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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

.UCLA wins

Pick 3; 091
Pick 4:0590
Cards:
7-H; K-C; K-C;

13th straight
hardwood tilt

Low toolght In mid-teens.
High Saturday, In mid 20s.

A-S

Chance of snow 60 percent.

Page4

2 Socllona, 14 Pagoo 25 centa

Vol. 42, No. 184
Copyrighted 1992

AMultimedia Inc. Nowopaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, January 24, 1992

Meigs offered land to attract new prison
Ohio Power Company willing to donate
300-acre site northwest of Salem Center

A NEWSPAPER SUPPLEMENT

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Triplett seeks nomination for
engineer's post on GOP ticket

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RE~

Peoples Bank has grand opening

Power's customers, said Ohio
Power President Charles A. Heller,
Jr.•
Meigs, Noble and Belmont
counties are vying to awact one of
four new state prisons proposed by
Governor George Voinovich in
December. State officials are
expected in Meigs County today 10
visit the two proposed sites includ·
ing the Ohio Power property.
The Ohio Power site was purchased in the late 1960's, primarily
for ilS coal reserves. Afle'r mining
at the site was completed in the late
1980's, Ohio Power earmarked the
property for potential sale and
development.
State Representative Mary Abel
(D·Athens), in light of Ohi6
Power's announcement, said that
she hoped the donation will make
the Oh10 Deparunent of Rehabilitation and Corrections seriously consider Meigs County as a viable
contender for the new facilitr.
"The availability of th1s land
should shed a whole new light on
the continuing process of site selec·
tion," Abel said. "The benefits of
this offer and the need for this
facility in Meigs County are too
great to ignore."
Abel said the deparUDent should
carefully examine all of the rele·

vant information before rendering
ilS decision.
"A state facility would certainly
provide many needed jobs f?,r people in Southeastern OhiO, Abel
said.
"I have asked the Administration to take into consideration the
fact that Meigs County has high
unemploymenL a high poverty rate
and a high percentage of the lead·
ing indicators of poverty, such as
infant mortality and percentages of
individuals on public assistance
progrnms," Abel said.
"Jobs could improve the situa·
tion in Meigs County and help alleviate these statistics." Abel said.
She expressed her hope that these
factors would be examined and
compared as the site selection pro·
cess continues.
"When one takes the time to
look at the statistics as well as the
support demonsttated by lhe people
of Meigs County, I think that the
county can make a serious bid for
the projoct," Abel said. "In work·
ing with individuals from the area.
I have received much input in favor
of the prison and none opposed 10
it. The people of Meigs County are
willing 1o accommodate the state
and are enthusiastic about this project," Abel said.

Meigs teachers, board
sign contract agreem_ent

SAllE MORE WHEN
YOU BUY BY THE CASE!

3 Pfcl.

The Ohio Power Company has
offered to donate 300 acres of land
10 the Meigs County Board of
Commissioners in support of the
county's effort 10 attract a new
Ohio medium-security prison there.
Economic Development officials of Ohio Power and the Meigs
Division of the Southern Ohio Coal
Company recommended a site
northwest of Salem Center on
Meigs County Road 1, one mile
north of the intersection ·of County
Road I and State Route 124. It lies
two· miles due west of the Parker
Run Penal of Meigs Mine 31.
"We hope that this site will
prove auractive for the Ohio
Department of Rehabilitation and
Correction. and we are happy to
collaborate with' the Meigs County
Commissioners on the proposal,"
said Ernest E. Sisson, Jr., manager
of Ohio Power's Pomeroy office.
"The prison could employ 250
Fred Hoffman, Robert E. Evans, president .nd
RIBBON CUTTING CEREMONY ·A
to
300
people when it is completed
chid executive office of Tbe Peoples Banki)lg
grand opening celebration or the Peoples Bank
in
1994,
which would provide
and Trust Co., and Taml Buck, operations offi·
in Middleport today featured a ribbon culling
obvious economic benefits to our
cer, pictured len to right.
.'
ceremony. Taking pari were Emma Jane Paugh
area." Sisson said.
loan officer/office manager, Middleport Mayo;
If Ohio prison officials choose
the site, Ohio Power is committed
to donating the property 10 Meigs
County at no cost, S1sson said.
The tax benefilS from the com·
chief executive officer, was assist· in the community.
pany's
contribution of the land
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
He complimented Mayor Hoffed in lhe ribbon cutting ceremony
WQUld
b~ passed on to Ohio
Sentinel News Staff
man for his assistance in the transi·
Officers of The Peoples Bank· by MiddlepOrt Mayor Fred Hoff. lion _and pledge4 "f~.end)y_and first
~ ing and :rrust Co. were j(lined by _man, and Emma Jane,Ea~gh-, lqan c1il.ss service" to the community.
business and community leaders, officer/office rnanager, and Tami
Favors of silvllf ttays, cups, and
village and county officials, for the Buck, operations officer.
key
chains were given to those who
In hts comments, Evans said
grand opening celebration of the
visited
the bank during the all·day
Peoples Bank office in Middleport that Peoples Bank is delighted to be open house. A large decorated calce
in Meigs County and appreciates
Friday morning.
was served with coffee and punch
Robert E. Evans, president and the welcome the bank has received by local bank personnel.
--·
-- -The Peoples Banking and Trust
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
Co. purchased the Central Trust
banking office in Middleport severThe Meigs Local Teachers
al weeks ago. The company's other Associ.tion (ML TA) and the
banks are located in Marietta, Meigs Local Board of Education
Athens, Belpre, Lowell, Nel- have signed an agreement extend·
Eugene "Gene" Triplett, 42, of
sonville, Caldwell, Chesterhill, ing the contract which expired on
Pomeroy, has fded a petition with
McConnelsviUe, and The Plains.
June 30, 199110 June 30, 1992.
the Meigs County Board of Elec·
That action which took place
lions, seeking the Rgmblicari nomearlier this week was revealed by
ination for the office of Meigs
County Engineer,
Supt. James Carpenter at a meeting
of the Me1gs Local Board of EduTriplett graduated from
Pomeroy High School in 1967, and
ATHENS, Ohio (AP) - A man cauon Thwsday "'fht.
In an informa conversation,
earned a Bachelor of Science
charged with involuntary
Carol
Ohlinger, ML TA president.
degree in Civil Engineering at Ohio
manslaughter in the drowning
and
Carpenter
said that representa·
University in 1971. He is a regis·
death of a teen-ager was sentenced
lives
of
the
two
groups will meet
tered Ohio Professional Engineer
10 four to 10 years in prison and
with
a
mediator
to discuss "alter·
and Professional Surveyor. He also
fined $3 ,000.
holds professional registration in
Paul Bartlett Jr., 22, of Athens, nate points of view".
"This", Ohlinger said, "gives
West Virginia. Kentucky and Indichanged his plea from innocent to
time
to come to a seulemenl and
ana.
no contest Thursday in Athens
EUGEN&amp; TRIPLI!;TT
.
avoid
a strike." She said that .all
From 1971 to 1978. he was
County Common PJeas Court. He
employed by the Ohio Depaninent neering Services in Pomeroy pro· was charged in the May 30 drown· pro~isions of the contract wht~h
of Transportation in the District 10 viding engineering and surveying ing death of Heather Jones, 17, of expued last June w11l rema•n 10
effect through Jun~ 30. .
office and design section . While services in Meigs, Gallia, Athens Athens.
At last n1ght s meeung, the
with ODOT, he auended the North· and Washington Counties in Ohio
The sentence by Judge Alan
Board
approved an expenditure
western University Traffic Institute and Mason County in West Vir- Goldsberry was part of an agreereduction
plan to meet. compliance
in Evanston, Ill. and an Urban Sys- ginia. Services provided include ment between Bartlett's auomey
w1th
the
loan
fund requuemenlS.
tems Planning seminar at the U.S. property surveys, construction lay- John Lavelle and County ProsecuCarpenter said that the board
Department of Transportation in out, and design of public works tor Michael Ward. The maximum
will
have to borrow $563,951.24
Washington, D.C.
projects such as streets, waterlines sentence is five to 10 years imprisHe was the Chief Engineer for and storm drainage.
onment with a $5,000 fine, Ward and show cuts m expenditures of
Crown City Mining Inc. and Musk·
$281,975.77. This he said will be
Tripleu resides in Pomeroy and said.
ingum Mining Inc. in Gallia and is married to the former Karen
Muskingum Counties from 1978 to Hawley of Middleport. They have
1988. While with Crown City and two children, Michelle and Russell
Muskin~um, he was responsible for
Triplett. Triplett is a member of the
permiumg, reclamation and engi- Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club
neering and surveying.
and the Professional Land SurveyIn 1988, he began Triplett Engi· ors of Ohio.
·

4 Roll.
Caseol24.
REG. 30.98

(20407016)

,._

Golden

,...LoJ•

4!

Burns lor 3 hours.
3 lb. log olze.
C~~~eol6.

Athens man
sentenced, tined

Haggerty named Meigs
4-H Associate Agent
David Robert "Chip" Haggerty noted that there are over 180 prQ·
has been employed as the 4-H jeclS available to club members.
Associate Agent at the Meigs
Haggerty graduated from Meigs
County Extension Office, a new High School in 1971 and recci vcd
position funded through a special his bachelor of science degree in
grant from the Ohio State Exten- recreational studies from Ohio Uni·
versily. He spent five years as mansion Service.
ager
of the Gallipolis Racquet Club
This is the first full-time 4-H
professional on the Meigs County and before that was a progrnm spe·
cialisl whh the 0 . 0 . Mcintyre
staff.
Haggerty's role will be to Park District.
He is a junior varsity bllsketball
entiance the 4-H program in the
coach•t
the Kyger 'Creek High
county through a program of out·
School,
a
member.of
the Ohio High
reach 10 youth and development of
School
Athletic
Association,
and
adult leadership. Currendy he said
an
instructOr
wilh
the
U.S.
Profes·
about 400 boys and girls between
the ages of 9 and 19 are active in 4- sional Tennis Regi~lly, · . .
Haggerty has three children, .
H clubs. His gool is to ajlpreciably ·
increase that enrollment lhis year Johnathan, nine, Tessa, five, . and
and his empltasis wiU be on won:- · Jaymes, three. The family resides
ing through the schools and com- in Cheshire and auends lhe Faith
munities 10 reach young people. He · Baptist Church in Rodney.

• David Robert ''Chip" Ha11er1J baa been
Agent at the Meigs County Extension OMce . .

done through a variety of ways
including some reduction in staff.
The Board adopted a resolution
regarding professional leave of
staff which stales thai the Board
will only pay from the Genet's)
Fund the salary of substituteS for
any teacher taking professional
leave. This means, said Carpenter,
that for the remainder of lhis year,
the cost of any registration. fees,
mileage, lod~e and meals wtU not
be covered tf the fundmg would
normally come from the General
Fund.
It was pointed out, however,
that many times such expenses
come from special funds which
have a balance and do provide
related expenses of those taking
professional leave.
Jane Fry, treaSurer, reported that
the district has had cuts ,in state
funding of $6,840 in the d1sadvantaged pupil personnel fund, ~nd
$8,400 in the rural demonstrauon
project.
Added to the substitute teacher
list for the remainder of the year
were Jennifer Couch, math and
physical education, and Pauline

Harrison, English and spee.:u, both
7-12. DOck days were granted to
Evelyn Hobbs, Jan, 13-15.
Triplelt Engineering was
employed as consultant for the
sewage system replacement at the
Salisbury Elementary School. He
will be paid 10 percent of the cost
of the project not to exceed $4 000.
Robert Barton. president.
announced that the superintendent
and treasurer will be evaluated at
the next meeting to be held on Feb
13 at the Salem Center School.
·
The board which had earlier
taken action to hold at least one
meeting a year in each of the
schools in the district, voted at last
night's meeting to alternate the two
meetings which are held Mch
month between the board meeting
room and schools of the district.
Randy Humphreys voted against
that plan.
An executive session to handle a
personnel problem preceded the
open meeting.
Attending were Supt. Carpenter,
Treasurer Fry, and Board members
Barton. Humphreys, ·Larry Rupe:
Roger Abbott, and John Hood.

sOUISby t 0 seek second
term as Meigs sheriff
19

Meigs County Sheriff James M.
Soulsby announced today that he
will seek the Democratic nomination for a second term to that office
in the May Primary Election.
Soulsby filed his petition of can·
didacy with the Meigs County
Board of Elections Thursday after·
noon.
Prior to being elected in 1988,
Soulsby had nearly 30 years expe·
rience in Jaw enforcement. He
served as a deputy in the depart·
ment under Meigs County Sheriffs
Robert Hartenbach and James Prof·
fill, and also worked as a Pomeroy
Village police officer.
He was the Pomeroy posllllaster
fo l'. 20 years and prior to that
worked as co-manager of the
Kroger Co. in lhe Pomero~ store.
In commenting on his decision
to seek re-election, Sheriff Soulsby
said thai it has been his ~rivilege Ill
serve lhe people of Mergs County
and that he loolcs forward to anoth·
er four years in the capacity.
"We bave worked well with
other agencies, locally and on lhe
!nate and federal level to try to
eliminate some of the problems
with marijuana and other drugs,

and we have tried

respond to the
needs and complaints m as fair a
way as possible," Soulsby said.
· He is married to ~he former
Clara Sue "Susie" Will. They have
four children. Susan Abbott, Cindy
Fields, Pat and Jimmer Soulsby
and 10 grandchildren, all of Meig;
County.

'
j

-'

.,'1

\

�~

Commentary
A policeman's lot is not a happy

111 Court Street
l'omeroy, Obio

one.

DEVOTED TO THE INTERE81'8 OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

.MU.TIMEDIA, INC.
ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Daily Press Association and
the American Newspaper Publisher Association.
LEITERS OF OPINION are welcome. ~y should be less than 300
words long. All leiters art subject to editing and must be signed with name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters wiU be publisbed. Leuers
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

If an officer says, "Have a nice
day" after giving us a speeding
ticket, we say, " What kind of person would give you a speeding
ticket and say, 'Have a nice day'?
He must have a warped mind."
If he gives us a verbal dressing
down after he clocks us going 50
mph in a school zone, we say, "So
I was going too fast. He could at
least be civil."
The policeman today can't win
with the public. If Rodney Dangerfield thinks he gets no respect, he
should become a policeman. Public
opinion polls rank the policeman
near the bottom, along with the
used-car salesman , in terms of
respect
We have called hin\ by such epi-

thets of disrespect as " the fuzz"
and "pig." This hippies' defmition
of the 1960s has even found its way
into the dictionary.
If we were to play a game of
word associations, .the word most
people would use to fill in the
blank in " police - " would probably be " brutality," not " protection." Yet nobody puts his life on
the line more often (and for people
like us he doesn't even know) than
the policeman.
We used to teach our children
that the comer policeman was their
friend. Now we teach them their
Miranda rights in case a policeman
tries to bully them.
It would be hard to say who is
responstble for the adversarial relationship that has been allowed to

develop between a community's
ci tizens and those they have
entrusted to act as the guardians of
their life and safety.
In any case, it's time for a truce.
Both sides need to reform.
There is no doubt many police·
men could use a Dale Carnegie
course. The police do the most to
shape a city's image- especially
in the eyes of ou tsiders. If th e
image they project is poo r, the
whole city has a PR problem. It
may even go deeper.
One social historian has sa id
that a civilization can be judged by
its police. " If they are rude, talented in the usc of bad language and
easily irritated, tllen we have a civilization that is backward for all its
technological progress," he said.

I HAD 1b u;bK TWIC~.M
IT roUND&gt; UKE TUE ~

As political issue, domestic
storm looms larger

LECTURE MY FATH!;R

6AV~ M~

40VEARC&gt; AGO.

By MIKE FEINSJLBER ·
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Sounds like George Bush isn't going to be shy
about reminding the American voter who was president the last time the
United States won a war.
"If I'd have listened to the leader of the United States Senate, George
Mitchell, Saddarn Hussein would be in Saudi Arabia, and you'd be paying ·
20 bucks a gallon for gasoline," Bush said a few days ago in New Hampshire.
Is Bush going to be able to capitalize on the Persian Gulf War in the
election?
Desen Storm isn't going to hurt him, but the answer isn't as clear as it
seemed when the soldiers came home last year.
Is he going to uy?
The answer seems clear enough.
The war was quick and clear cut and relatively painless. The aftermath
has been ambiguous, awkward and full of uncertainties, which remain.
More relevant is that the war has become somewhat irrelevant to what
Americans are thinking about the economy.
Bush and Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan and a lot of
economists don't understand why, because the last recession, a decade
ago, was worse - at least on paper.
But tlie surveys say Arnencans are uncertain of their future, suffering
the same malaise that the war was supposed to have knocked orr.
The reason that health insW'llnce is a sudden and potent political issue
isn't that 34 million Americans don't have it, but that many more millions
fear they may lose it
So Bush must be adroit in using the war.
Saddam Hussein remains in a position to cause mischief. Unchecked
further, says CIA Director Robert Gates, Saddam could be back in business making the stuff of nuclear weapons in a few year.;, poison gas even
sooner.
Saddam's ruthless suppression of Shiite and Kurdish rebellions and the
indifference of Kuwait's Mercedes Benz chieftains toward sharing power
with the~ subjects diminish the war as a political triumph.
Americans like to think they fight wars for principles, not against $20a-gaUon gas. Bush said at the time the fight was to stop Hi~er- lil&lt;e aggression; he didn 't talk much about the price of gasoline.
And yet, those movies.
Bush has films that make Ronald Rea~an's "Morning in America"
TV commercials blandly gray in companson. They are lump-i n-throat
inducing:
Bush in the desert, in khaki. Mrs. Bush with the troops. Mothers kiss
husbands and children and ma&lt;eh off to war. Mothers return in triumph to
husbands and children. Teary, flag -waving Americans welcome home
teary, flag-waving troops.
Bush found a way in New Hampshire to tie the war and the recession
together to underscore his strongest issue, his leadership.
"I'd like to take the same kind of energy and leadership that we had in
·Desert Storm and use 1t to help the worlcing men and women in the state
of New Hampshire and across the counrzy, · · he said.
That's effective.- if he wins the bat~e. But it is questionable whether
auacking congressiOnal Democrats who dtdn't vote to go to war will be
effective.
When the staffs of anti-war Senate Democrats are asked how the senaCors respond to attacks on that vote, they respond with a shrug. The issue,
they say. rarely arises.
Desert Storm ended II months ago, but it seems more distant than that.
It has been replaced by Domestic Stonm.
Thought for Today: "Age is stiicdy a case of mind over matter. If you
don't mind, it doesn't matter."- Jack Benny, American comedian
(1894-1974).

Berry's World

'lESTERDAY

•
,.

TODA~
·~

~byNEA. tnc
•••

1.D

George R. Plagenz
" If tlle police are firm but courteous, good natured and slow to
wrath, then we have an advanced
civilization as in England.'·'
When I lived in Cleveland, there
was a traffic policeman at the corner of East Sixth Street and Superi.
or Avenue who would accompany
the pedesuians on their walk across
the street while complimenting the
ladies on their good looks and joking with the men.
People like me would walk an
extra block or two just to cross the
street at his corner. I imagine outof-towners staying at the HoUenden
Hotel on that block went back to
New York, Dallas or Milwaukee
with a good feeling about our city.
But if we want more policemen
to act like this uaffic cop we will
have to change our disdainful anitude toward the police. They are
giving back what we are giving
them. Even so, the police_probably
show more good will towa:d citi-

·
NOW OPEN • Country Crafts and Vlde&lt;l'i, Pomeroy's newest
b_uslness, is ~ow open at 220 East Main Street In Pomeroy. In addi·
lion to movte rentals, tbe shop offers crafts on consignment and
tanning beds. Pictured are co-owners Kathy Riley and Debbie
Burke.

--Area deaths--

expect that his long-heralded State
of t_he Union speec h can, all by
itself, erase that public impression
completely.
But when all is said and done,
the fact is that this is a relatively
shallow recession, as eve n The
New York Times pointed out edito·
nally m the course of cnllCIZing
Mr. Bush for say ing that "the
economy is in free-fall."
That may be true of the Russian
economy, but it is far from true of
thts one . Unemployment only
recently reached 7.1 percent, which
is positively robust compared to the
10-plus percentages rcgtstered dur·
ing the 1982-83 recession, or even
the 7.5 that marked Jimmy Caner's
last month m the Wh1te House.
What makes this recession seem
worse than it is, is the people it has
landed on: ~e so-called "chattermg classes, from Wall Street to
IBM and the white-collar employees of Pan-AmerJcan. Such people
simply aren't accustomed to bemg
laid off,and they know how to
make thm vo1ces heanl.

Enter next the professional
mourners. You don't have to be a
modern Machiavelli to know how
the Democrats will respond to this
opportunity. Congress man Dan
Rostenkowski chairman of th e
House Ways &amp;'Means Comm .lt'"e
~ .
lfOWled on TV the other day that
m my dtstnc~ at leas~ this isn't a
rec ession , it' s a depression"thereby escalating the rhetoric to
levels seldom reached in the past
half-century.
And th e media! I mentioned
recently, in another connection
how they pooh-poohed the good
news that new claims for unemployment benefits were down in
December: The drop "wasn't as
big as-expected" (as if they had
predicted a bigger one!).
Then the other day the December trad e balance figures were
announced, showing the lowest
deficit in five years. "This would
ordinarily be considered good
news " one TV newsperson conceded - but then went on to
explain that Americans are simply
too poor, these days, to buy many

toward the police.
We arc ready to cry police brutalit y if an officer so much as
speaks sharp! y to us when we commit an offense that by all rights
should land us in the clink.
In one big city recently a
woman doctor who was charged
with resisting arrest for refusing to
show her driver's license subsequently accused the arresting officer of police brutality.
Many people might have been
inclined to believe her story if it
weren't for the fact that the officer
had recorded the entire incident on
a video camera in his cruiser. There
was not a hint of brutality in the
policeman 's conduct as recorded
on tlle video.
{C)I992
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

William A. Rusher

imponed goods.
Did it occur to you to wonder, .
by the way, how all those TV cameras just happened 10 be on hand to
photograph the line of several thousand unemployed men in Chicago,
waumg to apply for a thousand
jobs at a new hotel? In the cynical
words of William Gibbs McAdoo
"Things do not 'happen'; they~
brought about"
After a steady diet of six months
of this sort of thing, it's no great
tr 1ck to poll a representative cross- .
section of the public and announce .
breathlessly that a majority thinks
the economy is "America's No. 1 ·
problem," that Mr. Bush "isn't
doing enough about it," and that a
·1 D
name
ess one)
emocrat
no
tdenufiable
would{though
defeat him
if the election were held today.
A month later still, headlines :
scream that businessmen report·.
sluggtsh sales because "consumer :
confidence is down ... 1 wonder
why?
(C) 1992
NEWSPAPER
EN'rf:RPRISE ASSN.

