 .00
E-dltureo ... 2011,341 .00
Ill. 12131/89 .... 39,810.00 5
Happy Ada
TOTALS'
_ _.;.;,:;~.:..:.:.:.:_ _
Bal. 1/1/89 ...... 88.449.00
Rac0ipto .......... I04,800.00
Tolllllleg. Bal
Pluo Rcpta ...... 483.341.00
Expandllureo ... 427,184.00
Bal. 12/31/89 .... 88.4eii.OO
Jon 0. J-ba. R.S.
Admlnlalrator
131 13. 1tc
---::,...,..-:-:--:---Public Notice

, BISSELL
SIDIN'G CO.

.... ....-..lult .

PH.

Perta

742·3088

•Mobile Home
Rentela
•Lot Renlllo

•Front End

•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT
•AN.YTHII\!G
AT ALL

•Tire Salea

992·7479 . \

,....,.;.

•Brake Work
MAIN n., llnAIID

lt. 33 North of

RACINE
GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOT
EVElY SUNDA I

11

. 9-6·19- tin .

Howard L. Writllll

ROOFING .

NEW- REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

'949-2168

2-1-'!JIH mo.

pJ.

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

-Room Additiono
-GuttarWork
-EIIctrioal • Plumbing
-con-.vvork
-- Roofing
-Interior • El&lt;Uirior
Paint!
.
CFRErrlSTIMATESI
Y. C. YOUNG lit
1'-ror.,

-'

Ohio

·30.'19-2 110.

CUSTOMMT
HOMES &amp; GAUGES

POSITIOtl.
AVAILABLE. IN
· MEIGS COiff'IY ,
'

RECEmo•st NSinON
NOW AVAUII.E
Experienced in Typittg, Filing.
·FULL TIME .PLOYMINT

..,m
Call 99 -7440

1

SER~ICE

2-6-'90-1 ....

Stop In and See
:AT

PAT HILL

liEN'S APPUANCE

'CHIYSLEI..fll YMOUTH
DODGE

SERVIa
992-5335• 915-3561

'" s. """· llldtllepert

AD"oa p,.. Plilt Offlca
POIIDOY, OIH
I0/30fl9 lin

992-5589

2·2·'90- mo.

992-6421

:z:.ze ' 80-,

UNDArS

mo.

STREET
PIZZA

PAINTING &amp; CO.
INTIIIOI IITDIOI

lOWEST PRICES
IIGHEST QUAliTY
FRE£ lOCAl DEUYEIY
POMEIOY AND MIDDLEPORr'S ONLY
lOCAU YOWNED PIZZA SHOP.

FREE ESTIMATES

T•• tho pain out of
pairllillfl.

lot us tlci II far yao.

YDY IIASOtiMIE
HAVE IEFEIDKIS

Ann • ••·

· Piua-Subs-Salads-Daily Specials

(614)915·4110

Iofaro 6 p.no;
11

992-2228

•ciOWAVE
OVEN IIPAII .
ALL MAW

Bring It In Or Wa
Pldt Up.

lEN'S APPUANCE
SEIVICE
992-5335 01' 915·3561
AD'........ Pwt Offke
217 L S.C. P 1 ep
JIOMIIIOY, OliO
31&amp;/'10/tln

Announcement s

TRI·COUNTY RECYCLING
ClffiiS 3 LOCATIONS 10 SIIVE YOU'".

POMEROY. OHIO: AI. 7. I.A. 143
ALIIANY, OHIO: Rt . 110. S.A. 143
HENDERSON. WV.: At. 311 Adj. to SideroEquipmonl
NEW HOURS:
POMEROY: II o.m.· 7 p.m. 7 Doyo
ALIANY: 10 a.m.·l p.m. II DllYJ. Cloeod iundey
HENDEIIIC)III: 10a.m.·l p.m. IDoyo, Cioaodlun. -Mon.

PAYING AS

111

WIIUY
Clean ALL
Dry

TODAY. MAR. 13, 1110
as~ ptl'

!li.; ·

ICIIAP,
Ca~n~a.
:·:3:~~~~~~~f:.il~b~
.i
ETC . .

4

Glv81Way

z ,...... full IIIJnfrd Border
To

""'klnn.

Coflloi, wlh
good homo. 114-112·11:13.

•

21 culolc
IDoltopiir.
1YN 114oMt- · · ••
N
minor
=24:-;.31::.:..- : - - : - : : - - - - - - :

-r....................
·- .
F l - 11ft -

i

from llmbor
l!ripplna, Eeoy IO (10110 a loocl. ,
11(~inl48.
'

Flutly -~~-Collio
- ·· 4 ;'
111111,,
11~:&amp;&amp;11.

-lin Toblrv -~~ cat vary :

'

.,...

-

"SHRUB. 8t TREE

TRIM apd RE·
MOVAL·
*LIGHT HAULING
"FIREWOOD

SUN'S UP TANNING

New U.. ld., lutlantl, Ohio
1 Session .........................~•••••••••••••• s3:5o
6 Senitnl ..................................... '12 .00
12 s.......................................... IJO.OO
15 SluiMis.....- .....
SJS.OO
fiiST VISIT Fl&amp; - POssaI MOlE

I and J CONSIIUCTION

Gar•
lt. lK r
If Clllie

OliO IAUY

m•!IGS

AUTO &amp; TRUCK .

REPAIR .

Alee tnu1iiiiiiH
......t-1611
or ftt-7121
4.25-lfn

,.. -

1121.

Roger Hystll

Off'S APPUAIICI

36629 517
POIIEIOY, OHIO

Midd~port.

1 -11-10-tfn

Work

985-3365

992·21

985-4422

F-ACE
FUIIACI
Al.LMAKU
GAl Oft ELECTRIC.

Repair

PAT HILL FORD

BILl SLACI
991-1169

·JUMACI

CHESTER, OHIO
Custom Built ·
Homes.
Remodeling 8r.

cort rad~ators and
heater corn. We can
also acid bail anti rod
out radiators. Wt also
rlpllir ·Gat Tat*s.

Pl. 949·1101
. ..... 949•1160
Dty ... .....
NO SUNDAY CAW .

PARTS AND llfiVJCI

ElWIN
CONSTRUCTION

DALE HILL

CALL

..•

BISSELL
BUILDERS

6-ZI-'19-tfn .,

We can ~r and re-

tel

Realdentiellr.
Commercial

'

12 Geulie Only

PH. 992·3922

Heating, C..Ung,
lefriteratlon

Storts at 1:00 P.M.
Fac1ory Choked

Homelite, Wellduter.

1- 12-'ti0-1

USED APPUANCES

S...wica

"At lnit lit Prbti"

·---~---

HUMPHIEY'S
CUMATE
CONROL

..

,, Tecumoeh. Briggs &amp;
Stratton.

"LOW ..COIII-110111"

CIEnDr 01110

1·15--'10-tln

992·6215
're still
looking mighty
, fine
At the age of 291
8t s.

Alignment
•Oil Change It Lube

20, South 4th St.
Middlepart, Oh.

fatlor'y dloko
12 Gou• hi.,... Only
Slrkk!ly Enfor. .
'
10-9-tfn

R. L HOLLON
TRUCICitllG

•Mobile Hame

AND SERVICE

enainH
Stock """•lor

RUTLAND TIRE
SALES and
SERVICE

MOBILE
HOME PARk

In llldtlr.,.r&amp;, Oh.

~ATS

For Moat 2 and 4-cycle

6:30P.M.

992-2772

ENTERPRISES

DUMP TRUCK
Sand-Stona-Dirt

tYEIY
SAl. NIGHT

FREE ESTIMATES
•

LomfedatV...yl......

Good Retea
T.L.C.

Iathan lddlnt

VINYL SIDING
VINYl REPLACEMENt
WINDOWS

N...WL~ND

1'----------

CASH I.UII COMBINED
ANNUAL FINANCIAL
REPORT
For The Flacal Yoor Enclod
Dacembar 31, 1111
MIDDLEPORT VILLAGE
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
GOVERNMENTAL FUNO
TYPES
RECEIPTS:
Loool
.
Tox. ........... 2ee.1ee.e3
lnter..,..,..mlftlll
....._ . ........ 311.112.12
Chargao for
hrvlceo .......... 72.211.21

Middloport&lt; Ohio 457611

SlnWORK • ~ADS
CLEARING

(61'4)
MEIGS COUNTY
GENERAL HEALTH

Ntw Location:
168 North Slconcl

DAVE'S
SMAU ENGINE
REPAIR

RACINE
FilE DEn.

PLUMIING &amp; HEAnNG

DOZER

acribed .. foii0)¥1:

will

your loaal llloR lkMIII.,._, ._.,... IIGP"' ~~~~- - • •
Wa're_reedy to hltp you I
'

.&lt;tro t.

Stote Rou• No. U. S. · 33
and 1 portion of IIIIo Route
the hearing or rn11lllng It to
No . 124 In Mal go County.
the Ohio Oapartmenl of
PROPOSED. THE
Tronoportetion Diotrict Oe·
IMPROVEMENT OF
STATE ROUTE NO . U. S. -puty Diroctor, P. 0 . Box
. 668. Marl-. Ohio 46710.
33 SITUATED IN THE
The final Date f01' •ubmia-VILLAGE !JF POMEROY.
oion of otatomonto will be
MEIGS COUNTY. OHO.
March 30, 1990.
.
BYTHE ·
Bernard 8 . Hurot. P. E.
RECONSTRUCTION OF
Director of Transportation
THE ROADWAY.
And being more fully 'de- (31 13, 20. 2tc

.POMEROY :._ . The Meigs
be
County Board of Elections
closed Thursday in order for
employees to at (end a meeting in
Woodsfield.

oiNVEITMI!NT INTEREST. The dtcluollon for

In M tH1lUf tilfll

SuNDAY PAPER

.......,. of lhe rm.r.t on
""""' You ltouuu ... d for ,.,..
IOftll .................. In·
-....,on-.,...., GNCIIt

uualil11u.
.

t11 afivilnc~:

C;1td ollh;mkt.

THURSDAY PAPfF.
t-HIUAY PAPEA

WHAT IINDS Ill lfll'iiiESJ
' CAN I DEDUCJ IllS YW1
•CONIUMIR INTIRI!IT: For
1lit. veu Jill' dedual only 20

a.m.

