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hge DB-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Mlddleport--Galllpolls, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

Prune .exports climb Fresh fruit, tree nut exports slip· in November
WASIDNGTON (AP) - l'rune
expons are expected to climb to
nearly 90,000 tons for 1992,
according tb an Agriculrure Depanmentstudy.
"If you are looldng for a U.S.
trade success story, you need
search no further than the prune
industry,' ~ said a reeent report by
the Foreign Agricultural Service.
Export sales reached 54,000
tons in 1987,itsaid,and "in )992,
U.S. exports are expected to near a
record 90,000 tons valued at $137
million."
. The largest markets for U.S.
prunes in 1992 were Japan, 20 percent; Italy, 19 per&lt;;em; Germany,
13 percent; Canada, 7 percent; and
the Uniled Kingdom, 7 percent
The United States is the world's
dominant prune exporter, the report
said, with the U.S. marlcet share of
global prune e"ports rising from 55
percent in 1986 to 66 percent in
1991.
"The U.S. industry is benefiting
from two important consumer
trends: an aging population and a
growing health consciousness," the
report said. "Many older people
have long recognized prunes as a
natural laxative. In addition, the
growing health consciousness of
younger and older people alike has
spurred sales, as they become
aware of the nuaitional and convenience aspects of prune snacking.··
It also c(ted state-of-the-art production and packing techniques,
product innovation and astute marketing strategies as play'ing key
roles in the suceess story.

Among British consumers, however, the prune "has suffered a real
ima~e J?roblem which is only now
begmnmg to change," the report
noted.
According to the California
Prune Board, ''The image problem
comes from the laxative stigma and
the force'd .consumption of poor
quality prunes during childhood."
The board organized National
Prune Week in 1989. "This annual
public relations an&lt;! promotion
event caught the public ~y surprise,'· the report noted.
"The humorous element which
made it an overnight success was
inescapable· to the British public.
Prizes wet~: offered at cooking contests to introduce new recipes,
donations were made to the National Heart Association, and sampling

area.

.

·•· The beautiful trees that grew
along its shores, the flowers that
grew along the mill race, the mill
. pond that afforded !!'any happy
hours or swimming and fishing
when folks. came to the area around
the mill all made for lots of fond
memories. When folks came there
was always that happy and pleaSant
sound of water splashing and bubbling as it found its way down the
sluice. The water f)owed through
the millgate water wheel where it
performed its intended chore then
off to the next mill downstream .
The nostalgia aroused by the
memory of the old mills has captured the ·imagination of many writers. The water 'Wheel, the millstones, the dams, as water poured
over the edge creating miniature
waterfalls was something that
would cre8te images for most of us
toda
. ~wn By The Old Mill Stream,
On The Banks of the Old Mill
Stream and On the Banks of the
Wabash Far Away are songs that
once heard, are never forgotten.
These songs will be· legends; if not
already.
The farmers traveled the country
roads bringing their ghrists to be
ground into perfect \yheat flour, so
necessary as food. There was
always the pleasant sounds of the
water as it rushed through the .mill
race. the sluice gate, then through
the mill wheel. and pouring out
. into the stream from which it came.
There was the familiar rumble of
the miUs grinding and the sound of
the grain as it made ' it rattling
sound on its way to the garners, or
bins as we would say today. There
were the sounds of happy folks
swimming in the shallow water
beneath the old maple, oak, and
hickory trees that grew on the shore

of tomato paste and canned tomatoes reached record sales for the
January-November period o( 1992.
Paste exports totaled $55.9 million,
alrca&lt;!y greater than total calendar
year 1991's value of$44 million.
Most of the paste export
increase was to Canada, Mexico.
the Philippines and Korea.
Exports of canned tomatoes
reached $9.1' million during January-November 1992, which was
16 percent above the tlital value for
calendar year 1991.
The largest canned tornatli sales
increases in 1992 were to Japan
and Canada.
"Canned tomato production~~

varieties, bul those vllfieties wili
not be available to growers for
years,
Other techniques being worked
on includ~ experiments in infectin·g
trees with a mild ~n of the virus
to protect them from severe strains.
In another approach, researchers
are investigating the potential use
of parasites found in ASian countries as na1ural enemies of the
brown citrus aphid.
CTV causes two diseases,
known as "decline" and "stem
pitting," said Raymond Yokomi,
an entomologist at the U.S. Horticultural Research Laboratory in
Orlando, Fla.
Decline disease rapidly kills a
tree, Yokomi said. Stem pitting
reduces tree vigor, fruit size, quality and yield, he said. Grapefruit is
particularly vulnerable to stem pitting.
"We want to learn everything
possible about this pest in case it
does hit the states.'' said Vemon D.
Damsteegt; a plant pathologist in
charge of a colony of the aphids
maintained in a quarantine facility
at the Foreign-Disease-Weed Sci. ence Research Laboratory in Frederick, Md: That colony was
shipped from infested ,citrus in
Hilo, Hawaii.
"We are now establishing a
colony of the aphid from the
Caribbean for research purposes,''
Damsteegt said. "We need to
determine if the pest from the
Caribbean region is the same biotype as that from Hawaii and other
parts of the world where the aphid
transmits the virus with such high
efficiency."

WASIDNGTON (AP)- A disease-spreading pest found in many
citrus•growing regions around the
WASHINGTON (AP)- Lay; world may pose a threat to U.S.
ing flocks produced '6.09 billion groves, but scientists are developeggs during December 1992, up I ing strategies IIi control it.
percent from the 6.04 billion pro· "There is no cause for U.S. citduced the previous December.
rus growers to become unduly
Tbe total number of chicken and alarmed about this pest yet," said
turkey layers during December ' Edwin L. Civerolo, who oversees
1992 averaged 281 million, up horticulture research for the Agrifractionally from the 280 million a culture Department's Agricultural
·year ago.
·
Research Service.
December egg production per
The tropical brown citruS aphid
100 layers was 2,165 eggs, com- feeds exclusively on cil:r\IS and has
pared with 2,155 in December become well-established irr such ·
1991.
.'
places as Puerto Rico, the DominiThere·were 280 million layers in can Republic and Haiti. It carries ·
the U.nited States as of this Jan. I, severe strains 'o f a citrus disease
compared with 281 million a year known as CIV.
ago.
U.S. researchers have identified ·
genes in a citrus relative that would
make citrus resistant to the treeldlling CIV virus. They are breeding the resistant genes into new

Business
hz"ghlz"ghts

line.
As for life at a mill and those
whose occupations it was to operate the mill the job was often diffi- .
cult. In winter very few mills were
heated. A miller had to rise early
CHICAGO (AP) - Top G611eron :a cold winter morning and chop a! Motors Corp. officials moved
ice to free the mill wheel so it aggressively to counter the publicicould tum fast enough to malce the ty from an enormous n~gligeitce
ghrist wheel function properly. But, . verdict on GM's pre-1988 pickups,
near the end of the nineteenth cen- asserting it would have no impact
tury. millers were beginning to sell on sales or customer loyalty.
But autombile industry experts
their mills. Loss of business was
the main reason. .
said Friday the verdict was the last
thing the struggling automaker
needed as it tries to restore an
Colorado, California image
bauered by hom:ndous lossk
t1 d
es,
management
upheaval and an
share mar e ea
WASHINGTON (AP) - Sheep eroding share of the car marlcel
"We'Ve been very close to this
and lambs on feed for the slaughter
market in the 16 major producing . issue for some time and our dealers
states totaled 1.66 million head at have not felt any impact in the mar,
ketplace.from this problem," GMC
the start of this year. ·
California and Colorado tied for Truck Division general manager
the most sheep and lambs on feed Roy Roberts said in an interview at
with 315,000 head each, said the the Chicago Auto Show.
National Agricultural Statistics
LONDON (AP) - British AirService.
.
ways
chainnan Lord King said he's
It noted that the recent report on
retiring,
early, his suceess at .transsheep and lambs was the firSt one
forming
a money-losing state-run
released since a similar series was
carrier
into
a successful private
discontinued in March 1982.
company
overshadowed
in the end
The' other 14 states, together
a
"dirty
Dicks"
scandal.
by
with their totals of sheep and lambs
on f~ for slaughter, are Arizona,
NAPLES, Fla. (AP) - Coming
70,000; Illinois, 18,000; Iowa,
off
a second money-losing year,
, 85,000; Kansas, 87,000; MinnesoAmerican
Airlines will decide by
ta, 60,000; Montana, 34,000;
spring
on
jet and hub cuts that
Nebraska, 42,000; North Dakota,
produce
massive layoffs, top
could
37,000; Ohio, 35,000; Oregon,
95,000; South Dakl!t~. 91,000; executives of th~ nation •s biggest
·
Texas. 180,000; Vlfgmta, 25,000; carrier said.
American must decide the future
West Virginia, 175,000; and
6f
about 140 aircraft and unprofWyoming, 175,000.
itable hubs in Raleigh-Durham,
N.C., and San Jose, Calif., American chief fmancial officer Michael
Reports earnings
Durham said Friday.
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP)
Owens-Illinois Inc. reported earnings before extraordinary items of
$2.9 million, or 2 cents per share,
for the fourth quarter of 1992. That
compares with a loss of $30.9 million, or 6 cents per share, for the
same period of 199 I.
The company said Friday that
net sales for the quarter were $931
million, up 5.5 percent from $882.5
million for the comparable period
in 1991.

PARKERSBURG LIVESTOCK MARKET, INC.
Mineral Wells, WV
January 30, 1993
STOCK STEERS:
65.00-108.00
300-undcr
69.00-98.00
300-500
55
.00-89.50
500-700
60.00-68.50
8QO-over
STOCK HEIFERS:
73.00-89.00
300-under
64 .00-86.00
30().500
50.00-79.00
500-700
48.50-67.00
8QO-over
STOCK BULLS:
60.00·1 00.00
300-uilder
61.00-103.00
300-500
58.00-83.50
500-700
54.00-60.75
Slaughter Bulls
350.00-810;00
Cows &amp; Calves nH
46.00-58.00
Bred Cows By #
350.00-650.00
Bred Cows BH
Slaughter Cows:
47.00-54.50
High Dressing
43.50-46.00
. Utility
40.00-43.00
Canner &amp; Cutter
87.00-96.00
Veal - choice
76.00-81.00
Medium
65.00-76.00
Good
23.00-28.00
Sheep- Ewes
.
68.50-75.00
Feeders
45.00-90.00
Baby Calves BH
42.00-58.00
HORSEScwt
29.00-43.00
POnies B.H.
32.00-35.00
HOGS 200-250
30.00-35.00
300-500
22.00-23.00
Male Hogs ·
25.00-61.25
Goats
.
Horse &amp; Tac Sale Fri. Feb. 19th, 6:00p.m . ·

tomato paste production in 1992c93 because of a sharp increase in U.S.
in the major countries, excluding production.
It said U.S. onm11e juice producthe United States, is estimated
down' • because· of reduced tomatli tion in 1992-93 JS forecast at
P-roduction, the report said. 855,000 tons, 30 percent above the
'Cannell production in 1992-93 is p~evious seas~m's output and the
•
estimaled at 1.4 million wns, 6 per- · htghest level smce 1979-80.
The repon also JIOted that the
cent below the previous season.
Paste production in 1992-93 is esti- Canadian government ruled recentmated at 903,000 tons, down nearly ly that cauliflower imported from
13 percent from the previous the pnited States "has not caused,
. is not causing and is not likely to
year."
The report noted that orange cause material injury" to British
juice prod~~~;tion for major produc- Columbia producers.
ing countries in the Northern . The dumping investi~atioll' was
Hemisphere in 1992-93 is forecnst initiated last July followmg a comat 1.02 million tons, 29 percent plaint by the BC :Vegetable Marall!&gt;ve the 1991-92 revised output, keting Commission.

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WASHINGTON (AP) - · The Health Inspection Service's plant
government has expanded a quar- protecti,!lll and quarantine.
The qua,rantine prohibits the·
antined area in Los Angeles County into part of neighbciring Orange inlerstate movement of certain
County and quarantined a paxt of fruits and vegetables out of infesled
San Diego County after recent dis- areas unless they have been certi- ·
coveries of Mediterranean fruit · tied by the inspeetion service.
The expanded quarantine ·
includes
the Covina area in Los
flies.
•'These agricultural quarantines Angeles County and the Artesia,
are designed to stop the spread of Pico-Riveta and Walnut Park areas
the Mediterranean fruit fly through in Los Angeles and Orange counfruit and vegetable shipments,'' ties. The Oceanside area in Sa,n
said B. Glen Lee, deputy adminis- Diego County is newly quarantrator of the Animal and Plant tined.

Pick 3:
670
Pick 4:

0572
Super Lotto:
8-9-11-31-43-46

Page4

Kicker:

'
Vol. 43, No.. 202

Copyrighted 1as3

•

Union, Peabody at odds
over securlty pafrols
•

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FUN ON A SUNNY AFTERNOON - As the
temperatures moved into the mid-SO's Sunday
afternoon the games on High Street in Pomeroy
began. While a couple or teenagers got out a
basketbaU to shoot some hoops, these youngsters

got out their vehicles .ror a few noisy runs down
the brick street. Here Nathan Burnem, left, and
Tller Faulk on scooters, and Zacll Faulk on bis
btg wheel prepare to take orr on just one of
many afternoon trips down High Street.

· t y ra te 18C.t.·s
P over

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

'----------------------.....1

said. "But in the outer areas in the percent. Pike County was thirdcounty, levels of p,oveny do exist highest, at 26.6 percent.
to a htgher degree. '
.
Lake County in northeast Ohio
The U.S. Census Bureau had the lowest poveny rate, 4.9
acknowledges that numbers don't percent. Two other northeast counalways tell the whole story.
ties were second- and third-lowest
The poverty rate could be -Medina, 5.5 percent, and Geauskewed by the number of Ohio · ga, 5.6 percent.
University students living off campus. The university is in Athens,
the county seat.
1 w"I think that's what's happening
here. It shows there are some limi•
' '
tations of using poverty rates as a
ineasure of a community's wellTEHRAN, Iran (AP)- An Irabeing," said T.J. Eller, an analyst nian airliner carrying Muslim pitwith the Census Bureau in grims collided with a military plane
Washignton.
and went down in flames today,
College students generally don't killing all 132 people aboard the
depend on good-paying jobs to get jetliner, Iran's official news agency
by, and many have other SOUTC\l&amp; of reported.
support- such as money from ,
It was not known what haphotne. But they are counted an\ong pened to the crew of the military
the poor if their income is below · plane, but the Islamic Republic
the poverty line.
News Agency reported that the
Of Ohio University's 18,200 pilot and co-pilot were believed
students; about 11.000 live off- killed.
campus. Students who live in uniThe 10: 15 a.m. collision
versity housing are not included in occurred minuteS after the·leased
census figures for Athens County.
Russian airliner took off on a
Adams County, one of the most domestic flight from Tehran's main
blighled counties and usually hav- airpon for the Shiite Muslim holy
ing the highest unemployment rate, city of Mashhad, the repon said.
came in a close second to Athens
Witnesses said they saw passenCounty with a poverty rate of 28.5 gers thrown from the Russian
Tupolev after the nose of the military jet, a Russian-designed
Sukhoi, crashed into the passenger
plane's tail, !RNA reported. The
collision
caused an explosion.
~
The
jetliner
had 119 passengers
Two Meigs County men were charged with driving under the
.and
13
crew
members,
including a
influence over the wecltend by troopers of the Gallia-Meigs Post of
Russian
pifot,
the
official
news
the State Highway Patrol.
agency
report
said.
, Johnnie K. Harrison, 37,368 Bailey Run, Rutland, was cited .SatLocal journalists teported that
urday morning on Bailey Run.Road in Salisbury Township.
the
wreckage feU on a military base
Tony M. Quillen, 23, 234 Second Street, Pomeroy, was cited
·
at
Karaj,
west of the capital, and
Sunday morning on Ohio 124 in Rutland Township.
·
that fleets of ambulances ferried
Both men-were summoned to appear in court Wednesday mornthe bodies of the dead from the
ing.
scene.
It was not clear if anyone on the
ground was killed. The area around
the airpon is residential.
. A Rllcine man was cited after a two-vehicle wi1:ck at the junction
Pilots who fly out of Mehrabad
· of Ohio 124 and Eden Ridge Road in Olive Township Sunday
airport, which serves both military
around 2:45 p.m.
and civilian craft, complain of
.-.coording to a report from the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
near-collisions nearly every week
I· Highway Patrol, Jefftey C. Kimes, 31, Reedsville, was southbound
in Tehran •s ~otoriously overcrowdContinued on PIIRe 3
ed skies.
,

Two charged with DUI

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'By The'Associated Press
1990 poverty rate facts, uccording to the Census Bureau:
·-Highest rate in Ohio: 28.7 percent, Athens County, southeast
Ohio. Rtinked 242nd nationally .among 3,141 counties and indepen-dent cities.
·
'
-Lowest rate in Ohio: 4.9 percent, Lake County, northeast
Ohio. Ranked 3,078th natioqally among 3,141 counties and independent cities.
-Ohio rate: 12.5 percent, 24th highest among all states and the .
Disaict of Columbia. Tied with California.
-National rate: 13.1 percent.
~Highest state rate: 25.2 percent, Mississippi.
-Lowest state rat.e: 6.4 percent, New Hampshire.

...---Local briefs__,___,

'

By DAVID WILKISON
Associated Press Writer
Peabody Holding Co. officials
say the company has brought in
additional security guards at saikebound .mines to protect property,
not to harass pickets as the United
Mine Workers claim.
But UMW spokesman Jim
Grossfeld said Sunday that
increased .security at mines in West
Virginia, lllinois, Indiana and Kentucky is merely an anempt w intimidate 7,500 striking union members.
"We have several mines and
preparation plants and naturally
these are million-dollar investments and we have a judicial
responsibility to malce sure they're
protected,'· said Terry Whitt, a
spokesman for Peabody subsidiary
Eastero Associated Coal Corp.
Whitt said the additional guards
from Virginia-based Vance S'ecurity were instructed only IIi "observe
and ·document" problems on the
picket line.
~ep_orts of guards harassing
pickets were "totally untrue,'' he
said.
.

:Poverty doesn't !OO$en . for
Filing deadline _
May primary
:grip in: Ohio ;·foothi~ls
·
el~~!!!?,!!~~!~nthe
,.---------------..!!!!!!"!.-...;,..., .

CQLUMBUS·, Ohio (AP) New census figures affirm what
people in the Appalachian foothills
of Ohio have long endured as a
reality of life --' the relentless hold
ofpoveny.
Figures for 1990 show that the
concentration of poor people was
highest in the southeastero !hind of
Ohio, where poverty rates were far
above the state average of 12.5 percent. ·
Eleven of Ohio's 88 counties
had a poverty rate. above 21 perceo~; all are in Appalachia. They
are Athens, Adams, Pike, Meigs,
Scioto, Jackson, Vinton, Lawrence,
Galha, Monroe anjl Morgan.
Athens County's poverty rate of
28.7 percent was the highest in the
state, according to figures released
· Sunday. The government's poverty
line income was,$6,310 a year for a
single person and S12,67 5 for a
family of four.
John R. Frech, director of the
, Athens County Department of
Human Services, said the ·region
has lost hi$h-paying jobs in the
rnanufacturmg and mining indusDies.
While there are some jobs to be
found - the county's unemployment is 7.4 percent, about the average in Ohio - they tend to be in
the low-paying service indusaies,
such as fast-food restaurants.
"There has been s·ignificant
growth in service jobs," he .said.
•'But tbere are minimum-wage jobs
that don't take people over the
poverty line.
"We may be·on the cuuing edge
of what may happen in other areas
of the country."
Dan Neff, assistant director of
the · Governor's Office of
Appalachia, said he was surprised
by the ranking for Athens County.
particularly because Ohio University is a source of jobs.
"Obviously, the university's
impact is felt in the city," Neff

ON 1992 FACTORY
PROGRAM CARS!·

1 SectiOn, 10 Pogeo 25 _,,.:A lolultlmedlo Inc. Nowopo.,.r

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, February B, 1993

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342 Second Ave.
GIIUpolls, Oh.

40s.

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Low tonlgbtnoar 30.
Tuesday, cloudy. High In mid

940009

Scientists working to thwart pest that feeds on citrus

trials were run.''

Passing of an American .
era that is almost forgotten
By WENDELL TOPE
Earth Team Volunteer
GALLIPOLIS - The passing of
the old ghrist mills with their water
wheels closed an era of American
life country folks were dependent
upon. A country stream of freshwater with sufficient energy to grind
the ghrist that farmers would bring
to the mill was a focal point in the

WASHINGTON (AP) Exports of U.S. horticultural products totaled $573.4 million last
November, 7 percent below the
same month a year earlier, according to the Foreign Agricultural Scr• ·
vice.
The sharpest decreases in November were in fresh fruit and
tree nuts, it said in a report this
month.
.
During the flfSt two months of
fiscal 1993, October and November, the tlital value of U.S. horticultural exports was $1.29 billion. 2
percent above the same period a
year earlier, the report said. .
It also showed that U.S. exports

0 hio Lottery

Southern
upsets Clay
72-70 in 2 OT

February 7, 1993

Man cited in'two-vehicle wreck .

Plane c•ns'h
kz.llS 132 ;n J•an

"They are not , there to cause
any J?roblems with our ~pie on
the ptcket line," Whitt saJd. ·
The UMW has been on a selective saike against St. Louis-based
Peabody, the nation •s largest coal
producer, for nearly a weclt after a
contract involving more than
60,000 UMW miners and 150,000
retirees expired.
Grossfeld said no contract talks
were scheduled between ihe union
and the Bituminous Coal Operators
Association negotiating team. The
association represents 12 of the
nation's largest coal producers.
Thomas Hoffman. a spokesman
for the association's negotiating
team, did not return messages left
at his home Sunday.
The strike has been violencefree thus far, but UMW international board mell)ber Howard Green
said the security force hired by
Peabody is trying to stir trouble. .
· "This weekend, they kept moving in on different Peabody properties ... trying to use their intimidating means and methods to try to
provoke problems," Green said.
He works out of District 17,

based in Charleston.
"They've been basically trying
IIi hatass our people with cameras
and spotlights during the night,
things like that," Green said.
·
He said miners·on picket lines
have avoided confrontations. State
Jl(&gt;lice have reported no problems. .
"I think that the purpose is io
intimidate by their very presence,"
Grossfeld said. "I don't think
there's any question about that.
That's part of the reason why we
stress discipline among our own
pickets."
,
Meanwhile Sunday, church ser:
vices in strike-torn areas toucheil
on the labor dispute.
'•
At Miracll' Run United
Methodist Church, which sits
across from a picket line at tile
Federal No. 2 Mine near
Blaclisville, W.Va., ihe Rev. Jam~
Sturm called for peace.
·•
"1 have people iri my· churo6
who are umon people and thosP.
that are company employees, ~o
what I asked and prayed for i~
peace and a speedy resolution lo
this issue,'' Sturm said. "I encour; ·
aged them to live their faith and ti!i
ChriStianity be evident."
··- :

May Primary ~lot lu!ve only 10
days in which to ft)e their petitions
with the Meigs County Boatd of
Elections.
Feb. 18 at 4 p.m. is the deadline.
Rita Smith, director, said Monday morning that less tha,n 10 petitions have gone out and that only
one has been filed. George Wright,
Republican, flied a petition for his
party's nomination for,a seat on
Pomeroy ViUage Council.
Petitions can be picked up at
anytime ·at the Meigs County Board
of Elections office on Mulberry
Ave., Pomeroy. Fifty' valid signatures are required and must be of
. the candidate's party or undeclared
voters. The filing fee is $10.
Both Pomeroy and Middleport
are expected to have Republican
and Democrat primaries since there .
are four seats open on each vii!age's co~ncil and each pany will
be nominating candidates to run in
the fall. 'f!te only way primaries
wiD not be held is if only the right
number of candidates file for the
;MIS- a total of not more than
foui in each party.
•
PUPIL AND TEACHER - Soutbem head r011cll Howie Cald•
In Middleport the terms of Judy
well (left) walks back to the bench after shakina hands with
Crooks, Dewey Horton, Paul Gerard; Republicans, and Jack Satter- ·Portsmouth Clay mentor Carl Wolfe before Saturday night's boys•
basketball game at Southern· Higb School, where the Tornadoes
field, Democrat, will expire as will
won 72-70 in double overtime. Caljlwell played tor Wolfe wben
the term of Bruce Fisher on the
Wolte was tbe bead coac!J at Southern In the 1970s. For the story
·
'
and other photos, see Pages 4 tmd 5.
Continued on page J

World mourns death of Arthur Ashe ·
NEW YORK (AP) - With
flags in Virginia flying at half
mast, President Bill Clinton led the
world in mourning the death of a
champion.
.
"In the last years of his life, he
continued his tenacious battle for
others in the face of a disease he
could not beat," Clinton said of
Arthur Ashe in a statement released
by the White House. "He was a
true American hero and a great
example to all of us."
Ashe, who died Saturday from
AIDS-relaled pneumonia, spent his
final hours asldng about current
events. He nas1ted the OK hand
sign IIi his doctor shortly before he
died, his physician said
Dr. Henry W. Murray and
lawyer Donald Dell, a longtime
friend of Asbe's.-held an emotional
news conference Sunday at New
York Hospital where the tennis legend had died the day before at age
49.
J
"His last gesture to me was
this. •• Murray said, making the circular OK sign with his dtitmb and
forefinger.
Ashe on Thunday wrote a kind
note of regret to a Long lslarid
group which was sponsoring a conference on "H1V -AIDS in the
Workplace" where Ashe was
scheduled to speak the next day.
"I was so looking forward to
speitlcing with all of you today,"

•

Ashe wrote. "As of Thursday
morning Febtuary 4, my doctors
have advised me to spend the ne"t
three weeks at home. We all must
fight the battle against AIDS iit our
own way. Today my way is to heal
at home, your fight must also continue. ••
Ashe, who contracted the AIDS
virus from a tainted blood transfusion, was credited with· helping
break rucial barriers in professional
tennis. He is the only black man to
win WimbledOn or the U.S. Open,
the two most prestigious tennis
titles.
"It was thanks to him that I
could have a career in tennis," said
Frepchman Yannick Noah, who
won the French Ope,. in 1083, the
only other black male to capture a
Grand -Slam singles title. "He was
a missionary for black American
sports. Just appearin~ on a tennis
court was a challenge. •
After winning a tournament in
Japan, tennis star Martina
Navratilova offered a prayer for
Ashe.
"I ask lthat we stop for. a
moment of silence here to remember an extraordinary human being
who ll'IIIICended his ~ his race,
religion and nationabty.and in his
own way helped to change the
wotld,'' Navratilova said. "We ·
wm always remember you,
Anhur.''