Martin Schram

main camps: {I) Bill Clinton and . Democrats' pitch to the center-left
Bob Kei-rey are pushing a tax cut middle clais echo nighdy through
for the middle class - a dollop or the first-primary state that Bush nightmare is that a real Buchanan
relief for a dozen years of Reagan- once took for granite. That's why victory - 50 percent plus one -Bush booty for the well-to-do; (2) the Bush team teeters on the edge may not be just a far-right fantasy.
So Bush popped into New
Paul Tsongas and Tom Harkin of panic every time a newscast
Hampshire
to apologize for insistridicule their cuts as minuscule wafts thropgh living rooms and into
mg
there
was
no recession at all.
a $350 cut means just $1 a day the ether.
The
next
thing
his handlers knew
but pushed their own activist agenBush's advisers worry that New
there
Bush
was
on
TV, blurting thai
das to jump-start the economy. Hampshire Republicans will view
&lt;_ll!r_
economy
is
in
a "free fall ." ·
(Just in from outer space, Jerry Buchanan as a freebie and consider
Poh-psych majors might call that
Brown, who'd clowned through voting for him not to make him
transference . Deep down, Bush
December's debate like a Home president, just to send Bush a mesfears
not that our economy is in
Shopping Network pitchman hawk- sage.
"free
fall
." It isn't. He is.
ing his 800-number, got serious
Bush is plunging in the polls
(C)I992
NEWSPAPER
Sunday. He proposed replacing our Buchanan is climbing, and thei;
ENTERPRISE ASSN.
income-tax system with a flat tax
of 13 percent - no deductions
except for home mortgages, rents
and contributions to charities).
In the New Hampshire videos of
'92, Clinton, the media-declared
frontrunner, seems relaxed and
By The Associated Press
confident. Kerrey, whose creden- . Today is Friday, Jan. 24, the 24th day of 1992. There are 342 days ]eft.
tials look so good on paper, has yet m the year.
to look reassuring on the screen.
Today's Highlight in History:
Harkin has stopped doing his bad
On Jan. 24, 1848, James W. Marshall discovered a gold nugget at Sut·
imitation of Will Rogers but bas !~~~ Mill in Northern California, a discovery that led to the gold rush of
yet to appear Trumanesque.
Tsongas would be the frontrUnner
On this date:
if New Hampshire were a sound
In 1742, Charles VII, king of Germany, was elected Emperor of the
stage for "Radio Days." The sub- Holy Roman Empire during the War of the Ausuian Succession.
VOleS.
stantive-but-not-lelegenic Tsongas
In 1908, the fJtSt Boy Scout troop was organized in England by Robert :
Last Sunday night, thousands of wins praise from opponents who Baden-Powell.
. ,
voting New Hampshirites watched see him as no threat, Ill in Kerrey's
In 1916, the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the federal income tax.
'
five Democratic candidates for debale observation: "Paul's got a
. In 1922, Chrisuan K. Nelson of Onawa, Iowa, palented the Eskimo
president appear more forceful and terrific indusoial policy."
Pte.
.
.
sound more impressive" than they . After the Democrats hash Push
In 1924, the Russian city of SL Petersburg was renamed Leningrad in :
have in their preliminary dust-ups, on TV, newscasis give equal time bo~ (!f the laie revolullOnary leader {but this past .year, it went back to ·;
as they oudined just how !hey will · to the Republicans - so viewers bemg St. Petersburg).
..1
lea~ us out of our hard limes.
can watch Buchanan bash Bush. . In 1942, 50 years ago, a special court of inquiry into America's lack of ' ~
While most of America 1188 yet ro · The commentator is proving a · p~ for the J,apanesc attack on Pearl Harbor plilced much of the 1
focus on the c_andidates, New savvr, campaigner; his "America blame on Rear Admiral Husband E. Kimmel and Lt. Gen. Walter c . . ;
'
Hampshirites tuned in and IJ)OI; a First ' slogan hits home in a state Short, the navy and army commanders,
In 1943, P&lt;esideri't ~in D. Roosevelt and British Prime Minister ~
good look at what the Democrats ' wllose voters fear the· bank may
Winston Churchill concluded a w'artime co~ference· in c~ablanca, .. 1
will do about the issue vOierS care foreclose 911 theirs.
.
Morocco.
,
. ·
.
.
•
about most - economic n:covery.
• Buchanan's pitch to the centerIn 1965, former British Prime Miilisler Win~tort Chwthlll died in ion- ;
The quintet separared into two right middle class and the
~~~- ,
.
.
I

Today in history

';,

I,

.

space. Names are being withheld
pending the suspect's court appearance.
The department was notified
late Thursday evening by Thomas
Theiss, Racine, that someone had
stolen a set of cutting_ torches,
hoses and gauges from hJS farm at
Great Bend over the past couple of
days.
·
Deputies took a report Thursday
afternoon of an accident that
· ·

Units of the Meigs ·county
Emergency Medical Service
responded to nine calls for assistance on Thursday and early Friday
morning.
On Thursday at 4:01 p.m. the
Pomeroy unit went to Route 33 for
Richard Finlaw who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 4:17p.m. the Middleport unit
went to the Holzer Medical Cen1er
Clinic for Heather Franckowiak
who was transported to Holzer
Medical Center.
The Middleport unit, at 4:40
p.m., was called to Overbrook Center for Goldie Lovins who was
taken to Pleasant Valley Hospital.
At 8:53 p.m. tlie Pomeroy unit
went to the Maples Apartments for
Ilene Smith who was transported to
Veterans and at 9:46 p.m. the unit

went to Royal Oak Reson for Virgil Windon who was treated but not
transported.
On Friday morning at l:Oi a.m.
the Syracuse unit responded to a
call at Tuppers Plains for Mirna
Walker who was transported to St.
Joseph's Hospital.
At 2:54 a.m. the Rutland unit
went to Meigs Mine No. 31 at the
Salem Shaft for Kenny Taylor who
was taken to Veterans.
The Chester and Pomeroy Fire
Departments and Pomeroy unit
were called to a one-car motor
vehicle accident at 6:38 at the intersection of Rock Springs and Flat·
woods Road . D81Sy Haggy was
taken to Veterans.
·
At 7:52 a.m . the Pomeroy Fire
Department was called to Maple
Street on a electrical fire at the
Marjorie Capple residence.

Lola M. Weaver, 61, of New
Haven, W.Va., died Wednesday,
Connie Lou Drake, 46, of Van
Buren died Thursday morning, Jan. · Jan. 22, 1992 at Ohio State UniverHospital, Columbus.
23 ,- 1992, in Blanchard Valley Hos· sityShe
was bom Nov. 10, 1930 in
pi tal.
Esmond, Ill., daughter of the lale
Born Nov. 7, 1945, in Meigs Arnold Rausch and Elinor Mae
County, she was the daughter of Stark Christ
the late Gilbert and Mary Christine
She was a nurses aid at Pleasant
Smith Freeman. ·
Valley Hospital, Point Pleasant,
She is survived by her husband W.Va
Seniors meetlngcbanged
Thomas L. Drake; a son, Thomas
The Harrisonville Senior CitiSurvivors include her husband,
Drake Jr. of Findlay; and two Foster B. Weaver of New Haven, zens Club will not hold its regular
daughters, Andrea Walton of Van W.Va.; step-mother, Ruth Rausch January meeting. The next regularBuren and Sammi Drake of Find- of Okeechobee, Fla.; one daughter, ly scheduled meeting will be
lay.
Sandra K. Rousch of New Haven; February 25 at noon, if weather
Other survivors include: a broth- two sons, David R. Weaver of New permits.
er, Gary Freeman of Pomeroy and Haven, W.Va., and Arnol F.
Southern board to meet
two half-brothers, Charles Watson Weaver of Vinton; 'two half broth·
Southern Local School Board
of Baltimore, Md., and William ers, Robert Rausch of Boca Raton,
David Watson of Cheshire; two Aa., and Ronald Rausch of Okee- will hold their regular meeting on
half-sisters, Sharon Kincaid of chobee, Fla.; and 10 grandchildren. Tuesday at 7 p.m. at Southern High
Point Pleasant, W.Va., and Jgann
She was preceded in death by School.
Smalley of .~esville; and a close one daughter, Audrey L. Weaver;
Crusade set
companion, Madeline Leaf.
and one half sister, Judy Rousch.
The Mason, Gallia and Meigs
She was preceded in death by
Funeral services will be contwo sisters, Candace Freeman and ducted 1:30 p.m. Sunday at the County Crusade for Christ will
Marcella Birthfield.
Foglesong Funeral Home, with the hold a revival at the Church of God
She was a former president of Rev. Dave Fields officiating. Burial of Prophecy on 22nd Street in Point
Pleasant, W.Va. at 7 p.m. Special
the Van Buren Band Boosters.
will be in Broad Run Cemetery.
Services will be held 10 a.m.
Friends may call at the funeral singers and speakers will be featured each evening. All churches
·saturday at the Coldren-Crates home on Saturday from 4-9 p.m.
are welcome, according to Rev .
Funeral Home in Findlay with the
Clyde Henderson.
Rev. Alan H. Sandford officiating.
Burial will be in the- van Buren
Cemetery,
.
Ceremony Saturday
Friends may call from 4 to 9
Bethel 62, International Onder of
p.m. Friday at the funeral home.
Job's Daughters, will have an open
Am Ele Power .................. 32 1/8
installation ceremony at 7 p.m. Sat·
Ashland Oil ..................... .31 7/8
urday at the Middleport-Masonic
AT&amp;T .............................. .38 3,1l
Caleb Manley
Hall.
Beth Clark will be installed as
Bank
Onc
..........................
50
1/4
Caleb Noel Manley, threehonored
queen. Melanie Arnold is
Bob Evans .. ...................... 24 ?ill
month-old infant son of Melissa
the
Bethel
guardian and Dorset
Manley and Rick Stone, both of Charming Shop.................. 23 7,1l
Thomas is the associate guardian.
Gallipolis, died unexpectedly yes- City Holding ...................... I? 1/4
Federal Mogul... ................ l6 3/4
terday morning, Thursday, Jan. 23,
Meeting canceled
Goodyear T&amp;R .................. 57 3/4
1992, at his residence.
The January meeting of Delta
Key Cenwrion ................... 15 l/4
The infant was born Oct. 20,
Kappa
Gamma, scheduled for
Lands'
End
.......................
.31
3/8
1991 in Gallipolis.
tomorrow
(Saturday) at Heath
Limited
Inc
.......................
29
1/4
In addition to his parents the
United
Methodist
Church, has been
Multimedia
Inc
..................
24
3/4
infant is survived by two sisters,
canceled.
Tiffany and Casey Manley, both of Rax Restaurant ..................9/16
Robbins&amp;Myers ............... .36 1(1.
Gallipolis; grandparents, Fona
Coin Club to meet
Shoney's Inc ................:..... 23 1/4
Smith, Bidwell; Bill Fry, Marietta;
The
OH KAN Coin Club will
and Marjorie Stone, Middleport; Star Bank ...........................26 1(1.
meet Monday at Burkett Barber
Wendy lnt'l... ..................... II 3/8
great grandparents, Charles and
Shop
in Middleport. Social hour
Worthington Ind ................25 l/4
Geneva Wise and Noel and Edith
and
trading
sess•on at 7 p.m. preHerman, all of Middleport; as well Stock reports are the 10:30 a.m.
cede the meeting . Refreshments
quotes provided by Blunt, Ellis
as several aunts, uncles and
and Loewi of Gallipolis.
cousins.
The infant was preceded in
death by his grandfather, Robert
Stone, and an aunt, Belinda Hospital news
South-Central Ohio
"Pinky" Hicks.
Tonigh~ panly cloudy and cold.
Private services will be held SatHOLZER MEDICAL CENTER Low 10-15. Saturday, snow lil&lt;ely.
urday at Gravel Hill Cemetery in
Discharges Jan. 23 - Philip High 25-30. Chance of snow is 60
Cheshire.
Burgess, Gloria Cox, Eric DiaArrangements are under the mond, Randall Evans, Patricia percent.
Extended rorecast:
direction of Fisher Funeral Home Greenlee, Ruth Murray, Valerie
Sunday through Tuesday:
in Middleport '
Norman, Jackie Ward , · Roy
Mostly fair. Highs in mid-20s to
Williams and Janelle Woods.
mid-30s Sunday and mid-30s to
mid-40s Monday and Tuesday .
Lows
10-20 Sunday and mainly in
Mill may close
the 20s f\1onday and Tuesday.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
DAYTON, Ohio (AP)- The
THURSDAY ADMISSIONS •
Howard Paper Mills plant will
Jennifer Cross, Syracuse; and close if a buyer isn't found by
Richard Finlaw, Pomeroy.
THURSDAY DISCHARGES • March 27, owners say.
"We are hoping to find a buyer
None.
CLEVELAND (AP)- Here are
but negotiations are not at a point
Thursday
night' s Ohio Lottery
where it is close to being a completed deal," said Robert Esten, selections:
president
of the Wisconsin-based Pick 3 Numbers
TI1e Dally Sentinel
0-9-1
Fox Rivtlf Paper Co. which bought
!VSPS 2111-960)
(zero, nine, one)
Howard Paper MiUs last June.
Published every aRornoon, Monday
Pick
4 Numbers
t.hroUBh FridAy, 111 Court SL, Pomeroy,
0-5-9-0
Ohio by the Ohio Valley Publi•hing .
CompanyiMultimedil Inc. , Pomeroy,
(zero, five, nine, zero)
Ohio 45169, Ph. 99'.2-2156. Seeond clau
Cards
poo!Age pold al Pmneroy, Ohio.
A marriage license has been
7 (seven) of Hearts
Member: The Allocifr.ted PrQ., Inland
issued in Meigs County Probate
K (ldn~) of Clubs
Daily Preu A.uociaUon nd Lho Ohio
Court
to
James
Bryan
Chadwell,
5
(five) of Diamonds
New1papoT AstoolaLI(!n, National
21, Reedsville, and Monica Jo
AclverU1in1 Repruentlti~e. Dranham
A (ace) of Spades
Newap1per Salul. !33 Thtrd Avenue.
Adams, 1'1, Pomeroy.

Meigs announcements

Candidates leave Bush grabbing air
Those Iucky _New Hampshire
voters. They are witnessing a rare
pohucal happening - the candidates for president are actually
growing, right before their very
eyes.
All except one: Our Incredible
Shrinking President.
In Sunday' s debate among
Democrats and on the non-stop TV
news, New Harnpshiriies are seeing
the candidates growing in stature
and substance in what, after an
abysmal start, is becoming one of
our fmest presidential primary
campaigns (the phrase rings, I concede, a bit Iike: " one of our finest
dental root canals," but it does
have the added virtue of being
true).
New Hampshire' s voters are
seeing genuine spurts of growth
and flashes of leadership from
Democrats Clinton, Tsongas, Kerrey, Harkin - yes, even Brown and certainly from Republican hellraiser Buchanan. Their messages
resonate because folks in the first
primary state have lived for two
years through a near-Depression
that Bush denied and ignored until it came time to court their

Lola Weaver

Connie Drake

Media hysteria whips up.recession
To a larger exte nt than any in
recent memory, the current recession is being deepened and pro·
longed by forces that have a vested
interest in exaggerating it.
That is not - repea~ not - to
say that there is no recession. A
rec~ssion is simp I~ a free economy sway of correcung for errors m
Judgment and of adjusting to spells
of b~d luck that nobody could
anttctpate or avo1d. (What atrhne,
for example, could have predicted
the Gulf War, or avOided the sharp
mcreases m fuel costs, or the equalIy sharp drop m passenger revenues, that It caused?) Recesstons,
m short, are inevitable, and we are
havmg one now.
.
..
Nor am I suggestmg that Prestdent Bush IS without blame. In tlie
r,_rst p_Iace it wouldn't ma_tt_er if I
d1d. smce the voters traditiOnally
hold the mcumbent prestdent
res ponstble for any e~onom1c
downturns that occur on his watch.
But Mr. Bush has been unforgivably. sluggish in displayi~g any
convmcmg concern over thts one,
and it is simply not reali st ic to

An individual, charged with
receiving and possessing stolen
property, is to appear in Meigs
Countr. Court after being located at
the Htlltop Station on Roule 124
east of Rutland followmg a complaint regarding theft of. rings and
necklaces from a restdence at
Antiquity on Wednesday evening.
According to a reJl!!rl from the
Meigs County Sh'enff's Depart·
ment, the suspect was released
from custody due to lack of jail

occurred at Koyal Oak Reso&lt;t. .
According to the report, Wibna L. ·
Parker, Long Bottom, backed her
1984 Chevrolet into a 1986
Chevrolet driven by Angela Shuler,
Bryson Road, PQmeroy. The Shuler
vehicle was behind the vehicle
dnven by Mrs. Parker. Parker's·
vehicle received no damage while
light damage was listed to the front
fender of Shuler's vehicle. There
were no injuries.
On Wednesday evening

Meigs squads respond io nine c_alls

zen s than we citizens express

~

I

Unnamed suspect to appear in court on charges

Why are we getting wary of police?

The Daily Sentinel

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant PubHsher/Controller

OhiO

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday, January 24, 1992

.-1
~

Stocks

Weather

will ~served. New members are
welcome.
Golden Buckeye Card
A Golden Buckeye Card may be
obtained if the person applying is
age 60 or older, or age 18 to 59 and
totally disabled.
.
Qualified persons may sign up
at Plraser's Restaurant on Maip
Street in Pomeroy between the
hours of I and 3 p.m. on Friday,
Feb. 7.
Bring proof of birth date or documentation showing totally disability if between the ages of 18 and
59.
Garden club to meet
The Rutland Garden Club will
meet Monday ·at 1:30 p.m. at the
home of Mrs. Chris Diehl, Ru~and .
Spaghetti dinner
The Southern High School
Cheerleaders will have a spaghetti
dinner, originally scheduled for
tonight (Friday), on Tuesday at the
high school beginning at 4 p.m.
Cost is $3.50 for adults and $2 for
students. All proceeds will assist in
funding the cheerleader's trip to
eom~te in natiopal competition in
Aorida. The public is invited.

deputies took a report from Sandra
DeMoss, MacKenzie Ridge Road,
that she had left her residence at 4
p.m. and rehJ!I!ed at 6:30p.m. She
reP?rted when s~ returned that her
restctence was ftlled wuh smoke.
She investigated and found that
someone had taken hot coals from
the woodburner and put them in the
ash pan and placed the ashpan on
the carpet causing it to scorched.
She reported that she dtd not lock
the ~ailer. She also advised tha\

~~::~dn~:i-~~~o:fmo:~:~i;
'

WJa~

Shop Elsewhere'! ·
WE RAVE IT Al,l.!
Tuxedo and Crinoline Rental·
Dry Oeaning
·
In Store Sewing Machine Repair
Scissor Sharpening
Singer, White Machines
Alterations
Craft Supplies
Quilting Supplies
Craft and Quilting Classes
Sweatshirts and T·Shirts
How· To Video Rentals
Full Bridal and Prom Department
. Sequin Fab!ic ·
Vinyl
Upholstery S11pplies
Fake Fur
Knitting Machines at Close·Out.Prices
Yarn
In Stock Patterns - 1f2 Off

FABRIC SHOP
1-10 West Main

Pomeroy

992·2284 .

Drive For The Gold
Sales Drive

Hospital news

..

Lotfery numbers

License issued

New YOr~ , New Yurx 10017.

POSTMASTER: Send addreaa chanpa to
The Daily_"Sentinel, Ill Court. St.,
Pomeroy, OHio 46769.
'
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...........

No 111baer,lpUon• by ft'l.ltl penqtUed tft
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Mall l•hlcrlptloM
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�Friday, January 24, 1992

The Daily Sentinel

Sportl

Friday, January 24, 1992
Page-4

Florida State beats No. 18 Georgia Tech
By DICK BRINSTER
AP Sports Writer
Florida State ... the road warriors. Everybody knows that.
But wait a minute . We aren't
talking football here.
As surely as Bobby Bowden
built the Seminoles into one of the
nation's preeminent football powers with upset victories on the road
- in the years when the big boys
wouldn't come to Tallahassee basketball coach Pat Kennedy is
making his bones in the same fashion during his team's first season in
the tough Atlantic Coast Conference.
And he's listening to Bowden .
"Bowden told me that one way
10 make a name for yourself is to
become king of the road ,"
Kennedy said after Florida State
upset 18th-ranked Georgia Tech
83-79 Thursday night in AUanta.