~lilt .~ ... ~ .
papu1 l Ci!ll hchne 2

pubh CitliOII t n mak" r:mrtTCitull

COPY Ol:AOliN E
MONDA~ PAPER
lUESOAY PAPER
W[ONfSOAY PAPI:F.

POMEROY - The Xi Gamma
Epsilon Chapter, Bela Stgmi~:-Phi
Sorority will meet Thursday at 6
p.m. at the senior·clllzens center
Rehearsals for the Community
In Pomeroy. Pizza and pop will Choir to perform on Palm Sunbe furnished and necklace mak· day,AprU 8, at 2 p.m. will be held
ing supplies should be brought In . · on every Sunday at 2:30p.m. and
by the members.
at 7:30 p.m on Wednesday at
Trinity &lt;';burch until the date of
POMEROY - The Pomeroy _performace .. The Trinity Choir
Group of A.A. and AI-Anoh will will rehearse every Wednesday
· meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the at 6: 30 p.m . Lois Burt. director.
Sacred Heart Catholic Church. advises that there are stlll
For more information 'call . openings In the community choir
1-800-333-505~. .
and those interested are invited
to come· out for one of the
POMEROY -The Meigs rehearsals.
County Democratic Executive
Committee will meet Thursday,
7:30 p.m. at the Carpenters Hall
In Pomeroy.

..:.:·

111

·A t:1&lt;16Stlu !CI ouN e n uou•n o..,.n t t•l iM:otd ,., 1 ht! 0"''¥ S.•~nlllllill 111•
t:l',PI
CI:U~Sihud tltSPI~v . Bl1sut cs~ Conti , uui i L~I&lt;II ncUtCdl
w•l! ,,1,_, ••P~•it&lt; 111 H•t: P1 Pluol5i11H Rt:111Stt:l 01nd lht1 G tlllt
p••hs Oo11ly- T r •bl-1!1 " t t! C~ttlln,, uvur ' , tl . 000 huu•••

OFTHEWEEK

readill8 mllil. r guess rm J• a-dim
bulb who has 10 wat 10 or I:Z. hotn
a. day to get Ibis column out For
anolhez- point d view ,lrcep Jadlni,
.,_. ADB Laaderi:~)'OU-.111
~ owl vs. lade letter? r hope 10.
Like die woman from Torrance. r
too have been l!lldc: 10 fed !hat IDIIICthing is W!'lllll wilh mc,lwanrlam
not able 10 Ic:ap 011 d bed chirping
and brimming wilh c:netJY at 6:30

~ ltm

,,.,...

' Ad1 lhll must be JHJ!d

*

TJm .... !4.-ndlrwtP •nd
. tl'f'lt~ Syndirll.-

Gtvt:lfWI'r lutd Found otcb llll&lt;ltrt 1Swurdl will bl'

•p"c~ ol •d lot illl cap11all~ter~ '" duu hlc puce ot arl Co$1

ru bc:til' you publiSh ttus reaa-, a lot
The"child"youseem'l!lhmklshould
lhemlc:lvea,!nl it
get up ... fbt IN I ' • far will10011 of people wiU
POMEROY - 'l'he Laurel Ci Iff
juSt
may
change
lheirHvea
... DENNY Better
be cdclnlill&amp; her SOib Iii dlllay.
Health Club 'will meet
Thursday at 7p.m. at the home or
Molt people: have .... ibout 40 IN SACRAMEN'IO
l&gt;EAR DENNY: I'm SUie you're Iva Powell.
peacelll Ill their lloep whcil :2 a.m . .righL
a million.
,
roDs II'OUIIII. Al·ll* hour, lam usullly at my ~ or in the tub

UNDER~

,

wn l ,n.,, at nu ch•Y t-

·Comrrtunity.choir
rehearsals underway

TIWRSDAY

'

't-r~f! 11th

I,

Academic Fair winners named

.

'Hit!C!$1VIl S , ~0 diSCOunt lOr ildl pjttd In illhl-d llCC

. CHESTER -The Chester
' Township Trustees will . meet
Tul!lday, 7: 30 p.m. at the
'townhalt
&lt;

..

' A,t ,. mlt1MI\t Mu•w•. G•lhll or Ma1u11 c ounl4~ must b iJ p,~

. POMEROY -The 'Pomeroy
Flame Fellowship wtn· meet
Tuelday, 7 p.m. at the senior
citizens center In Pomeroy. Gu·
est speaker will be Bob Shackelford of Delaware.

:·. HARRISONVILLE -There
wilL be .. a · free blood pressure
academic fair at Pomerii)' Elemllldar)!. 'l'lle • .cliniC on Tue8day,10a.nl. to noon
public was Invited to view tile proJed• of all tile. at the town liouse Ia Harrison~
lltuden&amp;a.
· ·
ville apoaaored by the Harrllonvllle SeniOr Citizens. Following
the cliniC there will be a meeting
and - ~elebratlon of three month
birthdays for members.

,

~
derl Ex_.t. Dlob. • a- I;.;.~::=Ji~:f:i::
.-1. Fund
Ua•INn ......... c4.014.111 I.!
Cooh lhiM•

Fin•. Lie•-- •
..., E - d- Dlllt. •
Pennlta .... ........ 81,013.08 · u-/Net ....... (10,118.
Ml~.- eouo,.,'.71,110.00 Fund CMh lhtanoe
TOTAL
1/1/11 ~ ........ 401 ,183."
RECEIPTS.... III,I31.08 FUnd· C..h leiMoe
DISBURSEMENTS:
12/31/11 ..... 311 ,318,. 42
Security of Peroon.
PIIOPIIIETAIIY FUNDI!
'
Property ...... .. 184.18&amp;.38 RECEIPTS:
LaiauN Timo
·
C h - for llerv· .
Activlt1M ........... I.080 .49
lceo ....... .. ..... 302.718.20
IMio Ulllty
TOTAL liE·
·
Sarvlceo ........ .. 61.1181.112
CEIPT8 ........ 302.78s.20
OlliURIEMENTS: ·
Treno·
portetion ....... 311 .141.11 Per-al
Gen•l Govlivlceo ......... 1111,126.11
ernrnent.. ....... 1119,1112.38 C o - l
Copltel
llarvlm ....... :. 18.2811.88
Outley ..... ,.......71,108.31 Supjii!M and

i .........." . _

.

LOTIONS - STICKERS

Calls.... c.......

•NEW HOMES •SIDING
•GARAGES
•REMODELING
•GENERAL CONTRACnNG

AGrettCIIMineliMI-

t:

lo 110011 homo. ~
loOU!IIul, fluffy. 1'111111 dog. -

lluppioa

""""'"'

_,_,

.·

a.-. .

......,~, II~~~Ill. Ilk '
Hooi....,.,lle.

cs

1.os1 a Founcl

�The
7

Yard

~1

Ohio

sale

LAFF-A-OAY

ALL 'hlnl II.,. 1o Pold In
Adwnco. DEADLINE: 2:00 ,_,.
the., btloN tllo ... le ... - ·
SundoF-~'!!! • 2:00 p.m:
p.m. . - -Y.· odltlon • 2:00

for Rent

~

1990

• Mad• 13, 1880

Houllhold .
Goods

51

42 Mobile Homll

•'

BORN LOSER

Television
Viewing

=..-- ... - ...
2 ~~•~c•

....--::==---2

tmllr

-'t, at10

IDr

llolal "" -

· *'Hl'l-

•

----·

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

l'lfll, 11' .... - ·

I

I:OOfcc~·· ANI

ThrM

Wlnoor Auction Sorvlcf. 11 Y,.
• • - ror.,.nc-. LlcenHCI .•nd ~ In w.t Yl,.
glnla and Ohio, 304-273-3447.

"That's the seventh delivery
.I've m~de to the Maytag
·
's WI•fe. "
repairman

L..---------...,.--;......;.____

L.ony un~, Ito~. r

~

grodo oak uw loaa. SilO

per ttlouNnd. Dellva...rta Ohio
PollOI Ca. -~. OH.

11

Wanted

j.- ---'------

. OUIHa
Pro t940 quiHo. AnJ candHIDn. AVON • AU .,...;, c:an llarllrn
Catlh Paid. t;alll14-tt2·51S7 or Woavor-·2145.
614-6112·2461.
Soli - · · C:..wy A Would Ilk• Ia Buy: PopoUp or
·
~ -lon.
25%. "'""
No 1-mont.
Wrtto:
Crank~p
c:ampor. 61 4-381- Eam
P.O. lor 103, Oolorllto, IN 47317.
8896. .
Travel, Fun I 11-. Do JOU
llu IIIMIIng poc&gt;plo, -lng thO
Employment Services USA ond oornllla good """'""'
Con yau tit In wlt~ I JOU"'I onl h - bUolnHO grour,? 11 ~
.. ........ ~·lor
11 Help Wanted
men and worMn ill 1Mi81 11
'POSITION ANNOUNCEMENT
IDr olnglao) to ..... on

I::"'

Tht 'Unlvar11ty of Rio GP'Incle
anno~c• an ~nlng far tM
Chair at tha Graduate Educlitlon

I'Jogram. Subloct t~ IP91'0""I o1

the proDoted Malttr'a degrMin

Educatron, this r.;sltlon wlll.n-

be

='toT~:!.'::':~

=

..
._ry, Tra,.pMI!Uon
and llllt lm-

(r.ndom
modloloty.

prwldecf, ...,..,._ advanced,
llperlence not nr 3Ill NY but I

:

31 Homes for Sa!&amp;
3 billdroom houM, dining room,

wetl, ~.- nicely fUma.r.cr. car-

,.,_ ,. . .,

E~MJ Apt.,

fomlly room _ ,

o~.

fld2 I

·-•-J;;U.ia":"'.odtciOio,
•
t~

dor*.(noor
171
llktd'-"
Hlfht. S3t,OOO. 114.

3 looclroomo,
-·
South
Fau~h,
::.~·

r.'lu':nc.!.."".!...ldo,1!:~

=~

u!lelllro,

Fum. A... All utiiHieo
Upotaln. 114-44WS21.

FumlohOii Apl. 241

Ja~'-n

t-

I

·

74(4, .