Ashe announced that he had
AIDS last April at a news conference prompted by a newspaper's
planned swry exposing his condition.
He defended his right to keep
his illness private, but nevertheless
became active in the fight against
AJDS, forming a fund-raising foun- .
dation and joining the boards of the·
. Harvard AIDS Institute and the ·
·UCLA AIDS Institute.
Continued on page 3

.AR111UR ASHE

'&lt;

�'
•

Commentary

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, February 8, 1993

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Oblo

Accu· Westher• forecast for

· DJ:VOJ'ED TO THE lln'ERBSTS OJ' THE IIEIGS-IIASOI'f ARBA

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publisher
PAT WHII'EHEAD
. Assbtant PubllsberiController

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Genenl MUU~ger

LETI'ER,S OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less lhan 300
words. All letters are subject to editin&amp; and must be lisned wilh name,
oddzou and telephone number. No nnsip&lt;d !etten will be publisbed. Leaen
should be in good taste, lddremns ~s, not pellOnalities.

Sticking to the day's
·-~essage: Easier said than done
ByWALTERR..MEARS .
.
·
AI' Spedal Correspoadeat .
WASHINOTON - Mer straying from the script, President Clinton
iS back on bis message, or messages - one ~ two a day, no diversions
allowed. it's a Ronald Reagan technique, bed&lt; for a Democratic renm.
•:·: The idea is simple; making it work at tbe White Honse is not. Too
iitany issues, too much pressure to answer them all at once. Presidents
l!lways try to conttol the agenda of issues, to keep tbeir own on top. Reapn's people worked at it by picking one message at a time, making it
their focus, and putting word out across the administration to bear down
on the same poinL
·
· ' They didn't always succeed; sometimes events defy tbc most deter. qiined image-making strategy. B_ut the tactic helped that administration
fOcus on its primary goals, especiaUy during tbe .first term.
Clinton admires that kind of straight-aheld strategy; after his early
'problems as a candidale be stuck to it during bis campaign for the White
·house, and said wben be won that be would keep a Ja$er.Jike focus on the
·ec.ononuc Concerns that wac key to bis election.
.
· But the distractions came quickly, and the new president's message
:Was muffled in problem issues, the mishandled nominalion of an attorney
;jlenerat wbo had to withdraw ber name, aad the oontrovc:rsy over rescind' mg the ban on gays in the military.
.
·" Clintoo said be did get Into conaoversies, but bard issues ought to stir
debate and jam .the White House teieptone lines witb calls from people
wbo want to re~ their views. '' ..J ki10W tbat it defies the mommlll)'
•conventional wisdom; I think we're off to a peay good ~~art," the pest·
. :dent·saidMonday, starting a work week in wliii:h be chose the topics,
.
: First be told the nation's govanon be would cut fedenil ~ and
:give them more leeway in dealing witb the federal-state Med.i&lt;:atd pro•gram of health care for the needy.
• .
: Next day, be = : : k to that forum of former colleagues to reslate
•bis longstanding
for welfare reform, including a two-year limit
whlcb ;:!e:'ts would have to gn to work. That was ari outline;
;tbele is no I · ·on ft8dy and woo't be until later Ibis year. Congres•sional action wil) wait at least IDIIil1994, perhaps longer.
'
-.,. C1intlln kqJl a JlledF, lli8IIIIFd
~d;:ihat be had run, and woo, as·a different

:c Tbatme gewastmiedwitbhis~forthefamil)'lea~blll,and

lwitli word tbat be'd told Democratic oongressionalleailm of plans for a
J$31 billioo poposalto stimJI]at.e tbe economy, botb fix1ures in hii cam•paign. So was bis call for c.npa~gn finance reform, the topic It one of bis
•,.....;ons ,.,;th con""'.uional Demoaats.
"'
o-: That was the agenda, 11111 ClinlllD enforted it. "I ~ DOibing to say
·about that," be countered when asked about reported features of the eco- .
:nomic plan be will present to Con~ on Feb. 17. What about the con- .
' trOVersy over gays in the military'/ ''We're not here to talkabotit that.''
; .That problem -isn't settled. Clinton is going to have to face it twice,
•over his initial comprom.ise order to ease the barrier to mlistment by
:hottiosexuiiB; and over die fiiW 'tilrms ihal'art•clile' lli iX'ftlciii'diS. He ill

!CZ: .H.,~-.
~-ae:~ .' h L
.rorums
P.D'

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and
Michael Binstein

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~ 1t83 by N~ . Inc .

"Maybe I should have ju9t said 'be fruitful'
.and left out ,the 'AND MULTIPLY.'."

Sooth Central Ohio
Tonight, partly cloudy. Low
nesr 30. Tuesday, clouding over
again. High 45-50.
Extended forecast:
Wednesday through Friday:

Robert Bailey

Jack Andenon and Mlcllael
Biasteln are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc. •

at H ento"

First, the national siwation as a
pessimist might describe it.
The conttoversy over President
Clinton's detennination to bar dis·
crimination against homosexuals in
the armed forces illustrates one of
contemporary America's most dis·
turbing realities. Our nnlitical and
cultural s ste •
't- 1
Y m IS pen ODS Y c1ose
to blowinp fuse.
What IS most disturbing is that
so many of today's unresolved
issues impinge upon, or spring
from heartfelt moral convictions.
As a result, they have engllfldered
differences which, if they BJe not
actually irreconcilable, often
appear to be so ori the surface.
None will be sealed without deeply
wounding the Jasen and politically
weakening the winners.
What Can be Comproml.sed on
abortion? Those wbo oppose it see
it as a mortal sin, the murder of a
living, if unborn, human being.
They are at least as honest, as Sl·ncere and as weiJ,versed in their
arguments. as --~ the pro-abortionists,
. are equally ....,...,,
-"-"·t about
h . wbo
. Prl&gt;Jieve. atbatnd comanti-.
at 00elrttonr.co~ical~~~sbe
,.,. """
promise is immoral.
·
N • ·•or ts """'~an easily discernible

common ground between those
The optimists-. or,'at least, the
who want homosexuality to be · qUalified optimists - see it some·
ueated as an alternative lifestyle or what differently. They begin with
sexual preference with no moral an undeniable proposition. The
.
most contentious subjects of debate
today were not even on the national
,U .I
tabl 30
H
e
years ago. omosexoality
implications, and those who see 1•1 as expressed in sexUal conduct was
illegal in vinoaUy every state and a
as an abomination of the devil. matter of shame in all. The man
Gays do not want to _go back into who was openly gay was a rare .and
the closet of legal repression and often vulnerable exception to the .
public censure from. which they rule. So were open lesbians.
have just begun to extricate tbem·
As, for legal abortion, it was. a
selves. The millions of American r di
· h
1
men and women who consider ar· Stant prospect 10 t e ear Y
1960s. Roe v. Wade was not even
themselves moral traditionalists on tbe horizon. Back-alley butch·
wiU not willingly license, im.f!!,&lt;:ity cry was the only alternative for
or explicitly, behavior they
ply poor and ignOIIDt women wbo did
believe is as sinful as it is disgust· not wish to give binh to unwanted .
ing. Reconciling their warring
b' F · b
becL
·
· 11
·
be . fi .
ba tes. oretgn avens
..oned
vtewpom 1 pt~~mses to tn mte·
· h and 10
· ~ "" The
·
ly more difficult than bal8ncing the the f'1C
orm.... standing
budget or shrinking the national of pro-abortionists in the 1960s
debL
.
was approximately that of anti·
Tha · the ...,_.
slavery Abolitionists in tbe t84os .
Its
pes..... JSt's case, and T
h bl ' f
h
it is difficult to refure. Not since the
oo moe po tc ervor on I e
C'vil w ba
. of
question was invilation to a one1
•
)Cc sue h IWIIIJes
tbe
lick
f.
Uall
If
·
h
bee
outofo this
mostwu
towns.
eq Y se -ng teous
n gath· wayBot ifetall
uue then,
ered in contendil!g order on the and it was, somcthin~else was
national plaln. At with that irre·
11
• 1963 h
·
pressible'conflict, ,....., say, the out· equa y true m
. e nauon .
u-1
had not yet moved resolutely to end
come is bound to be tragic.
·legal segregation bated on race.

uotJ4i'ng _Carter Ill

Todd Mitchell, the ACLU coneedes tbat the Wisconsin law which
it supports is nonetbeless "easily
susceptible to prosecotorial abuse.
,. .
.
- . .
. 0 tven tbe proliferation of smt·
tlar laws throug~~t.lhe cou~try,"
sars tbe ACLU, !t ts essential for
thJS ~to e~lisl! a clear set of
consUtubo~ guld~lines to ensure
that hate cn~e s.t~tutes ~o not
become, .as theu cnucs predict !'lid
even tbew su~rs fear, a vehicle
forth.~ suppressiOn of unpopular
tdeas.
.
The. cowt, ~wever, tS under ~o
obbgabon «? ltsten to tbe ACL~ s
nervous adviCe. If th~ hate cnme
law.s .are so susceptible ~ ab.use,
why tS the ACLU on theu .s1de?
B~use that tS tbe popular thtng to
do.
Nat Hen torr is a nationally•
_renowned authority on tbe First
Amendment and the rest of the'
Bill of Rights and a writer fcir
Newspaper Enterprise Assoclatlon.

..

Wayne Gilliland
·

Wayne R. GiUiland, 70, for'Tierly of Coolville, died early IOOay.
Monday, Feb. 8, 1993 at Veterans
Memorial Hospital in Pomero~.
Funeral arrangements wtll be
announced by the White·Biower
Funeral Home in Coolville.

.'

Tbe Daily Senlioel
(U8P81JS.IIt)
Publi1bed every aRernoon, Monday
lb....h FricloJ, lU c-t S&amp;. Pwoe..,,
Ohio by tho Ohio Valley Jo.diiiOhlnr
CompanJ/Multlmodta tne ~,.,,
Ohla 467111, Ph. 11112·2166. 8
• ...

White supremacy still 'defiantly
embraced in most of the South.
Those who predicted that it would ·
be as dead as John Brown by 1993:
were as few as they were· far·
between. In the next few years.: .
dozens or people would be mur- ·
dered, thousands assaulted and'
countless ' unconstitutional laws
enacted in the nll!lle of segregation·
forever. ·

Edward Mullins, 70, 1331
White. Oak Rd ., Gallipolis, died
Sanuday,Feb.6, 1993,at~t
Valley Hospital, Point Pleasant,
W.Va.
He was born Jan. 24, 1923 in
Logan County, W.Va., son of tbe
late Hark Bod and Pearlie Frye
Mullins.
' ·
He was self-employell, a World
War II Army w:teran·, and a member of VFW Postll4464. .
Survivors include ·his wife,
Alice, who he married Feb. 10,
1962 in Gilbert, W.Va.; five daugh·
ters, S baron Durham of Harrisonville, Connie Brown of Bid·
well, Cinnamon Smathers of
National City, Calif., Belinda Bates
and.Alice Mullins, both of Gallipolis; six sons, Rick MoUiits of Gas·
tonia, N.C., Bill Mullins of
Byesville, Edward Mullins Jr ..
Eugene Mullins, Jason Mullins,
and Keith MuUins, all of Gallipolis;
IS grandchildten; .one.great-grandchild; ~sisters, Minnie Oine of
Hanover, W.Va., Virgie Gillenwater of Gauipolis, and Ida Hager of
Mat;ietta: and three brothers, Buster
Mullins of Lyburn, W.Va., Buddy
Mullins of Delbarton, W.Va., and
Arnold Mullins of Chapmanville,
W.Va.
,
He was preceded in deatb by
two brothers, Author Mullins and
Burgess MuUins.
Services will be held I p.m.
Wednesday at Cremeens Foneml
Chapel, with the Rev. Theron
Durham and Alfred Holley offiCialing. Burial will be in Robinson
Cemetery, Morgan Township.
Military graveside services will
be conducted by VFW Postll4464.
Friends may call at the chapel
on Tuesday from 7-9 p.m.
Pallbearen will be Roger John·
son, Roge.r Lee Johnson, Jeff
Cochran, Darryl Martin, Keith
Pugh, and Terry Russell.

Lottery resuIts
CLEVELAND (AP) _ There
were no tickets sold naming all six
numbers selected in Saturday's
Super Lotto drawing so Wednes·
day's JB.ckpot will be $8 million,

Membor: Tho Auodated ...._, and tho
Ohio New""- ""--otion, Nalloaal
·- ertlaJnl Be-tall••, Bruh""'
Newspaper Sal..; 733 Thlnl -..,,

• ~ow Yort, N. . '111111110017.

.P061MAB'I'I!R: Send-'"'- to

The DaUy __S.nltneJ,. 111 ·caart St. ,
P ·r N)i, OHio 41180.
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By The AlilliOCiated Pras
Around the nation
Party sonny skies and· milder
Snow swirled over pans of New'
te~ are forecast for OhiO . York and Ohio early today. A
donng t1!e ftnt ba1f of this week, storm swept across the Southwest
tbeNJilional Weather Service said.
and gale-force wind buffeted the
But tbinp could be quite differ- Carolinas.
'
ent bl Friday, forecasters said. · Scattered snow showers broke
They re predicting a significant out along the southern shore of
amount of precipitation in the form Lake Ontario and spread down to
. • .___,_
· and snow.
Ohio. But southern psrts of the
Ofratn
u~og ratn
The record-high temperature for Northeast, where the mercury
tbis date at the Columbus weather drOpped to near zero Sunday, were
station was 72 degrees in 1937 expected to have a surge of mild air
while the record low was 13 below created 'by a disturbance in the
zero in 1977. Sunset tonight wiU be northern jet stream.
·
at S:S9 p.m. and ·sunrise Tuesday at
A Pacific storm dumJICll heavy
7:31 a.m.
rain on southern and centrill Cali-

fomia on SUJ1day and was blamed flooding in coastal areas from
for power outages and dozens of North Carolina down to Georgia.
freeway accidents.
Temperatures were likely to rise,
The storm was expected td con- only into the teens and '20s in;
tinue into late Tuesday or early northern New England and the.
Wednesday, bringing up to two upper Great Lakes region and into:
inches of rain over much of the Los · the 30s and 4Qs 3CI'OSll much of the·
Angeles area, and as much as five rest of the nation's upper half.
inches in coastal and mountain
Tile nation's southern half,
areas.
should have highs in the SOs and
It also was expected to dump 60s, rising to the 70s in most of.
snow overnight on the southern Texas, the southern tip of 'Florida:
Sierra Nevada and the mountains and New Mexico.
of southem·Nevada and SOIIthwest
The high temperature for tbe.
Colorado.
nation Sunday was 82 degrees at
Strong winds swept out of the Palm Springs, Calif.
Atlantic and threatened to bring

Eight ~illed
on Ohio roads
over
week~
a1 Tbe ABidated

Federal, state tax hikes
affected school issues

rc===="==========""'i'i

StQcks

Am Ele Power....................34 lfl
Ashland Oil ....................... .27 7/8
AT&amp;T................................. S3 3/4
Bank One........................... S3 318
Bob Evans ........................ .18
Charming Sbop.................. l8 1/4
Chmp lndustries................ .IO lfl
City HQiding ......................21 1/l
Federal Mol!ul.................... l9 SIS
Goodyear T&amp;R ..................74 1/4
Key Centurion .............. ~ .... 22 314
Lands End. .......... ;..............24 1/8
Limited Inc....................... 28'S!8
Multimedia Inc..................33 112
Point Bancotp................... .12 3/4
Rax Reslala'lllt................... J/16
Reliance Blectric................23 1/8
Robbins&amp;Myers ........;.; ..... 18 1(2
Shoney'slnc...................... 23 1/8
Star Bank .•..••....••.••••..••..•...36
Wendy fnt '1........................ 13 1/4
Worthington Ind ....... ;........27 1/4
Stock reports are tbe 10:341
a.m. q1otes provided b7
Keltlper Senrltles, lac., o

MASSILLON . Darlene
BJanke!lsbip, 2. of Louisville, in an
accident on a Stade County road.
WAPAKONETA- Todd A.
Post, 22 of SL Mary's driver of a
truck tiW went off a to~bip road in Auglaize County
·
SPRINGBORO·- Sherron K.
Highley, 24, and Tasbia Highly, S,
both of West Carrollton, passcn·
gers in a ca- that crossed the medi·
an of lnterstare 7S in Wim:n County and struck two other cars.
OREGON- Max B. Soncrmu,
58, of Toledo, driver in a two-&lt;:ar
accident on Ohio 2 in Lucas Coun·
ty
FRIDAY NIGHT
DELAWARE - Charles L.
Greenawalt, 2S, of Plain City, driv·
er in a sin.llle-vebicle accident on a
Delaware·County road.

Fz"lz"ng•'•-•

Continued ,from page 1
BoanlofPublicAffairs.
. Jn l'llmerof., the terms of Betty
Baronick, W~iam A; Young, and
Thomas Werry, Repoblicans,lUJd
Larry Webrong, Democmt, expire
this year. All are four year terms.
In Pomeroy, voters will also
. vote in May. on a 1.9 current
expense·levy. The levy was up for
renewal in November bot was
defeated and most itow go on the
ballotasane~issne. ·
.
While Rutland, Racine, and
Syracuse will have .open seats on
Council and Boards of Public
Affai!ll this year, being non;partisan (onder 2,000 population),
residentsofthosecommunilies will
not vote on candidates until fall.
For those non-partisan seats, the
deadline for filing petitions is Aug.
19at4u.m.

'tl

COUr t neWS

Judpent awarded
A judgment in the amount of
$4,618.10 has been awarded by the
Meigs County Court.of .Pleas to
Chrysler .Credit Corporauon from
Ivan PowelL
Marriage licenses issued Marriage licenses have been
issued in Meigs County Probate
Court to Paul Larry Smith Jr., 21,
Long Bouom, and Lisa Diane
Schuler, 18, Lon~ Bottom; and
Keith Dennis Pbalin, 43, Middle·
port, and Brenda Sue Wyau, 36,
Middleport.

ro be honored

..---· Local briefs... --.·-

New service
program .available .

Squads make several

------Hospital

--Meigs announcements·Cbester Trastees to meet
The Chester Township Trustees

will meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at
the town balL All regular meetings
for 1993 will be held the second
Tuesday of eacb monlh at 7:30
p.m. at the town balL Gary Dill is
president and Oris Smith is vice·
presidenL
.
PreacbiD&amp; alld llaliDI set
Faith Full Gospel Church in
Long Bottom will have preaching
and sinM Friday at 7 p.m. witb
David Dailey and dtc Dliley Family u well as olbeJ local singers.
Pastor Seove Reed invites t1tc public. Fcllowship will follow.
Bedl'ard TJ astees to meet
The Bedford TOWIIIhip Trnstees
will meet toniaht (Monday) at 7
p.m. at the townbaU. .'

