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                  <text>ZESTA
CRACKERS

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MACARONI or
SPAGHEnl

Vol. 42, No. 188

Copyrighted 1992

County commissioners approve
proposal regarding jail expenses

s

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Chuck Roast•••••••• 1
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CAMPAIGN CHAIRMEN • Donna Carr, left, and Jane
Frymrer, right, will serve as Co-chairmen of the American Heart
Assoctation's Residential Campaign in Meigs County. The group

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Beginning Saturday, Feb. I,
nearly 200 volunteers from Meigs
County will begin work on the residential campaign of the American
Hean Association under the direction of co·chairmen Donna Carr
and Jane Frymyer.
These volunteers will be going
door to door educating their friends
and neighbors about the warning
signs of ·a'ileart attack and the
importance of quick medical attention while also raising funds to sup·
pon AHA programs and research.

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. paigns across the nation are being care could save a hfe," Frymyer
conducted by more than two mil- stated. "Most people wait nearly
lion AHA volunteers from all two hours after having the symp·

wa~~s~:~~

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continuing reduction
in the death rate from hean disease,
stroke and related disorders, an
estimated one million Americans
will die of cardiovascular diseases
this year. Nearly one-fifth of all
people killed by hean diseases are
under age 65. From the latest statistics available, 131 Meigs County
citizens died of hean disease in
1989. The total deaths from all
causes in 1989 were 25 L That
means that of all deaths in the area
heart disease accounts for 52 per:
cent. This is one of the highest figures in Ohio,
"The American Hean Association is known for its support of
research, which has lead to such
developments as cardiopulmonary
resuscitation, new drug treatments

:f~s ~!l~.h:! ~~~te~~~edrce:i

attention can be obtained the
greater the chances of survival and
recovery."
Donors beware!
In addition, the AHA is warning
the public to be cautious when
responding to mail or other
requests for donations from non·
profit organizations.
·
"Mailings from organizations
with similar sounding names may
confuse the donor and divert funds
from intended agencies," Carr
explained. "in particular, we are
concerned that the public may confuse the AHA with other groups
whose names included words like
'American' , 'National', 'Heart',
'Cardiac', and so on."
Continued on page 3

By BRIAN J, REED
bursement would be derennined by
Sentinel News Starr
the applicable coon in a hearing.
A resolution that would allow
After the resolution was passed,
the Meigs County Commissioners Jones poinred out that the resoluto recover the costs of incarcerating tion may never be appUed to a con·
convicted criminals was approved · victed criminal in' the county, but
when the board met in regular ses- according to Jones, "is now on the
sionTheWednproeposdasaly•. based on two sec- books to be used as a tool for the
courts to use when deemed neees·
tions of the Ohio Revised Code, sary ,"
was introduced by Commissioner
Program endorsed
Richard
Jean Trussell, Director or the
. E. Jones at last week's
mheeting. The acdtionfonhly applies to Meigs County Housing Authority,
those con.vtcte o c arges other and that group's chainnan, John
t an a mmor misdemeanor, and Weeks, updated the commissioners
who are housed in the county jail.
on that new board's activities.
Charges that may be reimbursed
According to Trussell, the initial
to the county by convicts could funding for the board's family selfinclude
and sufficiency program has not yet
medicalfood,
care.clothing,
Amountsshelter
of reim-

Depanmem of Housing and Urban
Development. However, the appli·
cation process for those funds is
now underway.
To help in that application process, Trussell and Weeks requested
that the commissioners provide
several things. First, they requesled
that a letter of suppon be written on
behalf of the program by the com·
missioners pledging material coop·
erau'on.
Weeks and Trussell asked that
~board appoint one of its members to the authority's board.
(Weeks, Judy Crooks, Bill Miller,
Florence Richards, and Paul Reed
are also on the board.) The board is
also requestt.ng thatth e co unt Y

and equipment, and perhaps pledge
a smaU amount of money for startup COSIS of the program, until HUD
provides operating costs.
According to Trussell. such an
offer on the pan of the county will
add additional "points" to benefit
Meigs County's application for
funds.
Once initiated, the program will
provide up to 50 rental housing
·
vouc hers.for 1ow-mcome
families
with children. The program
requires that the families pay 30
pen:ent of rent and utilities expenses while HUD pays the balance on
approved housing facilities. The
ultimate goal is to promore self·suffitctency
·
on th e pan of those low-

Ohio Governor George neering study on this project was
Voinovich and Ohio Depanrnent of completed 20 years ago m 1972,
Transportation Director Jerry Wray the project was placed on a shelf
have re·opened a door to progress where it remained until Voinovich
in Athens and Meigs Counties, and and Wray decided it should be
ultimately, in all of Southeastern revived in an effort to improve
Ohio.
highways in Southeastern Ohio.
John Dowler, Deputy Director Voinovtch and Wray made their
of ODOT's District 10 in Marietta, decision at the request of Dowler,
has received the "go ahead" from who asked earlier this month for
Voinovich and Wray to start the permission to include the Athens to
preliminary study of a proposed Darwin project on District IO's
project to relocate US Route 33 agenda. Preliminary engineering on
v flooM &gt;lAWt4HI&amp; t~ar.win.-Funds - •thoJIS8:jl8t-must ·be redone because
totaling $1.6 million have been the 1972 infonnation is outdated.
allotted for the preliminary srudy.
"The 1.6 million approved by
Although a preliminary engi· the state will provide funds to hire

a consultant to complete an envi·
ronmental document and prelimi·
nary engineering study, both neces·
sary before the project can move
into the design phase," Dowler
said.
Although it can take several
years to complete such a project
from preliminary study to actual
construction, Tom Hedrick, plan·
ning engineer for District 10 said
that it is the aim of Voinovich and
Wray "to cut the time in the high·
waj!odcvelopment plllCe$S..:tl..daeJ,
however, talce approximalely nine
to 10 months to hire a consultant
on such a project, Hedrick said.

Relocated U.S. Route 33 is
expected to be approximately 13
miles long, which is somewhat
shoner than the existing route from
Athens to DatWin.
Long, Abel respond
State Representative Mary Abel
(D-Athens) said Thursday that she
was "real excited" about the study.
"At least this is the be$inning
for a prospect to begin htghway
development in this area " Abel
said. "Many of us have lived in the
area and have worked very hard for
this. This is one more step to aiding
progress in Southeastern Ohio.
Hopefully, we wiU see this project
come to fruition ,"
State Senator Jan Michael Long
(D-Circlcville) said today that he
was pleased with the announcemen.t, but that he hopes ODOT
contmues to act after the study is
completed.
''This is more positive news for
Meigs County to get things moving
!!"d to get things done," Long said.
, The .announcement that the study
ts gomg to commence to take a
look.at the 'Athens to Darwin ' project tS extremely good news and 1
comp!Uttent all panics involved on
the announcement." .