I

•~nw tlnandal • rlct •• Ccon-

Slw
llil
I . UW ml
pul-....75-

coom. cancllcloto mwt onloJ
·challenging
worlt, - ·
aood communlcotlonl
oknta, a
fiova tho obltH7 t~ ond
•PfiiJ computM*~ tnlning
to - ~rtorm euoceelttulty In ONIIt. ••-, ..._..
tiona, I admlnllllnttori. T1ke
progr11me

-_ l......
and
n , .-~
,-T
o"""""'
- n ...
-

calliI

1122.

PICKENS FURNIT\IRE
Ntrw/U- .

• No Not. *IWTS-

UIIilrl

.

. .

.,

"

c'ampera &amp;
MOtor Homes

79

\\

...

a

THIN .sHe
.·, I.IFT ME ... •
$111 J~lf&gt; ·THE l.fTTLE

;•• ANP

/

.7:051Il Jefforlont
7:30 (Jl Family l'aud.
(!) NCAA PtiWIIW

e

ee a(J) E-ln!Mn!
Tonight
M-'1 F-ly

I ::.A'Urp8rdyl r;l

fNtJINf THAT c.ouLp

IIJ Crouflnl
D Night Court
i':351Il Sanfard.Ancl Son
1:00 (J) MOVIE:
L.atl Wagon
(2:00)
(Jl til Mlllock Matlock
tries 10 clear me name of a
. clown a.ccused ol murder. IRJ

The

· r.

lla-

ponranoblo, hlohl)o

&lt;

~Hiono

I T-ibi
In CloHI,.... Walllh1

I
'

I

~

Crib ll..d water rnattraoo. Fib
• ., bob¥ loocl.....
twice.
lt4-11112·Uza. Donne Grato.

u.

57

Mualcll '
· Instrumental-.,
lndlwkluol
guRor

··-

1\ I I" ,10' K

A--·

froll'l

=

@:~"'

.101. . . . . ... . . .

--

.THidlr Movie (2:00) r;l
IIJ~K.,~

'au~~~e ~~~ (~-

Ill Nellrlllll -

Country
mullic:'t honest sta,. are
featured Hve.
t:30 •
•Ill COMit H~yden
,. ·
'It forced 10 IHCIIen ' .

a

FER TH' LIFE

1ooc1

•

-

-

OF M§~ CAN'T

RfCK7MEMBER
WHAT!! .

01 C, •

~--~~
~- · '111- ·
'o

tQ.I..74S-1471.

I

I I

w c1o "" tniOOf!lll .
- . brioll. -~ • 01_-. ""
•--.:IM-T7Nsao.

,.

82 . Plumbing&amp;

Heating

ca~or'oPiumblng
and Hooting

....................._ 1--------------lmPonl•--ploll...,
-llod,

PI, out-lo, lit

t-·-"··
;rm
1Ga

•

,..l'otil ,_110. XL, .... 1 R. 84

t•

~..a.n:.~

Spoclolloll, ~.... c..
mototoglota, Eloolrtclono, Food

11,000 ttth&amp;'iilil·~

s.rvtce wartt.., a.at;onla
Tooltnlola""'
lnduolrlll

1Z:

1n IQ llllbtM11:tl•or
oftor7:t0

NurM

...-. llocltlnloto, Pa""'"lo,

BROTHER BUBBA
IS COMIN' FER

""""- · SUPPER!!

.

(!) l'rom ]).!My To The
Rhine Willi . . MotII a A

'

grQUP or WWII - n •
retum. with lhelr famHile, to
the summer (I( 11144 to
D-D1y 1111&lt;1 10 1111 lnveslon of
. Normandy. (1:20)
10:00 (J) 700 Club Willi Pll
Ral:l11'110n
• (Jl • NIC Newa Sp ICII'
CIWIQIS· Jene Pauley
.
itotei¥Tewl 1 yar1lty ol peoplll
·who ha.. undlrgonl 1
significant ~ In lhelr
prolonlonel encl peraonal

.

p t1ollll All vt Fruler
From New York·1174

. ;•Je111 ••,•••IIIIINt•
(J) S1

.

Electrlcll &amp;

1D Nlw Tullglll z-

10:30
.

liD

lllnnr ..
-, .....
, alulu
•
....,. Cot lltJ The fltr

IMIIII'OI performanclt lly .

Eddie 1111111111 IIIII HigiiWiy
11)1' • Will u belt&amp; .....

lecl'llarleelncl w
tor- l o r - - ~ng
llorelt 21, 1110. caR T
\'acatlollll Aduft C.ncer at •
100437-. A Wllloty o4 ......
ding - - 1 0 , . , ""tnlnlnl
. . - - , . , . _ ollglblo.

........

M1 if If~ 011' llftd l1fp1inl
IIIOw, llftd IIYIIIOok exhlblla.

11:001Jlll _ _ , ..........

l&lt;ll ••• (J) • • •

........

r:=n.::rJ~:

.

Going back

'IKU
tK54 2
+104

'IQJ873
t A 76
. +916

Often the !II!Cret to succesatul lie- ·
SOUTH
.AQJ9
clarer play is to be In the rilht place at
'IA4
the right time. And one 11101'1! thine tiD 93
you may need to aet ther;e tile rilht
.KQ7 3
number of times. South ducked the
openina lead when Eut played the .
Vtalnerable: North-South
kine, but had to win tbe next heart. .
Dealer: South
Chances were not
Apparently
W..l
Nordr East
declarer needed the
of spades ott· S.dr
Pass 2 NT
Pus
side and a J.J spade spilt u well. So he 1 NT
3
NT
All
pass
played king of clubs and a low club to
the jack. A spade to the queen won,
OpeniJlllead: • .7
and declarer played a club back to the
ace ill dummy. Asecond spade flnesae
worked, u Welt contribuled the spa~e
10. Tbat left South with the A·B of
over the K·8 in tbe East band.
unately Soilth was on lead. He then takes the spade finesse. Since
·
club left, but It was the queen, both defenden followed to the previ·
ummy was left with the five- OU8 two rounds of clubs, declarer is
now safe to overtake the queen of
spot.
· Declarer South did not really expect clubs with the ace to Jake another
. West to hold the doubleton 10. of spade f~. The five of clubs is left
ailades; but it cost nothill&amp; for him to in dummy, and· declarer liaS the Jowly
provide for the poalbUity. After cash· three - one more entry to the North
tnc the club kina, be sboultl carefully band to lead a third spade throulh
play the aeven to dummy's jack. H~ East's king.

t:!·

1-.---------...J

i

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSlPH
ACROSS
45 Ford
1 Bile.
61 yore
down on
8 Golf shot DOWN
1 Sinarl
10 Harig In
· 2 Israeli
· the sir
dance
11 Face card
13 Goodnight 3 Obvious
4 Checker
girl of
pieces
song
5 First
14 Light on
in rank
one 's feet
8 Gregorian.
15 Vehicle
lor
18 Wk. day
one
18 2·year-old
7 Road
sheep
menace
19 Tarnish ·
21 Coloml:Man 8 First
9 Skunk
Indian
12 Enlerlain
22Mr.
17 Lowest
· lscocca
. integer
23 False Idol
24 Serve
27 Aclor,
Nick28 African

Yesterday's Answer
20 Sheltered
23 Tree
trunk
24 Liliaceous
plant
25 Slarlled
26 Rich
ice
cream
27 Tell

29 Slapstick
ilem
31 Yonder
32 Melal
wasle
36 Italian
family
37 Skin
39 Weight
41 Unil of
radialion

lily
29 Buddy
30Biemish
31 Spenl
33 Garfunl&lt;el
34 Possessive
pronoun
35 Congress
member
(abbr.)
38 'S trucl&lt;
40 Cropped - .. 1~~+42 Title
lor Juau
43 Sample
44 Eat
formally

DAILYCRYPTOQUtTIU-Here'a how to wort II:

3113

AXYDLBAAXR

II'LONGFELLOW
One letter standi for.another. In this sample Ais "
for the tine L'a, X for the two O'a, etc. Single letten,

aDOfllrGpbea, the lenlth and formation of the words are all
hlnta. Each day the code letters are different.
CIIYP1'0QUO'IE

•ODGC
••• ,NTM

'

GX

SPR
OPT

REM

PSCZ

CDHGSMXX:
XNKKMXX

·· PO PREMTX.- ANCMX TMSDTW

liN "'~"""' ...,. but
... &amp;!ltlnl
10 tlirorll olhor
.,.., Pia' n ~liNin &amp;Qiaw .. ......._ PI
II .

::"'_,......·=-· -=-..=

ltAST
.K8S2

W1!ST
+to 1

REMTM Q,X DCXP
·flirt -

. , "I'd Clll for towing If only the phone
· workad In lhle alupld lunnoll"

9

.

+AJU

VNSGXEIMSR

R.N.

•

tQJ 8

IIICIII IPGJ (2:00)

BERNICE

:t-IJ.~

'IID-15 '

10:10!1l MOYII: GoCIIIQura ....

