<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="10078" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/10078?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-01T20:00:12+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="20518">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/56179163b7a5a12bc82bfc1437233867.pdf</src>
      <authentication>2781d57a1c25b247d3a78bff71d1d7b5</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="32213">
                  <text>Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page

•

Wednesday, February 10,1993

Ohio Lottery

Bearcats
defeat
Warriors

Dorothy Karr
Beat of the Bend...
presents
by BQb Hoeflich
garden club
program
111!4
of

If you were young
talented loolced again. It was Dale Walburn
and had a choice locations where . of Middleport who was being sent
The February meeting or the you'd prefer working, chances are home. And you didn't believe in
Chester Garden Club was held the beautiful Cayman Islands Old Horne Week.
recently at the home or Pat Hoi ter would be clo~e to the top of
A 'reader asked about the ldnd of
featuring a program on birds.
favorites • even the impossible
figures
that were involved with 'h:Je
Dorothy Kari gave a talk on "A dream.
Baird
who
had her nomination
Favor Returned·· Winter Care of
However, the loeation is realil}'
as
Clinton's Auomey
withdrawn
Our Feathered Friends." Insects, for Meigs County's Robyn Barnett
General.
You,
toO, might have IQst
pests and weed seeds that birds who recently accepted a job in the
consume in the summer, while they Cayman Jslaf!d&amp; located !n the track of the figures in the
also arc citjoying fruit and tender British West Indies. Robyn IS uaf. widespread publicity that was
green vegetables, the importance of fie director and production assistant given the case.
a feeding program in winter is evi- at Z 99.9 FM. This radio station · Baird had paid an illegal alien
dent. Once ·a program begins, it opened only in May of last year couple-one to care for her child and
should continue through lhe cold and ig tile first privately owned sta· the other to serve as chauffe~r­
weather. It was noted 'that birds' tion in the Islands. It's located on $2,000 a monlh and had provided
body temperature is 113 degrees. theJargest of the Islands, Grand room and board. according to £ig.
They can handle peanut butler and Cayman, which is 480 m~les due ures I have been able to. locale. She;
fat quite well. Mixed with bird soulh or Miami. Oh, and IDCiden- did not pay F.I.C.A. or required•
seed, sometimes adding com meal, tally occasionally Robyn has a_n unemployment taXes on the C9uple .
they provide tasty bird meals. cipportunitY to become an on atr and Baird did admit that she knew·
Kimberly Fetty, Lessie Osborne, Rachel Bales,
REGIONAL WINNERS • Twe11ty-five
Apples and oranges also disappear versonality on weekends when she the couple were ille~al aliens.. . . '
Robin
Gardner,
Jennifer
Pi-omtt.
Standing,
1-~.
awards -re plftleated to tile BIISilless ProfesSo there's the mformat1on m:
quickly.
It is important to provide does some substitute D.J. work.
Wendy
Clark,
Aodr.
e
a
McDonald,
Tammy
sioiiiiS of America fn. Mftc5 High School at
water
amj
give
special
attention
to
Although
she's
a
.
l
ong,
long
·way
case
you're in~rested.
!·
Quee11,
Lisa
S11yder,
Rhonda
Gibbs,
Stephanie
Picb-y Ross JVS I'«Utly. Tile Regioll D win&lt;
from
home
being
"young
and
tal·
the
water
supply
during
extreme
Price.
ners from Meigs HiJ!!h Sdmol are, 1-r, seated,
Upriver in the Reedsville area
weather.
·
·
ented"; Robyn is probably enjoying
lives Kay Epling who has a very ·
A video made by the National the experience to lhe fullest.
Audubon Society, "Owls Up · Sl)e previously worked at Q102 oregnant Jersey cow named :
Close:• from Ohio Association of in Marietta and l)S107 in Belpre. r.Pi.neapple".
Near lhe Epling home is a steep .
Garden Clubs was shown by Mrs. The daughter of Ron and Carol
Barnett
of
Reedsville,
Robyn
grad·
embanlcment
which has a 30 foot
Karr. It gave a colorful account of
drop
into
the
Ohio River. Some-,
uated
from
Eastern
High
School
in
the lives and habiiS of 17 ~ies of
.
how
"Pineapple"
got too close to
1987
and
was
a
!991
cum
laude
owls. The next day-lhe vtdeo was
the
drop
31)d
was
extended
ovenhe
graduate
of
Ol]io
University
receiy·
shown to the students of Chester
steep
banlc.
Kay's
son,
T1m,
ing
her
bachelor's
degree
m
second grade.
couldn't
budge
"Pineapple"
in.
his
Roll call, "Bring for display and telecommunications. I know you
join
me
in
wishing
her
·great
sue·
effort
to
pull
her
back
to
safety.
Twenty-five awards were pre- fust in information processing spe- buSiness law; Lisa Snyder, flflh in a bird brunch" was answered wilh
Tim's friend, Brian Wood, di~ov- '
pine cones filled with peanut butter cess. Enjoy, Robyn.
sented to d!e Business Profession· cialist. second in administrative business knowledge skills.
ered
that .Tim and "Pineapple" real·
Students advancing to state and bird seed and suet in mesh
als of America from Meigs High specialist. lhird in business knowl1
y
had
problems so Tim and 1\rian
And I keep telling you it's a
School at Piclcaway Ross JVS edge slcills, sixth in proof reading competition on March 19·20 in bags for hanging in feedirig areaS; a
ued binder. twine· around "Pineap'
recently. ·
· and editing; Stephanie Price, lhird Columbus are Wendy Clark, Lore- mixture of seed, sunnower, cracked small world.
Edna Stobart of Pomeroy and ple's" horns in an awi·mjll to The Region II winners from in administrative specialiSt, third in na Oiler, Stephanie Price, Tammy corn and other grains, regular bird
seed' to suit, lhe appetite of a vari· ·clarice Erwin of Middleport retrieve her. Meantime, Kay sum· _
Meigs High School are: Tammy financial· specialist; Kimberly Queen and Kimberly Feny.
Olhers
from
Meigs
High
School
ety of birds. Comments included a attended school together · come on, maned lhe Reedsville Fire Depart·
Queen, fust in f111811Cial specialist. Fetl}'. first in administrative spewho
placed
well
but
did
not
win
•
bird bath warmer, the gold finch now • it's has been a while back, ment and about a dozen firemen .
second in fmaocial specialist. sec- cialist; Andrea McDonald, first in
awards
were
Misti
King,
Megan
and
love of lhistle seeds and cobs and they were good friends. As . carne to lhe rescue of "Pineapple" :
ond in business lrnowledge slcills, business malh, second in business
Bartels,
Missy
Jeffers,
Shannon
of field com secured to a post or often happens lhey went about their pulling her back to .safety with an ·
fourth in proof reading and editirig; law, fifth in financial assislallt; JenMcComas,
Becky
Williams,
Penny
lives and hadn't' even seen each attached rope. "Pineapple" was ·
Rhonda Gibbs, thinl in infonnation nifer Proffitt, first in personal
tree.
Gillispie,
.Sandy
Vance
and
Angie
other
for years. However, fate apparently none the worse after the :
The "Save the Earth" lesson,
processing assistant; Lessie finance, sixth in payroll accountWhite.
intervened
and lhe two are now experience except for being short .
"Brushing Up on Paint" by J~an
Osborne. third in infllnlliltion pro- ing; Robin Gardner. third in key_
sharing
the
same
room • that• s 390 of brealh from the struggle.
Frederick reported that accord1ng
cessing specialist; Lorena Oiler. · boarding; Rachel Bales. fi'rst in
I
do
like
stories
with
happy
end-·
•
in
the
orthopedic
center
of
Grant
to the San Francisco Household
ings and I'm glad "Pineapple" is :
Hazardous Waste Facility, paint Hospital in Columbus,
o.k.,
aren't you? Somehow I've :
Edna's daughter, Libby Moodis·
and paint produciS account for 66
never
looked at the expressi~~ of
percent of the hazardous waste paugh of Pomeroy, was at Grant
"being
over the hill" quite _in this:
dumped by individuals. This Hospital due to her mother's hospilight
before.
Do keep smiling.
includes oil-base paint, thinners, talization when she noticed a man
solvent, stains and finishes. The being transported on a gurney. She
by-products of oil base paint are
also nasty pollutaniS.
Devotions by Maida Mom from
•
"Heaven in a Wild Flower" by Joan
·.
NEW YORK (AP)- Mick Jag- about her affect her.· ~
Winmlll Brown, were on "Rose of ger marked the release of his
She added: "It's not pleasant
Sharon Love." The aulhor writes "Wandering Spirit': album with ,a when people say or do thmgs that
that seeing the naming blossoms, gig at a dance club 1n New Yodt s are cruel, but that's more a ,renecgrowing in abundance on the plane
tidn on them than on my daughter
.
of Sharon, give her the assurance East"IVillage.
hear no one paid ta·J!el in or me &lt;ir my husband.''
of God's,Iove. The plants bend and tonight!" he shouted to lhe mvita·
sway in lhe wind, their strong, sup- tion-only crowd at Webster Hall on
LOS ANGELES (AP) - A TV
ple stems, not resisting, but bend· Tuesday night. "But you can still series is in the works for Sinbad,
mg resiliently, righting lhemselves have a good timet''
the comedian and former co-star of
when the breeze stops. Observers
The 65-minute, 14-song set the NBC comedy "A Different
are reminded how important it is included 11 songs from his new World."
that people remain pliable in lheir solo album, but Jagger didn't comSandy Grushow, Fox TV's prospirituallives.
•
KAREN HOGUE
gramming
chief, said Tuesday that
. During the business meeting pletely ignore Rolling Sl!JIIes mate· Sinbad's humor is "in sync" with
rial. He played "Live Wilh Me"
notes of appreciation wer~ heard and
Awarded scholarship
Fox's young audience.
"Rip This Joint."
from Jam1e Gillispie, Pomeroy
Sinbad has starred in specials
The audience of abou't 1,200
Karen Sue Hogue:daughter of
Nursing and Rehabilitation Center,
such
as HBO's "Brain Damaged"
for holiday tray favors and from people included record industry and was in lhe movie "NeceSsary
Mr. and Mrs. Gelald (Mary Donna
Helen Wolfe. Betty Dean, Pauline figures, contest winners and Roughness."
Grueser) Hogue, Darlington. Pa.,
has been named the recipient of the
Ridenour and Jean Frederick pro· reporters. The concert was beamed
Tbe new series will be produced
vided altar nowers at Chester Unit· to clubs in Atlanta, Chicago, Los by Walt Disney Television.
1993 Community College of
'
ed Methodist Church during the Angeles and Toronto.
Beaver County Presidential AcaSPECIAL OLYMPIC PRESENTATION· The Business ProJ~gger doesn't plan a tour to
winner month. Pat Holter and
fessionals of America Club at Meigs High School presented a
demic Scholarship.
,
LOS ANGELES (AP) - For
Maida Mora assisted wilh holiday back the new album. But the Harry CoMick Jr., it's Christmas in
dlecl reuntly to L.W. HarJII!r in support of the special olympics
She is a senior at Blackhawk.
Stones
are
set
to
begin
recording
decorations at Trinity.
program. That support is a statewide project or the BPA. Maki.ng
High School.
. .
.
February.
The postponed meeting for their 27th album next monlh.
1M presentation to Har)ll!r is Wendy Clark, treasurer of the Me•gs
She will be gomg miO tbe medi·
The Gmmmy-winning musiciWI
March will be held March 10 at the
club.
cal field.
NEW
YORK
(AP)
Hillary
is worlting on an album of holiday
home of Clarice Krautter.
She is the granddaughter of
Rodham
.Ciinton
says
she
would
standards.
Mrs. Holter served valentine
Dave Grueser, Galhpolis, and has
have
liked
10
have
had
more
chi!·
"You name it, it's probably
refreshments to 12 members. Twila
several aunts and uncles living in
dren,
and
she
resents
comics'
wise·
going
to be on there," the 25-year·
Buckley received the door prize.
lhe Pomeroy area.
cracks about daughter Chelsea.
old singer-songwriter-pianist said
"It would have been fun and Tuesday. He said he may also
The Meigs Local Chapter 1 will hold a training session on
wonderful
to have more children, include an original composition.
tcac:hers will be holding their. train- problem solving and eomprchenand
I
know
Chelsea would have
A TV special, "Harry Connick
Fuur eyes-·for all
ing sessions for parents from now .sian from 1:30-3:30 p.m. Rutland
Flight orthe c011dor
•
liked
it,
but
you
know
it
jusi
didn't
Jr.:
The New York Big Band COn·
According 10 The Kids' World
In January 1992, tbe long cffon until the end of the school year. will have its training session with •
·
work
out
for
us,"
the
frrst
lady
said
cert,"
wil air Feb. 14 on cable's
Almanac of Records and Facts, the
to save the California coodor from Parents, grandparents, guardians or Mrs . Paula Chancey and Mrs.
in
the
March
issue
of
Redbook
Disney
Channel. The show was
first people known to wear eye'
extinction reached a new ph~. any other interested party may Linda McManus on March 26 from
directed
by Connick's fiancee,
magazine.
.
9:,30·11:30 a.m. on comprehens1on glasses were the 13lh-century MonThe majestic birds had almosl dis- attend any or all of the sessions.
Mrs.
Clinton
said
she
has
tried
model
Jill
Goodacre.
gols. These eyeglasses were made
On Friday, Pomeroy Elementary and probkm sol~1~g. Harnsonv11le
appeared as a result of h~mling and
to
help
Chelsea
deal
.':"ith
su~h
of convex-shal'ed quartz with
the use of pesticides. 'The last sur- · will be holding 'their training ses- ' w1ll hal~ Its trammg sess1on w1th
slights as the recent Wayne s
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Proud
viving condors had been captured sian wi1h Janet Hoffman and Mrs. Paula Chancey and Mrs . frames of tortOise shells. In the World'' sketch on "Saturday Night papa Quincy Jones was present
1700s, Benjamin Fmnk1in carne up
in !987 and bred in caplivity. On Tammy Chapman from 10 a.m. to Vicki Haley ?n comprehension and
with
the idea of-combining far- Live" in which characters Garlh when Nastassja Kinski gave birth
Jan. 14, a male and female were noon on phonics and basic math problem solv1~g on March 26 from ·
and Wayne suggested d!e 13-yearreleased into the wild in d!e first factS. Meigs--Junior High will hold 1-~ p.m. Salisbury w1ll hold 1ts sighted and nearsighted glasses into old isn't as'attractive as Vice Presi· to the couple's first child, a 7pound, 14-ounce girl.
step wward reslllring the birds to their session with Ron Drexler tTammg sess1on wuh Mrs. Barbara one pair of bifocal glasses._
dent AI Gore's daughters.
Kenya Julia Miambi Sa.rah
from 1·3 p.m. on oral reading and Mat~ews Crow from 1-3 p.m. on
lheir natural hab11aL
"It's sad that people don't have Jones was bdm Tuesday at Cedarsproblem solving on Feb. 26. On Apnl 7 on bas1c facts and readmg
The laqiest denomination of U.S. anything better 10 do lhan be mean Sinai Medical-Center.
March 3 Mike Kennedy at Meigs comprehension.
currency
now being issued is the StOO to a child," she said. "My attiwde
Miss Kinski, 33, whose movies
Jazzerc1se . a fitne s center \\as High School will hold his training =T...;h:;.e..;l_nt'-e....
rn-a-:lio_n_a-:I-::W-:o-od7w-o-rk:-e-r-s-;of bill. Issuance of currency in denomi - is, I'm going to do everything r can
include
"Tess: • "Paris, Texas"
listed as th e l-HR leading lranch1S(" m session on computer problem solv- America labor un ion w
"'
founded in nations large r than SIOO waS discon - to help Chelsea be strong enough and "One From the Heart," now
th'e United Sta tes for 199:!. "'llh a ing· from t -3 p.m , On March 26 t987 by Wilson Hubbell : it has 28.000
linued in t969.
not to let what other people say
has three children. •
start-up cost of $2.32a
Salem Center with Bryan Zirkle · members.

Pick 3:

038
Pick 4:
8707

Super Lotto:
3·21·25·33·35·47
Kicker:
252255

Page4

---

I

1

l

I
I

Vol. 43, No. 205
CopJrtghted 1993

2 Sectlona, 12 Page• 25 cenll

'

BRIDGE REPLACEMENT MEETING Among those attending an informal meeting
with Sen. Jan Michael Lon&amp; on steps to be take11
toward gettina a time line commitment on plannine and replacement or the Pomeroy-Mason
bridge were olr~elals from Pomeroy! M!ddleport,

.By JULIE E. DILLON
Sentinel News Staff
Mary Powell, director of tbe
Meigs COunty Park District. spoke
at Wednesday's regular meeting of
Jh(Porneroy,-Merchants Associa·
Obrt H ·
Mrs. Powell discussed the
·Meigs County Showcase to be held
at the Meigs Counl}' Fair Grounds
on CJoL HI rrom 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.
and Oct. 17 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
According to Mrs. Powell, this
promotion is desi~ed to acquaint
tour companies w1th a taste of the
area in hopes to.be ~hosen as a destination by several. Mrs. Powell
feels the showcase can also help
local citizens to become more
aware of the varied aspects of the
county.
·
The idea for this promotion
came from the tourism branch of
the Ohio Department of Development. Mrs. Powell ~tated the primary goal of the showcase' is to
at.trrua media attention from larger
areas including television stations
and statewide newspapers.
The showcase, according to
Mrs. Powell, is intended to represent all entities, festivals, events,
and organizations in lhe county. By
presenting such a showcase, Mrs.
Powell hopes to develop an indus-

_T,::::.:-::::;..:-::::.:-~~-~;;-~

On AU OUT.

!

I
I
----~~I
-

I

I

I

STUDENTS OF THE MONTH _- Tbe. student of tile month
-mbly - held rec:ody at Tuppos 1"1ai11s Elemmtary· Sc~L
Those receiving die award are, 1-r,.froat. Cl)d.J Bartram, L1sa
Smilb Bryaa Millear aad Cllris Coaaolly. Bad, Jake HCMisebold·
. er,
Ste•eas, Stevm W~ aad wes~e,. Slaafet_.

J.;.,.

then' becomes part of ODOT' s
"Project Development Manage·
ment System" (PDMS, for short),
at which time, funding can be
released.
Durm expects to submit the project proposal to Columbus "within
the next few weeks." Once submit·
ted, there is no way to. iletennine
exactly how long the review pro·
cess will talce, he explains.
Durm also adds that just
because District I0 is trying to get
the project programmed, it. is not.
considered a priority at lhis time.
"The district IS thinking·ahead to
future priorities," says Dunn, "after
&gt; •
current priorities are met, such as
the Connector Road to the
·' Ravenswood Bridge, the relocation
of Route 33 as a four· lane from
Darwin to Athens, and the building
.• of the Route 50 four-lane in Athens .
' County.
· Should lhe project proposal for
a new bridge pass lhe Columbus'
review process and be placed on
PDMS, the next step wU! be 10 hire
a consultant, Durm says. It would .
be the consullallt's job to conduct a
"location st.udy" to determine
where a new bridge should be built
Many factors' would be considered
in a location study, inclUdins environmental concerns and public
input.
•
·
John Dowler, District 10 deputy
director, also points out lhat every
SENTENCING • Polowinl bllltD-Ina b)' c-moll Plea
Court Judllf Fred W. Crow ID Wedlltldty, lo.epb E. Kanawalmeasure would be taken to ensure
sky, 44, of Reedavlle, wu lakea back· 10 the Mel1s County Jall
federal funding on this and any
w.ltlre he will nmUI utlllle ll.tralllpOI'ted to the Orient Correcother ODOT project "The
tiolllllllllltule, Kauwlllkx, pictured ten with hllattomey, Pnblk
Voinovich Administration wo.uld
, Defeader Mike We1tra11, entered a plu or cullty to mur~er, a
never approve a project that did not
Rrtlnllalpldl'leldon OD that char1e, a11d to aHem pled murder or
adhere \0 required guidelines for
fedendfundmg. ·
·
a II" elllorcemnl o111ctr. .
•
·

Although WI ani!Ouncem~nt was District 10 plaMing engineer.
made a couple of years ago that
Durm reports that planners in
steps would be tak.en to replace the his department have been gathering
Pome\oy-Mason bridge, that the necessary information UJ get the
announcement was premature. A . bridge replacement project "proproject of this type can be initiated grammed" through ODOT's Cen·
only by the Ohio Department of tral Office in Columbus. · ·
.
Transportation. Only recently has
B)' ·programmed, Durrn means
Distrtct 10 of OOOT, Marietta, that 'such a project has to have
tallen lhe initial steps UJ start a pro· approval from a number of sources.
ject to replace the bridge. And even Those approvals, along 'with a plan
though mitial steps have been of action, are submitted 10 Colum·
uta1c;en~,~a~ne;w~~;:l1~
· s~stil~'!l~y~ears;:_b~u~s
for P,rPCCSS.
review. aUpon
passing
lhe
to Tony
Durm , review
ptoposed
project

-----

Io. s.r iroe eat.
I

try of tourism in the county. She is Pomeroy on June 26 and 27 at
being assisted in the. showcase by which time the public may board
Cindy Oliveri, Meigs County . the boat 10 learn of its history and
.Extension Agent, CQ-Chairman.
how it was utilized in its ·day. A
Mrs. Pow~ll says the showcase charge of $2 per person wpuld be
needs participation from every requested to board the natbOac .,
grpup in the county' to be a sl'ccess·
-··The flalboitt is stopping at towns
ful event A public meeting to dis· along the Ohio River .and will
cuss the showcase will be held begin its jQurney in March and end
March 9 at S p.m. at lhe Chamber in October.
of Commerce Office (former
The possibility of confirming
Pomeroy Li~).
this stop will be investigated.
Fash1on Show
Revitalization
The eighth·annual fashion show,
· Speaking on revitalization,
sponsored by the association, will Clark 'stated Pomeroy's grant appli.
be held April 2 at Pomeroy Ele- cation was submitted to the Ohio
mentary. The· theme for this year's Department of Development oli
sllow will be "River Essence" and Friday. He stated a copy of the
tickets will be available as Soon as grant is available for review at
next week.
.
Clark's Jewelry for anyone inter,Susan Clark is again show ested. Word on the awarding of the
chairman and the show will carry grant will come the first week of
.
. the same format as in previous April,
years.
The next meeting of the associa·
The next show meeting will be tion will be held March 10 at 8:30
F~b. 25 at noon at Clark's Jewelry.
a.m. at Bank One.
All committee chairmen are urged
A mem.bership drive for the
to attend.
organization is still underway.
Other matters
Anyone interested in joining may
In olher matters of the associa- · do so for $75 for a full membership
tion, Joe Oarlc, president, reponed or $35-for an associate member·
he had received correspondence ship. Membership dues should be
from American Pionl:ell; Anoat. A made.payable to the Pomeroy Mernatboat with this organization has chants Association in care of Vicki
requeste.d permission to stop in Ferrell, treasurer.

closing i~ disastrous to businesses. when a federal highway may no
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Hoffman noted that a survey taken longer cross the Pomeroy-Mason
Sentinel News StaiT
The need for replacement of the some time ago ·showed that bridge.
Cost of a new bridge, according
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge and how to between 40 and SO percent of the
go about ·getting a time line com· business in Middleport and to Hoffman, has been set at $20
mitment for a new bridge were dis· · Porneroy comes from Mason Coun- million, $2 million of which would
cussed by area officials with Sen. ty. The mayor also pointed out that go to tear down the old structure
Jan Michael Long at a meeting held the bridge is vital to those who and $18 to construct a new bridge.
Monday night at Middleport village cross it every day to get to work.
That figure came from the Ohio
hall:
.
Since it takes such a long time Department of Transportation fol·
Mayor f'red Hoffman called the to get plans completed and funding lowing a 1988 Sbldy which recom·
informal meeting which was for replacement-maybe six to mended replacement of bridges in .
attended by John W. Blaetmar .or eight years-Hoffman said that Ironton,
East
Liverpooh
Pomeroy Village Council, George now is the time to let the Ohio Portsmouth, and Pomeroy.
Nichols, mayor of Mason, Dewey Department of Transportation
Accordin~ UJ (igurts presented
Horton, Jack Satterfield and J!lffies (ODOT) and everybody else know at the meetmg, the bridge had a
Clatwoitby of Middlepon Village that there is real local concern maintenance cost of $4,516,000
Council, and Blllce Fisher, Tom . about replacement of the bridge from 1978 to 1988. The paint pro.
Dooley, and Chuck Kitchen of the because of its age.
ject in 1989 cost $2, lll,OOO; an
He
also
said
that
state
deparl·
Middleport Community Associa·
. inspection and analysis in 1989.
tion. '
. ments need to know that there is $199,000; an inspection in 1990,
It was the genend consensus of general agreement among all offi- $107,000; and repair work in 1991:,
the group that the Bend area cannot cials here lhat a new bridge be built $250;000. It has also been project?delay pushing for a new bridge in the same location so as to con - ed that inspections cost $110,000 a
because · of the long process tinue benefiting all three communi- year.
ODOT in the fall of 1990
required for ,planning, securing ties.
Concern was expressed by announced at a Meigs County
finWtcing, and the actual construe·
Hoffman that any delays now in meeting lha.! a study for replace;.
tion.
The bridge was built in 1928 getting some plan in the works ment of the Pomeroy bridge was •
and through the years has been toward bridge replacement could underway.·
closed sevend times.
an eco- mean the loss of possible federal
From those attendin~ last
Continued on page J
nomic link between the
states, highway dollars later this decade

.
r

.

'

CERTIFICATE .OF APPRECIATION·
Richard Eric Chambers, center, was presented a
certificate of appreciation for his six years of
worlc In 1M safely belt program. He missed only
two of 156 scbeduled sessions. Tbe program bas

now been ditc:ontlnued. Here Bill Quickie, board
president, presents Chambers with the certifi·
cate as new board member Dobrman Reed,
right, looks on. Reed replaces Oris Smith who
recently resigned.
'

Applications being accepted by
board
for
secondary
supervisor"
Replacement
of
bridge
still
ye(lrs
away
.
.

News briefs

____________________....

and Mason. Here as they reviewed some stalls,
tics on the bridge are· from the left, Pomeroy
Councllma11 Joh11 W. Blaettnar, Middleport
Mayor Fred Hoffman, ~en. Lone, and Mason
Mayor George Nlcbols.

·Fall promotion topic
of merchants speaker .

Training session planned

News briefs

A MutUmodla Inc. Newopeper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, February 11, 1993

Area officials discuss
bridge replace.m ent

-Names in the news---

I.

Low tonl&amp;btnear 48. Friday,
rain H ltlh Ia mkl 4Gs.

•

Awards presented io 25
BPA members recently

.I

'

'

.'