Valelldae dlllner
A valentine dinner will be held
GIUipolil.
Saturday at 4 p.m. at tbe
..__ _ _ _ _ _.......... · Wilkesville Pytbian Hall on Route

'

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - · spending and increase fe~s. Last
The failure of the majority of year. it increased lunch pnces aJMt
school bond issues on statewide didn't replace two teachers who
;·
ballots last week shows tbat resi- left the district
"I
see
a
subconscious
type
of
dents are tired after contending
with federal and state tax increases, . thing," said James Van Kueren, 8(1
assistant state superintendent of
education officials said.
PI! Tuesday, only seven issues public instruction. "The recent
of the SO on ballots statewide (state) tax increase might ltave
.
.
passed. It was the worst showing done something.
!!D
to
the
polls
8!'
&lt;
i
think,
"You
for schools since the special election in August 1989 when four of 'There's JDSI bem a WI tnerease.
How does that impact me?' I ~
29 issues passed.
Robert Butts, superintendent of malce a decision for myself in tluit
Jhe Union Local School District in mood, and I know what tbat dec;i·~
Belmont County, said· he didn't sion will be."
He
predicted
that
aboo.t
24p
take the defeat of a.property tax
more school issues would be on
Ievr personally.
·
·.
..
'I believe in my heart that it's ballots statewide in May.
"In
the
next
primary
election;
I
Elizabeth Kahler of Amesville, the only thing people can say no
·thin\&lt;
you
'II
see
us
back
to
a
hig~one of the top sales associates at to," BullS said. " You can't say no
40-percent 10 lower-SO-percent
Century 21. Classic Gold in Athens, to federal income Wtes.
.
"I just watched two TV shows, . passing tate," he said.
sold m~ than $1 million worth of,
Nancy Spahn, a cashier at .a
real estate in 1992.
l'· and they were talking about the
restaurant
in suburban Dublin, slid
She will be recognized for 1\er · new energy taX on oil, coal, elec·
voters
are
tired of spending JliOOCY
effort at a regional sales raDy to be tricity and everything else. We
for
schools.
'
held in Columbus this month. She won't be able to say no to that. But
"The
high
schools
need
to
a_o
received a gol!f award from local you can vote on a school tax and on
anything .else in your local area. back to basics - reading. writipg
broker, Mark S~zza
.
and arithmetic," said Ms. Spahn,;~
Mrs. Kahler 1s the fonner Ehza· You can say no to that."
Butts said the district will cut Delaware School..District residc!nt
beth Hilferty of A Couple Design·
e':l, Inc..in Middlepof!.llnd a past
·:
d•rector of the Me1gs County
Museum.
Kahler and her husband, ~·
Continued rroin page 1
and daughter, Ashley Si!"'er, res1de
on Ohio 124.
.
.•
in Amesville. ·
A northbound vehicle, driven by Charles L. Mograge, 65, . :
Racine, attempted to turn left in front of Kimes' car and was struck "
on the right side.
.,
No injuries were reported. .
.Damage to Kim~s· 198S Dodge Aries and Mugrage's 1990 ...
Dodge Dakota was bsted as moderate and disablmg.
,
• Mugrage was cited by the patrol for failure to yield.
Larry Bunger of Pomeroy has
opened Red AJ:.e Consulting;'lnc., a
w~ekend
scholarship .and financial aid sean:h
Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Services
service JlfOI!"U'l·
. ·
respon4ed
to several calls for assistance over the weekend and early
Operatmg out of his Baom
I·
Monday
morning.
·
.·
Addition home, he will be working
On
Saturday
at
11:57
a.m.
the
Pomeroy
unit
'was
called
to West
with The Scholarship Foundation
'Main
Street
for
Russell
Meadows.
He
was
taken
t
o
Veterans
Memo· ·..
which bas operated nationwide for
rial
Hospillil.
.
·
more tban 10 years. Bunger's hours
At 12:31 p.m. tbe Pomeroy unit went to the Pomeroy Nursing
are 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday ·
and
Rehabilitation Center for Wayne Gilliland who was taken to
through Friday, and 10 a.m. to 4
Veterans.
.
p.m. on Saturdays. His telephone
At
10:10
p.m.
the
Toppers Plains unit went to Route 7 for Con· •
number is 985-3SS6. ·
nie
Moyer
who
was
transported
to Veterans.
. Headquanered in Dallas, Texas,
The Middleport unit, at 10:10 p.m., went to Lower Roure 7 for
Bunger said that The Scholarship
Anna Shoemaker. She was transported to Holzer Medical Center.
Foundation bas the largest scholar·
On Sunday at S:19 am. the Rutland onit responded to VanZandt
ship database in the country and
.
,Road
for Margaret White. Slie was ·taken to Holzer.
can access over 650,000 scholsr·
At
'11:14 a.m. the Pomeroy Fire Department responded to a
ships with funds of $29 biUion. He
chimney
r.te at the James Broderick residence on Gruescr Hollow
said that $3 billion went unclaimed.
Road.
Tbe
Middleport Fire Depanmmt was called to assist at II: 13
He said that his company will
a.m.
.
sell the search to those trying to get
At
6:
I
6
p.m.
tbe
Pomeroy
Fire
0\l)lllltlllent
responded
to
a furscholarships, and will guarantee
nace
fuc
at
the
Jack
We~l
resulence
on
'Route
681.
$1 ,700 in scholarship funds or
. The Racine unit, !II 6:22p.m., went to Rowe Road for Bill Morgrants. If at least that much is not
ris
who was taken to Veterans. ,
•
secured in the way of scholarship
.
.
On
Monday
at
6:21
a.m.
the
Scipio
Fire
Deparunent
responded
funds or grants, then the amoun1
to
a
trailer
fire
at
the
Charles
Trader
residence.
·
paid for the search will be refund·
The Middleport Fire Department we~t to Lower State Route 7 at
ed. Bunger said that less than two
7:28
a.m. on a motor vehicle accident. TrcU and Edna Schoenleb
percent receive a refund which
were
transported to Veterans. Kenneth Madden Jr. was transported
means that more than 98 percent
to
Veterans.
·
·
'·
receive scbolarslPP funds or grants
At
7:33
a.m.
this
morning
the
Racine
unit
went
to
Vine
Street
for
of at least $1 ,700. ·
Elza Bi.Ich wbo was taken to Veterans.
Bunger stressed that grades and
the financial situation of the parents are not the only things taken
news---~.
in~o ~f&gt;nsideration ~ Vocational
obJCCUYe, talent, educauonal back·
Lego, Gene Stiffler and Alice
ground, organization affiliations,
Veterans ~emorial
Cooper.
and ethnic origins are also areas of
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS •
Feb. S birth - Mr. and Mrs.
consideration in the scholarship Floyd Stewart, Mason, W.Va.;
Brian
Conde, daughter, Middleport.
search. The agency also ~ists stu- Wayne Gilliland, Coolville; Connie
Feb.
6 dis~barges - Loretta
dents in securing loans up to Moyer, Tuppers Plains.
Reiunire,
Myrandia Taylor, Daryl
$4,000 a year at simple interest
SATURDAY DISCHARGES ·
Shoemaker,
Angela Teaford, Garwith payback not to stan until after · Com Webb, Charles Young, Alice
net
Staats,
Mrs.
Sleven Rose and
graduauon.
· ·
:Walsh, Jenna WiUiams.
daughter,
Mrs.
James
Pickens and
Bunger said that the average
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS ·
son,
'l.aum
Cramer
and
Christopher
number of scholarship and finan- Robert Bailey, Pomeroy; Dayton
Swingle.
cial aid souJCes in each student's McElroy, Middleport; William
Feti. 6 birth ..- Mr. and Mrs.
computerized printout is over 103.
Morris, Racine.
·
Travis
Canode, daughter, WeUston.
SUNDAY ·DISCHARGES •
Feb.
7 dis~barge11,.- Jewell
Naomi Hoschar. '
Laodermilt, James Weiher, Roy
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Griffith, Robert 'Diamond, Janet
Feb. 5 dlscbar1es - Joshua Hill, Mrs. Brian Conde and daugh160. Cost is $5 for adults and $2.50 Cmbtree, Peggy Cremeans,' Martha
ter, Brace Furbee and Edward
for children. Public invited. '
Chambers, Shane Rose, Charles Sayre.
Murray, Mrs. Cary Carrington and
Feb. 7 birtba - Mr. and Mrs.
Turkey seminar
son, Freda McWilliams, Mrs. Russell Hartwick, daughter, WellThe Southeastern Ohio and Robert Bauer and daughter, Sylvia ston. Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Sickles,
Hocking Valley Chapter of the Skeens, Kermit Faught, Bradley son, Jackson. Mr. and Mrs. Cbwles
National Wild Turkey Federation Byas, George Pinkerman, Bonnie Walter, son. Oak Hill.
wili host the Ohio State Turkey
Seminar. Caning contest and Banquet on March 6 and 7 at the Tri·
•••
. County Joint Vocational School in
Continued from page l
NelsonviUe. The (eatured speakers
"He dido't take .it lying down ,
will be Paul Butski, premiere did he? He was out there doing
L
call
od Dr J
Earl things, taking caie of business to
tur.ey
er, a
· ames
the end," said Jimmy Connors,
Kennamer, biologist and director of . who lost to Ashe in the 197S Wimresearch and management for the
NWTF. Further information may bledon ftnal. "He had a style and a
'be obtained by calling 373-9613 fo!lll all his own. He didn't copy
• s
anyone's ~· He made his mark
aoter p.m.
not just tn tennis, but in world

R

Traffic accidents claim
igbt
lives in Ohio over the wee ken
including two in one wreck, the
State Highway Patrol said.' The
patrol counted fatalities from 6
p.m. Friday to midnight Sunday.
The dead: j
.
SUNDAY ·
YOUNGSTOWN - Lavelle
Shavers, 17, of Y.oungstown, in a
single-car wreck on Ohio 170 in
Mahoning County.
SATURDAY
MONTPELIER - Karen Bar·
rera, 33, of Bryan, in a one-car
~~ent on a William~ County

the Ohio Lottery said.
Pick 3 Numbers
6·7·0
1
(six, seven, zero)
Tickets on sale
Pick 4 Numbers
Tickds for the Meigs vs. Soutb·
0-5-7-2
em boys varsity and reserve bas(zero, five, seven, two)
ketball games on ·Friday night are
Super Lotto
for sale at Meigs HiJb School and
8-9-11-31-43-46
. also at Locker 219 tn Middleport.
(eight, nine, eleven, thirty~ne, Tbe tickets will remain on sale
forty-three, forty:six)
_ thorough Friday ~ $2 for students
Kicker
and $3.50 for adults.
9-4-0.0·0·9

........ pold •• -..y, Ohio.

I

Twenty years later, "never, ·
never" is a f0 rgnuen phJ'Jil!C. Gay
rights are openly proclaimed and ,
advOcated in all SO states. Abonion :
is legal from one end of the nation '
to the other. Rather than being
impressed by the inevitable reac- ;
tion to such monumental change,
the optimists say, we should be :
heartened by how sturdily the •
nation has adjusted to it.
:
•
Hoddlna Carter III, former :
State Department spokeamaa :
and award-wlnnlag reparter, edl· :
tor lnd p0 bllsher1 Q preJJdent of ~
MalnStreet, a Washlnaton, D.C.· r
based televls~onrodo~tlon com- t
pany and a
cated writer far :
Newspaper ntrprlse Auoeia- :
tlon.
'

..

.Edward Mullins

Robert 0 . Bailey, 7S, Scout
Camp Road, Chester, died Sunday,
, Feb. 7, 1993 at Vpns Memorial
Hospital.
Born Sept. 2-\, 1917 in Bashan
he was the son of the late Thomas
and Ruby McKay Bailey. He was a
retired worker for tbe Ohio Depart·
ment of Transportation, Meigs
County Garage. He was a member
of the Chester United Methodist :
ChuJCh.
He was a life-time me111ber of
the D.A.V., Pomeroy. He was a
· veteran of World Wsr n where be
was a Pre. assigned to H~~~ ar·
ters 48 Annored Infantry, Ba 1'on
7th Annored Division. He served
overseas duties in North France,
Rhineland., Ardennes Central
Europe where he was decorated
with Bronze Star Medal, Purple
Heart Medal with one Oak Leaf
Closter, Good Conduct Medal,
European, African Middle Eastern
Medal with four Bronze Stars. He
·was wounded in action on Aug. 24,
1933 at Balencoun, France. He was
also wounded March 30, 194S at
Berghian, Germany. He also haS a
combat infantry badge. He was dis·
charged Oct. 24, 1945.
Mr. Bailey is survived by his
wife, Bernice Young Bailey; one
son and daughter-in-law, Bobby
and Cheryl Bailey; one grandson,
Michael Bailey, all of Chester; two
sisters and brolhers·in-law, Maxie
and Hollie Walters, Tarpon
Springs, Fla ., and Audrey and
Chuck Spore, Franklin; two brotb·
ers, Russell and Erlinda Bailey,
Jack,son, and James Bailey,
Bashan; and several nieces and
nephews.
Besides his parents be was pre·
ceded in death by one brother,
Oliver Bailey.
Services will be Wednesday at
II a.m. at Ewing Funeral Home
with Rev. Sharon Hausman officiating . Burial will be in Chester
Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeml
home on Tuesday from 2-4 and 7-9
p.m.

.
,.
,
California, as could easily have the pcrpetraton in their case were before it was adopted that she
been pmlictetl, &amp;nfet a civil rights blesSedly ftee ofbigolrf.
would never countenance such an
rather than a civil libenies ·course · After the Wisconsm Supreme infritigement of the First Amend. the
.
c declared .that sta~•s "h_ !lie mmL)
tn . se matten. 'fl!e_civil rights . '?llfl, law
.........
·---.
cnme
:- m.a case mvo1Vll!~
Adelman is being opposed not
First Amendment secures all our
~
black-on-white crune - onconstt- only by the attorney seneral of
!Jiher li~ and ~bts. Ac_cord·
'JJ
tuti~. the ~¥win Sta~ Jour- · Wisconsin but also by the national
mgly, O'Neill was IDVOlw:d m. ~
nal, m an editorial, asked: Is the ACLU which used to have the
· success~ attempt to have Ohio s approach is to demand that the gov- mugging of an elderly bl~ck . First ~dment on one sidl! of its'
"~ cnme'' law ~-uncon- ernment add penalties 10 crimes woman by • bla!=k )'!lOth soddenly membership call. In its embatrass~

!?

Wednesday, fair. Lows 25-35.
Highs 45-55. Thursday, a chanc¢ of
rain or snow. Lows in the 3Qs.
Highs in the 40s. Friday, a chance
of rain or snow. Lows 25-30. Highs
35-45.

-----..:-Area deaths----

No drup were ever found.in bis
home, nor were any charges ever
filed: On Jan. 28, the informant
who provided the tip wu indicted
for providing false mformation to
fedetal agents. Carlson bas ftled a
$20 million claim against tbe governmenL

Open debate -spurs national ·consent

•.

------Weather-----

Kevin Francis O'Neill, legal
director of the ACLU of Ohio
Legal Foondaliorr; is a classic civil
libenarian in that be believes, with
J··""-- WiiJiam·B-"•"" that the

~ pen_altt~ fl!f cnmes com-

Pl.
lne.

ACLU, s CIVI
. ·1 war on h a.t e speech. Iaws

loday in history

.;
'
• •

Ice

~-

believe - as Leslie Williams, committed by a white youtb7"
mt~ ~tit ,bias m mind. , , . executive director of the dissident
The U.S. Supreme Court has
. ~bts IS dangerous, s~td Vermont afftliate pots it - "the chosen this Wtsconsin case to
0~10. s . Soprem~ ~oort, wtth legislature should not be able to review, during the l?r~sent term,
Ne1ll m ~nthostasllc agreemenL add several years to a prison sen- . thereby probabl)" deciding the fate
If the Ieg,ts~lllle can enhan~ a tence for an already punishable of all tbe state's bias-crime laws.
penalty for c~mes.commtued by crime because it Onds the reasons Wisconsin's statute adds up to five
reason or ractal btgotry, why not fOr the crime offensive."
years prison time for crimes
·~y reason or opposition to ·abor·
Over 40 states have "hate allegedly based on mce, religion,
u~ •.wsr, the eldet:Jy (or.any,?ther crime" laws and tbe intent, as its national origin, sexUal oriemation
poliucal or ~oral vtewpo~nl)?
. advocates keep pointing out, is to or disability.
. Th~ Oh10 ACLU ts .m the send a message to blacks, gays, les·
Arguing for the First Amend·
mmonty .amon~ ~~ aff!ltates. pf . bians -and other targets of bias ment will be state Sen. Lynn Adelthe Amencan Ctvil Ltberties Umon crimes - that the commuQity man who has never before
that have taken a stand on adding regards such attacks very seriously appeared before tbe highest coun.
to the prison terms for crimes com- and therefore will punish bate Adelman was one of the leaders in
mitted by bigots. The New York crimes more harshly than violent the ultimately successful auempt to
affiliate ts enthusiastically willing crimes committed w.ithout bigotry. persuade the University of Wisconto punish speech in addition to the
This approach, however, also sin _of which he is a regent- to
penalty for the crime in these cases. sends a message to those in any drop its. speech code punishing
The Oregon ACLU not only sop· community who are mugged or offensive language directed against
ports added punishment for bias otherwise assaulted for no other certain groups.
crimes bot actitallY helped write the reason than the criminal's lust for
(The new secretary of the
By Tbe Associated Press
state's law curbing the First money. The message to lhose ran- Department of Health and Homan
,· Today is Monday, Feb. 8, the 39th day of 1993. There are 326 days left Amendment in tbis regard- a law dom victims is tbat the injuries they Services, Doima Shlilala - while
!n the year.
that has been upheld by Oregon's receive, however painful pbysicaUy chancellor of.the university- was
·' Today's Highlight in History:
.
· Supreme Court.
and psychologically, are of less an intense supporter of tbe speech
Three hwulred years ago, on Feb, 8, 1693, a chaner was granted for the
The three ACLU affiliates in concern to the community because .code, although she had told me
CoUege of William and Mary in Williamsburg, Virginia. '
'

-•.
•

W. VA.

;i,. •;*"·""~~~',¥al!'f~~E~:J -~~~t:nw~A'&amp;ti ~h~a~ 'it:~a':i~~~~·~ ~~~?.!:r!'rt&amp;:-lf';~~!;~

, Por lliNt. botb bis
and his 111CSS8ges
the agenda~ on
;bis terms. Even Republican governors wd they liked wbat they'd heard
•from tbeir former coUeague, suggesting his experience may make him
:more sensitive to their problems.
.
: That basn 't been the case with ~ past two ~vem&lt;;JCS wbo got there.
.•Aid to the stateS was cw sharply dunng the admtniStratJO'I of Reagan, the
:former governor of California. Those reductions began, and federal rev•enue sharing with tbe states ended under Jimmy Carter former Georgia
:governor.
·
'
. .'
; · So; roo, at Jhe Capitol. Clinton went there twice, to see Senate and
:House Democrats, talk about his programs,.and seek unity for them.
• Hoose Speaker Thomas s. Foley said it wasn't a question of smoothing
:ruffled congressional feathers. ''He said again, as be bas said so well, tbat
·we are going to succeed or fail together," Foley said.
·
•
: EDITOR'S NOTE - Walter R. Mears, vice president and colum•nist for The Associated Press, has reported on Washington and
•national politics for more than 30 years.
. .

Berry's World

IND.

By Jack Anderson

:atter

:~~~~:::DOt botmd by liberal formulas tbat once were party

conditions and

MICH.

it at IS cents on the dollar. Bot if cies are involved, the assets are duce tragic results. Sources cite the:
we seize $10 milliail, they lose $10 .sold IIIII divided among local, state shooting death of Tommy De La:
million," says Cary H. Cope~d. and fedetal aulhorities. Some prop- Rosa •. a 10-year veteran of the.
director of the JIISiice Depanment's eny also getS eartll8!ked fix' prison Fullerton, Calif., police depart-:
construction, the drug czar's offiCe ment, at the bands of drug smug-·
and management expenses. Since glers in 1.990. At the time, six dif.:
1985, the Justice Department has . ferent police d4;partments were;
reaped nearly $2.6 billion from the vying to lure the traffickers into a·
$4 million cocaine deal. De La:
pro~. w1tb some $600 million
gewng plowed back to individUal Rosa was killed in an am bush
fedenil agencies and a billion dol· while working undercove.r as a:
drug dealer.
'
Iars to swe and local police.
In
addition
to
thetr
own
forfeiexecutive office for asset forfeiture.
Copeland acknowledges probBut to a growing chorus of crit- . t111e programs, Slate and local cops
lems
m state and local forfeit~
sbat1:
of
the
federal
windfaij
if
get
a
ics, the pOgtam has become IIUCh a
programs,
and his office recently ·
they
assist
witb
seizures.
Though
cash cow that law. enforcement
new
guidclliles for officers
tssoed
ageucies are shifting tbeir piorities asset sharing was desi~ to.foster
.
10
use
in
asset
forfeiture. "The Ia~
cooperation
between
the
BfeDCies,
in the drub-7 - especially at the
some
say
the
profit
mottve
has
was
created
to
make sure that there
Sl8f.e and
levels. "We're IICI·
begun
tn
.
i
nterfere.
Explains
was
not
a
disincentive
to seizing
ling cash off the ~ instead of
Charles
Intreago,
editor
of
the
be
explains.
"B'ut
to sug-.
money,"
drugs. Since wben is that the priori!)' in the war on drugs?" says Rep. Miami-based newsletter, Money · · gest that these guys sre running.
John Conyen, D-Micb, chairman Lawtdcring Alert: "State and local amok on a national level is bogus."
of the House Government Opeia· cops get stars in their eyes, and For federal law enforcement agenmcxe will try to lall:b on to big fed· cies, he argues tbat tbe windfaU _is
lions Committee.
ThrotJgh civil forfeiture, law · era1 cases to get a piece of the pie. too negligible to make a difference.
Informants, who are· often
enfon:erbent agencies are allowed Meanwhile, who's solving the
to seize Jllmost any asset snspocted neighborhood rape and murder promised a cot of the value of
assets seized in tbeir cases, are a)so
of bein 1inlted to criminal conducL cases?"
If Joe~ police make the seizure, · Sometimes the profit motive and enjoying a piece of the forfeiture
law enforcement combine to pro· gold rush. Some federal informants
they
.,- - keep
--· the
. loot.
. . If fedetal agenpocket up to $250,000, ~ 2S percent of the value of seized )lloper1)', creating ·temptations to furnish
false information. Wben coupled
with overzealous investigators, the
•
results can prove disastrous•
Take the case of Don Carlsoli, a
vice president at Anacomp Inc., a
Fortune 500 company based in San
Diego, Calif. Last August, Carlson
was
critically wounded after Cos·
•
10ms agents, acting on a bad lip,
stormed his suburban home late
one night in !le8ICb of drugs. Carlson, who believed be was being
robbed, exchanged gunfire with
Cus1oms agents. He wound up
spending ·six weeks in intensive

WASHINGTON- 'The lure of·
easy money is dualteninJ to tum
the government's war on drup into
a high-stakes bounty blllll.
It's called the asset forfeiture
program. It's tlie reason why an
assistant prosecutor in New Jersey
tools around in a forfeited yellow
Corveue, and why tbe Denver
police forte exercises on weight·
lifting:J~pmcnt seized from a fit·
ness s
•
"If the locals (police) have a
guy with a lllD of mai)!lana llld no
assets venus a guy witb two joints
and a Lear jet, I guarantee you
thefll bust the llli.Y with the Lear
jet, ' a senior official witb the U.S.
Customs Service kl1d our u'Oci•
Dean. Boyd. "It's a business for
them. Bot the problem is, you can't
just talce the smuggler's checkbook. You have to get the wbole
pactage; the dope, the criminal and
themoney."
.
To ,the government, asset forfeitwe is 111 innovali~ way of lllaCting criminals where it hurts the
most - in their pocketbooks "If
we haw: the Cali cartd losing 100
pounds of cocaine, they can replace

Unseasonably mild weather forecast next few days

Tuesday, Feb. 9

Forfeiture program b·ecoming a .cash cow

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

OHIO Weather
•

The Daily Sentinel

.

Monday, February 8, 1993

·World,

evenas.••

~

Lodge to meet
Dr. Murray said Ashe had been
Harrisonville Lodge No .. 411 hospitalized with pneumonia for
F&amp;AM will bold a special meeting two weeks in January and had been
Thursday and Feb. 18 at 7:30 p.m. 1·u 0 ff d
•
ra1
th
Practice in the master mason
an on .or seve mon s.
He delivered a speech Tuesday, but
degree. AU master masons urged to was felled 9uickly by a fever and
auend.
•
·
other complications that began lare
· Wednesday.
\

runs

�'

:-s ports

The ~aily M~!;~!~~! .
p

, Jn mentor-vs.-pupil battle,

~--

e-4

.
I

gymnasium was filled to the brim
with approximately 1,100 paying
fans, most of which donned Soulhem's purple and gold. The game's
significance was highlighted by the
return of former Southern mentor
Carl Wolfe and the fact !hat Clay
was ranked third in Division IV.
ClosiDg secoDCis
In the second of two ovenime
periods, Soutllem {12-4) got the tip

,.

Clay was content to go for tile
fi nal shot, but Sinj!leton' s high
leaping steal pumpecl new life back
into the Tornadoes. Singleton
flipped the pass downcourt to
Evans. who returned the pass to
Singleton underneath for the gamewinning la ~- in with six seconds
left.
·
Southern pressured lhe inhounds
pass and time ran out as hundreds
of haoov Soulhern fans flooded the
(See SOUTHERN 011 Pa)le S)

but bad a turnover. Clay {15-2) fol- rebound to lie the score at 68-68 botlllhe hall and the lead.
With 48 seconds left and time
lowed up with a travel, tllen SHS with 1:20 left ·
ticking
off the clock, Singleton
On the next possession Roben
turned the ·ball over again.
came
up
with the first of two great
With 1 ~ 43 left in the second Reiber took a forearm, but was
steals,
flipping
the ball cross court
overtime, 6-3 point guard Frank called for the block , sending
to
Mark
Allen,
who
ru-ed under the
Burchette drove the lane and Burcheue .to the line, where he
scored .on the lay-up to put Clay sank both ends.of tile bonus, giving bucket to Evans. Evans, who made
ahead ·68-66. Mark Allen hit Rus· Clay a 70-68 lead. The foul put a great save on tile pass came down
sell Singleton witll lhe back door Reiber, who was a big faetor in ·tile witll his back to the bucket and a
pass, but under pressure he missed . game, on the bench wilh five fouls. hand in his face. Evans somehow
the lay-up. Three times Singleton Southern gained· possession, but managed to twist around: tb~
missed, but through great determi' missed a non-select sbot. Walker _defender an!l get tile roll in to tie
nation followed up with the grabbed tile rebound and Clay had .lhe seore. .