8BDEOSOL

.. .,

~

I!VIftlniNewa
DNewa

VI, PI, o-wlh 00. Ill', 101
OIYIOtrldo,
- . ::::\ Allll'lll ~~ IOindow, t!IP

Account lng/Computln g

' ICiilemlc • •. ~

THAT'S IT II

11-. r;l

FOOIIIharttiPino
00111-. Ohio

~~~

-=-

•1121

-wd,

tm Chorrr p1o11 ,. :uo, .....
~=:=- loiiiO.

ploaH contact Moclcat ...,._.
not Pool, t-IOG.all-3tDO lor fur·
t._lnlonnotlon.
Job Hunting? Naod a olclll? Wo
troln pollplo lor )obo u Aut~
M a c 1h a n I c • ,

-

=-::-&amp;;....

=.':l:...=;cPil

oHico. 114-II0-700S.
Home Hoonh Alda"o, noiCIICI lor
caae In the Welltton area,

Rn~lng

'

Rosanne wants Oan.ne to

riclte e poem In front of hlr

~llory'CU

Soptlo Tonk PurnDina QII"-C!_I!'!O
CIOYIIAIIIIINT SEIZED VohlciM Co. RON EVANS lENTERPIIIHB;
rram ttoo. Ferdo. • - .-..0H1_.,1.....
~jf:0. ~"'= 1Hpto G.
RL i, Illlit 8-1tllt. .
tllh, WY, - - or Nonlioaad
Flooring, V"froo·ua plink or :
OOVIIINIIINT IIIZID Vahlclao oquaro
-lal oo1t or

72 Trucks for Sali
tm ~ :uo, -

emOkfnG

'

Dl¥la
a.w.v.c Servlc•,
G•• ~ CfMil Rd. PMte, • •
~""· and ctottvorr. """

bt. ..,.....

At11M1nt,

•rid.

PuiiiP -

· •·
• ..,.,.
- --·•111 _ _urph&amp;
,_

Roco..lonlot tor Doctor'o olfloo
In Columbw. Vwy good tunHJ
lor to · Nloeatton
Cofumbue,
OA

IAIIN - y

IJI ~11

tool *"ling..

~blo

D8 eiiJIIDIII1W ..

r~~~~ge of his aonge,
including setectiont lrOfll hla
new album; .on.• ' - .a l
Elo8ton's Colonial Theatre.
(Rt
ill)
MOYIE: 'The K.-

··~

-.. . ._.....Ice.
. . _=·
....
Rcr4ary ....

(!) Muicll MIIIIIN

wide

2414.

me.

~ ,n 1:1

......

·

In The Hut Of Tile

pears. IR) ll

.

dhor ......... -

"'

Crook • Clilt11

(l) . . _ . feytor In
JatMS TaylOr perlctmll a

-3114-671-23411
"""''•-Ohio
..po~ra.
wv·.
114-441-

nogtoct. Jail -..
30M7So1131 Wltlll; 30t 1111 w.n.li 1111 ue 4110,
Faith loabi 114- IU7, llhl

Business
Opportunity

MORK MEEKLE AND WINTRHOP

,1 '

TV Sorvtco, -ltiiZing.
In Zonlth ..... aorviCing -

PWIOCARE '
Aogutor .,._..tunlngo can bo
ploiltlont a muolt ~ than

Ftnanctal

l:tl. 701.

,

'
'

R~'o

lloft.'111UIII,a.t.

oaoombiJ al pr&lt;rducto (t~.
craf11, .a.ctronlca, otherl) or
morlclllng worll. Allt&gt;IJ Dolta Entorprl- call f~t-1423

-

m.-z2111.

blalnrtOII, gultarlot,
Jofl
-loY
lnolruotO&lt;.
441.a077,
......
_ ,114.
_

Excellant Income for Mo.,.
BaNd omplaJ_,., Clorlcal or

I

. 1:00

0 old

Interior polralng, "" ,_ ...
llmltt 01111 ~ SIMmer
c...,.,., eu ue 1104 or 304-

=6
a

tot-•·

lt!-47:1'7440 Ert. 11303.

?

· 304-171-172( .
~ maOI •

U.lnt.,.,...
Roollng, now/-lr, . oldlnti
~lr, carponory, odd lobi:
lt4-37W1120, oolc lor
lltch.
Hoe

114-411 .....

Eam
$300
·~ uao
por - caH
Reading
lkKiko
al homo.

w-..

1=30•• e111 The wondat
YM,. Kevin 1111&lt;1 Winnie
uneasily ponder euendlng a
m a - party. r;l
.

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

ar, sa,ooo

m.._., GIGO. Ctll 1fler tp,n1,

tOt II.

11a1ra-

(2:00)
1:05 CIJ MOYIE: The New
cantutlont (AI (2: 15) ·

catr"" ootl-..114-44, 1210. '

""'"""•1.

1ru. Thl• le a non

J ,B""As In Jlllbird ·

Carpet lnotolotiDn and - ' " "

1111 Ford E-.

'

at Chun:h 8trHt Station
· D MOYIE: Sunbum (PCIJ

Rooms

EARN MONEY Raodlng - 1
t30,000/Tr. ~nco...
Dotollo. 1) 105-617..000 Ext. y.

Dtntal

(JPrlmiNIWI

IIJ Munar, 11M w-

:

~:on~p~oto· -

·

Tltett, Tlt1l It Now (RJ (2:00)

IIIIH*

weterprootlng.

Furnished

Spoa... 304-171-1429.

Ful..tlme

~· ,

'

- - .......can
- nlghtiil
· ,.'
114427-0488,
, ...

LMo CMnlo. t;a,.., - l n -

-ltblo. Send ........ 21
1~: NutrRTc&gt;n llaclleal, 511 WOOl
High Stroot, Pique, OH 4S:US.
&amp;YON I All ....... I Slrlrlor

ellll MOVIE: Tltat W11

r~ ~
- - 'llotiOM II\III'IR&lt;
tee. LOCII ,.... .. '" tuml*hld.

.,..,.to,
mollvatoa

lor Aaolotnat - ·

•1121 Host: William

~hatrMwll

114-441-27'15

~plo
S.IM

bell. r;l
(!) CltnorO Magic: lmagel
Of Nature (1 :30) .
ill)

call. JOHN T. BRUNTO!i

WaraiCI: Allll-·

ebout Angt!ll'sfalher. r;1
mNature Examine a tiny
monQC1&lt;118 and birds who eat

Servtces

olv• - n a pockogo. For
pron1111 canlldoratl~ ploaao

F.

-··The

aneslhiSia·lnduced dream

Joo'o TV -

kr4tl
Sliver aneta- Plaza
CIIIAif!OIIa, at! 45631
Equal OpJ»rtunlty trnptoy01 II-

e111

Bou? Mona has an

Int--.

~~-~
P.I:30P.m.

~ oazzlllt(l women Of

.

3 · 1'1.

· NORTH

·for more

e

compl......_

I

(!)~I

to triCk down a illealll .
paramilitary group. l!lereo.
1111 01 YlcleoCoutltrt
D Abbott And ColleiiO

WA$ t&gt;/lopPitl6
ITS 'AioO$

' • "WATIRPROCIJIIIJG
iJAiiiii

icit•M LETS ANSWIIS

BRIDGE

ICJJPMiflagazlne .

I'

1m Fonl """cap-••~• oondl ff.ODO. can ,304:f71a"IU ••• a:oo Pll or -~
II

O

0 M'-1 VIce Cockllt tries

..

t:m:;t ~Clio¥"

u.
.......

TrJnsport.Jtton

thla opporlunHJ 1~ join thO
profooolonal atalf II blnollclat.
Wo olfor an 111-llwr Olytlng
Mfll'tlna _,,'Y I

colleel enough , l'll··-- ·--·-1"

ScMecrow. M,.. King

,I c!.eourt r;1

Now 1101 Cant- K~
. , . . __ (louaht lor. truciti
_ , 111) 1300. 1144711-2113 ·~
terlp.~
....
,

Now whHo otoctrtc rongo · ~~
draworo, "'l•n, bot w~h four
otoolo, antlq.. hutch. 114-1112-

- - ond ailul
chording
and t~ If
noro,

otudonta. -

I0

•

ThiiMI-Finch·4•CUie .., Cralty-CHANCc
A famous philosopher, I always like to quote, said:
"No man was ever wise by CH;;.A.;;.N:..;C:..;E;;.·· - - - - - --- - - .

,.

Ne•attour
,~ til. Wltell Of

•·=r

45

I

1 R 6 GA N

m

e (J) Curlin! AHalr
(l) , ()) MICtlllll LeiiNr

1114. Now thiOUah . April 30.
l'lrot - h he t~ t -

...,plt::'J:I,

_

r;l

• 8

~~44~1~1~41~1~.p;;&lt;j;jjj!"~;-111!!; ~~v~, ·~~ji-~~·~;

IUmlf tolnl, home equity l'nH.
tnaur1nc1 ..... In genenl
~lflco odnrlnlotrot\o,;~ 11io _ .

7:00~

·

Altlrlmentaln Mlddltpcrt. From

=

r.:= ,...

1:351Il Andy Or1flltlt

lloUoMn Fumltura. Checll. ue
M far quality I low prtoao ~
cart&gt;ot I IUmMwo. It,._

1::.-d:.'f.:..::'i!t,rrc:,,:

::1':.!!:

.

Complete rho chuckle quoted
-.1..
-L.
L
.
....J.L......J.'-'
by filling rn the missing words
L
you develop !rom step No. 3 below .

N~ N1gh1ly Newa

the'"'*

==-

I

•

IlL~=~

quoliiJ. Colt 114.112·7717.
monding library ocquloltlonl,
EOH.
dovol~lng rotatlonohlpo With
L.orgo 1 a 2 ~ooc~;~ lumlahod
ilrM RhOOII and . dewloplng piMH.
and monitoring of the ~- We . . now • llatt approved·. Thrw bedreo.n hDUM lor Nle. •'"•LQIH231. por month t&gt;luo
Ouallllcatlona rnclude .n earned mne aide training.PfOirem. Do . S.lem lt., Autllnd..23 .ere laC. IIIItH-, roluoblahod.
P I - ValleJ llootty, 304-17&amp;daclcroto
'
_.II'M; - thO oplrlt ~I """"'' $17,400. 114.74NMO.
4100 daya 171-3481 .... 171-1111
domonatrotod INdorohlp lor Thllr. - ,.._ ..... ""'•-.grach.•attlevll activity u ..riH turllll• for Meeii:' c&amp;;WDI"kera. • - or t ...- badroorn. NM" nlghla.
feaclershlp In public IChoolai a.come 1 Ylluabfli !Mrnber ot root, newly rtdaeal'lltecl,., lara~ rwnodirttd-. 1 bedroom,
. rocard
of ochotarl)o • ..,. thO hllonh caro toam In I""' tl btHment.
11'111
unc:aln downtown
Potnt ,.......,., Alrt~butlonl; O¥idonco of .-.1.. · Enroll ,_ In tho Nu,.. Holghto. 114 1112-IIBI.
cond,
dtapaul,
c-munlcatlon In nrlouo COli· A.. _ . . , 01 TrJ.Caunty ,_ otory ~ loocl.....,., 1 112 WID hodl..,p, VOl\'dl8hwaaher,
nloo, 304~~~J:'':,,:'t~::.~~:.
eonts:.':.id ~ both, llnlah"' hill booornont, 2 I'IH774.
. ..... In on ocadomle oonlng n lor training? wo .haw 0 varlotJ car garage. L.ol, t301ctll6 In ·an. btdiocorn hlmlahod opl,
wott u In • public loium. ~I funding - • ovolltblo lor Roo;tno. 114'9411-3077.
very ellen •nd nice, llduftl. no
poll, 1114-471-t400.
l:::l:..~·,:!tt=:r::::
32 t,loblle Homes
Ono loocl- fumiMod ...
toadorohlp aklllo In muRII&gt;IO :lelh._~llt
. catott
for Sa
' 18 ·
upotolro klr 1 - · ~ polo,
..... .. -·~· lntortolod '"" .... .
.
and .,_~~, 304-17&amp;lhc&gt;lrld aond • - r ~~
t4x71ttll7 Nonto. 21&gt;&lt;; hill both, •..2811.
.
cludlng'tt.!".:='..
17 Miscellaneous
gordon ·.t"!'L largo living-,
o1 thrao roloroncao boloro HEALTH INSURANCE • Ml·ln
uchon,
cathodrl Ono br, unhlmlolrod' 1111. Ranga
a llolrtg. provldocr. water,
thO deadline olllarch 16, tVOO ~••ogo wHh llmlbitlonoln and colllngo. Vl:'l,\ 1
f~: Mo. Phylllo lla-, Poroai\- outpot!Ont ........ - ~~12 ;:,_ .=~ toi -DopaOH
g • noq'd.
•nd It
345.pold.
not ~lllcor'pTho Unl_.lty o4 Rio nllllng condft!orw c . . - If wH'*r cttJ dlolrtct. 114.
Grande, .0. Bor 16ViJ Rio JOU quotlty. Call Uta a 441.a701oftor 4p.m.
Grande, OH 411674; Tllo nlvor- Accl.ra. 1 - 412.atl1 or 304oHy ~~ AI~ Grande, lo an Equal 717-l!TS7.
1112 SChullz 12dll win=:,
Op~rtunlt•
CJ•A, -·•'
bu rnor, IPIIIIOncaa,
t '
~
, AHirntollvo ActiDn
--:':1.:·
E
11- • "'1'Vo 304-171'3GM or
mploJor.
18 Wanted to Do
Sorvlco Ro-oll.. 01
ITS-4111.
bonoflclll. W. ha.. an 1,..: EaR Trao Sonlio&amp; Topping, 11173 21&gt;&lt;, aooc1 --~