,.
I

Applications for the position of
secondary supervisor arc now
being accepted by the Meigs County Board of J;:ducation.
Bill Buckley recently resigned
from that position to accept the job
of superintendent of the Me1gs
Local Boitrd of or Education.
John Reibel, county superinlen·
dent, reported at a meeting of the
board Tuesday night said that sevelal applications have already been
received. However, applications
will be accepted until the April
meeting of the board. The job is
expected to be filled in May.
According to Reibel, the position
requires a principal or supervisor's
cenificatc.
Transfer of early childhood
funds was approved and a repoft
was given on the vehicle purchased .
by the board to house a miniature
classroom to be used for pre-school
handicapped children. Instead of
the teacher going into the home of
the student, the student is taken
into the van classroom where a
deslc and materials are readily
accessible.
The bus driver certificate of
Failh Varney was approved. Also
approved Wll$ a contract wiJ]t Resi·
dcntial Management Service
(RMS) which provides health care
business services. The agency will
wodt with the board UJward getting
lhe county schools certified as a
licensed health care provider. This
means lhat the school system can
.be reimbursed for special services
to Medicaid-eligible students.
These services Include things lilce
speech and psychological

scrnces·

According to Reibel, this could
bring in sevelal thouS8l)d dollars to
the county. Payment to RMS. will
be in the amount of four percent of
whatever is received.
The board also approved a contract w'ilh the state audi10r for the
Generally Accepted · Accounting
Principles (GAAP). This includes
puning fixed assets on computer.
The Meigs County spelling bee
was announced for Feb. 25 at
Southern High School at 7:30p.m.
A certificate of appreciation was
presented to Richard Eric Cham-

bers for his sill years or work with
the safety belt program. It was
noted on the certificate from the
Ohio Department of Education that
seat belt usage rates increased from
17 percent to 58 percent John L.
Rochester, assistant director of the
Ohio Safety Belt Educational Center program , credited a significant
part of the increase to the worlc of
safety beh center instructors.
Reibel reported that during the .
six years. Chambers missed only
two out of !56 scheduled sessions. ,'

•

WARM AND SUNNY • It seemed IIIOft like Mlly thaD Pebnary Wednesday~ when the temperature hit 70 cleateca 011
the Baak One tbennometer Ia Pomeroy. Folks llled their
walked a little slower to enjoy the warm, sanny wutber which
· weather forecasters say lsll't here to stay.
·-: _

_..IDCI-·

. ..

\

•

1

.. -'

'

�•

Thursday, February 11, 1993

Commentary
·The Daily Sentinel

•

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, February 11,1993

Is the economic 'truth' true?
'

exist because we measure it. WJOOg.
What about productivity? The success. Foreigners are buying up
Serious economists all: Thanks for root of slow economic growth is America; no, America is investing
will tell us about our economic the help;
. slow productivity growth. Produc- 100 much abroad. We're losing our
· DEVOTED TO THE JNTEIU!ST8 OF THE MEIGS-MASON AR1tA
What about jobs7 Tell us the tivity in the manufacturing sector work ethic; no, we're working
problems, and offer economic solutions. He said recently that earlier
has soared. It's productivity in the harder than e.ver. We need more
presidents had not "leveled" with
¥lfVice sec lOr thai's flat But most regulation; no. we need less regulathe American people about the
&amp;onomists concede that we don't tion. We've have I haven't lost ·
economy, echoing a decade of
know how to measure productivity manufacturing jobs. Immigrants
_rhetoric about how politicians truth! ClinlOD says that jobs are a in -s ervices. (Don't computers help I hun us. We're hurting I we ·
ROBERT L. WINGETT
"haven't had the courage 10 tell us big problem, and th8t he wants to increase productivity in offices? have the highest standard of living
Publl.!iber
lhe truth."
."grow" jobs, and not just any old . Don't automatic teller machines evtr. Income has gone down;
income has stayed flat; income has ·.
Now, I will probably sup)ion jobs, but "good jobs." But many increase productivity in banks?)
gone up.
program.
But
let's
deal
ClinlOn's
And
so
it
gQes.
Arguments
PAT WHIIEHEAD
serious
economists
stress
that
19
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Moreover, most of these contraforst
with
this
"
truth"
issue.
everywhere.
The
rich
got
a
tax
ripmillion new jobs were created from
Assistant Publisher/Controller
General Manager
Whal. for example, is that elu- 1980-90, that the new jobs were off in Jhe ' 80s. No, they didn't. diclOry faCtoids are boosted by ide·
sive hidden truth about the defJCit7 not mostly hamburger-flipper ser- We're overtaxed. No, we're-under- ologists, not economists. Beneath it
LET!l!RS OF OPINION are welcome. They sboul~ be less than 300
This:
Some serious economists vice jobs, but mostly good ones. taxed. A sttong dollar is good. No, all is usually a big government I
words. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name·,
we should cut spending. What's the truth7
think
a weak dollar is good. Trade cre- small government argument.
address and telephone number. No unsign~ letters will be published. Letters
So, it's not thai we're not being
·
Some
think
we
should
raise
taxes.
Will President Clinton tell us ates jobs. No, trade costs jobs.
should be in good taste , addressing issues, not ptl'onalities.
Some believe we need more eco- that truth about bow America isn't Lower defiCits will lower long-term told the truth. We don't !~free on
nomic growth, which they say is competing well in the global mar- interest rates. Nb, they won't. what the truth is. All this edgeS me
hanned by raising taxes or cutting ket? I hope he also rel1s us the truth "Infrastructure stimulates the econO- lOward supporting the likely Clinspending. Some say the !leficit isn't that America (after gelling into my. No, it doesn't. The trade ton plan.
really high. Some believe it doesn't inremational trade tare in the game) deficit hurts us. No, it doesn'L
· The argument has become sttt·
matter much if it 's high or low. recently became the biggest
Want more? The budget deal of ile, boring and endless. By now it
Some say the deficit doesn't even exporrer in the world.
1990 was a failure; no, it was a is paralyz~.{~he public dialog. ;
&lt;:Worse. it
economists impor- ·
C,l\MJ. ,_. WCIIIIMoiJIItlf.·WA ftf' ,, -£-rtJ'r
tant.) We have more imporlant :
By WALTER R.MEARS
things to debalt than which anip 10 :
H~
AP Special Correspondent
take out of benefits, which smidgen
WASHINGTON - While lhe DemocraJS claim 10 have ul)tied gridto add 10 our taxes. and where 10 :
lock right at the swt, their all-clear signal could prove premawre.
nick spending. The sacrifices
There are still gridlockers 10 be confronted - problems that can pro:
required are small. (How about a :
duce impasses even in an undivided government, without Republican
dartboard 10 choose?)
·
veLOeS.
We've made the budget deficit a
President ClinLOn said America· s families beat the gridlock in Washmonumental LOII:m of national diS- ·
ingLOn 10 win the family leave bill, the forst act he signed as president
cipline, so we should do some. :
•'Today marks lhe end of gridlock and a new beginning,'' said Vice ~si­
thing, and it shouldn't bc another ·
dent AI Gore. "The decade of gridlock has ended," added Sen. George J.
phony baloney trick that never :
Milehell, the majority leader.
·
quite gets to spendin¥ cuts. We can :
The gears of governmem, House, the Senare, lhen While House, had
. resume the ideological argument ·
indeed meshed 10 deliver the bill ClinlOn signed on Friday, guaranteeing
later. Right now, most any serious :
up 10 12 weeks of unpaid leave for family emergencies 10 employees in
·
plan is better than no plan.
fmns wilh SO or !Ilore workers.
Clinton was elected. We only ;
And !here's another major measure 10 follow, probably late this month.
have one president at a time. Let's .
requiring that states allow their voters 10 register by mail, and at agencies
hear his p10posal. He'll tell us that •
like the motor yehicle departments that issue driver's licenses. The House
it's based on telling us the hard '
has passed thai measure and it awaits action in th~ Senate.
truth. Sure it is. But if it's mildly
Both were vetoed by President Bush, family leave twice, and the
· appropriate, I'll make believe I.
Democrats couldn't gain the 1wo-thirds vores needed 10 override him .
believe him.
Republican minorities in Congress could not pass or block legislation, but
Ben Wattenberg, a senior fel·
lhey could withstand override attempts, on all but one of Bush's veLOeS.
low at tbe ·American Enterprise
Bush veiOed 46 bills; Congress overruled him only on an election-time
Jutltute, Is author of "Tbe First
velD of legislation 10 renew government regulation of cable television
Universal Nation," published by
rates.
.
The Free Press and a ayadlcated
· So when ClinLOn lOOk office, family leave and vorer registration were
writer (or Newspaper Enterprise
. measures ready made to display a fast start as evidence that the
hA\rll! a problem.
need a board of d1rectors that
Associ adon.
Democrats had moved beyond gridlock. With only minor alrerations they
looks' more like the stockholders."
were recycled for enactment. They already had been d~ and passed
by majorities in the last Congreas, so it lOOk no time 10 get going in this
one.
Republicans could only repeat their oppi&gt;sition, knowing it would be
futile. They could have stalled passage in the Senate; but thai would have
left them vulnerable 10 gridlock complaints, to no advantage. _
Betrer 10 wait. koowing there are more difficult. closely contested
Valentine's Day 1993, and once
Once ag~n. we are v1ct1m to sympathetic hand squeezes. We she fiXes fish again, I swear I'll put '
issues coming soon, when GOP voleS or objections may have an impact.
again
I revert 10 adolescence. 1 fan- that old spmler of mate-female still didn't undersJand much of antifreeze in her Blue Nun and
That will be the case on some of the taxes and spending cuts that will
be in the economic plan ClinLOD presents 10 Congress on Feb. I 7. And it ~ize that on V-Day my Beloved relationships that's been around what we were saying to each other, bury her in the city yard waste ·
also could be on another bill be'Jueathed bY Bush ve10, the campaign will take me for a candlelight din- since Eve hoped Adam would · but at least it made us feel better dump. Good thing I haven't got ·
ner in a hoity reslaurant and present
about it.
finance reform ClinLOn wants enacted.
around to pitching the Christmas
lt:s not that we don't WANT to' · tree or the hedge clippings from
WhCn congressional Democrats voted for campaign reform, including me with one of those "eternity
communicare, but thai we're taught last October.)
public financing 10 induce spending limits, they koew Bush was going to rings" that says he'd marry me all
veLO the measure. They could vOle for reform without worrying about the over again, even though he hasn't bring her something a little more different lexicons and·reatty need a
ME: "Do you not like flsli at
romantic than the apple peeler he cryplOgraph to decode our conver- all?"
crimp it would put in the advantage House incumbents usually hold at married me the forst time yet.
My real Valentine's Day will go showed up with on the fiist Valen- sations. Let me give you an examreelection time. Now there's a president commitred 10 signing campaign
BELOVED: "WcU; since you
something
like this: I dump an tine's Day: "differing expecla- ple of what I mean. taken from my mention it, 1· guess it isn't my ·
reform legislation - and less House urgency about .it than the other
entire bottle of food coloring inLO tions." It's nobody's fault. given personal archives:
veLOed and recycled bills. •
.
· ·
.
favorire." (I'd rather you'd fricas- ·
.
my
friend
Kathy's
special
devil's·
that
males
and
females
are
reared
ME: "What would you like for see the contents of )'9ur trash can.
That could put Republicans in a position 10 bargain i&gt;n the terms of
food cake reci~, rendering it blood . in separate solar sysrems and then dinner?" (Geez, I hope he levels Are you deaf, woman?)
e~onomic and reform measures. "Right now. we're sort of watching
red,
and bake 11 in my heart-shaped thrown LOgether like cats in a sack with me this Cime. I hated giving
J)em&lt;lcratic gridlock, with the exception of family leave, which was a
And why haven't ILOld him thl!t
pans.
I fix Beloved a platrer of cow and expected to mare. But it sure those salmon stealcs to the neigh- what l'cl'~y like for Valentine's
t!!ven," Sen. RobenJ. Dole,lhe minority leader, said in a CNN inrerview.
.•It's not Republicans bloclcing, it's DemocraJS, in effect. bloclcing pro- thai would feed Ken Norton Jr. and does keep our courtrooms jammed: bor's cat.) .
Day is an eternity ring and a dinner ·
Sr., along with homemade roUs and It's easier lb divorce 'em than learn
Jrams President ClinLOn wants to advance:"
BELOVED: "Oh, anything." in a place where the waiters aren't
·
• While that overstates the case, there are differences among t/Je a Caesar salad. The room is lit only how 10 please •em.
(I'd really like a niq: juicy stuffed even nice 10 us?
The second problem, afrer being pork chop. But I'd rather die than
. Democrats, as in the opposition that led the White House 10 renounce a by two red candles in the crystal
Aie
you
lcidding? And have him
di:fteit-Curbing freeze in Social Security cost of living increases, and to holders that I use once a year, and I reared in different cultures, is that say iL Real men eat whatever their think I'm the kind of woman who
JI!:Ccpt a compromise delay in ending the ban on homosexuals in the mili- am dressed in something th31 can- we're also brought up spealcilig two women put in front of 'em, just like cares too much about.maierial
not be described in a family news· languages just similar enough 10 my father did.)
·
JMY.
things, even though ad writers have
paper.
fool us into thinking they're the
. : One pany control comes with no guarantee against division, delays,
ME: (Maybe i( I list a few made millions trying 10 convince
He gazes lovingly at the medi- same. I once saw an ad for a men- choices, I'll notice a special light in people like me that any man who
even deadlocks now and then. Those were among the problems that beset
um-rare
slab on his plare and says, tal-health seminar tiUed "Commu- his eyes when I hit the right one.)
fresident Jimmy Carter during his single term in the While House.
"Why's
it so dark in here? The nication Between the Sexes." Now "How about a steak? Or a roast? REALLY loves his woman will
• But the Carter White House was aloof at the outset; Clinton has
buy all these things for her'l What
worked 10 open lines to Congress. And while approval of family leave .electncity off again?" He is eager there's an oxymoron if I ever heard Or I couhf' broil. some orange do you talce me for?
vias a foregone conclusion, it still gave ClinLOn a major piece of lcgisla- 10 get dinner over with so he can one. Beloved and I ofren talk about roughy."
Sarah Overstreet is a syndicatch the tip-off of a basketball this, and once. during a Donahue
_t~n to sign only 16 days inlO his presidency, far sooner than usual.
BELOVED: "That would be cated writer ror Newspaper
discussion of same, exchanged fine. Oh, yes, fine. F-i-i-i-ine." (If ~terprlse Association.
• Carter's first bill was an emergency natural gas measure. rushed game on TV.
·
tdrough 10 redistribute supplies 10 overcome winter shortages. He praised
~gress for swift action on that, but the major energy program he proposed that spring was stalled by a Senate filibuster that included
Democrats.
: The forst bill Ronald Reagan signed increased the debt limit. Clinton
If you believe that you are
Any additional revenues mised ity vore (two-thirds, preferably, but legislation f!iving him line-item
,;;u face one of those by April.
undertaxed
by
the
federal
govern·
by
the federal government will be more likely three-fifths).
veto authonty. When monstrous .
: Just four years a!!O• Bush signed his forst legislation- rescindin~ the
ment,
please
write
me
in
care
of
like
money
down
the
proverbial
rat
Had.
President
Bush
won
such
a
appropriations
bills cross his desk .
I!Y raise that had stirred such an outcry Congress didn' t dare to take 11.
this newspaper. Our new president hole. Until there is structural concession from Congress as pan - mohair. helium and all - he ·
seems 10 lhink that there are lots of
of the 1990 budget agreement, had cian simply strike the most wasteful
-: EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president and colum:
you
out
there.
And
that
if
more
of
the growth in federal spending SP.CDding items with his blue peniiist for The Associated Press, bas reported on Washington 11nd
you
paid
your
fair
share
of
taxes.
~
•
•
been
held 10 the inflation rare over cil.
.
national politics for more than 30 years.
we wouldn't have the current _____::...________ the six-year span covered by the
Let us suppose lhat the president
deficit mess.
change in the federal budget pro- pact, the governmept would have had line-item veto authority
I'm not convinced. I think that. cess, until Congress is unable to saved $414 billion. That would be between 1984 and 1989. According
with few exceptions, Americans spend freely, the federal govern- enough 10 10 buy alllhe goods.and to the General Accounting OffiCC,
are sending more than enough tax ment deserves not a dollar more services produced by Spain this he could hav~ saved the federal
money 10 WashingLOn. As Ronald from the taxpayers.
year, or enOU$h. to give every treasury $70 billion and reduced
Reagan once observed: The prob·
A constitutional amendment working Amencan a $3,300 tax the deficit by 6. 7 percent. That ·
lem of the deficit is not that Ameri- requiring a balanced budget would cut
seems a compelling argument for ·
cans are taxed 100 little. It's that do much 10 impose fiscal discipline
Just imagine if Congress were granting the president more sway ·
their government is spending LOn on federal lawmakers. However, forced to budget like the rest of us. over the federal checkbook.
· ·:
much.
based on recent hisLOry, the likeli- Each year, the solons would get a
Before Clinton asks the Ameri- :
President ClinLOn is asking lhat · hood of such a measure passing cost of living increase. Then they . can taxpayers to dig deeper in their . ·
••
Americans "sacrifice'-' for their Congress is less than zero. Law- would have to make tough deci- pocketbooks to hefp their govern- . :
country by acceptiog higher taxes. makers have shown time and time sions about what 10 spend money ment pay its bills, he should first •
But why should taxpayers sacrifiCe again that they will not willingly on and what to do without. Maybe ask Congress to _e nact budget
when there is absolurely no guaran- surrender .their license to spend they would fiJid beuer uses for the reforms. Once Jaxpayers see that
.
tee
that Congress wiU curb its prof: other people's money.
$200 million a year in wool and Congress is doing its part to , ·
.....
ligate spending habits?
There is !Jo!!e. however. With a mohair subsidie,s they pay out 10 restrain spending, they may feel : ·
•
Just three -years ago, you will member of theu pany in the White sheep and goat rarmers. Or the more sanguine abOut giving over • :
•
recall, President Bush ~ck a deal House, the Democrat-controlled $120 million a year that goes to more of their hard-earned dollars 10 :
with Congress in "!hich he accept- Congress may be willing not 10 sur- federalheiium reserves (to blow up Washington.
ed new taxes in exchange for assur- render, but to share some of its balloo may'-?)
Joeepll Perkins Is a colu1nlst
ances of spending cutS. Americans power over the purse. President
or~.
lillY find for Tile Saa ~le10 Ualoa•TrJ. ~ , )
were hit with a record tax hike of Clinton conceivably could push that they just cannot brin• thcm- bliM alld a IJIIII~tecl writer
.•..
$165 billion over five years. But through budget reform this year. selves to give up their pet pOrk-bar- Newspaper Enterprise Auocla·
Congress continued to spend much as Reagan pushed through rei projects. No problem. Mike the lion. ·
money like it was going out of tax reform during his lirsl year in president the butcher-In-chief. Pass
•
style.
office.
· ·
•
•
In fact, lhe record shows that for
The first step toward budget
every new dollar of federal taxes reform would be 10 set a limit on
.II
_
mised since the 1990 budget deal, annual increases in federal spend·
·
B)' Tile Atloelatecl Prelii
·
Congress spent roughly a buck and ing. It seems reasonable to peg
Todiy is Thursday, Feb. 11, the 42nd day of 1993. There are 323 days
.
. ~
a half. The result is that Washing· yearly growth in spending to. left in the year.
~t.jfA, Inc
•
LOn now consumes $1 of every $4 . increases in the Consumer Price
Todly's Highlight in History:
· ,'
.
"Excuse me. Could you direct me to the
produced by working Americans. Index. 1f Congress wanted to On Feb. 11, 1812, the ~huaett&amp; Legislature 11 the behest of Oov
$30 million toilet?"
Yet, President Clil)ton informs us exceed thai spending cap, it should Elbridge~. [liiiCd a re-c!istriclinglaw that favored rw.v•s puty ~
the government needs more.
be required to muster a supermajor- political maricuver that I'CIIilted in the term "gerrymandering:;t
'
In his State of the Union message on Feb. 17, President Clinton

111 COurt Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

,----Local briefs-_, _.......__Area deaths-Man suffers gunshot wound

A Pome~oy man ,ilnderwent surgery early this morning at Veter·
ans Memonal Hospital for an accidental gunshot wound to his right
leg.
According to a repon from Chief or Police Jerry Rought, Kenny
Brown, 49, was closmg the Corner Bar on Easl Main Street
Pomeroy. As he reached inLO his pocketlO $et outlhe keys to lock
.!he door, his 38 Special handgun fell from h1s pocket to the ground.
When 11 struck the ground, 11 d1seharged, and the bullet struck his
· nghtleg below the knee.
The Pomeroy Emergency Squad transported Brown .LO Veterans.
· Late th1s morning he was still in inrensive care.
.

Ben Wattenb.erg

Two injured in wreck .

· "fwo women were inj~ in a two-car.wreck at lhe junctio-n of
Ohm 7 and Success Road m Orange Township Wednesday around
5:30p.m.
'
. According 10 a repon from lhe GaUia-Meigs Post of the State
H1gh"Yay Patrol, Amy M. Hendrix, 23, 428'25 Mudsock Rd .•
Coolv_ille, was southbound on Ohio ,7 passing traffic and struck a
car driven by Cheryl A. Jernagen, 35, 33825 Smith Ridge Rd., Long
Bonom, that was slowing 10 make a left rum.
·
Hen&lt;JJ:ix was u:ansported by the Meigs County Emergency Medical Serv1ce 10 Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis were she was
treared and re~eased. Jern~en was transported by the EMS to Veterans Memonal Hospllal m Pomeroy and later transfered to St.
Joseph's Hospital in Parketsburg.
Damage 10 Hendrix's 1986 Ford Tempo was listed as moderate
and disabling. Damage to Jernagen's 1978 Ford Fairmont wa~ listed
as heavy and disabling.
·
No citations were issued.

Washington gridlock
may not be over yet

Valentine's Day is for· th~ hearty

1
I,

Sarah Overstreet

Higher taxes aren't the right answer
Joseph nerkins

Berry's World

.

.

ia:..m.tcen

Today ·· n history

II

I

•

'

,

ror ' ·

. .-'

T~e Dally Sentlnei.:_Page--3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

·Woman cited on DUI charge
A Portland woman was cited this morning by the Gallia·Meigs
Post of the State Highway Patrol on a fli'St offense charge of driving
under the influence.
·
Vickie L. Pullins, 27, 30578 Lovett Rd., wai cited on Ohio 7 in
Salisbury Towmhip around 2:30a.m. and is scheduled 10 appear in
coun Wednesday at9:30 am.
·

D~borah Reed
Deborah M. Reed, 34, Ridgeway, died -Wednesday, Feb. 10.
1993, at' herresidence.
.
Born Jan. 14, 1959 in Athens
County, was a daughter of Carolyn
WelSh Collins and .the late C .
Richard Nutter. She was a member
of the Ridgeway Church of Christ.
She worked a~ Loretta Lynn's
Dude Ranch.
She is survived by her mother
and step-father. Mr. and Mrs.
Willie Collins; tw(l daughter, Tari·
na Dawn Reed and Persie Marie
Bolling, both at home; two sislers,
Mrs. Alan (Vicki) Lease, Ridgeway, and Dena Collins, Bellefontaine; one brother, Richard Nutter, Ridgeway; thre\! srep-brothers~
William, Charles and Jerry Collins,
all of Pomeroy; one step-sister.
Mellisa C1llins, Pomeroy; one
grandmother, · Dena Welsh,
Pomeroy: four nieces and one
nephew.
Besides her father she was ·preceded in death by two husbands.
Services will be Saturday 'at .
10:30 a.m. at Price Funeral Home
in Mt. Victory. Burial will be in
Wells Cemetery in Harrisonville.
Friends. may call ;11 lhe funeml
home on Friday from 2-4 and 7-9
p.m.
.
•
Contributions may be made to
the Hardin ~ounty Hospice.

H. Freeman Roush

H. Freeman Roiish, 76, of Bris101, Virginia, died Wednesday,
February 10, 1993 in BrislOI Nurs•
ing Home in Brisiol, V~ '
· The Southeastern Ohio R~gional Council (SEORC) Winter
He was a native of New Haven.
Meeting is scheduled for March 4 at the University of Rio Grande
WV, and had lived in Cleveland,
in Rhodes Cenrer.
· .
VA over 30 years before moving 10
The guest speaker will be Nancy Hollister, &lt;lirector of lhe GoverBrisLOl, VA. He was a ·retired sunor',s-Office of ~ppalachian. The higlnvay committee.will release
pervisor of Appalachian ·Power in
the new brochures depicting the SEORC highway agenda and the
Carbo, VA and a member of St.
industrial development committee will release the new Wage, BeneJohn
Lutheran
Church
in
lit and Labor Survey of Southeastern Ohio at this meeting.
Abingdon, VA. He was a lifetime
Reservations may be made by calling the Meigs County Chammember of Roush Families of
ber of Commerce at992-5005.
America and a member of the
Cleveland Lions Club.
Survivors include his wife,
Louise Roush of BrisLOl, VA; three
sons. Jack Roush of Rulher Glen,
- VA, Nathan Roush and Bill Rousb,
both of Mt. Sterling, KY; two slepdaughters, Beverly Bfl!lldCS of
Columbia. SC and Barbara Homer
'of Ijamsville, MD; a srep-son,
Nineteen calls for assistance · Racine unit went 10 Mile Hill Road James Dodson of Kingsport, TN; a
•were answered by units of" the for Twila Clark who was treated sister, Mildred Fry of New Haven,
Meigs County Emergency Medical but not transported.
WV; on brolher. Lloyd Roush of
~. Service on Wednesday and early
At ].2:13a.m. the Pomeroy unit New Haven; WV; 20 grandchildren
: Thursday morning.
went to East Main Street at the
four great.grandchildren.
On Wednesday at 1:04 p.m. Corner Bar for Kenneth Brown andGraveside
service will be eonSkymed helicopter transported wlio --:as taken to veterans.
dueled
31
2
p.m.
SaJurday, February
' Wood~ow Hall from Veterans
The Tuppers Plains unit, at 13, in Graham Cemetery in New
~ Memorial Hospital to Riverside
12:45 a.m .• went to Pooler Road Haven wilh lhe Rev. George
;· Melhodist Hospital in Columbus.
for Delores Hottman who was Weirick officiating.
&lt;
At 2:22 p.m. the Racine Fire taken 10
The family will receive friends
•:neparuncnt went 10 Mile Hill Road
· The Pomeroy unit. at 2:52 a.m.• from 7-9 p.m. Friday at the
· on a molOr vehicle accident which was called 10 Route 143 for Jonetta ' Lebanon Funeral Home, 105 Tare
· started a brush fire. Mike Morris NoFITlan who was transported to Street, Lebanon, VA.
and Jason Rowe were treated but Holzer. At6:16 a.m. lhe unit went
· not transported.
.
to Route 143 for Shawn Mitch who
' At 3:47 p.m. the Scipio Fire was taken 10 Veterans.
Department responded to a b.rush
The RuUand unit. at 6:40 a.m.,
Veterans Memorial
fue on New Lima Road on proper- was•called 10 Route 124 for EmesWEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS
' ty owned by Chuck Whillington. tine Williams who was taken to - Dorothy Ritchie, Racine; Douglas
The Rutland Fire Department Veterans.
Burns, Pomeroy.
assisted at 3:57 p.m, The Pomeroy
Finally, at -7:15a.m. this momWEDNESDAY DISCHARGES
Fire Department assisted at 4:19 ing the Pomeroy unit responded to - Charlene Foreman, Alfred
p.m. The Meigs County Fire Plow Shorl Fourth for Edward James Ziegler, Janet Miller and William
' was called to assist at 4:30 p.m. whCI was transported 10 Veterans.
Morris.
and the Salem Fire Department ·.
•assisted at4:40 p~m . There were no
Continued from page 1 .
injuries . .
'
.
.
The Tuppers Plains Fire Depart- night's meeting there seemed to be office of Appalachia.
ment and Pomeroy unit responded som.e question as 10 the status of
Long also asked' that copies of
10
a
motor
vehicle
accident
at
5:49
th31
study.
the
resolutions be sent to him so
' p.m. ai Roure 7 and Success.Road.
Sena10r Long said lhat he had lhat·he can include them in a letter
Cheryl J~renagen was taken 10 Vet- contacted the director of ODOT 10 the ODOT direcLOr.
erans.
and ,was told thai a consultant is
It was decided that as a first step
At 8:03 p.m. the Racine unit working on bridge replacement all three villages will move on getwent to BuckLOwn Road for James plans . Long also said that $200 ting resolutions passed and in the
Anderson. He was transported to million has been designated for hands of officials and to Long by
Veterans.
general bridge replacement but he March 1.
The Pomeroy unit went to did not not what specific projects.
Discussed briefly at the meeting
Locust Street at8:21 p.m. for DouHe emphasized the importance was toll -rree telephone service
glas Burns. He was taken 10 Veler- of gening a time"linc commitment between several exchanges in
ans.
from ODOT on planning. and con. Mason and Meigs Counties. Mason
At 8:58 p.m. the Racine unit struction of a new bridge between Mayor Nichols asked Long to
responded to Main Street for Pomeroy and Mason.
check with the Public Utilities
Raben Proffitt who was transponHe proposed that each of the Commission of Ohio on-lhe status
ed 10 Holzer Medical Cenrer.
villages pass a resolution asking for of the request. Nichols indicated
The Pomeroy unit, Bl I 0:28 action ·on bridge replacement, and lhat as he undersJands it the PUCO
p.m., went to Hiland Road for · that copies of those resolutions go and the West Virginia PSC have no
Leona Wallace who was taken to to the1governors of both Ohio and rare responsibility for long distance
Ye1erans.
West'Virginia, U. S. and state sena- and the effort now is to get the
On Thursday at 12 a.m. the tors and representatives, directors request oul of lhose two agencies
of transportation in bolh Ohio and and inlO Federal District Court for
West Vrrginia, and Nancy Hollis- a decision.
, ter, director 9f the Governor's
The Daily Senliuel

SEORC to meet March 4

·S quads make 19
~-runs past-24 hours

v;erans.

