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                  <text>o ·hio Lottery

Meigs
girls
triumph -

Pick 3:

759
Pick 4:

Page4

Cloudy toaJabt. Low ID mid·
l Os. Saturday, cloudy. High Dear

40.

9105

•

•

THIS FRIDAY, SATURDAY.
.
&amp; SUNDAY

Vol. 43, No. 118

Copyrlghled 1113

; ~~~.-~--~---------------------------------------------------------------------

U.S. troop reinforcements ar.rive ·in Kuwait ·

By .\S~Gelated Press
" .T~e first batch of. U.S . troop
' rem,C!rcements ~ived today in
• Kuwrut as the Untied States. threat·
: ened 10 launch another f!lid against
• Iraq 1f Saddam Hussem doesn't
· comply with allied demands.
: · U.S. ~fficials, meanwhile,
· would netther confmn nor deny a
' report that one of the allies' bombs
slruck an apartment building during
· Wednesday's U.S. lead-air raid.

)

'.

'

for the raid, in which il claimed at
least two civilians were among 19
dead. But no retaliatOry action had
been taken by this aftemoon, and
Iraq announced it was giving in 10
the West on two issues that had
pushed the crisis 10 military action.
Iraq said Thursday it would let
weapons inspeciOrs fly 10 Baghdad
aboard U.N. planes and stop armsgathering forays in the Kuwaiti
border zone. Both were considered

ended fighting in the Persian Gulf
War.
·
.
Today, the fust contingent of up
to I , I 00 U.S. troops from Fort
Hood, Texas, arrived at Kuwait's
International ailport to beef up the
military presence on the border,
reporters sai4. About 300 special .
force members are 11lready in
Kuwail assisting the Kuwaiti milltary.

The first 350 soldiers from the

~Ira~~q~h~as~v~ow~ed~·~IO~iak~·~e~re~v~en~g~e.:·.~·i~ol~a~ti.on~s~o~f~U~.~N~·;;,6;~~~dt;at~2T:e~xa~S~b~ase~~am~·v~ed~th~i~s!af~le~rn~~

• REGULAR PRICED
APPAREL
•JEWELRY
•WATCHES

I

OFF

and three Air Force C-IOs were fly-

inginabout650otherslaterl0day. Iraq's mov~ment of missiles
iniO zones where allies were protecting dissident Shiites and Kurds,
and Baghdad's dispatch of planes
over a southern " no fly zone"
were other factors that precipitated
tl!e raid.
Defense Secretary Dick Cheney
said it was "enlirely possible" that
another air sbike would be neces·

OFF

l!y JIM FREEMAN

OVP News Starr
A Gallipolis man indicted
Wednesday by the Gallia County
Grand Jury on charges of murder
and .felonious aSsault pleaded not
guilty 10 the chuges during his .·
arraignment Thursday afternoon in
the Gallia County Common Pleas
Court of Judge Joseph L. Cain.
Gerald "Jerry" Matney, i 8, is
charged in the Oct. 9, 1992, shooting death of 48-year-old Olley
Angel, of Mill Creek Road, Gallipolis. Angel's daughter, Paula
Angel, was shot in the hip during
the incident.
Matney allegedly shot the
Angels with a .380 semi-auiOlllalic
handgun during a. dispiJte in the

,•

·-COSMETICS
•BATH
•HOME
. DECOR
• HOUSEWARES
•SPORTING
GOODS

works ·with some microfilm of oewepapers In
late 1800's. The library has purchased microfibo oo newspapers dating back to 1851.

Library upgrades historical room
The Meigs County Library has
added a microfilm reader.and print· .
er 10 its Carnegie Historical Room
research equipmeliL
Use of the scanning.equipment
and microflim of newspapers pub, lished in Meigs County trom 1850
to 1970 and census reports are
available for use by the public. The
cost for priniOuts Of m&amp;lerial is 25
cents a page.
Librarian Ruth Powers reports
that the library purchased from the
Ohio Historical Society the complete newspaper collection of. 177
rolls of microfilm. Additional rolls

of newspaper microfilm will be
purchased Ill!.they bec!ome available
from the Oh10 HisiOncal Society.
. The reader is equipped 10 magnify or zoom in on portions pf a
newspapjlr page and allows a
researcher to block an area to be
printed. II can be sel for whatever
speed is desired for scanning pages
and the screen, itself is well lighted
and makes _lhe printed page easy 10
read.
On microfilm are copies of
Meigs County's first newspaper,
the Meigs County Telegraph, a
weekly which was printed from
1851 10 18S9. Otl)er weeklies, all

. Reed a"ested, charged '·
Meigs· County Sheriff James M. Soulsby has reported that
Deputies Manning Mohler and John Spires arrested Roger Reed, 42,
of Gold Ridge Road in Pomeroy Thursday nigh! on a U.S. Army
Deserter complaint. According 10 the pickup form issued by the
Deserter Information Point at Fort BenJ31tlin Harrison, Ind., Reed
was listed ils a deserter from the U.S. Army from November 19,
1968. He is being held in the Meigs Cot~nty Jail pending pick up by
the military police.

No injuries in accident
On Wednesday afternoon, deputies of the Meigs· County Sheriffs bcpartment investigated an aulD accident on Stale Ro~te 7 pear
Dead Man's Curve.
.
Gary L. Hanning of Pomeroy was northbound in his 1978
Oldsmobile on State Route 7, went left df center Ill pass another car,
but did not see a southbound Corvette, driven by Mel Simon, Jr. of

•

Gallipillis.

-

Simon, S7, swerved 10 the right, going off the roadway and over
the embankment to misf'lhe northbound vehicle. No contact
between the vehicles occurred. Hanning was ciled for operating left
of center.
· ' .No injuries were reportq:1. and no damage occurred 10 Hanning's
. vehicle. Light damqe was reported 10 Simon's car. ,

Karnes transpo.rted to Orierrt ·
I

•

I

I

POMEROY

f[;"iit;;ili~•

'

'1

parking lot beside the Pizza Hut
restaurant on Eastern Avenue, Gallipolis.
'
A110mey William N. Eachus of
Worthing10n entered a plea of not
guilty in Matney's behalf. Mem·
hers of Matney's family were present during the hearing.
Cain appointed Eachus 10 represent Matf\ey. Eachus was earlier
appointed 10 represent Matney by
Probate/Juvenile Judge Thomas
Moul10n.
Matney may he sentenced 10 15
years 10 life and fmed a maximum
of $15,000 if found guilty o.n the
murder charge, Cain said. The felo·
nious assault charge carries a possible penalty of 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, or 8 10
15 years confinement and a maximum fine of $7,500.

In addition, Mamey may have 10 ·
serve an additional three years if
found gtlilty because !be incident
involved the use of a firearm, Cain
said.
'
Cain set cash bond a~ .$50,000
. with no 10 percent allowed. MatneJ has been free on a $5,000
bond.
Eachus had asked Cain io con;
tinue 'liond at $50,000 with 10 per:
cent allowed. Matney had bee)!
employed since being out on bond,
Eachus Said.
·
Cain ordered Mamey 10 repof(
10 jail at 3:30p.m. today.
Matney was 17 years old at the
time of the shooting but is being
tried as an adult. A !rial has been
schedul~ for Feb. 25 at 9. a.m.

Voinovich
·says Medicaid taking
.
away school, other state money·
'

NEW MICROFILM REAQER .• The Meigs
&lt;;ouuty Publk Library's neweet equipl!l~nt is a
l!llcrotllm reader and printer. Here Ruth POIII'·
en, ll~rarlan, demo~trates bow the equipment

• FURNITURE• SMALL APPLIANCES
•CAMERAS &amp;
ACCESSORIIES
• CASSETTES &amp; CD'S
• BLANK VIDEO TAPES

41300 LAUREL CLIFF RD.

tion and no.casualty estimate.
Chel'ley said IOday he could not
· confmn that an apanment building
was hit, but did not rule it ouL " It's
always .possible when you drop
weapons like this that you can have
collateral damage."
Cheney discounted Iraqi fibo of
a damaged building, saying that
during the Gulf War, Iraq
"phOnied up" film 10 suggest the
United States was bombing indis-

to murder, assault charges

,.........__.Local briefs---

OFF

"! would hope it would not he
necessary, but there shouldn't be
any mistake on his (Iraqi leader
Saddam Hussein's) part," Cheney
said this morning. " We are prepared 10 do il again if we have 10."
The Washington ·Post, quoting
unidentified Air Force sources,
reported in IOday's editions that a
stray 2,000-pound bomb heavily
· damaged an apartment building
near Basra. The newspaper said

Matney p iedds"",;;t

, ' •

•TOYS
•BEDDING
•RUGS
•CRAFTS
-•KITCHEN
•LINENS

A MuiUmedll Inc. Newapapor

'

JANUARY 15~ 1'8 &amp; 17
•

1 Sec:llon, 10 Pogea 25 centa

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio Friday, January 15,1993

On Thur,lday, Sheriff's Deputy Ralph Trussell transported
Daniel Kames of Shlde 10 Orient Reception Center 10 begin serving
his leiiUIIICII rec:enlly impoeerd by Meigs Counly Common Pleas
1udae Fred w. Crow In.
Xamea wu the .._ ollhree.chargcd mid sentenced for men,
theflllld JllCeivin• atm. property liOm the Scott Nelson home in
Columbia Townah1p.
.
,
· Ho -ICIItenecd 10 II nalha on the tllllft cltqe and two years '
an the 1111011 c:lwJe, 10 bo llr¥ed-c:onaecutively, and five years pro- •
balion on the chlrF oC recoiving 1101en property. FoUowlog the
. ,...."'~~. 111e defend•• hll roar ye111 1o whleb ro pay lhe reatitu'
lion In die IIDOUIII of 519.000 to Neilan, or the house that
- btned In the incldenL ,
Continued on MRe 3

on microfilm at the library, pub' lished in ·the late 1800's were the
Pomerey Crescent, the MosquiiO,
the ·Pomeroy Journal, 1he S1ar
Spangled Banner, the Meigs Coun. ty Press, the Independenl, the Herald Weekly, the Meigs County Herald, the Meigs County Telegraph,
and the Meigs County Times.
,Since 1900 the library has on
microfilm the Tribune-Telegraph,
. the Republican Weekly, the Republican Herald, the Meigs County
Republican, The Leader, The
Democrat. and The Daily Sentinel,
Meigs County's 19th newspaper.

Swisher issues
·statement on '
Jones hiring
Michael Swisher, dirCc!Oi of the
Department of Human Services,
has corrected and clarified several
items periaining to the recent
employment of Richard E. Jones 10
a management position in that
·agency. ·
'
. Swisher said that l,he salary as
he calculates it is $28,516.80.annually, not. as was earlier reponed in
The ~~ Sentinel, "unofficially
calcul
in excess of $35,000 per
year.
The director, making reference
10 a comment in this newspaper
about a list of individuals who had
passed lhe test for the position
·being unavailable,·said that "there
was no such list and there is nq.such list ofpeople who have taken
the test and passed It for Adminisaative Assistant IV and that·is why
the Deparl!llent of Admjnistrativc
Services gave the appointing
authority provisional authorizalion
10 aelec:tiiOIJICOIIC for the .lob." The
appointin1 authOrity is ilie Me{_.
County Board ol County Commllsloners; '
Swisher further said that the
positilln was posted within the
department, and that he "interviewed the candidates wbo
lied
and choae not 10 ~ any"'J the
four. Had one of II*D ~ llllect·
ed, their certification. would not
have carried and it 'lfOU1d have
been a provisional appointment,"

..

.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Ohio's Medicaid program bas
.grown so much in the ·past decade
that is taking away money for edu·
cation and other vital services,
Gov. George Voinovicb says. '
He referred Thursday 10 statistics ·that showed the health care
program for the poor now is con·
suming 30 percent of the state budget, compared with only 22 perce9t
for education.
"We are going 10 address this
very, very serious problem,"
Voinovich said at a Statehouse
news conference.
He.said that since 1982, Medicaid costs have increased 237.2
percent, cOmpared with 47.9 percent for the federal Consumer Price
Index. The cost rose from $1.16
billion a decade ago 10 $3.9 billion
this year.
.
,
Caseloads grew from 914,000 10
1.4 million .
. Voinovich said the program is
"gobbliitg up state dollars:' at the
expense of education and other ser·
vices and must he curbed.
.He oullined his plans for culling
costs and said nursing home subsi-

dies will be one the chief targets.
Nursing home costs increased
from $462 million 10 $1.7 billion
during the decade and now make
up 43 percent of the Medicaid budgel, Voinovich said.
A temporary law made permanent by lhe Legislature .in Decembei established a nursing home .

reimburs emenl formula and set
limits on state payments. It is
expected to save $100 million a
year, he said.
The administration also plans lo
increase the number of senior cilizens taking pan communjly-based
programs that help them slav at
home. _

Taft: Voters f~d up .
with politics as usual
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Ohioans in lhe Legislature,
Secretary of State Bob Taft said Congress and non-judicial
voters who turned out' in record Statewide candidates, and cast I
numbers last November sent a million ballo1s for independent
strong message !hal they won 't presidential,candida~ Ross PeroL
stand for politics as usual.
"That's the 1\ind of frustration
"They're fed up with the kind that accounts for the growing
of partisan gridlock that was occur- · strength of the independent movering in Washing10n. They want the menl in Ohio and across the ·counpublic officials simply 10 address tty," Taft 10ld about 350 people at
their concerns and their problems," the winter conference of the Ohio
Taft said Thursday 8l a meeting of Association of Elections Officials. .
"And cer~Jinly that's olie rea.county election officers.
Volers approved ~rm limits for
·Continued on page 3

Dr. G. A. Kusnir to begin medical
,practi~e in Pomeroy on Monday
Meigs County has a new physi- of nephrology before coming to the
cian.
·
United States in 1989. He was
He is George A. Kusnir, M.D., awarded a nephrolol!r fellowship at
an in~ist and a nephrologist, of the University of Vuginia Health
Roanoke, Va., who will open his Science Center from 1989 10 1991
pffices in Pomeroy ~n Monday, and meantime has continued his
Jan. 18.
·
training in Internal medicine 8l the
His offices will be localell in the Memorial Hospilals in Roanoke
Meigs Medical BuildinJ adjacent and the Veterans Administration
to Veterans Memorial Hospital Medical Center in Salem, Va. Both
wbere Dr. Kusnir will also serve on institutions are affiliated with the
staff.
Uni\ICISity of Virginia.
A native of Argentil!3. Dr. Kus·
Dr. Kusnir has received numernir received his lJledic8l degree 8l .ous honon and recognition during
the National University Buenos his training in internal medicine
Aires School of Meclicine In :1971. and nephrology (diseases dealing
H~ served l!is lolemlhlp and resi- with the kidneys). He hils autholed
dency in lnlm'nal medicine Ill the c. and co-authored several~c:ientific
Argcrich Municipal HOB)ftlai in papers relating to diseases .of the
Buenos Aires being promoted to renal system.
chief raidenllo 1974 and c:ompletDr. Kusnir's wife, Sylvia, a
ing his reiidency In 1975. He native of Argentina and alao a
served u attending ph)'liclan at "'lh~ian. and two ol the ~lc's
that hosDitlli from 1975 10 1980.
chlldren, a son, Juan. 7, and a
Dr. I(UJnir received subiDecialty daughter, Maria, 9, are residilla In
ttaining in critical care at l!l Sal- Roanoke and will remain there
vador Un.ivoraity from 1980 to until the 'end of the current ~c:hool
1981 and received 1 nephroloay year when thiy will join Dr. Kuanir
fellowship 11 the Unlvenlty of in this area. The Kuanira' alao
Buenos Aires Hospital l'roln 1982 have two other d&amp;ughton, Nllalia,
10 1984. He practiced ill the fteld 20, and Marina, 18, both ol whoin

arc allendin~ the University of
Buenos Aires lD Argentina.
•
The telephone numbers for
making an appointment with Meigs ·
County's newest physician are 9927463 and 992-7S79.

�••

Commentary

Friday, January 15, 1993

·.
Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday, January 15, 1993

Accu-Weather• forecast for

The Daily Sentinel

'Wise-use' groups threaten environmentalism

By The Associated Press ·
Skies will be mostly cloudy
today, with a threat of flurries in
northern ..and cenual Ohio. Highs
wiU range from 'the upper 20s 10 the
mid·30s. There will be a chance of
flurries tonighl in the north . Lows
wiU be in the lower to mid-~Os.
A mixture of clouds and ~un ­
shine is expected Saturday, with
higli s from the mid-30s to the
lower 40s. There will be a chance
of snow Sunday, with highs
remaining in the 30s.
The record hlgh temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 64 ip 1932. The record
low was- 12 in 1893.
Sunset today will be at 5:31

conditions.and

MICH.