· rtty fur.
modloto o-unlty lor • wotl lrtmmlna. ohN~-•-~ h'ao nlohod Wlot~n
bl f(,OOO
ora•nllld, Mlf-motlvlted In- .. mov.r. Pruning ........ t14- t;.ooll ~.'"","
1 •..... . I . '
dlvlduol
lnt•ootod
In
c
·
~.lng 1 Cl'"' In conMl
~

=::.

•

1--,;1,;...;;·i"'lai=-nl':-:.;lr-::.,1,..-l

0141-MMI
· a1 Top Card .ContesUtnts
combine onlortalnrnent trivia
.· . wHh
oflho drew. ,
D Henoln' In

Cllllllpr&gt;llo, tbr, $250. -ng: lluot Ioiii ' Ut- pd. 114 441 4411 oftor Stove,
7p.m.
,
au- ISO;
Slzo A~~~~'l!i...J
Wator
~j
Old R - o r Qt. ....,
Gillen, 11~7iill. .
- - living. 1 and 2 -

Pika,

.

A .slraet mustetan. who
wasn't very good. passed a
cup among lhe bus passengers, and warned , "II I don't

. ?Ai~

114.

pold.

I (Jl. •
~

Houaohofd lumlahlng. 112 mi.
Mmo room ...rtiMRII ·at Villa gil Jorrtch&lt;&gt; Rd. Pt. P l - . WY,.
.reu ad1l1d. llaiMit'
and
Alwfotao catt304-175-t410.
·

aboVo
J - ' 1 Varlo!J St-,
131C N. laaancl Ave. Mlci.._.,, OH. From ll.m,..._,,
-,March 11. No phone cola

1:30

~uloil,

. , . _ at VllllaiMit'
and
Rl~liio
APirlment• In Mlddl po.rt, From
$114. Now thr&lt;M~Gh ........ 15.
Ior i In-.
117,000. 304-727-6010.
Flnrt
-Colt .114-112-7787.
_ t~
who quoiiiJ.
EOH.
- l o r .... 112 4th St.·- · · C:OI 1-61 4-1112•116t4.
Oroclouo living. t ond ,2 .loocl·

, _ wAh CIA. Cllllll
City
Schoolt, In nk:e nell bol hnd.
114 318 415~ 114 44 0310. '

1:05(11 levlr!Y HIIIIUIIH
1:20.()) .. ..... Onl TV r;l

5TAKE5?

anc121ooc1.-. 114 441 2200.
aEAUT1FUL AI'IUnWIITS AT
lltJDGET PRICU AT JACKSON
UTA.,.!.. . 1:11 ...._
"""
11
10
from . walk
a
fi'MMM:.
CIIIIU
~11 21111.£0H.
11001111• Apo- 1 IR,
~~ ..... ldtchon.

toll r..~nolbiiH" o1 providing =~!"/'~ ~'%~~
lfaderahlp tor lht progr8m,
dovol~lng and lmplo.. ntlng ,..._, lntorvtow - Barbera,

~
• •~•
I ,_
progn m' IMC 1t1n
mg Pln..,.m-,
Miectlng penonrwl, NOOIIt-

Aput_ln,---.1

TilE •oUT OF SOUNDS'

NA KL Y

~ i::-tn CltafOe

5U!4 REFLECT OFF THE
. SlAIN'( WIIITE PAINT ON

44to0211.

Wanted to Buy

L~

'{EAI.. TilE ~y~ OF TilE

...,.1. ..

two

•o
Andy a.ctftllt
0 World todly

'{00 'EVER NOTICED
UOW, AT TillS TIME OF

2 ..... 1 both, print•
a eland Plllo. CloM lo
...-v 0 1 - . ohopplng r.,
--.,,
tra8h
provldld. sa&amp;ltno. .... 114-

~jOin

young ~"' on.•
seabornie projeCt. (R) r;J

· ~\IE

:u w. opl.

l)lltence malcM the tlhence.
LIGen nil Otdo, Kentuckr, w...
v1..-, 304-m.&amp;71S.

388•...-·
303.COlt

APROE

til Newt!

Public Sale
&amp; Auction
Rlek _...., Auction Compoi1J
now boo!Unt auctlono, OX·

Junk care wHh ~r whhout

I
I
I
.I, I I I r I.,. ,
:=====:::::"£..

~

(J) NU. TociQ
(l) YO,IIgl Of Tile Mlttt1

8

I

~----.1;;._;;..11:.:.;.:..1..;r.:.r-r--1

••~Ill s •a

eCJJ

""'p(o WO&lt;do.

UNA .MLA

IVINIHQ

Ya"l and Pordl Bale llarell 15,
11, 17. t :DO All. Rain ..,_lo.
I3G llaln Slreot.

9

four ,...mbfod·
low 10 form lour

IUEI.. MARCH 13 •

........ ""· 2 2 ' .... fur..
dryor.llr-.-771-11111.

.......... lolbn ol lho
_ . be-

•

Yael ' 1'1 Clfltt,•elet 1HE BEST TDE TO
· MAKE FRIENDS IS BEFORE YOU NEED lli!M. E.THEL BARRYMORE
.

'

�Page 10-The Daily Sa1tiuel

Pomen&gt;v-MidclePQrt. Ohio

...--~Local·

news briefs...- - . _S~mmer-like
Continued from page l

EMS has four Mondny rolls
Four calls were answered on . Moi'Klay by Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services units.
Middleport at 5: 14 a.m. was c alled to Route 7 for Florence
Potts who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 5:45p.m., the Pomeroy Fire Department was called to a
_
.
brush fire on Unlori Ave.
Racine was called at 8:56p.m. to Route 338 fpr Zelpha Stewart
to Veterans Memorial Hospital and at 11:22 p.m. to Dewitt's
Run . ROad for Lewis Francis, also to Veterans Memorial
Hospital. ·

West Virginia ... _c_o_n_un_u_ed_t_ro_m...:p;....a.;;.ge_1_ __
the West VIrginia Education
,o\ssoclallon which represents
about 16,000 of the state' s 21,653
teachers, said her members
. would remain on strike Tuesday.
But neither Meadows nor Bob
Brown, executive director of the
rival West VIrginia Federation of
Teachers which has a botit 3,000
members, would comment on
their meeting with the governor.
Teachers walked out of the
classrooms March 7 and schools
In 38 of West VIrginia's 55
counties canceled at least some
of their classes on Monday.
The WVEA called for the
statewide walkout after charging
Caperton with reneging on an
offer to provide $35 mlllon for a 5 ·
percent -pay raise, provide an
additional $6.5 million to !lie
state's health Insurance ~ro­
gram and add $27 million' In new
taxes on coal operators to help
pay fqr the package.
The state Education Dep~rt­
ment said the strike caused 29
counties to call off all classes
Monday, affecting hundreds or
schools and thousands of students and parents. Partial school
closings were also reported In at
least nine other 'counties, said
spokeswoman Carolyn Spangler.
A state attDrney general's
opinion Issued last week called
the teachers srlke Illegal a'nd
said counties had the right to fire

Middleport

anyone on the picket lines.
Striking educators gathered at
the Capitol for a rally Monday,
. locking hands and singing, "We
Shall Not Be Moved." ·
School boards In at least two
counties ordered that teachers
report back to work or be fired:
Picketing ' was reported In 46
counties, four more than Friday,
as tea~hers largely Ignored &lt;;a- perton's weekend offer of no loss
of pay In return tor an end to the
strike Monday.
,
Counties that kept some or all
of their _schools open called In
administrators and substitutes tD
man the chalkboards.
·
In Issuing his call for Monday's
meeting, Caperton said the two
sides needed to "put aside the
harsh words and miscommunications o( the past weekend and
move on to the.resplutlon of the
present predicament."
Caperton also plans to make' a
major policy address on educa.'.tion Tuesday night. Meadows
sail! she has no Idea what he will
say,
A Jefferson County circuit
judg:e ordered striking teachers
to return to tlie classroom on
Thursday. School officials there
said they expected teachers to•
obey the order. In Greenbrier
County, School Superintendent
Steve -Baldwin told teachers to
return to work Wednesday or be
·
fired.
Continued from page 1

that he Is negotiating for the
purchase of the old Royal Crown
building In the Mill Street area
for recycling only. He said that
he did not anticipate bringing his
trash hauling trucks Into that
a~ea . .
He . also reported that he
e)(pects to start a curbside
recycling pilot program with 20
volunteer custOmers sometime
this spring.
Petition For Annexulon
A petition for annexation of an
area of Ru !land Street Into
Middleport, along With a specific
request for sewer service, was
presented to village couilct!'by a
delegation of rtye residents.
Phyllis Young was spokesman
for the groqp who reside In the
area whiCh Is served by the
Leading Creek Water Conservancy. Those residents do not
have sewer servlcl\.
The petition was signed by 17
residents, "nearly lOOpercent" It
was reported by Mrs. Young,
who favor 'the annexation:- 'all bough Council said that only
eight families are actually
Involved.
The pr~edure for annexation
was discussed with the residents
but Council took no formal action
on the project at last night's
meeting. Pay Raise
Pay raises for village employees were discussed and the
first reading on an ordinance

Ohio Lottery

weather spreads ·to East (:oast

have

overnight after posllng a record and there were scatb!red show ~ Conn. Montepeller, _ VI., was
95 degrees and setting a high tor ers In Mississippi. Early mom- foggy and 36.
the country Monday, but the lng temperatures were 58 In ,
mercuey was rising again early Knoxville, Tenn., 611n JacksonIn the Midwest, Chicago poUce
Tuef(lay. Skies .were par tiy vUie, Fla., 62 In Atlanta and ' said crlmlnalacttvlty was on the
cloudy across Maryland, with Charleston. S.C.. and 72 In ·'rise overnight because of the
warm temperaiures thlil hit 80
slml)ar conditions over Pennsyl- Miami.
vania, West Virginia and south·
Rain, clouds and dense fog degrees on Monda~ .
.ern New Jersey·.
blanketed most of New England,
Hlgb pressure anchored off the as temperatures remained rela" Ever).one's-out on t\le street:
Atlantic coast sent terpper~tures . tlvely high In most sections.
and they remember how much
soaring again In the South, where
Boston was 40 under heavy they don't ilke each -other," said
Raleigh and Durham, N.C., set a
cloud cover and sprinkles, while Jefferson Park District Sgt. Jim
new record of 90 degrees ·.for
dense fog covered Wlndsor .Lock, Roussell.
March 12.
'
Some cloudiness marred the
.
.
NATIONAL WEATHER FORECAST TO 7 AM EST 3·1 .. 80
relatively clear skies Tuesday ,