AFC teammate Tmy McDaniel of coach George Seifert knowing
the Los .Angcles Raiders finall~ why. •
scooped the ball up and ran 28
Seifert said he didn' t believe
yards for a toucbdown that made it Aikman would ~::;Jlayed any ·
20-13 with eight minutes left in more if he had~ ·
regulation . .
NFL spokesman Greg Aiello
said
the league didn't know why
Young came up with some late
Aikman
left early, but said it woulil
heroics 10 sead the lime into overinvestigate
the matter.
time, driving the NFC down. the
Aikman played in the second
ftcld and tlwwing a 23=tooch·
down pass to Rodney
of quarter an!l the first series or the
the New York Giants on ourth- lhird, completing 10 of 1!5 for 120
and-12 with 10 sCconds left ill reg- yards and a 9-yard scoring pass .to
Oallas teammate Micltaelln'in.
uladon.
But Young, who. threw three , The AFC's other SCOI'C$ came on
intercep_tions, then lost-_his cos.lly a 31:yard interception return by
fumble ill overtime when Dcmck San Diego's Jwti&lt;l' Seau, a 42-yard
Thomu of Kansas City tackled field goal by L.owery after the
him from behind. Howie Long or Chargers' Leslie O'Neal blocked
the Raiders feU on the ball at the an Andersen field goal try and
NFC 28, aeuing tip lhe third field Miami' s Bryan Cox returned tile
goal of the game by the Chiefs' ball to the NFC 35, and Lowery's
29-yard field goal after lhe Bills'
Lowery.
As a fQ!ltllOtc to the game, Dal· Henty Jones inten:cpted an Aikman
las' Troy Aikman, one of three pass.
.
'
NFC quarterbacks; mystenously
Andersen field goals of 27 and
left Aloha Stad'ium early in the 37 yards ilccowtted for lhe NFC's
fourth quarter without even NFC other scores.

lntbeNBA ...
T-

Alloolk-

Wt.

New Yodt ..............29
New_, ...........27
s ........................2A
Odoodo.......: •..••.21
JllrD·":-'phi• ......... -11
Uloml .................. l4
w, t • r .........11

....

,.,Aboo~

T-115. c- Midoiaon 109

Mld-C_._tc.r...e

15 .M9 ·
20 .574
3.5
21 .m
5.5
20 .5t2
6.5
16 .395 11.5
29 .:126 WI
11 .295
"

WripSL95,Y-SLI7

Chico&amp;0·····""'"''"''32 15 .611
II .617
:10 .515
23 :419
:14 .471
Doonod. •••...•••••••••••.•l9 25 .032
M0...- ............11 Z1 .400

CUM!LAND .......29
· ~ ........... ..23
...................22
ladlooa ................ .22

3
7
9
9.5
11.5
13

tt.oJao 1.1, Ollodlo 5.! .

t 111
W-12,1!odhooi156
Wia.tNq Tl , A"

Ibm Tl ~(»aiD NadhD 61
*='rlr~ 90. Jaha Curall11

-

. ' - SAVOY STEALS - Eastern guard Chad Savoy {right) gets
down to business with a steal off Miller's Bruce Lanning during
·..·Saturday night's game at Eastern ~igh St:hool! which the Fa!cons
won 75-59 in part because or Lanntng's 17 pomts. Savoy fintshed
with seven. (Photo by Steve Bowen)

..Miller gents record
· ::75-59 win over Eastern

•

get back in lhe game in the second
period, but a couple missed lay-ups
and five misses '81 the line _stymied
an Eastern rally. Four foul-shot
opportunities were the first of
bonus auempts missed by the
Eagles.
Meigs outscored Eastern 13- 1'0
in the frame, but lhe Eagles stayed
close with a 28~21 halftime score.
Otto had seven at the half for
· Eastern as well as having a great
night on the boards. Jessica Karr
had eight at lhe half, while Compston went to the locker room witll
11 at intermi ~sion.
Karr put Eastern on the boards
first in the second half, then after
holding Meigs scoreless. Aeiker
and Redovian.hil consecutive buckets to tie lhe score at 28-28.
Meigs called time and quickly
regrouped, regaining lhe lead on a
bucket by Compston-anll another
by Sisson. Meigs led 32-28. .
Eastern kept pace tile rest of tile
frame , staying within four .until
Vanessa Compston hit a: three
pointer at lhe buzzer to put Eastern

&lt;

; ,e's a nice player."
~...

:,: Eddie Paige and Brady Oaugh:b!Y each added 15 for the Falcons,
:).ohileWillie Peyton notched 12.
.~: Junior Randy Kaylor garnered
~aise from Ullman as he tied for
tlOprscoring hqnors for lhe Eagles
l :t:Z -~ 4) with Olarlie Bissell, who
"«otched 10 . Kaylor has shown
~uch poise and improvement in
: lhe past several games. Bissell hit
• 6·6 at the line and grabbed high
: rebounding honors at eight along
. ' with teammate Mall Martin ..
Ullman said, "We beat ourselves
; the first half by only scoring 15
• points. We come out the second
'I half and .play like we are capable
and put44 poitits onlhe board."
! Miller lliCed to a 13-8 first peri·
'· od lead, then rolled to a 30-15-half-

1-

time score.
Eastern outscored Miller 22-20
iii the third round, but barely narrowed the gap to .50-37. Miller fin·
ished strong to post the 75-59 win.
Eastern hit 21 of 58 for 36%, hit
6-1 3 threes and was 11 -26 at the
line for 41 %. Miller hit 28 of 62
overall, 5-10 threes and was 14-22
at the line for 63.6%.
Eastern bad 44 rebounds led by
Bissell and Martin. while posting
11 steals, 10 assists, seven blocks,
21 turnovers and 19 fouls. Miller
had 40 rebounds, led by Peyton
with 10, bad eight steals, 13
turnovers, 15 assists and 18 fouls.
Miller won the reserve game 4034 led by Ryan Merckle and
Jeremiah Keller witll 14 each. East·
em was led by Micah Otto's 17. ·
Eastern goes to Waterford Friday.
EASTERN
(8· 7-11-12=59)
Charlie Bissell 2-0-6• 10, Pat
Newland 2-1-0=7, Chad Savoy 30-1=7, Roben Reed 342=8, Matt
Martin 341=7, Wes Arbaugh 10-0=2, Randy Kaylor 3-0-1=7,
Jeremy Buckley 1-0-&lt;r-2, Jeremy
Cline 0-2-0=6. TOTALS - 15+
11"59
' MILLER
(13-17-10-25=75)
Bruce Lanning 2-3-4=17, Eddill .
Paige 5-1-2-15, Willie Peyton S4
2=12, Jeremy Duffy 0- 1-2=5,
Manny Merckle 4-0-0=8, Brady
Dau~rty 7-0-1=15, Bill McGrath
0-0· 2=2, Tim Fulk 0-0· 1" 1.
TOTALS - 23·5-14=75
;

5

·oH....- ...16

I

I

\loc.

CDr!'.

E.M .S.

...

All

EHect ln

R.-te
Re\. &amp;. Atr .

.426
.•

16
19

•

In the MAC...
c...r.
TWL..._

""
WLPct.

3 .700
3 •.700

16 6 .7ZI
10 I .556

Sooth
N.C. O.orlolto 61, 'Mono 64, OT

M-

Mkbipn 14, Pllldue 76
Ncrl:nlk• 61, Kutsu 64
S..lh....

LSUI4,Touall

Eul
B•ton C!"'!ff 63, S...llall62 ·
81Dwn 41, PlinDicon 41
B.......,17, F ......... 63

.319
.311
.333
.319

... w...
Adzon• 93. Calitomia 11

Ohio high school
basketball scores

CoJp1061, ur.,-5~

ct

H,IOl,HuWnl70 •
DuaaaWr. n
DnMI '79, Dtr&amp;awaa
6l

CamillO"·

. .... ,.

AoiWa Sl 16. ~mnricw 1•
0earat W•hinpn 6'. S&amp;. IOMYllll·
tutt.59 .

Juliii\M

,._.,13

'-bland U. 71, M""" SL Mlry'o.

Md. 76

Maine 71, Newllariplhitt 6S

Morio114, ............ o;.u,.., 76
Muachulllllll. Rutp67 ·

Novy 13,1AIU.. 74

N - R . llaolonU. II

In the Big Ten~ ..

Paul 51, Yolo 50

c..r.

~71,SLJahn'•69

All
TWLPcL WLPcL
lndWII ............9 01 .000 :10 1 .909
u;m;..• ....-.....7 1 .771 . II 3 .157
...............7 2 .m 14 6 .100
Wilccnin .lr ·--' 3 .625 12 s .706
....... ...............4 ' ...... ., 5 .722
MJdUaul SL.....4 5 .C44 12 6 .M7
u;e e· .........4 S ..444 ll 6 .6G1
t... ..................3 4 .429 14 5 .7"!1
Obio S..0.. .........3 6 .333 10 I .556
-······--0· 7I .125
-.....
.000

·

l"'ootida:a 66, c:JoortMwn 51, ar
. SL Froncio. NY 102,1Udo&gt;- 71
SL Fnnm.P•. 59, McamCI.IIh, NJ. 51
SL J~'1 71, Villanov1 66
Towson St. 74, CouW. C.tolinl69
Wop5J,R-Moaio41

.

Soulh

.U.bomai5,T...,._Il
A1abani k 13, Teut Southern fiJ
,........ U. ll. Williom 4 Miry 17
,Appe,ft!•" SL 14, W. Cuolin• 71
A.*--14, PJoDda 66
.
C...Fiaol*9t,FioridoAILWic10

•

611
5 12 .353
.294

ClwWU.-71

Saturday's scorn

aen..a av, ..... CuoliDIM, or

llliooio 12. Nanb....,. 67
~73...... 66
.
- - 7 5. - 6 3
Ololof~.. ~- s.... 59

.....,

Bo)'l' ~~~:don

.

'I

.

Kcuerina Ah« 61, O.y. Chadn•da-

Hutf.... Pl.V-61
HoJr
c... 110. """' 7!
I~ma 91, &amp;.

Ohio at IJau "' •
.
W. Midtipn '' Wlimi. Ohio ·

·

Wo~!&lt;-106,T...,..II9

Saturday's a&lt;don

Bo•u;a~•,Takda
Cem..
·
at Kent St.
E.Midliaoo•-

LEBANON

EMI

NY'U 97, Bnndoiol2. .
·
N""'pn M, Lorolo, Md. 47
RhOde bland f!JJ,-w-. ViJ&amp;iai,l59

National college
·basketball scoreS

.319

Ull.A

SUIMiay'IICOI'tl

NOD-conhrtMt
Bbdftm 66. caio Wllloyan S4
Findlly 77, Mount SL Jmtiph 65
tndiona Tech 64, c"""' s. 60
Mllaaol.!, Ldto E!lo 76

Wedllfldato pma

'

~.

,

WeborSi. 74, N. Arii&lt;N70

61

.556
.444

5.. -

w.........,..,!laah.. c.t4J
W.....,_lll.
56

U1oh Sl. II, UC IMne 70

Mld.Oitlo Conftrtnee
Caduvillll71, SblwntO St. 61
Rio &lt;kandl. 9B, Ohio Dominican 1!5
UrMna 71. Mount Vemoa. 'N-:r.arma

12 4 .7l0

s--

r.--~~~...::r"
~JNL,V.l2. uc
69
U1oh 14,'Cnlnnde SLPI

Mouot Union 67.Hciddber1162
M--74,Jo1Uoc...Jl61
Ohio Nol1hecn 69, Hitam !51 .

Oldo 51, Kom.SL 53
ToWa 11.5, Cea\. Mchipn 109
W. Mldli&amp;on 66, Boll SL55

.

Ul.lh

~pilll76. o......... 56

MianR, Ohio Sl, Atlas

R1 t 1
Other

Ho...n7s,.w ...... e

ldaho 107, . . . SL 99, 201'
New Mexico~. Teut·BI Puo .53
N..MaicoSl.77,Lon.f
' a..chSL65
~SLI3,· =
p
.. :76.San
64
s. 10, NE lllilloU 7
Sla'Pt ' cq 17, (JoQpp 74
SonJ- Sl. 54. p,.,;flo U. 50

Ohla c.rarmce
Baldwln-WaU.c:a 92, hbri•11 II (3

AtlaJUal OoWI:n Sl*.lO:lOp.m.
u~ .,~.1&amp;.30 p.m.

Efftet lve

Col SL·l'lllloolao 72. N...... 60
E. wen~ 119, tdoho IlL 56
"-"&gt; SL I, Son !Moo SL 70

Kan,!~.&amp;=:~

L.A. Cllppen at Sa11 Alltanio, 1:30
p.m.
0eav« II SelaJ' 10 p.m.

E . - 65.

r .. w..t
AliooooS..I09,Suaf.... l7
B...... Y=\o75,W,......62
CS NaolbDdp • S
SL 73

Xavier 71, 0.)10n 65

MilwallkM v•. Boe:IGII aJ HutfOtd,
7:30p...._ · Cl.ZVEI.ANDalO.edn= 7:30p.m.
NiMDatDcui.&amp;. 7:30p.m.

nlo71
Teau ~ 61, HCUIICa 66
w. x-c~~: 1 9s,Lauu

Gmt LaW Valley Confertna
Aol&gt;loa4 72. s. IRdWu 70

Tanday'o pmcs

10 I
I 10
7 II
.)()Qt 7 II
.300
I 13
.300
6 12
.200
7 II

1

Ml4-.,. Caletl•" eonrennce

W·+;,~ai~1:30p.m.

.500
.500

SowlloomMelh.71,llloo17.0T

....,.... P.Auolio ao, r ....-s.. ........

Mld.C•tlMnl ConftNnct
Youn...,_ SL 66, Clewlaad SL !53

OdADdo • U1lh. 9 p.m.
ll•ll•u• LA. J..Uea. 1&amp;.30 p.m.

.700

I

S...-SLI6.SW~SL74

MWni. Ohio 77. Aboo 51
Ohio 75, Kw 6.1

r-~tt::.=z;•1:!0 p.111..

3
5
5
7
7
7
I

S.rlarllll, ~ Tedll02. OT
N&lt;Wtb Texul7, T...,Adinatm 'U
a&amp;Jrt
St.U,ct'
•76

Mld-AIMrkan Conftre~~ct

Now Yodla

2 .100

• rr :A

Bowlio&amp; 0.... 93, E. Miclliaon ,.

1

.......,

Aban Fi.nlloat '79, OnYille 66

Alam""""'
"'· Clo. Muolo.U 76
AttonMI ±r·59,SandyV.U.S5
Ao1bony W•JM 74, Swanton 47
Arclluft d6. Pnlb.l. Sh.,rnoe 44

AVOA . . . 71, Ol.iBilcd F.Jll .53
A,..m. 63,_,.50
- 6 4. Mooao56
r .men, 0ncnan 60
-.o64.-·!
-73,W"""'t-147
Wilt c....- Weaan Jt.erve 66. s.

w

~76.Min1•61

c--J22.B.....mu.75
c..o... COd.. 74, Cinton s.71
C..O... ~ 52, Moaillon Jock·

-so

Pain&amp;.,_._
"""a;,m

s:::c.lholic

1

CUI: taunllJ Dly .59, Oennont North·
...... ll
Cin. Mldein. Sl, Sti hmant S3
1
Cin. N. CoDcac Hill 51. Cin . Seven
llillo 41
.
Cia. .......U·Muion 53, CIA. Jlushoo

38
41

On. SL U..... 49, Cio. W..... HilJo
-

Suuday'sscore

17

a...Joaol ....... ""· '¥1
a..m.r"M.21
CoL w-l!,CaL-. 37 _

s. r - st. n, TL-f""'•MOI•

c - V'oll.6f, w-..n

-~51.-Modioa\57

C.,...Ho. 4$.--34

..... Lllrari=·' 12. SWUm 75
ftmlde AAM69, B - . C 56
.
(looop96, ........ " /
.
o...p - I : !,Do- 71
o...p Tech 93, Muylad 79
,..._ ... 93,Po.ulovtew76 .
Ktntud&lt;y 12. v - ~
t.JhMr 73. c.np11011163
1 ·, ~••
u_
Amtri-

T-11-k'JllmOI

......t,..,....
w_,
Ku+ur
T-.J

s~ •lqiDDil

tf _ ........

OhloSWt•N.da. . . .
WliCGIIin • Mk+ipn

,.,

CoLW-,,-voll.~

r•

Cnolwood 60, ....... SB 52

DooMIIo61,-Hiload51
o.,.
""'"''" 60, w......._
a...
52
.
llolowalk,.41';-&amp;.wbN. 34
~17-60'.
.
B'!ria 52,

..;..,Kine -4.1

r.ldoo h n.-.oA14w53

a:r.-~.:.::;:.."':2

_.. _,.

y_.,_

=-.r.~~ ..
g-..::r••
... Tdlllrif4, a...J

_,..VIlli.

Lllr6U. ...... ....,71
_ _ . , ..
.. 70

-T_,tao. ..
~kit,"

I

..... - - . . . .

tl • .....,

trlet llitJiftdooi

.... lopo.

11th collection carry a penalty of ten percent . Ta xes. may be pai d at the office
tex receipt; .and if you pay by mall, be sure to }OCite' your property by tax ing dis-

---c,

Ma'l r • SllorclaJ

Ill.....
Clololkll'l._ .. ,

AIWIVJ exam ine yO\.Ir tax r.ceipt to see th1t it covers til your property. Off ice Hours 8:30A .M. to 4 :30P .M., Mond1y thru Friday - Closed
on Soturdlv.
·
.

Closing date Februilrv 12, 1993

·

HOWARD E. FRANK , Meigs County Tre11urer

MlllpiiiiiL . . c

I

fS.o.t-"'

I

0

!56.)1

~-,W..,W.

..NW'La
n
'

0

99, Dad

tlwd

-a. ,.

-~t~II.'M
II 91,

-10'1,.,.., II
•••
'tt·,N.C... . . . . 69

33

31

3J, 1 ' I

dlllra. 21

~45,Tw ' ' : •
~-56,-49

Sou*·

'M

it ' :

r_o

II •

... ,

'd,,., ,..... ..

'

-15.
a.. Taft 'I
lltbn:l Lakewood 61, Jokaaowa

..lii...96
I

- - , . . ~11
OWD

d"

' 66

-.v..,.lt.17,-IL19
"

']1

~

·- ·t.l"'-14

Oblo collep
buketball seores

Cia. Win,_ W- :12, Fllloflold 49

C(lll.ol O.drm II, Oloraia SL 63
CIII'JiiD St.7l,llowul U. 51
Doli- kit, N. Cuollno AAT 10

E. ~1 65, A- l'eoj64

MldqoaJ4,- 76

(ContiDued from Page 4)

-ana

.l•hna• S1. 12. Alt.-Usrle lttM:k 53

Women's adlon-Saturday ·

-17.
Slltoll
...._., 121, OdiDdo lOS
·Ncw-liii,MiwtuUolll!
a.;.plbl, ........ 91
.S.O... IIII,DooaiiiOI
.
NcwYodtl04,-12

Miulli.•.............. l
Boll !I. ..............7
Obio ................7
W. Midi........•...1

.

Coalrlllll. 71.1..i-'a ..Manadol57
lloliMc:o 104, Mllaao71
.·
WUnrinpon 13, Ohio W....,.. 71

Su~.z.:~­

BOSU............. .5
T.-........... .5
C. M;oh .............3
E. Mldo. ...........3
Kom .. ...........3
Akrat ................2

Other
Aeouction

IZ

Dotlu

Meigs
(15-13-16-22,66)
Verna Compston7-0-4=18, Lori
Kelly 4-0-4=12, Kauina Turner 20-7=11, Missy Sisson 5-0-0=10,
Joy . O'Brien 1-0-0=2, Amber
Blatkwell 1-0-2=4, Vanessa
Compston 2-1-2=9. Totals- 22·
1-19=66
•
East~rn ·
(11-10-16-16=53)
Stephanie Ouo 4- 10-0=18,
Jaime Wilson 0-0-3=3, Amy Redovian 2-0-0=4, Penny Aeiker 2-05=9, Jessica Karr 7-0-1=15, Melissa Guess 1-0-&lt;r-2, Nicole Nelson
1-0-&lt;r-2. Totals- 17·0·19=53

Alld.
R l duCtlo.,

.511

S..-'-"'104,Mn
·95
DaMr Ill,
93
LA. CUw-119, s.s.a
............ o

TOWNSHIPS
Atr. &amp;.

.

N__,.....,.

~92

. Saturcla

M.A.

S
6
II

CUM!LAND 1211, A...... 109

In pursuance oi Law . l, Ho'Nerd E. Fran k, Treasurer of Meigs Count y, Ohio, tn compliance w ith revised Code No. 323 08 ol State o f Oh to,
do nerebv give not ice of the Rates of. Taxat1on for the Tax Year of 1992 . Rates e)(pressed tn do l lars and cents on ea ch one thousand dolla;s
·tax valuatton .

SCHOOLDJSTRJCTS

.MJ
.533

2P

c..ta.illo91,Sta-SL 13 .
Jtlo Onode 94, au. Daninian 1.1
t.bblaa 113, Mcull. V.nm ~
Woloh 11. Tilllo 10

.791
.661

' Sohmla:r'• ........ ·.
S..DletlO.W

steals, 28 turnovers and 28 fouls.
Meigs won lhe reserve game 2317 led by Cynthia Coueril with
eight. Eastern was led by Nicole
Nelson's five points and Tara
Congo's four.
Meigs reserve record is 11-6'
overall and 8-6 in the league.
'
Tonight's agenda has Eastern
hosting s·outhem and Meigs hosting Trimble.

Meigs had 22 rebounds led by
Kelly, Turner and Sisson each -with
six. The winners had just six
turnovers, 10 assists, 13 steals and
20 fouls . Kelly and Sisson ·each
had four steals, while Compston
anti .Henderson each had three
assists.
Eastern had five assists, five

25

79

Goldm ..... ..........20 Z1

Rates of Taxation for 1992

Twp.

Outdislancing Eastern 30-15 in
the first half, the Miller Falcons
rolled to a 75-59 non-league boys'
;.-arsity basketball contest Saturday
night at Eastern High School.
The Falcons (10-7) placed four
" men in double figures. Leadin_g the
: way was Bruce Lanning with 17
points, all of which came in the
second half. Lanning nailed three
:1hree-pointcrs and bit two field
i-«oals in a great post halftime per--!ormance.
;-: Eastern head coach Greg Ull•f.l an said, "We held Lanning score:)ess in the first half. We weren't
: Jc!ing to let him beat us, but several
:,il.ther Miller players did a nice job
!llicking up the slack. We inade
~djustments on them at the half,
lilind Lanning still .gets 17 poinis.

down seven at44-37.
The bucket was a pivotal point
of the game along with the fact
Meigs commiued just six
turnovers. Eastern had 28.
Tmiling by eight wilh. nearly six
minutes left, Eastern pressed, but
the experienced Marauders beat the
press and went up by 12 on lay-ins
by Sisson and Blackwell.
Eastern once got back to within
seven, but that was as close as !hey
could come at lhe finish. The finals
stood 66-53.
Meigs hit 22-67 for 34% and
was 1-2 from three-point range, hitting 19-34 at the line. Eastern was
16-52 for 30.7%, shot no threes,
land hit 19-30 at tile line.

Mld-OIIIo C-eo

12J
11..5

PodiiCD,_
·············---"' 9
Solal~ ........ .-..........30 IS
.......... ...._ ...... ..21 15
LA.~ .........2A 21
LA. UU. ...........23 22

Meigs ladies post 66-53 victory over Eastern
By SCOT£ WOLFE
Eastern Head Coach
After beiDg tied at 28-28, Meigs
put together a powerful 16-9 run,
then finished suonll enroute to a
66-53 non-league gtrls' basketball
victory over the Eastern Eagles
Saturday afternoOII.
Verna Compston led the
Marauders (15-3) with 18 points
and three assists, while teammate
Lori Kelly notched 12 points and
grabbed six rebounds. Katrina
Turner and Missy Sisson each had
six rebounds, while scoring II and
10 respectively. ·
Eastern {6-12) was led by
Stephanie Otto witll 18 points and
had 20 rebounds. Teammate Jessica Karr added 15 points.
Meigs went ahead early and
!)owered to a six point lead midway
through the rm;t frllllle, but Eastern
fought back and kept pace wilh a
balanced first period assault. Lori
Kelly led Meigs the first quaner
with seven points. while Verna
Compston added six.
Eastern had its opportunities to

4

.............-.........17 . n
Mi
c1t ...- .........JO 31 .231
Dotlu........................ " .093

DRIVING UPCOURT Is the task or.tbe moment ror Southern's
Mark Allen (right), who finds Portsmouth Clay's Brya!' Whitely
trailing him during Saturday night's game at Racine, which the
Tornadoes won 71-70 iu double overtime.