WASHINGTON - If Ron threatl:h careers, communities and would cause 30 pen:ent unemploy· does environmen~ism." •
Though percetv.ed bf so~e as
Arilold is right, former Arizona even Christianity. ·"It's really an · ment in the timber community, and
Gov. BTQce Babbitt will be to the .extremist movemen~" former Inte- add~d: "And along with that mere nu'IUngs by the radical fringe,
,
Pomeroy, Ohio
so-called
" wise-use movement" rior Secretary Stuart L. Udall told comes wife battering, child environmentalists are deeply trouDEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF 1HE MEIGS-MASON AREA
what former Reagan administration
molestation and all the rest of it. bled by the movement. ' 'I have
Interior Secretary James Watt was .
Now do you think the environmen- made a point of not taking them for
to environmentalism: a fund-raistalists give a damn about the fact gran~." sai~ David Abe~worth,
ing bonanza.
J 1
"'
..
that kids are going to be molested a Nanonal Wildlife Federliuon offi"They'll make us rich and
asaresultofthis?"
·
cia!. "They are areal threat.'' : .
"I
-In
Eureka.
Mont,
Forest
Ser.The Aduondack Council 1D
famous,"
Arnold
predicted.
ROBERT L. WINGETT
th_
i
nk
he'll
(Babbin)
be
the
perfect
vice
worker
Dave
Nesbin
and
his
Ehzabet~town,
N.Y. ":" a group
Publisher
Darth Vader."
1r.l1
wife dropPed by a local high school ad~ocatmg preservation of the
Arnold is one of the leading
Jllst year to hear limber proponents AdiJ;on!:lack State Pll!"' - ~ been
PATWIJITEHEAD
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
wise-use gurus, part of a growing
discuss the fuJure of !he local econ- · · Y'C~Imized by a strmg of v~olent
Assistant Publisher/Controller
General Manager
nationwide coalition of landown- us. "I think their use of religion to omy. What they heard was a ftre- mctdenl$, verbally and P~~s1cally.
ers, farrners, ·ranchcrs and off-road- further their cause is absurd and and-brimstone lecture on "attempts John. Sh!ll:han•. the councils co~LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They sbould be less than 300
vehicle buff&amp; seeking -to roll back dangerous." ·
by the environmentalists to bram- mumcat10ns duector, has expenwords. All letters are subject to ed iting and must be signed with name,
Interviews with activists across wash children at schools." Accord· enced the threat fusthand..
.
environmental regulations governaddress and telephone number. No unsigned letters wiU be pu~lished. Letters
ing public and private land use. By the country suggest that no rhetoric ing to Nesbitt, one speaker stated
"I can.' t tell.ftom ,their metonc
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.
stoking fear and resentment in is 100 inflammatory:
that"environmentalists were deter- whether I'm Hitler or Lenin from
depressed timber and mining
- "I just had a school teacher mined to destroy Christianity."
one day 10 .the next,'.' Sheehan told
IOwns, the movement has traveled call me about the last sawmill to be
- In Gillette, Wyo., the Abun- our associate Dean Boyd: Last
like a prairie rue across the coun- shut down in her town," Arnold dantWildlife Society- a self-pro- year, Sheehan was phystca)ly
try. The environmentally minded said. ' 'Everybody was coming . claililed pro-hunting, pro-trapping, assaulted by a· member. of Ir e
Babbiu, who is Clinton's choice for apart. Men were beating their property rights group charged m its Adirondack Solidarity Alliance, a
By MIKI!: Fli:INSILBI!:R
Secretary of the Interior, is helping wives.• molesting their daughters. newsletter that "most environmen- property rights group whom oppoAssocialed Press Writer
__ to fuel that ftre.
They can't sell timber because of talists are anti.,God, anti-American ' ·nehts claim·has ties to the far-right
·· WASHINGTON- They're the ftrst words he'll utter as president and
The wise-use movement is like the spotted owl. People are hurt, and anti-gun .'' And that "since John Birch Society. Over the last
'may be the most important His inaugural address can give purpose to his a church with different denomina- desperate and going to get even." ·
Communism has been thoroughly two years, vandals have spread
presidency, ~~ it o~f with~ round of approval.
.
.
tion~. an array ofpreachers and
.- During a town meeting in discredited, it has been ~ackaged nails !~ the sueet in front of ~he
· . E~ryooe s liste.rung. Th!s speech better be good. Bill Omton must be pulpits glued together by a com- Libby, Mont., a pro-development and called environmentalism , Com- ~ounc~ s ~ffice, sprayed the build: thinking thoughts like that nght now.
.
. . .
mon gospel: Environmentalists activist argued that a forest accord monism .attacks Christianity, so mg. with .hqwd manure and pelted
So wh~ does a president (or his ghostwnter) turn for mspl1'3Uon at a
·
the~r · office with fruit laced wtth
.
·'
skunk-oil.
"time like this7
· •· He turns to the words of predecessors, often and logically enough.
Adirondack Park officials have
• And sometimes, the evidence suggests, new presidents draw more than
fared worse. One official had J!er
)nspiration from the inaugural addresses of others. They borrnw ideas and
barn burned down last summer-.
.1 paraphrase phrases.
.
.,
Two years ago, park officials found
· .' Kathleen Hall Jamieson of the University of Pennsylvmtia, who studu,y C' .c.u I,.,.,...~ """"'aT/'
three bullets lodged in their car
·' ied presidential metoric for her book, "Deeds Done in Words," says
"'' .,"". 1'-WW'J' rMIN
'- 1
after they sped away from a Soli. inaugural recycling is commonplace. She doesn't condemn it
'fOUR HONOR, ON lliREE COON1S
darity Alhance &lt;lemonstration
James Polk paraphraSed Andrew Jackson, Ms. Jamieson says, and Jolm
where shots were fired. "Town
;. F. Kennedy echoed Abraham Lincoln. Richard Nixon borrowed from
Of POLICY PIFFERENCEJ.
supervisors here are petrified that ~
Kennedy and Ronald Reagan used Thomas Jefferson. Warren Harding
they're going to have their house
burned down if they offend these
and Jimmy Caner both quoted the sam.e verse from the prophet Micah.
Franklin D. Roosevelt and Carter both quoted a former teacher.
people," Sheehan said.
And if they didn't borrow from earlier presidents, they borrowed,
1 •
Dale French of the Adirondack
sometimes, from what was at hand.
Solidarity Alliance denounces the
FOR's most famous line- "We have nothing to fear but fear itself"
violence. "All we're doing is try. - resembles what Henry David Thoreau, the naturalist and philosopher,
ing to protect our property and
. wrote in his jouinal on Sept. 7, 1851 : "Nothing is so much to be feared as
have a future for our kids," he
.rear."
said.
, Samuel Roseiunan, who was FOR's speechwriter, wrote in his autobiAsked about outbreaks of vioography that Eleanor Roosevelt told him that one of her friends had given
lence like those in the Adirondacks,
.her husband a book of Thoreau's writings. She said it was in his hotel
Ron Arnold acknowledges that he
.:room the day his speech was being polished.
has had ''groups calling me $bOUt
, "Roosevelt frequently picked up a book at his bedside for brief readarmed insllJTl)Ction .... But.I have to
..inJl before turning out the lights," Rosenman wrote. ' ~ It may be that in
tell them that we won't be a party
thiS way he carne across the phrase, it stuck in his mind and found its way
to any violence."
~
Jack Ande~son and Michael
'into this speech."
, But Mrs. Roosevelt later disputed that theory, sort of. "It was an origiJ/ o/~
Blostein are writers for United
~
/I 1
Feature Syndicate, Inc.
· aal saying," she wrote, "if there is anything.really original!"
As for Kennedy's ringing words, the Rev. George St. John, who was
IIULMfal 1 ~ ~~--~-~...,
~ headmaster at Choate, Kennedy's preparatory school, reportedly used 10
rvo-•
""•··~'""~""--~
·tell students, ''Ask not what your school can do for you, ask what you can
-do for your school.''
:• A lirie used by R~an read like one of Jefferson's - though it per·
·l.oVu • • J
~
fectly renected Reagan s philosophy.
"
, -Reagan: "Well, if no one among is capable of governing himself,
Mary, who was his distant relative.
What happened between Charles compatible.
DI' ?.
then who among us has the capacity to govern someone'else?"
3(ld
Diana?
They
discussed it among themDiana
was
a
high-school
(boardStatistical
results
indicate
that
· -· Jefferson: "Sometimes it,is said that man can not be trusted with !he
"When
they
were
married
in
selves
before giving their answer."
ing
school,
really)
dropout;
Charles
arranged
marriages
once
were
suc.sovemment of himself. Can he, then, be trusted with the government of
1981,
the
Archbishop
of
CanterA
Jewish
rabbi' I know says:
was
a
Cambridge
graduate.
When
cessful.
But
obviously
they
are
not
:others?"
bury
said
to
the
congregation
at
St.
"For
4,000
years,
Jews were margoing
to
work
out
in
a
Western
set•
.
Paul's
Cathedral
in
London,
"Here
ried
off
by
their
parents
- aad,
ting
today.
We
are
too'
individualis: : EDITOR'S NOTE- Mike Feinsilber has covered inaugurals
is
the
stuff
of
which
fairy
!ales
are
you·
know,
it
tended
to
work
out. I
.
tic.
Young
people
would
not
permit
;ince 1969.
made.''
wonder
how
our
horoes
with
often
iL
••••
Since the prince and princess in once, in a dinner conversation, he
The reason that arranged mar- their tensions, their squabbles and
••
fairy tales always live happily ever mentioned Kipling's "Just So Sto- riages often have worked out so high rate of divorce prove that mar- .
·:
arter, this was what was expected
ries," she asked, "They were just well is that parents usually have riage by free choice is a change for ·
for Prince Charles and his real live so
.
.•
more wisdom in these matters ; lhe better. ~ '
what?"
princess.
As
for
love
in
an
arranged
mar~
Young
people
tend
to
be
impulsive
Then there was the difference in
"The end depends on the begin- . their ages. Sh~ was 20, he was 33.
and select a partner on a more emo- riage, this rabbi says: "The Bible,
ning" ( "finis origine pendet");
Before the wedding, · some tional basis ._ such as chemistry, tells us that when Issac brough ~
· and this surely was l)le most auspi- American marriage counselors convenience, cosmetics or circum- Rebecca home, 'he came to· love;
cious of marital beginnings.
her.' Rebecca had been picked for:
were given personality profiles of stances.
Or was it?
Issac
by the family servant. A~
What
happens
to
courtship
and
the couple. They were not optiThere were those who saw signs mistic about the future of the royal romance in an arranged marriage?
often happens, companionship lel)l
of trouble ahead even before union.
•'Courtship and romance did not to friendship and friendship to-.rl
Charles .and Di drove off from the
.
.
,,
play
a ll!rl!e part in ancient times," 1ove.
This was no arranged marriage.
church in their liveried 1902 lan- Charles and Diana found each says Prof. Paul Maier of Western
Arranged marriages have gone:
dau. Their tastes, for example, Yiere other with no help (or hindrance) Michigan University. "But this is the way of' 'love, honi&gt;r and obey'·~ •
radically different.
from their families. Despite their not to say that bride and groom in the nuptial vows. But failed mar~
He liked equesuian sports; she different tempeJ1!111Cnts, they devel- were simply thrown at each other riages - royal or otherwise - still~
was nervous on horseback. He oped at least a genuine affectioo for in a loveless mati::h. ·
raise the q~estion, "Should I havC:
liked opera; .she preferred ·ballet. each other.
·1
"In the case of Jesus' parents, listened to otbers?
•
He liked to read hisiOry; her tastes
•
George
Plagenz
is
a
syndicat1Would an arranged marriage· what probably happened was this:
ran 10 romantic fiction.
(often associated with royalty) have One day Joseph asked his parents if ed writer for Newspaper Enter;.
Nor were they intellectually worked out better for Charles and he could marry that villa,ge girl prise Association.
::
•• ••
••
••

111 Court Street

By· .'ack An ..ler"on
d

IND.

an
•..r:z'chael BzJnstez'n

•

•lcolumbusl3s•

by

••
..
.. ..

Inc

•
•

•

..

' '
'

'. .'' .
' .
..' ·

"My paycheck? Well. to borrow a word from Bill
Clinton , I 'invested' most of it m lottery tickets. "

:~Today

.,·~

Hospital news

·'

•'
By Tile Associalfd Press
: ; Today is Friday, Jan. 15, the 15th day or 1993. There are 350 days kft
in the year.
.
.
.
Today's Highlight in HistOry:
Fifty years ago, on Jan. IS, 1943, work was completed on the Pentagon, headquatters of the United States Department of Defense. The Pentagon, localed just outside Washington D.C. in Arlington, Va, was built
in 16 monlils at a cost of $83 million.
.On this date:
In 1559, England's Queen Elizabeth I was crowned in Westminster
Abbey.
In 1777, the JlC?Pie or New Connecticut declnd their inclePcndence
(The tiny republiC later became the stale of Vermont.)
·
In 1844, the University of Noue Dame received its charter from the
istate of Indiana.
•
In 1870, the Democratic party was represented ·a do~y for the first

·-

Announcements

s..t- ...._to

.. ..--.

in history.___________________

.•

as

~mlJ::

t

l)'t!dlc~-~

Mil

Good&amp;:

William A. Rusher

~~
1'9 1993 NEA,

••1111

Stocks

..
..

•

Judge O':Brien processes 34 court cases _)

Water to be off

..

In a column last November, rec- impeachment of Ronald Reat~an pened if a special ,prosecutor of the chance to make history th;lt he wilil
ommending that President Bush or, after he left office, his mdict- La~nce Walsh stripe had been ever have. If he could put Ronald
pardon Caspar Weinberger and all men~ fOnviction and imprisonment appointed to investigate the assassi- Reagan or George Bush behintl:
other Iran-Contra defendants, I for some related offense such as nation of Presiderit Xennedy. With bars his party loyalties would l'lll)k'
accurately predicted one consea limitless budflct and a staff limit, about 95th among his concerns.
quence: "The Democrats and their
ed only by ·his imagination, he
The dangers implicit in a prosepit bulls in the liberal media will
would still be pawing over that cuiOr as frustrated and vindictive as:
yowl bloody murder of course,
mountain~s compost heap today Walsh were well understood by the;
charging that Bush is trying to con·
I
- prosecuting peripheral figures late Justice Robert Jackson .i
ceal his own complicity in the arms
for not having come forwanl earlier Addressing a conference of U.S.• ·
sales." I then added: "But Walsh . withholding information from with allegedly ·vital evidence, attorneys' in April 1940, when hd,
Congress.
But
failing
that,
the
real
and those same media have been interest of the Democratic Party
that ·this or that concrete was Franklin Roosevelt's attorney:
trying to demonsUate that complic- viewed from the narrow standpoini insisting
of
information
"raises more general, he warned:·
:
bit
ity for well over six YCIIfS. How of partisan benefit, is to have the · questions than it answers,"
•'The most dangerous power of.
eu:.
much longer do they want.us to investigation go on forever conWhile I'm at it, let me lay to rest the prosecutor (is) that he wiU pic~
wait7"
the
notion that because Walsh's · people he thinks he should get~
victing
various
Republicans.'
from
The answer, of course, is: The
small
fry
all
the
way
up
to
George
political
affiliations are (or were) . rather than cases thai need to ~
,longer the better. Granted, the realBush,
of
offenses
ever
more
disvaguely
Republican,
he is immune prosecuted, With the law book~ .
.
ly jlCffect outcome of this investito
any
suspicion
of
improper filled with a great assortment o~
tan.IIY ~latcd to the original object
gauon, from the Democratic Slalld- . ofmqwry.
·
crimes, a prosecutor stands a fail,
motives.
point, would have been the
Imagine what would hjlve hapI was a young Wall Street chance of finding al I~ a techni-:
lawyer in the late 1940s when cal violation of some act on theo
.Walsh wa5'just one of a large ba!Ch part of almost anyone. In such a:
of young attorneys who had been case, it is not a question of disoov-:
recruited by Thomas E. Dewey ering the commission of a crimel
time in a cartoon by Thomas Nast in "HII'per's Weekly."
durins the prec~ing 15 ,years to and ~ looking for the man who1
In 1892, the' rules of basketball were published for the rust time, in assist him in his i:arcer as a c:riJne.. has committe!! it. itla a queSiioll ot\
Springfield, Mass., where the BIUJle originated.
busting~u!Dl and laler as gov- picking the man and then an:hint
In T919, pianist and statesman Ignace l'llllmwsld became the lint pre- ernor o New York. They wae all tht law boob, or Jll:lllina investlga-:
mier of the newly created republic of Poland.
.
nominally Republican, but practi- tors to work, 10 pin 10111e offeDSet
In 1929, civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. was b9m in Atlanta.
cally Ill Of them, including Walsh, on him. It Is in this realm - in:
In 1942, Jawaharlal Nehru succeeded Mohlndas K. Gandhi as head of went on to law careen oC one sort which the proreculor picks somel
·.
lndia'sNational Congress Party.
or another and never gave the - person he dislikes or desires u!l
· In 1967, the Green Bay Packers of the National Football League )tepublican Pany so much, as a embanus, or IIClects some group 011
defeated the Kansas City Chiefs of the American Football Leque, 35-10, backward glance.
, · unpopular petJOns and tl)en took&lt;
in the first Super Bowl.,
·
To Walsh, a thin-lipped Nova for an offense ~ that the greatesq
In 1973, 20 years ago, President Richard M. Nixon 8llliOWICcd the sus- Scotia-born Presbyterfan of the danger of abuse of the proii!CIIIinll
pension of all U.S ..offensivc action in Nonh Vieu.nt, citing progress in s~per-righ100us WASP dlspen~a­
'Rlllber Ia •
peace negotiations.
·
·
·
tion, the appointment as special
In 1976, Sara Jane Moore was sentenced to life in prison for her prcliCCUtor for the Iran-:Contra case tel writer for Newspaper Ente•-;'
',
aucmpt oo the life of President Gen14 R. Ford in Sin Francisco.
was,
quite simply,
the biggest prise A.lllldatloa.
.
.
..!

Foreclos'!fe filed
,
An actton for sale of real estate
has been filed in Meigs Count~
Commoo Pleas Court by Americaft
General Finance, GallipoliS:
against John R. Hunnell, Pomeroy,
and others.
The suit follows a Judgment
awarded to the plaintiff m the case
for a loan default.
'

Beat of the Bend...

It

.

DiSsolutions sougbt
Actions for dissolution. of marriage have been filed in Meig s
County Common Pleas Court by
Sandra Pauline S,nider, Reedsville,
and James Arthur Snyder,
Louisville; and Douglas Carson
Clelland, Pomeroy, and Carol Jean
Clelland, Pomeroy.

Damage light :
in two wrecks

Berry's World

'

-----Court news----•

---Area ·deaths--

George R. Plagenz

.....
••

the mountains on Friday.
,
A tornado touched down earl)'
Thursday in Buena Park about 2(1
miles southeast of downtown Los
Angeles. The twister felled uees
power lines and fences and ble~
out ':"indows at an automobile deal ~
· ersh1p.

Chamber of Commerce Month
declared
.

'

The special prosecutor's last gasp ·

this weekend and with it the possibility of flash flooding and mudslides because the ground is already
saturated.
In Sout!tem California. forecastcrs expecte&lt;! 1 to 3 inches of rain
along the coast and 4 to 5 inches in

;.._-----Weather-----

Why Charles and Diana didn't last

..

p.m. Sunrise Saturday will be at
7:51 a.m.
,
Around the nation
Rain clouds lingered over •parts
of die soggy SouthwestiOday, fresh
snow dusted the Northeast and
much of the nation was enveloped
in a w.intry gloom. ·
In the Wes~ rain feU from Los
Angeles to Phi&gt;enix as the Southwest braced for another ~nching .
The low-pressure system that
dumped nearly I l(l teel of snow
on the Nonheast since Wednesday
was well out over the Atlantic
Ocean by early today. ·
Forecasters warned that a potent
jet-Suearn disturbance could. bring
widespread rain to the Southwest