By Ualted Preu'lllleru&amp;loul
SUITIJIIfr-llke warmth chased
away fresh memories of frost
along the Atlantic CoaSt and the
·Midwest Tuesday, bu,t a wet
layer of snow surprised Southern
California and showers greete4 Texas voters headed for .the
poDs.
Following a day In )"hlch at
least 50 cftles set high temperature records, the Natlonal
Weather SerVIce said the mercury would return to t!Je 80s and
90s through much of the East and
Into the deep South . . ·
Baltimore cooled off to the 50s

•

~·

....

.

Hospital news.

---Meigs aru)ouncements _ __

'

'

'

WEATHER MAP - lOgb pressure area$ located over Ute
Southwestern and Southeastern porlloas of the cowi&amp;l'y l"'ll bring
a,unny sides and dry condltloas to,thoee areas. Tlu~remaiD4er of the
countey wUJ experience rather imleUl.ed condldoiW aa a siorm
system centered over the Midwest brlnp widespread clou~s
and precipitation to th~ central third of the nallo_n. Thllnd_e ratonns
should redevelop durtnc the day along the Mls&amp;lwalppl and Ohlo 1
Rivers. ( UPI)
..

••

·- ......----Weather-----, Soulb Central Ohio
Partly cloudy Tuesday night.

Correction
'

The Meigs Common Pll~as
Court case of Ronald E.' Joseph,
et al, against James W. Suttle, et
al, was Incorrectly reported In
the Feb. 23 edition of The Dally
SentineL
The case was filed 'by JoSeph
against Suttle ·for a money
judgment and a section of prop-erty. ·According to , the most .
recent court entry In the case, the
defendants have been deprived
the use of the pr.;&gt;perty and
damages'_ to the _defendants are
$480. A surveyor's report defln- ·
log the .boundary line I~ dispute
_lias been accepted by-·the court. .,_.
In addition, the court appointed
surveyor has been ordered to
-provide the court with a written
description of an old road location and the centerline of
easement.
However, the case has not yet
been concluded js earlier
reported,.
·

with a IOlN between 55 ·a nd 60.
Partly ~loudy Wednesday, with
record highs near 80. Chance of
rain Is 20 percent. •. •'
Extended Forecut ·
Thursday .ll!rougb 8u~ay '
A chance of rain Thursday and
Friday, with fair weather Saturday. Highs will be II\ the · 70s
Thursday .arid ranging from the
50s If\ the northern part of the
~late to the 60s In the ,south
Friday and Saturday. Overnight
lows will be In the 50s Thurtday .
morning; the 40s early' Frld!!Y ·
and In the 30s Saturday morning.

l.
'·

.SYOBlltT'$,
GREENHOUSE
Is Nowt Open
' For Busin•s~.
·'
· WHOLESALE
' '
RETAIL ·'·'

Attended funeral

'

Mrs. Neva Radekln Nicholson,
of Rutland, a,tte_nded !he funeral-.
of her cousin, Mrs. Ina Radekln
Sams. of Columbus, on Thursday, March 8. Mrs. Sarns was a
native 9f Columbia Township In
Meigs, County and , had taught in
the former Columbia Consolidated SchoolhDistrlct. She was
80 ·years old and had · been In
falling health for a short lime.
Also while in the Co tum bus
area, Mrs. Nicholson visited her
son,
Ronald Nicholson, of
Hilliard.

WE HAVE••••
•CABBAGE·
'
•CAULIFLOWER
•BROCCOLI
•A WIDE VARIETY OF
FOILAGE PLANTS,
ETC . .

'

949-2545 or
949-2342
YEllOWIUSH lOAD,
IICI., 0110

'

'

'

.

'

home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 on
wi!dnesday .

'

'

'

'

ROLL .OVER YOUR-EARNINGSTO A PEOPLES. BANK
INDIVIDUAL RETIREMENT ACCOUNT
'

8.0()0(0

'

A.P.R • .

'

· 8.24Q/o ANNUAL PERCENTAGE YIBul

~ MON'q!S ·• NO MINIMUM BALANCE- ~EREST COMPOUNDED QUARTERLY
·· We C~rge Nci Annual Fee '{o Maintain Y£?ur Self-Directed
'

. IRA

'

Plea8e Call·Sara Williamson tn otir New Aecourits Department
-· . at (304)'675-1_121 for more information. - ~ . ·

PEOPLES BANK
.. .·9oinmttted To Being The Best
·· MASON

2 Sac:tion1, 16 P•S.n 2ei Cent1
A Multim_ldio Inc. Nowopepor

Meigs board · adopts
revised drug policies

'

Stocks

•

at

'

'

........ cl. . ._
tontp&amp;. Low In IDI!I Ill. CloDdy
Tlumdq.
In •pper 'l'h.

3743

·
.
.
to-tax lncreases
'.

.

Pick-4

Bush -stil'l opposed

WASHINGTON (UPI) -Pres- "we are willing to talk about lt ."
Ident Bush said Tuesday he was
But Bush made clear that there
heartened by the "very broad
would be . no deficit reduction
proposal" to balance the budget . negoliatlons any tt'me soon.
put forward by the House Ways
Rosteknowskl "made a very
and Means Chairman Da'n -Ros- broad proposal. We've made a
tenkowskl, . D-lll .. but remains
proposal," Bush said. "We'd !Ike
opposed to tax _Increases.
to hear troll! the budget proces~
Bush, In a news confrerence on the hill. Then we'll talk."
called to announce .a new aid
Bush submitted his 1991 budget
package lor Nicaragua and Paless than two months ago and Ills
nama, told reporters · that he unlikely they will have a comprepartiCularly welcomed the tone hensive spending proposal ready
of Rostenko~Yskl's pian' to ellml· before slimmer.
nate the federal -deficit In five
When asked If Fitzwater's
- years because It was presented receptive comments the pre" wlt·hout rancor, without vious day meant he was willing to
rhetoric.' '
negotiate a tax Increase, Bush
Rostenkowskl, head of the tax said, "No, It doesn't."
writing committee In Congress,
But he said he wants a budget
presented his plan in. a long Item deficit agreement and "was ·
on the edltotial pages of The ' being receptive by not knocking
-W~Iilngton Post Sunday, calling
the things we don't like."
for an Increase In taxes, a freeze
Sen. Lloyd Bentsen, chairman
In · Social Security benefits and
of
the Senate Finance Commit:
other spending and a rejection of
'
tee,
said Monday he was not
tax cuts, Including Bush's cherIshed plan to reduce the capital encouraged by the White House's
guarded reaction.
gains tax.
·
Bush's spokesman. Marlin , Speaking to reporters In San
Diego, Bentsen, D-Texas, hailed
Fitzwater, s.aid Monday that
·the
Rostenkowskl proposal as a
while tl)e president was opposed'
"
bold"
plan with some "solid
to many elements of the plan,
Ideas.· :
In the same breath, he warned
which · would give all full-lime
' tl:lat "squabbling Isn't over",,on
employees a 25 cent an hour
· Capi\Ol Hill, saying It will take a
Increase was given. Three read- Dally stock. prices
"tough approach" and leader- ·
Ings are required before . the (As of 10: 30 a.m.)
's hip from the Bush administraordinance can be adopted.
tiOn to make It work.
.
Bryc_e and Mark SmUh
It was reported by Mayor Fred of Blunt, Ellis 6 Loewl
·' : 'There's no way you can get·
Hoffman that the cost to the
•llfat 'throllih without a'presldent
village would be approximately Am Electric Power ............. 30~ 'teady to' sit down and go Into the
$15,000 a year.
c;letalls," said Bentsen of Bush,
AT&amp;T ...... ..... ........ ..... :... .... .41')i,
In other action last 'n ight, Ashland Oil ..... :.............. ....34% - whO~!! no nE!W't311es pledge was a
Council passed a resolution op- Bpb Evans ............ ........... ... 12~
corrie~stone of his 1988 presidenposing the rate Increase pro- Charming Shoppe5 ...... ... .. .... .. 9
tial campaign.
posed by Columbia Gas.
Rostenkowski chas tlsed DemoCity Holding Co. .. ... ..... ........ 13
Issue 2 project funding was Federal Mogul.. .. .. ..... ..... .. .. 17~ . crats as weil as Republicans for
discussed and Mayor Hottman ' Goodyear T&amp;R .. .. ........ ...... .36% ·play! ng politics with the budget
noted that street Improvement . Heck's .. .. ... ...... .'.... .:... ....... ... 3%
and
urged' compromise
.
projects are low priority In I· Key Centurion ................... -P'l'
District 18. High priority In t.he · Lands' Eli&lt;t.. ......_.... .......... :.18%
district Is being given· to water
Limited Inc . ........................ 39]•
.and sewer projects, and the Mulllri\edla Inc ..... .. .. ........ .. 18~
village Is seeking funding for
Rax Restaurants ................... 2lh
Ve&amp;erans Memort&amp;i
work on the Ohio River bank
Robbins &amp; Myers ....... ... ....... 16
Monday admissions - ·carlos
erosion at the sewage lagoons
Shoney's Inc. .:.... .. ..... .. ........ 13
Snowd,en, Pomeroy; Marte. Tho- ·
•,
'
below Hobson.
Star Bank ................ ..... ...... . 19
mas, Pomeroy.
Mayor Hortman was autho- Wendy's Int'l.. ........... :........ .4Y,
.. Moriday discharges - Robert
-.rlzed to sell the old backhoe,now Worthington Ind .......,.,, , .... ... 20% Smith, William Pickens.
that a new one has b!!!n ·purchased. The IT!ayor's report
showed receipts 'of '$5,231.32 In
·. green beans, coleslaw, a roll, pie
Dinner planned
February. It was reported that
or cake and a drink. The prices of Racine
Elementary
School
there has been no response from
PTO
Is
sponsoring
a
ham
and
r
$3.50
for adults and $2.25 for
Pomeroy on the Route 7 business
turkey
children
dinner
this
Sunday
•
.
11 and unde~ Include all