Republz·cans· to. propose
new c0 ngressz·onal dz•stn•cts

of a plan by late next month.
of U.S. House districts from 21 to
Republicans, who control the 19 as a result of population changes
Sen'l!e. were to make their propos- renected by the 1990 U.S. Census.
als public this afternoon.
Aronoff said the Senate could
Aronoff scheduled a news con- vote as early as next Thursday on a
ference at which details of the GOP Republican redistricting bill. Initial
proposals were to be discussed, hearings are to begin Monday
along with a schedule for commit- night.
tee hearings,
He and Riffe on Wednesday
Democrats. have set no date for appointed a special 10-member
introducing their measure.
House·Senate committee created to
Legislators must cut the number resolve differences between
Republican and Democratic pro·
posals.
Appointed by Riffe were Reps.
William Mallory, D·Cincinnati;
Judy Sheerer, D-Shaker Heights;
and 'Mike Stinziano, O.Columbus.
House Republicans on the panel
will be Mmority Leader Corwin
Continued on page J

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Weeks of legislative inaction over
congressional redistricting that
promllted concerns about election
deadlmes from Secretary of State
Bob Taft are coming to an end.
Senate President Stanley
Aronoff, R-Cincinnati, and House
Speaker Vern Riffe, D-vlheelersburg, oullined a timetable for draw·
ing new boundaries of U.S. House
districts that could lead to adoption

Three juveniles held in .
connection with theft of auto

Columbia, W. Va, was cited for
failure to yield the right of way
following an accident on West
Main Street. According to the
repon, Roush pulled into the north·
bound lane from Super America
into the path of a car driven by
·Martha McPhail, Syracuse. There
was moderate damage to both vehicles, the left side of the McPhail
car, and the right front of the Roosh
vehicle. There were no injuries. ·
A car driven by Sharon Harris,
dleport
Syracuse,
!lipped over on its top at
McCullough said he had washed
7:47
p.m.
Wednesday as she 113V·
his car Wednesday afternoon and
· .
SUPERIOR AWARD· The Meigs SoU and Water
eled
down
the Mulberry Avenue
misplaced or lost his keys during
Conservation District received a Superior Senice Aqrd duriag
that time . He said he assumed. hill near the pond at the entranCe to
the ·49th unual meeting of lbe Ohio Federation of Soil 1nd Water
someone found the keys and stole Beech Grove Cemetery. Harris said
Conserva~on Districts beld recently in Columbus. Tbolli85 Tbelss
that the rear of her vellicle slid, she
the vehicle.
,
left, who.Is curreally ~~erving as chairman of the board of supervi:
Also under investigation by hit the brakes, lost control, and the
sors for lbe Mel1s SWCD received lbe award from th OFSWCD
PomerOy police is damage done to vehicle slide off the right side of
President Bob Rockwell.
·
the Lambert Insurance building on the roadway and (!vertlllll!ld on its
Second Street. The rear door and top. Neither Hairis nor a passenger,
waH were scratched and had marks Heather Harris, were in).III,Cd.
The care was heavily damaged
from bicycle tires. A railing brace
had been broken and' removed, and towed from the scene. the
LAN~ASTER • Paced by a 1990.
.
dijver was ciled for not wearing a
pollee rep&lt;rted.
.
record-Setting
effort
at
Southefll
Meigs
No.
2
mine,
located
near
stat
belt.
James M. Roush, Wesi,
Ohio Coal Company's Meigs Divi- Albany, was ;t.EP's top producer
'
sion, Amerlcu Electric Power's once again with recon1 tontiqe or
mining operations pfodu~ed 3,454·,751 clean tons. That shat·
12,711,338 cleo I®S of, c~l in · tercd the mine's 1990 mark of
1 99L
'
·
+
3,262,346.
The. Meigs Division,' a two . Met~' s No, 31 mltiC', •-•-'
.......... near
MeisS County Sheriff Jamei t4 Soulsby reports that ~is ~­
undc!~und mines, Meigs No. 2 WilbsviUe, alia ~ a banper proment received a report from MQ. Earl Shufer li Morili111 Star Road.
a~d ~eigs No•.31, combined to duction year, as numerous rccOids
thauhe nOarby Swlther cot~~~e had been Cllleled.
·
produce a record 5,888,595 ~lean feU several times durin&amp; the last six
Upon invealiJation, deputielleamed !hat the couagc bad been
t~n~. Tbo previous hjgh ror the months or the year. Ovenll, Meigs
. , . entered an,d vandalized. lleavy damaae was reported, ,although
dtvtslon
•was 5,4$6,652, set in No. 31 mined a record 2 433 844
'1
COIItlD~ 011
3
·
· ,
. clean tons, topping its 1990 matt
Three juveniles are being
detained pending flling of charges
resulting from the theft of a
Pomeroy vehicle.
Accordin$ to a report frofll
Pomeroy pohce, a 1991 Camero
belonging to Ken McCullough, 235
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, was
taken from his driveway about
11:57 Wednesday night. The vehi·
cle was recovered about an hour ,
later in a private driveway in Mid·

"However," Long said, "We
must continue to move on once the
study is completed. We need to
have timely announcements of
funding construction following the
completion of the study."
"As citizens," Long said "we
should say, 'okay, now hcre:s the
study, let's push to get the road
completed.' We can act as the fans
to lcecp those embers burning and
get those flames going."

Meigs S&amp;WCD receives
Superior Service Award
The Meigs Soil and Warer Con·
servation District received a Supe·
rior Service Award during the 49th
annual meeting of the Ohio Federa·
tion of Soil and Water Conserva·
tion Districts held recently in
Columbus.
Attending were Thomas Theiss,
chairman of the board of supervi·
sors for the Meigs SWCD, sapervi·
sors, Charles Yost, Jne Bolin and
Marco JefferS, and district employees Opal Dyer and Blair Windon
aod Soil Conservation Service District Conservationist Mike Duhl.
A wide range of agricu)lure and
natural reso,urce conservation top·

ics were covered during the three
day meeting. Stanley Gault, chairman of the board and CEO of the
Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company, delivered t)te keynote address
to more than 600 conservation offi.
cials B]ld employees.
The Distinctive Service Awards
Program, sponsored py Goodyear,
encourages SWCD supervisors to
evaluate their natural resource conservalion program on an annual
basis,. For the 1991 program year,
72 dtstncts were rated "superior";
12 were rated "excellent" and three
rated "good,"

Meigs No. 2 Mine captures tQp productio11; honors again

zNa

'2

and coronary bypass sur~ery ,"
Frymyer said. "The AHA ts also
recognized for its dietary guide·
lines which are based on the latest
recommendations of medicalscientists. All of these improvements
wiU help save the Jives of the peapie in Meigs County."
During the 1992 campaign, the
AHA is emphasi2ing the need for
·public to·become familial •ilh the
early warning signs of a heart
attack.
"Knowing the early warning

ho~~o~~~~~I~i~?t~n=- ~~i~~~~f~~:~:~~~;e~~:~~~;~

DEL MONTE
.TOMATO
JUICE
46 oz.

Onions••••••••••••.4

3 Sectlono, 34 Pages 25 cento
A "ulllmed!a Inc: Newopaper

P!Jmeroy·Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, January 30, 1992

LB. BOX

$ 99

nurrles.

•

MUELLERS

USDA CHOICE BEEF BONELESS

Low tonight In JOs. High
Friday In upper 30s. Chance of

r----Local briefs--------.
Swisher cottage vandalized ·
pap

~~

,.

'

.

•.

•

.

.

t

t

•

' unit
(2,146,186) by nearly 300,000
·Meigs No. 31's longwall
also set an annual record witfi
clean tons. .
the northwest longwall unit ar . I ,541,809 c}ean tons. The previous
Mei8s No. 2 produced more. coal high was 1·,401,968 in 1990. ··
Southern Ohio Coal's Maninka
than any other AEP Jonpall (there
are currendy six Jonsvillls operat- Division, loca~d ncar Fainnont,
W.Va., added 2,615,550 clean tons
ing at AEP miilcs) during 1991 1,706,035 clean tons- which · to thl AEP total. Windsor Coal
broke its 1990 mark of 1,485,393. Company, located at West Liberty ·
Ill addition, botb Melp No. 2 long• W, Va., produced 1,528,682 and '
waDs combined for a new ftlCOril of 1 Cc:ntrai,Ohio COil Com1110y's sur·
21956,331 clean tons. The previous . race operation near Cumberland ·'
htgh, which camo a yeu earlier; Ohio, mined 2,678,Sll, ·
was 2,638,918.
'

�.,

.

'

Thursday, Janul!lry 30, 1992

Commentary

New Hampshire is heavy with hopefuls

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
. DEVOTED TO Tlllt INTBRBSTS OP 11IE MEIGS-MASON AREA

fiMULTtEOIA,INC.
ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

AMEMBER of The Associated Pross, Inland Daily ProssAssociation and
tbe American Newspaper Publisher Association.
LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be Jess than 300

words long. All letters .,. subj..,t 10 editing and must be signed with name,
addn:ss and telephone number. No unsigned leiterS wiU be published. Letters
should be in good tasle. addressing issues, not personalities.