Meigs County Court Judge probation and restraining order . costs; Peter Elioff, Medina. failllfC license suSJICI!ded for oneh year, twb
· Patrick H. O'Brien processed 34 Issued; Ricky A. Priddy, to control, $20 and costs; George years pr~bauon , alco o1 assess'cases last week.
Langsville, domestic violence, $25 D. Kimes, Philippi, W.Va., speed, ment, future to con'!ol, $35 al!d .
Fined were: Dorothy A. and costs, one year probation, $22 and costs; Jetta L. Kramer, costs; Charl~s Michael, Jt·. ,
McDaniel, Rutland, stop sign 'o'iola· resuaining order issued, six months Syracuse, speed, $20 and costs ; Pomeroy. passmg bad chec~s ~2)j
lion, $10 and costs; Tara L. Wolfe, in jail, suspended to tillle served.
Robert Roberts, Pomeroy, seat' belt $25 fi~e. suspended, costs, cnni';DB
Pt. Pleasant, W.Va., seat belt violaBiUie A. Wells, Reedsville, seat violation, $25 and costs; Clark ~gmg, $100 and c_osts, resutution, $25 and costs; Kenneth R. belt violation, costs only; Donald Taylor, Long Botto!ll. no regisua- uon, two y_ears probauon, ~~­
Guinther, Racine, failure to control, G. Kames, Nitro, W.Va., seat belt lion, $10 and costs; Patti J. KeUey, . ing order ISS'!e~. 30 days In bl!'d•
$20 an~ costs; Joseph R, Hemsley, violation, $25 and costs, speed, $20 Gahanna, speed, $20 and costs; sp~nded; Will~ "1- Peck, 1 Zanesville, speed, $20 and costs, and costs; Anne M. Bearhs, Leta Fett'Y, Langsville, assured well, seat belt violauon, $25 .Bl)d
seat belt violation, $25 and costs;· Pomeroy, speed, $21 and costs; clear distance, $10 and costs.
costs; Gary !ohnson, Racme,
Mitchell Glenn Charles, Isle Qf Delia A. Kames, Nitro, W.Va., seat
Ruth Francis, Pomeroy, failure improper backing, SSO and costs;
Sunday through Tuesday:
r South-Central Ohio.
Palms, S.C., speed, $2S and costs; belt violation, $15 and_costs; Wal- to yield right of way, $35 and Roger P. Schomburg, Defl8Dc_:e,lcft
Sunday, It chance of snow. Donald E. Graham, Pomeror. terM. Sayre, Jr., R~venswood, costs; David Priddy, Rutland, DUI, · of center, $10 a!Jd costs; Lily M.
Tonight, mostly cloudy with a
)ow around 25. Salunlay, a mixture Lows in the 20s. Highs in the 30s. ~~ult., $75. and costs, 30 days m W.Va., speed, $19 and costs; Larry $450 and costs, 30 days in jail, ·sus- Holley. Galhpohs_. speed, $20 !lfld
·of clouds and sunshine with a high · · Fair on. Monday and Tuesday with )ad, suspended 25 days, one year Romine, Pomeroy, speed, $20 and pended to 10 days, operator's costs;~ A. .Kibble, Reedsvillc,
lows in the teens. Highs on Moo·'
near40.
'
seat belt violation, $25 and costs;
day
25-30; Tuesday in the upper
·
~ Exteuded forecast:
. Carl S. Reip, Onna, W.Va., spet(d,
20s to inid.-30s.
· $15 and costs; David I;&gt;ean Con. '
grove, Athens, took more than two
In rec0$!1ition of the many valu- of Com!llerce, said, "We_ a.re ing the "10nth will be to inform !he deer·per license year, to-wit,: a
able conlJ'Ibutions made by cham- extremely proud of the role the public about chamber activities and fourth deer, $150 and costs.
bers of commerce throughout the Meigs County Chamber of Com· initiatives: The chamber will take ·
Forfeiting bond was Brad
·
state, Gov. George V. Voinovich merce plays in our community, and this opportunity, with the backing Thomas, GuysviUe, speed, $85.
.:Nellie Creeger
Willa' Jacobs
· Nellie Mae C(eeger, 78, of
. MASON - Willa M. Jacobs, 8(), has proclaimed the month of are pleased that Gov. Voinovich of the governor, to let the commu··coolville, died Thursday evening, of Mason, died Thursday, January February as "Chamber of Com-' has seen fit to recognize the efforts nity know more about Mei~ CounJanuary 14, 1993 at Camden-Clark 14, 1993, at Elder Care Nursing merce Month" in Ohio.
made by all chambers in their com- ty's chamber, its goals, ob)ectivies,
Paula
Thacker,
executive
direcand how, by working with the local
Medrial Hospital.
munities:"
Home,
Ripley.
tor
of
the
Meigs
County
Chamber
community, it can - and
· She was born in Tontogany,
One of the chamber's goals dur- business
Born May 10, 1912 in Clifton,
does - make a difference.
;Ohio, daughter of the late W~ she was a daughter of the late
Light damage was incurred to
For additional information about
.artd Nora Altekruse Burgoon. She James I. and Frances ''Fannie" ~-------------------three
vehicles in two accidents
the Meigs County Chamber .of
was a retired 'Clerk for the U,s. (Spurlock) Blake. She was a
investigated
by Pomeroy Police
Commerce, and how companies
Postal Service, ·a member of
homemaker.
this
week.
There
were no citations
can become a part of this organizaCoolville United Methodist
She
was
also
preceded
in
death
in
either
wreck.
tion, business owners can contact
.Church, Coolville United
At 9:58 a.m. on Wednesday
Paula Thacker, 200 East Second
by
Bob
Hoeflich
Methodist Women, and was an by two husbands, Horace Junior
Roush
and
William
Junior
Jacobs,
Debra
Reitmire, 39, of Hartford,
. Sueet in Pomeroy. The phone num·.organist and past Sunday School
two
sisters
and
seven
brothers.
W.
Va.,
turning off the Pomeroyber is 992-5005.
teacher for the church. She was a
Survivors
include
two
sons
and
Mason
Bridge
onto West Mam
·member Fidelity Rebekka Lodge.
a
vehicle driven by
·
Street.
suuck
daughters-in-law,
Arthur
A.
and
the
position
that
we
can
retire
at
40.
Jim Sheets, Meigs High teacher,
. She is survived by two sons,
Daisy Haggy, 21, Pomeroy. The
Frances
Roush
of
Mason
and
Harry
That's
the
way
it
is
with
Gene.
and
his
three,
sons,
Aaron,
Jared
Ivan (Rita) Creeger and Dennis
Water on New Lima Road, and ' left front fender of the Haggy car
·(Sue) Creeger, both of Coolville; E. and Jean Roush of Racine, Ohio; and Adam, have a vote of thanks however, who has reached the
three
sisters,
Mae
ToUiver
of
highest· rank possibl11 for enlisted Nelson and Bryant Streets in Rut- and the left side in the door area of
coming.
six grandchildren; and seven great
Glenwood,
Alma
Zimmerman
of
The quartet has been working at personnel in the U. S. ~Y and is . land will be off from 8:30 a.m. to , the Reitmire car wete damaged.
grandchildren.
At 4;18 on Thursday, a parked
Besides her parents, she was ClifiOD and Rena Williams of Point the high school to improve the. only 40. He is a command sergeant 4:30 p .m. each day next week car owned by Brenda K. Hickel,
preceded in ileath by her husband, Pleasant; ~ one granddaughter, boys' locker room. A lot of paint- major imd was the honoree at Dec. beginning Monday while new 41, Point Pleasant, W.Va., was
.
ing has been done, locker doors 2 change of responsibility cere· water lines are installed. The new
Delphin Creeger, two infant daugh- Crystal K. Roush.
wiU
be
held
Saturday,
and general repair work monies held at Fort Campbell.
Service
replaced
lines will be laid along New Lima suuck on the righl front by a vehiters, Connie Mae and Bonnie Mae
Although only 40, Gene has 22 Road by. Jeffers Excavating. Funds cle driven by Amber Well1 16,
Creeger; a sister, Mildred Gill; and January 16, 1993, at Foglesong done. Thanks. to. the Sheets family
for
taldrig
on
a
chore·
like
that.
Funerill
Home
with
Rev.
Terry
Allfl
years of semce completed hav- for the new water lines comes from Pomeroy. The WeU vehicle was not
a brother, Arthur Burgoon.
ing entered the army on April 28, an Issue 2 grant of $9,900.
damlll!ed·
Services will be held on Sunday varez officiating. Burial will · be in
Ronald
Jeffers
is
at
Overbrook
Lone
Oak
Cemetery.
.
1970
doing
his
.basic
training
at
at 2 p.m. at White-Blower Funeral
Fort Knox, ,Ky. He received rotary
Friends may call at the funeral in Middleport these days.
Home in CoolviUe with Rev. Helen
bas
suffered
three
Ronald
horne
from
7-9
p.m.
IOday
(Friday).
wing aircraft !llaintenance uaining
Kline officiating. Burial will follow
strokes
which
have
handicapped
at
Fort RuCker, AI., and arrived in
in Coolville Cemctely.
·Samuel
Pickens
him
but
he
is
improving,
Before
Vietnam
in March; 1971. He
: Friends may call at the funeral
Samuel "S.G." Pickens, 84, of becoming ill he was a uuck driver served his tour as a crew chief with
home from 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 10 9 State Route 124 in Pomeroy, died
for a coal company. Ronald is the two different organizations and
·p.m. on Saturday.
on Thursdaf. JanUary 14, 1993 at son of Eula Jeffers, Willow Creek then returned to Fon Knox for two
Holzer Medical Center.
Road, and the late Charles Jeffers. years before going to Ansbach,
He was born on November 30, Cards would be an·encourage.ment Germany from 19,74 to 1977.
1908 in Buffalo, W.Va., son of the and they may be sent to Ronald at From 1977 10.1981. he served with
late Todd and Lena Franklin Rust Room 202, Overbrook Center, 333 the Attack Helicopter Bn. at Fort
Pickens. He was a painter and con- Page SL, Middleport,
Campbell and then for on~ year at
struction
worker, and attended
Camp Humphre~, Korea Yi1th the
Am Elc: Power......... ;......... .33 1/4
Bradford
Church
of
Christ.
That
was
a
nice
gesture
by
the
45th Transportation Bn. Returning
Ashland,Oil... .....................26 3/4
He is survived by six daughters: medical ·staff at Veterans Memorial to Fort CarnpbeU In 1982, he again
AT&amp;T................................. S3 3/4
Lois I. Goodwin of Cross Lanes, Hospital. The staff voted to give served with the 45th Transportation
Bank One., .........................51 5!8
W.Va., Lena P. Wood of Scott $1,000 to the scholarship program ,Bn. He then served at Camp StanII 1\1 &lt;"1'.1.11~(
'"tli'''A\IIli~
Bob Evans .........................20 lfl
j M '.: '- t (' ! IOi ~ )'\
-~ '
, ',
Depot, W.Va., Tressa F. Snowden, of the hospital's Women's Auxil- ley, Korea, from 1990 until Aug ..
Channing Shop..................l7 3!8
AFEW
Celina, Qhio, Hallie A. Willard, iary. Scholarships awarded under 1991, when he was assigned to Fort
City HQlding......................21
~&amp;~-GOOD MEN
The Plains, Sharon K. Brown, the program are given in the spring. Rucker. He is no'1 with the 9th Bn.
7:00 ,9 :30 DAI LY .
Federal Moaul....................l8 SIS
MTUIHS SAT &amp; 51111 . 1:00 3:30
Zanesville, and Cathy E. Pickens,
at Fort Campbell.
Tcl:R ..................66 5!8
Pomeroy; a son, S. Larry Pickens,
Active Racine residen~ Jeanette
Gene has received the MeritoriK~y
nltlrion ...................21 3/4
Pomeroy; a sister, Ruth Musser, Lawrence was delighted to have as ous Service Medal. the Army ComL8nds End ..........................27 S/8
Athens; 18 grandchildren and 29 her holtday guests, her son and mendation Medal 30LC, the Army
Umiled Inc....................... 29
great-grandchildren
.
daughter-in-law, Gene Roy and Achievement Medal, Good ConMultimedia Inc...:.... .......... 33 1/4
Besides
his
parepts,
he was pre- Beverly, and their daughter, Dara, duct Medal 7th Award, Vietnam
Rax Restaurant.................. 3/16
ceded in death by his wife, Emily of Fort Campbell, Ky.
Reliance Electric................20 lfl
Cross of Gallantry wiih Palm, Vi~t·
Irene Pickens; a brother, Carroll
While we've he8nl of life begin- nam Service Ribbon 2nd Awara,
Robbins&amp;:Myers ................ 16 3/4
Pickens; a sister, Ruby Pickens; ning at 40, hardly any of us are in the Noncommissioned Professional
Shoney's Inc ......................23 3/4
and
a son, Lewis Allen Pickens.
Development Ribbon wilh 'numeral
Star Bank ..........;,,.............. 35 3/4
Funeral
services
wiU
be
held
op
4,
Master Crew member Wings and
Wendy lnt'l........................ l3 5/8
Saturday
at
1 p.m. at Ewinl! Funerthe Air Assault Badge.
Wonhington Ind. ....:..........23 3/4
al Home i.n Pomeroy, with. Rev.
Veteraas Memorial
Stock reports are lhe 10:30
Derek Stump officiating. Burial
THURSDAY ADMISSIONS •
In the Sandusky area, someone
Lm. quotes prcivlded by Blunt,
wiU follow In Robinson'Cemetery.
Robert
Bailey, Long Bottom; Clara is getting kicks out of slashing BarFJlls and Loewl ot GaDipoiiL
Friends may call at the runeral Shenefield, Langsville; Carl Nel· bie dolls in stores. In Columbus,
home on Friday from 7 to 9 p.m.
son, MiddlepQrt; and Robert Davis, you can get killed for your sports
Middleport.
jacket. And you think X~u don't
THURSDAY DISCHARGES - have it good. Do keep smilmg.
I
Rita Smith and Brenda Coucrill.
The Daily Sentinel
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER Tajt.~ontinued from page I
Trustees to meet
Discharges, Jan. 14 - Ricky
Publiohed .....,. ........... Monday
The Orange Township Trustees
Herbert Clarke, Debo- son that turnout in the party priLaudermilt,
th"""h
FridaT,
Ill
Comt
SL~
~-·
wiU
meet
Monday
at
1
p.m.
at
the
Oblo by ... Oblo \lllloy ,...,Haiti...
home of the clerk, PaUy Calaway, rah Barringer, Shelbaden Dawson, maries in Ohio last year was a htde
It&gt;&lt;.,
l'antonty, '
OhiO 4117811. Ph. 11112-IIM. Sooond eJa.
Mrs. Dale Gross and son, Roscoe over 2 million, which was less than
for 1993 iipplopriadons:
' poolop pold al "'"'-• Oblo.
'
Houck,• Cathy Vironet, Leah · half the turnout in the general elecHenry, Eva Pinkerman, James tion,'' lte said Thursday.
' Mo-. Tbo'Aolodalod ~ tmdlho
Dance 1:lassa plaDDfd
Taft applauded local elections
Ohio Newtplpw *-'•tian, Nallcma!
Tyree, Ida Arthur, Virginia GrinThe Middleport Art• Council
MYmioi... ~It... llnDlwn
officials
for their work durin$ a
stead, Clarence Jewell, George
wiD offer a l!eries of dance classes
N..npap. l!eiOa, 'Ill 1'lllrd Anna.,
presidential
election year in which
Oiler, Justin Dickerson, Gregory
· NowYorll. N..,v.rt 10017.
•
on western line dancing beginning
the
primary
was rescheduled
Wednesday. Dances to be taught . Hall, Edna Elkins, and Marcella
' POSTMAS'I'I:R:
of
wrangling
over new
because
Hopkins. ·
include the Electric Slide, Texas
'Tit•
Dally . ...IIIIo!; Ill c-t St.,
state'
·
legislative
districts
and
a gen-...,_OHio 411'1811.
Births, Jan. 14 - Mr. and Mrs.
Freeze, Achy Breakf, Tush Push,
eral
election
that
saw
a
teeord
num•
IVUCIIJPTION IL\Dil
'Boot Scootin' Boogte and others. Donald Barlcman, son, Middleport.
,~
Cost of the classes, per session, are Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Eblin, son, ber of voters.
0na w.........- .................................st.eo
Syracuse.
$3.50 per person and $7 a couple.
Ona ll•lll.........................................te.llll
0na Yoar.-:............................. _ .N:uo
COLONY THEATRE

·-n

•• ••

I

W. VA.

·~None dare call it plagiarism

-

The Dally Senllnei-P~~je-3

Mixture of clouds, sunshine forecast for we~kend

OHIO Weather
Saturday, Jan. 16

'

'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.-----Local briefs... . . . . ._,_ _,

IINOUOOn

.
PBIC.
• DaD~ .............................. -

1habocrlbn . .

\

-...to

.. -211 Coato

I

Pl7 ... • tr may h1lllt ia adqnct ctiNn lo Tht
;DatJr -1011 COl a - · lbt w It

·-·-.......crt., - 1taota. Crodll wm

EMS units answer calls

~~op..,...

No -llll" •• by mall .....lied Ill
_ . wllaN homO cant« /to

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Continued from page 1

&amp; .,).

FIIDAY 1HIU 1IIUISDAY

1HE MUPPm .
CHRISTMAS CAROL o

Friday-Saturday 4-9 PM
Come into Shoney:S this weekend andgtt all th~ fried shrimp you can ~1. ;
Dinner includes French fries (or a baked potato after 5:00 p.m.) and our•
famous AII·You-Care·To-Eat .
. ,
Soup, Salad and Fruii Bar.

Unill of MoiD Bmelaancy Services answered the following calls
for aasiltance: 'fHURSi:JAY, 6:33p.m., Middleport unit to Seventh
S~t, Rober! Davis to Veterans Memoria!. llospital; 6:47 p.m.,
Tuppen Plains ~ to State Route 1, Tony J~nes to Camden- ,
Clarlt Memorial
ttal; Il:SO p.m., Rutland unit to Depot Street,
Ooolp Oiler, Sr. to eterans Momorial Hospital and laler to Holzer
Medk:ll (:enter; FRIDAY, 3:21 i.m., '~'uppers Plains squad to State
Route 681, Bcuy Headley to Camden.Cfark; 7;29 a.m., Pomeroy
lq!lld to Pomeroy Nunina and Rehabilitadon Canter,' Elm Henry
to Veterans.
.

J •••

I-A.' •

'

' ~

... .

-. '

........

j

. . ..

·~·

"

OITtr avalllble for a limited time tl

panlclpating Shanty's.

328 VIAND STREET- PT. PLEASANT, W. VA.

. ... .. ·-·......... .

•

....

,

~

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

... - ·- ....

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

~

. . ...

-~..-.

..

---

~

.

�Spotts

The Daily. Sentinel
Friday, January 15, 1993
Page--4
..

'

Meigs girls defeat Alexander 50-42 to take first place in TVC
By DAVE HAIUUS
..
Seati~~el Correspondeat
• Meigs outscored Alexander 176 in the_ third Jler:iod to erase a 2719 halfume defictt and ',"CD! on ~e
defeat Alexander 50-42 m girls TriValley Conference basketball .
.. action Thf!!Sday night at. Albany.
'
Th~ wm coupled w1th Federal
;Hockmg's stunnmg 29-27 upset
over Belpre puts the Marauders in
·

first place. Belpre won its first ·
eight games, but has loss the last
two. Meigs defeated Federal Hocking so~ndly Monday evening 5519. Me1gs IS, now 10-1 on the season and 8-lm the TVC. Alexander
·saw its seven-game winning streak
end, as the S~artans fell to 8-5
overall and 6-3 m the TVC.
Alexander used a balanced scoring attack to jump out to a 13-8

lead at the end ofthe fll'St period.
The Spartans had three players
scoring four points each in JUmping
outiO the early lead.
In the second period, Amy
Lovsey scored six points as the
Spartans increased their lead
outscoring Meigs 16-11, Alexander ·
went into the locker room at the
half wHh a 27-19 lead . Verna
Compston started to get the hot

Score boar((
.In the NBA ...
EASTERN CONFERENCE
· Atlaatk Dl~lon
W L Pt:L

Team

Now.Y.U ..............20
New Ieney ............ 19
Bc.tm .................... l9
Orlwto.................. l4
Philodolpllia ........... l2
WIJblaalon ............ ll
Mianti •...•............... IO

13

.606

17
IS
19
23
23

.S28
.483
.387

l.l
ll

7

9.l

Cea&amp;ral DI•IAo•

CIEYELAND .......20 ll
Clwloa&amp; ................ l7 IS
llouoil. ...................17 17

.SJI

4.5 .
6
• 7

Allanlol "''"'"'""'""16 17

.485

7.5

lndiau ~-·-······-······- 16

17

Milwnbe ............. l4 20

.S71

.soo

7.l
10

.415
.41 2

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mklw•l Dlwlllon
Tam
W L Ptt.
Utah .......................23 10 .697
Saa AnWlnio •.-.......20 13 .606
HOIIIW. ..............,..1 7 16 .515
Dcn ... .....................9 29 .281

r.6nno&amp;aot ................6 2A
Dallu .......................2 28

67

10

ChicoiJo. .................24 10 .106

GH

3
6
13.S

IS.S
19.5

.200
.067

6

Rio Grande 94, Findlay 90
Shawnee St. 99, Wilber!~ 87

Major college
basketball scores
East ·

IS
16
17
19

s..r...-...-......

2
3
7.l
i
8.l

.S4S
.529
.S14

NY62
Hartford 70, Bocton U. 67
Ho&amp;tn 64, Anny S2 .
lona 63, Loyola, Md. 47
·La Salle 80, QCcmil Mcn:y 73 (011
!.a&gt;8 blind U. 72, MWt 71 (01)
LoycZa.llL 67, ()u,queme 6S
Mount St. Muy'a, 'Md. 74, St. Francia,
j'a.70
·
Nilaan13, Manhattan 64
Nonheutem 82, Vcnnonl 74

Rhode blind 96, St. BonavCIUW'e 82
Ridm- 68, Robat Mmril 59 ~

South
Coutll Carolina 115, Md.·Biltimore.
County98
Coll. of Charleston 86, Charluton

SOUihcm62

FLI. ln\.emlt.ionaJ 69, Gcotgil St. 68
l..wiaville 77, Va. Commonwealth 68
Md.-E. Shcwe 91, Howard U. 71
Mercer 73, SE UM.ti.Jiana 58
N.C. Charlotte6S, Virginia Tech 56
N.C.·Wllminst.on 73, SacramenlO St.

12

.406

Thursday's ,..res

Atloda 108,Deuoit 91
San Amomo 101. MilwaW:eo 93

-114, Cltarloii.-i02
Utah 96, s.&amp; 89

61)

Phoenia:'fl4, Sacramento 104
Panland 104, MWru 93 (Crr)

Tonight's games
Odan4o•Boaon. 7:30p.m.

a:=•

at New Jme.y, 7:JO p.m.
ND It Indiana, I p.m.
Demer 'at Minnelda, I p.m.

Bn~dley Sl , SW Miuouri St. 46
DlinoiJ St. 68, Wi~:hi~ St. 67
Indiana St. 96, Dru:e 73
Iowa St. 81 , Oldahcma St. 72
K.~n~u 140, Oral Robcru 12

!cdl•t

I.A. cu-&gt; at s...le.IOp.m. ·
~cf • L.A. LU~. 10:30 p.m.

Saturday's 1ames

Southwest

o...ilat Philadelphia, 7:30p.m.
New Jctle)' Yl. Waahincton at Balli·
more. 7:30~ .
Atlala at CLEVELAND, 7:30p.m.
- OcW.a SlU •.' Indiana, 7:30p.m.
Odando.
p.m.
New YOlk It HouAon, I:JO p.m.
Owtau at S~rt Ani.CI'Iie.l:lO p.m.

Houston 81, Teua 67
Lamu 86, Soulh ~bama n
NE l..ouiliiJUI 80, Stephen F.Austin 62
Oklahoma 102,Nchruka 89

a.;,;.,.,,,30

· Far West
Arizona 93, Walhingttm 76
Arizona St. 81, Wuhinaum St. 77

Bolton It MilW1uQo. 9 p.m.
I)JJJ. It Denver-, 9 p.m.

Bri~am Young 72. fi'CinO St. 57

California 13, Stanford 66
Lona Baach St. &amp;4, Nevada 15
N. Arizona 78, Boile St. 12
New Mexico SL 17, San J01e St. 72
Oreaon St. 68, Southern Cal 57
San Dieao 70, St. Mary'a, Cal. 51
Santa Clara 91, S1n francis..:o 80

m\0 ~t U&amp;ah, 9 p.m.

$.gnday's pme
s-ale It Putland, I p.m.

.In the NHL...

ucu. 99, O.OJ!"' 17

liNLV 88, Pacific U. 71
Utah 61, Air Fetrce 47
Utah St. 75, UC Sarua Barbin 6S
Weber St. 91, ldaho St. 80

WALES CONFERENCE
PolricltDI"'Ion
WLTI'ILGFGA
l'ltlobtqb .......... 29 12 • 62196156

,.._

W............... 23 II 4
Ieney "'"'"' 23 17 3
N.Y.Rq. ..... 21 18 6
N.Y. labnden .... 18 22 4
Philadelpltia ....... 16 19 .7

SO
49
4
40

39

179159
151141
186179
172167
l64166

Ohio high school
girls' basketball scores

21 16 6
12 27 4

OU.w• ............... 4 39 3

4 1941SS
28 136196
II 101214

Hilllbon:l71, Nc:,r Richrncnd. .29
HOlland Spdna. 44, Millbwy Lako 30
Hopewcii·Loudon 44, Cuey 41(01)
Indian Vall S%_1\JaCiniWU Va.Jl44
JCWdl·Seio 71, C.di%49
· JonJtbm Alder 45, W. Jc((erion 41 ;
Kaaau Lakota 59. OU:eao 42
Kcat ROOIOVelt 62, Aktm Sprina. S9

(2m')

GRAVELY TRACTOR
·SALES &amp; SERVICE
IIW Flldo I llllftll 111181
CLOSED MONDAY

OPEN TUESDAY THAU FRIDAY
INUPM
SAT. I AM-12 Noon

~THE

SYSTEM

,.ha DEALS are
BOT,.ER.THAN
.EVER!!!

DON TATE
{614)-992-6614

Nrrrll Dlwlllon

W L T Pto. GFGA
25 16 6 S6 1551'2.4
24 19 3

21

l521 2

40

WWtipc&amp; ...........

21)

2ll

35 122110
14 12A214

Thunday's S&lt;ores
7, l'iaabwJit 0
St. I..ouia4, Otl.lwa 1
M4tt:ulS, QIIrboc3
Wuhift.... 3, N.Y. hlandcn 0
N~ Jcney .7,l.OI Anaele:t 1
Calply 4, Ploilad&lt;lphia 4, U.
OlietJO ~. Minnelota I

Y1

•\,. 1993 CHEVY S·1 0 PIC

'

Cin. Princaon 40, W,

Oa~:~tcr

1992 OLDS. CUTLASS SUPREME
Acri&amp;ll; ».
Loaded,

57,444or
s1

Saturday's games

PhUaddphia at Boala\, 7:10p.m.
OtiiWial Piaabuqh, 7:40p.m.
St.l..aail1t TlmJMI Bay, '7:40p.m.
Sani-•QIIdoo&lt;. 7,40pm.
N.Y . bland en at New ler11c1 , 1 :40

p.m.
Hanfanl atV........,,8,10pm .
N.1\', Ran~ 1t MonltOll. 1:10 p.m.
Qic:apat Toron\O,I:IOp.m .

Mam.ou,l:10p.m.

W1ooUpoJ at Ia Aosoloa.IOAO p.m.

Sunday'• pmes
Deczoilat J'hilldelphia, 7:10p.m.
WMIIinpcmltTimpl B1y, 7:40p.m.
BuiWollBdmonton,l:lOp.m. ~
N.Y. Jalanden at OUaw•,l:lOp.m.
,

S9 Down ·

Auto., air, ater·
eo, air bag.

SEVERAL TO CHOOSE
-~b,,_
FROM
AS LOW AS

~ton-Maui&lt; 56, Yollow Springs 48

Col. Beeeheroft 47, Col. Mifflin 27
Col. Briggs 71, Col. Eastmoor 57
Col. Brookhaven 56, Col. Wheutone
29
'
Cot. Eaal S2, Col. Linden -McKinley

RE1\REMEN1

5
I

$19,999

8~999 or

$

.174Down

ADVERI'ISINO OEADUNE
IS JANUARY 20, 1991

Fot Rate. Information

.,.