"Don't ask me about why we're
winning on the road ," Kennedy
said. "It just keeps happening. The
kids show great character on the
road.''

teams it was No. 2 UCLA ·86, California 66; No. 12 Missouri 77,
Notre Dame 68; No. 17 Oklahoma
130, Oral Roberts 89; No. 19 North
Carolina Charlotte 82, Johnson C.
Smith 80 in overtime; No. 20
Louisville 88, Southern Mississippi
74; No. 23 Texas-El Paso 77, San
Diego State 54; Southern Cal 82,
No. 24 Stanford 72; and No. 25
UNL V 58, Fresno State 50.
The victory was the fourth
s1raight for Rorida State (11-4).
Jon Barry hada career:high 32
points, 14 in the frrst 12 mmutes as
the Yellow Jackets built a 36-21
lead. The loss was the third in four
games for Georgia Tech (13-5, 3-

3).

.

Rodney Dobard added 14 pomts
for the Seminoles and Malcolm
Mackey had 15 for the Yellow
Jackets.
No. 2 UCLA 86, California 66

446 ·4524

By RUSTY MILLER
AP Sports Writer
Miami of Ohio has played in a
lot of difficult places. But to go to
the toughest of all, they might not
have to travel very far.

B~R~IN

In the NBA ...
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atl111dc Dlvlllon
Team
W l. Pet.
BOila1.,,..................25 15 .625
New York.. ............23 15 .605
Philadelphia ..... ..... 19 21
.475

NIGHT TUES D.I.Y

Redmen offense shakes
off Tiffin for MOC win

The University of Rio Grande
overcame an aggressive Tiffin University defense Wednesday at Tiffin to hand the Dragons a 94-90
loss in Mid-Ohio Conference
men's action.
The win propelled the Rcdmen,
3-0 in MOC play, into first place as
Rio Grande continues its defense of
the conference crown.

Employing its best ball-handling
skills, Rio Grande notched a 12point lead at the half, but Jim Hammond 's Tiffin crew, boosted by a
27-point performance by Thad
Patnck, went on a run early in the
second half and knoucd the score at
63.
Rcdmen forward Jeff Brown,
who had 32 points and II rebounds
for lhe game, combined with a 17point, six-board finish by co-captain Brad Schubert, 18 marker s
from co-senior leader Mark Erslan
and 17 more from center Troy
Donaldson to shake off the Dragons' offense. While shoring up
their own defenses, the hosts ran
into foul Lrouble and allowed Rio
Grande to advance from the line,
where the visitors hit 21 of 30
auempts for 70 pcrccnL
Besides Patrick, Tiffin also got a
big scoring night out of Jeff Ward

and Clark, who had 19 point&lt; each.
Ward also had 12 of the hosts' 29 ·
boards, while Rio Grande brought
down 27. The Redmen had 17
IUmovcrs and Tiffin recorded 12.
The Redmen were 56.9 percent
on overall shooting (33-58, seven
of 14 from the three for 50 percent)
while Tiffin was 51.4 percent (3874, six of22 from the three for 27.2
percent). The Dragons connected
on eight of nine attempts from the
line for 88.9 percent.
Now 16-4 overall, the Red men
take on Wal sh Saturday night in
Canton. Tiffin (14-6, 2·3) 1ravels to
Urbana Saturday for another MOC
contest.
Box score:
TIFFIN (90) - Chris Ward, 91- 19 ; Rick y Spencer, 3- 1-0-9;
Mike Clark, 5-2-3- 19; Thad
Patrick, 9-3-0-27; Steve Miucn dorf, 2-0-4; Phil Rhea, 1·1-3; Dale
Kuhl, 3-3-9. TOTALS 32-6·8-90.
RIO GRANDE (94) - Mark
Erslan, 2-3-5-18; Brad Schubert, 22-7-17; Matt Powell, 0-1·5·8; Jeff
Brown, 13-1 :3-32; Tim Christian,
1-0-2; Troy Donaldson, 8-1-17.
TOTALS 26-7-21-94.
Halftime score: Rio Grande
55, Tiffin 43.

7:00.9 :30 DAILf .
SAl &amp; SU~ M,I, T lNH ~
l: OO,J :lO

~~·

Monday, Jan. 27 • Saturday, Feb. 1

:lOW PRICES, FAST ORDERING SERVICE ON
OFFICE AND SCHOOL SUPPLIES
Special Order1 Welcome
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MONDAY·S.ATURDAY 9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.
FRIDAY 9:00 a.m.-6:00 p;m,

;: OFFICE SERVICE and SUPPLY

•

•

•

14
15.5
20.S
24.S

W,..,. 72. Brl&amp;Mm Young 61

Ohio high school
basketball scores
Ohio Deaf 59, Whitney Young 29
Liberty Chr. 93, Delaware Olr 36
LahRidge68, Kin&amp;'• Acad. lB
Sylvania Southweatem 88, Orange

~ V/(

Pd.

GB

3
3

26

400
.333

Minnc:aCJU •.............•.1 33

.175

11.s

o.n.......................J3

BUGSV

Paclnc DhUIM
Golden St~te .......... 2ii 10
Pmtland ................. 21 13
PhDCI1ix ...... ..........26 IS
L.A. La.ken ........... 24 16
Scattl11 ... ............... 20 21
L.A. Clippers ......... 20 22
Sacrammto ............ l2 28

ROlliN
'fl"lLLL\JIIS
RUK

9

.722
.615
.634
.600
.488
.476

1
15
4
8.5
9

.300

16

Deuoitll l , Minn esot• 100
HoUit011109, LA . Clippers 96
Denver 115, U11.h l ll
Portland 1!3, Seattle I 09
LA. I...akers 108, Sacramento 105

h "'"""' ,,, o~•ul lc"IIUI~ ~o

:

011 Il I .

Chr. 82
Prehlc Shawnee 97, Brookville 71

Miami Vall . 60, Spring. Valley
Academy 56
EatOn 80, Bellbrook 76

Girls

18

Thursday's scores

'""'"""'"' ....... '·

Tonight's e:ames

~omiA

at BOlton, 1:30 p.m.
Miami at New Jersey, 7:30p.m.
MinllCIOU. at Philadelphia, 7:30p.m.
Dallu 11 Orlando, 7:30p.m.
Cituland at Indiana, 7:30 p.m.
Detmilat Chit•go, 8 p.m
Milwauk~ 11 San Antmio, 8:30p.m.
Atlanta at Portland, 10 p.m.
Sacnmento 11 L.A. Laken , 10:30
p.m.
New York 11 Golden Sute, 10 :30
p.m.

Saturday's games
New Jusey at Philadelphia, 7:30p.m.
PhDCili~ at Wuhington, "1 :30 p.m.
Cltvtland II Or IIndo, 7:30p.m.
DaUuu Miami, 7:30p.m.
Indiana 11 Charlotte, 7:30p.m.
Hounm ll Olicago. 8:30p.m.
Milw1uJtoc nDmver, 9 p.m.
Utah at Seattle, JO p.m.
New Yorll. 11 L.A . Clippers, 10:30
p.m.

Sunday's game
Detroit at 801\.oo, 12;30 p.m.

Akron Ccnt-Hower S7, Akron Kenmore 43
Akron CCNcntry 60, Sandy Vall. 38
Akron Ellet 72. Ak1UI FLtCStooe 32
Akron Garfield 56. Akron E. 35
Akron Manchester 38, Fairless 31
Akron N. 48, Akron Huchtel 34
Akron Spring. 43 , Nardoni• 32
AJeunder 53, Vinun Cwnty 39
Amelia 40, Cm. Anderson J8
Ashlrnd 61, Marion Harding 26
Athens 52, Gallipolis 40
Ba.mCI'Iille " · SeaU.ville 50
Beaver Eastern 90, Pon.smouth E. 23
Bedfotd 42. Willoush by s. 33
Bclpre 4S, Trimble 39
Berlin Hiland SS, Jewen -Scio 43
BeJ.Iey 51, La.kewood 42
Big Waln\lt65, Licking VaU. 49
Bloom-Canoll4l , Hamilton Twp. 30
Botkins 62, Anna S7
Brccklville 65, AUm Elm• 26
Bucll:eye Loc:a1 93, Steub«&lt;ville 39
Buckeye Vall. 49, River Va11.4S
Canton GimO.U. 62, N. C.nUXl 47
Cardinal Stritch 67, Tel.. Libbey 13
Celina 64, lima ShaMICC: 26
Chippewa 79, Smithville 45
Cin. Aiken S8 , Cin. Oak Hill.J 33
Cin. Country Day 61, Cin. Seven
Hilli 2Jl
Cin. Deer Pari: 511, Cin. Christian 32
Cin. Finncytown 39, Cin. Tay lar 24
Cin . Glen Eate 54, Cin. Woodwud 50
Cin. Huri10n 49, Cin . Walnut Hills

"We've played at Ohio State,
Cincinnati and The Pit in Albuquerque, so we've been in many
other tough places," Wright said
after Wednesday's 59-53 victory
(at home, naturally) against Westem Michigan.
But even he admits it's daunting
to travel to Athens.
"Ohio was the preseason
favorite and they're a solid team,"
Wright said. "And I know they're
tough at home, so we'U have 10 be
ready to play in another unfriendly
environment.''
Other MAC games Saturday
find Kent at Bowling Green, Ball
State at co-leader Central Michigan
and Toledo at Eastern Michigan .
Western Michigan takes the day
off.

Cin. Indian Hill 28. Cin. CAPE 22
Cin. Lock.l1nd 47, Ball via •U
Cin. Marion Local49, St. Henry 21
Cin. Mercy 69, Cin. McNicholu 38
Cin. Mt. Hea lthy S9 , Cin . Western
Hills 38
Cin. Northwut 6S, Cin . Hughes 20
Cin. PrincelWl 53, Middletown 42
Cin. Reading 61 , Cin.l..IJvcland 52
Cin. Roger Bacon S3, Cin. McAuley

Fairlei&amp;h Dicll:inaiHl 84, Long Island

33

Oe. He ights 59, Cle. Regina 52

u. "16

Clennont N.E. 66, Cin. N. College

La Salle "18, Temple 67
Lincoln, Pl. 78, Delaware St. 6!

Marilt 66. St. Francil. NY S9
MuuchUICIII91 , SL JOI!Ieph'•ii6
Mount St. Muy'l, Md. '72, Robert
Morril 63
Rhode bland 78, Duquesne 65
Vermont 78, Maine 5'6

South
Centen.ary 69, Steaoa 64
Coppin St.%, M~a.n SL 80
Florid• Sl83. Gcorai• Toch. 79
Howard U. 87, Md.-1 . Shore 54
Liberty 90, N.C.·Aslleville 76
Louiliana. Tech 85, Jacksonville64
LouiJville 88, Soothem Min . 74
N.C. Charlotle 12, JMnsm C. Smith

so,ar

New Orleans 87 , Lamar 12
SE Lou iJiana 81, Fla . lntemational
79,0f
SW Lou.i.siana 90, Tcxu·P•n American 54
Samford 56, N.C.-Grmlsbaro SJ
Sou th Ala b&amp;m• 84, W. Kcntoclr.y 12
South Florid• 66, BcU!une·Cookman
4?
Tennessee St. 66, Tenn.- Martin 49
Virginia Tech S7, East C.mlina44

Schedule For Completion On February 14, 1992
llon'l. mi ss you r chance to Lh l'lll someo11C

Midwest
Alton 80, Yaungatown St. 67
Bethel, Ind. 85, 'llalp•r•Uo 82
Minouri 77, Nolle D1mc 68
SW Miuouri St. 63, Drake 41

iijlC&lt;! ial WiLli ,YOl\1' VOI'.Y OWl! 11188SHgen f love.

Southwest

Here's The l'futs &amp; Bolts:

Arii .-Little Rock 86, Prairie View 56
NW Louisi•n• 74, Sam Housl on St.

•Your Message Only Costs 201' Per Word

64

Nid!olb St. 81, Texu-Adingt.on 12
North Tau n, McNceae St. 59
Ok..lahoma 130, Onl Roberu 89
Stephen f .Aunin 70, NE Louili•n•

• Bring in or Mail your typed or neatly
handwritten message to Vdlentin~ Greetings,
care of \his newspaper.

65

Tulll 67, Ind ian a St. 53

Far West
E. Wultington 71 , Weber St. 68

• Your greeting mus\ be receive ~
byWed ., Feb.12, 1992

&lt;,..

Cin. Turpin 47, Cin. Taft 14
Cin. Wintoo WoodJ 44, Norwood 38
Cin. Withrow 42. Cin. Co!Cilllin 39
Circleville 47, Canal Winchester '1:1
Qe. Erieview 69, Oc. St. AugUitine

East

Lcban._, 45, ed&amp;ewood 41
libaty Unian 6l New Albany 30
Logan 85, Marietta 48
Logan Elm 78 , Amandi -Clearcruk .

'2

34

32

Hill 48
Ointon· Mallie SO, CO(U TYillc T1
Col. BIIIIChcmft 83, Col. 81'00khavc:1
61
Col. Centennial 41 , Col. Whet atcme

Col Eutmaor 59 , Col. We.t31
Col. 1ndq~endance 77, Col. Walnut
Ridge 3S
Col. linden -McKinley 46, Col .
NQnh land 34
Col. Mifflin 52, Col. East 51
Col. Ready 51, Col. Hartley 50
Coldwater 66, Fott Recovery 49
Coahocton 48, Cambridge 47
C\lyahoa• FlUs 60, Buben.on 51
Day. Nordunmt46, Tmy 30
Day. Oakwood 50, VaUey View 47
Defiance 66, Van Wert 6S
Dixie S7, Car!ale 50
Eastern Brown 64, Goorae1.0wn 27
EastlU:e 58, Euclid 4S
Eaatwood45, Tot Woodmore 16
Edison S. S6, Wintmville 48
Flyri.a Ca!h. 53, Lonin Brook:Jide 42
Everpcm S3, Emanuel BaptiJt 35
F1irba.nkl 40, Mcdlan1C1burg 3')
fayeUeville 1S , Peeblca43
Felicity 19, New Ric hmmd 7
Fllhcr C.th . S6, Lidinallt... 35
Frrilin· Moruue 88, Bradford 43
Ft. Frye 71 , Caldwd.l 41
Ganway 57, Ridgewood SO
Garfield Hu. Trinity 74, Plrma Holy
Name46
Gcnoto 65. Northwood 36
Gnndview 47, W. Jetfmon 21
Orinville 70, Mil.1erspan 38
Hamil too 46, Cin. Sycamore 42
Hamiltm Badin 52. Unuline 36
Hamiltoo Rou 60, Uttle Miami 39
Hawken 58, OuficldHu. 49
Huth 72, Berne Union 29
Houlton 59 , Ruuia Sl
Jackson44, Vincatt Wl1"111'138
Jolu!nown 41, Madison Plains 32
Kenton Ridge Sl. Sprilla. Shawn«:

47

K.lnp ~. BllnchMer 35
UkeRidse so. Klns'• Acad. 3!

lAndon 52, Joo.a\han Alder 34
l.onin Kiog 47, Vonnilim 3X
Lorain S®lhriew 72, Lonin 68
Lucu 58, S. Cemll 33
l...ucuville Vall. 65 , Porumouth W.
LYJ!dhunt Brullh,40, Maple Ill•- 28
Madeira 59, Cin. Mariemont 54
Manafidd Sr. "· Mlnlftcld St. Petm~

Mapleton 53, Plymouth 37
Marion Cath. 64, Manlficld Ou. 47
Marion Locll49, St. HIIIN)' 21
Marion-Frilli.n 45, CoL Brigl44
MauHlon Iadt~on S4, Canton
Timken 29
Maumee 42, Sprinsfield 33
Meado...broak 45, Oaymont 41
Mcip 57. Mill~ J8
Mentor 47 _Mnfidd 'II
MiamilbiUJ 56, Belmont 30
Midview 43, Stndlllkf 36
Minrord 57, WheelcnbWJ S6
Minner 48, New KnOll ville 36
Ml. Notre Dame 68, Cin. PurcellMarian 31
N. Ridgeville 45, Elyria 41
NapoJoon 72, Oay 60
New Boaton 61, Porwnoulh NoLTe

Hannan Trace kept its grip on
first place in the SV AC girls basketball race with a 53-39 win over
visiting Southern Thursday night.
Junior Lucy Mullens led the
Wildcats (10-4, 7-1) with 19 points
and was one of two players to score
in double figures. Southern's
Aimee Mills , the other, led all
sharpshooters with 22 points,
including a pair of three-pointers in
the fourth quarter to key a 12-poinl
frame by the Tornadoes (1-11. 17).
Monday's agenda will have
Hannan Trace taking on Southwestern at Gage, while $outhern
will host Eastern.
Quarter totals
Southem ...............2 14 1I 12 = 39
Hannan Trace .....lO 17 18 8 = 53
Hannan Trace (53) - Mullens
9-0-1=19; Stephanie Stapleton 3-02=8; Thomas 3-0-1=7; Triplcu2-l·
0= 7; Ours 3-0-0=6; M. Sanders I·
0-2=4; L. Sanders 1-0-0=2. Totals
-22-1-6:53
Field goals -23-65 (35.4%)
Free throws - 6-9
Rebounds -46 (Thomas 14)
Assists -12 (Mullens 6)
Steals- 9 (Mullens 4)
Turnovers- 24
Southern (39) - Mills 8-20=22· Ohlinger 4-0-1=9; Moore 2·
o-0=4; Clark 0-0-2=2: Cooper o-o.
2=2. Totals -14-2-5=39
Free throws- 5-10 (50%)

.Newcomct~town 65, Lak.eland 54

Nonmn" 54. c"'""""" 20

Olentan&amp;Y49, Utica41
· Oped Door40, Oe. Lulhenn. E. 22
Ottoville 62, Pandon-Gilbol 51
Paint Vall 40, PikdOn 32.
l'cnyobwa 57, W.o 211
Piqua 53, ldilion·Unim 38
Porumouth Clay 39, Franklin Furnace Green 36
Ravenna 35, Kmt Roosevelt 16
Rayland Buckeye 93, Steubenville 39
Rilfsedtle 42, ML Gilead 29
River 50, Martini Ferry 45
Riveni.de 60, Indian Lake 57
S. Webste.r 51, Wavc:rly 32
Shaundoah 38, WaiCI'ford 36
Sherwood Faitview 63, Ayenville S4
Sidney48,TippCity 44
Skyvue 63, Fria\tier 47
Sparta. Highlan_d 56, PI~":Jtt4S
Spring. Catholic 59, Miami E. 42
SL Bemud 45, Cin. Swnm.it22
SL Rill 39, Ohio Deal"22
SL Uraula S9, Cin . Setm 49
Stc:ubatville Cath. 50, Mingo 30 1
Suubu.rg 46, Malvern 30
SylvutiJ NIJI\hvicw 69, F01tcwia 35
Sylvani.t Southview 35, Rou!otd 32
Tcaya VaU. S6, Fairfic:ld Union 44
TOC\II'IIach57,~ 32

Tol- Ccntra165, Tot Bowsher 4Cl
Tol. Christian 39, Ottawa Hilll36
Tol. WailcS9, Tol Roam 38
Tol. Whitmer SO Fn:monl Ross 11
Tri· Vilbp "15, Bethel 30
Tuacuawu Cath. 76, Cononon Vall.

48
TIIKirtWU Vall. 40, E. Canl01129
Tualaw 76, HeritiBe 0\r. 14

TwilubLlfg54,0ranp 36
Unicit Local 73, Bridacpon. 43
Urbarla 77, Spring. Norihcmem 29
Vandllli-BOOer 37, Day. OlaminadeJulic:nnc: 29
w. Union sa. Leabufa Fairfield 34
WapUoom 59, St. Maey'aJS
Wuhinaton CH 52, McClain 22
WCIIWn BmwD 80, BethdTate 53
White 01k 55, WCite:m Lalhlrn 49
Willml 55, Milan Edison 41
Wilmingtot~52, Milm.i Trace 35
W001ter90, UniootoWn LU.c32
W0011etTriway 47, W. Holme. 4.5

North Gallia 37, Oak Hill21
At Vinton, North Gallia broke a
6-6 tie created in the first quarter
by outscoring Oak Hill 25-8 in the
next
two quarters to post a 16-point
victory.

Transactions

1

I 'll' ~" ~·• ~

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CINClNNA TI REDS - De.ianated
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LOS ANGELES DODGERS Ap-ood lO lll!fiTII with Jay Howdl, pitcher,
tnd Jeff Htmilton, infielder, oo one-year
contncu.

SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS Agreed to terms with Jeff Brantley, piu:her, on three-year eorlltiCI. and Miko l•ckaon, pitcher, oo 1 one-year contnct.

Basketball
NaUon1l Bukt,ball Auodatlon
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Named Ocorae Kid eo~ch .

Football
N1tlona l Foolb1ll Waut
GREEN BAY PACKERS - Named
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OPEN HOUSE ·

N1llonai1Aa1ut
CHICAGO CUBS - Agreed to
temu with Greg Maddux, pitcher, 1nd
Dwisht Smith, 011tfielder, on one·year

~1 1 ,,.. 1 ! lrw.. vd f I ' ·'' ' ~ l • r•« •• ~• ol Mr o~, ( •&gt;•oroty 0!"1) .n , l}lo~•loJ&lt; \! 1' worh orwo&lt;i'!l Cndt' Nn l ?l•lfl '' 1 S•.•• r • Ill', .
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SC HOOL DISTAICTS

Symmes Valley 44, KCHS 40.· :
At Aid , Trina Schneider an4
Jennifer Owens scored 13 and 12
points, respectively, to pusH
Symmes Valley to a four-point vic·,
tory.
•
The Vikings (6-6, 6-2) led 'Qy
two at halftime and by six at the
end of the third quarter, but KC's
outscoring Valley 13-11 in the final
frame wasn't enough to keep the
Vikings from remaining tied f~r
second in the conference.
Tonya Drumf11ond led the Bol:!cats (5·8, 3-5) with II points.
Quarter totals
Kyger Creek.. ...... .4 17 6 13 = 40
Symmes .Valley .:ll 12 10 11 = 44
Symmes Valley (44)- Schnei·
dcr 3-0-7=13; Owens 5·0-2=12;
Wiseman 4-0-0=8; Krausz 3·0·
1=7; Conley 1-0-0=2; S. Wilson l·
0-0=2. Totals -17-0-10=44
:
Free throws -10-19 (52.6%)·
Kyger Creek (40) - Drummond 4-0-3=11 ; Ward 2-1-1=8;
Black 3-0-1=7; S. Jones 3-0-1=7;
Gindlesbcrger 1-0-3=5; Bush 1-00=2. Totals- 14-1-9=40
Free throws 9-19 (47.4%)

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Junior guard Beth Salisbury and
freshman forward Nickie Meade
paced the Pirates (9-3, 6-2) with 14
and 13 points, respectively,to help
end North's three-game lostng
s1reak and remain in a second-place
tie in the confqence with Symmes
Valley (no report was available
from the Southwestern-Eastern
game). Senior forward Alicia
Lloyd led the Oaks (3-9, 2-6) with
seven points.
Monday's datebook will sec
North Gallia playing Kxger Creek
at Cheshire and Oak Hill hostmg
Symmes Valley.
Quarter totals
Oak Hill ............... 6 4 4 7 = 21
Nonh Gallia ......... 6 11 14 6 = 37
North Gallia (37) - Sal.isbury
7-0-0=14; Meade 4-1-2=13;
Twyman 3-0-0=6; McConnick 1-00=2; Myers 1-0-0=2. Totals- 161·2=37
Oak Hill (21)- Lloyd 3-01=7; Carney 2-0-0=4; Fisher 1-00=2; Kuhn 1-0-0=2; Ramsey 1·0·
0=2; Sharp 1-0-0=2; Swann 0-02=2. Totals-8-0-5=21
·

$20 OFF ANY APPLIANCE OR "

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BALTIMORE ORIOLES - Apood
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Rates of Taxation for 1991

•All greetings will be published in
a special sec\ ion on Valcnline'
Day, February 14.

our defense."
The result is a defense that has
allowed just 52.8 points in four
MAC games, allowing opponents
to shoot just42 percent.
· OU. however, comes in with
arguably the best 1-2 punch in th~
conference in Lewis Geter and Dan
Alai. Geter is averaging 20.1 points
a game and leads the league and'
Aloi came into the week scoring
18.1, third best in the conference.
The Bobcats are second in the
MAC in scoring, averaging more,
than 70 points a game.
Wright is cheered by the fac!
that despite averaging 63 points
and shootin~ 44 percent in the
MAC, there IS room for improvement.

~In Middleport

Baseball
A.merlr:an

Miami (3-1 in the MAC and 105 overall) is currenUy setting the
pace in the MAC along with Central (3-1, 9-5) . Right behind are
Western (3-2, 12-4) and Ohio (3-2,
11-5). Ball State is next (2-2, 12-4),
trailed by Toledo (2-3, 5-8) and
Kent (2-3, 5-10). Rounding out the
pack are Eastern (1 -3, 6-10) and
Bowling Green (1-3, S-9).
It was through a difficult preconference schedule that Wright
learned what his team was mad~ of,
and what made his team effective.
"We have enjoyed the success
we have this year because of our
defense,"-he said. "After we got
the snot beat out of us by Ohio
State (94-61) and Cincinnati (8262), we decided that we were going
to do whatever it took 10 improve

Hannan Trace girls beat Southern
53-39 to stay in first place in SVAC

Dlmdl
New Riegel 66, Fremont St. loteph
4X

u

33

Major college
basketball scores

~

•
•

I
12

.619
.550
.550

Dmver ................... 16 24

11\RRE\BE\'1\ - 1\\1 ''11:1\ 1\C

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"A 101TlHSts
5liVEN 5PlflBfiG
AT Hts voo&amp;:sr

FRIDAY NIGHT BUFFET WILL BE
HELD ON FRIDAY, JANUARY 31
AND NOT TONIGHT AS STATED
IN THURSDAY'S PAPER.

GRAND OPENING

6.5
10.5
IH

W l.
Utah ....................... 26 16
Houaton ................. 22 18
San Antonio .. .........22 U

·

(Across from Home National Bank)
RACINE, OHIO