Letters to the editor
You could be next!
On the back of a belt buckle my
husband received from Kaiser Aluminum of Ravenswood, WV are
these words:
"The scenes depicted reflect
work performed dwing the 1980's
by great men and women of
courage. Each employee at the
Ravenswood works or Kaiser Aluminum gave of themselves through
personal sacrifice dwing a changing metals industry to assure the
secwity or jobs and future prosperity of the Ravenswood Reduction
plant. These employees were willmg to lake one step backward only
in order to march steadfastly ahead
to return Kaiser Aluminum 10 a stable and profitable company and
~ng di~ity 10 the words "made
mU.S.A.
·
In the fall 1990 we received a
letter from the new owners
Ravenswood Aluminum Co. commending the Same workers for the
great job they had done in the first
three quarters of 1990; they mentioned they had already made ninety million dollars. Later my husband and I attended a dinner held
in honor of the employees with 25
years of service or over. At that
dinner I listened to Mr. Boyle give
a great speech. He praised the men
for a job well done, told them about
the large profits they had made,

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
PQmeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, January 30, 1992

WASHINGTON (NEA) Much of the talk in New Hampshire is over the Democrat who is
not on the primary election ballot
- New York Gov. Mario Cuomo.
Ironically, be is about the only one
missing: This year New Hampshire
voters ane being confronted with 67
candidates.
Officially, 63 people have ftled
to run for president - 37
Democrats and,l26 Republicans.
Four people have filed for the
office of vice president under a
technicality. This allows convention delegates to be selected in
New Hampshire with instructions
to vote for a specifiC vice presidential nominee.
The previous record for a New
Hampshire primary ballot was 39
in 1988. This time there are so
many names that a smaller type
face had to be used.
Those on the Feb. 25 ballot
include professional politicians,
actors, businessmen, interest-group
representatives, and several who
list themselves as unemployed.
Ijach candidate had to fiU out and

file a set of official fonns and pay
the $1,000 filing fee.
Among the 37 Democrats are, of
course; the original six who have
been considered legitimate candidaJes. Even though Virginia Gov.
L. Douglas Wilder has laken himself out of the race, his name still is
on the already printed ballot in
New Hampshire.
The first six Democrats are
j9ined by others like former Minnesota Sen. Eugene McCarthy,
actor Tom Laughlin or "Billy
Jack" fame, disabled Viemam war
vet and protester Ron Kovic, jailed
Lyndon LaRouche , libertarian
Andre Marrou and lesser-knowns
such as Fanny Rose Zeidwerg
Monyek, a 67-year-old wioow from
Rahway, NJ .
On the Republican ballot, in
addition to George Bush and Pat
Buchanan, are the likes of perenni ·
al GOP candidate Harold Stassen,
comedian Pat Paulsen and a large
number of unknowns. They include
New York farmer Paul Conley; and
Georginia Doerschuck of Palm
Beach, Aa, who lists herselr as an

out-of-work stockbroker.
Democrats running for vice
president are former Massachusetts
Gov. Endicott "Chub" Peabody
and Susan Shargal, a psychologist.
On the GOP vice presidential ballot
are Winiam Hare, a retired teacher,
and Herben Clark, who lists himself as disabled and unemployed.
There is actually a serious side
to all this. With this many names
on the ballot, voters who are
unhappy with the mainstream
choices have plenty of ways to register a protest. In the end this could
water down and dilute the result.
In the pas~ Vice President Dan
Quayle has gotten into some difficulty when he has ad-Jibbed during
speeches or public appearances.
This uait seems to have continued
during a recent campaign swing
through California. .
Quayle's motorcade was traveling through the city of Norco in
Riverside County, southeast of Los
Angeles, when the vice president
spotted a large "now hiring" sign
on a Burger King restaurant.
Immediately, he ordered his car

to stop. Qyayle went bounding inso
the restaurant, instantly determined
to use the situation as an example
to his sizable press contingent that
the economy was on the upswing.
"This is the best sign I've seen
today ,., I want to show you an
optimistic sign that things are
beginning to tum around," Quayle
said enthusiastically to the hastily
set up cameras.
Then the reporJers interviewed
the restaurant's manager, Terie
Roeder. She indicated the jobs
involved were pan-time at the minimum wage of $4.25 per hour. She
indicated that the restaurant was
having difficulty finding people
willing to work so few hours at
such a low wage.
"You certainly couldn'tlive on
this wage," Ms. Roeder admitted.
But Quayle was not deterred
when he was told the facts. Instead,
his upbeat response was: "You
have a part-time job, you have a
job. It's better than no job at all."
So after a day of mtense campaigning - ineluding visits to several aerospace companies and a
meeting with 20 aerospace union
leaders flown in from around the
country - headlines said that
Quayle, and by inference the GOP,
believes workers should be happy
with jobs paying $90-$100 a week.
Pat Buchanan is having a bit of
a problem explaining away one
thing. His campaign is built around
an aggressively protectionist trade
policy, especially towards Japan ·
and its auto industry. But Buchanan
himself drives a Mercedes.
Why? Buchanan says America
has just not been producing quality
cars.
.
But he says that he does like the
new Cadillacs from General
Motors. He says lhat will be the
next car be buys.
(C)I992
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

Taking a closer look at the postal service

Cong. Clarence Miller

Wants prison here
Dear Editor:
I would like to express my suppOrt for a new prison to be built
here in Meigs County. Let the new
jobs come on in with it because not
only will we see a new prison but
will see at least a new eating place
plus a motel.
. For our area too I am one of
those persons who believe that to
have jobs you have to give up a lit·
tie.
I am glad to see Meigs County
stand out and want this new prison.
Unlike Mason County across the
river, they see fit or as one put it
people working or people that have
money see fit, to block the new
pulp and paper mill that wants to
build in that county and create hun·
dreds of new jobs for their area.
But they don't waniit so all those
people out there out of work should
go to these people's door for some

are

A special thanks
£&gt;ear Editor:
: It has recently been brought to
our attention, that Mr. Gerald
Pullins, a custodian with the Mei~s
Local School District, will be rclll·
ing this spring.
•
· We would like so give a special
thanks to Mr. Pullins for doing
such a great job while our regular
janitor, Mr. Hatfteld, was iU.
· Anytime you walked into our
school, Mr. Pullins was always

Jerry Brown has a very good idea JosephSpear

------Against proposal

Dear Editor.
1 feel strongly moved to express
rity opinion of the additional I%
income tax being proposed by
~yor Hoffman.
· A few years back a I% income
tax was impose~ ~.y the vi~lage
w.ith many benefus ib be ~ned.·
ii'he only real evidence or @!is I see
is a pnall puu-puu golf course not
~sed by many. I believe' we also
pey someone to attend it plus we
have or did have a )lilt supervisor

opiUy.
.
· Frankly, I don't see whete the
c:ilrrent. I '1. tax money is spent
~OIIdthal.
.
• Now tlte q~ayor il SUJJCSting
...,.._ i&gt;ICiease. Of die Jill or the
tor illpo;omeatoril)' village
· t nuJbl for Jaiiiii)IIOVC111e11 • 1111' ~ n dl!nFapala IIIIIIJ na Why didn't we
uille C1R1 or thil inlleld ol buildiiiJ
a pua-1!11117·
· My lltltei d!oulhl is that the timilia lor dlis •JPMk•ls vti'J JIOCI'·
'Thole of liS oa Col-ho• SOUihe!h
lllectric are eipectlnj a possible

=

Where do you draw the lin.e? · -

':::f '

so

,.

Friday, Jan. 31
~ccu- Weather• forecast for daytime conditions

and

By The Associated Press
Northwesterly .winds will bring
colder Canadian air and some snow
flmries to Ohio tonight and Friday,
the National Weather Service said.
Northeast Ohio could get a fresh
coating of snow on Friday.
Temperatures will spend most
of the day in the 20s, forecasters
said.
A slight warming trend will
occur over the weekend, with highs
on Saturday in the 30s and Sunday
in the 40s. More flmries are possible in the northeast on Saturday.
The record high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
statioo was 64 degrees in 1916. The
record low was 5 ~low zero in

MICH.