AS LOW AS

s159 Per Mo.

bu ' 29

c••L eelft'~
a""

Rates of Taxation for 1992

Auto., air, etereo.

1992 CADILLAC SEDAN DEVILLE

.,,

Phone (614) 992-2155 - Ask for P. J. or Datle

Equipped.
Not atrlpped

i

Lakotl

Cin. Readina 32, Cin. Indian Hill 24
Cin. St. Ri~ 49, Norwood B1ptist 42
Cin. Woodwud 60, Amelia 43
Cin. Wyoming 94, Cin.'Lc\-cland 41
. Cle.. Manh1U 36, Watren~ville 33
Cle. S1. JoRph Academy 74, BcaumontS8
Clcnnoru Northeailem 60, Willi am•·

Sm Jc.e at Detzoit, 7:40p.m.
Hatlford at E&amp;knonton, 9:40p.m.
Buffalo n yancowu, 10:'40 p.m.

TCifl:ldOat0Ucap, l :40p.m.

(800)-837 -1 094

lS

Toolght's gam~

~at

(614)-992-6614

A

The Daily Sentinel

POMEROY, OHIO

o.,.

s_v

lS 175146
s 49 J&amp;llllll
4 44 ISSI62

Ectrnonsoo .......... 14 2S 7
S111 JOK .............. 6 36 'l

Auto., air, atereo, V6, till,,
crulaa, PW l locka.

.· s·a t ur d ay
Mc
. .Donald's/D. ays I nn CI'assiC

Call Yoat AMttitlng

$189
$
.
189 PerMo.

Caldwell SB, W•tcrfOJd 48
Cmal Winchel.ter .59, Teaya Vall. 48
Canfield S2, Poland 36
Celina 51. V1n Wert S4
/
Chclhi.re River Vall. 47, WcUa\on 34
Cbippew11S, Smithville
CUL Bacon 16, Cin. McNichol11 35
Cin. Cc1erain 48, Cin. Me. Hcallhy 40
Cin. Country Day SS,lock.llnd 51
Cin. Olm Eate44, Cin. Turpin 19
Cin. Madeir1 65, Cin. CAPE 37
Cin. North_. 56, I-larriron 48
Cin. Oak Hilla 46, Ci.n. Western Hils

3214~173

CaJpy .............. 2S IS l
17

308 E. MAIN ST.

(201)