JANUARY 26 - 1:00 P.M. to 5:00 P.M.

.,

Tum

ill.D .

Sonya's Country Kitchen

OPEN BOUSE SUNDAY

-~ 3

.462
.3j9
.23 1

MldVt"tll Dh•lslon

ur
nual
alentine's Day
reetin s ection!

hair of Thursday night's Pac-10 showdown in Oakland, Calif.,
which the Bruins beat the Golden Bears 86-66. (AP)

Mioomi ...................19 22
New Jersey ...... ...... 18 21
Waahington ...... ...... l4 2S
Orll.ndo ............ ........9 30

Mont1.111 7J,Idaho S8
Mlllllllll. St 60, Boilc Sl. S6
Oregm St 82, Wuhinatoo. 58
San Diego 92. Podland 76
Santa Clm 73, Ciorwga 52
Southern Cal82, SWilord 72
Teus-EI Puo 771 San Diego St 54
UC Sant~ Barbin 64, Cll St-FuJlerton S8
UCLA 86, Califomil 66
UJirr.'LV S8, Frc~oo Sl 50
Utah 68, AU Force 51
Utah SL 80, San Jote St 63
Wuhinaton St 90, Oregon 55

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Now Under Construction:

•

1
6

'"

First, the Seminoles upset then
fifth-ranked North Carolina on
Dec. 15 at Chapel Hill. Then came
victories over then-No. 19 Wake
Forest and Maryland.
''Our confidence is staning to
grow," said Bob Sura, who scored
16 of his 18 points in the last 12
1/2 minutes as the Seminoles overcame a IS-point deficiL
In other games involving ranked

SHOOTS OVER BEAR- UCLA guard Mitchell Butler (left)

GH

Cenlnl Dlvl1lon
Chica!o..... ....... ..... .35 S
Clevt lnd,_.M_..26 n
.684
Detro.iL ............ ,......23 17 .575
Atll.n11. ...................21 19 .Sll
Milwauke ....... ..... 19 2.0 .487
Indiana ........ ..... ...... 15 26 .366
Charlone ... ............ 11 30 .268

COLONY THEATRE
STARTING FRIDAY

3-5 on the road.
Moreover, MAC home teams
are a glittering 14-4 in conference
play and are 53-II overall.
That's why they call it a homecourt advantage.

Hawaii 58, New Me.Uc:a SS
Long Beach St 92, UCINinc79,0T

Boys

·

goes up for a shot over California center Ryan Jamison in the first

Miami lfavels 'to Ohio University Saturday, with a share of first
place in the Mid-American Conference hanging in the balance.
The numbers don't favor
Miami. OU is 7-0 at home to MU's

Scoreboard

8AIIr.AI N ~T!NEE S S'-TURDU I SUNO-'Y..

11 lA. ~ 501'1 PIKf
1101 If l'&gt; WES"'"

The Dally Sentinel-Page-s

Miami to take on Ohio University squad unbeaten at home faturday

At Oakland, Calif., the Bruins,
matchi ng their best start in 18
years, got 28 points from Don
MacLean to climb to 13-0.
The Bruins (5-0 in the Pac-10),
forced 21 Cal turnovers.

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

,.,

j

.'

159021.-19.8Cubic Fl. Ke!VIIore Refrlgeralor Almond
Side by Side. Factory lnslalled lcemake1............ '709. 99
154546. LXI46ind! MTS Slereo Giani Screen 1V.....'2,099.00
113301. 30 Inch Kenmore Alm'ond Beclrlc
• Rangellllh Stii:Oiiillng Oveo. ........................'409.99

�Friday, January 24, 1992

By The Bend

TO PERFORM - The Gallipolis Christian Church, SR 588,
will hold its annual tri-state
youth rallr, Youth Attac '92, Jan.
24-25. ThiS year's guests include
Tommy Oaks, (left), Destiny of
Kentucky Christian College,
(lop), the largest vocal ensemble
from KCC, and the Buffoons for
Christ of. the GCC. This year's
theme will be "What you see is
what you get," using the Scrip-.
iure I Tim. 4:12. Phil Luckeydoo,
Russ Shaw, and Evan Casey, are
directing activities for the youth
for the two days. For more information call Mic Bowen, youth
minister, at446-1863.

The Salem Center Go-Getters 4H Club met for the first time in
1992 recently at the home or advisor, Bonnie Scott. There were 19
members, two advisors and three
parents present.
Members discussed future plans
for this year including donalin)l
monies to Project Lift-Off, as in
past years; and donating to .the
County 4-H candy bar sales and the
County Building Project. The
members also discussed their proJects for 1992, the cost of th eir
books and the cost of 1992 dues.
Election of 1992 officers was
held. Elected were Michele Scott,
Preside~~ Allison Gannaway, Vice
Pres ident; Denise Shenefield, Treasurer; Crystal Vaughan, Secretary;
Ginger Holcomb, Health and Safety Officer; and Beth Clark and
Stephanie Kopec, Recreation Lead-

ers.

Refreshments were served by
Scott and the next meeting is to be
announced.

Community calendar

..•

Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and the day of that event. Items
must be received well in advance
to assure publication in the calendar.
FRIDAY
HARRISONVILLE - There will
be a youth rally at the Harrisonville
Holiness Chapel , Route 684,
Pomeroy. on Friday at 7:30p.m.
Rev. Bryon Myers will be the
speaker and Rev . John Nevi lle
invites the public.
LONG BOTTOM - Preaching
and singing at Faith Full Gospel
Church in Long Bottom at 7 p.m.
TIJPPERS PLAINS - The Tup·
·pers Plains VFW Post No . 9053
and Ladies Auxiliary will sponsor a
dance on Friday from 8 to 11 :30
·p;m. at the post home with music
by C.J. and The Country Gen~e­
men . The public is invited to
attend.

SATURDAY
RACINE - Th ere will be a
cficcrl cadin g clinic on Saturday
from tO a.m. to noon at Southern
High School. The clinic is spon·
sorcd by the Southern Varsity
Cheerleaders. Further information
may be obtained by calling 9925138.
KANAUGA - The Liberty
Mountaineers will perform Saturday at the DA V Center in Kanauga.
RUTLAND - There will be a
round and square dance at the Rutland American Legion Hall on Saturday from 8 p.m. to midnight with
music by the Country Kin Band.
Ray Fitch will be the caller and the
public is invited to auend.

POMEROY - The movies,
"Frog and Toad Together" and
"Hand Me Down Kid" will be
shown at the Pomeroy Library on
Saturday antl Sunday at 2 p.m.. and
at the Middleport Library on Monday
at 4:30 p.m. The movies arc
MIDDLEPORT · Rejoicing Life
free
of
charge and all area children
Christian Scbool at 331 North Secarc
welcome
to attend.
ond Avenue in Middleport will
liPid a spaghetti dinner in the
LOTTRIDGE - Country Music
aehooiiW1Chroom on Friday from 5
Night
will be held at the Louridge
p.m. 10 8 p.m. Parking is available
tn the parking/playground area Community Center on Saturday
behind the scbool. The cost of the from 6 p.m. to midnighL Refreshdinner is $3.50 per person, which ments will be available and the
includes spaghetti, salad, bread, public is invited.
beverage and dessen. All proceeds
SUNDAY
will go to the operation of the
CHESTER
- A film entitled,
school. Information is available by
"On
the
Edge,"
will be presented at
calling 992-6279.
the Mt. Hermon United Brethren
RIPLEY, W.VA. - The Libeny Church in the Texas Community
, Mountaineers will perform Friday on Sunday at 7:30 p.m. The public
is invited to attend.
~ at Skaleland in Ripley, W.Va.
•
LONG BOTTOM - Evangelist
; ,RUTLAND - There will be a
William
Villers of Anna Moriah,
;dance at the Rulland Legion Hall W.Va .. will
be at Mount Olive
' on Friday from 9 p.m. 10 midnight
f6aluring 1 variety of performers.
The public is invited 10 auend.
1
I

.

~

- HOCKINGPORT • There w1ll
' be a round and square dance on
: Friday from 8 to II :30 p.m. at j Hockin8JlOn on Route 124 at the
~e of Kenny. and Millie
Reynolds. Music will be provided
~ Ramblln Counlr)'. Jim Carnahan
~ will be the caller. Country and
'.bluearalt music will be played
;every Monday evenin• beginning
111. 7 p.lll. 'I1Ie public IS inviled to

Community Church in Long Bottom on Sunday at 7 p.m.

Friday, January 24, 1992
/ .

POMEROY - The Shady River
Shufflers will hold a clogging
workshop on Monday evenings, for
six weeks, beginning on January
27. The sessions will be held at the
Pomeroy Municipal Building from
7 p.m. to 8:30p.m. Beginners and
"plus-level" classes will be held for
a $2 donation.
POMEROY - The Meigs County Veterans Service Commission
will m~t on Monday at 7:30 p.m.
in the Veterans Service Of(icc in
Pomeroy .
POMEROY - The Meigs County Public Library in Pomeroy will
hold a free program on Living
Wills on Monday at 7 p.m .
Pomeroy Attorney Jennifer Sheets
will present the program, and a
question and answer session is
planned.
The Holy See
'{atican City includes Sl. Peter's,
the Vatican Palace and Museum the
Vatican gardens and neigb~ring
bu1ldmgs between V1ale Vatieano and
the Cburch. Thirteen buildings in
Rome, outside the boundaries, enjoy
extraterritorial rights; these buildIngs hoUBe congregations or officers
necessary for the administration of
the Holy See.

Amerla's Tax Team -

J

~llllald.
.

.

· f RAC!NB - The Southern High

SdiOOI e'-!lailen wil,l sponsor a
fl!llhetll dinner on Friday begin11 4 p.m. 11 the hish school

:ftl.,

:prior to the ball gat~~es. Cost is
•$3.50 Cor adulta and .$2Jor stu·

.fdenu. All proc:eeds will assist in

lfundins the cheerleader's trip to
~~ in national cornJ!CI!tion in
!Fiorida. The public is invtted. ·

'··

I

NEW YORK (AP) - Howard
CoseU is retiring from ABC Radio
Network at the end of January, four
decades years after his caustic,
high-brow style first cut through
the air waves.
"Don't you think it's about time
I retired? I sure do," Cosell said
Thursday. "(Walter) Cronkite's
retired, so I guess I can retire, too. ''
After leaving television in 1985
when ABC canceled his weekly
"SportsBeat" show, Cosell did a
daily sportscast and was host of a
weekly interview program on ABC
radio.
Cosell, 73, gave up a career in
law to go into broadcasting in
1953. He was a commentator on
"Monday Night Football" for 14
years before quiuing in 1984, saying : "Pro football has become a
stagnant bore.' '
He also ended in disgust his
broadcasts of televised fights in
1982.
' ' I am tired of the hypocrisy and
sleaziness of the boxing scene,'' he
said at the time.
Shelby Whitfield, ABC Radio
Sports director and executive producer, called Cosell "a pioneer in
broadcasting who deserves to be in
every broadcasting hall of fame.''
Cosell underwent surgery last
June to remove a cancerous tumor
in his chest. He has seemed to be in
good health recently.
NEW YORK (AP) - Sara
Gilbert the tomboyish daughter on
ABC 's "Roseanne," says she
shares one trait with her character:
they both prefer the company of
boys to girls.
"Most of my friends are guys.
With guys you get the straight
truth," Gilbert, 17, says in Sunday's Parade magazine. "Guys can
be manipulative to get their way,
but you can see right through them,
and laugh at them, so it's OK."
NASHVJLLE, Tenn, (AP)Singer-songwriter Roger Miller
says he got good news from his
doctors: radiation treatments have
reduced a cancerous tumor beneath
his vocal cords.
"Today, right now, I'm 2 feet
off the ground," Miller said
Wednesday. "I'll never take my
health for granted a~ain. I'm going
to squeeze my k1ds real hard
today.''

MONDAY
POINT PLEASANT, W.VA. The Crusade for Christ at 22nd
Strcct Church of God of Prophecy
in Point PleasanL W.Va. runs Monday through Saturday at 7 p.m.,
with Rev. Rick Towe, Pastor. Rev.
Paul Chapman and New Life
Singers will perform Monday
night's service.

. We prepare all

Income tax returns,
simple to the complex. Whatever your tax
sltu.yion, we can handle it.

BLOCit
POMIIOY:
611 EAST Ulll nREET
f92·6674

.

.The Dally Se~tlneJ..,..Page-7

The Daily Sentinel
People in
the news

Go-Getters meet

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-6

Reedsville news notes
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Whitehead
were recent overnight guests of 1uli
and Walt Hensch and their children, Lisa and Jordan of Canal Fulton. They auended the December
commencement exercises of graoiuate degree candidates at Kent State
University. Juli, the Whiteheads'
youngest daughter, received her
master's degree in elementary education with a concentration in reading specialization. Juli and her sister, Jane Hensch, are teachers in the
Green Elementary School, Green
Local School District in Summit
County.
Mr. and Mrs. David Weber honored their daughter, Morgan, with a
dinner on her fifth birthday. Guests
included Morgan's grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. Denver Weber; her
uncle, Mark Weber; and her sister,
Erin.
Visiting recen~y with Mr. and
Mrs. Warren Pickens were Mrs .
Helen Sprague and Mrs. Sandy
Savoy of Tuppers Plains.
Mr. and Mrs. John Smith,
Melissa and Brandon, former residents, have moved to Weston,
W.Va
Ann Buckley, a student at Ohio

University in Athens spent her holiday break with her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Chester Buckley and
brother,Jim.
Mr. and Mrs . Jay Long and ,
Courtney of Vincent were Sunday·
dinner guesiS of Mr. and Mrs. Lyle
Balderson.
Attending a holiday family dinner hosted by Maxine and Ernest
Whitehead were Bill and Gladys
Meredith of Beverly; Roger Meredith of Vincent; Jay Sauer of Middleport; Mary Ruth DeLamerns ~f
Gallipolis; David a~d Debb1e
Weber, Morgan and Enn, Denver,
Grace and Mark Weber or
Reedsville; Juli and Walt Hensch
and children, Lisa and Jordan of
Canal Fulton. Warren and Lillian
Pickens who were unable to
attend ..:ere visited by his sisters
and spOuses during the evening.
Christmas holiday ~uests of Mr.
and Mrs. Ernest Whnehead were
their children and grandchildren,
Jean and Sarah Frydman of
Evanston, Ill., Juli and Walt Hensch and children of Canal Fulton
and Jane, Eddie and Matthew Hensch of North Canton.

Apos1olic
Church of Jesus Christ A .,..toll&lt; Follh
New Urna Rd. , nexllO Ft Mei1s Park
Putor: Robert W. Richards
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Evening · 1 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Church of Jesus Chrlst Apostolic
VanZandt and Ward Rd.
Pastor: James Miller
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
Evening - 7:30p.m.
WednesdAy Services-7:30p.m.

Assembly of God
Ub&lt;rty Assembly or God
Duddin'g Lane, Muon, W.Va.
Pastor: Dan S. Eaton
Sunday Wonhip- IO:JOp.m.
Thunday Service!! • 7 p.m.

Bap1ist
Ash Street, Middlcpon
Pastor: Mark Morrow
Saturday Service. 7:30p.m.
Sunday &amp;hool · 10 a.m.
Wonhip · II a.m.,
Wednesday Serviee-7:30 p.m.

returned thanks.
Present were Sarah Caldwell,
Charloue Van Meter, Gertrude
Robinson, Martha Poole, Nina
Robinson, Nellie Parker. Martha
Elliou, Florence Spencer, and Osie
Follrod.
Next meeting will be at the
church on February 18. Charlotte
Van Meter will lead the program:
Martha Poole will be hostesses.
The

Rulland Flrst Baptist Church
SUnday School · 9:30 a.m.
Worship. 10:45 a.m.
Pomeroy First Baptist
Ean Main St.
Paslor: SLCve Fuller
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - IO:JOa.m.
Wednesday Services -7:30p.m.

Flrst Southern Baptist
41 872 Pomeroy P~e
Pastor: E. LamarO'Bryant
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Se!"'ices - 7:30p.m.
Middleport Flr!lt Baptist
Comer Sixth &amp; Pabner
Pastor: Rev. James A. Seddon
Sunday School· 9: IS a.m.
Worship · 10:15 a.m.
Wectnesday Services - 7 p.m.

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Racine First Baptist
Paslot: Ste"c Deaver
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship · !0:40a .m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services ·7:30p.m.
Sliver Run Bapllsl
Pastor: Bill Little
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Wonhip - lla.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:30p.m.
MI. Union Bapllst
Pastor: Joe N. Sayre
Sunday School · 9:45a.m.
Evening · 6:3!1 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 6:30p.m.
Bethlehem Baptist
Pastor: Rev. Earl Shuler
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m
Worship· 9:30a.m.
Thursday Services · 7:30p.m.

problems, to getting a passport or a

birth certificate.
FOR LIFE INSU RA NCE

CALL:
JEFF WARNER
INSURANCE
302 W. 2nd,
Pomeroy, Ohio
614·992-5479

...

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.................. COIIW'I'

,_-...-c.,..,n~earr.-­
~OHGI.

"-O.:.-C...'-"-,...
~

To The Veterans of Meigs County:
Judge Fred Crow III has found it in himself to go against the
expressed wishes of over 35 veterans representing almost all of the
Veterans' Organizations of Meigs County. He did this by
reappointing Otis Knopp to another term as Veterans Service
Commissioner. Upon the completion of this term, Mr. Knopp will
have served for 35 years on the Commission.
In the past, these veterans organizations to be represented were
asked to submit a list of three names for the Judge to select from.
This was not done in this case. Judge Crow asked the AMVETS
St51te Department for a list of three names. Before these names were
received by .Judge Crow, he had contacted the AMVETS and stated
that he did not need the list, that he had made his choice.
It is the contention of this organization that t~e wishes of the
veterans of Meigs County were not the paramount consideration
when this appointment was made.
We ask, what does it take to have veterans organizations here in
Meigs County heard?
We would like to ask Judge Crow to reconsider his appointment
and solicit a list of prospective appointees from the newly formed
AMVETS Unit 1942 of Meigs County.
One day all the veterans will see and understand what is and is
not being done for them. This disregard for veterans wishes pertains
not only to the local level, but to the State and Federal level as well.
Perhaps when these government officials find out that their jobs are
not guaranteed, that we can and will vote them out of office, then
our voices will be heard.
To all veterans, we, as the Commanders of the below listed
Veterans Organizations, urge you to go to the polls and vote. Your
vote does count and it, when added to all the other votes of fellow
veterans, can insure that the rights and benefits that you helped to
preserve ate applied to you .as well.
William R. Gilmore, Sr., #128, American Legion
Robert A. Ashley, #53, DAV Chaper
Ebner L. Pickens; Post #602 Legion
James R. Ingels, Commlmder, VFW #9053
· C~arles Carr, #9053
R&lt;ibert Smith, AMVETS
Mark A. Tillis, Post #4.67 A.L.

•

Pomeroy Church of Chrlsl
212 w. M.m St.
Pastor: Andrew Miles
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
W~dnesday Sei'Yices - 7 p.m.
Pomeroy Westside Church of Christ
33226 Children's Home Rd.
992-3847
Sundar School · 11 a.m.
Worshtp - 10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.
Middleport Church of Christ
Sth and Main
Pastor: A1 Hartsoo
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship · 8:15, 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Keno Church of Christ
Worship-9:30a.m .
Sunday School· 10:30 a.m.
Re~~orwallow

Ftee Will Baptlsl Chun:h

Alfred UMW study program
Alfred United Methodist
Women studied the program, "The
Earth - A Sacred Responsibility",
when they met at the church on
January 21. T.he meeting opened
with "This is My Father's World,"
by Florence Ann Spencer, pianist.
Martha Ellioll gave the opening
prayer. Nine members were present
and 54 sick calls were reported.
Nellie Parker led the program
with all taking pan in reading and
discussion. Psalm 24 and Genesis I
were the Bible readings. The society determined to follow the United
Methodist stand on caring for the
Earth, to practice general conserva·
lion and to inform legislators of
their stand on continuing care of
the eanh.
During the business meeting,
the society decided to order a new
prayer calendar and to check the
ordering of vanilla. Mrs. Parker
read holiday greetings from June
Stearns and Emma Lou Finch.
Florence Ann Spencer had the
prayer calendar and chose Sibyl
Dodson, evangelist at Bebard College in North Carolina. The society