·Hospital news ·

Edgar Thomas
A memorial service for Edgar
Thomas. who died Thursday, Feb.
4, 1993 31 Holzer Medical Center.
will be held Sunday at 2 p.m. at
Ewing Funeral Home in Pomeroy.
The family will receive friends
atl:30p,m.
.
The family requests in lieu of
flowers that contributions be made
to the Meigs County.Branch of the
American Heart Association in care
of Millie Midkiff, Box 586.
Pomeroy. or to Calvary Baptist
Church, Box 147, Pomeroy Pike. in
care of Allen Blackwood, Middlepan.

Court news · · .
Foreclosure action nted
An action for foreclosure has
been filed by Home National Bank,
Racine, agamst Exa Mae Christian,
Pomeroy.
Judgments awarded
Two judgments have been
awarded by the Meigs County
Coun of Common Pleas to Farmers
Bank and Savings Company from
Hill and Associates. Inc., and others.
The first entry grants a default
judglt)ent against Kenneth R. Utt,
defendant with Hill and Associates,
on a cross claim of Buckeye Hills
Hocking Valley Regional Develop·
ment District in the amount of
$30,161.26.
The second entry awards a judgment in the amount of $32,042.21
to Farmers Bank and Savings Company from Kenneth R. Utt." defendant with Hill and Associates, Inc.
and others.
Licenses issued
Marriage licenses have been
issued by Meigs County Probate
Court to Charles Arthur Ritchie Jr .•
20, Racine, and Kristy Lynn Rizer.
17, Racine; ancf to Elmer Wesley
Althouse, 46, Albany, and Judy
Canova Rose, 47, Albany.

Deer accident reported

Meigs announcements Weather

TONIOHT

ORACULAR

ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30

•

Birthday celebration planned
Glada Davis will celebrate, her
95th birthday Friday.
Cards may be sent 10 her at 209
Soulh Fourth Street in Middlepon
in care of lhe Elam Nursing Home.

South-Central Obio
Tonight,. occasional rain. Low
near 40. Winds east 10 to 20 mph,.
Chan~e of rain 80 percent. Friday, •
occasional rain or drizzle. High 40:
10 45. Chance of rain 80 percent •

Games cancelled
Saturday's basketball games at
Eastern High School have been
cancelled.

Extended forecast:
,
Saturday through Monday: '
Saturday, a chance of snow:
west, rain changing to snow east. :
Lows in the 20s and highs mainly •
in the 30s. Sunday, a chance or:
flurries. Lows in .the 20s. Highs in:
the upper 20s to mid 30s. Monday, 1
fair. Lows 15 to 25. Highs in the
mid 30s 10 lower 40s.

Reunion meeting planned
The Southern Class of 1968 will
have a meeting 10 plan activities for
the 25tli year reumon on Feb. 23 at
Southern High School at 7 p.m.

'

•• •••••••••
••
••
•
•
••
POPCORN

OUR SPECIAL
VALETI['.IES DAY
THANK YOU.

Present thiud with your
admission Eicketslub :tl our

conscssion stand :and recievc a
46oz.sizccUpof

·

FRESHlY ~d popcorn.

•

p&lt;lpcorn offer cxpir&lt;s 3/15/93

POPCORN

•

- - - - - - - - - - - · " '------,-----J

•

Enjoy a feature film in luxurious comfort.

·...II.
. .......

Donald W. Houdashelt, Syra- •
cuse, struck and lcilled a deer Tues- •
day night while traveling west on ,
Route 124 around 11:30 p.m. near
Maple Wood Lake according to the •
Meigs County Sheriff's Department
His 1986 Nissan pi~kup sustained moderate damage io the
right fronL

COLONY THEATRE

•

' '"·''15 a~.n, .. .

lti.TIII'r[S· SAT &amp; SU., l : IS l: I

••

. rc:.~::.~t~

A

River

RUNS THROUGH IT

~-

.:........ ~.Wt

SHOW TIMES
FRL, SAT., SUN.
7:30 8:45
MON. THAU THURS.
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
ADIIISSIOIUUO
4411-0123

'
Area

.

(U8P811J.IIO)

i•

Published eYery al\ernoon, Monday
lh""''h Frida,y, Ill Coun St., Pomeroy,
, Oh'o by the Ohto Valli!)' Publishing
CompanyiMuiUmadJa lac. , Pomeroy,

Pursuant to the Company's

Ohio 46768, Ph. 992-2168. Second dua
JIOIIap paid ot Pomervy, Ohio.

Emergency Control Program

Member: 'l'bo AHoc:loled Pnoo, ond the
Obto Newa,_~
..aociation, Natioul

. apprOved by the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio on

AdnTtiaina
nt.ative, Branham
Newspaper Sa II, 733 Third Avenue,
N.,. Yorlt, N"" Ybr1t 10011.'

POIITMASTER: Send adclnu , ....... lo
The Daily Sentinel; 111 Court St.,
. Potnervy, OHio 46769.
lltiiiiCIIIPTION &amp;ATB8

IIJ'Corrioror-a-ta

One We&lt;k. .................. :........................ l.SO
One Monlii ......................................... M.95
One Y-.......................................... $83 .20

IINOL&amp;COPY
PII.ICII:

Daily.............................................25 Conll
Sllbocribon ..,. deoiri.. 1o pay the c:orri·
• mar remit in advance direct to The
))atly S..ttnel on a dlree, ab: or 12
month b.W. Cn!dlt. wtll be tfwen carrier
au:h....t•
No a.m.cripliona by mail permitted in
.a.-.u where llame carrier Hrvice il

aYallable.

_. __

•
Jaotdo ...lll 0..DI)' ·
IS W-.........................................121.84

w-.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Capac.ry

and

Energy

service area.

. ELECTRIC
POWER SUPPLY FACILITIES
.
'
The Company's electric
supply facilitie s - including power generating
plants , major transmission
po~er

facilit ies and interconnections
· with neighboring electric utili·

ty systems - ar,e adequate to
provide reliable electric service
to its customers. During 1992.
excluding temporary powe r
sales to other utility syst~ms,
generating-capacity margins of
the American Electric Power
(AEP) SySiom , of whic h Ohio
PoWer is a part, were approximately 24 percon1 (or mO&lt;o) of
capability. Margins ol at least

th is level are e;~Cpected to be
ava il able throughou t the year
and somewhat less - about
20% - during the peak load
period of neMt winter (1993 •
1 9~4) .
Generating-capacity margins

are r{tquired in order to meet
unexpe ct ed increases in
system IQa~ . 10 provide 1or an
effective program of preventive
maintenance of generating
. facilities and to allow for ran·
dam shutdowns and loading
curtailments ot generating ~

un its.

·ELECTRIC ENERGY SUPPLY
ApproXImaiOiy 88% of tho'
AEP
Syslem's
power

~.150

generating capacity is coal·
meet the antiCipated electric
fired. 9% 1S nuclear and there- . energy requirements of its
maindar is oil -tired or customers dur~ng the year

~

112 \V-..................................:....... N8.40

ONLY

March 18. 1981 . the Company
hereby apprises the public ol
the state of etectrlc supply in i1s

~. 18

w-..........................................
·112 w-..............................................78
O.lol.. Kelp Co. . .
u w-..........................................1123.40
28
118

s

PUBUC NOTICE
FROM OHIO POWER COMPANY

hydro.lectrlc. Tho Company

believes that ils coal supplies
are adequate to enable it to

• Faelory Fresh
• Best price,
Best qualily,
Guaranleed

Mason ·Furniture Co.
2ND STREET

(304) '773•5592

•
'

.

•

I

~:
•...
'•

•'

�•
•

/
•

Sports

The Daily

Tliursday, February 11, 1993

Sentinel ·~

Sports Probe

SEC) had a 15-pointlead with nine
minules to play, but had to hold off
Kenwcky (17-2, 8-2), which closed
within four five times in the final
two minules.
Corliss Williamson had four
points.
Travis Ford and Jamal Mashburn each had 20 points for Kentucky.
No. 3 Duke 73, Georgia Tech ~3
The Blue Devils (19-3, 7-3
ACC) won their sixth straight Wid
beat Geol'!lia Tech (12-7, 5-5) for
the seventh straight year at home.
The Yellow Jackets led by two
at halftime, b.ut Hill scored six
points in a 10-2 run to start the second half that blew itopen.

Oberlin beats Denison 88-85 to post
first win of season after 18 defeats
beat Mount Union 85-66; Willis
Brown had 18 points and 14
rebounds and Baldwin-Wallace led
35-12 at the half on the way to a
78-54 win over Heidelberg; and
Steve Hardaway scored 22 points
as Hiram College made it eight
wins in a row by beating John Carroll 78-68.
In non -conference games,
Youngstown State lost to Buffalo
76-64, despite 19 points by Reggie
Kenip; Findlay topped Indiana-Purdue-Fort Wayne 84-71; Dyke
outscored Daemen 99-88; and
Bluffton came up shan to Manchester, 85-58.

Funderburke's .offense helps
OSU beat Northwestern 81-70

on's

speedskater Bonnie Blair are founder and past presidc!lt of the sports media.
. Joyner. athletics. 1988; Jim Abbott, campaign by Golf Magazine is a •
Today's questions in the world 4111long the 10 Olympic gold medal . AAU. The group is the largest
The winner will be ru~nounced baseball, 1987; and Jackie Joyn~­ major step in the ri,l(ht direction. It
of spans:
champions of 1992 who are Sulli- multi-sport, non-profit volunteer on March 8 at a dinner in Indi- Kersee, athletics, 1986.
has the cooperation of leading '..
' Who's the leading amateur van Award finalists. The others: organization in the United States anapolis.
•
Track and field stars have won organizations.
athlete in the United States?
boxer Oscar De La Hoya; swim- dedicated to amateur athletics.
At the magazine 's suggestion,The initial Sullivan Award went the most Sullivan Awards - a total
Right now, the title is up for mers Summer Sanders, Pablo
In nationwide balloting, about to Bobby Jones in I 930, when he of 36 in the category of athletics. the U.S. Golf Association is devel-•
grabs. Voting is under way for the Morales, and Mike Barrowman; 2.500 people will select the 1992 became the fU'St golfer ever to com- Another 12 recipients have .tri- oping a forrhula to determine playannual James E. Sullivan Memorial wrestler Bruce Baumgartner; diver Sullivan winner. Those voting plete the spOrt's Grand Slam.
. umphed in swimming or diving: Of ing times for courses. These Pace
:'ward. The coveted bronze uophy Mark Lenzi; and hurdler Kevin include the AAU Board of DirecLast year, Mike Powell , the the remaining 14 awards, no sport Ratings will set a reasonable time
ts presented by .the Amateur Athlet- Young.
tors; members of the Sullivan world champion in the long jump, has had more than two winners.
for completing a round of golf, tak:
ic. Union to the nation's outstand'The Sullivan Award is given to Award committee; past winners; won the Sullivan Award . Other . Devers, 26, of Seatde holds the ing into account such things as
ing amllleur athlete.
. . the athlete who best reflects leader- AAU Life Members; the ·U.S. .·recent winners: John Smith, gold medal in the I00 meters from course difficulty, length, and disSprinter Gail Devers, figure · ship, character, sportsmanship and O!ympic Com111ittee Board of wrestling, 1990; Janet Evans, the Summer Games in Barcelona. tances between greens and tees ...
skater Kristi Yamuguchi and amateurism. It s named ' for a Dtrectors; and members of the swimming, 1989; Florence Griffith She ran a personal best of 10.82 Separate ratings will be developed :
·
seconds in the race, the closest in for carts and for walking.
Also, every PGA Tour player ·"
Olympic history. It capped acome- ·
)
back from Graves' disease, which will be timed and ranked by Golf
'
had threatened to end her career as on how quiclcly he plays tee shots, .:
•
. approach shots from the fairway "
a sprinter.
D&lt;wer :so. Caaolllon 29
Paon SL .............l B .Ill\ 612 .333
~ In theNBA ...
3-Ballimorel.ib. Urtion 18·0............. .166
and putts. The magazine has been
Elf'!' 37, Son-y 36
N&lt;mh_,... ....0 9 .0110
ll3 .278
4-UU... (l) 19·0 ................................. .146
recording times, using a system ir ··
Fairbom60,Sprina, Non1138
:Yamuguchi,
21,
of
Fremont,
S.Doylealown Chippewa (2) 15·0 ...... 120
, EASTERN CONFERENCE
Fainnant 5"', S'prina. South S6
6-Cin. W_!Ominai'f-1..,................ ....... 92
Wednesday's
soores
developed
with the PGA. The rankCalif.,
is
a
Sullivan
Award
finalist
t
Atlantic Dhillon
Ftimew sa, Amht~~t 40
7-BEAVER EASTERN 16-1 ............... 84
Michiaan IS, WiaconM 66
T~
Teut
W L Pet.
GB
ings
o(
PGA
stars will be published :
for
the
second
consecutive
year.
Field
66,
R.av_.
SE
56
1-B-ville 16-1 ................... ........... ... 62
Illinois 13, Miehi an SL 80
' · New York .............. 30 l$ .667
~50
.
A'IIm38
9-Welhvrue
15·1
..........
..........
·
.............
so
each
month,
starting in the April ·'
She
became
the
first
American
Ohio SL ll.No:f,.,.~ 70
" Now Ieney ............21 20 .S83
3.l
Fml...unp 42, Millar City 40
10-Cutalia M.r,m:u. (2) 16-1 ......... ...29
Pwdue·7s, Mi.Meaou69
issue.
woman
since
Dorothy
Hamill
r 1 Bodon ....................lS 21 .543 S.S
in
Gaaeusvm. 44, Su.uboro 'II
~
Ooluulo .................22 ll .lll
7
Hud~n Weatcm Racrve 45, Chanel
• What happened at the first
Othen recelvla1 1l Dr more polnll:
1976 to win the Olympic gold in
Future
~:ames
; Philadelpllia ........... 17 21, ,37,
13
39
Ll ·Drook(ic1d (1) 25 . ll·Rock.y R1v'cr
NBA
All-Star Game?
.
figure skating. Thereafter, .
S1turd.y
" Milml .................... l~ 29 .356
14
lluqlin.... 62, WOIIfall29
Lulhcran We.t, 20. 13-Z..ne•ville Wes t
PiubutJh ulllinoU!
, W...................... 15 31 .326 15.5
Jcffcnon 53, Aahtlbula Rubor 38
The East beat the West, 111-94,,.;
Yamuguchi won her second World
Musking~m~ 15.
Pu.tduc It Wile'Olllin
1om 01onn 67, Morun 4l
before
10,094 fans at the Boston·
Figure
Skating
title
in
a
row.
I.'
Paul St. It Notthwe~~em
'Ctn&amp;rll Dhillon
ICciNaon 73, Wic:kiiae 35
Division IV
Ohio Sl. n Michiaan SL
\
Chiclll&amp;a- •• ;........... ..33 IS .688
Kollorini Al,..47, Doy. Ookwood 38
Garden
on March 2, 1951. The·
Team
.Pll.
Iowa at Minnaoll
~
CI.J!VELANI) .......30 19 .612
3.5
Kettcrina Fainnont 57, Spnna. Soulh
Blair, 27, of Champaign, Ill., winning team was led by center:
l·S.
Qlrlcston
SE
(14}
17-0
...........
209
' Chaloao ................23 21 .523
8
l6
z:tJpped!cioto v.u. (2) 17-0.........:... 187
won two gold medals in specdskat- "Easy Ed" Macauley, a 6-foot-8'
SundaJ
",(, Alluooa ...................23 23 .500
9
Kc~e SO, Lorain Cleanicw 40 ~
J.Don&gt;illo17-1 ................ ,.. ,,., .., ....... 1fll
Michi~n at Indian•
lndiana ...................ll lS .468
1O.S
Lorain Adminl Kina 60, Lorain
ing (500 and 1,000 meters) at the star for the Boston Celtics. As the
4-ZanciYille Rosecrana {4) 17-2. ........ i 53
0a:roiL.':: ............... .1 9 ZJ .413
13
SCR~thviow SO
Tuaday
Winter
Games in Albertville, game's MVP, he led all scorers
t· MilW.ube .............l l 28 .391
14
Ltnaio C.llt. 51, Elyria c.Jh. so
Ohio SL II Iowa
~~=.~-~~:.&lt;.1· ) ·~ ·7... ~.:::::: 1.~
lAraift Kina 60, l..t:wain Southview SO
France.
She
was also a Sullivan with 20 points. Macauley held
;
7·Nol\h BlltimOR! 14-2 ........................ 82
liJWMlle 5'0, Minllln'a4S
Award
finalist
in 1989 and 1990.
&amp;-MariaS~
Marion
Laca\
14-3.
........
52
George Mikan, the 6-f00!-10 center
Ohio college
Madiaan 66, Aahtabula 49
,,,.
9-Su~O.nwly 16-2 ... ..............51
•
Can
anything
be
·done
to
MlllhiJtan 67, W. Br~nch 41
for the Minneapolis Lakers, to jusr ·
baske~ball scores
IO.Bodfonl •Clwtcll2-4 .................... ....33
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Maywille. 71, Croobville 40
U.S.
golf
reduce
slow
play
on
four field goals in the game.
:
l
Midwtll DIYIIJon
Ollxn: rccci"l"l 1l or more polnls:
Medina &amp;S, Stron,&amp;n'illc 43
•"~" Tum
courses?
WLPtLGB
ll·Cin , Courtly Day {1) 19. 12-fremont
(C)I993
NEWSPAPER
Men ,
McniOf LoU Co &lt;h. 68, Resina 39
t\
San-Antonio ........... 30 14 .612
St. Joaqill S.
Midview sa. Lorain T1
Great Mldweal Conrcrtnce
The new "Pick Up The Pace" ENIERPRISE ASSN.
, , Ullh ....................... 30 16 .6l2
1

tions.''
Northwestern (5-13, 0-9) was
unable to contain him. With Dion
Lee scoring the first eight points
including a pair of 3-pointers, the
Wildcats took an early lead and
were ahead 23-15 when Funderburke struck.
He scored eight points in a 13-0
run for a 28-23 lead that put Ohio
State (ll-8, 4-6) ahead to stay. ·
Then be scored seven points in an
opening 10-3 second-half run to
'give the Buckeyes a 44-34 lead that
they pretty well maintained the rest
.·
of the way.
. Cedric Neloms with 25 points
and Kevin Rankin with 17 kept the
game from turning into a rout.
Neloms, who missed the last game
because of a Big Ten suspension
for fighting at Wisconsin, didn't
start. But be scored Northwestern's
last eight points in the fU'St half and
1'5 in the second half. Still he
couldn't match Funderburke.
"When he plays like this, he
takes us to another level," Ayers
said.

Travis Best led Georgia Tech
with 13 points.
No.4 Michigan 85
Wisconsin 66
Wisconsin held tough for almost
30 minutes, but the Wolvetines
(19-3. 8-2 Big Ten) pulled away as
the Badgers lost.
Chris Webber scored 15 of his
21 points in the second half as
Michigan enjoyed a 41-32 rebound
advantage and forced 24 wmovers.
· Michael Finley had 25 points to
lead Wisconsin (12-6, 5-4).
No. 7 Kansas 84
Oklahoma State 72
The Jayhawks (19-3, 6 -1 Big
Eight) won despite the worst shantin!! half in the five years Roy
Wtlliams has been their coach.
Kansas missed its first 11 shots
and made only 8 of 36 in the first
half as'the Cowboys (13,5, 4-4) led
33-29 at halftime.
Rex Walters led Kansas with 18
points . Bryant Reeves led Oklahllma State with 26 points.
No. 10 Florida State 111
No. 9 Wake Forest 94
The Seminoles (18-6, 8-2 ACC)
celebraled the return of point guard
Charlie Ward by moving into a
first-place tie with North Carolina
in the conference.
·
Ward played a total of i6 minutes and had four assists. Bob Sura
hap 22 points.
Rodney Rogers led Wake Forest
(15-4, 6-3) with 26 points. ·
No. 11 Vanderbilt 89
Mississippi 59 ·
Billy McCaffrey scored 14 of
his 20 points in the first half as the
Commodores (18-4 , 8-2 SEC)
cruised to the home win and into a
first-place tie with Kentucky in the
Eastern Division of the Southeastem Conference.
Vanderbilt started the second
half with a 14-4 run that gave it a
57-28lead.
Joe Harvell led Mississippi (712, 3-7) with 19 points.
No. 18 Purdue 75
·Minnesota ~9
Glenn Robinson had 29 points
in the home win over Minnesota
(12-7, 4-6 Big Ten).
Cuonzo Martin added 25 points
for the Boilermakers (14-S·, 5-S).
Miami 75
No. 21 Boston College 71
The Hurricanes (8-11, 5-6 Big
East) won consecutive conference

games for the first time in the two
seasons they have belonged and
improved their home league record
this season to 5-1.
Miami made 19 of.26 in the second half, including two by Trevor
BllrtOn with two seconds to play.
No. 23 Kansas State 68

•

Iowa State lili (OT)
Anthony Beane was a last-second hero as he made a shot from ..
the lane with one tick left in overtime. .
Kansas State is 154, S-2 in the
Big. Eight. Askia Jones led the ,
Wildcats with 21 points.

"

~
~
!!.'
I'

HDUit.on .................27 20 , .S74
oa.
IS 28 .391
..,,__.......................
_
MIPI-ola ..............IO

33
Ddlaa ....................... 4 41

1

;r

.233
.C.9

~~

Paclrk DIYIIIoa
PtlocniJ. .............._..Js ~ ~
1
Seoldo .., .. .,.,, , ......30 16
~· Potl1md ............ .....28 IS
1; L.A. Lakcn ............ 2S 22
~· L.A. Clppaz~ ......... 24 23
111. Colden Siate-..........20 28
,, Sl&lt;:nmenu&gt; ............ l6 30

,.I
li

Cincinntti 55, Mllrquct1c 53

4..S
13

.795
.6S2

Oh1o North em

6.5

.532

ll.S

.Sll

125

.417

17

.348

20

Allegheny 76, Cue RCRrvc 73

Non-conr"rtnc:e
F"Lndl•y 84, JUPU-Ft. W1yne 71

Dyke 99, D•cmen 88

Bultalo 76, Yaungstown SL 64
Manchcttcr U, B1Wfm S8

Miami 101, Minnaao&amp;a 90

f
r

HOUIUIIlatNewYOik, 7:10p.m.
Orlmdo•Cwiouo. 7:30p.m.
Wuhinatoo It San Antonio, 8:30 p.m.
U\lh II SeluJe. 10 p.m.
Phoenix ll Ooldm Saa\Co .10:30 p.m.
Atlanta at Sacramento, 10:30 pm.

0

North C01at Conferl!ntl!
Wittcnbcra 74. Earlham, Ind. 63
Deniaan ..,, Oberlin 34
Ohio Wealcyan 72. Kenyon 41

Frklay's1ames

....
I

..

l'hiJadolohiu•~-.l0:30p.m.

·
PorilaJ M L.A. Cippets, 10:30 p.m.

I

l

-~_,-

....

~

..

~

_,

.

'

In the NHL ...
WALES CONFERENCE

•

htrk:kDI¥11'Teom
W L T 'PU.
Pitllhuqh .......... 36 14 ' 17
Woobiopn .. , ... :t6 ~ 6 58
N.Y. R...... ..... 23 23 9 l5
New Jeney ........ 2S 24 4 S4
N.Y. loluulon .... 24 24 6 54
P!illodelp!Ua ....... 19 26 I 46

BuJTalo 76, Younptown St.' 64
Colaaic 67, Navy 57
,._. Fordh.m42, Anny 40
GCOIJ,e WuhinJkXI 75, Temple 72

Vanderbilt 19, MWiuippi 59
Vugini1 Tech 7S, VM144

•

I.ENNOXe
•
•
•

"DIMENSION"
HEAT PUMP

With Bank One Electronic Tax Filing,·• you'llliave your refund check back weeks

Conr.
L Pc:t.
2 .818
3 .1'1:1
4 .636
4 .636
l .S4l

r.6ami" IWnoi• st.

All
W L Pel.

13 4 .76l
17 6 .739

·to

9
10 9
811
8 11

.526
.l26
.421
.421

913 .409
712 .361

712 .368
712 .361

ONLY.