Smythe DI.Ukln
VanCGUvet ......... 26 12 S 51 196129

t...Anada ....... n

1992 CHEVY LUMINA

Overall, Rio Grande suffered 21
Rio Grande connected on 10 of ~onsecutive goals from Walter 111J1ked and picked 10 win the diviturnovers
10 Findlay's 10.
20 outside shots for the game to Stephens and Troy Donaldson, and sion. ll's been a clean rivalry
The
Redmen
shot 64 percent
provide the boost necessary 10 tum . then wrest it back after deadlocking between us and F"tndlay because 1t
from
the
floor
(32-50)
and made
b~ck Findlay, which started lllis at 23 with the hosts. Vicior Washis well-coached, and because or
the
bulk
of
their
free
throw
chances
week 22nd in the NAJA's lOp 25 ingtan led the fll'SI half scoring for that, it's always a war when we go
(20-27)
for
74.1
pel'(:ent.
By
con· _
listing and was the first of four the Oilers with eight, while David out there against them."
trast,
Findlay
hit
36
of
75
field
goal
teams making the naiional ranking Smith- who would net the bulk
Veteran Oilers mentor Ron
the Redmcn will meet in the com- of his game-high total or 24 much Niekamp seemed less impressed attempts for 48 percent (including
eight of 18 from the three for 44.4
ing weeks.
later- had five.
with his team •s performance.
Pressure from both sides highWith the entire Findlay bench
"We wanted 10 pressure, but we percent) and went 71.4 percei\1
:
lighted a game that saw the Oilers producing, the visitors built a nine- dido 't seem to do it too much," from the line (10-14).
The Redmen return to Mid.Qhio
open' with a quick lead, lose it on point lead in the latter portion of Niekamp said. "It was a struggle
the peripd, forcing the Redmen to for us. There were times when we Conference action at home Saturday at 7:30 p.m. against Tiffm for
slowlyworktheirwaybackand thoughtwehadafive- orsix-point Bob Evans Farms Night. Findlay
come IQ within two (44-42) of lead, but because we didn' t main·
.Findlay's margin in the last minute. tain the intensity, we $Cif-desln!ct- (13-S) is idle until Jan. 20, when it
travels 10 Defiance.
Donaldson's pair of free throws at ed.
The
fifth
annual located. at Mastic Beach', Long averaged 8.6 points per game.
Box
score:
Rufus King
:32 knotted the score, where it
"We haven't been playing well,
McDonald's,IDays IM Prep Classic Island and has an enrollmenl of
RIO
GRANDE (94) - WaiCer
vs. Cambridge (6 p.m.)
remained at the intennission.
and an indication is, with us getting
will be held at Ohio University's 2,200 students in the upper three
Stephens,l-1·2-7;
JeD: Brown, 5·2·
Rufus King High School from
Not 10 be outdone, BriB!I Vorst 25 rebounds and Rio Grande 33,
Convocation Center on Saturday, grades. Coach Bob Hodgson has
6-22;
Troy
Donaldson,
8-4-ZO;
Jan. 16.
eight lettermen and five starters Milwaukee, Wis. entered the sea- scored two points 10 open the sec- we got belted on the boards pretty Lypdell Snyder, 0·1-2-5;
Matt
The day-long basketbaU tourna- returning including Rob Hodgson son with a 474 record sinee. coach ond. half and Findlay remained in well," he added. "'Rio Grande has a Powell, 2-4-3-19; LaMont Harris,
ment, featuring eight teams, will Jr., a 6-7 junior Who averaged 26.2 Jim ·Gosz 100ic over the team with tenuous possession of the lead until great inside game and Man Powell 3-1·0-9; Kyle Schroer, 0-1-3-,6;
start at9:15 a.m.
points and 16.7 rebounds per game seven game's remaini'ng .in the Brown's jumpers on the inside is a great shooter."
Brown emerged as the high man Tim Christian, 3-0-6. TOTAI:.S
North Adams
last year. Because or a New York 1989-90 season; had a state cham- broke tbe Oilers' control of the
22-10-20.!14.
.
.
vs.Jroaton (!1:15 a.m.)
rule which allows athletics to par- pionship and a runner-up finish to game. The Redmen succeeded in for the Redmen with 22 points,
F.
I
NDLAY
(90)Rod
Ro$e,
North Adams has seven players ticipate in varsity basketball before its credit during that span; and also closing down Findlay's offense for eight rebounds and, in a repeat of 1-2-0-8; Brian Vorst, 4-3-11; Greg
and all five starters returning from reaching high school by passing an reeled off a 36-game-win streak. nearly three minures to lead by II. hiS Tuesday performance in the Denecker, 7-1 · 1-18; Chip Smith, 2last year's Squad for coach Dave aptitude test, this marks the fifth Although hit hard by graduation, 6- Vorst's basket at 3:.26 (84-75) same category, 11 assists. Donald- 0-4; David Smilh, 6-3·3-24: ViciOr
Young. Top returnees for the Green year of, varsity basketball for the 9 Dan Ninkovic will be among this sparked a run by teammate Smith son filled in with 20 points and Washington, 3-2-8; Jon Thorballn,
season's rewrnees and last year's that resulted in th.e starting guard seven boards, while Powell added
. .
Devils include 5-foot-11 guard younger Hodgson.
0·1-0-3; Kennie WashingiOD, 2' 1.::
Andy Toole, who averaged 18
Fairland has just one letterman junior varsity team had a 19- 1 netting all of Findlay's final 15 19 markers and seven rebQunds. 1-8; Tyson Moore, 3-0-6.
points.
Alongside Smith.• Findlay's offense
points and 6 rebounds per game returning from last year after three record.
Cambridge
advanced
to
the
state
..
"You've
got
to
give
Findlay
was highlighted by Greg Denecker TOTALS 28·8·10·!10.
· last year; and 5-9 Brian Toole and strong seasons and a 53-17 niark
Halftime score:· Rio Grande
6-0 Ty Campbell both of whom during that span for coach Jack tournament last year before being credit. Ther, don't quit," Lawhorn with 18 points and Vorst, who had 44, Findlay 44.
as part of a 24-3 record. observed. 'We could see why it's 11 and led the rebounding with six.
averaged 13 points a game last Harris' Dragons. The lone return- eliminated
Although losing· two starters to ,__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _"!"'_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..;_.,
year.
. ing letterman is Chad Stewan, a 6lronton returns eight lettemmen 2 senior. Also returning is Brent
and three starters from a team Snyder (6-0 senior) who missed
Ford, son of the Bobcats' coach,
~ .~~
,,.
~S.'-'~
which posted a 16-8 record last most of last season with an injury.
.
Gen
Ford.
He
averaged
36.4
year and caplured the school's fll'St
.
John Marshall
vs. Wellston (2:30p.m.) , · points per game last season and has
~~'district title in 12 years. Top
~~ ·
·"~
returnees for coach Phil Rice's
John Marshall High School, scored3S5jJointsintheteam·srll'St
1
10 games this year and has surTigers include 6-4 forward Joe located at Glen Dale, W.Va. near
Leith, who averaged 14 points and Mouridsville, has 1,263 students in
passed the 2,000-pointmark for his
.A4*U
~~~~ ·
· .~RV
.
10 rebounds per game last year, the upper.three grades. Among the career. He bas already signed to
attend Ohio University. Also
·
.
'
·
Ohio State foolball signee Walt top returnees for coach Alfonso
Delong (10 points and 10 rebounds Flores' Monarchs is 6-1 senior returning is 6·1 Josh Chrisman
(12.1 points per game last year). ·
per game las! year).
guard Alex Jnclan, who averaged
Bentoa Harbor
·Huatington East
12.6 points and 6 rebounds a game.
vs.
Valley
For1e (7:45p.m.)
vs. Meigs (ll a.m.)
Wellston has posted an 80-33
Benton
Harbor,
Mich. has postHunting10n East has six letter· record during the past five seasons.
ed
an
81·20
record
during the.last
men and two starters returning Heading the list of returnees for
four
seasons
and
were
state runfrom last season's lean! which had coach Jim ·Derrow are Scott
ners-up
last
year.
Eight
lettermen
a 12-10 record for coach Don ~heatham (6-7 junior), who averand
four
starters
return
for
coach
Lucas. Top retitmees include P.J. aged 19.6 points and 14 rebounds a
from
last
season's
Paul
Wilhite
Smith, a 6-7 center,' who averaged game last season, and 6-3 senior
squad which went 24·3. Heading
12.2 points and 12 rebounds a Brad Spencer (II points, 6
the list are 6-8 Corey Childs. (25
• game last year; and Matt Holbrook, rebounds a game last year).
points
and 12 rebounds a game; has
a 6-2 guard, who averaged 10.8
Germantown Academy
signed
to attend Tulane Universipoints per game last season.
vs. Alexaader (4:15p.m.)
ty); 6-6 forward Marcus Singer (15
A strong group of returnees is Germantowwn Academy, which
points and six rebounds; has signed
back at Meigs r&amp;.. coach Phil Hani· has 317 sWdents in its upper three
son. The Marauders were 12-9 last grades, is located at Fort Washing·
to go DePaul Univetsity); and 6-4
season. Top relurnees include ton, Pa., University.
B~ian Echols (16 points, 10
:· Trevor Harrison (the coach's son),
Three lettermen are back from
rebounds a game; has verbally
committd to Michigan State for
a 6-2 senior forward. (20.9 points last year's 15-7 team for AlexB!Ider
football).
and 5.9 rebounds last year) and 6-2 coach .Jay Rees. The Spartans postsenior guard Jphn Bentley (13 .6 ed a 15-7 record last season.
Parma Heights Valley Forge has
been a regional qualifier three of
points).
Among the returnees .is Travis
•
WUIIam Floyd
· · Waggoner (6-l junior), who averthe last four seasons. Among the
vs. Fairland (12:45 p.m.)
aged 6.4 points per game, and
top returnees for coach John Stav,
'·
William Floyd High School is Bryan Johnson (5-1'1 senior), who
ole's Pab'iots are 64 Brian Baracz
who averaged 12 points and 9
rebounds a game lasi year, and 6-2
forward 'Milce Ziol (8 points per .
game).
. By OWEN CANFIELD . in 1972 when the United States
. Johnson Central
STILLWATER, Okla. (AP)- failed 10 win the gold medal for the
vs.
Southern (II p.m.)
Hank lba, who won nearly 800 col- first time. The U,S. team lost 10 the
Larry Swrgill is in his fll'St sealege basketball ~ames and two Soviet Union in one of the most
as head coach of Johnson CenNCAA titles and mfluenced many controversial rmishes in baslcetball son
tral;
located at Paintsville, Ky. The
of today's coaches with his teach- his10ry.
team
was 17-13 last year. Among
"It never did bother me," lba the returnees
,gs, died Thursday. He Wll,'l 88.
is 6-2 senior Shane
lba compiled a record of 655- said of the loss at Munich. "'But it Moore and 6·3 sophomore Nathan
Repnteni~IJVe
316 at Oklahoma State and a -767- bothered the boys who play~ for Salisbury.
.
'
'
·
•
338 mark overall. He led the Cow- me."
Southern,
located
at
Racine,
has
boys to. national champi!)nships in . The United States appeareii to four lettermen returning rrom last
194S and 1946, and coached the have won the game in regulation. year's team (15-8 record) for coach
U.S. Olympic team to gold medals But the clock was reset twice, giv- Howie Caldwell. Amon!! the
ing the Soviets three chances to returnees are 5-10 forward M1chael
in 1964 and 1968. ·
• .
He also was the Olympic coach score a game-winning bucket.
Evans (12.9 points per game), 5-10
guard Michael Allen and 6·2 center
Sports briefs
Russell Singleton.
FootbaU
process of becoming a union again
CANTON, Ohio (AP) - Walter so its members can ratify the labor
Payton, the NFL's all-ttme rusher, agreement they reached with the
.
"
and former coaches Chuck Noll league Jan. 6, The association
and Bill Walslt head the list of decertified itself on Nov. 8, 1989
fimilists for induction into the Pro so it could legally file lawsuits
In pursuance of Law, I , Howard E. Fran k, Treasurer of Meigs County , Ohio, in compli ance with revised Code No. 323 08 of State of Qh10 ,
Football Hall of Fame.
against the NFL, challepging its
do hereby give notice of the Aates of Taxat1on f or the Tax Year of 1992. Rates el(pressed 1n dollars and cents on eacn one thpusand dollars
Also nominated were former rules against free agency.
tax valuati on .
offensive linemen Bob Brown.
FootbaU
Larry Little, Tom Mack, Dick
TOWNSHIPS
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - San
Stanfel and Dwight Stephenson; Francisco quarterback Steve
AU
EffecU.'re
Atr. •
Efftetl•e
SCHOOLDISTRICTS
quarterback Dan Fouts; cornerback Young, ,who has led the 49ers to
Othtr
Ratt
Rttt
M. R .
llltductlon Reductio" " ' '· &amp;. Air.
Twp.
• Voc.
Carp. E.M. 5.
Otllltr
School
Mel Renfro; defensive end Carl Sunday's NFC championship
"'
Eller; tight ends Jackie Smith and game, was named the winner or the
Kellen Winslow, and wide Maxwell Football Club's Bet! Bell
receivers tynn Swann and Charlie Award as NFL player of the year..
Join"'.
·
Teauls
The finalists were determined
ADELAIDE, Australia (AP) by the hall's 34-member board of Stefan Edberg of Sweden beat
selectors, who wiD meet again JB!I. Patrick McEnroe of the United
30 to elect the 1993 induction States 6-3, 7-5· and Todd Woodclass.
bridge of Australia defeated
Foot baD
Michael Stich of Germany 6-4, 7-6
NEW YORK (AP) - ,The NFL (7-4) in the six-man Rio Challenge
Players Association has begun the exhibition IOiimament.
·

Coaching legend lba dies at .88

Boardman 62, Youn~;. U111uline. 56
Buckeye Vlll. S9, Sparta Highll:nd 49

51 189160

17 6 48 152149
20 17 1 .rl 14, 144
18 21 6 42156161

f

Bcallaville Sl, frontier 46
Bea'tler Eastern 81, Portsmouth Notre

Bellaitc SL Jolwl'a 35, Min&amp;o 23
Bellbttd 49, Preble Shawnee 34
Bane Union 43, Liekins Hu. 40
BeU\el-T11e S9, Blanehelter S4
Bloom..CuroU 41 , Amanda-Clearercclr.

.]t was a pretty grim situation the 90 decision over the nationallyUniversity of Rio Grande Redmen ranted Oilers before a Foodland
faced entering the second half of Night audience.
their Thursday meeting with the
"I think our guys really hung in
University of Findlay at Lyne Ceo'
there," Red men Coach John
ter, and it didn't get milch brighter · Lawhorn noted as his lean! went to
right awily.
14-4. "The pressure bothered them
But Jeff Brown's consecutive some, but they hit the threes down
field goals at II: IS anill0:49 gave the stretch, which they didn't do
the Redmen their first lead since too well the other night against
9:31 in the first half, a lead John Ohio Dominican . That was very
Lawhorn's club clung to for a 94- pleasing."

GU\OE

CHEVY.·OLDS.·CAD.·GEO

(800)-837-1094

··Redmen reverse Findlay lead for 94-90 non-conference win

PLANN\NG

IT'S COLD OUTSIDE, BU·T.AT DO·N TATE
·C"EV.·OLDS.·CAD.·GEO
·~~~ -~- ~--

:lA

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE
O:i.CIJO..............
Detroit..,............
Min-.. ..........
-Tomn\0 .........,....
S1.LoW ............
Tampe8ay ........

HOWARD E. FRANK
MEIGS COUNTY TREASURER

GRAVELY

Dame 39

T-

Pom•oJ, OH.

204 Condor Sl

The Dally Sentinel-Page-S

COM
. •d
2

THE TAX BOOKS ARE NOW OPEN FOR 1992
COLLECTION OF THE REAL ESTATE TAXES, ALSO
fOR DELINQUENT TAXES.
CLOSING DATE IS FEBRUARY 12, 1993
TRAILER TAX DEADLINE IS JANUARY 31, 1999
NO EXTENSION WILL.BE GRANTED

-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~~~~~~}~!n'r: :!a~JUS'e~~

MEIGS COUNTY.REAL ESTATE OWNERS

39

Akron Ccn-Hower46, Akmn Ellet 33
Akron Garfield 64, Akron Kenmare 48
Akron N. 52, Akron Fircitone 39
Andrews School 60, Oe. Erieview 42
A\MW!.wwn Fitch 50, Wantn Harding

A.dMU DIYIJion

llaJtl,..) " '"""" "

Ooobon 39, Kinp 21
Onnd.view !i3,JohnltoWn 33
Gmen011 40, Spring. Nonhc:uu:rn 39
· lhmiltt~~70, Middletown 30
Hamilcm Badin. 33, On. St. Unula 23
Hamiltm Twp• .55, fairfield Uni.on 'I1
HeblQd Lakewood S3, Lickina Vall.

Akron Buchtel62, Akron E. 30

M - ............ TIIS l l9 197ISI
Qud&gt;oc ............... 2A IS 6 :l4 190166
BciWIII ................ 24 17 2 SO 1n154
Buffalo .... ...........

faimewluk4l, Oatfiel.d Hll. 37
Fcdenl !!&lt;&gt;&lt;kin&amp; 29, Belpoo Tl
Franklin Furnace Gre.en 47 ,
Porumruth E. 2.S
. FtMklin·Moaroc: 65, ktlnwn 24
Ft. Recovery 52, Put way 30
GaliM 59, Cratlina 31
Glllipnlil 63, JackloD 60

Midwest

Odden State., OUea 10, a:3o p.m.
New
~·8 :30 p.m.
Mimli, It PholniJ., 9:30p.m.

.'

' c 43

EIJin S!5, Northmor 2.6
Eu&lt;lid ll,ldaple Hla. 29
FaUbonb 76,1W!p0111 44
Failla~:~, 43, Tuslaw 3S

.

Now Odean1 60, Arhnsu St. 5"8
Nicholll St, 79, Nonh Teau 76
Ri~tunon d 69, Siena 67
SW Louilian~ 90, h ck•onvillc 84
Samford 88, SleUOn 71
Tenneucc Tech 90,Aunin Pely 12
Tuas-Arlingt.cn 72, McNeese St. 10
W. Kentucky 92, Ar:lc.· l.ittle Roct 56

LA. C1ippen lOS, L.A. I.aken 102

S

,

Connecticut St. 92, N, Adams St.
.... Cent.
Fairlciah Dickinaon 6.S, St. Francis,

.800

9 .719
10 .688

Ed.ilcm S. 54, S

Mount Vernon Nazarene 87, Lake Erie

PJK:tnc Dh11iton
..........................24
Seaalc.M .................23
l'bnlaM .................22
LA. Laan ............ ll
GoldatS\IIe .......... l8
LA. Cippcs ........ .tl
13

Eatm61, Day. ~~=Je "2

Non.conference

4

.324
.303

..
E. llvetp0014t!i, Steubenville C1!h. 40
Ealtbke N. lO, Bedf,..) 47
EaRwood 65', Nmtltwqod 29

Mld·Ohlo coor.
Wwh 64, Ohio Dominican S7

GB

IS .SS9

E. Cialoo«&lt;. Wayncnille 32

Ohio men's college
basketball scores

hand for Meigs scoring five 'of the more physical, our bench really ' three of six from the line for 50
Marauders 11 second-period played)oVCII."
percent. The Spartaps had 21
points.
Vema CompsiOn, who poured in rebounds led by Lovsey with II.
Whatever ~ud~ head coach 22 points to lead the Marau~ers,
Alexat~der defeated Meigs in. the
Ron Logan Sllld to hiS team ~the play~ on a very so~ ~e that s~e reserve game 34·28. Carrie
half must have worked, as a differ· spramed Monday mght to the wm McClain led Alexander with nine
ent Marauder lean! lOOk the coun . over Federal Hocking. Amber points. Melissa Clifford led Meigs
.
in the second ~alf. t.!eigs. quickly Blact~ell and Lori Kelly alsq with 11.
made up the e1ght pomt difference · turned m gutsy perfonnaces playThe Marauders will travel to
and tied the game two minutes into ing with injuries. Katrina Turner Southern 10 play the Tornadoes on
the third period. Compston poured joined Comps10n in double figures Wednesday evelling, and they will
in eight points in the period to lead wilh 10. Sisson added eight points, hit the road again on Thursday as
the .Marauder offens1ve c~arge as Kelly four, Joy O'Brien, Chrissy they traveiiO ViniOn County,
Me1gs t?Ok a 36-33 lead mto the Taylor and Lee Henderson added
Meigs
final ~nod. .
.
two points each. Vanessa Comp' Meigs CQntmued to play ou.t- ston and Blackwell failed to score.
(8·11-17-14=50)
Verna Compston 6-0-1 0=22,
standin~ defense in the fo~ ~Meigs hit 16 of 36 from the
od. holding Al~xander 10 JUSI moe floor for 44 percent, and cashed in Lee HendersOn 1.0-0=2, Lori Kelly
pomts all.by Ja110.e RolstOn. Comp- on 17 of 30 from the line for 57 0.0-4=4, Katrina Turner 4•0.2=10;
ston hit (ive of six fro~ the. line percent. The Marauders pulled in Missy Sisson 3-0-2;.8, Joy O'Brien
down the sb'e~h, and Missy SISson 26 rebounds with Kelly grabbing 1-0-0=2, Chrissy Taylor 1-0-0=2.
added four (lOIDts ~ the. Marauders 11. Meigs ha,d nine steals with Totals -16-0·18=50
posted the e1ght potnt wm:
Vanessa Compston, Vema Comp. "T~ k~y to the game was ~ur ston, Turner and Sisson getting two
Alexander
mtenstty 1n the second half, a each. Meigs turned the ball over 18
(13-16-6-9=42?)
happy Loglitt said after the game. times.
Kris Gilkey 2-0.1=5, Jaime Rol"Alexander dominated the game in
Jamie Rolston led Alexander ston 6· 1:2=17, Amber Davis l-0the first h.alf and controlled the with 17 points, and Amy Lovsey 2=4, .Andrea Andrews 2-0-0=4,
game physd:ally. In the second half added .14. The Spartans hitl9 of 51 . Amy Lovsey 7-0.0=14. Totalswe changed our defense and played from the floor for 37 percent and 18·1·5=42?

Friday, January 15, 1993

'

5

"····

174PerMo.

36

Col. lndcpcndmcc SO, Col. We. 44
Col.. Northland 71, Cot Cenlc:Mi.147
Col S~Mh 73, Col. Waln~t Rid~te 39
Coldwater~. St Henry 37
Colllmbia so, Open Door 37
ColumPianl
Crc1tVi.ew
S6,
Columbian• 'Zl ·
Cori1W Lakeview 53, Hubbud 41
O..Ncp Hu. 46. Be.tbwood 41
D.nvtue 73, Johnitown NOrthridae 20
Day. Jdfmon 49, Middlcwwn Ott. 30
. DeOraft R.ivcrride 58, Benj•min Lo-

1991 CADILLAC SEDAN
DEVILLE

95
1991 DODGE COLT

pnS~

BLI,.Z
WILL BIIPPIIRIIG

FIIDIY liD SAnRDAY
JUDUY mUD 18 AT

711 WA,.IRING HOLE

5 apeed, .tareo, low mllaa.

$8999

$7495

119 Down ,
1
189 Per Mo.,

. 1990 CADILLAC
BROUGHAM
Anteloptl • Clean.

$7995

Hour~: Mon.-Fri. 9 am-8 pm .
Sat. 9 am-4 pm
Sun. 1 pm-5 pm
(614)-992-6614
•

2 Dr., auto., air, etereo, QuMI 4.
1
157Down
1
157 Per Mo. .

1

Luxury,
Garnet Red.

$5899

10:.. P.ll.-2:.. 1.11.

1990 PONTIAC GRAND AM

1987 CADILLAC SEVILLE

Teal Green~
Ljka New.

E. Canwn 60, Sandy V1U. !i 1

1991 GEO TRACKER

'

(800)-837-1094

$16,951

. 1

OLDS CUTLASS
CIERI

$6,999

•

1991 DODGE DYNAStY
Auto., air, crul.., till, loaded.

$9399

••

189Down
~189 Per Mo.

TAX AND TITLE FEES NOT INCLUDED
ALL PAYMENTS SUBJECT .
TO BANK APPROVAL

(614)-992-6614

•

1

DON YAlE· CHEY.·OLDS.·CAD.·GEO

•

We can help find
investment that's
right for you
INCOME FREE
f[C)m Federal Tax, and
in some cases INCOME
· FREE ·from state tax.

.'

H. D. VEST FINANCIAL SERVICES

·..

KARL KElLER ,Ill, ·c.P...

R..lstitrtd Representatlwe
(614) 992·7270 or (614) '667·6011
/

(800)-837-1 094

.

ta••

Rill Estate
wh,ch han not been paid at. the ct011 of 11ch collection arry 1 penalty of ten percent. Taxils may be paid at the affica
of the county triiiLirtr or by mail. PluM bring your list tax receipt ; and if you pay by mail, be sure to locate your property by tlxing dis·

trict and anclo11 1tamped Hlf ..ddrtutd envelope.
·
Always IXImine YCJ\1' t~x receipt to 111 thlt it covers all your property. Office Houn8 :30 A .M. to 4:30P .M.• Monday thru Friday .- Clowd

' on S.turdo~.
Closing datt Ftbruar~ 12, 1993

,

HOWARD E. FRANK , Meigl Col.ontv TrtiiYrtr

'
,.~.
t'

'•

' v

,

)'

•

'.

' l•

�•

,I

\

:

Sentinel

.Ohio

•

BISSELL &amp; IURKE
CONSTlUCTION
eNowHo••

CHARLIE'S
IIULL DOZER
won.

-c;.,
....
-c... ••

DRIVEWAY WOU
••• u•ISIOIE

Apo stolic

Catholic
Sacrtd Rout Callaolic Cllon:ll

161 Mubny A~.l'oioen&gt;y, 992-5898
. PurOt: Rev. Walrcr E. Heino
Sal. Ceo. 4:45-S:I:Ip.m,; Malo· 5:30p.m.
s.... Con. -1:45-9:15 a.m.,
Sun. Mw • 9:30 .....
Dailey Malo· 8:30a.m,

'

Church of Chnst
.

212 W. Main SL

·Sunday Scbooi • 9:30a.m.
WonhiJ&gt;- 10:30 a.m., 1 p.m.
WednCiday Sel'liccs - 7 p.m.

'
.

.~

l'omtroJ Wollllde Cllurdo or Cbrlll

a.m.
Wednesdoy Sel'lice - 7 p.m•

•• •

••

33226 Oli14ren'• Home Rd.
Sunday School · II a.m.

Wil

•

•

BlorwalloW Rldp Cloutdo or Clorlll

Pasklr: Dr. Lee Morris

f
l-

I

P11110r.Jact'Colo&amp;Jo¥e
Sunday School -9:10a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
WednCiday SeM~ · 6:30p.m.

:u. Church orCin-til

Pomeroy, Hurioonville Rd. (Rt.143)
Pallor. Interim~...

S110day School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.,7:30p.m.
wem.csday Servites - 7 p.m.

6lh ond Palmer St.
Pasr.or. Rev. lames A. Seddon

Sunday School · 9:15 a.m.
WonhU&gt; -10:15 a.m., 7:00p.m.
~
A.B.Y.- .5:30p.m.
Lord's Supper h t Sunday of every monlh.
)
Wednesday Sel'liee- 7:00p.m.

•
•;' .

Racine Flrst Baptist

BradburJ Chowcb or Cluill
•Par.or : Tom R1111y111
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonbip • 10:30 a.m.
Tuppon Plaia Cbordl "'Cbrlll
Putor: Bill Wineo
·

Sunday Sebool • 9 a.m.
Wonhip • 9:45 a.m., 6:30p.m .

Y oulh Past&lt;&gt;r Ride Hurls
Sunday School • 9:30 un,
Wonhip - 10:40Lm., 7:00p.m.

Wednesday Sel'licea ·7:00p.m.

. Jlnler Church or Cbrlol
Pallor: Chris Slewan
Sunday Sc:hool· 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Sel'licco. - 1 p.m.

Sllnr Run Baptist

Putor: Bill Liale
Sunday School· IOa.m,
Wonhip · lla.m., 7:30p.m. ·
Wednesday Sel'licea- 7:30p.m. ·

..

·.

Mt. Union Baptist
PallOr : Joe N. Say~

Rutland Church or Cbrllt

Pistor: Eugme H. Underwood
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonbip -10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

•

Sunday Sebooi·9:4S a.m.

!\(_, Church or Chrlll
. Miller SL, Ma11011, W.Va.

Evcniqg • 6:30p.m.

Wednesday Sef'lieeo · 6:30p.m.

.'
..

Betbe Free Will Bapllsl Cburdl
28601 Sa. Rt. 7. Middlepon.~

.

Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Evcnina · 7:30p.m.

·~-

.~ .,.

• ,.
.•;~-•

.., . .

Thundly Scrvices - 7:30

Hillside RapU!It Church
SL RL 143 jull off RL 7

: ~:

Pastor: Rev. JamaR. Acree, Sr.

•' ·

Sunday School- 10 a.m.

:;..

Wonhip , lla.m., 6 p.m.

.....

Wednesday Services •7 p.m.

·.....-.·
.•

~

VIctory BapUsl
525 N. 2nd St Middleport
Pastor: James E. Keesee

,• '

Wonhip · lOa.m., 7P-m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Faith Raptlsl Church
Railroad SL. M11on
Sunday School - to o.m.
Worshi p · J 1 a.m.~ 6 p.m.

Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Forut Run Baptlsl
Pastor : Arius Hun
Sunday School - JO a.m .

Worship - 11 a.m.

ML Moriah Bapllsl

Founh &amp; Main Sl., Middleport

Pastor. ReV. Gilbert Ctaia. Jr.

-.-

Sonday School - 9:30a.m.
Wor&gt;hip - 10:45 a.m.
Antlqult7 Bapllsl
Pastor: Keoneth Smilh

Sunday Scbool · 9:30a.m.
Wo!ihip • 10:45 a.m.,_
Thunday Services-7:30p.m.

• .•

RuUand FrH Witt Bapllll
SalemSL
Pu1or: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday Scbool · 10 a.m .
Evening · 7 p.m.

St RL 124 A Co Rd. 5
p....., llen:k Stump
.Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service• · 7:30p.m.
Su«&lt;11 Road Church of Chrlol
Pulor. Joccpb B. Holkin1
Sunday School · 9un,
Wonhip - 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
WednCiday SeMoes · 1 p.m.
Uhert7 Chrlltlaa Cburdl

OWer

Put&lt;&gt;r: woody Call
SIDiday School - 10 a.m.
Evenina · 7 p.m.
WednCiday Service · 7 p.m.

La....lle Chrllllan Chureh
S110day Scbool · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip . 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneaday SeMce 7:30p.m.
Hllflloek Gro,. Churclo
Putor: Charlea Dorni&amp;an

Sunday ochool - 10:30...m.
Worship· 9:30a.m., 1 j)lil.
R...mtlle c•urc11 ~ Chrlll
Plator: Philip Sturm

Sunday Sehool: 9:30 i.m.
w~ Service: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Soady, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

Chnstian Un1on
H.,.,_ c•ardl or Chrlolla

C-Unlon
Pallor. Theron Durllan
· Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Evenina - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Semces -7 p.m.
Hartford Church or c•rbt In
Cbrllltlan Union
Hanford, W.Va.
Rev.·O.rid Mo:Mania

Racine

Sunday School - 9:45·a.ni.
Bvenina • 7 p.m.
Wednesday Sel'lica -7 p.m.

RACINE PLANING Mill

... K&amp;C JEWELERS

Mill Work

Cahrnel Mak '"~

212 E. Main Sir"!
991 -3785, Pomeroy

Syracuse
992 3978

New

.POMEROY, OHI0 - 992 -61&gt;1!
BILL QUICKEL

MEIGS TIRE

( '~l~ C!~~~
Ph~2.,01

~~..;..;;;.~:':':':'"::-::::~of-!~~

.SAlES
204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, .ott.

992-2975

Pu&amp;or. Jdm w. Ib•l•s
Sunday Sebool- 9:30a.m.
Wonhlp • 10:45 a.m., 1 p.m.

Sunday School • I 0 a.m.
Wonhip • 9 a.m., 6 p.m.
TuCI&lt;Iay Sel'liceo • T p.m.

Wodnaday Sel'licco • 7 p.m.

Flatwoocb
Putor: Keith Rader

Puoor: Rev. n.~... ~

Sunday oehoola.m.
Sunday wonhip -7P-m.
Wed-day prayer .-in&amp;- 7 p.m.

MlalnYUle
Pastor:
Newman
Sunday Sehool • 9 .....
Wonbip • 10 ~.m.

o-.

Plae Grove Bible Hoii .... Cburcll
· Ill mile otr RL 325
Pastor: Rev, O'DeD Mon1oy
Sunday Sehool - 9:30a.m.

H,.U Run Rolla. . Church ·

· Putor: Roben Manley
Sunday Scbool· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:4Sa.m.,7 p.m.
Thursday Sef'lice -7:30p.m.
Hant.IYille Roll- Cllapler
P1otor: Rev. John Neville
Sunday School 10 a.m.
Wonhip ' 11a.m., 7:30P-m·
Wednesday SiiYioe · 7:30p.m.

P1110r: FJonace Smilh
Sunday Sebool • 9 .....
Wonhip • IO.a.m.
'

--]

Poraujl F1nt Cburcllflllhe Naanae

PUKr. WiWnJIIItio
Sunday Sebool ·9:30a.m ..
Wonbip • 10:40 Lm., 7 p.m.
Wednoaday Sel'liceo -7 p.m.

Plaor: Hllllhae (G....,) Kee
Sunday School· 9: IS a.m.
Wonbip - 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servicu ·7:30p.m.
RocloSprlnp
·
Putor:Keilh Rader
S~mday Scbool- 9:15 a.m.

New Ha•ea Cburdlflllhe N...,_
Putor: Glandon SlnlUd
Sunday Sebool • 9:30 a.JII.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.• 7 p.m.
Wednaday Servicel·? p.m ..

' Wonhip - 10 a.m.

Other Churches

Wedneoday Setvi~:e~ • 6 p.m.
·Rtlllud
Putor: AnhurCnbtne
Sunday Sebool · 9:30a.m.
Wonbip - 10:30 a.m.
Thuoday Semoea·. 7 p.m.

Latter-Day Saints

Sai•Celler
•. Putor: Roo Fiacc
Sunday Sebool- 9: IS a.m.
Wonhip -10:15 a.m.
S.....We
Putor: Flora!ce Smilh
Sunday School - 10 a.m. ·

R........... Cllurcll or J.,a Cllrlll
lo Lalllr DaJ Salnto
Pordarui-Racine Rd .
Puoor: William Roulh ,
Sunday School-9:30a.m,
· Wonhip • ID-.30 un.
Wedneaday S.Moe. ·7:30p.m.

W~p-9un,

Botl!uy .

Lutheran
81. Jollo Lull!eru Clourcll
Pine Grove

Putor: GeorJe Weiridc
Wonhip • 9:30a.m.
Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.

' Our Sovlour Latlloraa Churcll
WalnUI and Henry SU., Ra...,owood, W.Va.
Co-paaon: Revs. Richard A
Pauicia Bonch-KruJ
'

Sunday Sebool· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 11 a.m.

St. Plul-Lulheraa Chun:h
Comer Sycamore A. Second SL, Pomeroy
Pt1110r: George Weirick
Sunday Sebool ; 9:45 a.m.
Wollhip • 11 a.m.

M~nlagStar

Mt. 011'" United Metbodlllt
Off 124 behind Wi!k.ovilk:
Pastor:·O.•lcs Jones.
Sunday Sebool · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m., 71'm·
Thunday SeM&amp;:o • 7 p.m.

. s...~y Scbool - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:45 a.m. (hi&amp; 3rd Sun)
EuiiAtart
Pastor: Ropr Grace
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip • 9 a.m.

-

Putor: Roaer Groce
Sunday Sebool - 10 a.m.
Wonhip • 11 a.m.
Laurel cwr Free Mell!odlll a.urc11
PallOr. l'der Tremblay
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedneaday ~l'liccs - 7 p.m.
RuUaool BIMe Melbodlat

Meip Coopll'adve Plrlsll
Norlheut Cluller

PallOr. Rev. Ivan Myen
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Evcnin.J - 7 p.m .
Wednetday stmces • 7 p.m.

Alfred
Pastor: Sharon HauSII\In

Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 11 a.m., 6:30p.m.

,.-ettfll&lt;r.

Pastor: Sharon Hausmao
Wonhip • 9 a.m.
Sunday Sebool • IO.a.m.
Thuncky SeMees · 7P-m.

Lool Bailon!

Pastor: Rev. Seldon Johnson
Sunday Sebool • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30am.
Wednesday Semoes . 7:30p.m.

•

Suuoa

United Methodist
Gnham \lolled Melhodlll.
Wonhip • 9:30 a.m. (Ill A 2nd S110),
7:)0 p.m. (3nl A 4lh Stm)
WednesdayScrvioe . 7:30p.m.

Fallh Tabernacle Cburch
Bailey Ruoi Road
Paacr. Rev. Emmet RaWIOD
Sunday School · 10:00 a.m.
Bvenina7 p.m. ,
Thunday Sel'lice • 7 p.m.

Putor: Kcnnech Baker
Stinday Scbool • 9:45 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m. ·
Thunday Semc:eo · 7:30p.m,

CoolvDle Ualtod Metllocllat Par1o1!
Pl-. lldm Kline
Cool\'lle Chard!
Main .t Fiflh St.

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip • 9 a.m.
TuCI&lt;Iay s.Mc:eo • 7 p.m.
llalhe!Chum

Townlhip Rd., 468C
Sunday SChool •9 a.m.
WMhip . 10 a.m.
WednCI&lt;Iay SeMce• - 10 a.m.
HoelliiiJIIri Cllurdl

• PrieeofadforaUcapit.l teu.w Mdo.We,.;c.ef-....a
• 7 poialliDe type oal7 u..ted
• Senu.el il aot n~pD~Ie for en'On aft. r......,. (deck
for erron r....t day ad naa ia ,.,..,_ CdiiNfoft 2:11p..a.

IIJ...W. Ct1111osun1ty Cllurcll

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 Lm,, 1 p.m.
Chrllllu Fallowlblp c..a.r
Salem SL, Rtuland
1'uiOr: Robcll B. Muo10r
Sunday Sebool-10 a.m.
Wonbip-11 :15 a.m., 7p.m. .
Wedneiday Semoe • 7 p.m. ·
M- Chapel Church
Sup&lt;.: Mike MallOn
s...r.y Khool • I0 a.m.
WllltbiJ) - 11 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedneoday Semc:e • 7 p.m.

hnor. Lawrence Bwh

Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Evmina • 7 p.m.
Wedneday Semce - 7 p.m.

Grm4Stroet

·IOa.m.

:J79-W.-

Days

Words

Rate

1

15
15.

$4.00

$.20

$6.00

$.30

3
6
10
Monthly

$.42
$.ti0

$9.00

15
15

$13.00
. $1.30/day

,

Middloport

Fatten VOlf HaiEt
, "'ith awart ~
'

Brogan-Warner .

· 228 w. Main St., Pomeroy

992~5432

~:57" .Veterans

.
,Memorial Hospital

114 £Main
992· 5130 Pomrroy

11 S I. Memorial Dr.
992-210•

Pomoroy

EWING FUNERAL HOME. '
... Di~tnit .' · and S,.rl'it•t• Alu•"y .. ··

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT
Nalil!nwide Ins . Co.

Established 1913

ot C olumbu\, 0 .

601WT . . .
HMUt

992.2121
106 ......,An,

MICROWAVE OVEN
and VCR REPAIR

•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

KEN'M:.nANCE
992-5335 or

•

. .

12·30-92-1111

,

•

•

.,

\ : I

15

•

41-------................... -·--2

46-S,..fw-

,

1-laM

I')

3- "'·-4- Cl••w.1
5--HapP7Ado

••

IN POMEROY
6:45p.m.

F« Sale or Troda

; \ I, \I "'l 11 1'1 II

&gt;

,\ I I I I ' I I II k
.
.
.... .tad to&amp;,
Ue La ak

--Sale
T.-tors....
v-.t:41rll'e
MalereJciM

Boate 4 ....,,. lor S.t.
""'" Puto A Aoo-n-1
Auollepair
c-.-.~

S..-·DaJ AdHIIIIol

~:-....-.
Eloelrioal A llelripnolioq
c-aiHaaliotl

9- Yaatad Ia lilly

lloWio-llepair

IIOILE OF SALE

NOTICE OF SALE
By virtue or 11n orcrer ol
Salle Ill 1 J out ol ll'le Snle loaued out of the
Co
n , _ Court ol Co111rnon
Court of
llliga Ca
r. DhiD. in a. lhiga c-ty, Ohio, In the
~ of S.k One, Athena,
-_.,......
""-llotioll!tl
..-un,
..-.... N.A., Plllinlilt, ogoin11t J ..k
a. .... R. ......... al, K.. SpirM, Jr., et al., l)e.
0.1-cla•t•. upon a toe riMita, upon 11 judgment
i '&amp; ......... d , .... therein rendered, baing
llt.CV.tl6io c... No. 12-C¥-202 in lllid
lllid eo.t. I will oht tor Court, I wil lor 111le, al
lhia hont door ol lho Court
Cowt
itt Pa.eror. HouH in Pom•oy, Ohio, on
Ollie. • ... • • day or lhia 11th dlly ol February,
r:aw,. 1eD, a1 1 0:00 1llllt. at 10:30 o'clock A.M.,
e'cloclt A.ll. . . fo I n m,-, lhia following lando and
.........
lla:
111-11, to-wll:
m 1 'ln . . c-tyol in !he County of
. . . . . . . . _oiOHo, lhiga, in tJMo s.. ,. or Ohio,
. . . . . . . . . . . R ito: ...d in lhe VIllage ol
m s lln . . . _ o r Middleport, and being
R
C:l ••.,. OSilo: bou- ond deocribed aa
Lei
eigllly-sb faflcwa:
(II) ill . . ocr.,; .. p2o1 or
,B aing in One Hundr.ed
.. r
pow, 1-.par (100) Acoe Lol Number
R • Oltiol.
Th.o w Hundr..S Twelve (3121
1EED -RIEIERB:RLEIIIIIIIC:EE: vat. of the Ohio Compony'11
•nd now
- · ..... 583, . .iga Purch•••
C \U..R
._
incarporatlld In the Village
a. l 15 g -~~~~~on ol Middleport, end
hglnnlng at ·• polnl In tho
tantat 0111 , _ . SlrMI in front line of Lot Number
.. m a o1n · • Oflio. One (11 in Palmer's Adcftion
~and Fifth to lilddteoport, Ohio, on
- 40No, . . S...ot1lh SlrHI, 122 fHI
Southerly from
the
...
ionaec?i.c.ty
__. ·
...._._,
I liiwwlt. Nortluast corn• ol uid lot,
ef
laad• nnd on • line wllh . . ld
trra•• wata ._, interaect Seven.. Slr..C Soulhorly 75 .
_ ...... --lcomor
orllllid.JOt, - e wilh th•
us ~ rt-='U"•
South line ot arid lot W•l
110 to lhia Soulhweot
.............. , • •,ol . . corner ot lllld lot, !hence
No&lt;thody along !he WNI
line of lllld lol 50 r..c.
- c o In 11 direct line
Elloterly lo Ill• plac• ol
...... Ca•tw;Ohio beginning, and being the
(1)1,15,22,~
property conveYed by
A;chur c. Covorl and
•• I oed c-t, hlo wile, to
EtR•t H. c - t; by deed

B r - .... Order

PI•••

...c-.
.
.
..........-......
lla•••

(Monsgtes&amp;~e&amp; Wt~c~ne
•)
Poinl-t Yaulh Cenlitr
Mondoy 8:00p.m. Couples
. Wedneodlly &amp;:00 p.m. Sif9es
"Sic!Mr Pace Claa"

Mubny Hu. Rd., Pomel&lt;lf
PallOr. Roy Lawiruky

Saturday Sel'liceo: '
Sabbath School - 2 p.m.
Worship · 3 p.m. ·

l
•

(Older~
Wedneodlly 7:30p.m. Sif9es
' 'Faster p..,. Clus"

i

WedneSdaY, 9:00p.m.
For Enrollment Colllnstruca
· Mikki Caslo 675-3888

•

I

•'••

Happy Ads

5

UCINE, OHIO
614·949·2202
6

3

r.corlled in Volume 171,
..... 511, Melgo Counly

DNdR o dL
DEED REFERENCE: Val·
211, Pop Ia, . .lgs
County Deed As: ardl.
The .............., ....
..le ldenllled In 1M
riC I nlr ol IIIia llelgo County
AurMor by Percoil No, ~5--

Co~,.

_Happy
40th
Birthday