-tloo&lt;IM-tColl...
n-.-17.B..-74

1.5

.636
.571
.316

-. ..... u-.61

n ·n

WESTERN CONFERENCE
-DI'TWL .... GI
s.o ....................l9 14 .~4

quieted the SHS crowd just sec:·
onds later at the 3:40 mark in the
noor.
final round, 111C score S9-S8 Clay.
The scoriae
• Evans made a nasb cut and
Robert "The Panther Killer" ensuing back-door layrup to apin
Reiber came into his own Saturday give SHS the lead at 60-59. Browu
nigh~ not only providing ptay-by- picked up his r.ftll foul on a charJc
exa111ple leaders~ ip. but also at the 2:21 mark, but SHS followed
teaniS. .
becoming an emotionalleathder as witll a turnover. Southern miued
"Defensively iR overtime, we welL Reiber hit 7-12 from e 0oor two consecutive scoriDg opportuni·
took it away just like je had done to net a vars ity career- high 19 · ties. Reiber missed both ends of a
the whol:gmc," 'Sbul!l said. iJoints. The effon was also a game- two shot foul, but Evans gilbbed
"Ste\'C. (T
) was wtbelievable. 1 high perf~e.
.
the-rebound for a 62-59 score.
Michael Evans, another ·mtegral
We've admired hini ·from the
Burchette drove the lane (62·
opposing sidleine for a long time. part of .the victory, netted 18mark- 61), then following a SHS miss,
He came. up with the big field goal ers on 5-1· attempts, while sopho- Walker went to the. line with 37
block when we had to have it''
more Ry111 Williams again ran tile seconds remaining in regulation. .
·The NFC j!laceldcking game Southern offense with charisma
Walker missed the ftnt of twb,
probably suffered became Joel and poise, netting 17 points. Sin- · but tied the score on the second. ·
Hilgen~rg of the New. ~rleans gletQn added 10, and Allen had
SHS ran the clock to 11 sec·
Saints, the long-snap specialiSt, had eight. Mason Fisher did not score, onds, then called time out to set up
a Sor-e thumb and Mark Stepnoski,. but grabbed a crucial rebound a final play. Southern's shot went
of the Dal1.8'1 Cowboys filled in.
going down the stretch to help lhe in and out of the bucket and tilt
There were· a few impressive Tornadoes in their victory drive.
•game went to tile first overtime,
offensive numbers ptil up by the
Bryan Whitely led Clay with 18, tied 62-62.
NFC, including Young's 18-of-32 Frank Burcheue had 15, Mike
First overtime
passing for'l96 yards while playing ·. Kelly 13, Chris Brown 13, four
Evans quicldy put SHS. up wilh
less than half the game, and eight each from Jeff Pridemore and Anis a lay-up (64-62) as Singleton conreceptions by Atlanta's Andre Scott and tluee by Ryan Wallcet.
trolled the tip. At lhe 2:12 mark,
~Soutllera takes early control
Burchette hit both &lt;:nds of a two
Reibtz opened.the SHS scoring •
foul to agaili·tie the score. •
with a feed from Williams under- shotSouthern
made a bad pass on the
neath to put SHS up 2-0. Clay's ensuing P!l ssession, then.B~
Kelly bit a free lhrow to put the hit a tough turnaround Jumper m
score at2·1, then Reiber hit anoth· the paint to give Clay the 66-64
er turnarOIIlid jumper for'a 4-1 SHS advantage. ·
·
"*-'...
oa• sa. w. wr- S4
lead.
.
llillldUoM,...,_Citt. l7
•
After a mi~ bY Clay and Reiber
HIJ.Qtinlton (W.V•. ) St. Jo1e~ph 6.5,
Evans tied the score with a IF
s,...v-.... 60
rebound,
Williams
drilled
a
three
of
free throws at the 1:38 mark,
....... v.u. 66,C...U,.46
pointer for a 7-1 SHS lead. then after running lhe cloct down
Joli.&amp;owa 69,"Bil Walnlt .53
Eaum llldp 51; Sprln~ NonhWOOI·
Williams drilled another three- to 1:08, Clay clilled time for the
... ~2
pointer, followed by an Allen trey final play.
nJooo au. so,l!l&gt;N - . Doo&lt; 43
.
and SHS blitzed to a 13-6 advan1 •k •ood SL EdwaN $4, PIDDilhl.
As the 10-sec:ol)d mark ro!Jcd
tage.
Halr:.-:-4.1
around, Clay made its break 10 the
· ·at ..........om.o. 'iO
SingletQn got in Cll!l&gt;: foul o:ou· basket. A Southern d~feader
LibOioty Ott. 71, Y.UO" Sorinol55
t.JhMy.a ..... 70, l!lanoOod t1
ble putting Jeremy Dill m thc bne· knocked the ball looae alona the
limr Cad&amp;, 19, Siduy 50
•
up.' Dill played steady defense and baseline, where Clay pic:bcl • lite
UW. Miomi 73, Clamant N -·
-~7
cool offense to help keep South· ball and Burcbetie went for the '
Londoa 75, iJddola Voll. 55
ern's mo!Dentum alive in the baseline jumJ!f'Z. Singleton bJochd
Lonia Brocbidofa. Em:to~e :'lin
streak. ·
l.GalnCodo. 71,Ho...... 52
the ball cleanly, but Pridemore
l.onlo Kinlll.I!!Jrio 66
Evans
drilled
two
three's
going
recovered
and tried aaotber
l.«airl Souihvin
Mid.vie• 44
down the stretch to give SHS a 21- attempt, which Singleto~ agfin
Lucu 71, ML Oilood41
13 lead. Southern hit 5·6 three blocked out of bounds wtth oue
L,.-.. Coy '11. t..boqF.ufidd
60
point~rs.
stunning the Panthers second on lhe clock.
Mon6ld
,~
...
____SL
60,.......
""""'
57. PI,...... 63
early and leaving Wolfe scratching
The inbound pus 'to Whitely
~L;;..t 60, Fl.l.onmi&gt; ll
.
his
head
in
.
a
mazement.
was
received at the top of the lrey.
Merion PI--S, C~ Ac:M~my 46
Clay comes. back
. Before tbe ball left Wliitcly's hind,
MorJmlle41,-.,.oVoll.36
Men....- NW 72, Porum- NLike all good teams, Clay the buzzer sounded, but the ball
llomolO
•
fought
back hard in the second swished tbrouab the nets, llriDgiJw
Miulli E. 60. 110!'40
Millbuq Lob 76. a.... 74, or
period. Pridemore buried a three a silence to ibe SHS crowd
Millno-75, Moil! 59
pointer that sparked a 12-0 Clay false hopf8 of celebration to qa~
MU~&lt;nport 69, Foid'onld uru.n 67
run, the final bucliet in the drive a faru.
Monroo (Ind.) Adami Central S.5,
·
l'ubny52
three:pointer
by
Burchette.
That
•
MonrocM11c 41, New l.mdaa. 40
goal gave Clay a 29-26 ad~e.
N. Ccnlnl71, Mmtpollcr 59
All t1uee officials waved off the
N. Olmlud 49, PaitYiew Patti: 46
Following a Soutllem•time out, bucket.and lhe game went to ill
N1b.onal Tnil,Sl, Tri·Vi.l.lqe49r
the
Tornadoes rallied back to a 30- second ovrztime, tied 66-66.
·
New Bi.mea 60, Jickeon C"enter 5I
New 'Knoirillo 56, Upper Scioto Vall.
29 advantage on goaliby Singleton
:
That
SCI the S18JC for greal bcrolO
and Williams. Artis Scott put Clay ics from lhe Somhc:m five.
:
Newldr 64, Dublin 50
back up 31-30, then Roben Reiber
Ncrdonll 53, C11110n GlatOU &lt;17
Southern
l!it
23-49
for
47
J!C?·
Norw•lk S1. Pnl SO, Aahland
set up shop and put on an offensive cent, hit6-15 threes and 8-14 at the
er-iow52
clinic.
Obodio l~. Avon 52
line. SOuthern had 33 rebouDis. led
Dim- 61, .....lhul Alder ~3
Reiber tied the score with a free by Singleton (12), Bv~ (7) md
a.- Chr:60, ......... E. .!~
throw, then had another sliot taken Reiber (6), had 6 steals, 18
P,.iaiVoll. l3. IJoOdo 71
away on a lane violl\ti_oll: In' the tumOvm, five assists and 19 fouls.
Platino 67, Qy4o"
, . . , . . Spr!n. 97.- Jocbm·Mil""
next two, minutes, tile JUDI Or forClay hit 24-47, 3-9 treys and
5I
ward bit two rteld goals and w~t was 13-24 at lhe line.W,Va. Sl.O-:r"i•46
61, OU. Rubor
3-4 at the line to give SHS a 38-31
Ciay had 28 rebounds, led by
tlaciao S.Uihan 72. ......,,.lh Cor
advantage. Amid Reiber's assault, Walker (eisht), Burchette and
70, 201'
ltoct' IUnr 101 AmhaR 69, or
Wolfe signaled for a time out, f~ Brown (five), while having aiue
S......yiO, N. llid&amp;&lt;Mllo 49
s.r..ty St. Muy's11, Milan EdWm
ricating a game plan that pulled steals, 18 turnovers, nine usistl
63
•
and 18 fouls.
Clay
to within one at the half.
,
!hm· del~ 66. MoalkJwbftd. 59
Whitely buried a long jumper at
Sbcrrwood Fliniow 66, Bryan 55
s.
illo ~7. Anno 41
tile
bu:~;ZCr, but the shot was ruled a.
57.F-5~,0T
Toraado reserves will
two-pointer u one foot was ·Oil the
Sprioa. Nonheutern 63 , Sprint·
Soutbein
won lhe reserve game
Shlwne.30
line, tile score 38-37 Southern lead·
Sprinaboro 61 , Middletown Madilon
63-41.
Jeremy
Hill paced Scott
ing.
54
Wickline's
crew
with 30 points.
St. Haruy 58, Coldw11er $3, OT
Burchett had 11 at the half for
Tincn 5l, Stryka 57
Teammate
Cass
Cleland
had nipe,
Clay, while teammate Kelly had
TaL Libbey .52. S~Y111i1 SouUr'l'icw :SO
and
Kevin
Turley
arid
Sam
Shain
nine. Reiber had 14, and Williams
Tol WJiitmerU, Tal.. Roaen6l
had
six
each,
while
Mike
McKTriway12. Modin ..Biiekcye 55
bad 10 liar Southern.
Upper S~ndulky 60, Norw•lk 52
elvey bad five. '
Southern dominates
u...... 51.T.....,...50
In early action, that game wu
Uticl 76, Mldilan Plainl "- 201'
Southern dominated the third
Vllley V~w 67, Milmilhlata 62.
on
tile line at 12-11, when Hill sank
frame, led by Williams' seven '
Vormllim 46, Lonln 31·
four
straight three pointerS to spark
point offensive stjnt and great
w..... lfudinl 13. a.. S.Ulh 63 ·
W.......W.7 • Ol&lt;nvlllc 17
the
Tornadoes.
rebounding from Reiber and Sin, . w•.w~,st.ou.HiU~2
Clay was paced by Chip
gleton. SHS outscored Clay 18-8 in
w..roll59, Pik'"" 47
Hemphill's
11 points, NaiC Payne's
W..JateS2,B17&lt;1l
lhe frame to lead 56-45 .
Wloool&lt;nboq 76, Foidond 47
10
and
Danny
Hensley's cighL
Tornadoes stumble
Wfll"&amp;&amp;dnalon Quo, 63, D•7· Chrilliln
Soulhem
goes
to Meigs tor tbe
56
. To stan the final round, Clay
Wyafcxd 117, flod-- ~
clubs'
fll'St-ever
meeting
Friday.
slowed the hall down deliberately
Z.nU•ille Ro"IOCtll\1 .53 , Buckeye
to work for a good shQt. Southern's
Troll 51
SOUTHERN
good
defense added some cxua
Glrlo' o&lt;Ores-Saturdoy
(21-17-18-6-'1-6=71)
time to tile effon, but Clay slowly
Akl'lft St.V-SLM 63, UnictltoWn lAke
Mark Allen 1-2-0=8, Ryan
plugged
away. Chris Brown added
34
Williams
5-2-1=17, Michael Evans
A:&lt;hhold 59, N - 40
a key goal, that ignited a 7-0 Clay
Avoa Lake 63, 6tn.-. Falla &lt;12
run that pulled them to with!n f~ur. 5-2-2= 18, Roben Reiber 745•19,
A,....W.63. Libofty C.... 47
Bcrllrewe44. Tift'111 CohambUn4l '
Singleton gave SHS t~eu ft_rst Russell Singleton 5-0-0•10.
Baiiunla Lacon 3\l, lndian l.Uo 25
score at the 4:47 mark, mcreasmg TOTALS -13-6·8=71
Bc&amp;n c.iklr W•t.tm Jl.olcrve 49, SobriqlolcKialoy32
'
lhe lead to 58-52.
·
rr... Unian 41. F•~aeld Unian 44
PORTSMOUTH CLAY
Southern
continued
to make
a;,womw59,N.Union51
•
(13•24-8-17-4-4=70)
had
a
poor
shot
turnovers
and
a.....,.lO, Col'""bio 36
c-J Fubnn NW 66, Comlllloa 5l
Jeff Pridemore 0-1-1=4, Artis
selection
as
Walker
and
Brown
C-.1Wina...'Sl W, Joft'man36
added consecutive buckets off tile Scott 2~. Bryan .Whitely 5-2Coallold 6 0 , - 51
Cll\\Oft C•dl. 6.5, Lou.isville Aquinu
press to pull Clay to within two at 2•18, Frank Burchette 5-0·S•lS,
51
Ryan Walker 1-0-1•3, Mike Kelly
58-56.
CIIIIOII it.n*at..O. Atnln Elml34
Southern called time to regroup, 5-0-3• 13, Chris Brown 6-0-1•13.
c-.a
64. Cudinpon 32
g..pin Fa11141, 0...,. 14
but a three pointer from Burchelte TOTALS - 24-3-13:70
a.-... 73,11illodol0 35

Seau led the AFC defensively
wilh fiv!l solo tackles, four assists
and one pass deflection, in addition
to his interCeption f&lt;l' a touchdown.
AFC coach Don Shula of Miami
wu impressed by tilt play of his
all-SIIr sqUad's defense and special

,,1

ow. c........

111Wwia-W.-17,w.n-72
~74,01 ... 73

-

. U1oh ...................2J "
"""""" ___....... .26 19

Lau;: Va111 coot...C.

Gnat

s.lndlmo ", Jwt...uo
N_.. COM&amp;c-t....a
:o.o. tn. c- Wlllml65, ar

~-trai'DMIIM

RISING TO THE OCCASION- Southern guard Mark Allen
(4) gels abon Portsmouth Clay's Ryan Walker (31) and Bryan
Whitely (23) to· make bis sbot during Saturday night's game at
SC!utbem Hi'h ·school, where the Tornadoes won 71-70 after two
overtime pertods. ADen rmisbed with eight points.

Southern wins in OT...

...

-au.
Olda 51, X.."

GI

I

-- - .

E. w· 1.... 65.Bowlioa0....,.

EASTERN CONFERENCE

;I. . PREVENTION -Miller center WiUie PeytOD {right) exercises
prevention aglilnst Eastern troutman Matt Marlin {42) dur.· · ing Saturday night's game at l';astern High St:hool, where the Fal·
:···cons won 75-59. Martin finished with seven points. (Photo by Steve
· Bowen)

.

AFC all-·s tars hand NFC loss in Pro Bowl

'

~·· ·scoring

The Dally Sentinel~ .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

By KEN PETERS
HONOLULU (AP) - The NFC
dominated again. Only this time,
the AFCwon.
· Mustering just 114 yards of total
offense to the NFC's Pro Bowlrecord 472 yards, the AFC made its
own breaks Sunday for a 23-20
overtime victory.
. · · The AFC, which has lost nine
_straight S~r Bowls and had won
juSt one of the last four Pro Bowls,
blocked two rteld soa1 attcmpU and
turned those into 10 points, got
another 10 points with the help of
interceptions and, finally, at4:09 of.
overtime, converted a fumble by
San FranciscO's Steve Young into
Nick Lowery's 33-yard field goal
. for the game wi~~~~et.
As a sign of bow the game went,
Buffalo's special teams slar Steve '
Taslc.er was voted lhe MVP of the
first Pro Bowl to go overtime.
Tasker blocked a field goal
attempt by Jiew Orleans' Morten
Andersen in the fourth quarter and
bobbled the ball down the field.

Southern beats Portsmouth ..Clay 72-70 in two overtimes

By SCOT£ WOLFE
• · Sentinel Correspoudeut
A Russell Singleton steal and
ensuing bucket with just six seconds remaining in the second of
·. two ovenimes, lifted lhe Southern
i 'fornadoes to a satisfying 72· 70
upse t vic tory over state-ranked
•Portsmoulh Clay Saturday night at
Racine.
, Soutllern's Charles W. Hayman

Monday, February 8,1993

~:.........

4l

~51

,....__ 43, .,... HGIIh
QMolloor4S
lalo 56, OT ·

IAWood~loo

'*

i.ilr•
t%1
_ , _ _ l6
"·' wm.a

~46,0tL

,_.,

B~O....Orr.:Z.S,

.

&amp;18

e.

KAFIL kEBLER
Main St., Pomeroy, OH. \45769

'

992-6674
Houra: I:Oo.e:OO llllandaY-I'rkllly, Sllurday 1:00-1:00

'(
.I

..
.,
''

�...

'

y

'

Monday, February 8, 1993

-l

By The Bend·

The J)aily Se:r;ttinel·.

•The Area's
Number 1

Monday, February 8, 1993 •
'
Page--6
•I

'

Tragedy wakes up community . l'
'
Dear Au Lltaders: I am an

ovc:rnilhl peckar delivery man: 1
often have problems delivering
pacbps bee•• people don't have
their home&amp; 111111 nllillmca mtRcd.
of liiiiiCS 111111 nlllllbtts wllicb
are csaemial for ddivay people, IIIey
have fiDCy desijns or decals of
fruit or animals, or dlen:.are vines
growing all over the box, which may
look cha!miog bitt are nuisance to

In_.
us.

.

Ann
Landers

tell your n:adcn to go out 111111 get

3
6
10

Monthly

larae. euy-to-~ numbers for their
When dlen: is no name or Dum· hQmcs IIIII mailboxes ·lfOW belen IN CONNECI1Cl1I'
I
ber, we have 10 like the perkar ~y strikes. ·· D.K.IN CARY,
DEAR GRADUATE: The Bible f
back to the terminal, make a.phone
tdJs us lhlt a ."lbankless child" is
call, get directions aod try again.
DEAR D.K.: Yoo told them, and "!lbaqxr Ibm a sti])CIIt's tooeb." By 1
, There's a more important RliiOII I hope they listeD. That small lbe token, • graJeful child is . :
people should have their names and invesiiiiCDt could save a life.
beautiful· to behold and •a· joy -:addresaes clearly·visible ali home&amp;
Dear Aan Laaden: HaviD&amp; fdma'.• How nice for yo..- pam~ts
and mailboxes. Listen ·to this: A langlwlat my mother for nating that you are the lau«.
while back, I noticed that on a Yo« column as gospel for so IIUIIY
Dar Alm Lucien: When the
1-mile MICh.of road, every hCme yean, it ia now my IUID to ~
coft'ee is bot and tbc lilt is JOOd, '
bid a name and number on iL When opiaion ~a bot tlliK yoo. IIIII tbc fediD&amp; ia easy aoc1 the JauabI cCllllmenled llliout this rarity to a ' dealt
monlbl qo. I' 111' ia liabt. 111111 the JIICIIIOriea are ,,
~: sbe inbmed me ·that bope I'm 1101 100 late to p in on many but the. time is 100 short.·you ,·• •
two years before, • elderly couple the actiOIL It was about lllltleSI • bow you .c with a frieod. ;_ 89- '~
had lived on dial snet. When the free loans for children. Here's the YEAR-OLDFANINPHOENIX '~
. man had a heart attock, bis wife pc:npeclive of a rccipicnl:
DEAR PHOENIX: How ttue - ::
called 911. P1nmedics responded
I 1m fortunate 10 have parents every word of iL Thank you fpr tliii ·
.,~
immediately but couldn't lbcale the who were willing and able 10 Jo.l reminder.
house. Firally, they found it when me inlereSI-free money for college
Do you /tmle qutslion.s abollt p . ';;;
his wife went ........ panic-stricken, in order 10 supplement the part· bul110 oM to talA: to? Ann Laliders' ; ~
10 flag them down. Her husband clied time job 1 had duriJig school. My booklet, •su aNJ the Teen-Ager." ,:
on the WII'J to the bospital No one parents raised me to appreciate is fralll: tut4 to the pow. Send a ,.
will ever know if those precious lbe value of a doDar, and for that, u/f-addressed, long, b!UiMss-siu 1:'
wasted minutes would have saved l will be fo~veP'IIfateful. I'~ en~~tlo~ and a check or mollt!J ';j
the man's life.
·
certain dial .without their help, I order for $3.65 (tllis incltuks "1
When WOld of that tragic incident would never have had the chance to . poSUJge tJiltJ hondlillg} 10: Tt!t!IIS, ·:
got around the cdmmunity, every- get the eugineering degn:c I have c/o AM Ltwlt!rs, P.O. Bo~ /1562, ; "
Cllicago, Ill. 6()6II-0562. (In ' 't
.
· one weot out and put numbers on today.
their houses and IJIIilbQxes. Please
every·month, I iend my folks a CII/IIJdQ, urt.d $4.45.)
,
=====~==:~===========~:===~========~' ·

wih

:Harris, (rJ&amp;ht), Mueeled by AI« Baldwin, (cen·
:ter), ud Jou Van Ark at tile Gala B~efit ror
tile Amerlean Academy or DriiiiUitlc Arts honor·
,IJI&amp; Han1B at tile Plaza Hotel in New York SliD·

a ftn.tlme Tony 11nd two-

winner, wu prtsented with tile
Academy's
Award ror achievement in
tile dramatic
(APpboto)

Eastern-honor roll announced
_The honor roll for the second
nine week grading period for the
Eastern Local School District has
~n annDIIIIced.
•
Cbester Elemeatary
.
Sixth grade • Jacque Hall,
Vlllerie Karr, Kelli Li~htfoot, Jessica Marcum, Aaron W1ll, overall.
) Fifth grade • Josh Broderick,
Jessica Grueser, Chris Krawsczyn,
Scott Needs, J~ssica Pore, Josh
Wjll, Stephanie Young, overall. ·
; Fourth gnldci • Juli Bailey, Kristen Chevalier, Josh Clark, Cinda
Clifford, John .Cooke, Wes Crow,
Tiffany Hollon, overall. 1
· •Third grade· Tammy Bissell, all
A~s; Holly Broderick, Tricia
Congo, Amber Ellis, Ben Holter,

Garrett Karr; Whimey Karr, John
Krasczyn, Sara Mansfield,.
Jonathan Will, Charlie Young,
overall; Jonathan Louks, academic.
Riverview Elementary
Sixth grade • MicheUe Bilckley,
Juli Hayman, Heath Proffitt, Mike.
Sobieski, overall.
Fifth grade • Jason Barber,
Cassie Rose, overall
Fourth . grade • Nathan
Marcinko, all A's; Amber Baker,
Renee Barringer, Brandon Browning, Bridget Browning, Amber
Church, Chrissy, Smith, overall.
Third grade ~ Jessica McGinnis,
all A's; Jeremy Custer, Jennifer
Goeglein, Darucllc RucJ,er, Corey
Young, overall; Kayla Gibbs, aca-

demit.
Tuppers Plains ElemeDblry
Sixth grade • Jessica· BrannQn,
Stephanie Evans, Sari Puttnan, all
A' s; Lacey Bunting, Sarah Householder, Heather Rockhold, Mary
Styer, Ann Wiggins, overall; J.T.
White, Steven Whitlock, academic.

, d
communlty
• ca1en
ar

A'~i~e=Avt~a::Ssfs~

~

.

Your Social Security

MONDAY
POMEROY • The Disabled
MIDDLEPORT· Revival at Old . American VetenmS will meet Mon·
Bethel FrecwiD Baptist Church will day at 7 p.m. at the ball, 124 Butbe Monilay through Saturday at 7 temut Avenue.
p.m. ·wilh Rev. Marvin Markin.
RUTLAND • The Leading
Ralph Butcher, pasiDr, invites the
Creek
Conservancy District will
public.
..
hold a special meeting Monday at
RACINE • .Racine Board of 7:30a.m. at the bosrd offic;.e.
Public Affairs will meet Monday at ·
10 a.m. at Star Mill Park.
TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT • The MiddleCHESHIRE • Wol!len Alive port Community AssOciltion will
meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the Peoples Bank in MiddleporL The busi·
ness meeting will be followed with
a program on tourism by Mary
Powell, Meigs CotDity Park District
director.