2 .100

·Wia:lnlin .........5 4 .556

•

Cl:l1993 EJ!.NC ONE CQRPOAATtON. LoanSsubject to credit approval . 'Monday-Friday Bam .- 8 p.m EST. Saturday 9 am.- 3 pm . EST

conr.

L Pet.
01.000
2 .100

!
r

-

...............) l .SilO
Jowa,................. 3 • A29
- . . .........4 6 AOO
Mlchlpn

s" .....4

0!110 fL ........ .....a

6 ..oo
6 .400

Cin. CAPE 69, Cin. 0.. Polk 53
Qo~. LowJond 71, Cin. Modein 65
Cin. Marianant U, Cin. F'lMeytown

74

' OAKLAND ATHI:ETICS - Namod

Bob Aleja condit.iOflint COICh.

TORONTO BLUE JAYS -Aa-1 to

!-CfnU with Todd SUIUlemyns, piither. on a
one-yiCU contnct.

National Le•aur
ATLANTA DRAVES- Aarced to
remu ~ith John Smoltl, pilcker, an •
four·yet.t COIUnC\.

CINCINI'iA TJ REDS - AJreed to
lenni with Jolf 8tlftl0ft, infielder, Jacob
.Bni(nfield, outfielder, and Mike Ferry ,

piu::her, an nnc-rcu contra.cu.
COLORADO ROCKIES - Agn:ed &lt;o

Basketball

1991 CHEVY 8-10
2doors, V-l,air,MIIo.,PS,PS, tih
wMel, c:ruise, AWFM rado, radials, 3/41C11, long- bed, ..,..
slip bumper, aux. luel tank,~
ing r1111r glass.

·ONLY 27,322 MILES
4 cyl., 5 apeed stand. trans., PB.
AWFM • - tape, radials, 1/2
IDn, rear step bumper.

101111

101111

56,388

sa,388

National S.1kttball Auocl11lon
CHICAGO BUU.S - Siancd Ricky
B\uttcft, rorwud, tO I 10-dty CMU'aCl.

'

Football

N1IIGMI FOOC.balll Lea1ut
CffiCAOO BEARS - N•mcd Mikt
ShW. tiaJu ends caack.
DENVER BRONCOS - N1mcd Jim
FuiCl cffeftlive cootdinator.
INDIANAPOUS COLTS - Waived
Ron Mattei, offcru:i¥c lineman.
. NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS Wai"ed Randy Robbin•, 1afety; W•itct
Stanley, wide re.ceivcr·kid: rc1urnc r;
Richard Tudill.lincblckcr. Scau Bowie~,
olfcru:i&gt;te pard, ltld John &lt;ir~r~by, dcfWJsive beck.

Hockey
Nadonalllocby Lcaaue
NEW YORK ISLANDERS - A•siJnod Vladimir Malakhov, ddenaeNn,
ta Capital Diatrict of lhe Amcric•n llod-

PinsBUROII PENGUINS - As·
• ianed Peter Ahola, defenacm•n, to
c'Je.veland af the lnte.mation1l Hockey

loaJ"•

Colleee

HOLY CROSS- Announced 1h11
hck Whalen, base.t.ll coach, willl&amp;kc Lhc
ycu orr for hlllth rNIDnl. Named Ph il
Phili interim bueball coadl.

NPoRTH. CAROLINA - Announced

th•t Allm Morril. mon'• lennil coach •nd
directar ar ~il, will rai&amp;n effective
June 30 to bocomo dinlcu!t or the Scata- .
rnan'1 Club at Plabytcrian CoUca,c.
PmSBURGH- Reinstated Jcrmainc
WiUianu, tlilbal:k, and Reuben Brawn,
affcnaive linemlfl, to the footbiU team.
UC IRVINE - Named Petrin• Long
utocilto athletic direc1or·1tudent ICt·

1991 CHEVY
BERETTA
LOW IIII.EAGE • 2 doors, CCIIJ)IJ. 110111
wheel drive, 6 eyl., air, IUIO., PS, PB,
locka, jlt wheel, auise, AMifll
Ji&lt;lo, radials, bucktl ...IS, 111r Wil.
defog' gauge~

1987 NISSAN
SENTRA
LOW MILEAGE - 4 doo&lt;s, ITont
wheel dri'le, 4 cyl., aulD.. AMIFM
storoa tape, rear win . delog.

VIC~ •

Cin. T•ylor 72, Cin. Reldinl 51
Cin. Wl""""a 70, Clo. ln4lon Hlll45 .
Cle. Oilmout Acad. 49, Oa101 Mills

lbw.kcn42
a.. Hay 10, Cl~ Olcmillo'60
a.. K&lt;mody 6!1, Clc. ........ 63
a.ilnon1 NCIIIh....., f/1, Oooha\ 63
(01')

Foiopo&lt;1~7l,Nowbwy60

- 6 1 , Spru~~ Voll. 611
lludoon fll. c..,~oy lO
Lima c.m.13, Day.loll"""' sa
... , . , 41, KWand 36

v.n.

•

o-

TolknOd.. 61, Wodowmh 51
Wa•hinat.an CH 67. Or..filld Me·
C1ail1 55

.

/nAiRCisa \

The Fastest Income Tax Refund
AnticiC:tion Loan in thelrea! Receive
your c eck in. as little as 41 lOUIS! All
Fees can be withheld frolil your check so
you pay nothing in advance! .
3 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU:
1710 Washington Blvd., Belpre
64 Main Street, Coolville
· State Route 339, Dunham ••uare
·

"" .

W L Pet.
21 2 .913
19 3 .864
IS 6 .714

12
14
14
12
12

P,lehcn, an ODO-yut conmcu .

PUBliC ACCOUNTANT &amp; FINANCIAl
PlANNERS

· Ohio high school
basketball scores

Pym•~
'JC, LodJCI'nanl 31
~ f/1, a.-ubuiJ
6!1

In the Big Ten ...
TW
bodllno ............ 10
MlcJUpo ........... l
Dllaaii ............... l

wilh Greq Jdfe:rica, lhitd baacman, on a an.yar conllllet.
NEW von vANKEES - As-Ito
tennl wilh Bobby NunOil bld Ed Martcl,

BENJAMIN C. RANDOLPH
·&amp; ASSOCIATES

Far West
Califomia 92. cs N"'"""'ae 6'

Medina lliaJiland 6S, N"""" 110

NOfto-a.f'lriiiCt

•

Arklnus 101, Kentucky 94
Baylor 67, Tuu ChriaU.n S5
Okbhoaw. 9S, MiaiCIUri 14
SW Loui.riana 71 , Arkutua SL 69
Tu.u &amp;2. Tuu AAM 71
Tuln TT. S. lllinoia10

Brillol 7l, Onnd Vol). 66

w.

if w_e can't make tax season a lot more fun. '\\1::11, almost fun anyway.

Division ill

C.nlinal 54, Bc:d&lt;o!Wo45

Aloon ••
Mlel!~
BIJl St. It CenL Midlialll

Ktntat Bo.liaa (hen
Tm.l.o at B. MldLipn

Member FDIC

THE PLAINS ATIIENS 11. 14-Willud

Michipn 85. Wiacanain 66

Do's

Saturday'oaames

Whatever it takeS.

Odten renl•lna 11 or more polnll:
1l·A¥on l.AJu: (2) 21. 12 (tie)·M•diaon,

Howmn 17, Cal St.-PullcrLon 63

Wednesday's SC&lt;Jres

on all Bank One's tax relief options to help you with your taxes this year and next. we'll see

KANSAS crt'Y ROYALS - Asm&lt;d

lO term1

Southwest

Toledo SO, Bowllnf 0.... 49 ·
Kent SL 10!, Cent. Michiaan 71
E: Midoia• 79, All""' fll
Ball SL 72, Ohio $:1
Miomi 6l, w. Mlchlpn 39

To learn more, come into Bank One today or calll-800-395-0070' for a free brochure

'

K•nau 14. OklahDml Sl. 72
'Kan&amp;at: Sl. 68,Jowa St. 66 (OT}
Ker1110S. ecru. Miclti11n 71
Miami. Ohio 65, W: Midli&amp;•n 39

~•tCIJa•ry.9:40pm .

full amount of your refund, from $300 to $3,300, less a small processing fee.

·.THRU
Ji'EBRUARY

Midwest

Friday's aames

When your Bank One ElectronicThx Filing is confmned by the IRS. we'll advance you the

4-DayiM Canollt7·0 ..... .................. .125
5-AllionooMadlnatonl7· 1................ 118
6-Mill.CIIIbuq W. llobnea 16-2 ............98
7-Sc ltluyo ~ 15·1 ................. .89
I-Sp0nabon&gt; 17-ll ..,,.,.,.,,, .,.,,.,,, , ., ..47
9-C• Villa Anaela·SI (l) 13·4 ...........46
t(){;~orille Loaon Elm 16-2 .............42

Ball S1. 72, Ohio S2

MMDIIII at PhiJadelphla, 7:40p.m.
t,(inne~CK.aa~ 'fmp• D1y, 7:40 p.m.
Vaneauver 11 Taronto, 7:40p.m.
W11hin&amp;'M at St. LouiJ, 8:40p.m.
Boat.onat OUcaao. 8:40p.m.
Daroit at Los AnpJet, 10:40 p.m.

C. Mioh ............. 3 I .273
Atftln ........ ... ..... 2 9 .182

Need the money in a matter of days? Bank One has the Refun~ ~ticipation ~:·

. 3-'lllbona (5) 16-2........ ....................... 168

Tea..
,
PU.
1·Caldwat«(9) 15--1 ..........................192
2·VonaJlleo (5) 18·0........................... 183

Tetl'll
W
Miomi ...............9
Ball St.......... .....l
O!Uo.:................7
W. Mid\,,.,, ,,.,7
Tolcdo ...............6

Ql'l~)'car cantnet.

ey Looguo.

Pl.l.

Sl. Loui1116. ~o St. 66
Tolodo 50, Dowli.na On:len 49

BGSU ...............l 6 ,.454
E. Mich. ............4 1 .364
Kent Sl. .............4 7 .364

savings account, you can save even more time. It's that easy.

Division n

Team

Wednelday's scores

In the MAC ...

filed by mail. If you choose to direct deposit your refund into your Bank One checking or

or more points:

l5.ll·O...IandW•O.."'•l2.

l
earlier. Your completed return will be electronically processed and sent faster than ifyou had

n

12·Modiito 21.

N. Dlinoil 89, Lo)'Ola, Dl. 79
Ohio St. 81, Nonhw-eclem 70
P\atdue 75, MinnMou. 69

••
.'•
'
••

OlMn l'tftlvlftl

ll·~Wborn (I) 26.

Edmonton ......... / 20 28 8 48 IS8212
SMJOfO ............. 6 47 2 )4 149278

VMCOUver at BufT•Io, 7:40p.m.
N.Y. blandcn at N.Y. R•nacn , 7:40
p.m.
Hartford It WiMipe&amp;, 8:40p.m.
S.n JOM" Echcruon. 9:40p.m.

I
\

Port USlllflft. gatenJ. rhiRa(!,ct.
DETROIT TIGERS - Aarcc:d to
tcmu wilh Xilk Oiblon, ouUicldcr, on 1

10..LI.tewood 14-2 .. - ............................ 31

): Hamilton Badin (9) 18·0 ............... .. 192
~Confiold (6) 17-0 ............................ .179

William 4 Mary 12, Ocol'jc Muon 7S

Tonight's games

'
••
•

Lta1ut
BOSTON RED SOX - Named Mike

9-Yoonptown Boudman IS· l ........... 44

MUIRJ: St. 100, T~m.-Manin 74
N.C. Olarlauc 10, DIIYidaan 69 .
Radford 81, ~d.-BaldmoreCaunty 86
S. Carolina SL n, Coll. of Ch&amp;rlcstm
56
.
Soul.h Carolln1 lll, Tenneuu 107 (2
01')

l'i"'burp 3,N.Y. RonamO
Buf!olo 6, WinNpe8 2
Calpry 13, S1n J01c I

,I'•
l

l-LOOAN 16-2 ...... ..... .............. ......... 12&amp;
6-Eutlab Nodh 16-1 ........................ 1())
7-Cin. Madia ttl Maq 17· 1.... ......... 104
8-Colt&gt;mloou Soullt 16-l .......................S7

Mianii 15, Ba.ton Ct~Ucae 71

Cincin~ti SS, M1rquctte SJ
E. Michi&amp;•n 79.Akru~69
lllinoU n, MiehiJin St 80

ru.

J, Picl&lt;ainfO? (19)_17-0 ............. .......223
2-Rodr:y Riv Mapitic•t (3) 18-0 ....... 190
3-WOOilet 16-1 ........................... . ....141
4-GU&amp;ld Ht1. Trinity 17·2 ......... ......138

Coppin Sl. 75, DtlaWIK SL 57
Delta SL 73, Mill. ValJcy SL 63
lMe 73, Goo'Sia Tooh 63
Aoridll SL Ill. Wake Forat 94
Funnan 95, E. Tern'IC!IIoc St. 71
LSU 92, Mil&amp;ia' i St 66
M&lt;mphio Sc 95.~111cm Mill. 82

Smythe Dh-lslon
Vanccuver ......... 31 15 8 70 241167
Colp&lt;y .............. 30 19 6 66 219184
Winnip&lt;J .......... 2l 1A 6 56 203210
t.ooAn 1ot.o ....... 24 1A 6 54 212223

'•I'
•

Te•m

Chadd 53, N.C.-Oreenaboro 47

Norrfi Dl"lllon
Team
W L T Pt1. GFGA
crueoao.............. 31 11 s 10 195154
llelroi&lt;.,.,.,, ,,.,.,, 30 20 6 66 .2A()l88
Mirtnelotl ... ....... 28 19 8 64 1951 78
Toron~o ........ ...... 24 22. 8 S6 174166
Scl.ouis ........... . 24 24 i l6 119192
Tlltlpi Bay ......... 19 34 3 41 177212

I

Division I

South

Adlml Diwillon

•

,

Siena 11, Layol•, Md. 57

117 189

28 21 6 62 238193

COLUMBUS; Ohio' (AP) - llaw 1
sutc panel of •poru writcn and broad·
calletl ntN Ohio hiah achool Jirla bu·
ketblll teama4n the. ptnultimat e wccltly
replar-auaan poll Cor The AsaOCIIIcd
Plt11, by Ohio Hiafl School Athletic As·
t:aciat.iOft diyisi~l, wi.lh won-lost rccard
duouah pma or Feb. 7 (flnt·pl•cc vou:a
in puenthcacs):
.

East

222199
201217

Baseball
Amerlc:~n

two-year contr1ct lftd Oci'li1 Boucher ,
piu:her, and 1-'roddic Bcnavide~and Vinny
CutiUa, infielders, on 01\C•year conltlcts.
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS - "
Aaned to tonna with Kin Manwaring,
cttehcr, on a ono-you contnct.

Ohio high school
girls' basketball poll

~uuckncll84, t...f.ayeuc65

·M•nhallin 12, Fairfield 71

Transactions

term• with Duren Holmes, piu:hcr, on •

National college
b:tsketball scores ,

M-..1 ............ 34 18 l 73 236190
.......... ...... 31 21 4 66 225197
Qo-............... 29 lB I 66 223199
Buf!~o..............

Whhehal130, Delaware 29
ZancovillC ~ 71, Col. DoS~"
38
'

Non--tonrerente
Dcfuncc 68, Wocmer S3

GFGA
233176
210195
216212

IW1!..U ............. 14 36 . 4 32 l712l0
Otuwa ............... 1 41 4 18 133273

Wwkll'lillt N. 73, Wat.cn'ille S, 38
Wenl.U. 45 , Olmsted FaU. 31

Ohio Conferenct
John c.n.u 66, Hinm 62

Oltdoae 11 Miami,?::JOf:.m.
Milwaukee 1t CLEVE AND, 7 :30

Minnetota It lndiafta, 7:30 p.m.
Now Ieney 11 llrlllloit, I p.m.
Now Yolk •t QUcqo, I p.m.
&amp;a.on II DaJiu, lila p.m.

TO-Valley 64, Philo46
Vennilion 62. N. Ridgeville 39
W. Gc.u41 7i,Orange27
W. M~ 65, New Lexington 43
-Wam:.l,Howllnd 69, Sharon, Pa ' 2.5
Womot Konn.dy l9, Campbellll
Waterloo 70, Woodridge 48
Wcllin&amp;10n6l, Lon.in Brook&amp;idc 3 1

Mld-Amerlc•n Conrercn~
Kent 81, Cent. Michig•n 64
Oowlina Green 70. Toledo 46
E. Micl&gt;iaon67,Akron60

Tonight's &amp;ames

I

Tal. Stm64, Tot Woodward 30

Women

Wuhin.... llO, O.U.o102
Aooeoioll22, L.A. Qippcos 100
L.A. J.akon 1J 1, Denver 102

~

Orllgon Sahch SJ, Tol. Rogers 42
Paineavillc Riverside 55, Ashtabula SL
John 24
Paint Vall S7, Piketon 44
Panno 60, Cle. H~. l9 (01')
Panni Normandy 52, Shaker Hts. 46
Pumt Vtl.l. ForJtc 62, E. Cc. Sh1w 51
PidulliniUI'76, Walkins Mcmarial 38
Porumouth Clay 48, Symmca: V•ll. 38
Riw:r View 57, Sheridan SS
Racu\own S4, Cratwood 46
Solon lB, 0..... Falh 3S
Tal. Bowahcr6S, Tal Scdt 52
Tot Noca Dame 34, Tol. C1thollc Z7
Tal. St Uraula 64, Tol. Waite 58

Winenbera 10, Earlham 5I
Obodin 88, ~;.., 85

"""""" 98, P!Dladelphia 90
Odmdo 96, CLI!YELAND 87
ClUc•110 Ill, ladilno 104
New Jeney 109, Detroit 86

t
•'
'~

Obetijn 74, Elyria Wea26

North Caul Conrl!rtnce
Kenyon 75, Ohio W"l~y•n 68

Wednesday's ocores

~

65;

Otterbein 8!1, Mount Union 66
,
Baldwin-Wallace 18, Heidelberg S4
Hinm 78, John Clm&gt;ll69

6

.6SI

Mop- 53, Windltom SO
N. OlaUtod 68, Rocky River 39 ·
New..m Cath. 51, Col. W1ttcnon 44

Ohio Conrercmce
Capit.al63
Muieut 61, Muakingum 67 (OT)

19.5
26.5

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE

•
•
•
•
•

•

lly HOWARD SINER

Cincinnati edges Marque~te; Arkansas beats No.2 Kentucky

scored 21 points as Eastern Michi. By RUSTY MILLER
gan
topped Akron 79-69, Greg
··
AP Sports Writer
Holman
scored 23 points and Kent
·Now the 0 on Oberlin's letter
set
records
by hitting 12 of 18 3sweaters won't be mistaken for a·
pointm
in
a
105-71 win over Cenzero.
cral
Michigan,
and Ball State beat
Oberlin broke into lhe win colOhio
U.
72-52
by
holding the Bobwnn after losing its fU'St 18 games,
cats
to
21%
shooting
in the first
bcatin~ Denison 88-85 Wednesday
night m the North Coast Confer- half.
In the Ohio Conference, Jon
ence.
- Thad Gittens scored a career- Lapinski hit two free throws for
high' 26 points to lead the Ye&lt;imen breathing room with 14 seconds
left as Ohio Northern held off Cappist the Big Red.
.
. · Oberlin, which had also lost its ital 65-63; Jeff Ontko scored six of
fi(St dozen NCAC games, took the his 15 points in overtime to lead
lead for good when Gittens con-. Marietta to a 68-67 victory ·over
veru:d a three-point play - a layup Muskingum; Nick GuunM scored a
and foul shot - to make it 78-77 career-high 35 points as c;&gt;tterbein
With 3:36 left. Gittens scored 11 of
hjs team's last 13 points.
• Dale Lewis added 19 points,
Man Burkett 14.and Deshon Banks
I~ for the Yeomen, the last winless
team left in Ohio.
'
By JOE MOOSHIL
• Denison (11-10 overall, 6-8 in
EVANSTON, Ill. (AP)
fhe NCAC) trailed 51-43 at half- Lawrence Funderburke ·made .a
lime but ran off the fJ.rst 12 points decision to break his slump and the
· a[ the second half, then kept lhe . resillt was one of the best games of
lead until Gittens' three-point play.
his career.
·
:· Lance Watkins led Denison wtth
Funderburke, who had a career26 points. .
low four points last Sawrday for a
·. In other NCAC games Wednes- second straight game in single digday night, Chris Donovan scored a its, scored 27 points Wednesday
eareer-high 33 points but it .was night to lead Ohio State to an 81-70
'[om Oates' three-point play with
Big Ten victory over Nonhwes1em.
2Z seconds left that sealed KenyThat was ·a point less than his
75-68 victory over Ohio Wes- career high but he also led the
ltyan; Allegheny overcame a 10- Buckeyes with seven rebounds and
point ·defiC~ in the final four min- two blocked shots and added tltrre
utes and beat Case Western assists and two steals in his out'
Reserve 76-73 behind Josh Miller's standing effort
19 points; and Wittenberg blasted
"! made a commiunent to do it
Earlham 80-S l.
on the offensive and defensive
: Miami of 'Ohio stayed in. first end," Funderburke said; "The last
place in the Mid-American Confer- two games I just went through the
ence by holding Western Michigan motions. I wasn't giving the effort,
to 32'1&gt; shooting in a 65-39 victory, I guess it was just a mental thing.
while Sam Brown scored seven But I said to myself it's time to
poiilts in a late I0-0 run Wid Archie wakeup."
Fuller hit two free throws with 13
Coach RMdy Ayers said, "He
9iconds left to give Toledo a 50-49 draws an awful lot of attention Wid
Y.lctory over Bowling Green. In -they've been double- and tripleo:!her MAC games, Ellery Morgan teaming him. It leads to frustra-

The Dally Sentinel Page-S ;

.

Devers, Yamuguchi, Blair on list ·as finalists for Sullivan Award

Thursday, February 11, 1993

In major college basketball action,

have the ball as the clock wound .
· By The Associated Press
.
· . All eyes in Shoemaker Center down.
In other games involving ranked
were on Nick Van Exel. Hi$ were
teams on Wednesday night, it was:
on Erik Martin.
That look turned into a wide- No. 14 ArkMsas 101, No.2 Ke!lope" bank shot with one second tucky 94; No. 3 Duke 73, Georgia
left Wednesday night and a 55-53 Tech 63; No. 4 Michigan 85·, Wisvictory for No. 8 Cincinnati over . consin 66; No. 7 Kansas 84, Olclahoma State 72 ; No. 10 Florida
Ne. 15 Mlllquette.
,The teanls are tied for fU'St pl&amp;ee S&amp;ite 111, No. 9 Wake Forest 94;
in .the Great Midwest Conference No. 11 Vanderbilt 89, Mississippi
with 5-l records. They were tied 69; No. 18 Purdue 75, Minnesota
53-53 with 25 seconds to play 69; Miami 75, No. 21 Boston Colwhen Mlllquette' s Roney Eford hit lege 71; and No. 23 Kansas State
a 12-foot jwnpc:c. Cincinnati (18-2. 68, Iowa Stale 66.
No.l4 Arkansas 101
5-1 Great Midwest) called a timeNo. 2 Kentucky 94
out with 16 seconds left and there The
Razorbacks (16-4, 7-3
wasn't much doubt who would

Jlomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

111 .667
5 .737
5 ,737
6 .6lil
7 .632 °

11 I

.t/9

•Income Tax Preparation
•Electronic Filing
•Direct Deposit
ofull Accounting Services
.Computerized Service$

l'l#.,w • .,.,,..,. Clfads W.lc. .•!

·.fdH Toll Free For An Ap,.tntment
(In o•lo) 1·100·339·5021 or
(In W.V.) ·c.n Collect 614·423·4524

1989UNCOLN
CONTINENTAL

4 doors, front wheel drive, 6 cyl.,
auto.. PS, PB. power windows,
powerseat.-lod&lt;s,tiltwheel,
Ctllise, AMIFM stereo tape, radi als, rear win . defog.

4 doors. station wagon , V-8, air,
.aulD., PS, PB, po- windows ,

power seat, powwlod&lt;s, tiltwheel,
cruise, AMIFM stereo tape, radials. rear win. defog.

101111

NOW

58;495

54,888

1992 cna:tn
THUNDERBIRD

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

2doors, CCIIJ)IJ, Scyl.• air, IIIlo., PS, PB.
dl ....... auilt, Ml.fll '"""' tapt,
IIIII.. buclilt-11.

101111

'1~~ .s12,888

2 TO CHOOSE FROII
' .cioM. hlllll&gt;p, fron1 wheel drive,6

'

IU11., PS, Pll,.fiOWII,.._ , ~~
whOel, au~e. Ml.fll • - lllpe, racfi.
als, buclilt IIIII.
llr,

NOW

58,888

�Page 6 The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, February 11,1993

Scholastic Sidelight

Cambri&lt;tge's Ford, ISJ's Jones among latest hardwood heroes
By RUSTY MILLER
AP Sports Writer
Cambridge's Geno Ford is
already pledging to a prelty elite
fraternity. And he hasn'tev_en stalled at Ohio University YJ:L
·
With each basket, three-pointer
and free throw the senior guard
makes, he draws closer io some of
the greateSt names in Ohio schoolboy hoops.
On S.aturday night, Ford passed
Allan Hornyak on the state's career
boys scoring list when he notched a
school-record 54 points in a 122-75
victory over Barnesville.
Ford now has 2,429 points for
his career, believed to be the seventh highest total in Ohio schoolboy history. Ne"t on the list for
Ford is University of Cincinnati
coach Bob Huggins, who scored
2,460 points at Conotton Valley

points.
Tabi!ha Hannum became
and Indian Valley South.
Samaki. Walker bad a career- Alliance Marlington's all-time
At his current pace, Ford could
move past Middletown's 1erry high 36 points, including .the game- scoring leader with I ,228 points by
Lucas, Oberlin Firelands' Bill winner with two seconds left as scoring 20 in a 52-46 win over
Szabo, Mike Phillips of Akron top-ranked Whitehall- Yearling Dover. She is also the school's
Manchester and Vienna Mathews' edged Mount Vernon, 59-S7; Tiffin career leader in steals and assists.
Massillon Washington 's girls
Rex Leach and into second place Calvert's Ryan Shultz scored 16
points
in
the
fourth
quaner,
29
in
behind leader Jay Burson of New
(15-2) set a school record for victoConcord John Glenn (2,9S8 points) the second half and 31 for the game ries in a season with wins last week
in a 101-94 victory over Carey; over Orrville and ·Canton McKinbefore he's through.
Elsewhere, the heroes included: Travis Mulanax scored 40 points, ley; Mount Blanchard Riverdale
Shawn Haughn of Canal Winch- hilling all 12 free throws in the convened 21 or 29 free throws in
ester who scored a school record 46 fourth quarter, as Canton Heritage the fourth ~ua¢r and 25 of 33 for
points in a 73-56 victory over Christian beat Cuyahoga Valley ·the game m knocking off 12thAmanda-Ciearcreek, hitting I 5 of Christian for the fust time in any ranked BucyrusWynford 91-81.
23 shots from the field including 6 boys varsity spon, 80-73.
BIG GAMES, BIG PLAYERS:
Garfield Heights' Tony Lee had Bainbridge Paint Valley had its
of 10 three-point shots and 10 of 12
at the line. For the season, the Uni- 14 three-point baskets last week, recOrd 14-garne winning streak end
versity of Dayton signee is averag- scoring SO points in two games; when Huntington pulled a 72-70
ing 30.9 points a game, shooting Ironton St. Joseph's Chuck Jones upset in double-overtime Friday
56% from the field including 46% . became the fifth player In school night.
from three-point range and has had history to 10p 1,000 points for his
Huntington's Scott Keller hit a
only one game of fewer than 20 career.
three-pointer with 10 seconds left

in re~ation 10 send the game into
overtime. Then Paint Valfey's Josh·
Anderson, who scored 15 points in
the fourth quarter and the overtimes, hit a three-pointer with four
seconds left in the fiiSI overtime to
force a second extra sesSion.
Keller then scored seven points
in the second overtime to give
Huntington the win.
Keller finished with 35 points
and 16 rebounds, while Anderson
had 25 points, seven rebounds and
seven assists.
Twenty-four hours later, Keller
scored 28 points and had 16
rebounds and reached 1,000 career
points in a 63-52 victory over
Chillicothe Zane Trace . Mean- while, Anderson had 20 points, 12
rebounds and I 0 a5sisis in an 83-71
victory over Chillicothe Unioto.