•I Columbus I 35° I

"".

1966.
and almost all of the Northeast
Sunset tonight will be at 5:48
The warm air was pushed across
p.m. Sunrise on Friday will be at No~th America by a series of
7:41a.m.
stotms in the Gulf of Alaska that
Around the nation
ha.ve b(ought heavy snow to ·
A wet, windy storm moving Anchorage for the past several
across the Pacific Ocean from Asia days.
brought more rain to Oregon ll)d
The result was a high or 43 at
Washington early today, while Devils Lake, N.D., on WedJ!esday,
most of the 'rest of the nation which tied the 1931 record, and a
enjoyed unseasonably warm weath· high of 51 in Pocatello, Idaho,
er.
which broke the 1920 record by 1
AlthoUgh skies were cloudy degree.
over most of the United States, a
The heavy snowfall in Alaska
mass of warm air kept temperatures had ended today, however, and
10 to 20 degrees above normlil · cooler weat.her was expected to
from Montana to MassachusetiS. It return to the continental United
was also unseasonably warm States by Friday or Saturday.
throughout the Midwest, the South

'•

The storm in the Northwest also~
was warm , Which brought the ;
threat of flooding as rain continued :
to fall on already saturated areas :
and to melt snow in higher eleva- :
bans.
Meanwhile , a weak low· pres· :
sure system was expected to bring ,;
some rain to Aorida, Georgia and ::··
Sooth Carolina.
. .
Highs were expected to reach :,
the 30s in New England and the :
Great Lakes region; the 40s ·and i
50s in the mid-Atlantic arid Rocky 1
Mountain states; the 50s and 60s in :;
the Midwesl, Pacific Northwest :
northern Plains and South· and m; :·
70s in California and Florida.
::

Meigs Local Chapter 1 program plans training sessions
W. VA.

~

i)Qt.J£&amp;

T·stom!s Rain Aunies s.-

Sunny

Pl. Cloudy

Cloudy

C1992 Aca&gt;WOIM, Inc.

-----Weather----Soutb-Ceotral Ohio
Tonight, mostly cloudy. Low in
the low 30s. Friday, mostly cloudy
wtth a chance of flurries. Colder
with a high in the upper 30s.
Chanceofsnowis40pettenl
Extended rorecast:

Saturday through Monday:
Saturday1 a chance of ~urri~s
northeast, fm ~lsewhere. ij1ghs 10
upper 20s to mid-30s. Lows 15-25.
· Sunday, fair. Highs in mid-30s to
low 40s. Lows 15-25 . Monday,
fair. Highs 4045. Lows in the 20s.

C0Unty. •• Continued rrom page 1
income families.
. The _commissioners took no offiCia! 8CbOn on the request rstcrday,
but did voice suppon o the program and the board, and indicated
that the county could provide the
requested support.
Other business
Clerk Mary Hobstetter
announced that the Ohio Department of Liquor Control had set
February 19 atlO am. as the hearing date for a liquor permit application submitted by Ruth Rose, doing
business as Rose's Canyout in the
community of Bashan (Chester
Township).
The board discussed the
removal of a tree from the county
COW1house lot in Pomeroy. Accord·
ing to Jones, the tree is diseased
and damaged to the point that it
creates a safety hazard foc passing
traffiC and IJedestrians at West second and Mulberry, and could also
threaten the courthouse itself.
Ohio Power and county crews

are set to remove the tree on Thursday morning, and traffic will be
affected while the work is underway.
In other action, the commissioners:
- Appointed Cindy Oliveri to
replace retiring County Agricultural Agent John Rice on. the JTPA
Private Industry Council Board;
- Authorized Treasurer Howard
E. Frank to extend the deadline for
payment of property taxes;
- Approved a drug-free workpbice policy as required by law for
all county offtees and ageneies; and
- Discussed snow and ice
removal on county roads with
Engineer Philip Roberts and Highway Superinlendent Ted Warner in
light of last week's inclement
weather.
Present were Jones, Hobsletter,
Roberts and Warner and Commissioners Manning Roush and David
Koblentz.

,..---Local briefs...--...,
Cootinued rrom page 1
nothing was reponed missing. 1'he incident occurred within the last
week, according to Soulsby.

EMS units answer five calls
Five calls for assistance were answered by uni!S or Meigs County Emergency Medical Services 011 Wednesday and Thursday.
On Wednesday at 8:48 a.m., Rutland unit went 10 Hill Street
Marcia Dinison was laken so Holzer Medical Center. At 10:22 a.m.,
Pomeroy unit was sent so Pomeroy Pike for Jason Powell, who was
laken to V~ Memorial Hospital.
At 5:23 p.m., Racine squad went to Stale Route 124 for Paul
Flowers, who was taken to Vetenns. At8:56 p.m., Pomeroy squads
went to Mulberry HeighiS for an auto accident Heather Harris and
Sharon Harris were taken to Veterans.
On Thursday at 6:30 a.m., Rutland unit went 10 Happy Hollow
Road for Everett Pierce, who was taken so Velerans.

Heart...

Cootinued rrom pase 1

"While the AHA does not wish another, ihe standards call for solic·
to question any legitimate agency itations and informational materials
raising funds for cardiovascular to be accurate, truthful and not misresearch, we do want the public to leading. Total fund-raising and
understand that there is no n:lation- administrative costs ane limited to
stlip between these sound-alike 50 P,;rtent or less of total incOme.
'The AHA takes great pride in
groups and the American Heart
Association," Carr said. "Our vol- the fact that our fund-raising costs
unteen collecting in the residential at 13 .I pe~tent and administrative
drive will be properly identified costs at 8.2 percent have consiswith official AHA nametags and tently remained will within these
slandards," Carr explained • ."We
materials."
The Council of Better Business want you to be assured thai when
Bureaus has defined voluntary you donate to the American H~
Standards for Charitable Solicita- Association, the funds ane going to
tions. While not recommending .reduce disability and death· from
one fund-raising method over cardiovascular disease."
For more informalion about the
warning signs of a heart attack or
about the American Heart Associa·
tion, ealllhe Cenllal Ohio, OffiCe or
Continued rrom page 1
the AHA at 1-(800) 282-0291.
Nixon or Lebanon and Robert
Lottery numbers
Corbin of Dayton.
Aronoff appointed Finan, and
CLEVELAND (AP) - There
Sens. Barry Levey, R-Middlesown, were no tickets aold naming all six
and Betty M011tgomery, ~ numbers· drawn in Wednesday
butg. Senate Democrats on the night's Super LotiO drawing with
committee will be Minority Leader $8 million at stake so Sawrday's
Robert Bous of Jefferson and jacli:P_!lt will be $12 million, the
Alan ZJoleskl of Vermilion.
Ohio Lottery said.
·
"If everything works, we would
Here are Wednesday night's
like to have the bill rec011ciled ... winninf!:ben:
and on the governor's desk the Super
week or Feb. 24," Aronolf said.
·l-14-I9-264045
As a result,-the Feb. 20 filing
(one, fciutwn, nineteen, twentydeadline ror congressional candi- SIX, forty, forty-live)
dates in the May 5 primary would Kicker _
haVe so be extended. .
.
1-6-8-3•1.0
DernocriU cunently have ull·
(one. m, ciah~ three, 0118, zero)
·10 edJC over Republicans 'in the Pick ~ Numbert·
state's deloaatlon to the U.S.
7·3-4
House. Howmr, Demoaallc U.S.
(seven, three, four)
R• . Dlllnia ECkart or Mentor and Pkk 4·Numben
~
Donald ·pease of Oberlin III'C not
2-7-0-4 .
'
~
(two,
seyen,
zero,
fonr)
~~edne.sday the. Carda · '
Pcmocrllic Rdistrictina,P~.sal
2 (two) of Hearts
, would J!IOYido for the -cliinmauon
7 (~even) of Oubll
of 0118 Republk:an and one DemoIO(um)of~
·•
. critic ileaL '
9 (nine) of Spades

Republica_n...