signed a birthday card for her.
Osie Mae Follrod served sloppy
joes and gelatin dessen during the
social hour. Charlotte Van Meter

Church of Chris!

Old Dethe Frt!e Will Baptist Church
28601 S1. R1. 7, Middlepon
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening · 7:30p.m.
Thursday Services · 7:30p.m.
Hillside Baptist Church
SL Rt 143 juSI olf Rt 7
Pastor: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship · II a.m.. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m .
Hop&lt; BapiiSI Chapel
570 Grant St., Middlepon
Pastor: Da"id Bryan, Sr.
Sundar School - 10 • .
Wonhip - II a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.
VIctory Baptist
52S N. :b\dSL, Middlcpon
Pastor. James E. Keesee
Worship · 10 a.m., 1 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.
Faith Baptist Churdl
Railroad St., M1100
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Scrviacs -1 p.m.
Fortsl Run BapiiSI
Pastor: Arius Hurt
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wonllip - II a.m.
ML Moriah BapiiBI
Foun.h &amp;. Main S1., Middlcpon
Pastor. Rev. Gilbc:n Craia. Jr.
Sunday School - 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip • 10:45 a.m.
Antiquity B.tpdst
Pastor: Kenneth Smith
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:45 o.m.
Thunday S&lt;rvices • 7:30 ~m .
Rutland Free Will BapUrt
Sllcm St.
Pa1l0r:.Re.,., Paul Taylor
SW'iday School · 10 a.m.
Evening -7 p.m.
Wednesd1y Services • 1 p.m.
Ash Str&lt;tl Fretwlll BapUSI
Middlepon
S101day School - to a.m.
Wonhip • 11 a.m.
Wodnudoy Service - 7:30p.m.
Solurday Scrvioo - 7:30p.m.

Ridge Church of Chrisl
Pastor: Jack Colegrove
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m., 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Service~ · 6:30p.m.

Zion Church of Christ
Pomeroy, Harrisonville Rd. (Rt 143)
Pastor: Rober E. Punell
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship • 10:30 a.m., 1:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7- p.rn.
Bradbury Church of Christ
Pastor: Tom Runyoo
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m.
Tuppers Plains Church or Christ
Pastor: Robert Foster
Sunday School- 9 a.m.
Worship· 9:45a.m., 6:30p.m.
Dt!xler Church or Christ
Pastor: Chris Stewan
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m .
Rutland Church or Christ
Pastor: Eugene E. UnderwoOO
Sunday School -' 9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m.. 7 p.m.
Mason Church rl Christ
Miller St., Mason, W.Va.
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wonhip • 11 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.
Bradford Church of Christ
St Rt. 124 &amp; Co. Rd. 5
Pastor: Derek Stump
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Won;hip - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednes4&amp;y Services -7:30p.m.
Success R01d Church of Christ
Pastor: Joseph B. Hoskins
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedneaday Servtcc.i · 7 p.m.
Liberty Christian Church
Dexter
Pastor: Woody Call
SundaySchooi-IOa.m.
E.,.eniflg • 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.
Langsville Christian Churc:h
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Womup - l0:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service 7:30p.m.
Hemlock Grove Church
Pa.itor: Charles Oomigan
Sunday school • 10:30 a.m.
Wonhip · 9:30 a.m. 7 p.m.

n..

'

N!!w Life Church or God
Chester
Pastor: Gary Hines
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wors.hip- 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Heath (Middleport)
Pastor: Frank Smith
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services- 6p.m.

Episcopal

Pastor: Wesley Thatcher
Sunday School . 9 a.m.
WordUp • 10 a.m.

Grace Eplsoopal Church
326 E. Main St., Pomeroy

Minersville

PastOr: Rev. Dr. Roy C. Myers
Sunday school and worship - 11 :30 a.m.

PeariChapd
Pastor: florence Smith
Sunday School- 9 a.m.
Worship - lOa.m.

Holiness

·'
Pomeroy

Pine Grove Bible Holiness Church
I(l mile off Rt. 325
Pastor: Re.,.. O'DeU Manley
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Sprv1ce · 7:30p.m

WHleyan Bible Holiness Church
75 Pearl St, Middleport.
Pastor: Rev. Roy McCany
Sunday school ·9:30a.m.
Worship -10:30 a.m.,7:30 p.m
Wednesday Service · 7:30 p.m
Hysell Run Holiness Church
Pastor : Robcr1 Manley
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:45 a. m., 1 p.m.
Thunday Service · 7:30p.m.
Harrisonville Holiness Chapter
Pastor: Rev. John Neville
Sunday SchoollO a.m.
Worship . 11 a.m., 7:30p.m. .
Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m.

LaUer-Day Saints
Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ In
Latter Day Saints
Pon.land-Racine Rd .
Pastor: William Roush
Sunday SchOOl ·9:30a.m.
Worship · \0:30a.m.
Wednesda'o' Services· 7:30p.m.

Lu1heran
St. John Lulheran Church
Pine Grove
Pastor: Laura A. Leach Shrdflcr
Worship · 9:30a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.

Our Saviour Lutheran Church
Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood,
W.Va.
Pastor: Re.,.. George C. Weirick
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship · 11 a.m.
St. Paul Lutheran Church
Comer Sycam~ &amp; Seccnd St., Pomeroy
Pastor: Laura A. Leach Shreffler
Sunday School ·9:45a.m.
Worship - 11 Lm.

Uni1ed Methodist
Graham United Methodist
Worship - 9:30a.m. (1st &amp; 2nd SUil), 7:30
p.m. (3nl &amp; 4U. Sun)
Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m.
Mt. Otl"e United Methodist
Off 124 behind Wilkesville
Pastor: Cha rles Jones
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Services · 7 p.m
Meigs CIK!perallvc Parish
Northeast Cluster
Alfred
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
SWlday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship · II a.m., 6:30 p.m.
Chesler

Pastor: Sharon Ha usman
Worship · 9 a.m.
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Thursday Services · 7 p.m.

Christian Union

Pastor: Eunhae (Grace ) Kce
Sunday School · 9:15a.m.
Worship - 10:30a.m.,6p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:30p.m.

Rock Springs
Panor:Keith Rader
SWJday Scl10ol - 9:15a.m.
Worsh ip · 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services · 6 p.m.
Rutland
Pastor: Arthur Crabtree
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Worship - I0:30a.m.
Thursday Services · 7 p.m.

"Fiftelll; ltHII•Ir FiW C61d11"
221 W. 11tH $t., Pomeroy

.·

992·5432

RuU1nd Church of the Nazarene
Pastor: Samuel Buye
Sunday School · 9:30 o.m.
Wol'lhip -10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services. 7 p.m.
PorUand First Church of the Nazarene
Pastor: William Justis
Sunday Sdlool - 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:40 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.
New Haven Church of the Nazarene
Pastor: Glendon Stroud
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m.. 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Other Churches

Snowville

The Salvation Army
liS BuuemutAve., Pomeroy.
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m
Worship- 10:00 a.m., 1:30 p.m .

Southern Clusler
Apple Grove
Pastor: Carl Hick.!
Sunday School · 9 a.m
Worship · 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Services . 1 p.m.

Middleport Community Church
575 Pearl SL, Middlepon
Pastor: Sam Anderson
Sunday School 10a.m.
E"ening· 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Sel'\'ice . 7:30p.m.

Bethany
Pastor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School - I0 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.
Wednesday Servicet · 10 a.m.

Faith Tabemade Church
Bailey )ton Road
Paslor: Rev. EmmeLl Rawsoo
Sunday Sch_ool · 10:00 a.m.
Everung 7 p.m.
Thursday Service · 7 p.m.

Carmel
Pastor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:45 a.m. (2nd &amp; 4lh Sun)
Morning Star
Pastor: Kenneth Baker
Sund ay School - 9:45a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m
Thursday Services ·7:30p.m.
Sulton
Pastor: Kcnnelh Baker
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:45 a.m. (1st &amp; 3rd Sun)

Elst Ldart
Pastor: Roger Grace
Sunday School· lO a.m.
Worship · 9 a.m.
Racine
Pastor: Roger Grace
Sunday School · lO a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist Church
Pastor: William William s
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.
Rulland Bible Mt!thodlsl
Pastor: Re.... IYan Myers
Sunday &amp;hoot · 9:30a.m.
E"ening • 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.
Coolville United Methodlrt Parish

Pastor: Harold E. Alloway-Priddy
Coolville Church
Main &amp; Fifth St.
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship · 9 a.m.
Tuesday Services • 7 p.m.
Ilethl!l Church
To..,ship Rd., 468C
Sunday School·· 9 a.m.
Worship · 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services - IOa .m.

Racine First Church of the N17.artnt
Pastor: Th(Jflu L. Gate~, D
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.
Middleport Church of the Nazarene
PaslOr: Rt\1 . Lloyd D. Grimm, Jr.
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Syracuse Mission
1411 Bridgeman~ - . Syraauc
Pastor: Roy (Mike) Thompson
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Evening - 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service . 7 p.m.
Hazel Community Church
Ot!RL 124
Pastor: Edsel Han
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · I0:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Dyesvllle Communlly Church
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Burlington Comm~nlty Church
Burlin Jam
Pastor: Ray f:udennib
Sunday School • I0 a.m.
Wonhip -1 p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.
ChrlsU•n FeUo~shlp CentC!r
Salem SL, Rutlond
Putor: Rober1 E. Musser
Sunday School · I 0 o.m.
Wonhip • II :15 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Service . 7 p.m.
Morse Chapel Church
Supt.: Mike Malson
Sunday school · 10 a.m.
Worship· II a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday SeN ice - 7 p.m.
Faith Gospel Church
~..ens

Bottom

Sunday School- 9:30 o.m.
W011hip • 10:45 •.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneaday 7:30p.m .

MI. Olive Communlly Church
Pastor: Lawrence Bush
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Evening • 7 p.m.
Wodneday Service . 7 p.m.
United Faith Church
Rl. 7 on Pomeroy By-Pan
Pastor: Rev. Robert E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
WQIJhip • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Scrvioc · 7 p.m.

Ettlcslo Fdlowshlp
128 Mill St, Middlepon
Putor: Chuck Mcrt.enon
Sunday SchooJ • 10 a.m.
Evening· 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7 p.m.
Full G"''"' LlghthOUJe
33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy
P11tor: Roy Hunter
Sunday School· I0 a.m.
Eveniog 7:lO p.m.
Tuesday&amp;. Thunday · 7:30p.m.

SyriKUH Cburch of the Naurene
Pistor: Rev. Glem McMillan
Sunday School • 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

N- SeUiemeol Chumo
Sunday Won hip - 2:30pm.;
Thund.ay sr:rvice1 . 7:30p.m.
South Bethel New Testlment
Silver Ridse
Pastor: Duane Sydenstric:ter
Sunday ScOOol • 9 a.m.
Wonhip · 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7 p.m.

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME
992-5141

264 South.2ntl

jl .

MidlltJII!I .\

RACINE PlANING MILL
Mill Wo1k
Cabinet Makin~
· Syracuse

m .ms

GRAVELY TRACTOR
' 204 Condor St.

Po1111roy, 011.

lf92-2975 .

,•

Carleton Jnterdmomlnallonal Ctlu.-4
Kingsbury Road
Pastor: Clyde W. Hcnde~
SoodaySchool -9:30a.m.
:,
E... ening • 1 p.m.
Wcdne1day Service - 7 p.m.

fned,.. Gospel Mlllloo,
Bold Knob, oo Co. Rd31
Panor: Rev . ROi;er Willford
Sunday School - 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip· 10:4j: a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.

..,

White's Chapel Wesleyan
Coolville Road
Panor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.
F1lnlew Dible Church
Lctan, W.Va. Rt. 1
Pastor: James Lewis
Sunday School · II a.m.
Wonhip· 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m.
Calvary Bible- Church
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pas1or: Re.,.. Blackwood
Sunday School · 9:30a.m .
Worship 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesd ay Se!"'ice ·7:30 p.m .
Spiritual Faith Church
Slate 338, Antiquity
Pastor: A. Stewan
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Evening - 7:30p.m.
Thutlday Service · 7:30p.m.
Calvary Pilgrim Chapel
Harrisooville Road
Pastor: Rev. Victor Roush
Sunday School 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - II a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Servil.:e - 7:30p.m.
Sllt~t!rSVIIIe

Word fA Filth
Putor: David Dailey
Sunday School 9:30a.m.
E¥tning . 7 p.m.
Thursday Service-7:30p.m.
Rtloldng Lire Church
500 N. lnd Ave., Middleport
PaslOr. Rev. Michael Panaio
Sunday Schooi - 10Lm.
Wednesday S.:Mcc1 ·1 p.m.·

Pen1ecos1al
Pent....UI A...,.bly
St. Rtl24, Racine
Pastor: William Hoback
Sunday School • I0 a.m.
Evening -7 p.m.
Wednesday SeMces . 7 p.m.
Middleport Pentecostal
Third Ave.
Pastor: Re'l. Clark Baker
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
E"ening - 6 p.m.
Wednesday Se!"ices - 7:30p.m.

Presby1erian
HarrisonvUie Presbyterian Church .
Worship · 9 Lm.
Sunday School ·9:45a.m.
Middleport Peesbyl&lt;rlan
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Wonhip · 10 o.m., 4 p.m. (2nd &amp; 4U. S111.)
Syracuse Flrst United Prelbyteriln
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship · I la.m., 4 p.m. (ht.l Jrd Sun:)

Seven1h· Day Adventi st
Sevenlh-Day Advenllst
Mulbeny Ha. Rd .• Pomeroy
Putor; Bob Snyder
Saturday Service•:
S.bbolh School - 2 pm.
Wonhip • 3 p.m.

Untied Brethren
Mt. Hermon United Brellii'Otllo Cl!rl•:
Chwrch

·

Tent Community offCR 82
Putor: Robcn Sanden
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - lOJOa.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednetday Services - 7:30p.m.

•

JJ

IIIS{JUICKEL •' -:.;---~"

0\\;ft S.rul Q3..,f.s
93 Mill Str ..t
Mtddltpon, Ohio 46760
1&amp;141 892 -6667 - !998 -00KSI,

AGENCY INC.

rill Ia A - .
~
"tk ... n ... ..,., ,..,.,..,..,,.. .

Bill QUICKEL

EWING FUNERAl HOME
...Di"ni1~· ond &amp;nkc&gt; Alu'ar-··

Established 1913

992·2'121

r. ::.0:: .1 ·~
·\!S;
'·... ,,:.•'

J

'

POMEROY, OHI0-992-111177 •

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

RAWUNGS.(OAIS

..

Eden United Bre-thren ht Chri.R
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship ·7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.

Reedsville Fellowslllp
Church ollhe Nuart:~e­
Pastor : John W. Dooglu
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
. Wonhip - 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.

Ca1holic

Craw's :family Restaur tilt

Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - II •.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 1 p.m.

Pastor: Aorcncc Smith
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship· 9 a.m.

Nazarene

Church of God

CbeJter Church of the Naurene
PallOr: Rev. Herbe.r1 Grate

Trinity Coagreaatlonal Churth
Pastor: Rev. Roland Wildman
Churcll -9:15 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m

Torth Chwrdl
Co. Rd. 63
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · IO:JOa.m. .

Hartford Church of Chrtslln Christian
.Unloo
Hanford, W.Va.
Pastor: Rev. David McManis
Sunday School · ll a.m.
Worship · 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedne1day Services -7:30 p.ril.

Paslor: Rev. Thomas McOung
Sunday School - 9:30 o.m.
Woohip - 10:30 o.m. ond 6 p.m.
Wedoe.day Service1 · 7 p.m.

Salem Center
Paslor: Ron Fierce
Sunday School-9:15a.m.
Worship - 10:\5 a.m.

Hockingport Church
Grand Suw
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship· I I a.m.
Wednesday Services · 8 p.m.

HobiOII Church of Christ In Christian
Union
Pastor: Therm Durham
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
E'o'cning · 1 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Pomeroy Church of the Na:r.arene

w~

F•ll Ooclan·

Pre\&lt;npt•On\
nU'II

�Frlclav; January
The Dally Sentinel

Friday, January

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Public Notice

Public Notice

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace
RATES

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRID~.Y 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.

6
10
Monlhly

ClOSED ,SUNDAY
'

"Ads ou ltt de M11gs . Gll ltll

Of

pa tti
run 3 dl¥' 1 11 no ch•ge

hrd

COPY O'!AOi.INE MONDAY PAPER

Seles

TUESDAY PAP.ER
WEDNESDAY PAPER
TMUf\SOAV PAPER
FRIDA .. PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

DAY BEfORE PUBLICATION
- 11 :00 A .M SATURDAY

- 2:00PM . MONDAY

.-

- -----

BULLETIN BOARD
BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION
NEED AN AVON BOOK SENT
ANYWHERE IN THE U. S.?
CALL 992-7180 or WRIT E:
KAY McELROY
38216 S.R. 143
POMEROY. OHIO 435769

2 00 P M TUESDAY

- 2.00 PM . WEDNESDAY
- 2:00PM . THURSDA Y
-

Public Notice

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
HOWARD E. FRANK
Meigs County Treasurer
PLAINTIFF

2 ·00 PM

~AlDAY

Public Notice

21!1, rods; thence East 52
rods and 2 feet ; thence
North 2Y, rods; thence Wesl
16 roods; thence North 27
rods lo the place of
beginning, containing 5.28
vs.
acret , more or less ;
THE OHIO VALLEY
excepling lhe following deMANUFACTURING
tcriberJ premises conveyed
CORPORATION, etal
to Blaine Hardway by
DEFENDANTS Florris 0 . lamb and
CASE NO. 90 DLT 01
bounded and described as
follows: Beginning 35 feet
NOTICE OF SALE
Easl of the Northeast corn er
UNDER JUDGMENT OF
of Lot No . 3 in N. W.
FORECLOSURE OF LIENS McCune's First Addition to
lhe Village of Tuppers
FOR DELINQUENT
Plains, Ohio in the center of
LAND TAXES .
lhe
luppen Plains a nd
Whereas, judgment has
been rendered against Alfred Road , now on plat as
certain parcels of real Mill Sl; thence East 170
property for taxea, aa- feet; lhonco Soulh 205 feel ;
CO~DIERCIAL 1111d RFSmENTii\L
aeuments, chargea, pen· thence Wesl 110 feet;
in
a
Norlhwesterly
thence
FREE ESTIMATES
alties, interest, and costs as
direclion to the place of
follows:
beginning, containing 1/4 of
an acre; reserving the rigM
Sunday
(Parcel Number, Taxes, to lay and maintain a dra in
12131/911
lnlererest, and Penallies.)
or sewer from the house
10.00780.000-$391 .14.
dnow on the following
to.oom.OD0-$17,273.12
ascribed premises; sil·
09-00966 .000-$1,441.70
uated in Orange Township 1
F&amp;A TREE TRIMMING &amp;
11·00795 .D00-$1,615.61
Meigs Counly, Ohio, being
10.00778.000-$10,519.02
In Seclion No. 5, Town s hip
REMOVAL
Total-$31,240.59
No. 4, Range No . 12 and
Pruning and Landscaflng
PARCEL 1: Situaledinthe bounded and described as
POMEROY
Fr" hlimales-25 Yu. xp.
County of Meigs , Stale of follows : Beginning in the
Call oiler 6 p.m. -992-2928
Ohio, and in the Township middle of Slate Highway No.
of Orange, and bounded 7 Wesl 29 rods 6 feet, and
1113, 1... pol
and described as follows :
South 18Yt rods from the
Being in Section No. 5, Northeas t corner of said
Township No. 4 and Ran!i'e Section No. 5; thence West
No . 12 of the Ohto 16 rods to an iron pin ;
Company's Purch ase In thence South 8Y, rods to an
Orange Township, Meigs iron pin; thence East 16
PONDS
County, Ohio, beginning at rods; Thence North 8Y1 rods