~~~~ l~~
P r e'\crtptum\

,., 7UI

· Dave!

·Fl RE

&amp; SAFETY
S4LES &amp; SERYIC£
992-7075

·Love,
Coinnie, Davey
&amp;

172 North Stcllllcl Aie.
Ohio

(

.'

''

"

on

yow -

jo6

andbul_,_
in yow future
. ellfkiUIOrS!

01111.

S.td rul •Uie w•a
IIIJIIInd
_
..at:
_ $11,334.00.
Caoh.

We'UnU..~

..:.-::.. : : : . . .-::::..::

Julie, P,J., De6iie,

.. ..

• II"""-..

lhia IIIP...... M loul.r.

]IHIIIH, 0....., llilre

•a-c..-

'llherlff

992-2156
\

D. A. BOSTON
EXCAVATING

1181113

(614)
667·6628

Public Notice

Plaintiff

Racine, OH, 45771.
Said premia,eo appraised

All

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE
All HARDWOOD
Seasoned
$40.00 a Load
Delivered.
(614) 992·5449

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS

LAND CLEARING

WATER &amp; SEWER
LINES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING: limeatone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal
LICENSED and BONDED

PH. 614·992-5591

HAULING
LIMESTONE,
GRAVEL &amp; COAL
Reasonable Rates
JOE _N. SAYRE
SAYRE TRUCKING

614·742-2138
t-11-'U
YOUNG'S

Real Estate General

!f

11e1go County, Ohio

(1) .. . 1s. 22. ate

"'"r 1

CARPENTER

[~~;Ad~dldono

OFFICE 992·2886

Work
·
11nd Plumbing

Exterior
Painting

(FREE ESTIMATES)

V. (. YOUNG Ill
99H21S

• • •

...
.....................
............
_.,.,.

. SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

•DOZERS
•BACKHOE
•TRACK
LOADER
•TRUCKING

al $40,500.00 and cannot be
Delsndllnta aold
for lue than ~rda of
In pur11111nce of an order
thatamounL
of 111leo In !he 11bove entilled
Sheriff ol Moiga County ·
aclion,.l wiN offer for 111le al
·Jamea M. Soulaby
Public Aucllon, at _the fronl
Lerner,
Sampoon
I
door ol the Courthouoe In
Rolhfu••, Attornera
Pom•oy, iii the above Rick
D. OeBiaeia,
named county, on Friday, Attorney
for Plaii1tiH
February 12, 11192; at 10:00 (II 8, 15, 22,
3te
A.M. lhe following do·
acribed rNI nlat., oitualed
in · Townahip of Cheotor,
County of Melgo, Mel Slate
Public Notice
of Ohio and dHcribed ••
follow• to wit:
PUBUC NOTICE
Beginning ol lho South·
eaat corn• of Fraction 23,
Eftectlve Ja~ . 1, I 993 all
Range 12, Town 3; Section
23 ol Lot 257 of lhe Ohio driveway or occooa roa~
Comp•(•
P'urchaae ; coming oil oatabllohod
thonco Wool to WIIIIMI townahip roeda muat be
BiDII8' corner in the center properly plpod wilh o
of a brook; lhonco Norlh lo minimum 12" diMnetw pipe.
tiM center of Shade Aivai: Townohip Trua- muot be
thence down center of notified· prior lo inalallatian.
pipe mual bt purchaoed
Shade River to aection linei
thence Soulh on· solo by property owners and
aection line to the place of inalllllation can be dono by
beginning, conllllning lhlrty· Townilhip Truatee..
Bo•d ol Trualoei
three (33) acree , more or
Olive Townahlp
lea a.
Koleen Hllyman, Clerk
Properly Address: Rout._
I, Box 1B4 Twp. Rd. 67, (II 11 , 13, 15, 31c

...

-....or-Croll.

271 lhrth

"Helping You To Recover Your l"vestme"t"
Church, Home, Truck, Boat, Auto

Removal

SOUTHBANK

P-oy,Ohlo

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

·"'·''"
s......

Snodgrass Upholstery

Reaoonableo Rateo
Fully ln11ured
742-2360

SHERIFF'S SALE
OF REAL ESTATE
STATE OF OHiO
MEIGS COUNTY
No.I:I-CV-67

••c•

Hippy AdS

5.

~

and Office Seating

F_.,

. .

2/12192Mnl

.

Topping, Trimming,

.._ -·

''

S•lllley Calls)

KEVIN'S LAW-N
MAINTENA..CE
949·2398 or
1·800·837·1460
Lawn Mqwlng,
Fertilizing. W-ng, and
Seeding.
Shrub •nd T1H Trimming
I Removol
Rnklentlal6

Commerc:~l

FrHE..Im.tn

FIREWOOD FOR SALE

.......
D

c...,...

(No

12·17·'92

DWIGHT P, MEDLEY
ET AL

a- PuWio Sale "

Flying Eigl~
And Mo.. ollhe !..- Denon!

Seventh -Da y Adventist

7:00P.M.

-vs-

·.

s,_

This ad good for 1
FREE card.
lie. No. 0051·32

PubliC Notice

Public; Notice

F1rst United Pnlbylorlan
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
·
Wonhip ·II un., 4 p.m. (ht II: 3rd Sun.)

614-949·21,1 • 949·2860 .
or 915·3839

F&amp;A TREE SERVICE

pa...•-.aa.-.

Elvila,
Boo!
Boogie,
Cotton-Eyed Joe, Texas Swing. .
Texas Waltz, lOX¥ r- Slop,
Cowboy Cha-Cho, Cowl&gt;oy Pa1ca,
· Ten Stop Polka, Tush Puoh,

AFTER

s.M.t:F-

u,a • a..y

Sunday School- 9 a.m.
Wonhip • 10 a.m., 4 p.m. (2nd It 4lh Sun,)

.

Special Early Bird
$100 Payoff

a.,.a:c..u.

7-LOetudF...d

BULLION
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFPUBLICIDON

New Homes • VInyl Siding
.
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Addittons • Roofing ·
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES
.

742·3305

111241'92Jlfn

6-'-taadFoaad

AUOOioa

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

GARRY'S
GENEUL
MAINTENANCE

EAGLES
CLUB

FNilo.t:V,.taL._

ASK FOR CHRIS

3/6/90/lfn

BINGO

.......

-1.-A:Aa 0

MlddlepGrt Pnal&gt;7llrlM

Edell United llrethrtniD Chrlll
21/2milesnOIIhoCReeda¥illo
:
.on State R0111c 124
· Plltor: ~v. Robert Muttley

\

- ·

Sunday School • 9:45 a.m.

Texu Community off CR 82
Pastor: Robert Sanden
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.,7:30 p.m.
Wedaeiday Sel'licco • 7:30 p.m.

,

(3041 773·5533

Offlco

217 L Secoaol St.
POMEROY, 0•10

mo.

SEE NEAL FOR THE DEAL!

915-3561

AIIOII , _ Ptot

USED RAILROAD TIES

ll..x.JJ..- ...

41- .,
lw &amp;.t
- &amp; " ' ,.._

CII-

••011
Uaw.....-....
lo Cllrlll Clourcll

~

1~-1

ALL MAKES
Iring It In Or We
· 'Pick U

BILL SLACK
992·2269

Polo for Sale

_F_fw_

Presbyterian

.f·

937-Bulrolo

Mldiltoptrt,
Ohio

_rM;·,

INSURANCE ---=--: SERVICES

. 104 W. M.~un ·
,., 1311 Pomeroy

"FNiutlll/1 Ken~ Fried Chlclcflll"

. 742-hdoad
667-Coohille

-----Sale
a-F-fwSale

Sunday School-10 a.m.
Wonhip · 7:30p.m.
WI doySOovic:eo -7:30p.m.

Crow's Family Restaurant

89~1art

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

•

3r. LOCATION TO SERVE YOU IEnER .

S &amp;L
TRUCKING
992·5380,

St. Rt, 7
Clloslliro, OH.

G..,..

949--llad,oe

-----1_ ....._,_

Sunday Scbool · IO a.m •
Evonin1 · 6 p.m. .
Wedneaday"Sel'licea. 7:30p.m,

Umted Brethren

I

:

$.1&amp;/clay .

RAWliNGS-COATS

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME
992-S 1A 1

Call 614·992·
•
6637

4~.

S76--Applo

773-Miilon
882-New Hnea

-.....,. ._

~ft

Rates are for consecutiw runs, bmbn up days will be
clwged for each day as separate ads.

'

'!bini Ave.
PallOr. Rev. Clark Baker

15

Over 15 V."oids

Check our Price or We Both Lose

675-PL ..eaeant

247-laMi..Fola

......

MASON, WY. Acro11 tr.. the Po~t OHice
Wo Specialize I•
Tires • Ali1•ments • Ex.. u~ts

Of State.

EVERY THURSDAY

MlddleDorl Pea-.!

MI.

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

•The Area's Nutnber I
Marketplace

..__IA-blf
St RL 124, Racine
Paltllr: WiWam Hoback
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
.
Evenint • 7P-m,
WedMiday Service• - 7 p.m.

FallhG=urch
' . Sunda:S:ool- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
WednCiday7:30p.m.
Mt. Ollft ColllmuaiiJ Churdl

1:

r........,
985 a ler
M3.Po.oi..d

th.e Daily Sealinel, reachirw o.er ~ODD . . _

Pentecostal

Barr-.••
Pl'abytertoa
Wonhip . 9 a.m.

'

It£

245 . . C:a '
2Sf ,. , . . DilL
641 ...

Yard Solo.
• A olooo;f..d ad• ..-,~ ia ... C.S, l JWr
TribuDo(ooeeptCiuoil"..d DioplaJ,B '
c...Jor ....
Notice~) will aJ.o appear ill IJ.el'oild: P • £
_.

ad~r7:00p.m.

. Priday- ~

s,......MJ.....-

1411 Brid&amp;eman SL, Syncu~e
Put&lt;&gt;r. Roy (Mite) Thompaon
Sunday School-10 a.m.
Ev..U..· 6 p.m.
Wemeaday Seovicc • 7 p.m.
Huel c .......u, Cllorcll
OIJRL 124
Pu1or: Hdoel Han
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonbip - !0:30a.m., 7:30p.m.

I

3674'1

Ia M-riut

·
1/4 mile put Fon,"!eiJI'"' New~ Rd. :
l'aot&lt;&gt;r:"WiWam Van Met.r
:
Suad0y-7:00p.m,

w

3a--

992..¥···· po.V

ttt _C ' t

LOG HlULIIG,
LUMBER, or
FUTBED WORK
· In State or Out

Quality ·
Stone Co.

G.lia C
'J Melp County M-n Co., WV
Area Code614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

dayti.ftu pultlieation 10 ..... e....,;
· ma
• Adl that m•t he paid ia ..tYaace are:
.- Card o( Thaaluo
HaPPJ Ado

Calvary Plllrlill Chapel
HarriJonville Road
P1110r: Rev. Vidor Roush
Sunday Scbool9:30 a.m. ,
Wonhis&gt; • lla.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednaday Service· 7:30p.m.

Cllu.reb o1 J - Cbrlat,
Apollolk l'allh .

TROLLEY STATION CRAFTS
992·2549

HAULING

Gf_jAYMAR

Cltw4fied page• c011er ehe
f~ lekplaone e:~tchanges...

• FreeAclo: Cl...woyudF...dado...lot15_...;JI ..
run 3 d.ya al DO cilarp.

'

The S111Yatloa Ara7
115 Buttomut Ave., Pcmeroy.
Sunday Sehool - 10:30 a.m.
Wonbip ·10;00 a.m., 7:30p.m.

SAT.B-12

• Ada oullide ~ cou.ty your ad ~ ........ F ·z •f
• Recei'9e dilcout for W paid ia ..t.ac.e..

Faltll Fel-lp Crusade for Cllrlol
PallOr. Rev. Frulclin Diekm•
Sel'lioe: Friday, 7 p.m.

Re1okln1 urea. ....
500Jil.2nd Aw:. ,Middlepon
PIROr. Rev. Mic:hael Pqio
Sunday Sc:hooi-IO·a.m,
Wednesday Semceo · 7 p.m.

8A.M.~5P.M. ~

CLOSED SUNDAY

POLICIES

Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pastor: Rev. Bladcwoocl
Sunday Sebool- 9:30a.m.
Wonbip !0:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wodnaday Sel'lice · 7:30p.m.

Trlnlly coe..-eatlllonal Cburcll
PIIIOr. Re¥. Roland Wildman
Church · 9:1S a.m.
Wonbip • 10:30 a.m.

· Bvmin1 -7:30p.m.
Wedneaday Sel'lice • 7:30p.m.

Carmd
PIIIOr: Kcmeth Baker
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:45 L11L (2nd It 4lh Sun)

MoN. thru FRI.

CalY"'1 Bible Cllurch

SU.......Ue Word O(Fallh
Put&lt;&gt;r: David Doilcy
Sunday Schqol9:30 a.m.
Evenina • 71'm.
Thunday Service • 7:JI! p.m.

DAY BER&gt;REPUBLICATION
1:00 p.m. Satur&lt;!ay
1:00 p.m. Monday
1:00 p.m. Tuesday
1:00 p.m. Wednesday
100 p.m. Thwsday
1:00 p.m. Friday

Call992-2156

'
'

Falmew Bible C~urdl
Letart, W.Va. RL I
Putor: Jameo Lewis
Sunday School • II a.m.
Wonliip • 9:30 Lm ;, 7:30p.m.
Wodneaday Seivice ·7:30p.m.

l!addatH-oi'Pn7tr
(al Bur!inplm church off Rowo 33)
Put,or: Robcll Vance
Stmday WMhip • 10 a.m.
Wednelc!ay sel'lice • 6:30p.m.

Mlddleporl c...-n~., Cb....
57S Purl St., Middleport
p~ Sam Andoni&gt;n
Sunday SebooiiO a.m.

Putar: K.neah Baker
Sunday School- 10 a.m .
Won!Op. 9Lm.
Wednesday SeMcca • 10 a.m.

Putor: Kemc:ah Batc:r

·

Rullud Cllurcllfll lhe Naanoie
Putor: Samuel Baaye ·
Sunday Sebool· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30.a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednaday Servicel • 7 p.m.

IWICioapel

Wonbip . 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednelday Sel'lice . 7:30p.m.

W"*7an Bible Hoi- Chun:b
7S Pearl St.; Middleport
Paator: Rev. Roy Md:arry
Sunday sehool • 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip • 10;30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Sel'liee · 7:30p.m.

1'uiOr: Rev. Herflen Gnle
Sunday Sebool- 9:30a.m.
Wllltbil) • II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedaelday Servicel • 7 p.m.

'

Willie's Chat&gt;OI W-yao ·
CooJYilla Road
Putor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wanhij&gt; . 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Semce . 7 p.m.

a.- Chum or lbe Nnareae

Sunday Scbool - 9:30a.m.
· Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Semoe.o • 6 p.m.

To place an ad

Fried... Goopel Mlalon
Bald Knob,oo Co. Rd. 31
Pastor. Rev. Roser Willford
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Sel'lic:e • 7 p.m.

Pomeroy Cllurdo or lhe N....-Putor: Rev. ThomiS McCJuna
Sunday .Sebool • 9:3!\a.m,
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m. an~ 6 p.m.
Wednea&lt;lay Servicel· 1 p.m. .

915-4473
667·6179

2-7·92·1ht

N- S.W..ent Church
Sunday W~nhip · 2:30p.m.;
Thonday aeMcca • 7:30p.m.
•
·Sou lit llelbtl New T-eat
SilverRidae
Pulor. Duane Sydalsuidcer
SuAday School • 9 a.m.
Wonbip • 10 a.m., 1 p.m.
Wedne..!ay Semce . 7 p.m.

SyracuaeCIIun:loflllhell'n P1110r: Rev. Glem McMillan
Sunday Sebool · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
W-day Servicel "71!J11.

a&lt;M!dtltepartl
Putor: -Smith

~-~~~~~~~~

2114 South 2nd

f!

Putor:~~;_...

PHOIE: Patty or RMy Plclceaa
HCNae: 915-4231., P.tty'•

FIIIEISTUU'I'IS

-992·7553

CarleiOII lnlerdenomlaall'"'al Church
Kinpbury Road
Paot&lt;&gt;r. Clyde W. HendenCil '
Sunday School • 9::ijl a.m.
.
Evenina • 7 p.m.
Wedneiday Semce • 7 p.m.

R-Ule FeU-Ip
Clourcll or lila Nuar-

ForeiiRun
Paster. 1leron Newman
Sunday Sebool - 10 a.m.
Wo~-9a.m. ·
ThiOisday Semceo • 6:30p.m.

Wednesday Sel'lieeo. 7:30p.m.

Putor. Rev. IamcsS..Crficld

Newman

Sunday Sebool - 10 a.m.
Wonhip • II a.m., 6 p.m.
Thunday Servicu · T p.m.

Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.

'

'

~eJter

Pastor: Bra1da Weber

ML Moriah Cllu1,.,.

Putor: Rev. Uoyd D. Grimm, Jr.
Sunday Sebool • 9:30a.m.
Wonbip · 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
. Wodnaday Sel'licca • 7 p.m.

Sunday Sebool - 9:45a.m.
Wonhip • 11 a.m.
Wednesday SerVidoa .1:30 p.m.

Pastor; Gary Hines
Sunday School · 9:30 o.m.
Wonbip • 6 p.m.
WednCI&lt;Iay 8el'lic:a • 7 p.m .

Wo!ihip • 9:30 a.m.

I.

Paster.

Joppa

Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Mldlll&lt;part c•~rch flllha Nuareae

Cealn!Citlller
· Aabi&amp;JS..'.ra&lt;uM)

Bra«ord Chum orCIIrlol

Thursday Services- 7:30p.m.