The Meigs Local Chapter I program is planning to have training
sessions for all teachers, principals
and parents to help them work with
their students and children . The
focus is to be able to work more
effectively with Chapter 1 parents.
The main idea is to help parents
help their children at home. Materials will be provided for the parents
to take home with them so that they
can use it with their child. The
meetings will be held at different
buildings from now through the
school year and those attending
may do so a1any or all of the uaining sessions. Registration is not
required but would be helpful in
planning the different programs. To
register call the school or send a
notice to the school. Further information may be obtained by calling
Wendy Halar; Chapter I Director,
at 992-3404.
The training session at Pomeroy
Elementary will be held Friday

from 9 a.m. to noon. A calendar of
activities to be taught at home for
the rest or the school year will be
provided. Janet Hoffman and Joni
Jeffers will be holding this training
session. To register call992-2710.
Meigs Junior High will be holding a training session on Thursday,
Feb. 27 from I to 3 p.m. on problem solving. Mrs. Halar stated this
is one major area that swdents have
difficulty with on standardized tests
and classroom tests. Ron Drexler ·
can be reached at992-3058 to register.
"
Middleport Elementary will be
working with parents on Thursday,
March 12 on phonics, reading cornprehension and problem solving
from 8:30-10:30 a.m. Marsha Radabaugh and Liz Story will be
directing this session. Call 992·
3387to register.
Salem Center will be holding an
even in~ session on Friday, March
20. Th1s meeting will be mvolving

the Effective School Grant and they
will be encouraging everyone (not
just Chapter 1 students) to auend.
Call Cindy Allen at 742-3113 to
register.
· Rutland and Harrisonville will
have a training session at Harrisonville from 1:30-3:45 p.m. on
Friday, April 10 in math and read·
ing with a Make-it-Take-it Session.
Bryan Zirkle from Rutland Ele-

Mandy Snyder
Mandy May "Maudie" Snyder,
66, ·1299 B Morrow County Road
170, Marengo, died Wednesday,
Jan. 29, 1992 at Grady. Memorial
Hospital in Delaware.
Born May 2, 1925 in Evans,
W. Va, she was the daughter of the
late Andrew Jackson and Addie
Mae Donahue Scarberry. She was
the district overseer of the All
Gospel Church of God in Dayton
and was presi~t and _manager of

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial Hospital
WEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS
- Chester Van Meter, Racine; Ray
Roush, Racine; and Flora
Wingrove, Racine.
WEDNESDAY DISCHARGEs
- Hilda Carnahan and Louis
Vaughan.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges Jan. 29 - Christina Barnette, Mrs. Charles Boso and
son, Wayne Brown, Loretta Carter,
Alben Creech, Earlo Harris, Verlin
Hart, Judy Holliday, Jason Jewell,
Marjorie Johnson, Lanelle Landrum, Freemon Locke, Mrs. Raben
McFann and daughter, Delcie Ousley ,Ernest Stumbo, James Talbott,
April Walker, and Mrs. Christopher
Wallaoe and son.
Births Jan. 29- Mr. and Mrs.
Timothy Clary, son, Gallipolis. Mr.
and Mrs . Melvin Forester, son,
Racine.

Woman escapes
injury in wreck

the United Gospel Singers of
Marengo. She made her home in
Racine for 34 years as a singing
evangelist. She was a member of
the United Four Singing Group and
in 1965 she moved to Delaware
where she formed the United
Gospel Singer. She was a resident
of Marengo sinoe 1986. ·
· She is survived by three daughters, Nancy L. Parsons, Radnor;
Connie S. Ransom, Marengo; Thelma M. Denny, Delawane; two sons,
Eddie R. Snyder, Columbus; Paul
L. Snyder, Marysville; one brother,
Sheridan Scarberry, Kimbollon;
one sister, Laura Rogers, Akron; II
grandchildren and three greatgrandchildren.
·
Besides her parents she was preceded in death by two sisters and
four brothers.
Friends may call at the Benneu
Funeral Home, 92 North Sandusky
Street in Delaware on Saturday
from 24 p.m. and 7-9 p.m. where
services will be held Sunday at 2
p.m. with Rev. Robert Adkins of
the Full Gospel Fellowship of Rich
Hill officiating. Burial will be in
Radner Cemetery.

mentary will be joining Paula :
Chancey (Rutland and Har- :
risonville) and Vicki 1-taley, Har- :
risonville, for this session. Call :
742-3000 to register.
Salisbury Elementary will have :.
a Make-it-Take-it Session on read-'·
ing comprehension and Basic Malil ,
Facts from 1-3 p.m. on Wednesday;:
April 29. Call Barb Mathews Crow':
at 992-3404 to register.

AA meetiog
.
Organizational meetiDg
The
Pomeroy
group
of
AA
will·
Anyone interested in working
on the 1992 Pomeroy Merchants meerThursday 111 7 p.m. at Sacred
Association Fashion Show may Heart Catholic Church. ·
.
..
attend an organizational meeting
Installation
of
officers
will
he
..
Tuesday at noon at the Fabric
held by Bethel 62, International ·
Shop.
Order of Jobs Daughters, on Feb. 8at 7 p.m. at the Middlepon Mason,
Chili dinner
The Coolville VFW Post No. ic Temple. Scheduled for Saturda~ :
3478 will have a chili ainner at the night, it was postponed due to the .
Coolville Lion Club 'building on snow,
Feb. 8 from 4 to 7 p.m.
Meeting planned
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
A 12-step AA meeting will
begin Sunday at 7 p.m. at the JTPA
446 4524
"~~·~ :~~~~~
office, 117 West Second Street in
Pomeroy.

an

Stocks
Am Ele Power ................. .32 3/8
Ashland Oil ..................... .31 3/8
AT&amp;T...............................37 518
Bank One ..........................49 7/8
Bob Evans ...... :................. 24 1/4
Charming Shop..................24 1/8
City Holding ...................... I? 3/4
Federal Mogul.. ................. 16 7/8
Goodyear T&amp;R .................. 57 518
Key Centurion ................... 15 1/4
Lands' End ....................... .31 7/8
Limited Inc. ...................... 29 5/8
Multimedia Inc ................ .,24 1/4
Rax Restaurant ................. .5/8
Robbins&amp;Myers ................36
Shoney's Inc ........ ............ .. 22 718
Star Bank ...........................25 lfl
Wendy Int'l....................... .ll 5/8
Worthington Ind................23 lfl
Stock reports are the 10:30 a.m.
quotes pr~vlded by Blurat, Ellis
arad Loewl ofGalllpoUs.

OPEN STOCK

SBR'A
SALE
BEDROOM FURNITURE
OAK, MAPLE or CHERRY FINISH

25~n

•s Drawer Chests
•oraiSira 'Beds

•4 Drawer Chtsts
•Night Stllnda

--•AII.Wood

A Long Bottom woman escaped
injury when the car she was driving
slid off an ice-covered road and
into a sinall cieek.
According to the Gallia-Meigs
Post of the State Highway Patrol,
Shirley G. Belt, 67, was eastbound
on Lebanon Township Road 139
(ferry Run Road) early Wednesday
aftefnoon when the accident
occurred.
· Damage to Belt's 1988 Plymouth' Gran Fury was listed as

Ctnii'UCIIOII

SERTA
PREMIER COMFORT
10 Yr.

••••t

·~~.. 588-.. ,.
I .-----iT. o- Sol

lallliillllllltlpt

SERTA .
PERFECT SWPER
20,. . .,•• , '

5

5599
499
FULl SIT G111N SIT

moderate.

No citations were issued.