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
the Southwest corner of a to the place ol beginning,
1211211 mo.
LAND CLEARING
5.28 acre trKI of land of containing 0.85 of an acre,
WATER &amp;
The Ohio Valley Manu· more or lees, and being a
SEWER LINES
facturing Company,
a part of lh same premises
BASEMENTS &amp;
corporation , described in conveyed by Florris 0.
deed recorded in Book 191 , lamb, el al., to Forrest A.
HOME SITES
at page 283 of th e Deed Ward by warranty deed of
HAULING: Limestone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal
Records of Meigs County, dale March 17, 1944, and
Ohio, thence South 58 recorded April 17, 1944, in
licensed and Bonded
degree 25' East 244 fe et; Deed Book No. 151, paga
PH. 614·992-5591
thence North 79 degree 30' 321, Daed Records of Meiga
12-5-tfn
East 272 feet lo the Easl County , Ohio; over and
line of Ianda of Guy G. and across lhe fiflt hereinabove
Myrlle C. Boggess, thence described premises either
NICE 1 and 2 BR
North 77.5 leolto the Soulh to the ditch running lhrugh
FURNISHED
lina of said 5.28 acre tract, lhe first above described
MOBILE HOME
thence Wes t 475 feel along premisea and cross ing
the South line ol said 5.28 State Highway No. 7 or lo
RENTALS
Cheshire, OH.
acre tract lo the place of the ravine running North
Availablo In
beginning, containing 0.95 and South on the first above
COUNTRY MOBILE
acre. Excepting and re· described premises, wh ich
HOME PARK
aerving one-s ixteenth (1/1 6) ravine lies Wes l ol the
Slarting at $235 per mo.
of all oil and gaa underlying house on the las t above
Very nice 2 or 3 BR, 2 balh
said premises as heretofore desc ribed pr emise s, s aid
house w/basement and
excepted and reserved by ra in or sewer11to be laid at a
carporl, free gas.
previoua gr an tore . And depth so as not to interfere
CALL614· 92·5528 or
being part of lhe real estate with the farming or
385·8227
conveyed by Edda Boggess cultivating of the first above
12·11-1 mo.
to Guy G. and Myrll e C. described premillli and
Boggu s by deed dated bei ng the same property
October 21 , 1950, a nd co nveyed by Forrest A.
recorded in Book 1S6 , at Ward and Eula 1. Ward , his
page 99 of the De ed wife, to H. A. Cole and
Records of Meigs County, Oneita Cole, by deed dated
Ohio.
Auguol 24, 1945 and
Deed Reference : Volume recorded In- Book 153, at
195, Page 719 ollhe Meigs Page 617 of Deed Recordo
County Deed Aec:ords.
of Meigs County, Ohio,
PARCEL 2: Situate in the excepl 0.35 acre thereof
Township of Rutland, in the conveyed by H. A. Cole and
County of Meigs and Stale Oneita Col e, husband and
of Ohio:
wile, 10 Ida Alice Cooper by
Beginning aboul eighty. dead 'datod Ap ril 3, 1947,
one rods and lourteen links and recorded in Book 159 at
easl from the center of west page 230 of said Deed
line of Sec tion 36, Town 6, Recorda . Being the same
9·6·11
Range 14 of the Oh io real es tale conveyed to h.
Company's Purchase at the A. Cole Lumber Co., Inc., by
EVERY
northe as t c orner of Homer A. and Oneita Cole
Josephus Carpenler's land ; by deed recorded in Deed
thence s outh 44 rodo to lhe Book 165 Page 204, Melgo
6:30P.M.
northwest corner of Grant County Deed Records.
28
Aomine'a land; thence east
Deed Reference: Volume
fa1tory
Choko
!
70Y, rodo lo the norlheaol 191, Pogo 283, Mel go
12 Gauge Sllotgun Only
corner of Grant Romine'a County Deed Records.
land; thence s outh 19 rod o
PARCEL 4: The following
Slrhtly Enforced
and 23 linko; lhoncoeasl 77 real eolate being In Soc lion
9·13·'91·11n
rods and 22 Ya links to th e 5, Town 4, Range 12,
TOOL
wul lin e of Jamu Orange Townahip, Meigs
Chapman's land; thence County, Ohio, and bounded
north 60 rods to lhe center and described aslollows:
ol lhe road : thence ooulh
Beginning In the center of
67"1. degrees west 1~ roda State Rot.tle No. 681 , where
ond 6 llnko; lhonce norlh the Woo l line of tho
HOlliS
.78% degrees wool 14 rodo; Christian Church Comolory
thence north 4 rods to the lnteraecll the canter of s aid
center of tho oald ooctlon Slale Roulo; thence wool
Public Notice
No, 36; thence wool to tho 907.86 foal along tho cenlor
place of beginning , ol. oold State Route (to
&amp; Compare
Probllo Courl of Molgo
containing 33 ond 67/100 whore tho Weotllnt of Guy
County, Ohio
1cr11, more or lesa.
Bogg•sa' 57.84 acre f•rm,
hlitnatts
Eo1110 ol William 8.
Detd Raioroncoa: Volume daocrlbod In Vol. 166, page
Hoback, Decea..d
160, Pogo 37; and Volume 99 of the Mel go County
Cut No. 2731 S,
234, Page 411, Molgo Deed Rocordo, lnloroocto
Do~k0113 , Pogo 359.
Counly Dtecl Rocordo.
tho center of uld Stole
PARCEL 3: Tho lollowl~g Roultjlhenco South 0 dog,
dtocrlbtd
promlou , 22' woat721.11oalalong tho .NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
oltueted In tho Townohlp of olid wostllnt; thonce ooulh
Orange, County of Mtlgo · 88 dog. oaot 2067.86 feeiiQ Rovlood Code, Soc. 2113,08
"On Januory 14, 1112, In
ond Stott • of Ohio ond the ctnlor 'OI Sttti Raulo
lho
Moigo Counly Probolo
bounded ond dncrlbecl •• No. 7; lhtnce north 4 dog.
followa : Being In Section 40' weet to feel oiong tho Courl, Coot No. 27315, Nancy
No. 5, Townohlp No. 4 ond conttr of oold Slole Route, D. Hobook, 51 2M Stole Roulo
Ranflt No. 12 of lha Ohio to tho oouthaaot corner of 124,Roclne,Ohio,46771 Wll
Co!llpony'o i&gt;urchaoo, and the Ohio Valley Monu· oppolnled Aclmlnl•lratrlx at
beginning In tho middle of locturing Corp.; thence t~• ootolt ol William s.
Stoto Highway No. 680, on North 87 dog. sa· wnt 341 Hobac- d-oled, 1111 at .
1ht North line of Soclion No. fnt to o lot now owned by 51211 Sttte Route
5, 44 rodo 14% lnt W01t tho Ohio Voll,y Monu· Rlclno, Molgo County,
lrom tho northeoot corner of lacturlng · (:orp.; thence 45m •.
Robert E. Buck,
uld Section No. 5; lhtnco north 2 dog. 10' aoot 125
311 WEST MAIN
Probtle ~udgt
Wnt21 roclo 10Y. .I ttl to IIIIo foot with tho lint ol uld
POMERQY,
OHIO
l.enJ K. Nnoolroecl,
Chrlollon Church Lot: Ohio .Yolley Monulocturlng
114-882-3&amp;24
Clerk
lh.,ce Soulh I rode; !hence Corp; thonco oouth 71 dog.
1-22-'92-1
WtOt 10 rode; thence Soulh 30' weal 272 loti wlih (1) 17, 24, '31; 3TC

~

Business Services

New Homes • Vinyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

614·949·280 1 or 949·2860
(No

ARN IE'S SPORTS LOUN GE
Presents
GUYS NIGHT OUT
SUNDAY. J ANUARY 26. 1992
SUPE R BOWL PARTY
Watch lhe Ga me on a
Big Sc reen TV.
Pool Tournament-Quarterly
Winters Shoot Off for $5.00 Prize.
Regular Tourname nt to Foll ow
Food provided by Subway in
Point Pleasant. WV.
(304)675·5789

10:00 A.M.·3:00 P.M.

Price lit .
NOTICE OF SALE
Howard Sellers 12
By virtue of an Order of
James
Turner 11
Sale iss ued out of the
Arnold
Weboter 11
Common Pleas Courl of
Arnold
Webster
12.
Meigs County, Ohio, in the
Arnold
Webster
13
c as e of J. D. Dr illing
Arnold Weboter 14
Company, Pl aintiff, against
James O'Brien 12
Magnum Gas and Oil t98t ·l
James O'Brien 13
Partn ership , et al.,
James O'Brien 14
Delend a nts , upon a
Malcolm Ward 11
judgment therein rendered,
Malcolm Ward 12
being Case No. 91-C V-41 in
Charlea Eskew 16
s aid Court, I will olfer for
Charles Eskew t7
sale, at the Irani door of the
Geraldina Parsons 1111
Court Ho us e in Pomeroy,
Geraldine Paraons 12
Mei gs Counly, Ollio, on the
Geraldine Paraona t3
14th day of February, 1992,
Sail
o il and gaa wells
a t 10:00 o'cl ock A.M. the
were
appra ised
at
following oil and gas wells.
$14
,632.05.
Virgil Parso ns 111 , Virgil
TERMS OF SALE: Cuh
Pa rso ns
and Virgil
Oil and gas wells cannot
Parsons 13.
Edward Arcller, 11 and be s old for leu than twothirds of the appraiud
Edward Archer lt2 .
Gertrude Neece 11 and nlue.
James M. Soul sby
Gertrude Neece lt2 .
Sheriff of
GeOrge, Mary &amp; Gayle
Meigs County, Ohio
(1 ) 10. 17, 24 . Jlc

•2.

Real Estate General

Quality
Stone Co.
SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE
Call614·992·6637
St. Rt. 7

MARCUM
CONTRACTING
-New Homes

RACINE GUN
CLUB

GUN SHOOT
1:00 P.M.
SUNDAYS
Starting Sept. 22
12 Gouge Factory
Choke Only

OFFICE 992·2886

-Remodeling
-Garages &amp; Room
Addillons
985·4141

11-22·92·1 mo.

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

Bashan Building

SAT. NIGHT

20SHorth Second Avi.
Mlddl&amp;porl, OH
DARWIN - F•m -Approx. 151ocros of land with oldor 2
story home. Has six rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 ~arnt, and
lrve gasto htat yourhome. Approx. 20acres tillable .
$70,000
EAGLE RIDGE - Approx. 40 acros of land, of which
about 20 acres are ti"able. Has a bam with ~ay ~and
an oquipment shod. Public water and lloctric available.
Many groat buil&lt;lng sitos and wattr lor animals. &amp;30,000.
RACINE - Family Ntecled - For this I Y. otory •. 3·4
bedroom• home with 4 porchll, hall b~oomonl, dll11ng
room. fam~y room, and a small oulbuild~ng. Good.IIZtd
lei.
·
128,500.
MIDDLEPORT - ~I Slretl- A nice 2 story home with
3 bedroomo, 111.! bl,lho, vinyl siding, ntW win-. full
buomtnt. House lo on · a good olroal Prico was
$39,900.
NOW $37,000.
EAGLE RIDGE ROAD • A bHutiiUI comer lot wllh 0
pond fiH naluraf gas worluhor, or garage with a 5 ~y
equltimenl shed. Hal tlaclrlc n workshep and public
wollr lo avoilabie. Thil 1Pf&gt;11'X. 10 ocro percel hal 0
boaUIIIul lxlllding aile overtoo~ng the pend. 8oml ,..,.r
financing ponlble.
&amp;30,000.
.
SALEM STREET- Rulond ~A 2 otory home' with 4·5
bedrooms . nice front siding porch, corpolt! cull lldlt
playhoUH oitOOg lnlk» a lanced bact&lt; yard, Home hu 0
b10nd .... w rool and gullllt, conlnl "" and
carpeting. and o olotllgl bulicllnl1·
...,. . ..
•
•
DOTTIE TURNER, Brokei'.., ..............................992·5692
BRENDA JEFFERS...., ..................................... H2·3056
DARLINE 8TEWART............:............................H2-'315 •
SANDV BUTCHER...... ,......................................t92·5371
· !IHE~Vl WALTERS .......................................... 317-0421

-.:.=

L.,;;;;;;.;._...;.______ _____.,
~

MAkE IT ARULE...
USE WANT ADS,
AHANDY

Starling Sept.

BISSELL &amp;BURKE
CONSTRUCTION
leNitW
Rt11odeling
Stop
Frtt

985·4473
667·6179

MICROWAVES
VHSCAMERAS
AUTO RADIOS
REPAIRED

. H.E.C.·

I

••

Announcements

Stock
AIR CONDITIONERS· HEAT PUMPS and

FURNACES FOR MOBILE &amp;DOUBLEWIDE HOMES

HOME
BENNETTI MOBILE
HEATING &amp;
Located 01 Safford Sdlool Rd. off Rt. 141
(614)446·9416 or 1·800-872-5967
4·26-91

J&amp;L BLOWN INSULATION

li

r· .

~

1 ·,

•Unbeatable eDCrgy uvmgs
&lt;C1.11tom£it-no rnstallation mes&amp;

4

Giveaway
jr,.. Pupplt.. Pan Chow, Part
!lomorld. IM-441&lt;0311.
Male; blue Auaale Helllll' doa.

14

plano, willing lo give to church

304 .. 82•327'1.

•NeYer mj_UII'S paintiDB
•S•Ilel tilH n for euy clcanina
•Lifeti me frame w111111ty

I

6

MOBILE
HOME PARK

has nice homeslles
available for up to
80 homes.
JUST OFF RT. 33

Only $75{er mo.
(a

614·992-5528 01
385·8227
12· 11-1

18

Lost &amp; Found

OHIO PALLET CO

Pomeroy, Ohio
614·992•6461
1·7·92, 1 mo

FOREVER
BRONZE
RACINE

.Swntlli11rt .Speel11l

14 TANNING
SESSIONS - 514''

Offer Good Thru
Fell. 14

949·2826
OPEN

9 AM-9 PM
1-6-1 mo. d.

J&amp;L
INSULATION
•Vinyl Siding
•Replacement
Window
•Roofing
olnoulatlon

JAMES KEESEE
992-2772or
742·2097

531 Bry•n Place
Middleport, Ohio
11/14.11n

TRIM and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK
992-2269
USED RAILROAD TIES

3-BR on Llneoln Hgls.,
Pomeroy. 814-992·7889 after
5:00pm

51

7

the day blfor1 Ihe ad Ia to run.
Sundsy lldHion • 2:00 p.m.
Frld1y. Mond1y tdltlon . 2:00
p.m. Saturd.ly.

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction
Rick Puraon Aucllon Compa~ny,
full lime auctioneer, complete
auction service. Licensed Ohio,
West Virginia, 304-773-5785.

L..gal Sterttary, need to hlvs
ADDRESSERS WANTED lm· basic: comput•r aki11s, typing,
mediately!
No
Exper\snct tekt dlctatron, send r11um1 lo
Necntary.
Proctn
FHA Box C-21, cart Polnl Plusant
Mortgage Ratunds. Work AI Register, 200 Meln St, Pl . Pit,
WV25550.
Home. Csll1.,.05-321·3064.

42 Mobile Homes

Financial

Help Wanted

AVON . All areas, Call M1rllyn
Weaver 304-882·2545.

Want to:

PIN down EXTRA

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

For 11nt or ule, 2 bedroom
house, 2501 112 Uncoln AVI.
appllencn tumlshtd, daposlt
required, 304-875..S904.
Small Unfurnished Houn 3
Rooms, Bath, .Air Conditioning,
Carptt•d, Oraptrl•s, SerHnld
Porctl, Privat• Parking. 614-4462002.

Yard Sale

ALL Yard Salta Mull 81 Paid In
Ad"anct. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.

r.l

BULLDOZER , BACKHOE
ond TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES and
TRAILER SITES,
LANDCLEARING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
UMESTONE-TRUCKING

CA0H?H

FREE ESTIMATES

992-3838
1· 3·'92'·1 mo. :

tor Rent
1 Acre With 12x60 Tolal Electric
Trailer, In Kyger Creek School
District. $17,5"00. 614·367-7261,
Evsnlngs.
2br Mobile Home On L..rga
Private Lot, $215/Mo. S.cunty
Deposit, Rsfarences. 614-4462236, 614-446·2581.
3 bdrm. mobile hams, 3 mllea
lrom Pomeroy, 614-992·5858
3 bedroom, 2 bltha, fenchtd
bsck yard, out building, N. At. 2,
304-G75-71163.
4br Unlumlshld On Cora Mill
Roed ott Rt.325, No Pets,
Oopooll Roqulood. &amp;14-245-5622.
Total EleetrJc 2 BR Mobile Home
For Rent, No P1t1. IM-367·7438.

MDI-lA l-ISA, If I&gt;A Vlt~c.l HAC&gt;
oWNG!&gt; A CAl .

992·5553

OR TOLl FREE
1·800·848·0070

1'mn you,. dutte,. into t~ usl. ,
Sell it the easy wt1y... by phone,
rw neetl to letwe you.r lwme.
Place yow· clmsilied ad lOtlay!
15 wm·tls m· less, 3 days,
3 paJJers,$6.00

DiiiWIN, OHIO
,
7/31f91/lln •

L..---~;;...;,;;.;;;;1 i

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
-Room Addlllono
-Gudor Work
-Electrical and Plumbing
-Rooting
- Interior &amp; Exlerior
Painting
(FREE ESTIMATES)

V. C. YOUNG 111
992-6215

RENT20WN
614-44f.3158
VJ'ra- Furniture
Sofa a Chair, $11.10 Wltll ;
Reetlner, $5.47 W11k, Swivel
Rocker, 13.13 WHk.Bunk Bed
Complete 18.41 WHk, 4 Drawer
Chtst, 13.26 W11k; Posltr Bed.·
room Suits, 7 pc., $16.87 WHk,
lnciud• Beddlng.Country Pint
Oinett• With Bench I 4 Chslrs,
$10.98 Woolc.OPEH: MDndoy
Thru Saturday, ta.m. to &amp;p.m.,
Sunday 12 Noon Till 5p.m. 4
MIIH OH Routt 7 On Route 141,
In Centenary.
Slde-by.. tde
relrlgerator,
elactrlc . double 0\lln stove,
S250. 11c:h both S450. after 5:00
PM, 304-G75-5593.
SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 62
Olive Sl. , Gallipolis. New &amp; Ussd
furniture, haeters, Weslem &amp;
Worit boots. 614-446·3159.
Used hsuy duly Kenmore
dryer, $50. 304-675-nln.
VI'RA FURNITURE
&amp;14-446-3158
LIVING ROOM : Soli I Choir,
$199.00~ R010llnor,
$149.00 ;
Swivel •ockor, 199.00; C.HH I
End Tabln, $89.00 Set.OINING
ROOM : Table With 4 Padded
Chairs, $14SI.OO; Country Pine
Dlnetle With B•nch And 3
Chairs,, $298.00; M11ching 2
Door Mitch, $349; Or $58"9.00
Sol; Ook Table, 42x62 Wllh 6
Bow
Btck
Chairs,
$629.00.BEDROOM: Potllr Btd·
room Suile (5 pc .), $349.00, 4
Drt.wer Chill , $44.95; Bunk
Bed, $229; Compltts Full Min
S.t, S105.00 Set; 7 pc. Cedar
Bedroom Suitt, $899.00.0PEN:
Monday Thru Saturdly, h .m. to
&amp;p.m., Sunday 12 Noon Till
Sp.m., 4 MUtt Oft Rol.llt 7 On
Route 141 In Centenary.

Business
Opportunity
!NOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommends that you do busl·
nes, with people you know, and
NOT to 11nd monsy through the
mall until you hava lnvasHgated
th• offering.
I'm Involved with some buslntSS pao~le In a marketing net·
work. We re wanllng to ••pand
In thla aru end are rooking for a
bueinllt minded partner who Is
lntll'fllld In a HCondary In·
come. For 1ppt. call Greg, 6141'12·2157
VENDING ~CUTE : Gel Rich 44
Apanment
Oulck1 No Wayl But WI HIVI A
for Rent
Good, Stesdy, AHordabla, Busl·
neaa. Won't Last. 1-800..284· 2 bedroom apt end 2 bedroom
VEND.
house, both fn New Haven, WV.
304-882·3752.
Real Eslate
2 bedroom spts In Point
Pleaunt1 modern , clean, Hud
acceptea, 614-448-2200.
31 Homes for Sale
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
1 acr. home site, 'rox14 mobile ESTATES,
538 JICkson 'Pik•
home, 2 llory house could be from $192/mo.
Walll to shop &amp;
rapalrld, 1&amp;.20 OUI bldg, mov5ta. Call 814-448-2584.
EOH.
$24,000. 814-446-1930 after 5:00.
Furnished Small
3 Unit Rsntal, Sltuettd On 1/2
. Plus Utilities, 52 Sporting Goods
Acre Loe, Maintenance FrM, fw.
814-446.0338. Call
cellenl Shape, 514..4146-8568.
12 gauge auto Winchester R1n·
4 bldrooma, halt b111mant, 1 ;:;;;:;:::= :::7:-:::::::-::=-::;;::; iger $185. 30.01 Wlnchntar bolt
Effkiencr, apt. lor rlnl , blautllul 1CIIon with Simmons 4·121(40 •
acre, garbage plck·up, city carpet,
$175. 1 t~er 5:00, 304-675water, c1bls optlonll, good 675-6042n c:e couch and bar, 304· scope
5694.
location, $39,995. 304-895·3876. Furnl•h.ci Apartment, 1br, next :.;;:..;;..
_ _ _ _ _ __
Crnl Moch.I!Jce: Now le Tile
ID Ubtary, pooklng, een1 .. 1heal , i5:c3~-:-,A::-n-:t::-lq.:.u.,.e_s-:-::=-:-:­
Tlms To Buy. Many Sizes And air,
&amp;14-446-0338,
Floor Plana Avallible. 9H At BefOferelerenc...
7p.m.
Buy or tell. Riverine Antiqu11,
French City Mobil• HomH, Gel·
1124 E. Main Street, Pomeroy.
tlpolls, OH 614-446-9340, 1-800- Gracious living. 1 1nd 2 t.d· Hours: M.T.W. 10:00 a.m. to 6:00
231-1467.
room lpt~rtmenta 11 VIllage p.m., Sunday 1:00 to 6:00 p.m.
Manor
and
Rlverslc1e 614-992- 252~.
Hom1 for ule In low 20'1. New Apanmenla In
Middleport.
From =--'----,'---c--ce"C"c-:--:kitchen~.. wiring, heating, city of
$191. Call614·992·778t EOH.
Fumlture Repair, Feflnlshlng:
Point t'lta11nl, WV. 304-675Old Plclurs Fnunes; Trunks
8939.
Middleport, BHCh St, 2 btcl· RtMored; Light• RewlrN ;
room tumrlst.d 1pt, uiUtlln
Experlenca}. Watt.r
Ranch llyle home, 3 bedrooms, psld, rtflr.ncn &amp; deposit ,.. (2!11rs.
Wh le. 814·245-9448.
2 tull blths, eat In kltc:Mn, qulred, 304-882·2586.
dining room, sttchld gars~ ,
located
Unlv•ralty
Lane, Ntw Hoven, ono bodroom lur· 54 Miscellaneous
SM,500. 304-875-4132 or 675- nloh•d
lpl, depooll ond
Merchandise
5914.
reftrenc• rtquired, 304-882- ,..-...,.,.......,.....,...,..,.,..,:::-:
Flrswood fOf sale , 814-m-62&amp;5
Reduced To Sell: $49,900, 2566.
Chnhlrs, Ohio. 904-932-6959, Complltly Fumlshsd mobil• c":c1.:.."1.::
"11" ''-,--,.,..-----,-,---,
904·932·7870, 614-367-0649.
hom•. 1 mile bf,low town over· Firewood For S.ls: Hardwood
Wanted to buy, house end/or looking river. No P11a, cA. 614· Big Flatbed L01d1, Deilverfd
-c-:.-::--::c~·,...--;--:==· l And Stacktd. 614-146-3969, Or
ropert., In Gallla County on •_:•c•,..o_338
1nd contract, priced In the 20 's. One snd two btclroom 614·446-9329.
1partments lor rant. 304-67$304-G7s.em.
2053 or 875-4100.
32 Mobile Homes
45 Fumlshed
for Sale
Rooms
1976 N11h1u, 2 bdrm, end
kitchen with bly window, good Apt for rent by month or WMk,
condnton, $5900, 814-Hl-1594 304-482·2561.
or &amp;14·192·7821
'1911 Nashua mobile home,
14x6-4, 2 BR, 1 bath, newly
rscsrpeltdh wash.r/drytr, 8x16
front pore: • Park L1ne Court .
8t4-446-8132 after 5. $9,300.
1990 Sprucerldgt, 14x70, :J.
bdrrn., 1-bl.lh, hlat pump, 2.75
acres, 2 miles north ol Ch•ster, 46
814-985-4412

Pomeroy, Ohio

11·14·'90-tl

. ' ~·-------------

,

'.+2 ·--------------

DK's FARM TOYS
by ERTL
Displayed at The
Quality Print Shop

9.,_ __ __ _
/0 _ _ _ __ _

:.. ..----------------------- ll.- - - - - -

lfOURS:

8:30am-4:00pm

614·992-3394
Or Call
.
742·3020 Evenings '

' 4··- - - -- - .12 . _ _ _ __
· r:
J:J •.~---:·'·----------------------6. _____________