route through the villages ~hlch .
March
18,
at
the
Southern
High
the
menu
Items. Takeout dinners
both villages must approve beSchool
cafeteria.
Serving
will
will
also
be available and confore any further action can be
'
,
talners
will
be provided. Prostart
at
11
_
a.m.
The
menu
will
taken.
.
Include
ham
and
turkey,.mashed
ceeds
irom
the
dinner will be
Attending the meeting were
Mayor Hoffman, Clerk - . potatoes, homemade nOodles: used to purchase school supplies.
Treasurer Jon Buck. and Council
members Gerard, Bob Gilmore, Jack Satterfield, and William
Walters.

Allee Mary Clark, 90, or 95 ,
Custer St., Middleport, died
Monday at the Amerlcar~­
Pomeroy Nursing Center.
Born May 14, 1894 at Hockingport, Mrs. Clark was the daugh- '
ter of William and Emma Snyder ·
Chutes.-She was a retired cook
and was affiliated with the
. Baptist Church. She was also a ·
mem tier of the M,lddleport Amer· ~
Jean Legion Auxiliary, Post 128.
Survivors Include four children, Mabel Wlcklpne, or New
Matamoras, Floyd /Ainslee)
Clark, of Portland, Ore., Paul
(Mary) Clark, of Middleport, and '
-Mildred Milburn, also ot Middleport; two sisters, Hazel
McCloud, Pomeroy; Ruth
Deeter, Marie! ta; one brother,
Tom Chutes; of Arizona; 13
grandchildren and 22 great
grandchildren; and several nieces and nephews.
ln addition to her' parents, she
was preceded In death by her
husband, John W. Clark, In 1942;
two brothers and five Jlatera.
Services will be Friday, 1 p:m.,
at Ewing Funeral Home, with
Rev. Charlet~ NorriS officiating.
Burial will be at Graham Statton,
W.Va. CalllJII hours at the
funeral home will IJe 7. to 9 on
Wednesday •nd 2to 4 and 7 to9on
Thunday.
·

386

March 14, 1990

ATTENTION
ALUMINUM EMPLOYEES·
·
_ _ Area ·deaths_
· ------ RAVE~SWOOD
.
.
Carlos Snowden
And·Anyone Else.Anti.c lpating A DistributionAlice Clark ·
From A Qualified Retirement Plan. .

Carlos Elsworth Snowden, 73,
of Pomeroy, died Monday afternoon at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Born at Rutland on Aug. 31,
1916, Mr. Snowden was the son of
the tall.' Harry Elsworth and
Ethel Dora Stowe Snowden . J1e
was a graduate or Ru !land High
School and had been a member or
the CCC Corps and Rutland Fire
Department: He was a 35-year
mason and a retired welder lroin
the Kaiser Aluminum Corporal ton, Ravenswood, W.Va. '
Suvlvors Include his wife,
Pauline, at home; a, son, Jeff
;Carolyn) Snowden, Rutland; a
daughter, Alberta 1Johnl MontgOITjery, New Marshfield; two
step sons, Lawrence (Carolyn)
Darst of Rutland, and Rex
(Brenda) Darst: of Pomeroy;
two , step· daughters, · Party ·
rPearll Smith, or Pomeroy, and
Ellen (Bob) McClure, of Middleport; three grandchildren; 10
step grandchildren; two brothers, Robert Francis (Judy)
Snowden, Rutland, and Harry
' Everett IMary) Snowden, Point
Pleasant, W.Va.
He was preceded In death by
one · brother, a sister, a granddaughter and a great grandson.
Services will ·be Thursday, 1
p.m., at Rawlings-Coats-Fisher
Funeral Home with Eugene
Underwood officiating. Burial
wlil be In Miles Ct&gt;metery.
Friends may call at the funeral

Daily Npmber

playoff fever

POINT PLEASANT

'

NEWBAVBN
'
.
•

!

25th

- Ann~rauy

-\
.

' 1965.-9JO
IUIIT.AimAL PINALTV
PORIARLY
.
WITHDIIIlWAL .

• · 111118111 ,.o.1.c.' ..

AWAI'Il'B RESPONSE - West Vlfllnla G,v,
' ~aston Caperton unveils his prop08al Jue

Tueaday after tw' daya of talks ·wllh both the
WVEA and West Vlqlnla Federation of Teachers.
(UPI)

C'aperton .awaits-. respons~
·on latest offer to end :strike
-\

CHARLE$TON. W.Va.. lOP!)
- Teac~~ers union , leaders said
they· wollld· reiPIJIId W-eJneildiY'
to Gov. Gaston Caperton'ssev'enjx\ll111· plli11Jfor eridihgAhe stnJie
that has paralYzed schools ·
across the state.
Despite the governor's latest
offer, teachers prepared to push
tlie Walkout Into a sixth day while
. the West VIrginia Education
Assoclatio.n mulled over their
negotiating stance.
Caperton unveiled his proposal
late Tuesday after emerging
from two days of talks with both
the WVEA and the West VIrginia
Federation of Teachers.
His package to break West
VIrginia's first teachers strike
calls for some $20 million In next·
year's budget to raise teachers'
pay, an education summit In May
and a-special legislative session .
this summer to deal with
teachers salaries. But CapertDn
cautioned that the session would
be held only If the state ended the
fiscal year with a surplus. Legislators ended a 60-day
regular session last weekend,
without addressing the teachers'
grievances which led to last
Wednesday's walkout.
Before the 11 ·p.m. announcemen·!, education representative
stalked angrily out or Caperton's
office In a tiff over his timing.
"We're still on strike," vowed
WVEA President Kayetta Meadows, whose group represents
16,000 ,qf the 21,653 teachers.
"! guess I'm a little disappointed," she told · United Press
International. "We spent _two
days In negotiations and were

-han!Jed seven points "' 20 min- · the stale enacted a .recoro tax
utes· to 11-p.m., and were asked to
hike In 1989. He said about- $6
give a response by the Jloltclocl'
mllljon In a~al revenue
news.''
would be needed for every 1
· Meadows said " she -refused· percent ·• across-the-board InCaperton's Invitation to appear crease In pay. ·
at the news brleflpg. She and the
The strike erupted after the
WVFT leader declined to com- WVF;A accused him of f!lneglng
ment until their respective on an offer to provide $35 inllllon
boards · look at It. The WVFT . _for a 5 percent pay raise, put an
represents about 3,000 teachers.
extra $6.5 million In the health
, ''They have been working hard
Insurance program and levy $27
and negotiating In good faith with million In new taxes ori coal
the governor for the last two operators to help pay for the
days," the WVFT spokesman package.
said. ''They didn't receive the
On Tuesday, about . 300
proposal until the last hour. "
teachers, threatened with disTeachers launched the strike missal In Greenbrier County,
March 7 after the union accused were given a reprieve, In a
the governor of backing out of an compromise calllpg tor classed
offer to provide $35 million for a 5 to be dismissed Wednesday, then
percent pay raise, provide an resume the rest of the week with
extra $6.5 million to the sta,te's · available Instructors.
health Insurance program and
In return, the teachers are
levy $27 million In new taxes on obligated to refrain from picketcoal operators to help pay for the Ing, said county Superintendent
package.
Stephen Baldwin.
The two sides squared off more
"We're not going to !Ire anybthan 14 hours over the last two ody. and every teacher In · the
days, trying to hammer out a system will return to wor,k and
compromise.
every school will be open on
"We have reached a clear Monday," Baldwin said.
agreement on the need toes tabState Education Department
llsh along-rangeplanforlmprov- - officials reported Tuesday 25
lng education In W\!st VIrginia," counties had closed school beCaperton said. "And, although . cause of the strike, while 11 had
we have not yet reached a final spot closings and 19 were fully
agreement on returning teachers operational.
to the classrooms, we have
closed the distance between
ourselves and that goal."
Caperton said he could assure
teachers a pay raise only by
raising taxes bu I acknowledged
such a proposal would have little
public support, especially after
By United Preu International
· Ohio continues In thegrlpofthe
warmest 'weather or the decade,
'a nd while most Ohioans are
enjoying the unseasonable
weather, a Nat,lonal Weather
Service
forecaster said there·~ a
A Tuppers Plains man was cited In a car-ti·uck crash Tuesday
dark
side
to lt. ·
at 1: 45 p.m. In Tuppers Plains on S.R. 681 at the junction or S. R.
For
the
third
day In a row, high
7, according to the GaiUa·Melgs Post of the State Highway
temperature
records
were shat·
Patrol.
t
· ·
tered
across
the
Buckeye
State.
Blain Taylor, 77, was c!ted for making an Illegal left tum and
New
highs
were
set-at
eight
of the
driving with an expired registration after hla 1985 Chevrolet
National Weather Service's ·10
Celebrity hit a 1980 Mazda B2000 pickup truck driven by TerriL.
~porting
stations, another was
Nutter, 24, also ot Tuppers Plains.
_
tied
(at
Findlay)
ahd II came
Nutter was heading east on S.R. 681 when she stopped at the
within
1
degree
of
the
record at
jUnction. Taylor, who was driVIng north on S.R. 7, made a lett
Cincinnati:
·turn, but turned the comer sbort,and hit Nutter's truck.
·
- The ·h ighest official reac!ing
a1aln waa In Zanesville, where It
reached 80, 5 clepee1 above the
mark
set 111 1967. There wer:e
. In view of a· strong Interest expres~ed by many reslden.. of