Tite Dnily Seutinel

Member: The Aallociat.od Pron, lnlRnd
Dail,Y Prtat AuoeiAti~n and lhe Ohio
Newt paper A••ociaUon, Nalionftl
Advertisln1 ~preacmtetive~, DranhAm
Newapaper Sale•. 733 Third Avenue,
New YOrk, Now YOrk 10017.

METAL
STORAGE CABINETS

GLIDER
ROCKER

(USPS 213-960)
Publi11 hed every Aftern oon, Monday
Lhroue:h Friday, 111 Court St ,, Pomeroy,
Ohio by the Ohio Valley Publiahing
Company/Multimedia Inc., Pomeroy,
Ohio 4~769 , Ph. 9112·2 t56. S..ond clo ..
poo"a• paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.

'Utility Cabinets 'File Cablnell
•wardrobes
•ease Cllblnets
'China Cabinets

I'

Reg. '129.00. Cabinets .... SALE '10300
Reg. '159.00 Cabinets.....SALE '127'1'1
Reg. '179.00 Cablnets.....SALE '14ao"

POSTMASTER: Seoo addn!11 chitngoa 1o
The Daily Sehlin~l, Ill Court St.,
Pomeroy, OHio 4~769.
,
8UB8CJUPTION RAT£8
Dr Carrier or Motor Route
One w..k.•..••..••••................•..............$1.60
One Month ..........•.......... .................... $6.96
Ono Yoar...........••...................•..••_.•..$83.20
8tNGLECOPY
PJIICE

wJCIU twnn't lrt.d one of our
gftdlf root.n tlop.ln 1nd h~•
Wo 1hloll you'llbtl
pta••••
turpriMdt

•-

....... o,Jt .... -

-t.(.attoMII
_ _Flbrlol
_
•

Doily............................................2~ Cenlo

Subo&lt;riben pot dooirirc lo I"'Y llie "'rrl·
er rMY romlt in ldvanCCI dlreet to Tho
Glllioi&gt;lia Dolly ~buno on 1 3.6 « 12
liull. Credit will be gl'"n "'nlir

-u.
- .WMk.

, No suboetipUo111 by mall pormltled lh
areu where home curler service ll

••.O.ble.

' Mill Subilerlptlono ,
IMido OaUia·Coenty
t3 Weekt..... ...... ,............................. $21.84
26 Weolu .................................... :..... $43.16
2
76
G w-c;~j;d.h"li~tli~·c~;.;ty '.$84.
13\veetu...,................................ ~..... $23 .40

28Woetu.......................................... kUO

G3 Weel&lt;i.........,............................. ,•. $88140

·Reg. ~59.00 Glider Rockera.:.~•.'21r
Reg. '339.00 Glider Rockera..... .'2Br
.Reg. '399.00 Glider Rockers ... :..'ssr
'449.00 Glider Rockers ......'37go'

'· SJOIE HOURS
MadLJ foJO Ill PJL
,_ . . Sat.
9:30115 PA

',

_Meigs announcements __

--Area deaths--

'I

,.