~- Old
~~

•
·:

Sunda~ School· 10 a.m.
Wonhip -II a.,m.,7.~.m.
Wedneaday s.Mcca • 7 p.m.

Bethlehem Bapjbc
Pastor: Rev. Earl ~ulcr
Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.
Worship · 9:30a.IJ!.

i' '

Sunday School ond Wonhip- 9:30a.m.
Evenina s...;..,. 7 p.m.
Wednesday Semees • 7 p.m.

Keno Church ofCbrlll
Wonhip ·9:30a.m.
SUnday School · 10:30 a.m.

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
I• .
Wo!ihip • 10:30 a.m.
' '
First Southern B•P.IIsl
41872 Pomeroy Pike
Pastor. E. Lamar 0' Bryant
Sunday Scbool • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:45 a.m., 7:00p.m.
r
Wednesday Sel'lices. 7:00p.m.
Flnt BapUih Church

Thmlll L. Gatoa,
· Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedneaday SeMeea • 7 p.m.

1'11110r. Sbaroa Hau......,
Sunday Sc:hooJ . 9 a.m.
Wonbip • 10 a.m.
Tuc~y Semc:a . 7:30p.rf1.

Pastor: Rev. David Rus..U

SlhmdMiin
Pastor: AI Hutl(ll
S110day School· 9:30 o.m.
WonhiJ&gt;- 8:15, 10:30 a.m., 1 p.m.
Wednesday Sel'licco - 7 p.m.

· Pasaor: Roy Hunt.cr

Sunday Sebool· 10 a.m.
. · Evenilla 7:30p.m.
Tuooday A Thurlday .• 7:30p.m.

'l'llpp8'11 - · 81. 1'11111

Mlddleporl Church or a.r111

RuUand Jolrst BapUsl Church
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m. .
Wollhip • 10:45 a.m.
Pomeroy First Baptist
EIStMainSt .

.

·

Wednelday Sel'licca· 7 p.m.

Saturday Sel'lice ·7:30p.m.
Sunday School • I0 a.m.
Wonhi_p - 11 un.,
Wednesday Sc:l'lice-7:30 p.m.

.

W~ - 9:30a.m.

Apple ond Second su.

··-••Iiiii

Stop &amp; Coe~paro .

us.ooP••awOHAILE UTU

Fuii~U,ht-

33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy

ht .1: JniSUnday ·7:30p.m.
Sw!day School - 10:30a.m.
· W~y Semoeo. 7:30p.m.

NewLlfeChurcbfiiGnd

W~ · IO.,m.,6p.m.

Free
B~~£!'::"
Ash SUeet,
•
Pastor. Mark Morrow

•

'
Syrac"" Churcll or God

,~

.IELIYIIY SIIYICE
S.all ..... Work

R-Ule
Pastor: Rev. Seldoa1 -

Cllurdo ot God or l'rapiiOCJ
0.1. While Rd. otrSL RL 160
Pastor: Pal Remon
Sunday Sc:bQol . io a.D).
Wonhip - lla.m.
Wednesday Semoes • 7 p.m.

PomtroJ Clourch or Clnill
Pulor: Andrew Mile!

.' .

Rollud Cllurdlfll G,..
Pa-: Jolla F. Corcoran
Sunday Sc:hooJ . 10 a.m.
Wonhip - II a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Semees · 7 p.m.

HELP THE EFFOIT TO IUILD A PIOSPEIOUS
FUTURE FOR MEIGS COUNTY
HELP US IN OUR ATTEMPT TO GET INDUSTRY FOI
MDGS COUNTY
••
WANTED: S to 6 ACRES OF RELATIVELY FLAT LAND:·
(1) No - · tH. 6 ft. ,..., .. eltvllla.
(2) Wlllt S.Ww (3) Allll Wlllw

9-1n.o?•-llnl

205 Norlh Second Ave.
Mlddlepor1, OH

RUTLAND • Main Streei-A large 2 atory 10 room h,ome
wilh one bath and a Nttle over 112 acre of ground. Also .
has a 24 x 30 m8!81 Morlon bUDding .
Aalllng $28,000

POMROY· A 2 &amp;!Dry home with 4 314 &amp;Cf8s . Has a now
Hardy lumace, a new roof, equipped kilc:hen (range a~d

rafrigeralor), washer and dryer. Comes wllh ·a lamtly
room, dining room, and 3 bedrooms .
$30,000

HOWARD .
EXCAVATING

POMEROY· Main Strael · Vlaw of !he RIVER- A 2 olory
home with 3 bedroom~, 1 112 baths, one err ~ge, and
e lui baaemenl. The houae 1111 on 2 lo.. and haa cenlrll
lir. WM $25,000
NOW $20,000

BULLDOZER, BACKHOE
and TRACKHOE woRK
AVAILABLE,
SEPTICSYITEMS, HOME SITES •nd '"'

DOmE TURNER, Brok.t........................lt2-5et2

LANDCLEARING,
DRIVEWAYSINSTAUED
l.IMESTOfE·TAUCKING

TRAILERSITE~

FlEE ESTIIIATt:S

_....J

.,,
c

'

II

•Gaa Grill Tanka
•VendeuHutera

Rt. 124, lacl"
614·t4:f.

31904 Leading

10/1192

._.or,.
.. FFI
__c_E._._
..._•••_.-_._
..._..._..._.-_
..._.........._..._.•_..._..._..,.
...na
__21_ 1;.1

•100 lb. Cyllndero

•R.V.'a

;jJ~

MIDDLEPORT· Step •Righi In· af1d lake over a wall
eatabliahld business, lhe Wealam Auto. Cornea with d
stock. 11on1 llllun!a, and e 2 a!Ory commercial building.
Has polenlilll lor 4 aplllmenll upalalis. Gnoal polen-.J
lor
St:IS,DDO

. BRENDA .IEFFERS•._ ....- ......................182.JOH
DARLINE STEVtART...............................II2.ae6
lANDY BUTCHER................................II2-137t
~IRRY IPRADLING. ...- .....:........($04,..1-Mtl

Hew Dtaler
J and T Goa Service

n~~}!llng

CrMk Road
Mldlllaport, Ohio
614·992·7144

au-••·

!gas

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBING

RACINE· Beahan Road- This 3 bedroom, 2 bath homil

needs work but could be made nice with !he right
handyman's touch. ·It Iii• on a .Iitie over an acre: Has
honlllaticYiew of the ~untryaide .
$17,000

.
f
!J.
Ferrel

992·3831
~ .,.,...,1 -

GUN SHOOT
FORKED RUN. :
SPORTSMAN :,
C
, LUB
••
SUNDAYS
12:00 NOON
fKtor'l Choke
.

12 Gauge

••'

IL---..:..21!;~~[~

�I

•
Ohio
SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

41 HOUSH for Rent

Pome'r oy- Middleportr Ohio

1993

Friday, January 15, 1993

5I

The

The World Almanac ®Crossword Puzzl~:

BRIDGE

ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER
NORTH

l·tS-11

....

+ A K74
'KQ JI07 3 2
+ 92

EAST
+9 82

3

.• us

A4

t

QJ 10 7 5
Q 10 6 3

AK 82

+J84

SOI(fH

•8

+QJ6 5
• 9 6!3

+ AK75

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North
Soutb

1+

+

5
6•

BARNEY

West

Norlb
1'
Pass
4t
Pass
5t
Pass . Pass

Antwer to Prewiout "-ule

39 Behold!
40 Above (poet.)
42 Conlllclarota

1 Single ltam
5 Two-toed
oloth
9 Grain
12 lsrHI'o Golda

'I Qidi•r

44 Waohln g,Jon

Sound
46 Ear (pral.l
48Lc18

13 Unloon
14 New Doal
agcy.
15 EICh
17 Chemical
oulflx
18 Ruatlan
villoge
19 - Hly
21 Orlolructe
23 Hundr8dlold
27 A conUnant
(lbbr.l
28 Raclldllcl
211 - Leog.,.
31 South ol Neb.
34 Artlflclal
languoge
35 Garmon
lrtiCie
37 Belli

50 Enchantment
53 Follow
54 Unlock
(poet.I
55 Cry ol pain
57 UghUng
device
81 Yourond my
62 Ru11fan river
64 Acltaaa RoHanne -

65 Draft ora.
66 Funer~lltam
87 Non-ptofll
org.

3 3, Roman
4 Hanlllad
5 Conouma totally (2 wda.)
6 EmDlta Stitt
(abbr.)
7 'tear (Sp.l
8 W. Colli coli.

DOWN
1 Actress

Thurman

~-

•

2 Fiber clutter

9 Eaklmo bO~t

!::!·' : :

10

11 Bllllicll WHd
16 Rouehlr •••
20 1,051, ....
Romon
22 lnciiM mob"
(abbr.)

East
Pass
pass
Pa!:G
Pass

'

r...u••

.-·

lrH
25 .Nota waif '
26 Z11 Z11'1 ··
litter
..
30 Slxllll
radical (tLl
Tropl~al

24

Opening lead: t Q

..

23 M.c:kerel'l .

32 Actor

The long suit ·
reigns

PEANUTS ·
I

NO. MAAM ..M'( D06
DIDN'T COME TO

1

MAYBE ITLL "ALWAYS
13E A MVSTERV..

SCI-lOOL. TODAY..

1 NEVER CAN.
REMEMBER .. DID THE
''T" STAND FOR ''TRUE ''
OR FOR ''FALSE "?

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
ALL Yard '1111111 Be Paid In
Advance. DEADUNE: 2:00 p.m.

vered with another diamond, forcmg

tilt cloy bolofl!ho ad Ia to run.
SUnday odMion • 2:00 p.m.
Friday. lllondoy adHion • 2:00
p.m. Saturday.

Public Sale

8

&amp;Auction
I

~

•

!

Q

BORN LOSER
"~ 1 00vaJHA~ · AN'f"'

!MAD

WilY TilE. ~llER
,..__.....__..., ~I~ FIU:D

w.To :ir
a..tM- 1.

1~.

W.'H Pay You To Typa No.,.
And AdO- From Home!
$500.00 Per 1000. Call 1~
($1.41 llln118yrul Or
Wr11o:
PASSE
• DR, 111 S. Unllondlng Tl,. cotnwar, N. Aurora,
IL 10142.

By Jeffrey McQuain
DINT makes a dent in or impress·
es. Make a dent in this vet;b 's spelling
by changing tile E or DE NT to I fo r
DINT.

.

To luy: Junk Al.r!oo : mon monoyl
Froo olgh1
job
propanllon
Or Wlhoul ........ Col program
about nontn1ditlonal
Lally Llwll'o 114 3R 1303.
omoloVrM011, (ONOW), 1o800o
!• Prrlol: u Old u.s. 13U!il8.
Coin*, 0o1o1 Rlra an- Colno,
Gold Colnl. 11.T.il. Coin Shop,
1S1 SecOnd A - . Oalllpolla.

,,
Acc:enorles

Employment Services

'AYOH' ALL AREAS!-. your
limo Wl!h ... You'U lovl tho

81noo Robulll, -

owner

c.,. r'
11 COncern For Vow Child'•
; P..nta • wtH aa lnclvklu.tl Clra. Call U. For A
Infant
who hl¥e nnw hMI chUdrlfl of /Toddlers 111 118 122'7. p,..
theirown
chaol•r~ ISchool Age I~
• "-PPo who · - tho cho~ 8224.
Iongo ol . .lng loi child,.. who T
• t•
1n
1 pp1

M_,,_

mailing a dlllnnco

·

F~w C,~ ,rR11~=

T/1iiiu,
1oiOH2HC151 OR
KIDS.

114-112-5158.
146- Will Do C.rpantry

_,_
Jobo:
SII,SCIO
-112,000 Per Y-. Now Hl~no.
A1Mz1n1 Po ;reiN MMeage
R...alo DoloU. Ctt-352-45-ll
Ert 2llll
~:..:::::·..,...~==;:--;;::;:;
Hallllytloe
NMdld:
Paid
Vocatlonl OowiiiiiNd W.goo.

WOfk Building, Romodoll"'i, Fromlno,
llry Wall, F:fiJ Palr&lt;lng,
-ling, Etc. An lmo: Hovo
Ro._oncoo, 1
2ol0.
W- Like To BabyaK In llr
Homo.
E&gt; parloncod
And
Ro........
. 114-387-0415,
(Choohlro).

1-7217.

5I

\

":,r.

Household

'**'

SLOW DRAINS?
DRAIN CARE Endt Slow Dralna.

1 Bedroom, Rtflrtnc.., $150

Ohio, 304o852-2307.

Plpao And M'o 8ato To U...
I pc -lonal oaho, cool $1,100. Money Bock Ouara-1 luy
eHing MOO, exc cond, 104-171- DRAIN CARE AI: ThOfnoo Do ft

2 Bedraoma, 1 Beth, On M4 In

End. 1275/llo. S200 Dopooll,
C.III14-38H613 8-5:30.

2141.

Remov. Y-.rw Of BuilduP~ In

Centlf', 171 Mc:Cornllck Aoed,
Oolllpoill.

VI'RA FURNITURE AND AP.
PUANCES
Toppan 1100 m!orowovo, ~.i 2
614-441o4421 OR 614-ol4e-31SII end llibl• I coff11 WH, ADi 2
end tobllo, ·lll bolh; 114-1'12·
2087.

TrNdmln,

Manual,

Dlattal

llonhO&lt;, Uko -1114481oll78.
Uoad .DHch Wlk:h Trencher
DCNol Enalno WHh Or WHhoul
llockhoo 'lll......-. 11WM-

7142.

Thm your clutter into cash,
Sdl it the epg IDCJy... by phone,
no need to leave your home.
Plgce your cbwified ad toda:yl
15 UJOrcU or le11, 3 dap,
3 pqpera, $5,40 paid in advance.

81

I

'

X J N G

CN

HVG

J M

AGTPJXQX

W.llrproollng.

HVCH

ASTRO-ORAPH

BERNICE ,
aEDEOSOL

maker inatantly reveals which signs are
romanCically perfect for you. Mail $2
plus a long, seef·addreued, stamped
envelope to Matchmaker. clo .this
newspaper, P.O. Bo• 9)428, Cleveland,
OH 44101 · 3428.
AOUARIUI (...... 20-l'tb. 11)111hey are
properly handled, IC&gt;day'a. developments could Improve Or elevate your
station In life. You are In tune wtth the
times. so you should be able 10 recog.
nize your opportunities.

~'Your

.

U'Birthday
...... 1i, 1113

Plumbing a.

82

14·--~~----------~

F - ' 1 HeM!"L."':"Ioa.Coollna. '
IN«e.....,. And
RIO •'
c:.rtHied. ...llhnllll, C;m or ·

446-2342
9J2-2156

C L. H J P X

CLHPGXXGX

C A F

X G C A

LCA

..

V C 0 G . '

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: ""I oan'l be the same guy I was. That other guy
I

himself." -

IIIAT DAILY
PUULII

(Sportscaster/recovering alcoholic) Pat Summerall.

c:i li'll
p~

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letters of
four scrambled words

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PETROD

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A fellow was down on his
luck. Another chap tried &lt;o .
cheer him by saying. "There is
nothing wrong with being poor,
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F A R C E A 'can't ...... it."

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by fillin g in the missi ng word~
you develop from step No. 3 be low.

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P~INT

NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

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. . UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE LETTERS
V
TO GET ANSWER
•

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SCRAM-lfTS ANSWERS

Gotten · Heron · Usual • Whence . GOES ON ·
A friend who had joined a nudist colony as.ked me
to hang a poster in my store. It read : "Join a nudisl
camp. It's a place where nothing GOES ON."

Ft WOftlt Tk

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JANUARY ·15 I
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Dock And lam, Nice FO&lt; '•mlty,
Col! Amy 114-4,-G401.

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CELEBRITY
CIPHER
n
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como. 1 100 113 1313.
D , VEIGliNQ IIOUTE: OoC Rich
Oulck? No Woyl But We Have A
Good, Sllodr, Allordo":::utl-

Florida supermarket lakes an Ad-Vi ce
Award for advertis ing a special thai's
"comming." Perhaps lhe upcomin g
sale will be speci al, but !here IS no
word spelled "comming." To make a
present participle out of the verb
COME. just drop the E and add ·lNG
to the end. Unlike HUM. which dou·
bles the M before adding the ending.
COME does not double its M before
!he ·lNG. Keep your language hum·
ming along with the proper spelling of
pre sent parliciples, such as COMI NG.

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IS BETTER
· THANA
GARACE-FUL
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110 oollmo1•,
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lrom !holr Mnco,
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Mia Paula'• O.r CaN Center 1
Block Wool 01 HIIC On Jockoon

FOSTER Pr\AEKTSARE:
Pike II·F I A.ll. ·5:30 P.ll. H
• 11n91o Paoplo "' llorrlad CluoiHJ And E•parlonco 1o Tho

"'10U RE KIND

NA11.1RALL.Y I'D5EEM
C:UM61P MISe HOWLIE. .,.

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Tranoml•lont,
Llaod I .
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!Ypaa,
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llochlnlol /fod !Ioker, Port
~...'limo. Bend R - To:
CLA 2541...~· Oollpollo DollY I ::;,:~.::..,..,,..-:---::,.--=:-~
TrtbUM, .a Third Avenue, Gillpollo, Ohio 41U1.

1

YEA.H, I KNON. 'NEU..,

Ollor, 114-

441-3'101.

oornpany. t.aoo-812-1351.

Ex"""'ICid.

1 "E:T THE Fe E:L..INEi' 'T'HAT
Ml66 HOM.. IE THINKS ..

11171 C.dlll.. El DondO FOf
Plrtl, C.JI 614-311- Allor I
P.ll.
231 Iuick U Enalno, And
TtilllWlllllon NIYer I'Mnln C.Or

wanted

OUR LANGUAGE AD -VICE : A

Auto Pans a.

76

IOnfl

41 Roy- .
43 Place ·•.
45 North ol Fk
47 AQIVt Pt.pt
41Valvllllefur
50 Cow tolll!dit
51 Conellllalltn
52 B11111itnl '• ·
atroka . 56 Twfatllcl ·
56 Whttl

~ ...........ANRI~IEAIIN.

OUR LANGUAGE

Oltf:F!

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Help

the dummy to ruff again. •
Now there was no way to draw
trumps and r im the hearts. Declarer
could do no better than cash dummy's
. A· K of spades; take two top hearts,
discarding diamond losers, and con·
cede two down.
As you can see, six hearts cannot be
defeated. However, van der Pas
doesn't,suggest how to reach that c?n·
tract. It is all right to dtagnose an tll·
ness, but it is better to have a cure.
North could rebid four hearts,
here South would surely pass. 1'\!~::~~~~
what if North jumped to six
over five chills? That should be a
ous attempt to name the final con·
tract. Yet' would you pass as South,
with only one heart? You should, but
Wflllld you?
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Very early in your bridge career,
you were told that the number•one
aim of bidding is to lind a H maJOr·
suit fit. But there are times when this
usually sound advice · should be ig·
nored. Marijke van der Pas, the Dutch
international champion, highlights
one of them in her Bois Bridge Tip.
She points Out that when you have a
long, strong suit, you should plan .to
make it trumps. Ignore silly 4·4 hts
that exist on the side.
TO support her argumen t" va n der
Pas gives today's deal.
.
North 's four diamonds was a splmter, showing the valu~ for a raise to
four spades with at must o~e diamond.
Five clubs was an aggresstve cue·btd.
Five diamonds confirmed the void.
West led the dia mond queen, which
was ruffed in the dummy. The heart
king went to West's ace. II• perse·

.. •

Gllinn11a · "
33 Sliortletttr:
36 """lilt•
38 Soothing, •

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Elect11cal
Refrigeration

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Major changes In your IIOCCallllo a,. in·
dlca1ed in che yeer llhead. It lool&lt;a Uke
you will dewlap a number ol YIIUible
lrlondlhlpe wiCh people from v.-tou~
walka 01 life and Vlrioua - · 01 tn·
&lt;*avora.
Don'
CAPIIICOIUI (Die. 22-.lln. 11)
C
puc rll1rlc11ona or llmltallont on your
hopaa and expecWionl tOdiiY. You',.
In 1 good cycle - • 1 chain ol IIIIUIUal
produce banei!Clel .-ne.
Know - . to looiC lor romance and
you'll lind II. Tho 1\ttro-Oraph MitCh•

_,,.could

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P18CEB (Fob. 20-Morch 201 You hava
the abUity today to deftly manage sever·
a! prOfe¢11 t4multaneoualy. H~,
you must keep thooe with whom you re
lnvolvllcl posted regarding your inlen·
'!Ions.
- • ( - 21· April 11) Joint andMvort COUld be more fruitful for you
tOday than projects you actomp1 on
your own. Arrange your agenda eo thai
you work lrom your gr..leat aCrengtho.
TAIIRUI (April :1H11J :Ill) Before
milking an imponont- Coday, Cry
10 talk to 11 many people aa poalblo
¥111018 advice and counlll you respect
Thla ·conll!!nouil could aid your fudg·

ment.

.

CANCER (Juna 21.July 22) Vour
strength in furthering your . personal
agend• today lies in your ability 1o nel·

work eHectivaly. EaCh person you bring
in to 'this agenda will have a place and a
purpose.
LEO (July 23-.lllfl. 22) Success is likely
today. provided you do nollooe track ol
Che type of end results you desire and
the bottom line. Focus ori favorable
conclusions.