.

Finally, some teams find losing
contagious. . Liberty-Benton,
spurred by an early loss. has found
just the antidote.
. ·
The Eagles opened the season
with a ·68-67 loss to New Riegel,
but since then have rolled to 14
straight victories. Only two of the
games - a 50-47 win over Leipsic
and 49-47 over Fostoria St. Wcndelin- have even been close.
They also weathered a slowdown effon by McComb, winning
29-21.
.
But the Eagles don't need the
lll'ponenl to take the air out of the
ball in order to help their rlefensivc
Slats.
Since llie opener, only one team
tias hit 50 points against LibenyBenton, which i~ outscoring teams
65-43.

By The Bend

'

Thursday, February 11, 199~ : ·
Page-7 -

111-102. Houston beat Philadelphia 98-80, Washington beat Oatlas 110-102 and Miami beat ·Minnesota 101-90.
Nets 109, Pistons 86
At East Rutherfordl' N.J.,_three
members of the New Jersey Nets
got some retribution after being
passed over for All-Star berths.
Kenny Anderson had 28 points
and Derrick Coleman had 21
points.

Suns 122, Clippers 1~
quarter, but we. dOn't seem to be reeord tying P_Crt'ormancc by Chuck
At Phoenix, the Suns opened a comfortable with alead."
Person, '('ho tied h_ts own record for
26-pointlead in the second quarter
Heat 101, Timbe~lves 90
three-pomt prof1~1ency by makmg
and Jed by as much as 3llate in the
Grant Long had 21 points to 6 of 6 altempts.
game.
· help Miami overcome ~n NBA'
Charles Barkley had 22 points
and Dan MaJerle and Tom Chambers added _18 points apiece.
Magic 96, Cavaliers 87
,
At Orlando, Fla., Cleveland's
five-game winning streak came to
an end _and th~ Cavaliers found
themselves 3 1{2 games behind the
division-leading Bulls at night's
end.
. Scou Skiles scored 20 points
and Shaquille O'Neal and Nick
Anderson added 19 apiece for
Orland, (22-21).
Lakers 111, Nuggets 102
James Worthy scored 21 points
REGULAR
OFF
and Sam Perkins had 20 points as
Los An$eles ended Denver's threegame wmning streak.
There were six technical fouls
called in the second half and mildmannered A.C. Green W&lt;IS ejected.
·Rockets 98, 76ers 90
Hakeem 101ajuwon· had 25
points, 20 rebounds, si" blocked
STOP AND SEE OUR SELECnON OF
shots and seven assists.
The Rockets built a 16-poiill
lead with 8: 18 left in the fourth
quarter and still led by 11 with 1:58
remaining. The Sixers cut the
deficit to five at 94-89 with 1:00
left on a pair of three-point shots
by HerS:Cy Hawkins,' but the Rock-.
FREE GIFT WRAPPING
ets then scored four of the last five
points.
'
'
Builets 110, Maverlc11S 102
Mavericks' coach Garfield
Heard had the gall to tell ·his 4-41
team they should expect' to win two
253 Nort• Seco..
Middleport
straight this w~ '!BIIi!JstWasl!ing'
992·6669
ton and Plldadelphlll.' " ·· ~- ·
"This is one we really let get
away ' ' Heard said. "I thought we
had c~trol of the game in the third

.
.
AWARDS PRESENTED • Members ot Hill-·•
side Baptist Cburcb In Pomeroy were presented ·
awards }loring the New Year's Eve Celebratlo)IS, In r&gt;~eognltlon ot their work for tbe minIstry of tbe church. Pictured, 1-r, are, !lack row,
Gar1 Jones, .Linda Jones, Debbie Clonch, Tina

Community Calendar Items
appear two days belore an evmt
and the day or that ftent: Items
must be received-weD In advance
to assure publicatloll In the caleadar.

60%

•THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT- Revival at Old
Bethel Freewill Baptist Church will
be through Saturday. a1 7 p.m. with
Rev. Marvin Marldn. Ralph Butcher, pastOr, invites the public.

TAKE AN ADDITIONAL

, 15%0FF

Shop

HARRISONVILLE . - Harrisonville Lodge No. 411 F&amp;AM
will hold a special meeting 'Thursday and Feb. 18 at 7:30 p,m. Practice in the master l!lasoli degree.
All master masons urged to attend.

'

. ''
,. I
'

:

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) ,
- More than 10,000 tickets have
been sold for the Feb. 17 basketball
game in Charleston between Marshall and West Virginia universi" ties, officials said.
Last year, the annual cross-state
matchup sold out the -12.226-scat
Charleston Civic Center. West Virginia won 90-76 before a crowd
that included only about 3,000 fans
who bought tickets from Marshall.
But thai carne during a 7-22 season for the Thundering Herd. This
season, with its team 14-5, Marshall has sold more than 5,000 tickcis, said school ticket manager
Tom Freidel.
"The team's winning. That's
rhe big difference," Freidel said
Tuesday. He said Marshall still had
650 ticke!s left to sell.
West Virginia, meanwhile, with
the Mountaineers . at 10-8, sold
fewer than 5,000 tickets and
returned I ,000 to the Civic Center
on Tuesday, school ticket manager
Debby Travinski said.
Those tickets, at $12 10 $15 for
the public and $4 for Marshall and
WVU s10dents, were to go on sale
today, Civic Center general manager John Robcnson said.

GIFT
SUGGESTIONS

POMER.OY - A valentine social
evening will be held Thursday
from 5-8 p.m. 81 the senior citizens
center in Pomeroy. Music will be
proYided by The Class.ics. Free
offering will be taken for the musicians. There will be dance, cake
walks and refreshments. ·Bring
refreshments for the sna~lr. table.
Public invited.

.COttoa Tllrows
.OH.,_ •Lamps

Thg On Yqur

•Pktlfts •PoH•y

•E••••

Valentine's Heartstrings
With a
touching
card from
Carlton.

llew Arrlvelt

POMEROY - A Sugar Run
Scliool meeting will be·held Thurs·
day at 6:30 p.m. at the Trinity
Church. anyone interested in the
restoration of the school is invited
10 attend.

.

SWIY.EL • GLIDER ROCKERS
Extremely Comfortable •••They Swivel and
They Glide I
ASSORJ'ED FABRICS

Your Choice

GLIDER ROCKERS
Starti•g At

Styk

Gel ..,. -u111y o1
adlu•IUie lull-length ml_mtrl•-="'
Md llle .t.u•oo

.
'

.... $139

YOUR

CHOICE

$99

,

ANDERSON'S

· ....... 1·00."' 10.00 • ·"'
lhtft6lr 10:00 • • Ul 4 00' m
'" lllltU

SUNDAY
MIDDLEPORT ; Zamperini:
Still Carrying the Torch, a documentary film featuring Louis Zamperini, will 1\e shown at the First
Baptist Church in Middleport on
Sunday at 7 p.m. Public invtted.

mine.

Landers

mine.

I

... : ;

.

If i!'s mine, it wiJlnevet belong)9
anybody else, no n1at1« what.
·
If we • building aomething to:
gether, all the pieces are mine.
'
If it loob just Jilr.e mine, it is mine:
Gem of tbe Day: The following is
a note that Iunilir wrote to his mother
when he handed her a ~~~~ reprlll
card: "Dear Mom: I;:nglish is easy.
Math are hard.·

evt,.

.o:

Box 11562, CIJicago, Ill. 606110562. (In CQIIQ(/a, send $4.45.)
•

•

·.•··.
•

Read t~ Best Seier :

Toddler's Creed
If I WID! it, it's mine.
If I give it to you and change my
mind later, it's mine.

RC?adthC?
Clf\SSIFIED~DS

'

Sale Ends MondayHurry in for best selection!
•
•
•
•
•
•

ALL home and car stereo speakers
ALL extension and PA speakers
ALL CB and scanner speakers
ALL replacement ~peakers
ALL subwoofers &amp; amplified models
•t,moll!lllll 5101'&amp; siOCk 01'11~· Sorry no,.,~

c:hfteln•

REEDSVILLE- Youlh Night at
!he Naz will be held Saturday at 7 .
p.m. at the Fellowship Church of
the Nazarene across from Forked
Run State Park with "Rapper" Malt
Wilson from Belpre.

__,__

·curtti%

d · b
d
ay Serve

,.. . fllllllllz , . .
I'C wilt . , - ,

,.

•
•
•
•

3V2~

1....M8 Uappy •1MB RAM
Super VGA capable • Made ln USA
Desk Mat~ · software installt&lt;:l
100% PC compaUble •25·1Q) "40ff•!Of e••••

4-lt-r...,
j
•

•.
,
•••o•••
DUOI-'ONf:

• •,

Repl~~ee up to tour

I

indlv6dual video •

o S!IIOOifo·-ing duot.-. oosogn

rtm01e controts

• SimfJie 10 set up
• Work:l with moat brands "-'· a

.tl•1 5·1i04

• Convenient remote-control operatiOn

o When you'rt II ....... - - · SIOI&gt;S
If you IMIIW8I' phone
••Ute

Carrie.

• bNI for camping .
trawl or job lhes
• 5· wan 1npu1 powet"
•AII40CB• Hil1o . . . , _ . - .
uvw on blt..n.
. . . . .. . .l !·1el6

..,.,.®
..a~•••

Wilh over eeoo loclltiOns
rwtionwide. Radio Shack
is jn etaclronica

'1

-

Thetf"s 1 111t11o SliD- )QI-cl!et:l" )'OIIr p11ont -

\

....

--

• PltciJs IJf1liy 11 Pf/DOrlillilliJI:II
' llili»I!IJIOmS 111111-

·'
1

:

. Dtugs art everywhere. They're
easy 10 get, easy 10 liSt and
easier to gel hooud on.lfyou have ·
qut:sdons aboNI drugs, you netdANI
Landers' bookk/. 'The Lowdown oil
Dope. • Sellli a self-adJrustd.long,
bu.siness-me e11velope tllld a check
or IPIOM)I order for $3.65 Ithis in~
eludes postage aNI handling) to,•
Lowdowll, clo A1111 LolliJus, P

'

.

•r

somewhere .else . -- ALABAMA
FLASHBACK
DEAR ALABAMA: Your letier
is sure to hit .a few million people
right between the eyes. It's too !ale
for the mothers of SQ..yeu-olds, but ·
perJ!aps younger mothers will learn
from what you haVe wrilten. '
My message to all mothers is as
follows: Constant criticism can be
crippling. It destroys confidence and
· eats away at self-e!teem. Praise; on
the ~hand, is a -great motivator.
It gives children a lift and encour- .
ages them to do better. People of all
ages have an astonishing capacity to
.live up to high expectations. They
can also fail miserably if they sense
that nothing is expected of them.
Your poignant letterbeln testimony
that these feelings endure lhrolighout life. Thank you for writing. .
DEAR READERS: The follow•ing declaration of independence is
something I saw taped to my
granddaughter's refrig~rator in
Minneapolis. It really hit my funny
bone. Sorry I can't give credit to the
author. Anyone who has a child
under 3 years ol age will see that
. ·yOIDigster_in the lines that follow:

WILKESVILLE - A valentine
dinner will be held at the
Wilkesville Pythian Hall on Saturday at4 p.m. Cos! is $5 for a~ults
and $2.50 for children. Public
invited.

•

If I had it a little while ago, it't :

MIDDLEPORT - The valentine
pany of Hope Baptist Church in
Middleport will be Saturday at6:30
p.m. Nursery provided. Pholos will
be taken for $5. Coot of the meal is
$6:50 per person. Proceeds will be
used for a new sound system.
Reservations requested.
•
FAIRPLAIN, W.VA. -Liberty
Mountaineers will perform Samrday at the Jackson County Jam boree in Fairplain, W.Va.

.

e 1993 Carhoo C•rd~

,

Ann _

ATHENS
Old Time
Square/Contra Dance, Saturday,
Dance Factory in Athens, 8-11 p.m.
Cost is $5 per person.

In 1764. the Sugar Act placed duties
'
on
lumber, foodstuffs. molaues and
LONO BOTI'OM - Faith Full
rum
in the colonies to pay for debts
Ooapel Church In Lona Bouom
.
incurred
during the French and Indian
wUI bave preachina and sit111ing War.
·
'

'

.,

BAS HAN - The annual pancake
supper at the Carmel Sulton
Church will be Saturday at 5 p.m.
The church is located five miles out
Bashan Road. Pastor Kenny Baker
invites the public.

-

MIDDLEPORT - There will be
a valentine dance at the Old IAgi011
Hall in Middleport on Saturday
from 8-11:30 p.m . with music by
CJ and the Country G9ntlemcn.
Admission is free and children arc
welcome with adult supervision .
Bring soft drinks and refreshments.

TUPPERS PLAINS - The Tuppers Plains VFW Post No. 9053
and Ladies AlllPiiary will sponsor a
round and square dance on Friday
from 8-11:30 p.m. with music by'
"True Country Ramblers." EveryRUTLAND - There will be a
one welcome.
· valentine dance 'at the Rutland
.
American Legion Hall on Saturday
BURLINGHAM- There will be ·from 8 p.m . .to midnighL Music by
a meeting Friday at 7 p.m. at the
Burlingham Modern Woodman
Hall to oiganize a Bedford Townlrfh
0
ship Volunteer ~ire Department. ·
The 15th birthday of Robby
~uest Speake~ w1U lle Bob Byer, Crow, Syr~euse, was observed with
duec:JOr_of Met~ County Emergen- a JllltY 81 tbe home of his IIJ'BD(Iparcy Medical Services. Refreshments · ents Mt and Mil Robert l::row-.
. wm be served by_ the Modern
Attendmg
Bob and ~ua
Woodmen of Amencaf!. llurhng- Crow, Kellland Christi Collins,
ham Camp. The public IS urged 10 Lori Crow, and Jim and Pam Crow
8llelld.
and children, Meredith, Wes and

RIP~EY, W.VA. - Liberty
M;OUDtainocn will perform Friday
atSic... and In Ripley, W.Va.

•

,...., .....,.._
"-"'__,, OH
Op .... Wii. . "'thU "till

7

If I can take it away from you, 11'1- -

SATURDAY
LOTIRIDGE - There will be a
valentine potluck at the Louridge
Community Center on Saturday at
6 p.m. Everyone is welcome, .
Country music night will be held
from 7 p.m. to midnight. A.ll bands
are welcome.

were

FREE
DEUVERY

,)

Pure Country Band Public invited.

REEDSVILLE - The Fellowship Church of the Nazarene will
. he having a marriage enrichment
se~Dinar wit·h Rev. Darwin and
Jeannie Pressler of the Logan
Church of the Nazarene on Friday
and Saturday ai 7 p.m. The. cost
will be $5 per couple and will
cover 6oth nights.

B.

DOWNTOWN
POMEROY
992·3671

...."... ""'

I'IIIICIIIPfiOIII

I lltlft

FRIDAY
RUTLAND - Return Jonathan
Meigs Chapter, Daughters of the
American Revblution, will meet
Friday a1 1:30 p.m. at the home of
Mrs. Margaret Weber, Rutland.
Guest speaker will be Dean Weber,
soil conservationist with Hocking
County. He will .talk on "Pre-His·
toric Man and His Tools." Hostesses will be Mrs. Weber, Mil. Virgil
Atkins, Mrs. Clinton Fisher, Mrs.
Steven Jenkins, Mrs. Robert Jewell, and Mis. Dayion Parsons.

......t mt~ .....d. CIMIITY
or O.k Flnllh.

RUSSELL STOVER
CANDIES
CROOSE FROM
FOIL, SATIN,
OR VELVET
HEARTS
FOR YOUR
VALENTINE/ .

-

$299

A Cliarming 1(#ution of

$199

Sports briefs
ATLANTA (AP) - Right-hander John Smoltz agreed to a fouryear contract with the Atlanta
Braves for $16 million.
Smottz, 15-12 wilh a 2.85 ERA
last season, g~ts a $1 million signing bonus, _$2.25 million i~ 199~. ­
$3 miUion m 1994, $4.5 m11l1on m
1995 and $5.25 million in 1996.
Smoltz asked for $3 .5 million in
arbiuation and was offered $2.9
million.
WAS KINGTON (AP) :.._ A fedenil judge agreed 10 transfer a suit
blocking an across-the-board settlement of a five-year labor dispute
between NFL players and owners
to District Court Judge David Doty
in Mimeapolis.
But U.S. District Judge Rorce
C. Lamberth warned that conflicts
between preseason players who
were plaintiffs in the suit and players still on active rosters Jiose a .
major hurdle thal could stymie a
final agreemenl

POMEROY - The Pomeroy
group of AA will meet Thursday 81
7 p,.m. ·at Sacred Heart Catholic
Church. Call 992-5763 for information.

day at tbe Arthur R. Ashe Jr. Atbleti.c Center ·i_n
Richmond, Va. Ashe died Saturday of AIDS·
related pneumonia. (AP)

More than 10,000
Marshall·WVU game
tickets reported sold

Friday 81 7 p.m. with David Dailey
and the Dailey Family ·and other
loca~ singers. Pastor Steve Reed
invites the public. Fellowship will
follow.

TUPPERS PLAINS - TupJiers
· -Plains VFW Post No. 9053 will.
MIDDLEPORT - There will be
meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the
post home. All members urged to a gospel sin~ at the BelieverS Fellowship MiniStry one mile from the
· attend.
Gallla•Meigs line on Route 7, on ·
' CHESTER - Regular meeting, Friday at 7 p.m. Featured groups
Shade River Lodge No. 453 will be The. Hemlock Grove
F&amp;.AM, ·Thursday at 7:30 p.m. Singers, Bill Ward Trio, Free
Gospel Singers, Old Time Gospel
. Refreshments will be served.
Hymn Singers, Happy Pratsc
ROCK SPRINGS - 'Rock -Singers, C9nley Family, and oth·
_,Springs Grange will meet Thursday efS• A ldtchen area will be J)rovid. at 8 'JI.m·. Members bring an old · ed. Pastor Margaret J. Robinson
'item for the program.
invites the public;

•Russell Stover Candy
•Cologne
•Carlton Cards

SAYING GOOD-BYE - Jeann' Ashe
(right), widow of Arthur Ashe, says good-bye to
her husband during tbe public funeral Wednes-

Justus, Jamie Humphrey, Charles Reynolds,
lev. Mike Willett, Dan Hood and Joe
Humphrey. Front row, Sandi Joaes, Teresa
Reyaolc!s, Rev. James R. Acree Sr., Betty Acree,
Rachel Hood, Kay Willett and Ron Clonch. Not
piqured are James Acree Jr. and Kristen Acree.

Community .calendar

14K GOLD JEW_ELRY

Prescr~ption

Dear A•a Loden: My motbcr
died last week. Sbc bad four
children. We a~e all in our 50s now,
yet Mother felt until her dying day
that it was her Ood-givm right to
conaol, pass judpnent on and set
~ standards for
of !JS.
As adults, we were frequently
embunssed' and -"gered by our
mother who insisied on correcting
our grammar in the presence of
outsiders. Rately did she come into
our homes without malting us feel
inadequate about the way we kept
house, our taste in furnishings and
the way we were raising our
children.
As a result of Mother's constant
criticism, ODC of my sisters weighs
more than 300 pounds and has been
seeing a psychiatrist for 20 years.
Another sister is bulimic, a cocaine
addict and floundering in a third
marriage. My brother, who is a
homosexual, is an alcoholic, has
aaempted suicide and has failed at
everything he evt:r attempted to do.
I made a lifetime commitment 10
guard the self:.esteem it took me 30
years to develop. Yet every time my
mother wou.ld voice her opinion by
"innocently" asking, "Did you
actually wear that dreas to wort?"
or more boldly, "Did you really
mean to get a .haircut like thtu?" I
found myself feeling the same pa~~gs
of inadequacy I felt when I was 15.
Ann; please tell all the mothers
out t11ere who constantly criticize
their grown children that they are
wasling their time and energy_It will
· not make a daughter a btmer
honstktq~t:t, nor will it get a 100 10
improve his posture. All it will do is
mate her children uneasy~in her
presence and wish they were

an

Chicago beats Indiana 115'-104 despite complaints; Cavs .lose .-.Chicago's llS-104 victory.
·~Thatjust shows you how high
we are - at the bottom of tlie
to\em pole; And they (the Bulls)
are at the top. They're still running
the league. He's running ·the
league,'' Miller said.
In other games, New Jersey beat
Detroit 109-86. Phoenix beat the
Los Angeles Clippers 122-100,
· Orlando beat Cleveland 96-87, the
Los Angeles Lakers beat Denver

. •'
-...

Critical mother causes children
to f~el inadequate and uneasy

In NBA action,
By CHRlS SHERIDAN
AP Sports Writer
NBA players have long complained that referees have a double
standard when it comes to making
calls against Michael Jordan.
The Indiana Pacers added their
voices to the conspiracy theory
Wednesday night after Jordan was
not ejected- but Reggie Miller
was - following a pushing-andshoving match between the two in

Sentinel~

The Daily

�I

•

••
Thursday, F.ebruary 11, 1993
Thursday, February 11, 1993.

Page 8 The Dally Sentinel

Man charged with poisoning wife:

Racine UMW meet

CLEVELAND (AP) - A man
(~~ accused of poi5oning bis lhinl wife
also may have bcalen his second,
. said aulhorilies who are also invesligaling lhe'deadl of his firSt wife.
Robert Girts, 39, of Pmna, WliS
indicted Tuesday on a charge of
a~vau:d mwder ror die dcadl or
h1s wife, Diane Gins, 42, whose
body was found in a balhiUb aldie
couple's boole SqJt. 2
Parma police said a coroner's
report determined that she died of
cyanide poisoniDg.
Girls is scheduled for
ment today in Cuyahoga County
Common Pleas Court. Assistant
County Prosecutor Frank G~
said be would n:quest $1 millton

For die January meeting of the

Lee Lee thanked members for
helping with and donating to the
':All Women Wanted Within" was ·several dinners served recently.
l)le title of the pledge to mission
The prayer chain list will be
service presented by Etta Mae Hill.
revised and passed out at the March
· The purpose of die pogram wa8 meeting. Ruth Steams will order
to inform UMW of die opportuni- · several bOoks to be added to the
ties undesignated giving provides reading program.
~to celebrate women of all ages
Alice Wolfe was. appointed
from all walks of life.
chairperson of the 1994 Christmas
: The opening hymn "Women in Bazaar and serving and craft maleOle Night" was sung by members. ing will begin in February . Any
Participating readers were Ruth member may help by coming to the
Wolre, Martha Dudding, Karen chun:h every Monday at 9:30a.m.
Walker, Sharon Hubbard, Gladys Bring a sack luncti.Shields and Frances Roberts. ScripThe new 1993 program books
run: was read from Luke and Ruth. were distributed and checked. The
UndeSignated giving opens oppor- 1992 prayer partners were revealed
iunities or giving to areas where and Margie West had charge or
funds would be Iirnited.or nonexis- members drawing. for their new
tatL
1993 panner.
· To end the program, all women
The mother-daughter banquet
gathered around an improvised will be held at the chun:h on May
altar, placing their pledge cards in 9. The chairman will be announced
the appropriate place and then at the next meeting. Apple butter
repeating lhe Women's Creed.
making was discussed but no
·: No official December meeting action taken.
Two different SO(ority dinners
was held but the highlights were
noted: a successful Christmas · will be served on April 20 and 26.
bazaar, annual dinner party and Several money donations were
Christmils fruit baskets were filled approved.
· ·
ai\d delivered to shut-ins.
, Spring retreat at Camp Asbury
Lee Lee opened the business willbeAprill6and 17.
'tlleeting with the reading of
· Get weU cards were signed dur'-'Prayer" and the group repeated ing the refreshment time.
Ole UMW purpose. A moment of
The program fqr the Sunday
~ilent prayer was held for deceased · morning worship service was dismember, Louise Stewart. Officers cussed and the membership song
:repons were given and conespon- practiced.
.
Jlence was read. The penny fund
Refreshments were served by
·collection was taken and•all sick Dorothy, McKenzie and AI ice
:~Is reported.
_
Wolfe. ·
·
• The 1993 officers are Lee Lee,
Attending were Marian Bell,
president;_Margie West, vice-pn::si_- Sharon Hubbard, Alice Wolfe,
dent; Chns Hall, secretary; Claril Emma Jane McClintock, Martha
Mae Sargent, treasurer; Ruth · Dudding, Clara Mae Sargent,
:Stear·ns, secretary of program Margie West, Etta Mae Hill,
.resources; Sue Grace, Karen Walk· Frances Roberts, Dorothy McKcn·
;er, Lois Bell and Robyn Reiber, zie, Margie Rous". Gladys Shields,
·mission coordinators; Sharon Hub- Ruth Wolfe, Karen Walker, Ruth
:bard, membership chair; Etta Mac Stearns and Lee Lee.
·
'
; Hi!~ Alice Wolfe and Tammy Hill.
The next meeting will be Feb.
committee on nominations.
· 22 at die church at 7:30p.m.

Racine United Methodist Women,

l

=
_Willing Workers meeting
· ·The WiUing Workers of St. Pilul
United Methodist church of Tup:pers Plains mel at the church for
1he February meeting. An all day
:meeting was held.
· A noon luncheon was held and
cards were signed for Edilh Harper
and Mary Jamison. Orders for Fer- ·
tig order house were taken by Mil·dred Brooks,
. Terri Sou\sby conducted the
:meeting and read the love chapters '
-in Corinthians in observance of
:valentine's day . The opening
prayer was by Edna Harmon.
· Mildred Brooks and Patricia
Hat! gave the ofrlcers reports.
: Special days observed in February were for Evelyn Spencer, Patricia Hall and Mildred Caldwell.
Valentine candies, cookies and
sifts were exchanged and enjoyed·
from secret pals.
It was announced that the bake

bond.