uaofflcial mld-80 readlllll Ia
Melp County, Sheriff James M. Soulaby hu scheduled a
1ome Ohio River countll!ll. ·
meeting to establiSh a Neighborhood Crtme Watcb Prcicram.
"We are JOina to pay for It
Patrolman Dave Wllllama of the Athens Pollee Departmeat
(warmer
than normal ll!mpera·
wiD conduct the ~emlnar scheduil!d for Tuesday, ,.arch 20, at 7
. tul'lll) In the Iolii run," said tew
p.m., in tbe Metp County Common P._aa Courtroom.
' Ramey, bead meteorolo1ilt for
Patrolman William• bas been lnatrumentalln establllbiq lhll
the National Weather Service In
type of program In other areas of Southeastern Ohio and will
Columbus. "It Is almoat a fact
present a sUde show as well u diltrlbute l!.t erature to those
that II iiiOina to get cold a1a1n. ''
ateendblg.
·
'1'hete are notnormalll!mperOnce the program has been atartecl, a member of the Meigs
atures. It brings in the threat of
Continued on pap.12
Continued on pa1e 12

..---LocaJ ·news

Wann weather
is creating

, pro~lems

briefs~

Patrol cites ·Tuppers Plains man

Interest shown in pltm

'

-~----~~~~~----------------------~---!.
.'
\,

proved drug and alcohol treat- t.endent, with the principal to
By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
ment facility to be done at the
SenUnel Neww-Staff ·
refer the case to I he pollee or
A revised and more explicit cost and dlscretiom of the parent
sheriff's department for possible
drug and alcohol policy govern- or guardian.
court referral, and the student to
However, failure to enroll In or
Ing students on ·school property
be expelled for the maximum .
to complete the rehabilitation
Including buses and behavior pt
time allowed.
until release from the drug- · As for the provision on counter- all school sponsored activities on
alcohol treatment facUlty shall
or off school grounds was
felt drliji'S In the revised policy
result In expulsion of the student
adopted by the Meigs Local
adopted·Jast night, any student In
School District Board of Educa- for the · maximum number of
violation shall be suspended 10
days allowed by law. It further days on a first offense and shall
tion Tuesday night.
states that a second violation of
The policy deals specifically
be referred to t_h e property
with tl)ree situations - posses- the penalty section of the policy officials for possible court proshall -result In expulsion to I he ceedings. A second violation·
. slon, use or under the influence;
the sale and supplying of chemi- fullest extent of the law.
shall result In expulsion for the
As for the sale or supplying of maximum time allowed, the
cals, drlijls, marijuana or alcodrugs, chemicals, marijuana or policy stales ,
hol; and counterfeit drugs. It also
alcohol the policy states that this
-sets pemiltles for violations.
As to what constitutes countershall also result In a 10 day felt drlijls, Supt. James CarpenUnder the Influence Is defined
suspension following a written ter said that these are things sold ·
In the policy as a · student
recommendation to the superln·
: manifesting signs of chemical
Continued on page 12
use such as staggering, reddenIng eyes, odor of cllemlcals,
nervousness, restlessness, fal ling asleep In class, memory loss,
abusive langu!'ge, or any behavIor not normal for the particular
student.
As for prescription drugs , the
policy designates that use of a
drug authorized by a medical
'
prescription from a licensed
physician shall not be considered
By NANCY YOACHAM
servlce customers who would be
a violation of the rule as long as a
Sentinel
News
Stall
wiOing to participate in a pilot
parent's statement and/or presThe
Importance
of
recycling,
recycling program. If the procription label Is available. both
environmentally
and
flnangram
proves beneficial In MldPenaflies provided lor under
clally,
was
discussed
at
Tuesdleport,
Manley would consider
',the revised policy Include on a
day's meeting of the Meigs expanding the program Into
first offense a suspension by the
County Chamber of Commerce. other areas of Meigs County.
principal of the student lor a
The luncheon meeting was held
Manley explained how he buys
perlod 1of 10-days In compliance
at
tbe
.oen1or
cltlzens~mterln
'
-·~!jYCJabiEl
materials from the
with srude1\t:''du~ process proce.
·
Pomeroy.
genern'publlc
and theW sells to
dures, notification of the-pollee or
·
markets
outside
Meigs &lt;;ounty,
Roger
Manley,
of
Manley's
sheriff's departin~nt for court
Trash
Servlce
and
Manley's
mainly
In
the
Chillicothe
area.
referral, and a. recommendation
Recycling
Center,
Middleport,
He
also
explained
that
· the
from the principal to the superinwas
the
gties
1
speaker
and
market
for
recyclable
materials
,
tendent on the expulsion.
devoted his comments mainly to may change from lime to time,
The policy further provides
recycling. Manley explained his and so he often has stockpiles of
that an expulslonmaybeavolded
commitment to recycling and materials at his location In lower
by the successful completion and
shared Information regarding 'Middleport. In fact, plans are In
after care follow-Up by the
student and parents ~t an ap- proposed state legislation to the works to expand the Middlemandate recycling throughout port business, and perhaps acthe stale.
quire the former R.C. Bottling
" Recycling Is notjustath!J)gof Company building for the recy the future," Manley stiij, "It's or cling and use the current buildtoday." He went on to sllare ing, which was constructed just
current slatls_tlcs that 80 percent last fall, as a warehouue.
of solid waste Is being landfllled,
Also In regard to recycling,
10 percent Is being recycled and businessman Charles Kitchen. of
10percentlnclnerated. "We have Middleport Dairy Queen, told
to change those percentages members of Chamber that he
Holzer Health Plan Inc., a
around," he added, but atknowl· was discarding 21 cubic yards of
- Gallipolis area Health Mainteedged that such changes can't solid waste a week, and after just
nance Organization which oper- take place overnight. "We must talking a few minutes with Mr.
ates as AdvaCare, wUI close May
all be a part of the solution, not Manley, had "figured out how to
1.
just part of the problem," he cut that figure In half." Manley
The announcement was made
said.
offered to asslstother businesses
today by Holzer Clinic Inc. and
Presently, plans are In the In determining how !!est to limit
Central Benefits Mutual Insuworks by Manley to start a the solid waste produced by their
rance Company, who jointly voluntary curb side recycling establishments, noting that "It's
formed AdvaCare In 1986.
program In Middleport. Twenty easy to throw It In the dumpster,
The decision to dissolve the containers have already _been but harder to Write a check for
partnership was made because
ordered for use by 20 of his trash
Continued on page 12
after four years of operation, the
HMO has not attained sufficient
. enrollment to operate cost
efficiently.
Currently, AdvaCare has approximately 3,000 members,
most enrolled through one of 60
employer groups.
"Our concern for AdvaCare
members will continue. ~ said
Dr. J . Craig Strafford, chairman
of Holzer Health Plan. The plan
has made arrangements with
Central Benefits Mutual . Insurance Company to provide !or
continued coverage to the
members.
"Depending upon the type and
size of the group; Central BenefIts will otter a variety of
continued coverage options,"
said Anthony A-. Fata, ·a board
member of Holzer Health Plan
and vtce-prl!lllden~ of Health
Network Programs for Central
Benefits.
·
Details regarding speclflccov·
era1e propoeals are currently
being finalized between the Plan
and the. Ohio and Welt Vlrllnia ·
Department• of llllurance.
Employen who currently ~
vide AdvaCare coverap will be contacted l'elardllll their options wlthla the next few weeu.
Ia addition, A.dva~are
member• will be ~ent lettera tn ·
the near future explatnlq the
EXPIAINI Nn 111111N1188 - Denll llec+m••, el Mlillllle
clo11n1 and ullll'llll them tbat
port, tllllll a few m•t 1 u 'l'lllr18J'a mutlnr e1 lite ......
~erv.lce at Holzer Clinic will be
eo: Cllllllber or Camaaeree to _,.... 1111 - •tru a
unaffec:ted .
A.; 1 " : ' ' . : . ' ; .CamrtiiJ, wllk* II 11 "'•' 111
"Our members can continue to
.,
• gs
II ... fh
... vlllt the clinic and aee the
Widell will . . . ... ..., . . 7 ?II . . .
. phyalclllll they_know and trust,"
,l ldiJI-..., • well M wldl llillatlll , ......,., 'ftl'llall!a
Strafford emphasized.
m_,--vtaJJ concepCa.

Recycliflg topic
of Meigs County
Chamber session

AdvaCare

plan will
end May 1

=-:.
:._
U:.
.,...llatlo.

:1w

.,,,w.,

,,

------·- - --------~----~~--------------~--------~----------~-

•

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