, 7._ _ _ _ __
j

14. _ _ _ __
.15..________

Big Savings On All Cerpel In
Stock. Cl&amp;h And Carry, Mol·
lohan Carpoll, &amp;14-446-'11144.
0000 USED APPLIANCES
WsaMrs, drylt'l, retrl~rators,
rongH. SkiiKI• Aotollanceo,
Upper AI- Ra. llooldo Slono
Croll -1. C.IIIM-446-T.WI.

675-1333
l 4l46-2342
I
992-2156

Building
Supplies

P.ets for S81e

FarmSuppl1es
&amp;L1vestock

For lata : 1.21 Ac,. Lol, Locsted
AI Chooolola Loko i!Ubcllwlolon.
Coli Aft1&lt; lp.m. 614-3&amp;-1101.

!!_ltL.!!."Iitrs

.

robll,3~

)

-r

.

Autos lor S81e

li88 Dodge OaVIono, 16,000.
&amp;14-441-0731.
1819 Mazde 323, 41,000 Mlln, 4
Spood, Slondonl 2 Dooo,
H1tchblck, Excelllnl Condition,
13,800. 814·3&amp;7·1217 Ahor
5:30p.m.
1988 Mu1t1ng GT, whHtlbiiCk
lrim, kpood, V&amp;/5.0, 26,1100M1
pow.r Lumbar ...,,, llkl on
mull Nil, $9500, 114-a2-11731
802-2015
1989 Pontlec LaMent AMIFM
Radio, Air, Oood Condition,
31IOOO Mliow, 14,000. For Moro
In ormstlon c.u 814-448-2342
Ask For Paul.
231 V-G EnQlnoL 24,000 Mlloo,
And Car, T•lc• tJnt ottar. 114·
4464025.
Atk AboUI Our lnsttnt T11
Refund, Elt~~ Home Center,
614-712·1220.

72

Trucks for Sale

1178 lnt1rnatlonal dump truck,
304-678·288e.
118t Custom deluxe Ct.vy
1""'- holr ton wHh topr,:r, 8 eyl,
llsnderd lhltt, sxtra t r11, rune
goocl.aood eond, $1,300. ....

675-1104.

'

1110 GMC Shortbod, 5 Spoodl V·
&amp;, Loodod, 110,100; e...... ,...,
9w•t 16 $825 Firm. 1114-446=7357.

1990 Nla,.:.r.lcko:l:irJI"Y. bod
liner, k
, 21,
, AMIFM
ttereo, perfect cond, $6200, 814·

Farm Equipment

5000 Ford Dl-1 Troetor,
15,850; Lale M-1 4000 Ford
With lold1r, 16,350; 199t Merltz
S1ock Tnll1r, $1,895. Owner Will
Fln•nc•. 114·281-6522.
Jim's Fann Equlpmsnt, SR. 35,
West Gaftlpollt , 814-44&amp;-9777;
Wide sel~ellon new &amp; uNCI farm
!rectors &amp; lmplemenls Bur,
aell, trads, 8:00-5:00 wttkdlya,
Sat. till Noon.
Wanted: Used farm equipment,
anything you w•nt to all. 614·
256 ..1308, 614-25&amp;-&amp;040 After
8p.m.

73

Vans &amp; 4 WD's

11il84 Chevy Blazer, Silverado
piCkage, IUIO 305 engirw, 4
WhHI drl"'· V..a, PS , AC, PB,
sl1arp looking, 304·576·2fi52.
1984 Chevy Blarer, Silverado
piCkage, IUio 305 engine , 4
whHI drive, V..a, PS , AC, PO ,
sharp looking, 304·576-2652.
1984 JHp ChtrokH, 4 Wheel
Orin. 614-446-3869.

1988 Chevy C-10, 4 WD, PU,
AulD, v.e, 30'.. V.ry Good eon.
dillon, Rulli t.irlltl High Mites,
Aoklng, 14,900. 614488·1988 9·10 Bllltr 4x4, blue, s..
sptld, uk SS.OOO, call 614·98~
63
Livestock
4492
~
-.-,""T'"D"'K"Id,-A:-pr-::11
38:-:Na-:-n-ny-a-=-001
1989 Full Sire Bronco XLT,
First. 614-446-4656,Or Stt Uoyd lcldtd, Ewcolltnt Condition,
Call Anytime, 614..:167.0659.
Blake, N1l(lhborhood Road.

74

Motorcycles
::---..,....;.,.-..,....-,-,::-:: 1990 Yamat.a Warrior 4 Whtsler,
Top quality hay for stlt, $1.25 350 ~ Motor; Acceatorlas In·
cludlcl; Hllmel, GoaoiH, And
square bala, call 614·62·3826
Kidney BOll. $1,800. 'l1oyo: 014·
448-8269; Evenings: 614·31'9-

64

Hay &amp; Grain

Transportation

2715.

1981 Kswauld 100-R Nln)l Twin
Cam, 16 V11va, 2,600 M1111,
Showroom Condhion, $3,200,
71 Autos for Sale
':':::::--::--,.--:--":":==:- 614·245-5588.
1f73 Merctdes-Bsnz, 450SL,
both topi, 108,000mllll, Sliver 75 Boats &amp; Motors
color Mirc.dn. top of th• lin•
for Sale
c:onvertlbls, 19800 llrm, 949205!5 after 5pm
5 HP Sesrs, Gamallsher Motor, 1 ·
1W7 Ctdllllc Coupo Oovllll, Year Old, Like New.L Remington
Rib aantll, ~ew. ·
bHutlh.ll car, every option, a 110D 12
614-388-8'18 .
.._,., $11100, S14-i92.et'19

Gar

1978 Chevrolst Impala, Easy On 76
Gas, Nics Body And Interior.

Auto Pans &amp;
814-446-4959.
Accessories
1979 Chrysler Cordobl , new Budget Tnnamllliont, Uud &amp;
palnl, new tlrts, $1000, 304-675- rebuilt, l llrtlng 11 199; Al.llo
6955 after 5pm
Pan•. 614·245-5677, 614--379226,.
1979 Tovota Cellca With Air, 2
New Tins, Good Motor, Sis At New gas tankl, body pirtl, one
1818 Ch1lh1m Avenut, Gal- ton truck whHII, radlalora,
lipolle, Ohlo.ISOO.
floor malt 14c. 0 &amp; A ALIIo,
A l ple~. wV. 304-372·3933 or 1·
1980 Ford Pinto Ponl, Excellent 800·273-8585 ..
Condition, Mu~ St I! 614·256·
1750.
79 Campers &amp;
1983 Csmaro 2·28 Nsw Cor·
Motor Homes
vetteJ Whltl Pai~!L..btlun Grey
lnlenor, Loldld wnh Every Op- 1981 Toyota mini-cruiser motor
tion, V-i, Bullt· Up. Gel Mu~elt home 3500MI like new, Hll·
1
Car Pertormanc. With New contained,
would cont ld., parStyli sh lookt, Must Still 614· lilltrtdt, $.14,500,
614-h2·3H2
245--6588.
1983 Uncoln Town C.r, claim
Services
high mlllge, loaded, 814·892·
11731 it92.:Zltl5.

1983 Renault Alll1nce, New
Home
Paint, Excellent lnltrior, New 81
Tlrn. Ntld1 Englnt Repair, 114·
Improvements
446~1772 BtlwNn 11.m.To ,p.m.
BASEMENT
1184 Buick Rogol Llmhldi! 2dr,
WATERPROOFING
AU Ewi11'1 78,800 Mlln, xcel·
lsnt Condition, S3,200. 614·256- Uneondlt5onal lifetime guantn·
IH. Local refiM'IIncH furnished.
112 4.
FrH ntlmatu. Call collect 1· ·
1984 Camoro Z·~8 0 T&lt;ops1 350 .&amp;14-237.Q488, cloy Dr nlghl.
sng, auto, h)eaea, S300U, or Rogsrs 811ement Waterprootrade lor S-10 Billet or 5·10 llng.
truck, 304-175-3318
Complltl Mobile Horne Set-Ups,
11&amp;4 Dodge 100. 1350, 514-m · Rep~lr s; Comrnerk:al, Auid.n3873
Ual lmprovtments. Including:
Ph.mblng, Electrical. lnauranca
1984 Dod~t~ Arlo, 4 door, black, Clalma
kctpltd. IM·25e--1811.
AM!FM, CIIHite, 4 cyi, niW IX·
haust, 6t4-992·7231, l'ltnlngs
Curtis Home lmprovtrntnce:
YNre Experience On Older &amp;
19&amp;4 Okl1 Dttt• 88, 2dr coupe, Hewer
Homes. Room AddiUone,
t&gt;.a utiful hlmlly car, sv.ry op- FDundlllon
Roollr!g,
tion, 307 V-8, $2295, 614-992• Khchono And WD&lt;Ic,
lllhl.
F'"
Ei8719
tlmal•l ReflrencM, No Job To •
1985 Ford Escor1 Stllionwagon, Big Or Smoll ll14-141-0225.
Low Mlltaat, Good Condinon,
FrMman'a Plumbing And HMt·
AC. PS, Plf, Auto. 1114-448-0041i1, lng,
614-25&amp;-1il1.
Aner 4:30p.m.
Ron's TV Strvlc•, lpeelallzlng
1985 VW SciM'OC0 1 Will Takl In Z.nhh 1110 Mrvk:lng most
Boot Offtr. 814-448-1607.
other bfanda. Hou .. calft, sl.o
1fil,86 Escort $800; 1986 Turlsmo, aom1 spplllnce r.JIIIrs. WV
low mlltl, sun roof, tiOSO; 1987 3044 78-2398 Ohio 514-146-2454.
Horllon, 40 miiH gal. 304-175- Dlvie
Slw·Vac
Servtce,
2440.
GeorgH Crttk Rd. Ptrts, aup1986 F01d Tauru• St1llonwagon, plln, pickup, and delivery. 614loaded, $4,500. Excellent eondi· 446-0294.
tlon. 614-256-142i.
Will bulkt pet lo CO'ml , dtcklrl
1987 Chevy Nova : hlofl mll..ge, acriiMd rooms, pvt up Yin
n!Mda np~ll. Good lransporta· llldlng or traUer skirting. 1
lion car. Reduced: $500 To 245-91'2.
$1,100. Formor8lnlormatlon Call : ::..;;..:.::::--:-:--::-- 82 Plumbing &amp;
&amp;14-44,.234~Aok lor Poul.

l~f.....~o~'r~ndll~l

Heating
C.rter'a Plumbing
Founh and Pins
G1UipoUe, Ohio

614-446-

64114.

614-4~1-3188

84

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

Rnldlntlel or commercial •
wiring, new llfVIce or r.pah. :
M11ter Ucenud llectrlc..n. •
Rldtnour Eloct!lcl~ :104-f'IS.
ITif.

87 Upholetary
-::::;:;::-';;:·::::::;·:::::.:::--::~
......_,, U.....,01or1- ~
--··•
.. ~
.,e - ·~
lng trl counly.,.. 21 Jllto. Tho
bltl In lumlure . _.........
Coil
304-175-4154 "" .... -~
tlmatn.

:

••

~
•t:

742·2451 . '

t

:1-14-11'1111
\

"

'

lm-8173/ 1i192·2D15

61

Ull87 Dodge Shelby Shadow
CSX, 2.2 Turbo, lntercooled, 5soetd .t.MIFM Clll, AC, PS
PB. !kriouo lnqui~K only/
Evenlnga IW4e2-8125.
1SII87 Olds Cutlall Cieri grsy
sz.eoo. 1Ne Old• ctera bl1ck
$2,215. 11111 Ford Ranger XLT
$2,115. 11185 Ford Ronaer ood
$2,~. 11186 Dodgo Vlllo· 414
$2,100. 11185 Oldomolollo Dolls
Floh Tonk, 24t3 JockMn Avo. u 12,711. 11182 Comoro V-4
Palnl PIIIRnl, :104-f711-2()13, $1,1111. 11185 Iuick Sk~wk
154,000 mil• 12.!11. 1187
lull lint T"""""'-·'II!Lblnll, c;avollor
Z liiUI $2,600.
omollon10111oond-·
1 - C..olltr 4 door brown
$5,100. 1171 Ford F·150 414
PI~ Colllo pupplto, black I
- - SeDII:CU:'~·eo - ··-· Yl'i
- 2-3712.'"·
· U.-,
IO go! Kllven,
mommy
lfOipd,In
114-'JIIMill

G"""" ond Suooly Shop-Pol
GroominG. All fWMdt, atyles.
Jams Pt1 Food Otaltr. Julie
Webb. Call 814-«&amp;.om.
AKC rttltlertd Mlnahwl Dlcft.
shund, vet ~ecktd. 304-6752113.

2 Fill Cllln Lols1• 100'1115', &amp;
1001 tiO' Ill\- 1 oollo Will· 01
HoopHo~ TrolltfW AI-. Chy
Wattr And hwtr Avalllble. Clll
614 441 41101 After 5p.m.

~.

$50 A Ploeo, EO!COI·

Tools: Cnttaman, Rigid, Proto,
Sna~n, misc., slto guns for
:"::.''::.·.:.&amp;1~4·.:.1'1;:2..:;
·200:;.;;1_ _ ___

55

For Sale
or Trade
Will Trad1 1ml Chsvy, 4•4 PU
For Auto 112 To 314 Ton PU. 114256..1824.

$2, 500. 114479-2164,

Lois &amp;
112 Atra , Fiat, On Rt. 2, North at
Point Pl111ant, Stpllc Sratem,
Electric Hook-up And Watsr.
Rllc:l)' FOf Mablls Home. Frenoh
City Mobll1 Hocnee, 1114-441-

Loll

Ulld I YNr,

!Mt Condition, 814-3e'1-040t.

tn, Ato Gt1ndl, OH Call 11,..
:MUI2t

Acreage

35

ThrH 10 Ft. Ballbolrd Hlltsrs,

Block, brk:ll, MWtr DiPit , windows, lintels, lie. Claude Wln-

11340, 1-400.231-4461.

12·2-9t· 1 mo. pd.

INDIHNDIIIT
URNJ ClUNIIS
1M Till FlOOR CARE

2 Hdroom mobile home and 2
bedroom home, 17 acres,
136!000. l.olert, 304-495-9421 of·
ltr :00 PM.
Cllwoton BuckJnghsm 21151, 3br,
2 Bl !hl, Pallo Doorlo Deluxe
Carptt Sler.a Spac I Price
$211,986. (DIIPial Only). Flnonc·
lng Available. French Clly
Mobile Home~, 114-446-11340, 1·
800·231..C4e7.
Short nme On Job7 Poll Coodll
History A Problem? Many
R1poaN1Md Mobile HomH To
ChooN From. Small Down
Payment. Ceii1-ICJ0.58t-5711.

•

59

Household
Goods

r.

Fra1111 Rtpa1r
NEW I. USED PARTS
FOR All MAKES
I. MODELS
992-7013 or

•Reaaon•bl• Rlllea
.Quality Wor~
•FrH Elatlm,rtea
.C.rpei_Hn Fnt Dry
nme
oHigh Gloat on n1e ·•
· Floor Flnilh
IIKIIIWIS, q.jr .
Rt. l, llllflio4CIII.

wanted to Do

.

1~

WHALEY'S AUTO
WANTED
PARTS
low Grade Oak S'eclallzlng
In Custom

Saw Logs
$150 per 1,00
Delivered To

Small 2br HOUII In Gllllpolla.
Rsfwsncn Requlr.d. 61of.245-

5332.

Pupploo: 11-24.

MIDDIIPOD

~M ast ic

Business
Training

Rltrtln
Nowii!Southurattm 1375.
Buolnou Collo(ll, ~~ Volley 3 btclroom houu In country,
Plaza. C.ll Todly, 8
-436711
OIMI mil• from Mason 1 $250. ptr
Reglater1llon 60-05-12748.
rna, deposit r.qulrMI, 304·773-

2yra. old, llarted on cattle &amp;14!
IOI.a&amp;a evenlnge
'

11

c.uror rree
~·111·"JAMIIIIIII
992-2772

71

home, bath, kitchen,
l1rg1 Uvlngroom,
mile out Sand Hill

Employment Services

MASTIC®THE NATION'S FINEST
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Renlals

Situation
Wanted

MNI: 81~111: GUYI * Glrlt:. C.ll
Todoy. Dill Tonight 1-eoo-IOJ.
1004 , 12.95/mln. MUll Bt Ovtr
18.

Wanted to Buy
Farm111 Cub Tr1ctor With Attachments. Call 614-998-6528.
Want To Least Tobacco 81111 .
Call After 7p.m. 814·388-9769.
Wanted to buy old I!Jbe radios,
junkers or mint cond, big
monsy for some models made
btlore 1942. Phons Chuch 304·
882·2220.
Wanted To Buy: Junk Autos
Witll Or Without Motors. Call
Larry Lively. 614-388-830:1.
Top Prien Psld: All Old U.S.
Coins, Gold Ring~ Sliver Coins,
Gokt Coins. M.T.::J. Coin Shop,
15'1 Second Avenue, Gallipolis.
Would Llk1 To Buy Used Tan·
nlng Bed. Call After Sp.m. 614·
446.0129.

, Now In

Calls)

Last markdown
on shoes
before closing
R&amp;C EXCAVATING
store.
BULLDOZING
OPEN FRI. &amp; SAt

12

9

SIMON'S
PICK·A·PAIR

Public Notice

3

PubliC Notice

The

Ohio

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

Announceme nts

24, 1992

t
the line ol said Ohio Val· an ign•, to construct, formerly OWOfd by Lucy certificate or maettr list O
dolinquenttractt
lor
1
Iotti
ley Manulacturing Corp.; mainta in, rep1ir 1 s ix Inch Osborn, deceaeed . Baing
thence north 58 deg. 25' sewer tine lo a run on aaid the e ame real eatale of $31,240.59.
The flrot ouch oalo ohall
weat244 feel with lhe line of real eatate, together with conveyed unto W. Fred
be
at10:00 A.M. atthelrorit
Oaborn
by
Harnen
G.
said Ohio Valley Manu· lho right of lngreoo and
facturing Corp.; lhenca egreaa for aald Grantore, Osborn and Allee Osborn, otepo of tho Molga County
north 1 dog. 45' eaol 229 .5 lh 1 1
1
1
d hlo wile, by deed daled Courthouu In Pomeroy,
r agan ' ' 811 gna an
'eel With the line of said invitees,
to conatruct October 10, 1962, recorded Ohio on tho 20th ·day of Feb
company to the south line maintain and repair the sara In Deed Book No. 217 at ruary, 1992.
If aald parcels do not
of the Christian Church lot; atwlr line. Subject to all Pa~e 89, Deed Records at
receive
a sufficient bid, they
thence west 336 feel along '
d hi""
1
M01go Counly, Ohio.
the soulllline of the Church ~::;:~~nla an
IIP'ways 0
Deed Reference : Volume shall be offered for aale,
lot and the south line of lhe
Relerence Deed a: Vol . 238, Page 345, Meigo under the ume terrna and
condition• of the first ule
cemelery to the soulhwest 166, page 99; and Volume County Deed Recordo.
Whereas, such Judgment and at lhe same time of daY
corner of said cemetery; 227, Page 401, Melga
ordere such real property lo and at the same place, on
lhence north 0 deg. 38' east County Deed Recordo.
265 .1 fe el along lho west
PARCEL 5: Situated In be oold by the undorolgnod Tueoday, tho 3rd day of
lin e olsaid cemetery lo the the County of Meiga, In the to satisfy lhe tot•l amount March, 1992, for an amount
thai equals at leaat:
place of beginning, con· Stille of Ohio, and In the ol auch judgmentj
Aa In the court's order,
Now,
lherelore,
public
lain ing 22.36 acres . Ex· Townahip of Olive, bounded
noUce is hereby given lhall, the lair market value
cepling and reserving to the and dncribed 11 follows:
former Grantor, Edda BogBeing the western one· Jamoo M. Souloby of Meigo of the parcels as
gess ; her administrators, half ol the western one-half County, Ohio, will sell such determined by the county
ex ecutors, heirs and in ltraction 32, Town 4, real property at public auditor, in the amount
as si gn s one· sixteenlh Range 11 of the Ohio suction, lor cash , Ia lhe of $84,950.00 or tho
{111 6) of ~II oil and gas lying Company'• Purcha11, and highest bidder of an amount total amount ol lhe
judgment, Including all
under and within the beginning at tha aoutheaat that OCJUalo atloaot:
auesamenta ·,
As 1n the court's order, taxes ,
premises llereby conveyed, corner of said Fraction No.
devel oped , produc ed and 32, and running weat to lhe fair market value of lhe charges, penalties, anti
removed therefrom , s ubject Ianda now owned by Lane parcels as determined by lnloreot payable ouboo.
to an oil and gas lease from Vineyard (formerly owned the county auditor, in the quentto tho delivery to tho
Edda Bogges s lo B. H. by Reuben Webolor); thonco smount of $84,950.00 or proaecuting atlorney of the
Putn am da ted April 24th, north far enough to make lhe total amount of delinquent land tax
1948, and recorded in Vol. one hundred acres; thence lhe judgment, including certificate or master list of
41, page 38 of the lease eaat to the Fraction line ; ell taxes, assessments, delinquent tracts for a total
Rec ords of Meigs County, thence s outh to the place of charges, penalties, and of $31,240.59.
James W. Souloby,
Oh io. Subject to lhe right of beginning, containing twen· lnlereot payable oub ·
Sheri II
th e Grantors , Guy G. ly-five 1cres, more or le11, sequent to the delivery lo
Meigs
Counly,
Ohio
lhe
prosecuting
attorney
of
Boggess and Myrtle C. and lying In lhe western
Boggess, th eir heirs and one-half of real estate the delinquent land lax (1) 17, 24, 31, 3tc
~...:,:_..,._..,._ _ _...J.:....:....:...:....:....:.;.;:;_,.;;..:.,;J,_________.J.._________

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

RUTLAND LEG ION HALL
MARLI NS WHITE'S HILL BAND
&amp; J EANIE AND HER BAND
Admission $3 .00 or
$6 00 for Couple
6 10 12 P.M. Every Friday Night

Public Notice

Senttnel lfll ·

cept - cl•sitied displ~ . Busineu C•• d ~~ond legll notices!
will 1110 lppe• In tbe Pt PIIMtnt Aegr1ter 1nd the Gelli
pol11 D11ly Tribune. re1chrng o~ttr 18,000 hornet

• Pr ice of ad fo r 1!1 c ~ rtall !!t tert '' double prtCII o l • d cost
"7 po tnt li ne t ype onlr ~o~ted

In Ml!rtloi rlifr

813.00
11 .30/ day

•.a. cllttifllld •dv•rtisement pltced in The D1•l~

wtll be

• Sentinel is not respons ible for errors 1fte! f~r st d~ IChe ctt
tor enort flfll dWtt 1d ru nt'" pipe• I Cel b f!lo re 2 00 P m
d.v lh el' publi c~ tOn to mik e co rrech on
"Ads thl1 must be p11d m 1dv1n ce er l!'
C1 r d o t Th~nks
HI J'IJ'I'!' Ads

es.oo

15
15
15

.20
.30
.42
.60
05 / doy

R•tn ere tor conM euthll ru nt. brolltn uetdiVt will bt charelld
fnr 11rh tlrw 11 Uplrlle ldl .

Maton count •• must be pr e

" Rece!\111 S 50 dtt co unt t or 1d1 patd ,., 1dv1n ce
"fre• 1cts - Gtvuwar 1nd Fou nd 1ds undfllf 15 wt'rdt

•

.4.00
e&amp;.OO

15

3

Ov'r 16 Word1

R111

H

1

8 A.M. until NllON SATURDAY
POLICI ES

Words

Days

Public Notice

24, 1992

•

,'

•
•
~•

�•

Page-10-The Dally Sentinel
.f

Pomeroy~lddleport,

Ohio

Friday, January 24, 1992

Mumps, rubella can be wiped out, Retiring kids' TV crusader Peggy
international health group predicts Charren says she'll keep acting up

By ROBERT BYRD
~nd dracunculiasis, a J?Brasitic
mf~uon, also can be ehmmated.
Associated Press Writer
ATLANTA (AP)- Mumps
But netther the WHO or anyand rubella can be wiped from the b?dy else has previOusly reco~planet, perhaps in 10 years with a mzed the real potential opponuntconcerted effort, a global health ty ' ' in th~ case of mumps and
fuSk force said Thursday.
rubella, satd Dr. Donald Hopkms,
The International Task Force for prOJect dlfector. for the !ask fo~e.
Disease Eradication said the com- That opportunity anses, he satd,
moo but potentially serious child- because mumps and rubella ''are
hood diseases are "potentially less mfe~t1ous th~n measles, yet
good candidates for eradication," they are JOmed w1th the measles
chiefly through intensive world- vaccme at almost no additional
wide use of the measles- mumps- cost.
' 'We think it's logical for the
rubella vaccine.
The prospects for wiping out world to consider giving MMR
other childhood diseases such as va ccin e every place where the
diphtheria and penussis, or whoop- world is now 'giving only measles
ing cough, are not as good, the rask vaccine."
force concluded.
Eradication of mumps and
Eradication was achieved with rubella will likely take a decade or
smallpox in 1978. The World more, Hopkins said.
Health Organization and the_lnter" If the world decides to go after
national Task Force for D1scasc them, it could be done within 10
Eradication have since said polio years," he said. "The ad van rage is

that global im,;unization systems
for children are much better today ' By STEPHANIE SCHOR OW
Associated Press Writer
than,they were even five years
ago.
'AMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) The eradication of smallpox She's bat~ed television networks,
proved that such an effon saves not the Reagan White House and even
JUSt lives, but money, Hopkins said. the Teen-age Murant Ninja Turtles.
Peggy Charren, an advocate for
''We can potentially realize
reduced health care costs, as well better children's television for
as obviously eliminate forever the more than two decades, regrets
. 1llness and death caused by these only that she never made President
Nixon's enemies list.
two diseases."
Since 1968, Charren's group,
The incidence of mumps and
for Children's Television,
Action
rubella worldwide is not precisely
known. The United Slates reported has buzzed federal agencies, TV