Girts' lawyer, John S. Pyle,
denied !bat bis client beat bis second wife, although be acknowledged !bat she may have filed one
police complaint apiNI bim. Pyle
said Sl miliion bond was DOt ncc-

REVIVAL • A revival was belct receady at Hillside Baptist
Cburcb witb euest speaker, Dr. Kenny McComas. He was joined
by his son, Doug McComas, right. He is pictured bere with church
singer, Mrs, Jamie Humphrey of the Redeemed Quartet.
·

essary.

t

TJae ...._. Swecks

,
The Swedes have lived in ptesent-day Sweden fill' at least 5,000
years, longer tb11J nearly IDY adler ;
Euro)IUn people. Gothic tribeS: .
"from Sweden played a major role. :
jn the disintegralioo of lhe Roman :
Empire. Other SwedeS helped ere• ,
ate the first Russian state in the ·
ninlh century. m1 became Chris- .
tianiud in the 11th cenb*y.
.

MINEOLA, N.Y. (AP)- Prosecutors reopened their investigation
of Joey Buttafuoco after a former
employee came forward to back
Amy Fisher's claim that she and
Bultafuoco had had an affair.
. Nassau County prosecutors prev•ously discounted the teen-ager's
allegations or statutory rape and
decided in, October not to present
.them to a grandjucy.
Fisher alleged she and Buttafuoco began an alTair in 1991 a month
b!lfore she turned 17, the age or
consent in New York. Buttafuoco
37, denies having sex with lhe girl. '
The alleged "Long Island Lolita" is serving a five to 15-year

prison sentence for shooting Butta·
Cuoco's wife, Mary Jo, last May.
A former employee of Buttafuoco's has ca'me forward to say
Buttafuoco boasted of an affair
with Fisber in 1991, Edward Grilli,
a spokesman for District Attorney
Denis Dillon, said Wednesday.
George Nessler, 34, who
worked at Bultafuoco's auto body
shop from 1989 to 1991, said that
Buttafuoco confided that he'd had
sex with the teen, according to a
law . enforcement source, who
spoke on the condition of anonymity.
Dillon will decide in.a few days

whether to present the allegations
toagrandjury.
Buttafuoco's lawyer, ·Marvyn
Kornberg, questioned Nessler's
credibility, Claiming he was fired··
from Buttafuoco's auto body shop
in July 1991 for heroin use.
"Anyone who comes out of lhe
wood~ork claiming to have new
inforMation, knowing what lias
been going on for the past 10
IJlOnths. and volunteers it first to
Geraldo, has got 10 be out or touch
with reality," Kornberg said.
Fisher's lawyer, Eric Naiburg,
called the turn of events "yery
rewarding.'
~

OWNER:

rnm·~

To Fit Most Kerosene Heaters·

TANNING

. Tq place .an ad

Call992-2156 .
MoN. tbru Fa1. 8A.M.-5P.M. - SAT.S-12
CLosED SuNDAY
POUCIES

I

Clmaified page• c011er rhe
follovling lelepkone ezchan&amp;e• ...
GaDla County

675-PLI'I-"'

367..a-w..

Pomeroy

458-l.eoo
576-.ApploGI'OYe
773-M.oa
' 882-NIIW a ••ea
895-Letut
937-B.tralo

:lsr..c.,•• DW.
643-Anlrla Olat.
379-Wa!o.t

247-LetaotF...
949-Reclae

742-R•tlud
667-(oot.llle

Words
15
15
15
15 .
15

3
6
10

Monthly

MUiical[ulrWReob

r.w.. 1: v,......leo
Fo•Sate••Trade

$.30

s .42

I \1\\1 'I 1'1 '111 :-

$:&amp;&gt;

,\ I I \ I ' I II I k

$.05/day

$1.30/day

32- Maloile H._ fo• Sale
33-- r.... 1or Sale
34- Buoiaoao Bullcliafo.

Rates are for coruoecutive runs, broken up days Will be
cbatged for each day u separate ads.

1------:::=--::-::=====-----1

Pain tin

(FREE IILnMATES)

V. C. YOUNG Ill

992·6215
P-roy,Ohlo
9·1

f.. Sale

IMPROVE YOUR
MORTGAGE
SITUATION.
REDUCE
AND/OR
CONSOUDATE.
NEW LOANS
ALSO.
. 614-992-7523

1-lalol-r
3-Atuoo_...

4148-

11-HelpWur.l
IJ- Sl ...tlooa 1Va...t

4- .Ci~way

to R•t
(or Rea&amp;

Pl....,.,.':"1ftlootiaB

!:&gt;-- S.hoola A ID11naetloa
16-llodlo, 'cy 4 CB Ropail'
11- Mloeellt-"'
18- 1Voor.l To Do

52- SponiBti Coodo

E..a.atl"f
Elactrieaiii&lt;IW•Ipn·tlooj
C...ualHaullac

53-Aollq...

..~

~-.Me

Mohile Boae Repair

S:&gt;-- Builofi"tt Supplioo

Upbeloteey

.DEADLIIE
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE·
PUBLICATION

Fallura to provlda lhaao
lmprovomonto will reaullln
the company relocallng. lila
the County'a ludgmenl that 1.m.
the continued availlbllty ol
the araa outwelgho
conaklerallon ol E•ecutlve

POMEROY BOWLING LANE,S
614·992-3432
POOL TOURNAMENT
Starts a112 :00 noon on
Sunday, February 14.
Open Bowling 12:00 noon

-lo

more
deullod
d~crlptlon ol the proJect
and the FLA flood mapa are
available for citizen

;·

PRICE REDUCED!

'

-·.

ton to buy wq n1ct home on ax acntln
. -.4BR.3b-.2-.-d1
BR llfll. P _ , lraldoa 4,800 oq. ft. 111m

4151

· PEl IOU

bldg.

Col 614-9112·7104101'

..

Pomeroy
992·3325
Thre~: Ct'tH'r,IIHHI'

o~

St&gt;rving You In
Rl• .ll Eo;t;.llt' Du\:inen

Bring Your Valentine ori
Satvrday, Feb. 13 and
Join Us forA
Grand Evening.
, Meigs &amp; Mason Counties

1,..._ '

I

.&amp; SUPPLY CO.

8~00

'

get a Special Su rprlse I

,Reservations Encouraged

... ...

446-9545
Pubic Notice

Public NotiCe

NCmCI OF
EXIUNA110H
• The CIIUnty of llelga,
Ohio ln. . . . 111111. . . . .
lirolei!C ........... ~ 1110
line.
61.- ..In IIIII lltrYioe
IGMUI• for IIJ the
''"JIItl'totllilerllndld
at 411
Main .._ In
,,.••.,, JOhlo. TheM

INproV-Ia are naeded
to IMpron to lip Into the

•
:

fell.......,_
w.

. . . UnttMy ••~tNt

Itt Pflllllftly, )Na
t.
laa IIJ .. Ihe1oor-11Md
....... The propl!aediiNiool
..,..,, be ~dortaW In

•'* •-

'

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
. IULLDOiiNG
PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER
UNES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOME SITES
HAUUNG: Limestone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal
LICENSED and BONOEO

PH. 614·992·5591
1

,,....

POOR BOY TIRES
AUGNMEIT • 4 wheel

Dual Exhaust with Gloss Packs
$109.95 +Tax

Computer Balnd•a • Struts, Shocks,

Ca•bor lfrushing ·

Check our Price or We !lotb Lose
LOCAIIOII 10 $1M YOU 11m1

lr~

SALES AND SERVICE

Porta and Service lor all
mo- and modeto ali
traciO,. and farm
aqull!.,menl

MOKRIS ·•

EQUIPMENT ..
RUTLAND, OH. ..",.
742·2455

BINGo·
EVERY THURSDAY

EAGLES
CLUB
IN POMEROY
6:45p.m.
Special Early Bird
$100 Payoff
This ad good for 1 .
FREE card.
Lie. No. 0051-32

'.

~

Snodgrass Up.olstery
"Helping You To Recover Your Investment''
Church, Home, Truck, Boat, Auto
· and Office Seating

UCINE, OHIO
614·949·2202
614·742·2996

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • VInyl SICJing
New Garages • Replacement Windows
·
Room Additions • Roofing ·
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614·949·2101 • 949·2160
or 985·3139
lie SaMar Calls)

211219211111

111241'92Jtln

AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE and
ACCIDENT INSUUNCE COMPANY
Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health •
Accident •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent
Box 189
Middleport, o•io 45760
(614) 843·5264

HAULING

LOG HAULING,
lUMBER, or

FLATBED WORK
In State or Out

Of State.

Ho==i

SMALL DOZER
WORK,
·DRIVEWAY WORK
and LIMESTONE
DEUVERY SERVICE

'

for all college bound students:
'regardless of ihcome
• regardless of gr~es
'plus $20k guaranleed loan
'regardless of.credil

ALL HARDWOOD

992·7553

Seasoned
$40.00 a load.
Delivered•

POMEIOYr ON.

(614) 99 2·5449

REASONABLE RATES

.

FOR SALE

Guaranteed Scholarship Money

To collect your scholarship money ·
call 614-985-3556
Open Mon.·Frl. 11J.7 or Sat. 10.4
2·i 1

57·59 Court St., Gallipolis

OFF
0:'
,

&lt;

...

..
I.

OSCAR'S

AND ACCESSORIES

OFoF

(2) 11,11c

992·5335 or
915·3561

6181'9211 mo:

Eost Second St.

.;

EST~MATES

992-3838

TEAFORD
REAL ESTATE

.. :

SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES and
TRAILER SITES.
LANOCLEARING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
LIMESTONE-TRUCKING '
FREE

Your Housing
Headquarten

.u

S&amp;L
MolgaCounty
&amp;croso
TRUCKING
Commlaalonero
217
Robert
II;:="=·=·IO~Y,~~~ I .9 92·5310
Certifying Officer 1~
eounhou..
rl:====::!i:!!:!~
Pom•oy,Ohlo45711
CHARLIE'S
FIREWOOD
21 11 110

Public Notice

PIPE _

0

r~vlew

at the Meli• County
Courlhouao, County Comml•lonera omc:e, Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Molga County
Commloalonera
Robert Hartanbach,
P-klenl
Certifying omc.
Courth-•
Po"'eroy, Ohio 457119

Tt. pr1C0 hU " IM,IIOO and
lh&amp;w:lilll of"" 10 110% of """"........ may be ~ '"' quallylng pol'•

I

ToA fr• 1-100·73:1·3334

A

Pick Utt.

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

AVAIL88Lf.

(614)
667·6628

Wm llli.ERS DEALIR

USED RAILROAD TIES

MICROWAVE OVEN
a•ll VCR REPAIR .

BULLDOZER, BACKHOE
and TRACKHOI; WORK

D. A. BOSTON
EXCAVATING

YARDMAN RIDING MOWER
YARDMAN PUSH IIIOWIR
2(yda
(yla
EOIO TIIIDERS &amp; SAWS

BILL SLACK
992-2269
Ii~===~·g~~

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

2·9-93

•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

llJ liliES
Irina Jt In Or Wt ·

Public NOtice
eroy,
ONio
45789.
Commento will be received
until February 19 al 10:00

Public Notice

H261170 '

Baata A Molon for Sale
Auto Pe.u 1: Aoo-•""'1

13-loa14-B---,T........

5-HappyAdo
6-l.oatudFouacl
1- Loai ood Fouad
a- PuWie Sale 1:
AuetioD
9-lV.....ttoBuy

$3''

v.... a:. WD'o

PERSONAL
CARE.
BECAUSE
WE CARE. ·
992•5858
696-1290

&amp; TREE

Auto Ropalr
CoapliocEqod_.

25°/o

J

Ext.ior

-S,...for~t

Accessories

!

'

Addition•
Work
and Plumbing

IIHter .Wick ••d

and

555 PAll ST.
MIDDUPOI1. 0".

985·4473
667·6179

REMOVAL

Weatherstrip

lt14·9f2·U 11.

FlEE ESTIMATES

Mo$0reydN

$ 29

T¥$ i WI

Stop &amp; Compare

PICI-1-WICI

INSULATION

tOI'

Remodeliog

TRIM and

STOVE

...... "

CONSTRUCTION
•NewHo•s
•Goro..,
•Complete

TnaaluforSalo

Allin Stock

· ~

BISSELL &amp; BURKE

41- Ro. . for Rut
Maloile H-lo• Rut
42- r.... for lleat
....... Aput-ol for a ...
4:&gt;-- Funllohed ft..,..

AU I" STOfl

'

'

I{ I \ I \I '

4x15 KUFT
FACED
.

.. ..... .." .

1-26-93

3:&gt;-- Lolli: ""._
36-lleal Ea ............t

Ord•11SNII and 111180.

.Mld·Winter Clearance On All Electric
Heaters, Kerosene Heaters,
Reddy Heaters and Unvented Gas
Heaters In Stock.

949-2826

42-

INSULATED
FOAM
SEALANT

•

· Limit 2 Per Customer
GOOD UNTil fll. 20

CARPENTER SERVICE

$ .20

$4.00
$6.00
$9.00
$13.00

IT WORKS!

DESA

Sweethtut Specie!
14 SESSIONS - 114

YOUNG'S

Over 15 Words

Rate

Basha• Rd., Racine

2-7-92-tfl

RATES

1

·30%0FF

I

992-Miololloport/

9854' ler
•
84S-Pol'llood
MS-Ilo Gnade

c...... , ..rkero••••

sa a

~ollpollo

318-Vlaloo

ad•-•

·-

Melp County Maoon Co., WV

Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

P·•·

Days

· DAYBEFOREPUBLICATION
I :00 p.m. Soturday
l:OOp.m.Mooday
I:OOp.m. Tueday
I:!Xl p.m. Wedneoday
tOO p.m. Thunoday
1:00
Friday

COPYDEADLINE
Marulay Paper
. TueedayPaper
Wedne!dayPaper ,
'l'hlu!day Paper
Friday Paper
Sunday Paper

• Ado oooalo 1M ......,. JO"' od ..- auot be prepaid
• Lcei... d.ilco•t fer acb paid ia adftBCtl.
• Fno Ado: Gi--7 ud Fouad ado - I S -nLr will be
raa3da,. at •ehup· .
• Prioa J od f.. aD eopkollet...,lo do""lo,prioe of od - •
• 1 ,....l._lype ..Jy oood
. • Sa•tinel it ao~n~po.,U,Ie ror en'Or• afiW f~nt Uy (clteclr.
fo• ornn f.mday od .... ia papar). C.U before 2:110
day ~,..,.,,in- to aake oornctioD
• Ad. tlllt •lilt M ,._.. iD .dvaace are:
Cud of 'JUab
Happy Ado
Ia M-rlaa
Yanl Sai,.
• A cla.lllod
placed ia the Galllpollo lloUy
· T....... (••opt Cluolllod Dilplay, B....... Cud o• Lopl
No-) will alto oppeu ia tbe Poiat Plouoat R.p... ...I
... llolly S..tm.. , ....loi ...... 18,1100 ......

wicb I• stock.

.
:
:
:

WICK'S
SERVICE

992·3470

Our r•ul•r price o•

STUDENTS OP THE WEEK - Tbe following students were
selected for bebavloral or academic reasons to be the student of the ·
week at Meigs Junior Hlgb Scbool for the monlb of January. They
are: Scott Mitch, matb 1Rd English; Jason Rousb, reading and
English; Jasoa Litehfleld, history and science; and Zinnia Spears,
readlneand speUID&amp;•

I _Jt t

SIZED LIMESTONE

'

[pOrnillcffi

~I

St.lt. 7
c•es.ire, OH.

36970 Ball R•n Road
Pomeroy, Ohio

WE HAVE WHAT YOU'RE LOOKING FOR!
'

Call614·992·
6637

FOREVER
BRONZE

!~:;~;a~~~~!~~o:!
~le~~~~u~~~A'r!:~~~:.

'

SIZED UMESTONE
FOR SALE

•DOZERS
. •BACKHOE
•TRACK
LOADER
•TRUCKING

1·18-93-1 mo.

GENEVA, Ill. (AP)- The couple who left their two young
dau·ghters home alone while they
vacationed in Mexico left them
unattended at least once before and
also whipped, kicked and scratched.
the youngsters, prosecu10rs say.
David and Sharon Schoo were
indicted Tuesday on 64 counts,
in~luding neglect of children,
endangering" the life of a child,
aggravated battery. abandonment,
cruelty to children and possession
of marijuana.
David Alceniann, Kane County
state's attorney, said the couple
twice left the girls, ages 4 and 9,
home alone, once for four days in
the summer and then ~ain for nine
days during their Mex•co vacation
over Christmas.

~

Quality
Stone Co.

1

'Horne ·Atone' couple
charged with child abus_e ·
'

~JAY_.R

Jeff Wickersham

Alcemann said the girls appllfently were disciplined for normal
childhood behavior.
The Schoos. who live in a wellto-do neighborhood in St Charles
in a home with a big yard and a
swimming pool, were arrested Dec.
29 at O'Hare International Ailpon
as they re!IJ!Iled from Acapulco.
They were charged with child
abandonment, cruelty and endangerment for leaving the youngsters
home and were freed on $5,000
bail each.
David Schoo, 45, is an engineer
· with a smoke-alarm manufaclllring
company. Mrs. Schoo, 35, is a
homemaker.
The additional charges are based
largely physical and psychiatric
evaluations of the children, Alee·
mann said. Authorities also ·said
they found nearly 2 ounces of mari· in
·
and another m a room repeatedly, juana in the couple's honie.
. Herben Hill, an 'attorney for the
SPELUNG BEE WINNERS· The wluer oitlle 1993 Salisbury
Schoos, called the new charges
Spel6ng
Bee is Meredidl Felts, daqbkr ol' Melftll and Ma17 Felts,
One girl was scratched on the chest absurd .... It's just absolutely reach·
Smith
Road,
I'Wieroy. Tile nnil!er-up Ill Brandy Grabm, daugbsale will be April 3 at 9 a.m.
and abdomen and kicked in the ing," he said.
.ter
of
Kevill
and
Clleryl Graham, Blake 1111 Raad, Pomeroy.
The Boston Commons quilt was ·rib!!, _lhe indic.t~·· ••;A .
completed and is for sale for $200. Quilting will begin again on
Tuesday. .
.
Two comforters were made for
the Cline family and delivered.
There were 33 sick calls reported.
·
"
'.J:
.: ". . ,' : '" ' ... ~
Readings on the love theme
.,j,. . ,, p ~,.- ··
•1
were given by Mildred Brooks,
'
Joanna Weaver, Edna Harmon,
Patricia Hall, Mae Vineyard and
FIEPLAC!IEITWICKS
GlennaSanders.
' Allending were Mildred Brook$.
Patricia Hall. Terri Soulsby, Mildred Caldwell, Mae Vineyard, Beu- ·
lab Zumbach, Edna Harmon, Ever----lyn Spencer, Joanna Weaver, Glenna Sanders and Mary Vineyard.
The next meeting will be March
9 for an all day quilting and busi·
HVI
ness meeting.

:Terri Souls by conducts
• ·

amngn-

Gasper said Wednesday he will
try to have the body or the first
wife exhumed for another auiOpSy:
She died about IS }QlS aco and is
buried near Youngs10wn.
The ICCOIId wife tOld investigators tbat Girts beat ber up and
feaied for her life, Gaper said.
Diane and Robert Girts weremarried May 25, 1990. Diane Gins;
who was born in YoungstOwn, was
a lnnch llllllllgf!' at a bank in that
city before moving to Pmna with
her husband in 1990. The couple
had no children.

Buttafuoco investigation reopened

111y
or -don.
Thera Ia, tharolore, no
fiNOdealllo allornallvo to
Ill• propoaad prolaol.

PUBLIC NOTICE
Tha County ill Melgo,
Ohio Ia conalderlng a
projeol to .lnetall a 4" 100
llnHr laet unitary •-r
foroad
and ..rvlco
the Rlvinrldo

al431

w.

Ohio.
In the

ftoodpllln. The
Ia lntereatad In
dleau..tnt alternllll- io

publ r,roJeol
o peroopllon
of
thla
and -•Ina
poHIIIIe ad-11 INpaolo
thll aoukl •-II frorw lha
pr•j••l ud poaalble
min Mlullon -•u••· A
pulslo haarlnt t. aoludosled
on Prklay, Fillruary 1t 11
10:00 a.m. lo dloou.. tho
am all Clll.. Apploatloft.
The h-lng will be held II
lbe olllaea of tho lltelga
County Cornmlaalonera,
Cclurthouoe, .,_,_Ohio.
Plalle attend or aand
l'!5[.oo11rnlllll to lho
County Comrnla•
. Courth-, Pom·

c,

"

WOLFE&amp; .
ASSOCIATES
ACCOUNTING

RACINE GUN
CLUB
GUN SIIQOTS
SUNDAYS
1:00 P.M.

olncomo Tax Properation
oB'ookkoeplng
•Payroll

OPEN TO PUBLIC
12 GAUGE ONLY
FACTORY CHOKE
· ENFORCED

1_.....,

SERVING INDIVIDUALS
and BUSINESSES

113% W. SICOIID n.
POMIROY, OM. 41769
llkwoloHW.-r

HOURS.'

Sunctay · Monday - c Iasco
, Tuesday - Wtl:inesday - F r la.av - 9 : 30a .m .. 5:3 0 J"
Thurselay · Saturday - 10: 00 a.m , ~· 3 : 00P.m. -

104 Mulberry A ve nue
Pomeroy , OH 4b769

992·6193

I!=======~

CALIFORNIA

TANS ,

V.ldtful,..,..

us..s••'U
PI•• nu......,tit. of

.
.................,
949·2123

MAINTENANCE

949·2391or ·
1-100·137·1460
LMmllo .~ ..
Fertllhd"!!: W.....v. •II

leadllll.
Shrub and Tree Trimlllnt
'RMioval
Aelldl lUll

F... -

a CGmM-A'I*IOOMMI
..

FIREWOOD FOR BALE

GRAVQ&amp; COAL
ReosonaWe Rates
JOE N. SAYRE
SAYRE TRU(KING

614-742·2

:n

·

�Sentinel
SN AJ:U® by Bruce Beattie

1.1'11

n.-

~

42 Mobile HomN

1-'1110 1111

\ ,, r

Eat. ...............

r:,.~ Yra. -

~

~

:..)

}

" .,

C:.. 11021 "'·

I" I'AI(

,J .

~

f.E1[

~·

'

'

5I

'for Rent

Goods

1at lima- bwar't - :
12 .-loa ~~~ 1DT IIEHT,
pty"*lla' lllalllng at fll2.17, 1·
. . 4111'171.
2 I S lail uu:-. ...... N.G.H.S.

Cauch I Cluolr •250, 8~45·
1120.

St-Frldga, - · Trlah
Plkt, ........._a,..._,__.,
•~

ptYQICI '!ELL 'IQUII FUNIIE
C.. I . . 11111177 Ell. 11.11 ""' .... . . 11 Yra.
llilolll c.. ...........

3IIMII.

...,_,

11 , 1993

_KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry ,W right

Houuhold

Ohio

fi:,ot)s ...

BRIDGE

ACROSS

\

==

P.HILLIP
ALDER

Worlt- IM-441-31111.

2117, 114

-It

NORTH
+Q J 7 2
. 10 8 4 3
t 7
• J 10 ~ 2

::."a:S.t.

••mz

WEST

+ssl

.J6%
A863

.Q 9 7
.QI09 542

K 76

e

l·ll·tl

EAST

• ·to 8'

+Q

SOUTH
+A K9
.AK 5
tKJ
+A8543
Vulnerable: Boih
Dealer: South

1~ Cy NEA . InC

64

Hay &amp; Grain

Soutb

2+

Ear com lor oa1e, alto grinding
avallablt, IIWI&amp;-2412 or

111-1480.

'*

.

Hey, ..............

304..71141110:

n.. •

2NT
3t

BARNEY

RID.

North

2t
3+
S NT

goddaaa

37 Joyful
taclamotlon
38 NataUvo
prtftl
40 JIPIMH
currancr

1 Cetttar of

-lei .

5Fiowert
9 Babr'•
napkin

12 Winter hand
warmer
13 Of tara
14 Jazz player
Kld 15 Tennlo player
Andre17 Word of
naglllon
18 Hold a
Hulon
1g Mountain

42 Pan point

44Tinta~
48-~·1

48

·-

llab(a 011111
a HoUH

50 Doll

53 Antltred

animal
54 EaclemaUon
of tiiiiQUII
55 Approv11
57Lautll
8 t Arizona minIng town
62 Opera
herOine
84 Oklaltoma

Iaiit

21 Antlld b11td
23-.ry
equipment
27 llabrew latter
28 Fop
29 Twilled
31 Tlteotar sign
(obbr.)
:M 8ible dlv.
35 Dawn

•

'

DOWN

5

town

Ttturman

85 Uncooked
M Grafted, In
hertklrJ'
87 Takt tlte bllt

IS YOR'N

JUICY.

·-'

2 Drinking

3 ArUtl'a dag.
4 Saentlary -

SDSSIP
TODAY!!

ABOUT TH'

HAWKINS?

PARSON'S
COUSIN!!

WIDDER

,.,..

East

Pass
Pass
AU pass

tlrong

1873 ForrHI Par.k 12x&amp;s. 2 Sod·

• bill: llolo PIII"'Y a.t, O.J. Trimming. FrH Estimates! 814·
Wllilt Rood AIM, IIWK-1112. 367·7157 After 4p.in.

SI.RI.21B, 2·112 Acraa MIL. 614·
25&amp;-411112, 614·379-2748.
11m 2 BR, 2 balhO. 12X85, all
alactrlc $6,500; H..... &amp; 1.o1 In
Crown Chy, $12,000. 614-441·1511.
1188 Skyline Holly Rldga Mx70,
all elac, 2 badrooma, AIC,
cawred porch, kltct.n Island,
atoraga bldg, undarponnlng,

ptlancea lumlahocl, laundry
, _ facltMIM to In town. ~-- awl..._
at: Vlltaae.~GiNn,_ Alita. 141 Of

1990 Fairmont Fantaey, 14x80, 3

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT

7·

Geore- Porlabla Sawmill, dan't

Yard Sale

:aLo:'7S-1b7.
loaa to the mill juat

haul

Clll

,. .

Hive

...

elderly,

Total

~t.lectrlc,

Gallipolis

from llomt",

Ml18 Paua.•a O.y Care Center 1

Uke new, 304..&amp;75e24&amp;4.

11 COncem For Your Child's
c.rt. Ctll Ut For A VIall. lnlant

bodrooma, 2 both 0, gordon t~b.
~~ now hoot pump, 814-949-

MrYiae.

'ID•n

carpaatortte. Send cor'lfldanllal
InqUiry to PO IOK MO, Ntw

1a1 time homa buy a~·· prOgram.
12 months FREE lot rent,

AwHua, P~, 114otl2-6151.

paymanta atortlng at 1152.97 por

Or.clout living. 1 and 2 bad· ·

HDMI, WV 25211.