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

Canadian air brings colder temperatures

01110 Weather

Robert]. Wagman

and went on to outline some plans
he had for the future.
Now these Same men are locked
off their job for one reasonNOBOVI' IN f-\1)
GREED. They are getting older
RIG!~'T MINP WOULt:'
EE'fU?.
and, of course they have some
0
'"Mf&gt;AI6N
IN
HE~ElHEY
medical problems so Mr. Boyle
NEW Hfo.tv\PS\o\I~E
decided it would be more cost
COt'IIE TO
0
IN "THE DEAt&gt;
effective to lock them out and hire o
rROVE
IT.
OF WIN'TER.
replacement workers. The locked
0
out employees are still sure th.at
justice will prevail and they w1ll
"
get their jobs back through the due
0
0
process of the courts. All of you
out there who are getting 50 years
0
of age or over had better pray this
happens or YOU COULD BE
0
NEXT.
0
If justice doesn't prevail the
only consolation we the Union
0
workers will have is that 20 years
or so down the road the company
will be locking out the scabs and
hiring replacement work~ n their
jobs. Human beings are the least
The primary ballot includes proimponant factor in the race for the
fessional politicians, actors, busialmighty dollar. Mr. Boyle how
nessmen, interest-group n:presentaCan you look in the mirror every
ti ves, and several who list themmorning?
selves as unemployed.
Proverbs 22:16 He that oppres·
seth the poor to increase his riches,
and he that giveth to the rice, shall
surely come to Want"
Sincerely Yours,
Nancy Holbrook
11 has become increasingly Postal Service for the sake of
New Haven, WV
apparent that businesses and indi- impressing disgruntled citizens.
vidual citizens alike are more conIf there are workable solutions period of time. The last time postal blue-ribbon panel are becoming
cerned than ever before about reli- to the problems facing the Service rates were jacked up, I wrote the more attractive. As such, I w~l be
able, consistent mail delivery and and mail delivery 10 be found, then
General complaining watching carefully the developmoney and food so they too can eat the overall efficiency of the U. S. it is imperative that such solutions Postmaster
that
a
20
percent
increase in first ments effecting the fate of this parand pay their bills. I was once told Postal Service. Fellow members of be sought without rancor and
rates was not justified - cer- ticular legislation.
some time you have to each a little Congress have stated that com - rhetoric. Owing the last session of class
tainly
not in light of the oudandish
As expected, there is opposition
dirt so you can have food on the plaints about postal operations five ConfP"CSS, a noteworthy resolution bonuses
being
handed
out
witliin
to
the
idea: most of i~ unfonunatetable. Well as for Mason County I years ago had generally been spo- was mtroduced in the House to cre- the system, and certainly not in ly, coming
from the leadership of
guess we can say better to have radic and involved isolated, indi- ate a bipartisan commission to light of the deficit being recorded the legislative
committee to which
starved then worked and have a job vidual circumstances and condi- thoroughly study America's postal
by
the
Service.
it
has
been referred for considerathen to have a liule pollution in the tions. However, the outcry about system and offer recommendations
When the Postal Service was tion. Postal lobbyists have apparwater that is already polluted to failing in the system and a drop off to reorganize the system so that it reorganized
20 years ago in a major ently convinced key lawmakers
some degree. So I do hope people in quality while the U. S. Postal provides better service at reason- effort to give it operational inde- that the resolution is a first-step
in our area wake up and see the Service has actually tried to able rates. It was reported last year pendenoe from the federal govern- toward vnvatizing and totally comlight. All business and industry will streamline operations is growing that the Postal Service has lost ment, Congress imposed the merciahziilg the U. S. Postal SecpolluJe and that isn't going to stop louder.
nearly $1.4 billion over the past requirement that the Postal Service vice . Supporters of the bill (the
unless we all stop working. So here
It was obvious that Congres- three years. At the same time, the break. even - even if it means rev- measure currently has 113 sponwe are looking for jobs and fight- sional discontent about postal effi- U. S. Postal Service has raised rates enue losses in some years offset by sors) soundly reject such an ai'guing to block them from coming to ciency was swelling last fall, and it for first class mail - settling for a gains in others. Maintaining finan- . ment, and say that opponents are
our area so let's work together to appears that the issue will gain con- 29 cents ticket after seeking cia! integri1y and keeping the books just trying to delay action on the
see the pulp and paper miD come to Siderable momentum as Congress approval of a 30 cents rate. The balanced is a tall order- especial· bill by deflecting attention to a
our area soon along with a prison reconvenes. Like my colleagues in possibility of the rate being ly when the public demands (and nongermane issue - all at the
for Meigs County.
the House, I, too, have heard from mcreased•from 29 cents to 30 oents nghtfuUy expects) service efficien- expense of the public.
Yours Truly concerned
and business seems likely. First class mail was cy . But Congress set up such a
Us~ of the Postal Service both
Aoyd H. Cleland leaders whocitizen
contend that a full delivered for 8 cents a letter 20 standard and, essentially, gave the demand and expect first class secBox 348 examination of .JXistal management years ago. Postal rates have jumped Postal Service the latitude to meet vice at reasonable rates. If expectaRutland, Ohio 45775 and service dehvery is essential. I nearly every two or three years it
lions
not being met, and if the
share the concern expressed by since.
The circumstances tJDTently fac- bOoks are not balancing and perthose contacting our office. I have
Most disturbing of all issues tied ing the American postal user indi- ceptions of the Postal Service are
no intention, however, to join a to the mauer of the mail is the out- cate that the Postal Service needs a less than favorable - for whatever
pleasant, and the school always high profile chorus of Congress- rageous awarding of 520 million in closer look. The merits of the Con- reason - then a caneful examinalooked nice. When we had our men in simply railing against the bonuses to postal executives over a ~ressional resolution creating a lion of the situation seems justified.
dance and other events, he was
willing and eager to help in any
way that he could.
Again, we want to give a special
thanks to you, Mr. Pullins, for
A small miracle occurred in American - and politicians, ideO- would provide sufficient funds to - interest, dividends, reniS, capital
doing such a wonderful job. We New Hampshire a few Sundays logues, special interests and tax run the govemmenL I think that is a gains, everything.
wiD miss you.
ago. During a debate between the paiasites be damned.
There would be no other deducpipe d(eam. Economists who have
Harrisonville Elementary Democratic aspirants for the presi- · Plllfessional politicians find the swdied the concept seem to think a tions in the SF system. No credits
Tina Cotterill dency, a politician actually floated flat-rate idea repulsive because · rate of 15-20 percent would be for contributions, sales taxes,
a gutsy proposal that seeks to they live to dole out tax breaks to required.
investments, home mortgages,
.
address the nation's long-term eco- fat:cat supporters. Doctrinaire libBut specifics are irrelevant at ilothing. Every body would pay the
nomic problems.
emls hate the notion ~ause they this point. The important thing is same proportion of thei( income to
I know, it befogs the mind. A get their jollies punishing the rich that someone seeking the presiden- finance the government and enjoy
politician? Demonstrating courage with progressive lax rates, Knee- cy is talking about it. So how the fundamental right to keep the
28.4% increase in our electric rate and vision? Eschewing the quick jerk conservatives ·despise the conwould it work? A Spear FO\)ndation rest and do with it what they
at any time. Where wiU .it ever end?
fix
for
an
endwing
.
s
olution?
I
told
cept
because
they
like
to'
exploit
the
study, relying heavily on the work please.
Most people live from payday to
you
it
was
a
miracle.
system
t9
make
the
rich
richer.
· Can you even begin to imagine
of
Stanford University economists
payday already.
The
pol
was
none
other
than
forAccountanJS,
tax
lawyers
and
IRS
the
incredible feeling of freedom ·
Robert E. Hall and Alvin RabushI believe there may be other
mer
Califomja
governor
Edmund
,
sadisiS
find
the
sug~estion
abhorand peace of mind that would come,
ka, envisions this hypolhelical:
ways to raise money for village
G.
"Jeqy"
Brown
Jr.
(yes,
he
of
.
rent
because
they
nulk the tax teat
with a simplified system? Yo~
Every
taxpaye!
gets
to
deduct
a
improvements which call on .all Moonbe'am fame). His suggestion: fora living.
could
ftle your returils every April
personal
allowance
for
self
and
restdeniS for participation.
·
The
entire
federal
income
tax
sys'
But
for
the
vast
majority
of
on
a
tO-line
postcard. You could ·
dependents,
say
$15,(XX)
for'
a
famiBut to the idea of a I% tax
tem
should
be
scrapped
and
Americans,
a
flat-tax
system
would
say
goodbye
10
all the tax preparers .
ly of four, and all wages and
inaease, I must"J!!Sl Say No!"
replaced
with
a
flat-rate
tax.
be
"a
godsend.
I
don't
like
the
pat- salaries above that amount are
and
never
have
'so look at another
Thanks
Finally,
someone
of
national
ticulars
of
Brown's
planhe
Larry Compston stature has put fo¢1 an idea that thinks a 13 percent rate on income taxed at a flat rate, say 17 percent H&amp;R Block commercial.
You could. rest easy in the .
Middleport, OH would truly benefit the average ,and a value-added tax on business A family earnin' $25,000 would
thus pay $1,700 tn taxes (6.8 per- knowledge that every American is ·
cent of total income). A family paying a fair share. Phony investments would diaappear. The flow '
eami~g $~,000 (cloee ID the current average) would pay $5,950 or capital would be detellllin¢ by
(11.9 percent or-total · income). A actual maitet forces. IRS ageniS by
De1r Editor:
,
. . ·but for a small village like Syra-. only a rotted piece or wood. Did family earning $100,000 wOUld pay the hundreds would have to take up
One knows th~t ~he world 11 • c1iSe where Is the line drawn? the town ever clean this up? Well , $14,450 (14.45 petcent of tOtal aerobics so ~OJCize the hostilities '
.
chln&amp;lnl when • small village like Speaking or rights and equality no, it was left up to whoever income).
they normally diSsipate by
Ah., you say, but the rich would up 011 ~ Vllt forats
~yracu~e . oper.ates on ind.eflnite ~our little vi!Jage is out so beaU- bought ill And now today "they"
"
,linea of mequality. New ordinances ""'',but what about a few vean ago want what they consider J'unk or be pocketing more of their I1JI1IICY ly sacrificed ror IRS paper would ',
' ~eel ID ·"supposedly" cl.ean Our ;h~n lhey (the town fi;e dept.) prllage removed. What gives them than now. To 1 degree, yes. We call be spared, The oxygen level ol the
up, the ozone
n~•Jhborhood,- but wbat ts cl~an burnt an abandoned house and let the right to deciile what is junt? that "incentive." The more you , aunosphe~e could
and how far can.lheY go to enforce the debris lay ror several months? Whit ever happened to one man's make, the more you get to keep. hole could close, global warming ,
these laws? Police harusment or If t~at' ~ n,ot bad enough, right. junk is anot1!er llllll's aeaswe7
. '
But I wouldn't l~tthe wealthy mlaltt be rellldetL
· pollee enforcement not an easy · bestd~ ~h1s burnt debris and ·
.
· Shannon Counts wrigle free because. I would IIIII
)less you, Jerry Brown', tou 1
qileltion to answer for a big city, garbage pile was a well coveml by
The Counts Fsmily have a flat tax 011 ·bUsiness income could be saYing d!e planet

"