Actor buys home

MNTADS

-~~~

~

POMEROY .· Ohio Eta Phi;r
Chapter, Beta Sigam Phi Sorority •~
will hold a sing-a-long for residents•
of the Meigs County Infirmary on
Tuesday at 7 p.m. Hostesses arc1•
Terri Neece, Malldy Russell andi ~'
Kathy Haley.
~
.;

l!l'~t·_,;.

POMEROY • The Meigs-Coun-·.o
ty Board of Elections will mee~· ~
.Tuesdsy at 4:30p.m.
... attheoffiCC. :,
WEDNESDAY
:~
POMEROY • Pomeroy Mer···~
chats Association will meet':
Wednesday at 8:30a.m. at the con-;'.
ference room at Bank One.
:'&lt;

-

'

Fellowship schf!dules announced :
Schedules for Camp Friendship,
Camp Friendship and Friend- ·.~ ,
a program which offers children ship Weekend offer partiCiJ18!11oC an · ·i
and young adults with cancer the iopportujnity to establish indepen- ;;
opportunity to attend a summer dence, make new friends, and thor· •;.
camp have been announced by ~r- oughly enjoy themselves.
' ,.
man Moore, direcror of the Meigs
To register for their Camp I:
unit of the American Cancer Soci- Friendship or Friendship Weekend, ·~
. ety.
.
residents may colltact Diane :·,
The 1993 Camp Friendship pro• Holmes, coordinator, Cancer Con- i;
grams open to children 7 through trol Progran)S/Service, at the Ohio •r
15 who are in current. treatment for Division office of the American ~
cancer or children who arc in Center Scoiety, 1•800-686-4357. !!'
remission from cancer, will be held r - - - - - - - - - - - --;· •
June 13-19 at Centerville Mills
~
YMCA Canip in Chagrin Falls, and
&amp;
Aug. 8-14 at YMCA Camp Kern in
~~
0•
Oregonia near Kings Island.
V.
'
Friendship Weekend for y01mg
1
adults, age 16-21, was implement•,\
ed in 1991 and wil be hela July 811 at Geneva Hills Center in Lar\'
'r'l(

worrre. d AbQUt
HQW tOU II
Look w·1th A

--Property transfers·....:...--

'

·

sell, .Matthew Caldwell, Andrew ------......,.-------...;...-~----......,.-----------~ ~
Rollins, Leah Sanders, overall; ·
C
C
d
.
M d
7
· t
HARRISONV" ·, ,., • The Har) _
Steven Weeks, academic.
ommun1ty a 1en ar 1tems WI 11 meet on ay a1 p.m. a
..........,
,.
Fourth grade • Matt Grubb, appear two 'days berore an event Kyger Creek Clubhouse. Brenda rii!Qnville Senior Citizens will hold ;
Kevin Kearon, Josh Kehl, Justin aod tile day or that event. Items Faulk·Will be thC devotional speak- · a blood pressu~ clinic Tuesday,
RobertsOn, Danielle Spencer, Gary must he received weD 1D advance er. There will be a craft demonstm- from 10 a.m. 10 noon at the town·
Vierling, overall; Joey Brown, to assure publicatloD iD the cal· lion. Refreshments will include a house, weather permitting. Mem-f
Michelle O'Nail, Wes Shafer, aca- endar.
salad bar. ,
bers will have a covered dish din- ;

. Third grade • Bradley Brannon,
all A's; Tina DeLaCruz, Jake.
Householder, Tiffany Kidder, Chris
Lyons, Jared Marcinko, Kimberly
Marcinko, Elaine Pu[Oian, Billie Jo
. · :
By ED PETi RSON . .
the earnings limits for 1993 are Welsh, overall.
·
Social Security
$7,680 for bet~eficiaries .under age
Eastern Hi&amp;b School
MaDager iD Athens
65 and SI 0,560 for beneficiaries
Twelfth grade • Chad Griffith,
age 65-69. Again, your benefit Lisa
Hoffman, Kim Michael, Matt .
,If you worked ani\ recei vel\ check will be adjusted to renect Mi~hael, Mike Roush, Yield Warn·
Social Security benefits in 1992, any excess earnings anticipated. ·
er, all A's; Pat Barringer, Jeremy
If our records show that you Buckley, Nancy ' Gaddis, Sarah
have until April IS to report
to Social Security if expected 10 have earnings over the Harris, Letitia Holsinger, Tracy
.
' IIIQiallimits. ' 1992 limits, we will send you an Murphy, Misty Newell, Stephanie
limits were Annual Report of Earnings form in 0110, Bobbie White, overall.
under age the mail auromatically. If you do
Eleventh grade • Amanda Barnot receive !he report form by the ringer,
~IIJ~IJIJ for beneficiaries
Christy Hawkins, Tyson
earnings limits do end of February, you should call Rose, all A's; Charlene Dailey,
apply 10 people who are age 70 our toll-free number to have one Adria Ftecker, Debra ·Fros~ Shelly
sent to you.
the entire year.
Randy Kaylor, Marilyn
Failure to report your earnings Hendricks,
purpose of the annual earnKibble, Amber Well, Cynthia
illgs report is ID enable us 10 com- by Allril 15th may result in sub- White, Andy Wolf, overall.
pare your acrual earnings with the stanual penalties. You can be
Tenth grade • Charles Bissell,
eitimate Y0\1 provided when you penalized up to 1 fuU month's ben- Julie Brown, Ryan Buckley, Jessica
1RPlied for benefits or when you efits and be required 10 repay any Chevalier, Annie King, Mary
filed last year's earninss report. overpayment. You shouldlle aware
The benefits you were pald in 1992 that filing a Federal income tax Nally, Heidi Nelson, Jamie Ord,
wdre based on that estimate: If you return 1\oes not lake the place of fil- Jess•ca Radford, Jeff Stetbem,
earned less than you estimated , ing an annual repon 10 Social Secu- Stacy Woolard. overall.
Ninth grade ·' Rebecca Evans,
yciu may be due ad&lt;litio(lal money. rity. Your report may be made by
Connie
Pooler, Brandi Reeves,
If you made more that you estimat- phone if you chose.
Young,
all A's; Melissa
Lauren
To file an earnings report or 10
ed for 1992, you mar. have to repay
Dempsey,
Renee
Gray, Jessica
some benefits.
get more information call Social
Karr,
Mike
Laughery,
Jennifer
The report should also include Security's roll-free telephone numMora,
Robert
Murphy,
Nicole
Nelan estimate of the earnings you ber, 1- ~00-772- 1213, any business
son,
overall.
expect ID make in 1993. Note !hat day between 7 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Eighth grade · Meredith Crow,
'
Maria Frecker, Lisa Frigiola, Traci
Heines, Martha Holter, all A's;
Christopher Bailey, Candace
Columbia Transmission Corp ., Bunting, Angela Cl)aner.. Eric Dilcompiled by:
Rutland.
lard, Laura Eastman, W1Uiam Fran·
Emmogene Hamilton
to
Jaymar
Inc
.,
Ease
.Agree.
cis,
Christina Grossnickle, Sean ·
Jtecorder, Meigs County, Ohio
Columbia
Ga
s
of
Ohio,
Inc,
Maxey,
Amanda Milhoan, Lisa
•
':Albert R. Dangelo, Wilma L. Columbia Transmission Corp ., Stethem, Tracy White, overall;
Shain Loscar, academic.
DIIJ!gelo, Kenneth B. Young, Belly Rutland.
Marathon
Oil
Co
..
Mem.
agrev.
Seventh grade • Kelli Bailey,
L; Young, 7.6 A. to Jimmie L.
and
Mason
Couoty
E.
Inc,
Porn
Stephanie
Bearbs, Christopher
Young, Karin L. Young, Olive. ,
Viii.
Buchanan,
Brandon Buckley ,
Thomas F. Cummins, Sandra E.
David
Dunkle,
Belly
Dunkle,
Michelle
Caldwell,
Billie Pooler,
Cummins, Lot 7, to William Morparcel,
S.
23,
T-8,
R·l5,
ID
David
all
A's;
Billena
Buchanan,
Bethany
ris, Racine Viii.
.
Duillde,Jr.,
Penny
Dunkle,
Salem.
Cooke,
Jamie
Drake,
Jeremiah
•James R. Mills, Decree, v/s
Kathy L. Blankenship; Helen M. Kehl, Lamar Lyons, Michael
Lii.da Lou Mills, Pomery.
Lemley,
parcel 1.10 A., to State of Weeks, Nicole White, overall;
'Village of Racine (lncorporat·
Ohio,
Salisbury.
Steven Durst, Joanna Gumpf,
~; 0.75 A. parcel, to Ralph NeiD.
Taylor,
tracts
,.
to
Robert
Heather Naylor, academic.
gi!ir, Jr.,Oonald B. Neigle, Sutron.
Lynne
R.
Taylor,
Chester.
Milo B. Hutchison, Betty Ann
Hutchison, 1.000 A., 10 Suvaimab
James w. Suttle, dec'd, Celt. of
Trans., to Greta M. Suule ,
J.
Salisbury.
LOS ANGELES (At&gt;)- "Bev'John M. Brewer, dec'd, affid,to Lebanon,
Board of County Commission- · erly Hills, 902t0" star !an Ziering,
M8riOrie N. Brewer, Olive.
' '!Christopher Robert Lemley, ers, Resolution, ID Family Homes the blond bunk who portrays the
·
' son of a soap opera star, has bought
H~cfl M. Lemley, parcel , 0.30 A. Inc., Meigs.
Karen G. Haines, 1.95 A., T-1N, a Hollywood Hills borne nestled in
to:State of Ohio, Salisbury.
·
•Kathy L. Blankenship, Helen M. R-13 W. to Dana E. Haines , agroveoftrees.
•'He refers 10 it as his tree house
tAmley, parcel 1.10 A., to State of Nathan Haines, Jr., SultOn.
·Charles I. Mugrage, Evelyn M. because the propeny bas lots of
o6io, Salisbury.
Mugrage, parcels, to Charles 1. !tees around it," said Carolyn
~Robe,rt D. Taylor, tracts, to
Mugrage, Trustee, Evelyn M. Garth of Exclusive Realtors. The
Lxnne K. Taylor; Chester.
realtor is the mother of Jenny
James W. Su!tle, dec'd, Cen. of Mugrage,Trustee, Sutton.
Dana C. Hysell, June Hysell, Garth, another "Beverly Hills,
Tians., to Greta M. · Suttle,
1.1!181on.
. 9.24 A. 1D Dana R. Hysell, Janet L. 90210" star.
·
Terms of the sale were private,
Board of County Commission- HyseU, Meigs.
Charles Calhoun, Ease Agree, 10 but the Los Angeles Times ~­
~ Relolution, 10 Family Homes,
Columbia
Gas of Ohio, Inc, ed Sunday !hat Ziering, who IS in
Inl.; Meigs. '
~G. Haines, 1.9S A., T-lN,
Columbia Transmission Co~p ., his 20s, paid close to the $585,000
asking price.
Rl'13 W. to Dana E. Haines, Rutland.
N - Haines, Jr., SultOn.
Jaymar Inc., Ease Agree. to - - - - - - - - - tcharles I.. Mugrage, Evelyn M. Columbia Gas of Ohio, Inc
lhln9t .. buut•f In tho
Milgrage, parcels, to Charles I. Columbia Transmission Corp .:
Mugr11ge, Trustee, Evelyn M. Rutland.
Marathon Oil Co., Mem. al!rev.
Magragc,Trustee, Sutton.
~Dana C. Hysell, June Hysell, and Mason County E. Inc, Porn
ViU.
·
~ A. ID ~a R. Hysell, Jan¢! L.
David
Dunkle,
Beuy
Dunkle,
H~,Meigs. •
parcel,
S.
23,
T-8,
R-15,
1D
David
Charles Calhoun, Ease Agree, 10
Dunkle,Jr.,
Penny
Dunkle,
Salem.
. .·
Columbia Gas of Ohio, -Inc ,

,..!IC8ll,

.;&gt;

·

JOY CLARK

Clark ordained
Joy E: Clark; associate pastOr of
the First Church of GOd, Athens,
was recently ordained in ali Ordination service at the church.
Pastor William Shepler gave the
ordination sermon and ."Jan and
Kathy" were guest singers.
Mrs. Clark has completed the
necessary requirements of the
Church of God and is enrolled in
the cOntinuing .Education Program
through the Center for Pastoral
Studies, Anderson University,
Anderson, Ind. She is marrie4 10
Larry Clark and they have three
children, Tamra Lyons, Racine;
Penny Barker, New Haven, W.Va.;
and Wendy Claric, at home. They
also have !WO grandsoos, Jonathan
and Steven Lyona.
· The couple resides in Mi~dleport.
.

~carnpsaresta!Tedwith.Md-

ical personnel and counselors to
assist children with special needs.
Disruptions in
ribed diets and
medical scbedu~n not occur.
The eotire camp tuition for tach
child is paid by the American Ccn·
ter Society ~ugh individual and
group donations specifically designated for·the Camp Friendship program.

DOWNING CIILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

INSUUNCE

·111 Second St., PIIIHI'oy

YOUR INDEPEilDENJ
AGENTS SEIVING
· MEIIS COUNTY
SINCE 1161

JOHN WADE, M.D., .INC.
·E•~t No• &amp; Throat •Allergy •Hiarlng Aida · '

··

•Head &amp; Neck Surgery

QUALITY CARE FOR YOUR FAMILY
'

•

.

Medleare &amp; UMWA AMignmeola Ac~eptecl

Suite 112 Valley Drive, Pt. Plea•••t,

Hearing Aid?

Words

1

it denied me the oppc:wtunity 10 len ~
lhatmoncydoclll'tgruwon Rei, as ~
many of your n:adcn would have ~
you believe. 1 will moembc-1 lheU i
JeiiCIQiity for aliklime. perticulldy , :
when it comes time 10 aeud childnll • •
of my own off 10 follow lhCir :
drclml. 1 will do for them what my • ..
IBa111 did for me. •• GRADUA1E - !

an

H•~ril.

RATES
Days

!

'

Marketplace

dlcdc taw.-d repayment of tblt loin. •

Their decision Dot 10 charge me • :
imaal has 1101 spoiled me nor has · :

·:·

·;~
'
..
A

Chicago, Ill. - A free offer o(
special interest to those who hear~'
but do not understand words:7
'
•has been announced, by Beltone.' ~ ~.
A non-operating model of the:~'
smallest hearing aid Bellone'.
has e\oer developed will be given.'·'
absolutely free to anyone re-~:·
questing it.
It's yours for the asking, sci;~
send for it now. It is not a reah!• ·
hearing aid, but it will show yo~:
how tiny hearing help can hi•"
The actual aid Weighs less tharl:~
an eighth of an ounce, and it fil$~t
completely into the ear canal. ·•
These models ~ free, so we~.
suggest you write for yours now.~ 1
. there ts. no cost; and cer-.:&gt;
l\1
Again,
tainly no obligation. Although ll'l~
hearing aid may not . help
everyone, more and more people' il
•with hearing losses are bein£~
helped. For your free sampl~­
_send your name,. address, and~
phone nu111ber today to: Depart.;~
ment 081141, Bel tone Electronic&amp;.,
Corporation, 4201 West Victorilf '
Street, Chicago, lllinois 60646n

PWllc Notice

Rate

15
15
15
15
15

Over 15 Words

$4.00
$6.00
$9.00
$13.00
$1.3(1/day

$ .20
$.30

$.42
$.60

$.05/day

Ratas ue for consecutive runs, broken up days will be
cha!ged for each day u separate ada.

GET RESULTS • i'An'!

Totll Other Debt &amp;.nice
Fund.:..............".... ·7•672·87
GRAND TOTAL DEBT
SERVICE..............$7,&amp;72 ·87
SecUon 8. Thol lhero be
lpproprloted from the
1
o ll ow I n11
C A Pl TAL
PROJECTS FUNDS.
FMon! Gronl Fund ( - )
250 C.pllll OuUay $7,322.73
Tolll Fed-1 Gront
Fund ...............- ...$7,322.73
GRAND TOTALCAPlTAL
PROJECTS FUND APPRO.
PRIATION._.._, ... $7,322.73
S.CUon 7. Thot th.,• be
oppropJlotod from tho
following ENTERPRISE
FUNDS.
WollrFund

PubDc Not'ce
NOTICE 10 BIDDERS

The lloenl of Ednclllon of

FOREVER
BRONZE
TANNING

E111.,n LOCII School Dl•
trlct doelroe to receive
...ted bid1 on tho
lollowl119:
Building ond Peroonol
Property lno..-.,oe
hi orclor lo be c:Onaidwecl
ott ooolod btdo ohotl bo
rocllv..t In lho trooeuror'a
olfico by 12 o'clock noon
on:
Mlrch 10, 1!1113
Soid 8oo1d of Educotion
roaiH'Voo tho right lo ICCOpt
or re(oct .,y end Ill port. of
ony .,dIll bldo.
IIOoord of Educotion
E•tem l.oc8l .Schoot
Offlco
.
Dl• tricl
E1-5-A 210 "-onal
Eloloe Booton, Tr•our•
S.V.....
3lliOO SR 7
211 8118rlnl
Reodevllle, Ohki 45772
75,000 00 (1) 25: (2) 1, 8, 15, 4tc ..
212&amp;.~;;...
Benlltta ........,_ ••• 17.eoo.oo
Public Notice
230 Con118CIUil

w.a....

SwHf.tSrt S~l1l
14 SESSIOIS- 114

NO. 111 '
ANNUAL APPROPRIATION
ORDINANCE
An ORDINANCE to 111k1
opproprlellono for Cunent
Expon••• and other
Erpondlt- of the VllllfiO
of Pomoror,SIIIo of Ohio,
during lhl llocol r••r
llllflng Dlolmber 11, 11183.
Section 1. BE IT
ORDINANCE

:r-::-~~~~~~:

,:-~:",·,. ..

Slota of hlo, !hot, to
provide for tho ourront
oxpon .. , and other
oxpondlluroo of lho oald ·
VIllage of POmoror during
lho fteoal yoor ending
D_,bor 31, 18!13, tho
following oumo be ond they
•r• hwe by_!"' ••ftda ond
:t~ropr111.,. 11 o11owe,

Tolll Olflco.......... 278,014.88
E1·11-E Pumping
240 Sui&gt;Dit.. ond
.
Mllo!lito ............. 15,000.00
Tolll Pumplng.......15,000.00
E1-5-J Dlllrlbullon
250 No•DII&gt;l
000·00
T~I1D":!::;bu
... -u'0"""!!•
000 00
11
Ei+o
240 ::CpU• end
~
ale
2 4110 oo
-.-......... ' .
Tolllllotwa
.............
2,400.110
Total
Wlllr Fund
Approprlollon ............ $300,4114 ...
PROGRAM
V- BASIC
UTIUTY SERVICEs!
S.nlt F nd
Ill'
u
E2~A240 s tlo1 111d
...,..
upp
llllotllla .............. ll5,825.17
825 17
•
E2-6-J 250 Nollollobt
Servtoo.......--...51i,OOO.OO
Tolll Other uFund
55 000.00
Tolll si';;jj;,j's;;_ Fund
$150•......
•••17
·..
·~
Depollll
Refunded
~..--n"' m- 25 013.88
- • ''
... '
Tolll Udlllt.. Dopoolte ·
Fund Approprt- ·
otiona ..............-$25,013.88
GRAND TOTAL ENTEII. PRISE FUNDS APPRO.

St.lt. 7

915-4473
667·6179

YOUNG'S

UCINE GUN
CLUI
GUN SHOOTS
SUNDAYS
1:00 P.M.

Clles•iro,

CARPENTER SERVIa
oncl Plumbing

Seasoned,
$40.00 a Load
. Pelivered.

OPEN TO PUBLIC
12 GAUGE ONLY .
FACTORY CHOKE
ENFORCED

(614) 992·5449
121311921lfn

EVERY THURSDAY

MAINTENANCE

EAGLES
CLUB

949·2391or
1·800·137·1460

a.i.ro .. -, . .

' Lawn -lng,

FerUilzlng, W-ng, Md
Seodl"9.
Shrub lnd TrH :rr1mml1111.
I RomOIIIl

Public Notice

6:45p.m.
Special Early Bird

POIIIROY, Oli. 45769

Thj• ad good for 1
FREE card.
Lie. No, 0051·32

992·6193

FIREWOOD FOR SALE

MICROWAVE OVEN
••IIVCI UPAII
llLIIAIU
lrl1l:.rllltt Or ••

=-'·tlon

KEN'S DlitNCE
.
SERVICE
992·5335 or

' $tOO Payoff

(Dovolofl-.
1-NMa)

FrM EltlmatH

==;,-.:;;J:•

IN POMEROY

INDIVIDUALS
end BUSINESSES
113Y. W. SECOIID ST.

R-ntlaiA Comm.....l

.Soollon 2. Thol thwe bo
epproprloted from tho
GENERAL FUND:
PROGRAM 1- SECURITY
OF PERSONS AND
PROPERTY
A1·1·A Polloe Law
Enlor-•nt
210 Pwno•l Sorvloeo
211SIIuloo/
2
:=~.~~ 4,401.11 ~~~~9:-iii!::·:::
2~.;;;.;~... $127,000.00
Tolll RocrMilon ·
opproprloled from tho
. Bonollte................35,000.00 Progl'ltn ...............~4,401.11 mUST AND AGS.CY
240 Supplloa 1nd
Tolll Progrom.lll- Lolouro · FUNDS.
llltorlola-.......... 30,000.00 Time Acllvlllal ...... 4,401.18 POLICE DISABlUTY AND
T-Poloel.lw
Olh• Spoolll Rownue
. PENSION FUND
~ ......112,000.00
Fun do .
.
PROGRAM 1-SECURITY
Toll! Progrom 188-3-A Fire
RSONS AND
Soouottr of Pwnono end
210 P._nol Servlcoe
OF ~ioPERTY
Proput~·-·--$112,000.00
211 Slllrlnl
B·11·212 Employ. .'
PROGRAM V- BASIC
.2~~k;'y;;......... 5,500.00 Shoro.....................5,513.12
U11UTY SERVICES
a-~
234 Tu ........................ 200.110
A1.U. Elaotrlo Ullllty
........11 ........... ........ 1110.110 Tolll Pollee D111bWty ond
240 Suppllo11nd
·
Supplt.. end. · •• P8nalon Fund......$5,713.12
............... _ ......... 3.500.00 240Motarlllo..............
48•513PROGRAM VII- GENEI'IAL
A1+AGII Ulllhy
234 Tu Dlelrlbu·
.GOVERNMENT
'
tlon •..:...................... 7,000.00 Endowm•t Fund '· ·
Ill
... ............ 1,1110.00 Tolll Flre., ............. Sll,113.14 "-:2;
ft18 •57
111-f.J Fire Truoll
....,.,
_........ 42'"
T- Proa•rw V- Bllllo
Other En wmonl Fund
= = ' C I I ........eao.oo 250 No•llobt
a-•-S2 OOOJIO PwJietulf C....-4,811.51
P
VI- GENERAL
-·---- •
Tolll for Endowment Fund
GOVERNMENT
Tolll
Fire
liudi
..... 32,000JIO
aon1••
BI-1·A
....
ty
'
,,. _....,, ,.....
: : • n d Admlnle·
TOTAL musT
212 Unlforme ......... 5,214.81 AGENCY FUNDS APPf10.
.., ;......... . .to••
~7·A
250 Pwm ltalw •• ,... .PR1Jm0N_......$53,24U5
"!1\UHirlea! . ·
,u._...._,_ .........14,8.... , TOTAL ALL APPRO.
w11111 .....;;...~....... 42,ooo.oo BI-5-A 240 Ulllty .. 18,851.SO , PR!AllONS...$1,328,758.57
212 f"oloyM
234 TII ...............- ... 2,000,GO (2) 8 15, 22 310
'
'
' ·
p
··"··"········... 14,500.00 Tolll Olher Spodll
, r•niTrono·
Funde......- .......132,722.82
Public Notice
porlltlon...................soo.oo GRAND TOTAL SPECIAL
240 Supptt.. and ,
REVE!'IUE FUND APPR9PUBLIC NOTICE
· lllll!'ioifa............38,000.110
PR!ATION......-$277,316.88
FOR BALE
Saotlon 5. thol lh. . be
lhe ogency ot lho obove
ro:r::~i.d.Aii~:oo oppror,rtolod from ' tho 11U Dodge Rom Von for eddrooa,
wlth 1 copy lo
tratlw OfllcM ..;.;lii,OOO.OO follow ng DEBT SERVICE lllo. BMlod blda wlll be Ohlo Deportment
FUNDS.
rooelvocl unlll Fobruery 17, Troneportallon, Dlvlolono
A1·7·B Leglalatlve Acllvl. laoi(Coundl)
GENERAL OBUGATION 1803. Righi Ia rooorvecl lo Public Tronoportotlon,
FUND
rotu.. all bldo. Contoot South Front St., Room 711,
210 P\oi!NMl SorviCH
Oth• Debt ServlooFund
Wando Vlnlng al IKI2•2161 Columbuo, Ohlo . 43211·
211BIIorlall
for more lnlormoUon.
0811; Att~ntlon Deputy
~!0:;;;'""''"5,500.00 D-X·7 210 Bulldl"9
Fund.......................7,872.87 (2) 4, s, I, 3to ,
dlroclor.
.
Bonoll!l.-.-........... 250.00 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1 ·(2)1, 15,2tc

...