$14.L500;

month, 1-800-466:r671.

1.5% Rxed r11te mobile home
tlnanclng avallablt. Call 1-100..

W.nlad ...... ttmbar, lop
ill*- · pold, liOa OIIJIIIIIH,
ltoalltad toaalng coonpony, 21

Plllnotii;IOI alxth It, cNpMft
required, ~7131 afttr

12 , &amp;SoHd
410 -I!"G ~ equipment, plus
_ ,Aollon
_ R-,
__
~ 1700. Hunlington 304~

AI!&gt; ~It Only. Quno

~
Yinl

=. . . . . .,.,. .;
"'"' -

Otdi&lt;, 114-448-1122, 8 Vending

Raute:

R8cHslon

And Corner lol, Porter ArM For

Sala. 114·38&amp;-a02i, Or 814-245i244.

Land Marne Development, El·
... Home Center Will Show You
How! Your.. New Sinal• Or
Doutt~. Wtll, Septic, Founda·
Uon • Driveway, AU In One L~n

11 Acres Mort Or LA11,

Real Estate

·A-ALL- -.your
tiM
... ""''~ W J - IJ01.0-UII.

__-a

'""

1--------31 Homes for Sale

....... - - UkaTo

.,..,.,

........ CIII14t•1-

.I

A - I AI

llhl~ey

0338.

· '

JJ:i.

b 1droom
apt~rtmlnt,
Ntll'• en r.qulred, no pete, Pt.

One

Nice 2 Btdrocm Moblla Homo --.IM-tll2.aasa.

Gallla

Help Wanted.

1:00, dap 1'15-1138.
Complttly Fumlahod - 1
. - . + UtiiMita. No
Pata. Call Bolon 7 P.ll. 114-441-

45

High Schoo4
Utllltin
Available,
Owner
Financing, 814-388-0iil.

~

haan ad.tlonll for thrN IMn,
cable
tell'llelan,
thDwer,
Nlrlger8lor and niiCI'OWIIQ, OH·
paolllna. vary ruaonablt,
-.ln.abova·Oivhi, 114-ta-7791.

Roome ror rwtt • •ak or month.
8IU11!1J1 at $120/mo. Galla Hotal.
114 4.. 1110.

wv.

ArM. 114 311 110 lt.

In Pomaroy,

12501 mon ., 814·992-1551.

3 Bedroom•, 2 Batht, F~ll Carpet1 Eltc:trlc ·Heat, lnground

Sw•mmlng Pool, Whllt Road,

Oalllpc\la. 114-4411-97115.

""'
EduettiOn
flt!!wMALaa•rohtp
T-.
Pll. D.

3 Bedroom Homt In ChHhlra,

w-"""·

over 1700 ~.h. ,
3bdrm., 2 blth. momina room &amp;

ntadul.lr,

Oaa
Heat
1300/Mo.
1300 De-'!. · - ·
17115.
fsmltr r00111. T~m key nnanclng
awallabll. 1-100 4tiG·787t
Lo ..ly 7 Room Houaa F0&lt; Bolt
OOYERNMEHT·HOMES From 11 Or AWil, LDtll Of Aoom, For
(U Rtptl~. Dollnquant .Tax MoN lnlormatlorl, f14.441-GI3t.
Propa~r· ~t...,... .. lona. Yo\lr Rio Orondo, S IR, 1·112 bath,
Aroa 11 IOHI2-8000 Ext. liiii- 1450/mo. Dapoolt ._tnod. 1141D111 J=or Current Repo Llal.
441-4222 daP. o1411-2flll ......

to(~Or~ry­

••n

I-..:· Read the Best

-=
......~odt......

-

A' 7

OeetMne

,.~-.::=-•t

•

c ..... ,,....

. . . . ,.--pt- ...
........

-lui•
Ctntor'a
tMI
Or
sa.az w.ll.:
.......
Stlr1·

lll(I121.H; Roell...,. 1121L9cla
Arid ChaiN 1211 Or lJ10.93
Waok; Co- And End With
0..... fltlll Sat~
· 5' Tult Whh I
Cluolra ~I; WulloN,
Dfye;a,
-.
trator's
htt· Howe:
• ltwday
W ; hlow Stlwar rldga Ploza
Or 4 Mllta Out Mt On Uncotn
Pika.
·

IAIIN OIIIAT f f f

"""' .... Allar 4:00

• IIM4iiHiii (COUICT)
•

Dt!&gt;!&gt;tH on Rant·2-own;
Nothing E- Praownod.
COUNTRY FURNITURE AND
Utad

APPUANCU

1•

'

Clf\SSIAED RDS.
'

'

PICK-I'UIINITURI

t:leJ'ull
ftoJI huN ........ 112 MI.
~ lid. 1'1. Ill
n!, WY,
oat1104-f11.MIO.

"·''·'--·-·- - wv. -77WML
tiqwe. He

1N4 C111~rlty CL, H,OOO ...._,

=~~11to~'

•1

,.

~ AA Nlll£Te:, 'I'OLIR fATH€1!.
HI-D 1¥&gt; EGUL !

~RIOR~, ~.

aJT

~L~.1110!

Want to:
PIN ciown EXTRA

CA8H?H

OUR LANGUAGE

!

By Jeffrey McQuain

111112
-11t
1110 .........
For SUD
• tl lut
After I ',

P.M.

NULLIFY negates or makes in ·
valid: "The new laws nullify the old
laws ." Nullify any pronunciation of
this verb other than "NUL·ih·fy."

'

1112 - k l CIR-210, loalt (
drlnn bib, :1,410
'"~";~:~
cond,
""" Nlte
I
11.
. .-ul

aotua1:

1183 YaiiUiho175 Throt·Whttttr.•
$TGG Or IHI Ollar. 114411-

-.

1117 or•
2liOlrlciO
llojava
- ·or
· 21D
For
aala
fo&lt;• 25011

sov.e.n-11~

a..N'"NICr. 3M-112-aaz.

1

NMSZ,40D.I14 itiiMI. '

0..-IM-44tl-al58.

'

Auio Parts &amp;

76

THE. MASHED

FU""NY Aea.lT
THEecHOOL.
UJNGHTODA.Y...

11::lQA.Y ISN'T
6T. A6.TRJCKS

Ft:7r.AiiOES WERE
eRE&amp;N .

~Y,

151T':?

Accessories

Prom DrenH, Beaded Royal
Blue Sequence Long Gown 10.
12, 2 Blick Short Gowns, 1-12,

.

175-6671.

PD&lt;»' t1ble , $800. 34M•

Splnat:· con1011 plano tor sale.
T.ake on sm1ll payment•. SH

locally. 1-100-343-64114.

Sun.-ar k101un heater 125.

Two Com burning Dov• T1ch
stcwes, new, Morgan Farm, 304-

137·2018.
Waahara I Dryaro, $76 A Up, 30

Dey Warranty, Call Waahw &amp;

Dryar ShOJ&gt;pa, 614·446•21144.
Woodburner,

llkt

naw

wlchlmnay, $225. 304-&amp;71o41e3
after 8:00PM .

55

Building
Supplies

BlOck, bflck, Hw• pipe•, win-

dows, llntall, ••c. Claude Wlnt.,., Alo Grandt, OH C.N &amp;14-

245-51U

Ue,al roof •nd lldlna, blkld

anamal and gtlv. 304'372·5208

_58;;;;;;;;:-P;et;ds"ifi;;iorp;Sija"ileihOj;:p;j

Set vtces

buill lumlthlnga.

81

Thm your clutter into cwh,
il the epty way... by shone,
no need to leave your home.

w

PWce yOur clpui6ed rul todqy/
15 word. or~~~, 3 dap,
3 pqpeu. 15.40 paid ~ adVance.
.1 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___;__

•

2---------~-~-3., _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

--22.

...........;

=,.:~

-----.,
...... lnltlNUSIMIII:j
Y-. ' - ' " ' - On Otdar I ,

Curtfe

,_lon
KMohona And ..... ,,;;E:;
W'1fll,

R....-.. ·

tlmattal Ralar-. ,.. .lob'
Too Big Or Smaiii&amp;M-311-0itt. j
Dlvle Iewing H·ihlne AIICf

AIPIJr, 'r•·

fllok.U~.::' Del~

CrMk

oo .....

,114MI-6al4,

BERNICE
ijEDE OSOL

"

are gov~rning you In the year ahead.
Send for Aquarius' Aatrc-Graph prediC·
tlons today by mailingS 1.25 plus a long,
sell-addressed. stamped envelope to
Astro-Grapll, c/o this newtpaper , P.O.
Box 91428, Cleveland. OH 4.101-3428.
Be sure to state your zodiac llgn.
PIBCEI (Felt. 2'L"o'OII20) Htlte world
hu treated you abrallvety lhls - ·

don't uae lias an excuM to ~te your

8·---------9. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

10~-------~-11~-------~--~12
_________._____
14
___________________
13~-----------------

Falt.12, 1113

In the Y"8J' -.d. tlterll II I I)OIIIblllty
you mayobaoome Involved with I new
prodtiCI « tyttllll wlllch •will be rather
· rtvalutionlly. If tho piiCM ant put toaettt« praplr!J, ~could be
AQUAMit ,,... ~ Pall. 11) In tllf
Pi 1111101 ol frlllnda, you mlghtltaWJin
opportunitY todly 10 put ~ -yoU "-~ """ gatlinll 110110 .-11
with -'IV· Don't l'l!llte tllle error In
judgment. AqUitlut, 011 .1 juJt1p on Mia ,
by undarttendlng tlte lnftiWIIOfl• which

·-•lui.

••
I

ASTRO·GRAPH

~'-----------~-----

446-2342
9)2-2156
1333

W1th - · taoO,
Pur•- Dellarman Pupplttl, 2
Radii, 1 Fawn All MaiM, *71
loch, 304..71..1221.

.... Local .... lumlthod.;
Colt ·-217-4117t Or 114-2»-

6~·----~-----­

AICC R..leearN c.tn Tenter

AKC Raglatarlld Datonttlon Pupa

RIFf

IASIIIEHT
'
WA'TERPIIOOPINO
;
Unoond.. ill .,..,..... gu..,..,..,J

4 •. _;...__ _ _ _ _ _ ____;,
5. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

15 _____________

=l.::t.~ ~lnt

'

Home
Improvement•

V.OUUm ·a.ner

llln, ..........1:~ llyna1t

lllrd, 114-4fl.oluo.

;

,.

12,300• ~. auto. 4 door,
,
304-I?IHIIR aft•I:GG rll.
.:..
74.:..__;Mo:::.;,;to:;.;,;n:l;:!J:.;I'C:.;;Iea::,:..__

Black I Gold. stza: ?-41

Foa Tarrlar, Mlri. I'll-, Put,

'Readthe ·

BORN LOSER

u-. v..

Worn Once. Al.a Btlutltul Party

No

-= . . . .

THI-IEICHII'

hoy,

·l4o-Wol!·7733.
~
1111 S.IO ~ 414, lakt - r •
paymanta. IIIII 8-10 Chow ....

- 4 - T R X I I I Ulte

Dnoom and S..ppty IMp.Pat
Onoom[ng. All br~ atrlta.
lorna Pat Food llfattr, Jullt
Con r· ·• ....._ ""''......_ Wabb. Coll114 -441 0231.
·~
0322, I lllitaa 0111 N.
1-ltlt
lid.
AKC- lpanlat Ootdtn
F- Dtllwoy.
llandat1101aaiJ, IM-24Htlt.
11(1; OallanMn, RcA1wtiller, WIN

a·

Bla rDUnd balM of onlxad

.,,,.Ia, 114-l'IZ-

I

010, I

Prom DrH1, Loralle Orglnal.

LAYIIE'I fUIINITURI

..,...
· · Uo
,., lutw
..ian.
Heuo1t w..a
Te l2GG
A

hoy,
Sllblla, . . kiM, 114-141-2201.

'

· - · ~2111 t:OO till
Sldin, belutltul ear, one owner, ·~~
avery Qllllon, . :101
1ta - . LJI, LcJadad.
12500,114-1112.e?ll.
11.000 Mtitt, w~

614-245-5313.

1..-lll+t.
S.arw llfutyle n.-clte blka
20130 tlrp $21. New mens
VI'RA FURNITURE ANO AP· 175.
alze 10 1rt&amp;c 5 buckJe boo'- $15.
PUANCES
304·7J'3..5271 or 773-S10i 11ttr
114 441 4421 OR 114-441-3151
8:00 Pll.

~'f.~~ :r:.~n;;:..

I~WY21110.

w.l&amp;.c..(ttt411

c.-

UKD

100111. round balM of

P1naaon&amp;c I · Pin Prtnler $125,

~~ *PN.~at~ ~or~V2~~~2~·---------

r... . . ·~. .....-;::::~
~,.....,.

table, rr-•oflf coinbln.tlon,
TY, 304-llS-11183.
All
&amp; Vlnyt In Slock on
Salt. Mollohan C.rpata, An N.

OOOO

Hay &amp; Grain

304-175-1725.

Sl•te top

fumllwe. 2231 State AOUCI Mt.
114-441-1422.

........ n_-tan.-

b-

!!'IJta..J...m.- to -

S40 Delivered,

Houaahold
Good I

Wa Buy And 9t1 -

~~~~~~~~~ ·

11111nno, full . . . 4WQ. N, :
1183 Fonl Eoooft, ami 1m/ _. P8, eutomiCio, new t1N1. .,... }
"""· Y&lt;IIY ratlablt car, $41D muffllll', good oondlttan, '73.000 1

lion, S37r. 114-446-1189 Aftor 5
P.M.

CIW'TS

;:::&amp;;~::.~. OH
""law

73 Valli &amp; 4 WD'I

010, IM48J.a!I02.
Raglat- U - -Ia, 1183 Lincoln Tow.O Cor 7V.OOO
holrar.ilo.bullt, and • - · 1114- Mlln, __Florida Cor,
1112..1
Cond_,l ta,eoo. ·-·102S.
1114 Chov. Captlca Ctualc 4dr.

64

I

Sears 5" Gas Pow•rtd, Poet
Hole Digger, Exe•ll•nt Condl·

Merchandtse
5I

W.llttr M-, very atytlth. 4 yro

Ont Ralnbcw 111 aHachontnta.
•till under warranty, $750. firm,

Wanlad To Ron! lononadlataly:
Trallar S - W1th LaJao Yard
B - . ~... Or llalllpctl~ 614-367-7821.

"-!'1 3 Bode--. 2 latha, No
Chharen a'M-14114701.
.

T.n...-

114-245-lace, 814o388-0BOsa.

~nl

Want To

2 badr'IIOI'ft eu~ Oll'lllt. aoHM

Par - · Cal 1·1100Or
• 111n
131~~·1t1y,.I.•)Unwlnwn N. A...,., iL 11142.
iCili'TIST /EDUCATOR For
......
Dt--r
Iouth
~· Conlanll ljltc:lalit In
Tfli ,.,, I 'trltn;u lt.IICied

Mauve &amp; Blue Floral ContMnpcrary ~!!... $.50 King Slza
W•••rbed t6'~ Or Beat Ofter.

For ala or rtnt· Mobile Homt,
camping trailer
lata wllh
utllltln, $50-$75 per month, 614·

47 WantBd to Rent
Co&lt;lplt

VCR,

; Cold Spol

Monitor, 40 MB H1rd Drlva. New
OYtr t1,100. Only 1 Year Old
J ... IillO. 114-«H1BI.

Pro-

17 or 18 ·Acn11 on Lincoln Htl.,

~built In

311 ·18 Mhz WI 'lOA

$13,5()0. can be financed 11500
down· 1%, 614·192-2521, Guido,
132 luHernut, PDmeroy.

41 Houses for Rent

l'fWoti 116ttt: p

H.O. monhorl

Waall

old. Ott.r rtcllna ~- 31M.
171-2001 . . . I:GII Pll.. •

3200.

Rooms

1181, llleon

The Uft WI)' to dltt~

S.ara - r . $1GG; 814-112-

Furnished

Rentals

--Ar

For Ball- Slzt mtclum ladl• . INuttful

with remote,

S t - ....,.. whh cooking.
North AIMt~ aptet. All--upa.
Arta, Coli alar 2:GG p.m., 304·773-

1112-2720 or IM-H2·21Be.

- - STILL AVAILABLE O..am _ , Flnlahad drywall
Te ~ ...... And A'dd cue

Wanllng to buv on l a n d or rent a kit far • M110 trailer,
For Salt- Ladlta wlntar -.lull 114-112-3tt4..
Iangiii. gray wlptald acarf, hu
.,..., ory oltanOd, t30, IM-62· 63
L"---'2421.
==-=..;;:;.·~·"""""'~:;:-==

r~~W.~==~~~

P.M.O.Lat•.
prool l&gt;ual-. with 1 ataady
Packagt, Low Rates, Ope" Lltt
Wllnllnt to buy a polr of whMa -1--.1·11011-153-8383.
Llghtlld 1-tomae. 1·614-772·
YENOINO ROUTE: Oot Rich With
1220.
--IDd
!lultk? No Wayl lut W. HI .. A
- · _.,, A-~uol· 35 Lots &amp; Acreage
Employment Servtces -Vtnd.· Won1 Lut. I 2114-

11

~ remad1IJd . . ., MW' ap.

wlntar _., W/ lalthOr
Complatly Fumilhod rnol&gt;llt trim,
llkt ntw, wa• liS. now
homt, 1 milt below tow!l1 ewer- 14\rnld $150; also mlac. lldln
Must ucrlllct, 163 14x70 Red· ~lng rtvar. .., Peta, \,;A. 114- clot ~ call 114-992·2155, fl.
5pm or 4-1141-2204 aftar 8pnL
cludHwith
dellvary,
tltpl
man
5 year setu~
warranty,
InOonnla Nutrhlon Producta
and akinlna, tt85mo. \;flu 114ltaturing Amino Acid Body
385-2434 ult fo&lt; Mlka.
Building w.lght tou and tat
- u • Mx7V Expanclo 3 lad·
burner formurn. Avall•bla ••·
clualvtly at Rite Aid Pharmacy.
rooma, Bath 1 11~-~;;;.;, Tub,
FI1111Place, Fronl u.ca. I14-24S.
11073, 114-245-8234.

Ukt dacorallng &amp; aowlng?
llakt -y 124,000. yaar. Work
- a d: 22 Ctllbtr Pu11111 &amp; .. ttome. EntiN bu•lnn•,

FRANK AND ERNEST

rDDIII 1 ,-rtrnam. _. Vll'-111
Manor
and
RlverWa.
Aput:rnenta In Ukldlepott. From

Sill. C.II814-11!2-IIH. EOH.

Salectlon1, Low Money Down,
~7'-5~iup And Dtllvary. 1.8CJO.

Business

• rw' oriiAI3t

Eftlcllncy apartment, Mulberry

Buy! New 70x14,
3bdrm., Including dtlivtry, HI
up, a'klr11ng • stt~, $178.47 PI'

month._:1yr. FREE 1o1 rent. 1-1100411·7tln.
Looking Fer A0..1? Conaldor,.
Pr..OWnad Moblla Home, Largo

Financial

uti••

&lt;166·7671 lor appclnlment.

Fantattic

RAT5! I ALWAYS M155
Tf.lE GOOD DAYS!

IUDOET PRICES AT JACKSON
~~~O:w~ho:~
rnovlta.C.IIIM-4414HI.EOH.
1-h 81, Mldclaport, Ohl,!, 2
bedroom Nri'llllhlcl tDI,
ptld, clap I l'tl, 304 tltl2':!llll0.

r.higen~tor, all el.ctrlc,

DID EVER'fTHING GO
AT 5CI-l00L. TODAY, MARCIE?
f.lAD TO GO f.lOME

Clll114.fl2.mt. EOH.

614-843·5373 or &amp;M·IIl2-184 ,,

112 both, hoot pump, otova,

SOMEBOD\' BROKE INTO THE
CUSTODIAN'S CAR. T~E DRINKING
FOUNTAIN FE~L OFF Tf.lE WALL,
AND Tf.lAT STUPID KID IN THE
BACK ROW ATE TilE LAST
PIECE OF Cf.lALK ...

~OW

2bdrm. apta., total electrla, apo

OrdiiMd anlnl.ter (plua Maattre

d.Qra In caunHIIng) Mlkl lo-

1

Ferry, .wv :Jo4.175-2548.

z room effie- apartment.
UtiiHIM tumlthocl. filii. par
month. 12GG ONa SL 304-81$llOtl.
·

1990 Spruce RldQ41, 3brdm., 1

¥lfllntt, -

-,(Jhlo
TI'M7II. I -

2 BR atwtmont, OaNipclla

/ToddltN 814-441-1227. Pre-.
/School Ago 8 1224.

'=

Rltk ,__ _
tuM llml Ml&amp;llw ....

wm.

Block WHI 01 HMC On Jtcban
l&gt;ikt 11-F I A.M. ·5:30 P.M. II
Ouolhy And Expo~tnce It Tht

Public Sala
&amp;Auction

_...,.

for

WB,

&amp; VIcinity
ALL Yonl - - It PoJd In
·boIIIAOLJN!E:
p.m.
tho day
tho ad 2:00
It lo run.
~ • 2:00 ......
~-. lllanday edltlan • 2:GG
p.on.hturclay.

8

vacancy

reBal'laW. ~:•M"Home away

rooms,

I

LEO (Julr 23-Aug. 22) Upon occasion
people tend to perceive you as being ar-

rogant and bossy, and in your dealings
with others today, you might set some

classic examples. They won't help your
Image.
,
VIRGO (Aug. 23-S.pt. 22) Instead of
sening a steady course lor youraetl in
your commercial dealings today, you

might nove difficulty knowing when to
ll!lllings and go on a spending aprH. All be cooperative and when to be inde~
that will do is add addHionaland oxpen- pendent.
·
LIIRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 21) There are two
""'" comptlcatlons.
ARIEl (.._ 11·April 11) Patience 1'111110no why thl~ might be an unproduc·
miglll not De your long ault today, espe· tlve day for you . You might not be able.
cially with your clterlllted retatlonllhlps. to make up your mind concerning wllat'
When you lnlllal that othera do things to do, and II you do make up your mind,
your way, you could be IIQQI'fltiVII ntth·
you= not follow through.
.
erthln -lVII.
8C
(Oct......... 22) Before you
TAUIIUI (April 1N1ar 20) Thlnt'l a In- a great deal of money In a new
chiii!CII )IO&lt;J might wlka up on tho wrong
hobby at thlotlme, make turelt'IIOmellde of the bed today, Irritated by .-y. thlng you're going to stick with. There's
thing and ~one. You'll be labeled a a chance It might be )ult a puling 1811crab if y011 don'l get a grip on ~f. cy.
3111111 Iller ti-.IIIM 201 o-d IAOITTARIUI (Now. 21 Dec. 21) Avoid
llgailllllllcllnatlartl today to l'l!llta un· •gtlmlllto with your opecial klundad pnttUmptlonl. tuch u biting todey, ._..... you'l run the rllk or
tlklll ld¥lntage of by a lr- w1tan no · Hying things you'N lallr ragrllt. Harah
Ill wi" - Intended.
worde could • • unwalcorne IDWI.
CANCIII (.lUna 21..Jul)lll) Anilmpor- CA'NCONI (DIL ......,_ 11) Don'l
tlllt Objttc11VIJ you Htlbllllh lOr yountlll blame ~I today H_,..,,.you're
loday mlgnt not Da attalnad, OWing to a
trying to IPCIIH It un-able. Thla
lock of t-ty on your part. Once you
par101t ritlg t h - difficulty In getting
oommlt Yourlllll, go lor broke.
along with everyone.
~~

OUJ;t LANGUAGE AD·VICE: Give
the latest Ad· Vice Award to the com·
pany that offers "Strawberry Pre·
serves , Orange marmalade and
Cinnamon Apple Jelly." A comma
before AND in lhatlist is optional, but
the capitalization needs work. None of
these words requires a capital letter,
but if you want to stress words by cap·
italizing them, then you musl handle
parallel terms alike. Capital letters to
start "Preserves" and "Jelly" indicate
a capital also· on "Marmalade." To
sweeten your writing, do your best to
be consistent in uppercasing and low·

man

20 ComPHI pt.
22-trl
..
23 Blbla book: '
24 Coraonony ·25 Future bk.
26- 4•1a ~
30Now
. •
Englander • ,
32 Puerto- '
33 Marprmo :~
3e Drink alowly
3e llltar
•·
41 Alllantaa · _
43 Article ot -· '
lumltura .: •
45 Nato wall . ·
(abbr.( : ; ·~
47 Tltot man ·
49 Uncanny ,. ·
50 Conttruc·. ,
Uon baam ,
(2 wdo.) ·•
51 - Callocnlo
52 Saaporlln ;
Alatkl
H llalaUval '
58 Hall of bl :
5I IDattlllt herO

By Phillip Alder

E&amp;R TREE SERVICE. Tooolng,
Trimming, TrN R.rnoval, Hedge

..

16 Biblical ·

A coup .
that backfired
On top of the Old Bailey, the famous
criminal court in London, stands Jus:
lice. She holds a . sword in· her rilht
hand and '!Cales in her left. Across her
eyes is a blindfold.
We bridge players often feel like
her. We weilh the evidence, but be·
cause some cards are hidden, con·
tracts make that can be defeated, and
vice versa.
A Superior Court judge from New
Jersey, Burrell Ives Humphreys,
brought off a brilliant coup in today's
deal from a duplicate game - tJe.
cause West couldn't see Humphreys'
cards.
West led the diamond three: seven.
queen, king. Humphreys knew that if
he conceded a club trick, the def~ders
could run four or five diamond tricks.
To try to deflect the course of justice,
Humphreys made ·an incredible play:
At trick two, he led the diamond jack.
Thinking South was strong in dia·
moods, West -: an expert player ducked his ace. Immediately, Hum·
phreys cashed Jour spades, two hearts
and one club lor ·his contract.
AI the end of the evenina: though,
Humphreys found thai he had scored
zero matchpoints! Every other South
had won 10 .or II tricks. Maybe some
Wests didn't lead a diamond. But it
more likely that the declarers
played ll)e ace and anotber club, ei\her
immediately or after crossing to dum·
with a spade. When West won with
club king, he couldn't envisage the
diamond distribution. Instead, he
switched to a major, refusing to give
South a trick with the diamond jack.
As Humphreys migbt have said, jus·
lice definitely wasn't done - or seen
to be done.

Waay~ottar•

9Supo..Jso;• ·
10 Flower
11 Computer •

MINE'S

ABOUT TH'

..•

· 6 Guido a loll! ·
nota
..
7 Hr. part - ·
8 Old EngRtlf.:
poet
.

1 Aetratl

Opening lead: + 3

I GOT SOME

Business
Training

West
Pass
Pass
Pass

Senti

The Worid Almaaace Crossword Puala =.

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; fURNITURE. 12
,...a......8l ~-Hipctlt &amp; ,...._.
- ·• - .._.. .,· w...ern
,._
furniture,
I.