VIRGO (AIIfl. 23-llapt. 22) Dedicate
your mancalenergies today to addlno to ·
your storehouse ol knowledge. You can
more r..dlly understand feels and Issues now lhat priiYiously conlused or ·
eludect you.
LIBRA (lept. 23-0ct, D) You're sCIIIIn
a vwy lavora!&gt;'- cyc:1e - · your materlallnt"'"lla,. concemllcl. Thera are a
numbef ol oppor1unhlel hovarlng about
youJ~~ eo be con11anlly on the Iller!.
IC
(Oat. le Nov. It) II you wan1
to be llnanclally IUCCII""' todiiY, make
that your MCOnCIIIIY Objec11ve rather
than your primary one. Try to mike
wttat will be good lor you good for others oa ""''·
·
IAGmAIIIUI (Nov. a.Dac;. 21) Mat•
tars that you'll have !IIIIo or no conlrOI .
OVIr 10di1Y cflllld be tho very oneo ChaC
work out tho belt lor you. Don'! go ·
around lrylng to ff'L thlnga thac ~ ·t

cn'?ll (..., 21-.lune 201 Striving to
_,.. !he lnC•eata ot othoro cOUld produce peripheral benefits lor you 1oday,
though thlt Ia not likely to be your
param~nt concern.
broken .

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The Daily Sentinel

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Friday, january 1!i, 1993
Page-10

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Living apart doesn't constitute
Cancer screening clinic set feb. 3
legal separation, Ann tells reader

now,

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By The Be,n~

' . Dar Au I l!!!!en: My wife and
I 9C(l8fllled five ye~n ago. Neither
-of us hid 111y 1111111ey 10 we didn~
bolher. to file for divorce or get
separation paperi. We q=d to
slwe cuslldy of our daughtllr IIIII
lived SCjllille lives.
Four IIIOIIIhs qo, my wife was
in a terrible autoolobile accident
She was hospi181ized for a month
and died. Because we did not get a
divorce I am now responsible for .
lhc hospilal bills, which come close
to $12S,OOO. I am also liable for an
addilionll $35,000 which she 1811 up
on c~ ClKds. ,
The WOIIIIII had no life insurance,
and neilher of our families have that
kind of moliey. AD I can think about
now is how much my dauahter will
miss because I W&lt;ll!~ be able to IICIId
her to college. ·
· Ann, please lell your readers !he
following: If yoli are not livfng wilh
your spouse, don't assume you are
legally separaled. I realize
100
lale, that I should ha~ insisted on a
divorce and· mllllged somehow to
pay for it My fai!QI'C to do lhis has
gotten me imo a hole I may never
get out of. Any suggestions? ••
J.M.C., TACOMA, WASH.
DEAR TACOMA: Get some
legal counsel at once, Pelhaps you
will be-advised to file for bank·
'
rupu:y.
Thanks for letting several million
readers know that living 11p11t does
not constilulc legal sepllation. you
will be considered manied and

·----

Allhough you may consider this
IIi insipificant problem complied

Ann

wilb the ones you get every day.
I'm really steamed about this.
Am I overreacting, or do I have
a legitimate complaint here? -ANN LANDEIIS
"1992. LooADatl•
DEPRIVED IN CJ-IARLESTON,
Tlmt1 Syncllale ODd
S.C.
Cruion Sp&gt;tll_..
DEAR DEPRIVED: I see your
letter iJ from Charleston, a city
that ~ genlility and Southern
held mpousiblc for all apoo•ul charm. Appamlly, Louise gn:w up
obligatioas unless lcplly SCjlli*'li IIOIIICwlae ellc.
ordi~
In die future; when dil)ing with
Dear A1111 Lpden: My sialler, your llistu, sit on lhe oilier side of
"I nnise," is eight yc.-s my senior,
the table. And if she asks if she can
and she has always behaved 11 if have IOmcthing off your place. say.
she were my mother. Up until "No, !lis. Order 10me for yourself. •
now, rve been able to tolMtc her
Dear Alia Lancler$: How do I
bossiness, but last night was the · tell a very good friend that his
final sttaw
·
bmlth is lenibly o.ffeilsive? I need
Asmall 8rouP of family membeR your guidance. •• STUMPED IN
was having dinner at a iish place ALABAMA
.
that we all like very much. I Oldcrcd
DEAR ALABAMA: Tell him
the mini crab cakes, which a my prompdy llld in plain language. It
favorice. After we were served, will be m act of friendship.
Louise nudged me and said, "fd Jove
Gem of the Day: Don't criticize
one of lhosc cakes, sis. "!IBid. "OK,· people who talk to themselves.
and ga~ her one.Tw!l mirMJres laler, · Somclimes it's the only i!Uiligcnt
she said; "Mmm. Ylimmy. Arc they convcnation they have lhal day.
ever good!" She lhen leaned ovaAn11 Laliders' latest booklet,
and, without ISidng my permission, "Nuggets and Doozies," . has
speared a S«ond crab cake.
. ewrything from I~ outrageously
Afcer another minuce, she said, ,_, to the poigNJIIIly ilt.ligh(ul.
"Those crab cakes arc so wonderful; Send a self-addressed, lo11g,
I lhink you ough!IO gi~ Mom one.• busilltss-size tlllltlope IJIId il check
Wilh lhat, Mom ihoured across the or IIIOIILJ ortkr for $,5 (this illcludes
lablc, "fd love one." Before I knew postage IWi ltiwllbtg) to: Nuggets,
i1, I only hlid two crab cakes on my clo AM /.411tkrs, P.O. Bo%11562,
place.
Chicago, Ill. 60611-0562. (lti
Calltlda, ~lid $6.)
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A cancer scrccnfng clinic will be call, first serve basis. Clinic serconducted at the Meigs County vices such as pap smear for
. Health Depar;tmcnt on Feb. 3 ·from women, hemmocults, urinalysis,
1-3. p.m. at itS offices in lhe multi- heighl/w~ht, testicular exam for
purpose building on Mulbe'rry ·men, bl
pressures, and a gernalHeights in POmeroy.
ized hcallh exam will be included.
The American Cancer Society
Dr. Douglas Hunter will be
continues to provide educational donating his services at the Februmaterials and suppon during alllh~ . ary· clinic. Mrs. Phyllis Beahrs,
cancer screening clinics.
women's health care technician,
The clinic is limited ot 12 will be coordinating services at the
patients at til is time.and a $5 fcc clinic.
per client will 6e charged 10 offset
· According to Norma Torres,
lab fees. County residents' who RN, nusing director at the, MCHD,
·have no or limired hcaltll insurance cancer is· the second leading cause
coverage are encouraged 10.attend of death in Mei(:S County. It ison
this clinic.
the rise, nationwide, but it is om:of
Meigs ~unty may call to make the must curable of all major disan appointment at 992-6626. eases if it is diagnosed in time.
Appointments are made''on a rust Early deteCtion of cancer is one of

SUPER SAVINGS

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: Vol.~. No. 48
• Copyrlghtacl1tn

FRIDAY
REEDSVILLE • The Olive
Township Trustees will meet Friday at 7:30 p.m. at the Shade River
State Forestry Building to discuss
1993 appropnations.

RUTLAND - There will be a
dance at the Rutland American
Legion Hall Saturday from 8 p.m.
to Jllidiiight. Music will be by' Pure
Cou~try Band. Public invited.

:=~~~~~==~~~=====.~~::=====

$14,629

Rt. /35 expansion in Ross,
Fayette.to start in 19.95 :

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CHILLICOTHE- In a move section of U.S. 35, it was deterWrayalsonoredthata2.59-mile
described by Gov. George mined that a large portion of-the stretch of35 in Montgomery Coun;
Voinovich as a "brcalcthrough," a work done in the '70s is still ty was sold last month, and another
planned expansion of U.S. 35 · acceptable and will be able to be section in the same county will be
through Ross itnd Fayette counties ?sed."
.
.
. . . · J!Ut out to bid_next year. In addi;
is expected to go out to bid four
Wray srud that by salv(lgmg thiS uon, construction should be com•
years earlier than expected.
work, rough_ly four years of th_e pleted late this year on the fiiutlleg
Construction is now expected to normal plannmg ~ss was ehm•- of.35 through Jackson County. .
begin in 1995, as opposed 10 1998 na_ted. It_had bee!! anticipared that
"Things ar~,really start~?g.to
or 1999 as previously planned, th1s secuon of highway wo~ld be come to~ther, Wray Sill~. 'Y•th
Voinovich announced Friday. The expanded to four lanes later m thiS the back1ng of Gov. Vmnov1ch,
10.83-mile stretch of highway OO::We·. .
ODOT will c?ntinu~ with its g~
begins,wcst of the Ross County viiTh1s IS. one example -o f our to complete th1s com!k&gt;r from Indilage of Frankfort
administration's commitmen! to ana to WestVirginia." . .
"The continuous efforts of the use tax dollars w•sely and mmt•
Leaders m the counues affected
U.S. Route 35 Steering Committee, mize the length of iilJle to build by 35, in addition to the SEORC,
the S~utheastern ~hio Regional highways whenc:Je'r pQssible •." . have continued the push to. ex~
Couocll and the Oh1o Depanment W~y wd. . _
. ..
35 from Day10n !D the Oh1o River
of Transportation has kept this corWe behev~ U.S. 35 •s cnucal smce the completro~ of the 35 fOIJfridor high on the administtation's to the economtc v1tahty of south- lane through Galha County last
priority lisl," Voinovich said.
eas~em ~nd southw~ste~ Ohio," spring. The Galli a corridor was
ODOT Director Jerry Wray said Vomov1ch added. Th•s . break· ded•cated June 3 and the section
that "after closely reviewing this through reassures commitments around Jackson' opened to IJ"affic In
· made to this corridor."
1990.
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Air, _
automatic, 4.3 V-6 engine, . 8' bed, sliding rear
window, AMIFM . stereo with cassette, clock, step

·

SMITH'S GMC TRUCK CENTER, INC.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

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LONG BOTIOM - Faith Full
Gospel Church · in Long Bottom
will have preaching and singing
Friday at 7 p.m. with Pastor Steve
Reed. Marvin Clark family will ·
sing. Public invited. Fellowship
HOCKINGPORT - There will
will follow.
be a round and square dance Saturday from. 8-11:30 p.m. at HockingTUPPERS PLAINS - T)le Tup- pan on Route 124 at the Reynolds
pers Plains VFW Post No. 9053 Building. Music will be provided ·
Ladies Auxiliary will hold a round by "Out of the Blue." Ronnie
and square dance Friday from 8- Wood will be the caller. Everyone
11:30 p:m. with musi.c by True welcome.
Country Ramblers. Everyone welcome.
SUNDAY
CHESTER - "Growing Through
MIDDLEPORT - Tile semi- Grief" group at Chester United
annual installation of officers for Methodist Church, Sunday at 7
the International Order of Job's p.m . Call Rev. Sharon Himsman at
Daughters will be held Friday at 985-4312 for infonnation.
the Middleport Masonic Temple.
Public invited. Beth Clark will be
MONDAY
the installing officer. Kim Mattox
RACINE • The Board of Public
is the honored queen elect. Greta Affairs will meet Monday at 10
Riffle is the bethel guardian and a.m. at Star Mill Park in Racine.
Dorsel Thomas is the associate
bethel guardian.
POMEROY - A financial aid
workshop will.be held Monday at 7
. SATURDAY
p.m. at the Meigs High School
SALEM CENTER - Star library for all Meigs County
Grange and Sw Junior Grange will seniors and parents. Guest speakers
have fun night Saturday with a will be John Hill of the University
potluck supper at 6:30p.m. ·
of Rio Grande on the Financial Aid
Form (FAF), and Melony Green·
CHESTER - Annual inspection wood of Bank One on student
of Shade River Lodge will be held grants and loans.
·
Saturday with dinner at 6:30 p.m.
There will be work in the fellow
RACINE - Big Bend Farm
craft degree. All members bring Antique Club will meet Monday at
two pies.
7:30 p.m. at Southern High School.

••
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••

REED
r1~~~~~~~
Staff
IE
-. . The position of
Mu~.:f~v~~:.':-~1~ auditor must be
fi
·
days, and could be
filled by the end Qf January,
according· to Bernard Gilkey, the
chairman of !he Republican Central
Commillee.
The death of Auditor William R.
Wickline on Jan. 9 has left the
vacancy, and the Ohio Revised
Code specifies the process for
appointing a successor.
Ac:cordin(i to O.R.C. Section
305, the appomtment must be made
.by the central committee of .the
political pany with which lhe occupant of the office was affiliated. In
this case, the Meigs GOP Central
Commitree must make lhe appointment
BRIAN

sets.

A GIUP
OHYOO?

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The PAY:-OFF LOAN makes it easy for
yOU to consolidate your bills and lower
y&lt;&gt;ur monthly payment. And there are
.no killer fees to gobble up your savings;
Don't struggle! Call today and we'll send
you a simplified PAY-OFF LOAN
application. All it out, send It In, and pay
'
.
them off- It's that easy!

ccrning the use or lTV, and to
his knowledge, the local system
is !he.only one in the U.S. being
If lhe students were wearing . ·used to help at-risk students
rublristic clothes, the intelliCtive through proficiency interventelevision classrooms at River tion.
"We're the only ones wqrkValley High Schoot, Buckeye
ing
with these students and it
HiJ() Career Center and the Uni- ·
seems
to be worlcing," he said.
versity of Rio Grande would
A
new
program at RVHS
look like a scene right out of an
even
allows
students to get
episode or Tht I mollS or Star
after-school
homework
help
Trek.
from
education
majors
at
the
· The $400,000 Interactive
television system provides a university.
"We're trying to answer the
two-way linkup between the
problems
our Sllidents are hav- ·
three sites via 26 miles of fiber
mg,"
said
Roy MuUins, rechnoloptic' table - a thread-size,
ogy
coordinator
for Gallia
durable cable capable of carrying more information than con- County Local Schools.
The system went into operaventional celephoAe cable.
The sysrem allows In educa· tion Sept. 1990 ai Buckeye Hills
and Southwestern and North
lion major at URG to lecture to
classes at River Valley and Galli• high schools when a
Buckeye Hills simultaricously, grant from the Appalachian
Regional Commission funded
• and the students can also inrer75
pe!CCRt of II1C project
. act with the cescher. Remedial
The
fii"St of its type for public
, - clasacs in subjects sll(;h u malh,
schools
in Ohio, Mullins said
: writing and citizenship arc
the
program
wlll actually rave
prcsenUy being taught thro111h
the
schools
money
in lite long
the sySielll.
run.
Thanks 10 a pam obtained by
He explained that when the
Dr. S.haron Yates of t.he URG
JII'OIIIIIII
bc1an, the school dis- .
College of Education, high
trlct
had
only one certified
·school l'realunen with problems
French
ather,
who was located
muterln1 the Nintb Grade Proat
SWHS.
The
diSirict couldn't ,
ficiency Test c111 also use the
lTV sysrem to help improve the . afford to hire otbers, and the
syscem allowed the teacher to · ·
llkllls rcqulled to pus the exam.
lcclllrO at North Oallia as well.
Jak:,!-2.~1, Instructional
media
" . tat URG,Iaid he
"The original idea was to
share lltaff," be said. "This way
kccpil up with the studies con-

'

MEMIID. J1)IC

2212 jackson Ave.
Point Pleasant

675-1121
2nd Street

5th Street

Mason
773-5514

New Haven

882-2135

Credit Qualiflcatlons Apply
'

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Southern Local readies grade
changes at Portland, Letart

.:.Interactive TeJe.vision:.Space age
:technology as an educational tool
By KEVIN PINSON
Tlmes-Sendnel Staff

Hobstetter, clerk of the time and place to each of the 29
county commissioners, was central comminee mcmbers..Giikey said friday . that the
appointed by the board on ¥onday
meeting
has been set for Jan. 26 at
to serve as acting auditor until a
7
p.m.
at
the Meigs County Court·
replacement is named.
house.
and
Gilkey said that a new
The O.R.C. section states, ·"'not
auditor
will
be appainted at that
less than· five nor more than 45
time
.
days after a vacancy occurs, the
Gilkey said that he is now
county central committee shall
receiving
resumes and letters of
meet for the purpose of making an
application
from individuals interappointment"
ested
in
lhe
position, and' that those
Assistant Prosecuting Anorney
resumes
would
be considered when
Christopher Tenoglia said Wednesan
appointment
is made. So far,
day that if the appointment is not
made within 15 days, Hobstetter four applicants have contacted
must be re-appointed by the com- Gilkey in writing.
Each applicant who contacts
missioncrs or a new acting auditor
Gilkey
before the meeting will l)e
must be appointed.
·
afforded
8n opportuni~y to make a
As a part of the appointment
brief
presentation
to lhc committee;.
process, Gilkey or lhe secretary of
and
that
the
committee
will have a
the central committee must send
to
ask:
questions
of the
chance
written notice of the meeting date, applicants.
.
·
Mar~'

'

.- '

If monstrous credit card bills are
putting the squeeze on y&lt;&gt;ur budget,
figlit back with a PAY-OFF LOAN
from Peoples Bank.

NURSING HOME MiNISTRY • A nurslna bome ministry Is
now in place at Hillside Baptist Churcb. Mn. Kay WUie« conducts
the ministry service wbicb also works closely with lbe hospital
ministry beaded by Charles Willett. Pictured are Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Willett

Meigs GOP launches sear~h ·
or late auditor's replacement

TELEVISION TEf\CH·
) ..,.lNG - Trle.. JoiiDIOD, right,
n education majot at tile
University ol Rio Grllllde, pre_., a math tutorial to studeall at Buckeye HUls Career
Ceater via the Interactive televisloll systtm. Monitors al the
opposite end of tbe riiOIII allow
Johnson to see ber students.
At Buckeye Hills, teacber
Phyllis Rose, above, monitors
tbree lelevisioa IICI'eens durin&amp;
the tutorial. Tbe students
watch JobiiHII on one olthe
three IICI'~ens at tbe top ot tbe
photo, Another screen shows
tbe students as seen by tbe
lnstruc:lor and a tblrd screen
presenll the view or an overhead camera used to s-ow
cloee•up work. Tbe overhead
camera Is visible Ia both pbotos. ne camera trained on tbe
students Is loc:ated be#WftD tbe
first and aecOnd televilllon
(Tlmes~ Sendnel pbotOll)

•

ATHENS
Old time
square/contra dance, Saturday, 811 p.m. Cost is $4 per person.
Dance Factory, Athens. Lynn Frederick. caller. ·

·14 Sectlono, 101 Pogo•
.
A Muldliiedlalnc. Newopapor

Mlddleport-Pome.roy--GaiiiPQIIs-Polnt Pleasant, January 17, 1993

I

HARRISONVILLE - The Harrisonville Lodge No. 411 F&amp;AM
will meet Saturday at 10 a.m. for
work in the entered apprentice
degree. All master masons welcome.

n ....

•

Community calendar
Community Calendar items
appear lwo days bdore an event
and the day or thai event. llems
must be received well in advance
to assure publication in the cal·
endar. ·

Editorai .......................... ..A-4

Sports............. ~ ........ Cl-6
Weatller. """~ ..............- .... ...A-3

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The Roman Catholic Church has:
named the Apostle Peter as founder o~
the Church in Rome.
.

&lt;W&amp;-2532

...

•

.DDNJ).IDf

135 .PINE STREET

Along the river ..............Bl-8
Busiqess/Fann ...............D 1-6
Classilled ................- ....02-5
Deaths.... - .. - .........- •••• ..A-2

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S
An
Sierra- America's choice full size truck/
bumper, full spare.

Inside

'

Famous bol;ltrnan may have visited
Gallipolis· James Sands· Page B-6
Two outstanding men praised
by Fr~d W. Crow· Page A-4

•

1774.

s

.I

;_B·l
•

The first president of the
Continental Congress was Peytori
Randolph·of Virginia, elected Sept. 5/

. SUG. RETAIL

Super Bowl berths to be determined . C-1.

•

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---- :

Agency works
to upgrade
system

&lt;

the aims of the Meigs County
Health Department Cancer Screening Clinic. Following are seven
warning signals of cancer: change
in bowel or bladder habits, a sore
lhat does not heal, unusual bleeding
or discharge, thickening o.r lump in
breast or elsewhere, indigestion or
difficulty in swallowing, obvious •
change in wan or molo, and nag ••
ging cough or hoarseness.
;

.

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we can go beyond our staff and
tap into the University of Rio
Grande staff and their exper-

tise."

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Times-Sentinel Staff
RACINE-· While it won't be a
giant leap, education will certainly
take a big step forward Tuesday in
the Southern Local School District:
That is when the Portland and

Letan Elementary Schools will go
from double-grade classrooms to
one grade in each classroom wilh
one teacher.
AU of lhe fU"St. second· and lhird
graders now attending the two
schools will go to the Letan school

while all the fourth, fifth, and sixth
graders will go to the Portland
school.
·
For many' years, all six grades
have been taught in bo!JI schools,
but each teacher had two grade levContinued on ~-3

·

When consolidation went
in10 effect, the old Kyl!er Creek
High School buildmg had
already been wired for the lTV
system, so equipment_was transported in from Nonh Gallia and
Southwestern.
The classrooms conlllin three
cameras - one aimed at the .
instructor, one at tbe students
and an overhead camera aimed
ata lable top
which swdents usc as an "electronic chalkboard" to show lheir
work lto·instructors IOGated at
one of the remote sites.
Voicc-activared microphones
allow lhe students and instructors to communicate instantaneously.
The instructoc's conuol panel
. looks like a homemade ve11ion
of a desk at NASA's mission
conaol center.
The instructor can watch all
three Cll11eru on separate monitors and can "act as their own
stage m111ager" by switching
cameras and zooming in for
close-ups, said Martin Wallace,
coordinator of training and
career development at Buckeye
Hills.
.
.
.
Kent Lewis, director of
Buckeye Hills, said IIUdonts did
not have any problems adjUSiing
Continued oa A-3

',,

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-'':

~

LETART ELEMENTARV"SCHOOL
GRADES 1, 2 AND 3'

-

DOUBLE GRADES EUMINATED- Start·
laa Tucaday, S:udents lntbe Portland 111d Letart ,

elementary Kbooli olthe Soulb •• ......
Dlstrld will be Ia linlle-.ride ±r•

?

se.ao.
L

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