WICK'S
SERVICE

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and

REMOVAL

36970 Ball R11 Road
Po,.,.y,OIIio

•LIGHT HAULING
-FIREWOOD

SIZED LIMESTONE

BILL SLACK.

992·3470

915-2561

992-2269

. OWNER:
Jeff Wic..rsham .

USED RAILROAD
IMPROVE YOUR
MORTGAGE
SITUATION.
REDUC~

AND/OR ·
CONSOLIDATE.
NEW LOANS
ALSO.
. 614-992-7523

240=···•nct

="'-lion ....

Toll! Leglalatlft

(614}

ORAND TOTAL GENERAL
FUND APPfiO.

992-2259
REDUCED! Spaclouo log home with 2208· sq. !t. 3
badlooma, 2 baths, oeltng f8nl, buUIIn ohelvlnglcablnets,
latge wrap I&lt;OUI1d potch, n-r heal pump, 3 112 acral,
2 outbuildings. Many unique foatu~esl Now 18ducod to
$77,500

Accident•Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

DRIVEWAY WORK

aid UMESTONE

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent

DEUVERY SERVICE

Box 189

REASONABlE RATES

Middleport, o•io 45760

992·7553 ·.

· (614) 843•5264

NEW USTING· Stloctacular conltmporel')' home wilh 3
beclroomo, 2 bethi. sun porch, decking, appliances,
fin!place, ~~~. swimming pond, fish pond, shed and
NEW USTIIG- B11h111 Rd. - 8 112 acres with 1978 12 X
65 mobile home ond older houao, inclu•a 2 aeptle
syaltlma, TPC , F.A.N.G. lnd B.B. heal S23,000
8018

utilities on lite LCD water,

l'daQe togethel' lo 1111118 I pe!l8clhomeoltel

-(--~-.-20.-.oo

T_,
llrwteona.wllon
I Rnan

,,
I-

'regardless of income
"regardless of grades
."pkls $20k guaranteed loan
'reganlless of credit

To collllct your scholarship money ,
cell 614885 3556
Open Mon.·Ff1. 10.7 or Sat 1D-4

UCIIIE, OHIO
614·949·2202

61 ...74

:t-11-.pd.

IILP THE IFOIT TO llllll A PIOSPIIOUS
MUlE fOI IUIGS COUNTY
IILP US IN 0111 ATaPT 10 GEr INIIUSTIT FOI
IEIGS GUm
, ..
WANTED: 5 11 6 ACRES OF IBAIIYILY. RAT lAND:

CALIFORNIA
-TANS .
v.latfiN ·~·

.

...............
......
u ......... •u

(1)111 ................. .
(2) Wlllt
tl) ... ....

s...

PIHI1 P&amp;llf or .., Pitlla•

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

240 .........nd
.
Mlllrlile----11,11•. 1.

for all college bound students.

"Helping Yo• To Recover Yolll' Ir~vutmerll"
Chun:h, Home, Trvck, Boat, Auto
and Office s..tlng

on lot 3 bedrooms, 2 bathe, newer heat pump,
appllancao, CIA. flrept- okktlng. atepa. (like now) .

IU-22111-TI'\E NUMBER 11J KNOW WHEN YOU'RE
BUYING OR SELUNG A HOMEI EXPERIENCED AND
READY TO SERVE YOUR NEEDSI

Guaranteed Scholarship Money

Snodgrass Up.olstery

paved Rd. $7,500-1888 2A X52 Manufacalntd home now

~.!100.

f1201113t\fn

·~

extra cabin $88.000

LAUREL CUFF- 1+

1127193

Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health •

POMEROY, 011.

$10,!100

llrUCIGon--.... 111,211.11

Sunc;tay . Mono•v - Closed

AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE and
ACCIDENT INSUUNCE COMPANY

WORK, .

MIDDLEPORT· Commercial building fully ronted apta .
upallln, bualneaa clownalllrl. Some ,._ remoctoli119
hu been complel9&lt;1. Good lOCIItion, good monthly
lncomel $53,000
•
RUTLAND- Brick SL • 1 ft- frame home 2 bedrooms,
one cor garege, fruit traea, garden apace, oppllancea.

211........,
=---.10,000.00
211
...,..

(le S•••ity C.Us)

2/12192/tfn

CHARLIE'S
SMALL DOZER

'

111111 of tMI,IIO.OO.

614-949·2101. 949·2860
., 915·3839

104 Mulberry Avenue
Pomeroy. OH 45769

A1·7-G 234 Aucltor'e a
·T....- . F-....1,000.110
A1·7·X 230 Con-I

A1·7·X 273 Workmon'o
~n .... 11,fi®.OO
Totll Other 111M of
F..,. ..............S11li,!IOO.OO
111ot1ot1 3. Thll thoro be
epproprlolod from tho
GENERAL FUND for con·
..g1nclu tor pwpo•n nol
.AIIierwiH provided lor, to
~tie oxpendod In -dlnco
with tho provlelo'na
llootloa 1701.40, II. C.,

FREE ESTIMATES

TueSday · Wednesday · Fr iday- 9 130 a . m . - 5 :30P.m .
Thursd•Y · Saturday - 10: 00 a .m . . 3 : 00P. m .

Olh• GoMfll Gov........

n.ner.r........-.100,000.00

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

D. A. BOSTON
EICAYATING

ki~ICII .................2,000.00

Oov•nnt•l.... $131,250.00
Olhor 111M of Fundo
At·7-Am

. New Homes • VInyl Siding
New Garages • ~acemant Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
,

HOURS:

TOIII Solldlor..........2,000.110

Gova•••t·-··..
T- Progrom Vll4on-l

·

Real Estate General

~--·-··-·.11,750.00

Prlloner8 ..............1,000.00
Toll! Other Gen•al
10,000.00

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

•BACKHOE
•TRACK
" LOADER
•TRUCKING

A1•7•D Clerlc/TrMIUIW
210 ,__I Servt211..._...,
2~;\":.pj;y;e·- .... 11,000.00
Bonalte ...:............. 2,SOO.il0
Toll! a.tu
r - -............. 17,$00.110
A1·7·A llollaltor
230Conlf101Ual

len'lllll.

sto,&amp;c=.,.
FlEE ES1
U

1001 lllfll FEL 20

HARDWOOD

Servlcle.-·-·---10,000.00

oc......
......n..

' 6637

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE

l---------

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

limit 2 Per Cuetomer

949·2126

240 Sui&gt;Dit.. .....

Public Notice
·.
B1:..C Slrwl Cloonl"9,
.Snow end 1oo Romovol
...
240 Suppt'- 1 ••
lllllrleto ..........- ..2,000.00
T- Slroet CIMnlng, Snow
a loo ~V81.-..2,fN!II.OO
Totll Slroet Co111trucllon,
MllnllniiiCe ond Repair
Fund ..............-117,211.81
B2+B 240 Suppttoo 111d
-""terlale...............8•357·12
Tr~ pros~!a,hwa
_ y •nd
·-·~·
Fund ................- ....8,357.12
Totll Progrom VI.
TronaporiiUon$125,574.03
PROGRAM 1- PUBLIC
HEALTH SERVICES
B3-2-A Cemetery
210 Plrooiuolllervt211, Slllrlnl
·
w
111•mp_toy
.......
............. $800.00
2122 E
Bonlll!1 ................... 150.00
240 Sui&gt;Dit.. ond
llllerlite-.......... 13,JOI.W
~til"ft....
•o .....o~~ry...... , ...
........
Totll Progrom ll - Publo
H•tlh S.rvlc 11 ...14,151.17
PROGRAM Ill- PARKS a
RECREATION FUND
LEISURE TillE
AcnvmEs
BS-3-A R-Uon Progrom

SIZED UMESTONE
FOR SAlE
Call. 614-992·

............i..

~~~~:;.:~:;:=r:=======~
llllollala-.......
•
250
C.pllll Outley150,481.81
24,873.2i
PWIIC Notice

Quilty
Stone Co.

IISSILL I IIIII
COWIIUmOI

lntt: tiHU1 or hltf'•

·
TROLLEY 1111'101 CUFn
992-IMt
.

\•

•
I

.

�.
p

q

zmss I
KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by LaiTy WriiJit

· 3 AI'IIIOUIIC*MIII

71

Autos for S8le

1MI

a..

Cit II

,114'11

-"-111_ _,.111101-

......

~

5

• ........

1117 Fonl - · Yen,

.ACROSS •

.
:

.
Ill&lt;· .

PHILLIP
ALDER

....

K.pl. Lw lluot- To :
_,.~
--:~

n •

D

• • ' ......

1111 Honda
71,11110m1., -

• ,. ... 2144 .... epm.

..-.1,

-

opoool,

..........o, . . . . ..

..-. =·
...1110. ~

2

..

EEK AND MEEK •

"geL.• oJia .-It

EAST

j'

1

.4

1 ,....... . .,......

11114.
,..

enl Pupploo,

I •

,............ IJIIW15.-.

-lo· •
-....-.

Wilt -·

SOUTH

Clwalf••

*·

llpoft.

go back to plowing the whole runwayl "

+s

11

Help Wanted

Wesl

L.o0o10To11_?y_
ll'lllot:IIIL ·

LPN, PH

HAVE TO STAY
AFTER SCHOOL?

,

DerieiiCII.
, _ -. . .. . .
phyolclonos.nd
·
·- .
c.s· caM of- Point
.,. .
2

~...
:1111025510.
lllln
,._
.... wv

TH' T~ACHER .
CAUGHT ME
PASSIN' A NOTE TO
MARY SETH

I ASKED HER
WHAT WAS
9 TIMES 8 '

Opening lead:

I.... ...

I

~AYE

'

SAND TRAP

A NEW

RUNS

PIIILOSOP~'I' ..

THROU6~ IT"'

• LI!=E IS LIKE
A 60LF'
COV~SE''

.-

11 . Help wanted

FRANK AND ERNEST

•a'ION" ALL ARIIAIII- your

with ... -'II OOMpMJ'. 1.a 112 ase.

ALL Y l l d - - Po Polclln

-.tho
w..clly-........
DEADUHE: 2:00 p.m.
1ho 1111 .. to .....

=r..== ..-::.
,...

8

y.

~;;;

lho

A-IAR-ol"**ey

8pooro, :IOW75-1421.

•

Chofo

Cllppor

Go.=,

And

FACTORY
RSJSCT.
T-SHIRTS
. ...

~-'kt~..,:Une
aooldal"r'-~
ooob, IM1 •

phone·-:=

wWih

PubUcSele

No

=:.....:zoe:·'"' 571

&amp; Auction

In...

. • Route 7,

·~~-

f•. .•

'

Elm 11&lt;&gt;noJ Wllh- a- Col
~~ lpoclll Olfor, 1 -

•
•

•

E.Il..Mnced ...,.
~~ On
Frldop For ,5 !loin, lo
I

lilpeMI:cadAnd Nne flefeNn..

oee, 114 411 0111 After I

-.·rm Supptro•;
,\ Lr•JPSiock

P.ll.

Halrolyltol
-:
Pokl
f14-448-72t7.
I
- - - Wogoo.
L.- • - DI1111Wo Choln
Z2 Pooplo
To- Wart&lt;
IIMICiilllly.
No
f'
W· Wa WUI Tniln. QID
Por Wook To Stilt II You Cluollly.

54 ••cllllneoul
•• rchlnclllt

li..,....._

-For·- -·

. ' .:

. . . WAil

4113.

Z l I P.M.,

~'(

81 Farm Equlpmtnt
, ....._, ,,,. a. PI, lnl•
;::;"ol• rool good lhlpo,

-.J

I~

Mft. 1110 Lw lo!trollor,
..... ftrm, ... llWI:I :1471

-. .....

_..,
EAANOAEAT···

_____

~~~~;~~~ =&gt;""

Do LOVE To ~ An
cling COftCI!II In Plfly Plan ~ "". 71 •
lndl- In Yoolr AIOo To

-.. . .. . -.

oae..

Olmoltllll'lll Qulllly
TooiO, No llo!Mrloo, llo ~
Dleemlll'll Your Own Hra. NO

..
-

.

73 Va.ns &amp; 4 WD's

..

trucll-

brood

eolll14.....3179 boloro apm.

Ch-.'!1..

1111\

,.,.,_!35o;'·

llcyl.,

Motorcycles

74

~

•

..

1NI ~ 1&lt;87'1[

.H CIR.:JIO, blff
..... billa, Z,411C1 .......
"l'l":~r~
IIIIo ..-u

•

Q. I think I overuse the word BUT.
Are ihere any rules or hints you can
give me?

MORTY ~EKLEAND

...........
15.

HeRE: O:W.Ee M.R. ·
.CAAI-JWILI...Y, CX.IR

Auto Pane&amp;

N E:W PRINC 1131\1...

HE'S t50T A BIEr
SMILEON HIS
Fi6.CE . .

A. If you think you're overusing any
word, then you probably are. Remember that BUT should always indicate a contradiction or change in
thought. &lt;For example, in "f like ice
cream, but vanilla is a good flavor,"
BUT should probably be replaced by
ANDJ From now on, watch out for this
overworked conjunction, and &lt;not
"but") try never to use more than one
BUT in any sentence.

I DIDN'T !&lt;NON
PR!MCIA"' s
COULDSM!I...e.

=. II=

:-~~Ac~c!e~··~o~ne~·~--

-.

Tro.-loM, Uood • :

lla~lngol HI; '
1o11n 114471- ·1

owner

OIIIIIICKS.

2213. Panwtoy: 114-lb-ltoa.

Coli RITA Aftor.•oao

-

lti-271-40331COI.LECT)

43 Danllh

money
45 Piddle
48 Hll'¥eot ·
aoddlll
47 !. oiPA
48 Sphere
.40 Ba•rlik•
52 Rua1ltin now1

Kld21 Ev•d• •

lgtnCY
54 Ironia heroIna Jane56 lllamo abbr.
57 -Formeriy
58 Part of oye
59 Yaomlno

IUffil

DOWN

..
1 Allay-

7 ftlll-clrryiQ

3 Groove in

8 Actren

2

u.. lhrlfUiy

tlilp

.'

-,

ThUrl!lllt

~·of

.,

Olllllbllllr· "'
Cobb
.:·
10 Wild buffalo -

baird

4 Not pretty
5 A Stooge

6 SIZI of llltol

11 Till
"
10 A velllcll ::::
18 Hilton em •-'
21 Actot Yul :::'
22 UnuiUil
23 Flrtno...,. •·
cero(lbbr~T ;
. ..

24 Tip

25Sponlshaolll
'-

+K

Something MUTABLE &lt; "MYOO·
tuh -bul") can be changed or reshaped:
"The monster took ·several mutable
shapes."· Consider unsuitable any
spelling of the adjective MUTABLE
that doesn't end like UNSUITABLE.

1113 Branco, full lit•, 4WD, P&amp;,..,.
PI, •ut01Ht5c, nllw Urn. n. .;:
muffler, FOil oondHion, n.~
m:;.i'lducod lo 13000 010,,
•
7733.
~.

7 Ton-k I'* FMd Bin Wllh
...._ fNO. 114 141 M24.

~
·~-· -­

411nsecl
42 SoYIII Union
(lbbr.)

28 l!gg drink

28 Genllc
Tlibllacrljt'
:zt
_ ,
llrfll (lbbr.t
30 Antolopee · '

3111olllntnW,
33Unc-.. .
moll dlpt. " ·
34 Angar
37 1.11&lt;1 (lUll:~!.:
311 Tunt lo bolll