4,031 mumps cases and 1,093 executives and politicians to
improve children ' s programming
rubella cases last year.
• • More data on ... impact in and limit advertising directed at
developing counuies are needed to kids.
Earlier this month, she
support development of the necesannounced
that the Cambridgesary political commitment" to
based
ACT
would disband at the
eradication, the task force said in
end
of
the
yearnot because chilits reporl Thursday, published by
dren's
television
is better, but
the U.S. Centers for Disease Conbecause federal regulations long
trol.
sought by ACT now are in place.
"It seems crazy to slay in business to be a sound bite," said Charrcn, who as ACT president led the
way for the 1990 Children's Tele-

W-EB
''
LIS IIGS

like are cartoon characters with
heavy merchandising campaigns
behind them, characters with an
emphasis on violence, like "G .I.
Joe" and "Teen-age Murant Ninja
Turtles, " or "mindlessly cute"
characters. like "The Care Bears"
and "My Little Pony."
ACT was form ed in Charren's
suburban Boston home with two
other women, also mothers, who
were appalled by what television
offered young viewers.

sons.' The attitude of the program
toward censorship was perfect.' '
ACT had opposed a proposed
ban by the Federal Communica-

tions Commission on ' ' indecent"
broadcasts.
."From the beginning, ACT said
censorship was worse than junk on
television," Charren said. "We're
not trying to get anything off the
air. You can turn it off. But you

can't tum on what's missing.''
What's there that she doesn't

BOWL

MORNING
5:00 (J) (MO) Love Bolt
(J) Momlng Agriculture

SAVINGS

Ropo~

(TU,WE,TH,FR) NBC
Nlghttldt
0 (TU) Paid Program
0 ~F~ My Slote• Bom
@ M ) Women's Pro Snow
Sktlng
18J (MO) Sports LltoNight
18J (TU, WE,TH,FR) ShowBiz
Today
5:05 (I) D (TU, WE,TH,FR) Home
Shopping
(I) (MO) Hogon'l HorOOI
(I) (TU,WE,TH,FR) Gomer
Pyla
5:30 (I) Thlo Momlnt• Buotno11
(I) It ABC Wo d Nowo Thta
Moml:'&amp;.
lll AG y
crJI (WE,TH,FR) Pold
:"8rom
D oiling Fft
a OoyBraak
5:35 (I) D NBC N:fnflldo
(I) CNN Hood lno Nowo
6:00 (I) II Q)J NBC Nowo ot
Q)J

SUNDAY, JAN. 26TH

3 P.M.-7 P.M.

Save An Additional

ACT' s assets, about $125,000,
will be donated to the Harvard University Graduate School of Education for an annual fellowship and a
lecture series on children's TV, and
Charren said she expects local
groups to carry on ACT's agenda.
Although Charren remains disgusted with much of children's TV,
she doesn't consider the medium
the menace. She loves television.
"A lot of people look down on
TV. I think it's as good- or can
be as good - as any other medium ,'' said Charren, a quick-talking,
diminutive 63-year-old.
"TV should be like a good
library. You can find all kinds of
junky books in the library, I love
cartoons. In fact, I like 'The Simp-

1O%on
Already Reduced
Winter Mercbandise
ON THE "T" IN MIDDLEPORT

Sun~oe

(J) Shophord'o Chapel
Documentary
(I) ABC Wortd Nowo Thlo
Momln8
IJ) (M ) Agelnot All Odds:
lnolcla SlotloUco
l!l (TU) Art ol tho Westem
World
IJ) (WE) Buslnooo end tho
Lew
IJ) (TH) Buolne11 ot

01110

Men3='ement

-

IJ)
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1!1J CBS Morning Nowo
t!D • T11nog1 Mutant Ninja
Twtloo
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DBodleolnlllJ Todoy With Marilyn
6:05 (I) I Lovo Lucy
6:15 (I) Nowo
6:30 (I) II I!IJ Nowo
(J) Foith 20
(I) ABC Wortd Newt Thlo
Momln8
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tnoldl Statlttlcl
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DON TATE
CHm OLDS CADILLAC GEO
DOG GONE ·James Helmer of Cortez,
Colo., uses a hose to vacuum prairie dogs out of
their holes on Denver Water Board property in
Greenwood Village, Colo. The vacuum system,
which is the brainchild of Gay Balfour, sucks

Big pharmaceutical maker will make
heart drugs free to needy uninsured
NEW YORK (AP) - BristolMyers Squibb Co. , one of th e
nation ' s leading pharmaceutical
makers, said1today it will provide
free cardiovascular drugs to needy
Am ericans unprotected by health

insurance.

Bristol Myers-Squibb said the
new program expands a previously
existing policy that provided those
in need with access to its anti -cancer drugs and its AIDS medication
'

POMEROY, OHIO
NEW AND USED CARS AND TRUCKS
A'r LOW. LOW PRICES

the prairie dogs out of their holes and into the
truck. The animals are deposited alive in a large
holding tank in the truck and will later be relocated. (AP)

Videx.
ning March I, is expected to pro" We have taken this initiative vide tens of millions of dollars
to help the many thousands of worth of medication over the next
Americans suffering from cardio- five years, said Bruce Ross, presivascu lar disease , the country ' s dent of Bristol-Myers' U.S. pharlargest killer, who each year fall maceuticals group.
through the nation ' s health care
Cardiovascular diseases affect
safety net," said Richard L. Gelb, more than on in four Americans
chairman and chief executive offi- and are the major cause of death in
cer.
the United States. Hypertension,
The program, which will make which affects about 61 million
18 different drugs available begin- Americans, is more prevalent in the

THE ALL NEW 199 2
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A TEST DRIVE.
Attention, Bwslness People
leg. Prke........................$9,374.00
Sale P1ke...........................8,999.00
Rebote... ..........................-SSOO.OO
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YOUR

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1988 OLDS CALAIS
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IJ) (TH) Butlilell at
Mo;r,ment
IJ)
) Growing Ytoro
t!D. Mente Mtlodloo
Q)J 1D CBS Morning Nowo
0 (MO) Paid Program
DUpCto..
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aJ1 Jomeo Robloon
1:35 (I) Flinlltonoo
6:45 (I) NIWI
7:00 til II 101 Today
· (J) 8ucc111·N·LIIo
(I) (I). Good Morning

.

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One Owner. MUST SEE!

1987 OLDS CALAIS ·
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IJ)StumeS1Not
I!IJ II:JIID CBS Thlo Morning
t!DIII Jomn Bond Jr.
0 M'9lllo GoriAI ond
Friondo
D SportoCentll

1900 CHEVY
LUMINA

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poor.

leg. Prke......................$14,290.00
Sale Prke.....................J~242.00
Rebote. ............................-$750.00
YOIIR PIICI.$11,492.00

I8J DI~Braok

Reg, Prke........................$8,488.00
Don Tale Dis&lt;ounl...............l, 489.00
TOUR PRICI... $6,999.00
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Olmurll
til YldtoMomlng
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1:05 (I) Utile on 1M
Prllrlo
1:30 I]) llewltclltcl
I

t!D • K-'11 Copolond
Q .CI-Ixpron

a

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IO:GO (I) • Ctnolc Concenbltlon

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0 Yottron
0 The Llttlto
1:35 (I) Bow1:00(%)• Joon Rlvoro
(I) (I). 01 Uva With
Rllgil l l(jlthio LH
(ZJ i!JITV Programming

a candid c -

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lllJAL
7:05 (I) Tom ond Jerry's
Funhouse
7:30 t!D II G.l. Joe
0 ScoobyOoo
I8J Bullnooo Illy
1111 Popeyo
1:00 (J) DuckTIIel
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t!D 111 Peter Pon a tho
Plrotto
O!lcooby Ooo
I8J OoyBtaok
aJI A:.l• Oogglo and
Frlt I
1:05 (I) I DJWom ot Joannle
6:30 (J) Bozo
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10:30 (I) D One on One With John
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IIJ ID Fomly Foud
11:00 (I) D MouJY Povlch
(!) Joan Rivero
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(I)Q ome
I!IJ Q)J II Price II Right
t!D m Sllcceoo-N-LIIo
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Teth
0 Divorce Court
@Golfing FH
I8J DoyWotch
1111 Heart to Heart With
Sholle Woloh
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11:30 mSesame S1Not
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0 DIVOICO Court
@ Body by Joko
18J C~er l Co
1111 Paid Pn~gram
AFTERNOON
12:oo til a w (I) a I!IJ aJ m
Q)J NOWI
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a NowoHour
12:05 (!) Perry Mooon
12:30 (2) D 101 A Clooer Look
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liJ IIJ Ill Young end the
Rootleoo
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® (TU) Remodeling and
DocoroUn&amp;J.odoy
® (WE)
b~ Side
® (TH) Ootng ur Way
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llll (MO,FR) Amorican Boby
llll (TU,TH) Healthy Kldl
1:DO (I) II 101 Oayo ol Our Livea
(!) Nowo
(I) (I) It All My Children
lllliD Andy Grtfflth
0 Supertor Court
aT:foCard
D ( ) Amoricon Muocte
Magazine
'
D (TU) GymnotHco
D (WEI Pro Snow Skiing
D (TH) Amortca•o Horae
D (FR) Thoroughbred
Dlgoot
a Sonya Uvo
llll (MOl MOYIE: Thundll In

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111111
(!)

Mtnbull
Nn Tori

1111

NASH

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CNN

=
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FAM

NtWI
F~mll'

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Ill Father Know• Beat
3:05 (!) Wo~d Famous Popeyo
3:30 (!) Soved by the Boll
(!) Mtoter Rogere•
Nolghbolhood
l!l (MO) l.lnd ...peo With
Nonna

1!J (TU) PolnUng Fant11y
Flowers
l!l (WEI Welcomo to My
Studio
l!l (TH) B~dgo Cloao
l!l (FR) Homo Fn1nt
lllliD Tole Spin
D Scrabble
® .Top Cord
@ · (TU) NCAA Anol Four

Down

(TU) MOYIE: Alcatraz:
The Whole Shocking StoiY
(PI 1 ot 21
(I) (WEI MOYlE: Alcatraz:
The Whole Shocking SIOJY
(PI 2 ot 2)
(I) (TH) MOVIE: They Only
Kill Thtl• Mullro
(I) (FR) MOYIE: The Loot
Capone
1:30 I!IJ 101411 Bold and tho
Boautttut
t!D81 Gomer Pyle
0 Superior Coult
aaooStar
D (Fit) lnolcla 1M PGA
(I)

Tour

2:00 (I) II 101 Anothor World
(J) Now RCon Be Told
(I) (I) D Ono Lito to u ..
I!IJ II:Jie A• u.. wotld
Tuma
t!D Ill (MO) Pold Program
t!D Ill (TU,WE,TH,FR)
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OJoket"IWIId
a Crook ond chao
@ (MO) Women'I Colillle
Bookotbol
@ ~E) Top Ronk Boxing
@
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D Fit) Stnlor PGA GoH
1111 NtwoDoy
llll (FR) The Boy King
"2:30 (I) Andy Glllllth
t!D. DuckTIIel
0 Win, looe or Draw
til (MO,TU,WE,FR) On

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3:00 (I) • 01 81ntlllorblra
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PI~
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Jonklno' Art
w lhop
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Nolml

COunty, Ind.
7:00 (2) D Saturday lleport/Thlo
WHk In Po~lamont
(I) Llrry Jontl
(I) It 0 Paid Program
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lllll8 Bucky O'Hara ond tho
Toed Wore
tal Ill lilopactor Godget Q
tDl K-TV
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a II Hommennon Q
llll Gelllell
7:05 (!) Gunomoko
7:30 (2) II Mr. Cartoon
(!) Wo~d TomoiTOw
(I) Ill 101 Captain Planet
end tho PtaneiHro Q
liJ Agri Country
IIlli&amp; Toxic Crusodoro
Ole Aldora In tho Sky Q
DESPNOut-.
a NowofSportl Clo. .Up
Q ABC Wukend Special

Hlg~fl

E) NASCAR Y111 In
Rev low
@ (TH) Snowmobile
Ski-Doo Fonnula One Series
1111 Fothor Knows Boot
3:35 (!)Tom end Jony'o
FunhouH

4:00 (2) D 1!1J Q)J Oprah Winfrey
(J) DuckTaleo
(I) (MO,TU,WE,FR) Gonldo
(I) (I) II (TH) ABC
Aftorochool Special
(!)SooomoS1Not
(I) It (MO,TU,WE,FR) Jenny

Jones

l!l Body Electric
llll Ill Oolkwl:'8 Duck
IIJ mGolden Ills
0 (MO,TU,WE) $25,000
Pyramid
0 (TH,FR) PGA Gall
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D (MO,TU,WE,TH) Globol
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D (FR) Dovlo Cup onnlo
a EortyPrime
1111 Heroeo on Hot Wheels
4:30 (J) Chip •n• Dolo's Rfocuo
Rangero
l!l Stoomo Street
LID ID IIHUojulco
~ (1)227
0 (MO,TU,WE) P1011 You•
Luck
a lnolde Politics '92
1111 Captain N
4:35 (I) Btady Bunch
5:00 (I) II Cosby Show
(J) (MD, WE) Uttlt Monnold
I]) (TU,TH) Kldd Video
I]) SaRI t&gt;qww Tum
' (I) . II'J Povith 1
(!) Roodlng Rainbow
(I) a Who'o tho Boll?
1!1J Joo/tordyl
t!D 1D lny Toons

M

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8:00 (2) • 01 Specacoll Q
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(I) Ill

tiiQ Now
Adve9tre' of Wlnnlo 1111

Pooh

1!J Fre h Fleldo
I!IJ Spolll 011111
· I!D 18 Attock ot 1M Klltr
Tomoto8oQ
~ e Jim Henoon'o Muppet
Boblioo C
D Sportimen•o Chlllongo
1111 OoyBNik
liD Augle Dogglo and
Friondo
8:05 (!) Bononn
8:30 (2)
QJI YoiluYogll Q
Ill lnori!J llne11 Ropo!t
IJJ
Ill Lind ol the
Loll
l!l No loce Lil&lt;o Home
llll Wide Wotld ot Kldo
lllllll Bobby'o World C
~a~e Mo- Goooe olld
Grimm C
DGreoTOutdooro
a NewofTht Big Story
llll Popeyt
9:00 (1J Ill 101 Coptaln Nond tho
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(!) Weekend Morning Newo

1

Q(

Adventure a
IIJ II Qoraldo

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tht Sun

Mon~

for steelhead and salmon on
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@

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(!)Body Eloclrlc

D
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a EartyPrimo
1111 SUper Mono Bn~o.
Superohow
5:05 (!) GOOd Timll
5:30 til II Ch..ro
(J) Fllntotonoa
(!) l!l Whora In tho Worid II
cannen Stndlego?
(I) a Moma'o Fomlly
1!1J (MO,TU,WE,TH) Nowo
1!1J (FRJ Hoolt ot Ohio
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0 (MO,TU,WE) My Two
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@ (MOl
Roporton
@ ~N AATodoy
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Dlgllt
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aJ1 Pcipeyo
5:35 (I) Jolteroono

\II Q tiiQ Oolkwlng Duek
·iii Shelley

'"~~rlleld end
lllllll T~ 6 Jtrry Klcla Q
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ID Jimmy Houlton Outdooll
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9:05 (I] wcw Powlllfour
9:30 (2) D 101 PfoStars Q
(!)BoclyEitctrlc
(I) D tiiQ lllotlljuk:O Q
l!l1'o Be Announced
llll. TAZ-MANIA Q
0 Hollywood In® Jqy of Gordtnlng
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sc:rtt

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10:00 (2) D 0 WllhKid Stoning
Moclulay Culkin C
(I)L.... Kteloom
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llll Thet'a My Dog Stereo.
10:05 (!) MOVIE: Tomorrow'o Child
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12:00)
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0 Gon10Gamoo

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Redsklns vs. Denver
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liJ AI Undne~o ln-Frlhormon
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101 ColltGt Btokelboll
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PurouR (2:001 Ste•eo. Q
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a Q Fomlly Tlet Q
1111 Tho Yl~glnlan
t2:05 (I) MOYIE: The Stodlng ol
Streh Bumo (2:001
12:30 (I) 11 Roggln'o H11011
(!) Ylc10ry Gordon~
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. 1!1J To Be Announc
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Wlloon
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6:00 (2) II (I) II liAl IIJ Ill
Newo
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llllll GNdge Motch
101 Wide World of Kldo
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a Worid Today
llll Bordortown Stereo. Q
6:05 (!) World Championship
WrostUng
8:30 ciJII 101 NBC Newo Q
(!) Wild America Stereo§
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Ill
0 11J II CBS Newo Q
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Clemson at Maryland (Ll
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1:00 (I) 11 Bobe Wlnklomon'o
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Dave Richey go pike fishing

llll New Zorro Stereo. Q
7:00 ~II 1!1J WhHI ot Fortune

/J5 Runaway With tho Rich l

in Saskatchewan.

(J) MOVIE: For Love ollvy
{PG) (2:00)
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F1mou1

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lllllll 101 Star TNk: Tho
Next GeneroUon
11J II Boywatch
OMacGY"II C
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all Nowo
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Stereo. Q
7:30 (2) 11 1111 Cooh Eaplotlon
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til Q WKRP In Cincinnati
llll Block Stallion Stereo. Q
8:00 (2) II 101 Golden 01~1
Blanche is atrald she's lost
ho1 sex appeal. Stereo. Q
(!) llullo Eye
(!) Advonturee ol Robin
Hood
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ond Boou1y Stereo.
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1:30 (I) II SportsCenter
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Sterap.
18J Nowo/ShowBlz Thil
WHk
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Arkansas at Kentucky (L)
(!) Stwlng With Nency
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Sacramento, Calif. (L)
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Wake Forest at Duke (LI !;I
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2:05 (I) MOYIE: Surviving: A
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2:30 (!) Boot ot Joy ol PalnUng
1121 Runawoy With tho Rich l
Fomouo
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3:00 (J) MOVIE: One ot Our
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charge. Stereo. Q
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(2:30) Stereo. C
lllliD COPS Willie
Investigating an armed
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(2:00)
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Match-Up
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Rooto (PI 6 ciT II (2:00)

8:05 (I) MOYIE: Skin Game (PGJ
(2:15)
8:30 (I) II 101 Walter and Emily
Things heat up between Man
and his ex-wife when she
comes to visit. Stereo. [J

(J) NBA Baeketbal Houston
Rockets at Chicago Bulls (LI
())It a II Gn&gt;wlng Polno
Mike's homeless friend Is
suspected ot stealing. (R) C.
l!l How ExpiOflro Stereo. 1;1
llllll COPS Officers toll a

Moorcro", U.S. diver Greg
Louganls and U.S. gymnast
Mary Lou Retton. Stereo. Q
Q)J To Be Announced
til Rem-lng ond
Oocarottng Todly

drive-by shooting while
conduct~
·n drug swaeps. (R)
Stereo. ·
® Oro Ole OpJY Uve
Stereo.
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Hlghllghll Buffalo Bills vs.
New York Giants.
9:00 (2) II 01 Empty Moat HerJY

1111 Newt~­

tiiG College Bookelboll
Minnesota at Illinois (L)
aJ1 Big Volley
3:30 (!) Woodworlclng tor
Everyone Stereo.
(I) 111 Sonlor PGA GoH Skins

panics after leaming
Dreyfuss needs an operation .

(R) Stereo. C
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By JAY SHARBUTT
AP Television Writer
NEW YORK- When the Gulf
War began, CNN producer Robert
Wiener was in Baghdad, helping
send the world live reports on the
start of the allied bombing campaign against Iraq.
A few hours later, Perry Smith,
a retired Air Force major general
who flew Phantom jets against
North Vietnam years earlier,
checked in at CNN headquarters in
A~anra. He was re~ng· for ternporary duty as ami ilary analyst
A" year later, Wiener and Smith
both are authors . After the war
ended on Feb. 27, each began a
book about his experiences (the
better-known CNN correspondent,
Peter Arnett, now is writing one for
which he's being paid a cool mil·
lion).
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September, is "How CNN Fought
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