2 ltd,_, On liGUla 211,
haawy duty -har
lloJ_,. . - .
I WWIO
wuhor t:.,tod=·o:..~:a.
Dapoolt, 1 -1111.
cuta to SII.DO, K - Dryer
2
IR trall•o lumlahod, 176.GG Waatarnhout d!Jar
w-lctryw,
-713-8241 t11D.GG
CUI
te
SII.OO
anytime.
Ralrlgarator almond Ukt 2br On Bob llcCOnlllclt Rood, . 1250· Kanmora rtirtgt!rllor lroat
aatnpc~~a. 114 ua 1111.
oo..~~: :.,~$'::!,
F,..lahod, 2 "' :lbdrm, lor Nnt :llln' gu ranga $15.GG Sklgga
In ~ry
Park. -harl Appollancaa 71 Vlna Stroat 014dryor, al'&lt;-;111311 mon., IM-tll2· 441-73~ or 1-800-4!ll-349e

A I

·The

El-

80 Dutch town

CELEBRITY1 ICIPHER
o by'--- ......... Md PfMM'.

.,_, , _ ou"'"""'""...;o;;,... CNMIII hm Ql
IE8cti~MW

.u

p

1n u. ..-...,... b" ~M~ttw.

WEV

LVGMI

YVUWHVSP

IV

EKWFt -.. HNE
yy

~"'....,.

••

••
• ••

-·...•

IGKO

KVHWKI

F

UW

H F I U F 0 • N Y R

IV L 0 . ' ·

L.

MNJW

VXXWK

ZVGMI

N

r_,.,

X N ·M U

N I

. .,

FMIUFO .

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "~ D'Angelo Is a chameleon, a comblnatlc;.;7
of Jean Hartow and Jean Arthur." - Burt Reynolds.
· •
WDID
. '::~:~;~' S~\\.4{}lA-~£~S
..
lAM I
toy CLAY I. POlLAN _;;..._ _ __
0 four
Atorronrge letttrs of
scrambled words

. •!

Hllo~

...
..
.
···"
~

lOw to form foul slmpfi woo,ds. l

I

...

BELMME

I I'

...
~.

I
I I F

....'"•.'
...

UPDOR

I

N0 DL E

I

r-.....,1_;_'.;,.1..:..1,;5:....;r......l
.

.

.

_

,-:

'-::::::::::==~;,~

r

1_..,;.D..:E;...:C:.,.::.K..:W;....:I.,..-II

I I

'I

8

..

Man to his neighbor: "My

.wife's birthday is tomorrow so

I askBd.her what she wanted. •
She lold me.that the best thing
would be not to be ........ of it.'

le . o·Complete

7
L-J..-..L.-..L.--1.-.J.-.J.

1

~

Ike chuckle quoted
by fi/ltng in the missing words
you develop from step No. 3 be low.

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES

-·

~ UNSOAMBLE FOR

'

ANSWER

SCIIAM-LETS ANSWERS

..
-.

• ·••

Gtjtty • Fully - Ve~pe • Beyond • FEEL like GOING
Stlttng on a park bench ona day I overheard an elderly
gent tell his companion that he knew he was getting
older when he knaw his way around but didn't FEEL
like GOING."
'

.

··••

�•
'

Page-12-The Dally_Sentlnel

Michael Jackson: Skin problem
makes his skin look white
ic procedures.
Olher revelations:
-He doesn't like going out to
date, but a woman friend does visit
his ranch.
-He had a crush on singer
Diana Ross and is now dating
Brooke Shields.
art.
-His falher, Joseph, was a stem
He quickly dispensed with one man who teased and sometimes
of those rumors: that he bleached beat him as an adolescent for being
his skin.
"sad" and withdrawn, but Jackson
"There is no such thing as skin forgave him.
-During adolescence, he. had
bleaching," he said. "I've never
seen it. l don't know what it is." so many pirriples·he refused to look
lie said his disorder began after the in mirrors, and is still reluctant to.
1982 release of his "Thriller" "I washed my face in the dark," he
album, and he uses makeupto S3l·d•
cover its effects.
- He denied trying to buy the
He dismissed suggestions that bones of tne Victorian sideshow
he might be changing his appear- figure known as the Elephant Man.
ance because he doesn't like who "What would 1 need with some
he is.
' bones?"
"I'm a black American," he
. -lie hasn't read a· book by his
said. "I'm proud of my race."
sister LaToya that portrays the
Jackson said he had minor cos- Jackson family as 'dysfunctional. "I
metic surgery to liis nose but didn't love my sister dearly," he said.
alter his chin, his eyes, his lips or
-He !lopes to have a family
any of the rest of his face. "Very some day. "But 1 couldn't right
litile. You can count it on two fin· now because I'm married to my
gers;" he said, referring to cosmet- work," he said.

here with Miebael Payne, as be ·undergoes a
speech evaluatioll. Also pictured with Micbael is
Rhonda Marks, Pomeroy.
·

Head
application · Grange meets
. Start accepts
.
The Galli a-Meigs Head Start
Program provides specialized services to eligible area children
between the ages oflhree and five
whose family income falls within
the Head Start guidelines.
Head Stan contracts with Ohio
Unive£sity as well as other Iota!
health care providers to provide
enrolled children with complete
health caie services. Those services
include physical and dental exams
and follow-up, urinalysis, appropriate .screening for blood lead and
iron levels, TB testing, immunization update, and speech and hearing
services. The program also pro-vides families with requested
health and nutritional information
and infonns them of other available
service agencies that might be able
to assist each family in meeting

lheir own needs.
Head Start continues to accept
applications for enrollment to fill
vacancies as IIley occur throughout
the school year. Furlhcr information about enrollment may )Je
obtained by calling Carol Young,
Meigs Center Manager, at 9923088, or Kay Rowe, Cenlral Offtce
in Gallipolis, at446-6674.

· A 25-year pin and certificate
was presented to Aaron Sayre
when the Racine Grange met
recently at lhe home of Chuck and
Jean Alkire wilh master, Dorothy
Smith, presiding.

The by-laws were amended to
change lhe meetings from the ftrst
and tllird Thursday to the third
Thursday of each moqth.

Revival at Believers Fellowship
Ministry, one mile from the GalliaMeigs County line on Route 7, will
be held 7 p.m. nightly wilh Sunday
services at 2:30 p.m . Pastor Margaret Robinson will be the speaker.
There will be special singing
nightly. Everyone welcome.

A lhank-you was received from
Jim Spencer for the Christmas
remembrance.
Mary N. Easterday, chaplain,
gave the benediction.

~H~m~I
~f fijHm~.

I
~Hil1l

Til W~l ~f t~~IK

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, February 12, 1993

ea World -visits Harrisonville ...
· SCOUT CONTRIBUTION - A portion of
money paid for bunting and rJSbing licenses in
Meigs County comes back to the county for conservation projects. A donation from tllat fund
was given Ibis week to Boy Scout Troop 249 to
help with the expenses of a conservation project
completed at Camp Kiashuta. The money

llelped six scouiS earn their "SO-mile a loot or
anoat award" explllilned Robert Arms, ••••t
scoutmaster, center, wbo accepted the slulile
cheek from Earl L. Rousb ot tbe FiP ... G Association. Tbat organlzatloa wcirks wlllllllal
Wlldlife Olroeer Keillt Wood, left, In·distJ P liw&amp;
the local portion received from license sales.

People in the news-.- - -

JEFFERSON C!'rY, Mo. (AP)
"I'm terrifi~~ to ~rfonn there.
- Captain Kangaroo has advice It seems hie~ 11 s .~omg 19·be my
for adults: Handle children with toughest audtence, she said.
·
·
The Charleston native plays a
car~ob Keeshan called children the series of offbeat characters, some
nation's "human infrastructure," based on her West ViFginia
but said h8lf of them are at risk of 'upbringing.
leaving school, being abused and
"All of it is terribly personal
suffering physical or emotional and lhere is a lot of Charleston in
problems.
it," she said. "There's also--some ·
''The rlletoric of America risque moments and I hope people
'We love children' -· is nottbe won't getputoutabout.it."
reality of America," Keeshan said ·
Magnuson starred in the movie
Tuesday at lhe ninlh-annual Have a "Making Mr. Right" and lhe teleHeartforKidsDay.
vision series "Anything But
'
He told childrens' advocates at Love."
the Statehouse that it's important to
AUGUSTA. Ga. (AP)- James
show support for children, "who
Brown
gave a group of juvenile
do not exert political lobbying
delinquents a pep talk about God,
pressure."
"Walce up, politician\! Become education and hard work.
''Say"itloud- I'm black and
statesmanlike! Tomorrow is too
proud," he told the largely black
late," Keeshan said.
Keeshan, 66, was a fixture for audience Tuesday at the Youth
decades on children's television on Development Center.
"Look at me,'' lhe Godfather of
CBS and the Public Broadcasting
Soul
said. "As a young kid, 16
System.
years old, I was in prison. It wasn't
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) had for me, it W!IS good.' :
Behind bars, he said, he learned
- Ann Magnuson isn·~ sure how
the
value of education and hard .
her one-woman' show will be
work
that helped him on the road to
received when she brings it to ·the
success
and stardom.
town that helped inspire it
"You
can't beat the system. Get
Magnuson is scheduled to peran
education
and work hald, lhat's
form at a May 14 benefit for
Covenant House, a shelter for the only way 10 do it," Brown said.
Brown called on the youngsters
homeless families. ·

to ~y every day.
You always know, reprdl_ess
what they say. when somclllmg
really bad happens, "you can always
count on God," said Brown, wbo
served more tll~n two years in
prison for aggravated ilssaull

992-5627

!Tii·

SIIOE PtAfE

ans.

.

The others: Unita Blackwell of
Mayersville, Mississippi~&amp; first
black woman mayor; Mae Bcnha
Carter of Drew, for efforts to
improve education in Sunflower
County; Early Wright of Clarksdale, the South's first black disc
jockey and · a broadcaste-r on
Clartida!e's WROX radio station
since 1947; the late Lucius L.
WiUiams Jr .. Ole Miss' fii'SI blact
administrator.

WeAre
Having A
Valentine
Party .
Stop In Our Lobby On
Saturday, February 13,
9 AM-12 Noon
For Cookies, Punch
and Coffee

F. B &amp; Savings Company~
* * ...

,

u

..

u

211 West Second Street · Route 7 ·
P.O. Box 626 .
P.O. Box 339. .
•
?omaroy, QH. 45769
Tuppers Plains, OH. 45783
614·992-2136
;''

.

2 Sectlono, 12.....,. 25 cento
' A llulllmeclla 111c. Newopoper

Drennan pleads guilty
to aggravated m.u rder . .

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
Fred Drennan, 30, of
Ravenswood, W.Va., accused in
the murders of Jeff Halley, Sr. and
Jeff Halley, Jr., pleaded guilty,to
charges 9f aggravated murder this
morning when he appeared before
a three judge panel' in Meigs Coun. ty Common Pleas Court.
In exchange for the guilty pleas
on the
charges, a plea bargain agreement entered into by lhe
defendant, llis attorneys and lhe
Meigs County Prosecutor's office
asked that lhe charges of robbery
'lind lridnapping be dismissed.At 11:45 this morning, Meigs
County Judge Fred W. Crow Ill,
Judge Robert Teague of Perry
County, an~ Judge [)an Faureau of
"Hands On Whales" was
Morgan County returned to the
the theme of the program
court
room and Crow announced
whieb was presented several
the
panel
did .not accept lhe plea
times to small ·groups of dill·
bilrgain
agreemeniS.
dren at the Harrlsonvllle EleThe judges were in conference
mentary Sebool.
DRENNAN ARRIVES FOR
·Fred Dren-·
with
Meigs County Prosecutor
Higllligbl of the presentanail,
30,
wilo
is
cbar1ed
witll
the
19!11
of
Jefrrey
L. HaifeY
John R. Lentes, Assistant Prosecu·
tion by Mary Stringer and .•
and
his
son,
Jerfrey
S.
Halley,
Is
pictured
as
be
arrived
Friday
tor Charles Knight, and the &lt;!efense
Michelle Bellomo, an educa·
morning
in
Meigs
County
from
Atllens
for
a
plea
hearing.'
attorneys from the Public Defend·
lional team from Sea World, ·
The bearing is taking place before a tllree
panel because It is
ers office, J, Michael Westfall and
came with the laOatlng of a 16
a
capital
ease.
Judges
are
Meigs
County
Judlie
Jerry McHenry.
foot killer whale, Above Ricky
Fredrick
W.
·Crow
Ill,
Retired
Perry
County
G.'
Court reconvened at .1 p.m. for
· Stelmenlz and Ashley Young
Teague,
and
Morgan
County
Judge
Don
Favreau.
Wii'
s
further deliberation.
join Bellomo on stage for a
expected
to
be
len11thy.
Also
pictured
with
Droeni
r'n return for dropping the
closer look at the life-sized
County Sherirr James M. Soulsby; I&gt;rennan's atlt~r_!ll
charges
of kidnapping and robbery,
wllale. .
..,
Defender J. Michael WeslfaU of Athens County; and
the plea bargain agreemeni called
Uut before tllat the dlildnnGary Wolfe.
Continued on page 3 •
lea-rited everythlna aboat
'Wiil!les, tbelr luibiU, likeS alld
dislikes, and saw a video of an
actual blrtb of a whale at Sea
World.
•
Displayed for viewing and
handling by the children were
a variety of whale "things",
some real, some models,
Including teeth, neekbone,
gon; Keilh AdamsOn, 32, of North- the raid, called Operation Clan
By Tbe Associated Press
vertebra, and rib bones. AI
Eight people have appeared in wood; and Rick Hymore, 34, and Bake, was lhe largest it had con·
the ri1ht, Stringer displays a
courts in sollthem Ohio on charges William Reetz', -28, of Toledo, ducted.
youna gray whale's rib bone
The alleged ring called itself the
they participated in a statewide pleaded innocent in Gallipolis
·comparing Its size lo HarClan, officers said.
poaching ring lhat may have oper- Municipal Court on Thursday.
rlsoavllle student, Tiffany
They were being held on cash
The division said the suspects
ated for live to seven years.
· were charged with 25S violations,
Richmond. ·
The arraignment of 1he ninth bonds of $2,000 to'$1S,OOO.
Doug Andrew, 33, of Toledo, including shooting deer from pubsuspect, Ron Kendrick, 34, of Toledo, was set for today in Chillicothe and Tim Ello, 30, of Toledo, plead- lic roadways, hunting deer from
Municipal Court, to give him more ed innocent Thursday in Chilli- motor vehicles and the unlawful
cothe. Judge David Cutright set sale of walleye.
time 10 hire a lawyer.
Some of the violations caqy a
The suspects illegally took bond at $20,000 for Andrew and ·
Kendrick,
and
$10,000
for
EUo.
maximum
penalty of six months in
wildlife such as deer, turkeys and
James
Fyffe,
38,
of
LeMoyne,
jail
and
$1,000
fine. If convicted, •
walleye in Lucas 8nd Wood counwas
arraigned
Wednesday
in
Perthe
suspects
might
have to pay '
ties in northwest Ohio, Delaware
cialty item was her dumplings. Her County in central' Ohio, Ross rysburg Municipal Court on 15 $400 per deer in restitution.
· favorite meal, if she were allowed County iii soulhCm Ollio, and Gal· counts in connection .with tile
Authorities said Thursday IIley
to cook at Overbrook, would con- lia and Vinton counties in southeast , alleged iUegal sale of walleye. He had seized 10 rifles and one pisto~
sist of "soupy potatoes and oyster Ohio, lhe state division of wildlife was released wilhout bail.
II mounted deer heads, several
stew." Her favorite snack, howev- said.
About 60 officers with the dozen deer racks, several cases of
er, is Andy Capp's Cheese Curls.
Douglas Shields, 31, of Wal· wildlife division arrested the nine deer meat and pressure cookers
She also says she loves pizza but bridge; Gary Hymore, 29, of Ore· suspects in a raid in the Toledo used to cook the meat
area Wednesday. The division said
doesn't get it too often.
Mrs. Carney says slle ~
satisfied with her life at Ov
Center. She refers to her room as
.
.
her "apartment" and to tile sitting
area across from her room as her
"~arlor.'' She enjoys reading her
btble and she loves to sing. Her
favorite hymns are "Nearer, Still
The lack of money for adequate most likely to'be funded. As a part remove lhe sidew81k on Fiftll Street
Nearer" and "Abide With Me." She
cemetery care was discussed during of that discussion, Council in for- while lhe church is putting in a new
atso,entcrtains thoSe around h~ by
a recent meeting of Racine Village mally .agreed lhat connecting into parldng lol The sidewalk brick are
sllarlng some ller favorite stories
CounciJ in chambers at the Star the Chester-Tuppers Plains water to be removed and saved for the
and memories.
Mill Park.
system might be IIJllliOPriate for the village to be used in olher projects. ,
Now don't tliink for one minute
The drop in revenue for ceme- vill~e sometime in lhe future. I
A discussion was held on the
that ''Aunt Maude" thinks of hertery care was discussed and it was
S tdewalks need some attention big trucks knocking down signs
set( as old. When h~r roommate
decided lhat the clerk should con· it was pointed out but council and running over culverts. lt' was
unfortunately died, she said to
tact tile cemetery trustees to let agreed that before anything along decided that if the trucks continue
thoSe around her "don't ,pt!t an old'
them know about the financial that line is done,. residents will lhe damage lhen Council will take
person in llere with- me. She SI!YS
problems.
·
have to stop parking lheir vehicles some action against ,them,· perhaps·
she a1so refers to many around her
Efforts
will
be
intensified
10
get
on
the sidewalks.
banning 18 wheelers from village:
as "grandma" and "gnllldpa."
more lot care money and donations
Council approved the ~nt streets except for delivery vehicles ••
"Aunt Maude" will he honored
so that cemetery mowing this the Board of Public Affairs signed
Jeff Thom10n reported that h~ ~·
with a party at Overbrook on Saturspring and summer will not have 10 with Bob Moore to serve as techtii- getting a materials list and prices.
day from 1-4 p.m. where everybe cunailed.
. cal supervisor responsible for tile together for possible constructioii·
lhing will be just rigllt because she
It was reported that many lot water system operation.
·of a building at lhe park to be ~:
.is plannin$ the party. She ·has
owners have opened savings
Malcolm Parks, National Gas as a museum. It was reported an:
requested .btl red candles, a clolh
accounts at the Home National and Oil Corp., attended the meeting old miD is available as are a nlim;·
table cover and a paper table cover
Bank in the trustees' name with the to thank council and Mayor Cle- ber of photographs.
'• •·: ·
that says "Happy Bi.riltday."
. interest being paid each year for lot land for courteSies extended him.
Council agreed to send BriaR:
Mrs. Carney contributes bet
care. However, with the drop in He will be retiring on June 1. Bowling 1 bill for the cleanup. of·
yean to tiving a clean life. She says
interest on savin1s accounts, the Mayor Cleland sugsested t~at diesel that occurred recently from 1:
she has never Sliloted or drank and
money received Is way down, ere- Council send 1 letter to National vehicle allegedly under his conlllll;.
1 she believeil failhfully in the Lord
ating some of lhe )IIOblem.
Gas and Oil commending Parks for
The finucial rcpon showeit·i
'which l!llll kept her loving, alert and
Mayor
Frank
t=leland
reported
his
work
with
the
vill&amp;j&amp;e.
balance
in all funds ,·or:
full of the joy of life. .
that bids for ~ the weiiJ above
Tbe fint reading was Jiven to a $191,488.37.
;· :·
lhe flood plain will be advertised salary ordinance. Tbe ordinance
Next meetina was aet for MaT&amp; l
this ll!onth. The wort Ia set aside approved a pay raise for. the mar- . 1.
.
: :.:
to close
for minority bttliwsee ullsted by shal in lieu or IIOipitallzltion insurAtlalding were Mayor Clelaitd.:
Meigs County Common Pleas the sta&amp;o. It wu noted that if the ance.
&lt;;:ouncil members, Bob Bee!lle;
Street Commissioner Glenn !:Ieney Ientz, Scou Hill, Car}QH
Court fudge Fred
Crow m has well cuinalllllnat nlllld lhcn the
announced that hil office and all BPA cou1a order the vUiage water Rizer was authorized to pwchasc a Teaford, and Jeff Thornton, ~:
other county offices wiU be c"*«&lt; system to stilt llaaling the Wiler as tire and tube and 1 jack for the shal Don Dye, Fire
Johat .Riili:
on Monday, Feb. IS, In oblervance pound warer
:
. coml,)llClOI' truc!c afler I'Cj)O!Iing on man, Clerk Clmlyn PUwe51,
In a dla:uaion on Iuue ·:a pro- flat ttres. .
of Pruidcnts' Day; Olrocu will
Commlaloner Rizer, 1114 F'...a.ii
Council app!O\'ed the request of David NeiaJcr.
reopen on Tueaday at lhelr usual jCcta, the IIII)'Of reportnd that W8ICI'
8:30 Lm. hour. ,
.
system projeciS seotn to be lhe ones the 'R acine Baptist Cl\urch to
••
••

Eight accused ,in alleged
poaching ring ~ppear .in court

Middleport woman will celebrate
lOOth birthday on Valentine's Day
"really JiVj: ll up,"

a, J0UE lt. DILLON

s r

INewsSIIK
)' ... c..y; die oldest reSicblafO::An:ul: C
iJu Middkpnn, will ' I
Ia-1OOtb
bicthh) a.~ 7 ite's Day. She is
bowl! affcclioule1y as •Aunt
I

I'

-

t•IOCQ)WMC*iCLher.

MIS. Qney,- ora childml,- bon FdJ.. 14. 1893 at
I iilria W.Va.,-., bowll • The
fills, 10 &amp;•' ... Jacob Gawer.

Sk na!llllt:r • 1 adi:uqlll
B • D -, •
;. ., .ae.tine~"'
ne .._ w7lae
bclm is
SliP
sa..aicll•• • cof
llt:r lOIIt!l )IC8', Mas, C'anlcy baY·
dal ikm 10 lllne llt:r 1• e uten
a. We-' );· Aftcrwllds. she
j ;cd- llt:rr..w&amp; foods.piDa. al'iaaHt:L
0a lbr. n. 1911. • 111: • or
li,IFie
. . . . . . ca..,.lkir
wc"i•J is- C-.1 or 1locr life
wllidlltold puc:ioccs •-'cs.
Tk • 7 was --roopc ralive
.... tlllyill? 5 W.Va..alfle
"' I 7
I 5 I a If I - i n
a hili • •e ~- lin. Camey
SliD nlcalls - britW aaiae of •
l'llUIIId lllil willt.., a
1 TtZaase
... a . . -.a
neir!toaC J - wa IJICal Bl Jlis ' - t ,

*-

'"..a:=...:=:

: : llis
CFJde4· waJIWS MIJ
sllcllsi::IDk

elf

~

tile

&amp;fi&amp;

Ia 5912 IIIey aowc4 10
CU1 'M, W.VL, wl:ae dlcy
I
.
'.
• . . 6eir
•ied

............r_......
~--.

I

Sl. A'

Mr.

St.
Allllts a.l icll a s
..n
k ..,_..a lilnli.... aton oa

Cmley

I

I

.,.._

........

w..............
c..
Site II'

SPa

ilow ... .ad 10

_.=I;AI-ill
eiiliii
,.... . . . . 5 - lisl
I

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

•

murder

OXFORD, ~- (AP) - Ac1or
James Earl Jones will return to his
home state this week to accept die
University of Mississippi's annual
Award of Distinction.
"My Mississippi status is
almost voluntary," Jones said. "I
left lhe state when I was 4 l/2, but
it is ,the place of my nativity. I
would in no way fmake iL"
Jones, whose roles have ranged
from Darth Vader in "Star Wars"
to the judge in ihe current movie
"Sommersby," is one of five people receivin~ the honor Thursday
for outstandmg black Mississippi-

,_,,

IN BLACK, CERISE,
DRAGON,
STRAWBERRY, LINEN,
STONE, NAVY and
BLACK PATENT.

. .._ toalabll...ld 3GL

Saturday, rain, mhtd wttii&amp;DOW.
Hlgb ln mid lOs. ·
·

/

Your Bank fo~~~ ...
Farmers Bank

I

Pick 4:
7302

The baking contesi was held
with four entries. Dorothy Smith
received rust place.

Revival planrted

L----1-:....,_---'

806

•

.·

SPE:ECH EVALUATION· Dilnaz Unwalla,
left, a student ctinlcian of tbe Sebool of Hearing
and Speech within tbe &lt;;allege of Healtll and
Human Services ill Ohio University, is pictured

Pick 3:

Inside today

ioiied if you wanl"
Jack!&gt;Qn spoke anim.atedly and
occasionally giggled during lhe 90minute interview at his Neverland
ranch near Santa Barbara.
By confronting rumors about his
personal life, Jackson said, he
hoped his fans could focus on his

By JAMES ANDERSON
Associated Press Writer
LOS ANGELES - Michael
Jackson says lhe man in lhe mirror
has had a little work done on his
nose but not the -rest of his face.
And he denies bleaching his skin,
explaining he has a disorder that's
destro~ing his pigment.
" It s a problem for me, OK? I
can ~ t control it,." lhe pop megastar
s~id in a live TV interview
Wednesday wllen asked by Oprah
Winfrey about his fading slcin
color. The disorder, which he
didn' t identify, runs in the family,
he said.
·
In his first solo interview in
nearly a decade, the eccentric 34year-old star said be surrounds
himself with children to make up
for il friendless, workallolic childhood.
He said he was beaten by his
father and still doesn'tlike to look
at himself in mirrors (His recent !lit
"Man in the Mirror" notwithstanding.)
.
And he finessed a question
about whether he is virgin, answering, ''You can call me old-fash -

Ohio Lottery

Valentine
love notes

. . .

•
2
.., . . . . ....
Pelt wE e ... aays ... c.ll

· Another date precious to Mrs.
Carney is Sept. 9, 1918 at which
time she was baptized in lhe Hocking River at Logan..
Mrs. carney says she never had
any children, only cats. One partie"
ular cat she recalls disappeared for
a five year period only to show up
&lt;!gain one day on her doorstep.
Mr. Carney died in December of
1968 and sometime afler lhat Mrs.
Carney moved to Riverbend Apanments in New Haven, W. Va .,
where she stayed until 1983 when
she moved into Overbrook. She
was lhe ninth resident at Overbrook.
She lived bv herself until· she
moved to OVerbrook and she also
drove a car until about that time.
Her car was an old jeep which she
affectionall:ly r~~fers to as "Honey."
· Sbe also says h!!r husbaild used to
buy her candy for Valentine's Day
and be also called her "Honey." ·
Mn. Can'tey loved to cook and
she 11)'1 baking custard pies was a
faWIIite
to do. Anolher

Racine Council learns more funds needed for adequate cemetery care ::·;
-

omces

w.

auer

so..:

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="333">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9627">
                <text>02. February</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="32215">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="32214">
              <text>February 11, 1993</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1131">
      <name>nutter</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="594">
      <name>reed</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="100">
      <name>roush</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="5">
      <name>thomas</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