(1 llbllclll-

42
~~~~43 Awtreof ,-;
44- O'NNI ;..,

45 Reidy - not
48 llllnert' fttldl

48 Grevll rtdg'
40 Colfll

..

. clllpeftHr • f~

50 Group of .-:

P- .

51 Ona (Oar.); "
53 E. of GA ;;:
55 Conte 111tollhful

WL

' F 8 .L W · S

" •

-~

.,
...

l

FMXUWUHIMLL

·.~·

·• I

Fw ·uv .·

OMIMWTWUH

X

AXIS

YGBIOML

WY

BUIMLL

UGWLM

..
•..

DW'!YMFWYO
.
.
v

.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Golf is a ·puzzle without an answer. There Is no
.way to ligure it out." - Gary Player .

. '::~~t;~' e~~clllA~Lti-!fs· ....
WOIO

,ldltod by ClAY I. ,OUAN

Rttarrange letters· of
O four
scrambled words

the

:

J

•• •
'";
.:~

.

"

...

., ,~ '

'f!-lillllt..,..-........,_,-.....

be.. ~
low to form four sirnple words.

I

DIGGEN

~?

,.

SmoH

.....
71 hoy · All
cond.I04-m.c11.

'

~

40 Word o
neg1Uon

/lEN..';) Willi.£ I ~ VI';)ITIMC:o

low poeftlo; 114-l'IM416.

- . .-~~~~
71 hoylilno.
. II hoylilno.
l n- l lioMI 1GI bal 1 n dloo. Clehl

--

. ..

li,

170 llt.ll - · ~ PI,
PTO, • • aOod cond.;
lloaom pion; .... iillltly lrollor,

Fl&amp;TP'
R

PIN aou •• EXTRA

CA&amp;H~H

,.BOR.NLOSER
010
FE£0'1'00

owners' org .
311 French/"

Eul
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

In a British publication, Tom Scotl
described New Zealand thus: "Terri·
ble tragedy in the South Seas. Three
million people trapped alive! '
.
In my ezperience, New Zealanders
don't alfee with tbis view. The country's Isolation is more a plus than a
minus. Even though it takes a major
expedition to reach most other coun·
tries, the residents do manage it. And
there aren't hordes of tourists ruining
tbe country's unique beauty.
An unusually large percentage of
the population are enthusiastic bridge
players. Today's deal was declared by
Malcolm Mayer, many times a Kiwi
international.
Wben a weak hand with a couple of
useful nuggets faees a powerhouse, often a natural system struggles. My
suggested auction isn't il'tended·to be
perfec\, but siz hearts is th~ ideal spot.
(Tbe original .auction was totally
artHicial.) ,
After winning with dummy's club
ace, Mayer cashed the A·K of
preparing to claim. But when East discarded, be bad to regroup, Mayer unblocked dummy's A·Kc~o~~f-=~~:~~
ruffed a club in band and
J of spades, carefully discarding
monds from the dummy. ·
Next came a low diamond. As ·
couldo't benefit West to ruff~~;~ J
loser, be threw a club. Mayer
another club to get back to band,
having won the fin! 10 tricks.
.
Dwruriy bad the bear! sill and A-9 of
diamonds. Declarer held the heart
queen and H of diamonds. West retained tbe spade 10 and J-8 of hearts.
When South led a diamond, West was
beld to one trick.

AND~A

Employment Serv1ces

andTX

38 WedlnO bird
38 Flrewm

Down Under,
but not down

.. -

llol&gt;yoll,
Holth lrtct.
........
......- -

u..

emlndl8ns
25 Hockey ore1t
Bobby28 South of
Silk.

lMWWtoPreu'JIIIPulle

33 BUZZing
35 a.tw- AZ

---'

.......................
1171-D01.

Norlb

2+

s•

WHY DID YOU

allkw• -

10 Enl ol Tenn.
20 Purch211nvantor
Frlnkln
22 Sltlde~..

32 Chlmlcel

Pass 3t
Pass
Pass · Pass

BARNEY

1-Doy. -1111...... GaYrlllllld. 1M t Aha .._
full limo · p

t5 Sm•ll otone .

1lllt1doW

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: North

-1-------:---r-----....;.--~

ono

&amp;1111

27 SUIIIble
28 Jazz pl1yor

+QJ61
.QIOU2
t?;3

eo,700rnl.,
Plonew .....
~iitg ..... I'M 148 1144 after

"I hate these airport cutbacks. I wish they 'd

IIIII ....., ITO I - Old.
Nlntl. . RDid.IM 4tl Of'lt.

O.lhatlu

tQJ 1084
+J8732

MJHBE. ...

-----·-·

·-·---~·
ForW.c.11111 , . . . . .
I •

8lileld

a Mormon

23 Southw..t·

+s 4

Glvuway

L)

•

NORTH
!-1-IJ
+AK
.AK6
tAK962
+A106

l

Covollor ZM, 1

1 Abova (poal.l
4 C...llr of
12 Type ot Iuber
13 Do..rtlnAIII
14Bracklnrldge

Accon1 LXI :
Of"Y wllil .
. . , velour .......... tunroof, •

4&gt;.

The World Almanac• cro••word Puzzle · ~

BRIDGE

-Comr. -~
.....,.... • o.t, - ~

. . AIIIl

IIIUIT • 11 YIIS. w.TAR CO.

Tl1e Dally Sentinel-Page . 8 .

Ohlci

» . llllnor•·

-- - - -

GFFFII'

Wl'l'llt-. P.W PU-.

•

Monday, February 8, 1993

Monday, February 8, 1~

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

'

llllkt, 0110 1011 lruck :

l'ldlllorl,lloor ......
R A~lpiOy, WV.I7I.JIU Dr 1 . ~

~I

....;.:.N~E:;.::Q._,:E:....;,U,........II~
...~:·

Gal to her date: "Why do

men pay more attention to a

I
~===:::::'I.,
gi~s beauty than her brainS?"

I I

~

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Date: "A guy can be stupid, but
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by fil ling in the missing words
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from step No. 3 below.

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PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
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Misuse - Flute • Rough · Renown · SOMETHING
I had made a small wager on lhe outcome of a football
ga~e. After paying elf the bet to my grandfather he
·remrnded me that gambling was a way of geHing nothing
lor SOMETHING.

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Se rv1 ces
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1111Coi!M,IM-3INI70.
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Thm your clutter into ctuh,
S.til it the em way.. ·kr phone,
. no need to leave your home.
Plqce your dquified ad todo,y!
15 word. or lefl, 3 do,p,
3 pqpera, 15.40 paid in advance.

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·romanoa and you'U ftnd h. '1111 AllfOo
lirlplt Matc:ttmlk• lnltMIII' !II oIlia

• you. Mall $2 ptuo o long, 1111-ad·
dreeeed. llamped envetope to Matchmaker, clo this - - · P.O. Box
91428, ~. OH 44101-3-428.
...:.1 (fib. »-"IMII 20) Think
loday bllorl putting additional .
fUndi Into an ln-lmentthaloo tor hll
rllher oour. h's- for you to eeriOUIIy lhll entire lllulllon.
..... (Malott 21·Aprll 11) a. cooper·
au.. todiy, but don't matce concallona tor 1111 Nkl of axpedllnc)l. Restructuring • dNI could walcen ft for
both you ond 1111 other guy.
TAUIIUI (april. Mer 101 butlll and
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IIJI OUIIbllltiea

W:fll not

• - - today, ll1l1ouglt 1'011 might
be Inclined tO .._lftey will. Wlta!IY•
1r you ltlgiiCIIodty could be IliON dll·
11cu1t to do letw.
11111111 ,..., 1 1 - . , Roonance
rnu11 bl hlndted tn a ~ M''onate,
COIIIk!WMa rnannar tOday. 11 not, 1'011
may do 10114thlng lttll oou1c1 ll'fwaty
hllrl 1111 0111 you love•
CAilc:lll C"'- 11....., Jl) 1]18you try lo lmpras otltefa today, lhlltlll
lhothiO you'ral!ll to be. If you -•o
mMI 1 IIOOCI, lilting lmpmilon, be
both ltiiUrll ond llnclrl.
LaO I - D-AIIIo II) ~ pr\'

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lake ctf'l! of

-•Ilia merited today, but don'! use
flattery lor pilrpooes ol manlpulallon.

Olherl will perce~... vour lntanllons ond

not like lham.
VSIIGO (Aug. 23-lepl. :121 Ulullly you
are a pruden! ond Clrelullhopper, but
!oday you Could be knowingly utro••·
gant ond PlY more for IOIMihlng thon It
Ia reilly worth.
LIIIIA(...... _..IIIG-.1 agoinat
lncllnalk&gt;nl tode)l to prejudge people
Wliorn you do not know too well. Give
~lite - • oltlte doubt. end
don't tag lhem with !My don't
dlllrvl..

ICON 10 (oat. lM lloa.ll) In order to

be a nloe peroon toetar. you might IMI
Me· ·~..nl~ ~~
ltendllng on hla or Iter -.. YtAI could
wind up bllng uaacl klllllid afliPfliiOI)I. .
lied.

IAQITTNIUI (Notl. II lieu 111 Ba
..-ymlndlul o l y w r - tadlly, beyour IIIICdllmlglla I lltiiii'IION .

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good 1mp1 1: n an lllltlrs, h . . be :
....~do. ............. and 1101
..... ' . . be ;nolsd.

'*" l
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�•

•
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Monday; Febr,uary 8, 1993

1G-The Dilly Sentinel

BIIIB

Ohio Lottery

Eastern,
Meigs girls
post .wins

1112-1818

Pick 3:
. 005
Pick 4:

4652

Page4

EASTERN EAGLES
BOYS
·FEB. 12 - Waterford, Away
FEB. 13 • Hannan, W.Va.- Home

NOV. 30-AT SOUTHERN
DEC. 3-FAIRLAND
DEC. !HJNIOTO -1 :00 p.m.
DEC. 1D-AT WATERFORD
DEC. 12-AT FEDERAL HOCKING
DEC. 14-AT BELPRE ,
DEC. 17-TRIMBLE
JAN. 4-WARREN LOCAL
JAN, 7-RIVER VALLEY
JAN. 9--AT MEIGS-3:00p.m.
JAN.11-SOUTHERN
JAN. 1&amp;-FEDERAL HOCKING-1:00 p.m.
JAN. 21-WATERFORD
. JAN. 23-M ILLER - 1:00 p.m.
JAN. 27-BELPRE
JAN. 28-AT RIVER VALLEY
FEB. 1•AT TRIMBLE ·
FEB. 4-AT .FAIRLAND
FEB. &amp;.-MEIGS - 1:00 p.m.
FEB.15-'-AT SOUTH POINT

DEC. 5-AT MILLER
DEC. 11-AT TRIMBLE
DEC. 15-PT. PLEASANT
DEC. 18-WATERFORD
DEC. 19--AT f"AIRLAND
DEC. 22-AT SOUTH POINT
JAN. 5-AT SOUTHERN
JAN. &amp;-RIVER VALLEY
JAN. 12-AT FEDERAL .HOCKING
JAN. 15-AT HANNAN, WV.
JAN&gt; 19--SOUTH POINT
JAN.• 23-AT PT. PLEASANT
JAN. 2&amp;-AT RAVENSWOOD
JAN. 29--SOUTHERN ·
FEB. "s-AT MILLER
'FEB.12-ATWATERFORD
FEB.13-HANNAN, WV.
FEB. 16-FEDERAL HOCKING
FEB. 19--FAIRLAND

SOUTHERN TORNADOES
BOYS
FEB. 12 - Meiis - Away
FEB. 13 - Waterford - Home

GIRLS
FEB.8 ...; Eastern - Away
FEB. 15 - Symmes Valley - Away

DEC. 4-SOUTHEASTERN .
DEC. 12-MILLER
DEC. 1~AT !;YMMES VALLEY
DEC. 1~NIOTO
DEC. 26-COAL GROVE.;.At OUC
DEC. 29--AT RIO ·GRANDE :rOURNEY
DEC. 30-AT RIO GRANDE TOURNEY
JAN. 5-EASTERN
JAN. 9--AT GALUPOLIS
JAN. 15--SYMMES VALLEY
JAN. 16-.JOHNSON CENT., Ky. at ovc
JAN. 22-TRIMBLE
JAN. 2$-AT CHESAPEAKE
JAN. 29--AT EASTERN
JAN. 30-SOUTH POINT
FEB. &amp;-PORTSMOUTH CLAY
FEB. 12-AT MEIGS
FEB.13-WATERFORD
FEB. 19--FEDERAL HOCKING
FEB. 2D-AT TRIMBLE

·MEIGS MARAUDERS
BOYS
FEB. 12 - Southern - Home
F.B. 16 - Vinton (ounlL~ Home
'

FEB. 8 - Trimble - Home

'Mlere America Goes 'Ill Rel:lx··

For Just Pennies A Day.

r

NOV. 30-AT FEDERAL HOCKING
DEC. 3-ALEXANDER
DEC. 7-VINTON COUNTY
DEC. 1D-AT NELSONVILLE-YORK
DEC. 14-AT MILLER
DEC. 17-BELPRE
DEC. 21-WELLSTON
JAN. 4-AT TRIMBLE
JAN. ' 7-SOUTHERN
JAN. 9--EASTERN
JAN.11-FEDERAL HOCKING
JAN.14-AT ALEXANDER
JAN. 2D-AT SOUTHERN ·
JAN. 21-AT VINTON COUNTY
JAN. 25-NELSONVILLE-YORK
JAN. 28-MILLER
FEB. 1-AT BELPRE
FEB. 4-AT WElLSTON
FEB. 8-TRIMBLE

"Middleport, Oh~
992·3345

.

INGELS FURNITURE &amp;
JEWELERS

AND RADIO .SHACK
106 N. 2nd

QUAL\ITY PRINT SHOP

Middleport, OH.
992·2635

WILL ,.AKE CARE OF
YOUR INSUUNCE .NEEDS
DOWNING·CHILDS·MULLEN
MUSSER INSURANCE
'

111 SECOND AVE

POMEROY
•

GUARDRAIL
&amp;
SIGN EREOION

555 P1rk St.

Middleport, Ohio

P. 0. Box 683

JUST DO IT.

SALES • SERVICE • PARTS

(

Ci:?

SECOND STREO JACKSON AVL
STH STREET
,asDn, W. Va. Pt.
W. Va. New
W. Va.

CROW'S
FAMILY RESTAURANT
228 WEST /Ill~
992·5432
MAIN ST.
POMEROY . KFC.·

It has been suggested by Principal Fenton Taylor that students in
all three school districts in the
county might use the open house as
a time to see exactly what is
offered in the vocational program.
While the open house is going
on there will also be parent-teacher
conferences at the school.
In conjunction with the activities. tl!e Meigs Band wiD be spOilsoring a chili and vegetable spup
diMer in the cafeteria. The students
will be serving from 4:30 to 7 p.m.
and the cost is ~3.

·States make deep .cuts in welfare
programs second year in ~ row
WASHING10N (AP) _ States . receives ~ood stam~. and one _in ness. One s~dy by the Urban lnstimade deep cuts in welfare pro- seven children rece1ves benefits tute, a Washmgton research group,
~s for the secood .straighl year un\ter A:id 10 Families with Depen- found that cities o,yith the m~st
.n 1992 increasing· bardships and dent Ch•ldren, or AFDC.
homelessness had no general assJSpossibly' homclelsnea for some of
Today"s study singled out five tance prosrams.
the country's poorest families a states for the harshness of their
In the Urban Institute's study of
liberal advocacy group said
1992 cuts: Maryland~ California. 147 cities from 1981lhrough 1989.
""These cuts are especially bit- Illinois•.Oiclahoma and Wyoming. the lowest _rate .of homelessness
ing because they come when the Connec:ucut and RIKII;Ie Island were w~ found m ClUes. where general
economy is weak. precisely the also c•!ed for makmg cuts that ass1~tance ~~s ava1lable 1~ abletime when a strong safety net is undenmned the safety net for s1g- bod1ed mdiVIduals, the d•sabled
needed most;"" said Iris Lav direc· nificant numbers of low-income and to famiUcs.
tor of state and local pro~s at people. .
.
·
.
'"!C ~n~r on Budget and ~li• the Center on Budget and Policy
The report sa•d other ~tud1~s cy Prionues 1s a research orgamzaPriorities and principal author of have shown a .str~ng relauonsh•p tion that focuses on !he needs of
the lqJOlt.
·
between restrlcllons on general low- and middle-income Ameri"During periods of recession or ~SSISlanc~ 11rograms and an cans. The Center for the Study of
sluggish jp'OWth, ·even many for· •ncreased mc1dence of homeless- the Srates. which also compiled the
merly middle~ poop1o have litreport, is an information clearinghouse on State finances and prolle cholc:e bat to rely on govern- Body
dleDIIUiltanco,"" Lav said.
i!rams. Findings well! based on sur: . B~teted by a rec:eaion-dri':en
OLOUS"JER. OhiQ (AP) - The . veys of state olllc:es 111d agencies.
cut 10 revenues and faced wttb ' body of a woman who had been
The report wd srate programs
swelling welfue cuelotlds. many missing since Jan. 31 wu found in aidinf the poor were cut more
11ta1es have sought to save money a cm:k in the Athens County vii- · sharp y in each of the past two
liut cuttlna aid to families witb lege.
·
. . · years !han in any•year since at least
hildlen,the cti•eb!NI ud the elderThe death of Charlet Russell. the early 1980s. ·
er atud)' found. Few states 32, of Glouster ~as considered a
But Robert Rector, policy anato illcnue tuealallt yw.
homicide, pendina a coroner's lyst for welfare issues at the Her. The economic llowdowa that investiaation. said Police Chief itagc Foundation, a conservative
tiepnlnJuly 1989hubolpodpasb Roger Taylor. He said be didn"t .lhlnk tank; questioned the study's
lbo natlon'a welfue rolfs 10 all· know how she died.
assertions about the current state of
limo hiaJta. Now one ill 10 ArnerlThe body was pulled from Sun- · the safety net.
cans, more than 26 miHion. day Creek on Monday.

lllday.

FISHER - OwHr/Opentor

Ohio 45769

Dealer

985·3308

·

an awards ceremony scheduled for
9 p.m. The district winners will
then compete in regional contests
in Cincinnati Feb. 27.
While the contests are being
conducted. the school and classrooms will be open to the public.
VisitorS are invited to travel freely
through the school. Student guides
will be available (or those who
wanttn be taken on tours. Teachers
and other school personnel wiD be
on hand to answer any questions
prospective students and parents
might have.

found in cree'k

STIHC

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

@

FISHER FUNERAL HOME

Your Local .

£.1--.JI!Ibliii!!!l!a!o"
6r1HL •. " •

An open house will be held
Thursday from 6 to 9 p.m. at Meigs
High School in observance of
National Vocational Educational
Week.
As a ~of the open house, the
Vocational Industrial Clubs of
America (VICA) will be conducting district skill competitions in
auto mechanics. cosmetology. electronics. welding and nurse assisting. .
Advisory personnel from business and industry will be serving as
judges and recognizing students at

PHONE
(614) 992-6451

VALLEY LUMBER

vance are vocationai students Autumn Griffith,
Kandi Bachtei,Sbannon Spaun, Shane Hysell,
and David Hokomb,left to right•.

·O pen house to be held in observance
of National Vo-Ed ~eek Thursday

136

992·3381

:TEST

By AVIVA L. BRANDT
Associated Press Writer
A coal industry analyst says the
United Mine Workers"· selective
strike against Peabody Holding Co.
inc. subsidiaries may be broadened
to include one or two other companies but is unlikely to become a
naponal wallcout
.
Rafael A. Villagran. a·cpaJ analyst at Shearson Lehman Huuon
Inc. of New York, said Monday the
union's strike funds. estimated at
$100 million. could not support a
national strike.
."Any significant broadening of
the work stoppage is unlikely; •
Villagran said. "I think th,e strike
fu~d is a lot less than its been presented as.""
· He said the fund could be affect-

.

PREPARING SIGNS • National Vocational
Education Week will be observed at Meigs High
School Thursday and the public Is invited.
Preparing signs to promote tbe annual ohstr-

Bank
3 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS

N. 2nd AVE.

MIDDLEPORT

-=====

992·5627

Prescription
Shop
For All Your Prescription and Sundry Needs
See Us ·
·

253 II. S.co1d

:::;:::=:::::;:::..
r

'

'

to $2 million a year; private donations totaling $12
million; a $2 mil~on loan from the Cleveland Foundation; and a $5 million grant from the New York
Rock and RoD HaU of Fame Foundation.
Petro said at least three COI'JlOI'II!C sponsors have
agreed to support the hall with a combined $1.4 million a year, but that he is sure there will be other
sponsors once the stale guarantee is in place.
He said he hopes that ali the details wiD be completed by Marth and that groundbreaking for the proJCCl, first announced five years ago. will occllr in
April.
· The guarantee was recommended by Pevelopment
·Director Donald Jakeway. who described the project
as one of the most creative and exciting he has seen.

ed. by court rulings against the
umon.
UMW President Richard Trurolea called the strike against Sr.
Louis-based Peabody Holding Co.
Inc. after the union's contract with
the Bituminous Coal Operators
Association. involving more than
60,000 UMW miners.and 150.000
retirees, expired Feb. I. ·
·
Peabody Holding. the nation's
largest coal producer. is among 12
companies in the association. .
About 7,500 miners are strildng
Eastern Associated Coal Corp. of
Charleston. W.Va .• and Peabody
Coal Co. of Henderson, Ky. The
Peabody Holding subsidiaries have
22 mines in West Virginia, !Uinois,
Indiana and Kentucky.
Villagran said he expected the

union and the coal operators to
eventually agree to tenns on a conllilct extension. But he said it was
unlikely the two could come to a·
final settlement during the extension.
·
'"Both sides would benefit from
an extension," · Villagran said.
"The BCOA would operate their
coal mines without worrying aboul
~strike and Peabody could go back
to work. And the UMW could pllt
its miners back to wodc."
But he said it was too optimistic
to think the two sides could come
to a final agreement before spring
or summer.
The union and coal association
each have proposed 60-day exten·
sions but both sides say the other is
holding up an agreement.

State troopers seize record
amount of cocaine in traffic stop

Peop_les

Announcements.

programs.
Also involved will be transfers from the Head
Start and Pre-School programs of funds that t.:fs.
Tavakolian said were not scheduled to be spent until
the next fiscal year. \\!hich begins July I.
Cuyahoga County Commissioner James Petro and
officials of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and
Museum, Inc., said the loan guarantee will not cost
the state any money if other pending agreements are
signed as el(pected.
Petro ~sled other pans of the financing package:
A $I 2 million 11ond package authorized by Cuyahoga County commissioners; a $38.9 million bond
issue by the county Port Authority; a 1.5 percent
increase in the hotel bed tax designed to bring in up

Selective coal strik~ unlikely to ·
becom-e national, analyst says

1992·93 GIRLS' SCHEDULE

For Your 1993 Graduation

255 Mill St.

BAUM LUMBER

.

enrollment estimates were 25.000 too low. She said
there also were 5.000 more students than previously
thought who·qualify for Aid to Families wtth Dependent Children.
·
To cover part of the shortfall. the board authorized
the transfer of $19.1 million from unclaimed prizes
along with profits from the OhioLottery that exceeded budget projections.
·
Most of the rest will come from money that the
department said is not needed in the current ~chool
.. year.
These included $5.7 million in desegregation
costs of the Cleveland City School District, $2.6 million for bus purchases, $1.1 million for special education and $8.7 million from vocational education

(

When The Time Comes ..• See Us

®~·

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A Department of
Education plan to transfer money among its own
accounts to avoid a $48 million cut in state school
subsidies has been approved by the state Controlling
Board.
The board, in other action Monday. also authorized a $42 million loan guarantee to help complete
fmancing for the $83 million Rock and Roll HaU of
Fame and Museum in Cleveland.
. ··
The Department of Education said that under the
school· subsidy formula, .which is based on enrollments, it came up $48 million short of the money
owed by the state to local districts for the current
school'year.
·
Susan Tavakolian, finance .director, said earlier

.MEIIS
DEC. 4-AT ALEXANDER
DEC. ,_TRIMBLE
DEC. 11-MILLER
DEC. 12-'AT ATHENS
DEC. 15-AT NELSONVILLE-YORK
DEC. 18-BELPRE
DEC. 22-WELLSTON
JAN. 5-FEDERAL HOCKING
JAN. 9--ATHENS
JAN.12-AT VINTON COUNTY
JAN. 15-ALEXANDER
JAN.1&amp;-HUNTINGTON EAST at OUC
JAN.19--AT TRIMBLE
JAN. 22-AT MILLER
JAN. 2S.:NEL$0NVILLE·YORK
JAN. 29-AT BELPRE
FEB. 2-AT WELLSTON
FEB. 5-AT FEDERAL HOCKING
FEB. 12-SOUTHERN
FEB.1&amp;-VINTON COUNTY

1 Section, 10 Pagoo 25 cents
AMul~medla Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, February 9, 1993

·controlling Board approves school bailout plan

NOV. 3D-EASTERN
DEC. 7-NELSONVILLE·YORK
DEC.14-WATERFORD
DEC. 17-AT RIVER VALLEY
DEC. 21-AT FORT FRYE
DEC. 23-AT TRIMBLE
DEC. 28-AT ALEXANDER
JAN. 7-AT MEIGS
JAN. 11-AT. EASTERN
JAN. 14-AT WATERFORD
JAN, 2D-MEIGS
JAN. 21-AT NELSONVILLE-YORK
JAN. 27-TRIMBLE
JAN. 28-SYMMES VALLEY
FEB. 2-RIVER VALLEY
FEB. 4-AT WATERFORD
FEB. &amp;-AT FEDERAL HOCKING
FEB. 15-AT SYMMES VALLEY

1992·93 BOYS' SCHEDULE

GIRLS

Vol. 43, No. 203

·Copyrighted 18113

1992 GIRU' SCHEDULE

1992·93 BOYS' SCHEDULE

FEB. 8 - Southern - Home
FEB~ 15 ~South Point- Away

'

•

SOUTIIERN

GIRLS

60.

1992·93 GIRLS' SCHEDULE

1992·93 BOYS' SCHEDULE

THIS WEE •s·
G ES

Low .ton'abt near 40.
Wednesday; sunny. Hlgb near

Ml1lllltport, 011

.

·t

"•

·~

.

: \~

•.

•

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DAYTON, Ohio (AP)- State and that a car pulled over after the
Highway Patrol officials said the mobile home was slOpped.
'"After he talked with the occupatrol made its largest cocaine
seizure ever when troopers discov- pants of both molar vehicleS. his
. ered nearly 500 pounds of cocaine suspicions started rising." said
inside a motor home during a traf. Black.
According to documents filed in
fie stop.
U.S.
District Court. Trooper S.O.
A patrol spokesman, Sgt. John
Smart
said the occupants of the
Born, said Monday that the 491
vehicles
told him they were travelpounds of cocaine seized on Inter·
ing
from
Las Vegas to Buffalo.
state 70 northwest of Dayton h8d a
N.Y.
However,
he said all three
street value of more than $18 mil·
gave
different
stories
about who
lion.
owned
the
mobile
home
and the
"lt"s the largest lhat"s ever been
purpose·
of
the
trip.
pulled off the highways in Ohio."
Black said !fOOpers then brought
said Born.
·in
a drug-sniffing dog which
He said the' previbus record
amount of cocaine seized by the
patrol was about 70 pounds. That
seizure occurred during a traffic
stop on the Ohio Turnpike last
month.
. The patrol said a trooper
WASHINGTON {AP) stopped the motor home Sunday as
· it was traveling east on the inter- · Homeowners in many areas of the
state. Two men and a woman were nation saw their real estate values
appreciate during the Octoberarrested.
Lt. Joe Black of the patrol's December quarter as low mortgage
Dayton post said that a trooper rates and nsing consumer confistopped the mobile home for fol- dcnce fueled housing demand; a
lowing another vehicle too closely real estate trade group said today.
Homeowners in Midwestern and
Southern madcets found the prices
of their homes rising 5.5 percent
and 4.3 percent, respectively.
according to a National Association
of Realtors survey of 125
Three people were transported metropolitan areas.
to Veterans Memorial Hospital folOther markets posting price
lowing a two-vehicle wreck on increases were found in the NorthOhio 7 in Salisbury Township west and in some areas of the
Monday around 7:30a.m.
Nonheast. But the aftereffects of
According to a repQrt from the the recession pushed prices in the
Gailia-Meigs Post of the State Nonheast as a whole down 0.8 per·
Highway Patrol, a sou\hbound cent
pickup true1c driven by Kenneth W.
The West suffered a 1.1 percent
Madden. 37. 38049 Zwpan Hl&gt;llow drop because of the drag of many
Road, Middlepon, was stopped for markets in California where the
a school bus loading passengen. A ~nomy continued to siruule.
following car. driven by Lutrelle F.
Both first-time and trade-up
Schoenleb, 88. of Lasley St.• buyers participated· in the fourth·
Pomeroy. was unable to SIOJ? and quarter boom, Realtors President
struck the rear of Madden's pickup William S. Cbee Said. Tho Real~
truck.
found double-digit siles increases
Madden, Schoet~leb and his pas- in 39 swea in the fOW1h quarter.
senger, Edna F. Schoenleb, 85,
•"Consumers have stariCd feel·
Pomeroy, were transported by the ·ing more confident about buying
Southeastern Ohio Emergency big-ticket items," Chee added.
Medical Service to Veterans '"We"re seeinf,!lot· of pent-up
demand beinaa
bed. People ue
Memorial ~4: trealmOnL
Dlmage to
's 1991 Toy- comingoutofthewOodworll:.""
ota was Hstctl as lighL Dam8le to
Eightee~ metropolitan ar~l!_s,
Schoenleb's 1986 tronliac 6000LE rnost of which wen~ less expenstvc.
was lislecl u heavy and disabling,
recorded doubl~it price gains
Schoenleb was cited by the belween the foudh quarter of 1991
patrol for failure to maintain and the same period or 1992.
· assured ~lear dislance.
The Richland-Kennewick-Pasco

·"alerted"' to the mobile home
before being let inside it
The cocaine was found con·
cealed in comparunents throughout
the vehicle.
·
Charged with one count each of
possession with intent to distribute
cocaine were Roger L. Kenerly, 45.
and Trudy F. Barnes. 56. both of
Las Vegas and Julio M. Somel~an.
28. of Miami. A detention hearing
is set Wednesday for lhe three. who ·
are being held in the Montgomery
County jail.
The case has been turned over io
the U.S. Drug Enforcemeni Administration for prosecution.

Real estate values rise in many areas of cou11:try

Three injured
in accident

counties of .Washingt&lt;;m state
recorded the largest med1~n pnce
mcrease. a 26.1 percent JUmp to
$94,700 ..01clahoma City had a 18.3
percent mcrease. to $67,200, and
sggkane, Wash .• 18.1 percent, to
S ().400. . .
.
.
The nauonal med1an pnce was
$103,400, 4.3 percent above that of
a year ea~lier. Sixty·thre~ areas
po~ted ~nee gams exceedmg ~he
nauonal mcrease. The medi8D pnce
means half of the homes cost more
and half cost less.
.
Pnces for t.he sinf!le -family
detached and attached previously
owned homes ranged from ,
$352.01?&lt;J 10 Honolul~, a 5.1 percent gmn, to $49,400 10 WaterlooCedar Falls, Iowa, a 12 percent
Jump.
.
.
· The Midwest contmued to be
the region wilh the strongest over•
all residential r~l estate market.
Realtors economiSt John A. TuccilI~ ~aid .. Six. cities WS!Cd doubled•gn pnce mcreases, tncluding a
15.1 percent advance to $82,400 in
Altron, Ohio.
. In addition to Oklahoma City.
Tucc11Io sa1d several other Oil
Patch 3!US o_f th_e South ex perienced hi~h DnCe IIICieUel inchlding Corpus Christi, up 16.2 percent
to $69.600; Houstoa. up IS.4 percent to $81.900. and Mobile, Ala.,
up 14.8 pen:ent to $66.700.
The West had several other
a~s posti~g double-digit price ·
.aa•ns bestdes Richl&amp;lld and
SJIOIIano. They lncluclotl BugoneSJ!riltlfleld. Ole.. up 14.9 peacerll'
to SM,900. and Albuquerque. ulf
I 1.6 pen:eatiO
-'
'
.$96,500.
.

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