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

�The Daily Sentinel ·

Sports

USC edges UCLA 86-82; No. ·15 Michigan tops M~U 89-79 in OT

Thursday, January 30, 1992
Page-4

Hannan Trace, Oak Hill to meet in SVAC showdown Friday
By G. SPENCER QSBORNE
OVP Stair Writer
The rivalry between Hannan
Trace and Southern - a series that
began in the 1966-67 season came to its regularly·scheduled end
Tuesday night with a 78-68 victory
awarded to Mike Jenkins' Wildcats. The teams fmished their series
(unless they meet in post-season
tournament action) with the visitor
winning the last rive games and
Southern leading by a 32-24 margin.
Toda~ the Wildcats, who have
won thetr last five games. are into
sole, albeit 1emporary, possession
of second place in the SVAC. They
will play conference front-runner
Oak Hill - a 6546 loser to Jackson Tuesday night - on the Oaks'
home court. If the Wildcats win,
they wiU move into rust place. half
a game ahead of the Oaks.
The credo "do unto the Oaks as
they did unto you" should now
through the Hannan Trace camp
when lhe Wildcats take the stage
Friday night, because lhe Hill laid a
71 -61 loss on lhe Guyan crew 10
MercerviUe in December.
The most dangerous Wildcat the
Oaks wiU face is Chad Swain, a 6foot-2 senior forward who will
check in with a conference-high
I8.3 points-per-game average. ~ut
if Doug Hale's charges start paymg
too much attention to Swain, junior
center Dave Poling (10.9
pts./game)
and
senior
forward/guard Jimmy Brace (10.5
pts./game), they could well get
scorched by Trace's backcoun senior point guard Brian Unroe,
who has yet to score I 00 points on
the season but has connected for
. double figures four times lhis season, and sophomore shooting
guard/forward Shawn Cox (9 .1
pts./game), who had I6. points
against Southern Tuesday mght.
Oak Hill has its share of potent
weapons, but beyond the steady
Chris Simpson (15.3 pts./game)
and a resurgent Bill Potter (9.9
pts./game) lhat has sco~ in double figures m four of h1s last five
games, the rest of the guns haven't
been as loud as these two.
The biggest mystery in the Oaks
forest is the relative disappearance
of junior point guard Benji Lewis,
who averages 14.75 pomts per
game but hasn't matc~ed his 17point effort in the Oaks 7149 wm
over Kyger Creek two weeks ago
with the offense he has had in the
last three games.
Oak Hill will begin February
with a road trip to South Webster
Sarurday night.
North GaUia vs. Southern
North Gallia, tied with Eastern
for fourth in the association, is in a
must-win situation against a South·
em squad still stinging from its loss
at home to Hannan Trace.
The Pirates have yet another
chance to follow up a win with
another victory, something they
have yet 10 do this season . While
losing isn't a lingering habit for
them (they have lost back-to-back
games only twice this year), winning streaks are unheard of.
True, the offense of junior
shooting guard Charles Peck (15.75
pts./game) and junior postm an
Kevin Hunt (15.5 pts./game) are
necessary ingredients to the
Pira1es' fonunes. However, the key
to conb'OI of the paint and the birth
of the fast break has to be the
rebounding of Hunt and junior forward Rob Canady , who probably

SVAC cage standings
(OveraU)
Team
W L
Oak Hill ..............8 4
Southem ...... ........6 6
Eastern ................7 S
Hannan Trace ......7 5
North Gallia ........5 7
Kyger Creek ....... .4 8
Symmes Valley ... 2 9
Southwestern ....... ! 12

PF
775
842
838
755
681
632
614

PA
701
753
853
791
777
721
704
710 953

&lt;I

I

(Conrereace)
Oak Hill ............. .7 I 558
Hannan Trace ......7 2 625
Southern ..............6 2 606
Eastern ................5 3 537
North Gallia ........5 3 499
Kyger Creel: ........2 6 422
Symmes Valley ... I 7 446
Southwestem.......o 9 485
TOTALS ·-..-.33 33 4178

461
547
461
521
482
503
531
672
4178

has registered as many double-digh
rebounding efforts as double-figure
scoring efforts.
·
Southern, in spite of playing
.500 ball at this point, is still dan·
gerous, as senior forward Roy Lee
Bailey proved with his 28-point
clinic against Hannan Trace Tuesday ni~hL But if the Tornadoes are
to avo1d a second straight loss at
home, past scoring heroes Mark
Allen, Michael Evans, Scott Lisle
and Jeremy Roush wiU have 10 step
out of the shadow of 10 points or
less in which they stood againSI the
Wildcats.
Saturday's agenda will have

Southern as the guest team of
South Point's Pointers.
Easten "· Kycer Creek
The last time these two teams
met, it was at Tuppers Plains. The
Eagles were lucky to get out alive
will\ a 55-51 victory. .
There will be more of the same
this time.
The Eagles have the senior tandem of guard Tim Bissell (18.2
pts./game, II games) and forward
Jeff Durst (17.2 pts./game, 12
games), who have combined for 34
of the Eagles' 48 three-point shots.
Their task is primarily Ill spread the
Bobcats' defense thin enough so

Meigs sports briefs----.
Southern freshmen top Alexander
The Southern freshmen of Coach Jonathon Rees defeated the visiting Alexander Spartans 5248 Tuesday evening in the first of a
triple header that saw the varsity and reserve clubs from SHS meet
Hannan Tmce.
Southern was led in scoring by Mason Fisher's 17 points, Donald
Shaffer's I4 and Ed Friend's six. They were followed by Kevin Ihle
(five), Aaron Hoback (four), and Grant Circle and Jeremy Hill
(three each).
Alexander was led by Jason McKibben's 12 and Mike Sherman's eight.

Southern-Eastern game rescheduled
The Eastem-Soulhem boys varsity and reserve basketball contests, postponed from last Saturday night. will be made up the last
regularly scheduled weekend of the season on Saturday, February
22.
That game was Ill be played at Eastern and will begin at 6:30
p.m. for lhe reserves, and 8 p.m. for the varsity.
The following week tournament play begins.

that senior forward Terry McGuire
(11.4 pts./game), among others, can
have room in the lanes to get shots.
Though freshman Charlie Bissell (11.5 pts./game. II games),
who has ripped the nets for double
figures in his last six games, will be
worked into the offensive mix,
Eastern will be without the services
of junior guard Chad' Savoy, who
was suspended from school for 10
days.
The Bobcats are also capable of
spreading defenses thin, as each of
the six scorers in Tuesday night's
72-71 thriller win over Symmes
Valley nailed at least one trey.
Senior Phil Bradbury (15 .6
pts./game). who succeeded the
departed Brian Davidson at ccnler,
canned four of KC's nine from
Shangri-la.
As has been demonstrated in the
previous paragraph, the burly Brad~ury has plenty of company when
11 comes Ill sconng, as sophomore .
forward Chris Crace has shown. He
has scored at least 10 points per
game in six of his last seven outings. Sophomore forward Paul
Covey, who has scored in double
figures only twice in the fmt half
of the season (II vs. Hannan, 12
vs. Ironton St. Joe), has done so in
the last two games (12 vs. North
Gallia, 17 vs. Symmes Valley).
And there it is. The answer to
the question "Who do you cover?":
Everyone.
Symmes Valley vs. Southwestern
When the Rolling Stones sang
their megabit "(I Can't Get No)
Satisfaction," th ey didn't have

s

pen had 26 for Michigan State (133, 3-3).
No.l8 Oklahoma 110
Texas Southern 85
Damon Patterson scored 23
points and Angelo Hamilton added
21 as Oklahoma playing its last
'

non-Big Eight g3ll)e of the season,
pulled away in the second half.
The host SQOnefS (14-3) led just
44-38 before beginning the second :
half with a 9-0 run. David Arce- •
neaux scored 24 points for Texas
Southern (8-ll).
·
·

a couple," UCLA guard Gerald
Madkins said. "It's _l}_ow you

coach or the players, but I'm still
trying to figure out how we W()ll,"

Trojans are technically on top,
though, because they beat their
crosswwn rival.
The Trojans won at UCLA for
the first time since 1985, when they
held on 80-78 in four overtimes.
This time, the Trojans took a 41-19
lead with 3:20 left in the frrst half.
"When we were up by 22, it
. was very surprising," said Yamen
Sanders, who scored 20 points for
USC.
Duane Cooper added a careerhigh 23 points for the Trojans and
Harold Miner struggled to get22.
Miner, averaging 27.4 points per
game, played only 10 minutes in
the first half because of foul trouble
and had just seven points . He
played the last five minutes with
four fouls, and helped Souihem Cal
by making seven of eight free
throws in the final two minutes.
Southern Called 75-65 with two
minutes left. UCLA pressed and
pulled to 82·79 on Tracy Murmy's
3-pointer with one minute to go
and again to 85-82 in the fmal seconds. ·
Murray and Don MacLean each

John Pelphrey had 16 points for
the Wildcats (154, 5-2 Southeastern Conference). Joe Harvell
scored 29 for Mississippi State (89, 1-5).
No. 15 Michigan 89
No.13 Michigan St. 79 (OT)
Reserve Rob Pelinka sparked
Michigan in overtime.
Pclinka, who did not play in the
first half, began the overtime with a
3-pointer as Michigan opened with
a·7-0 burst. He scored six of ,his
career-high nine points in the extra
session.
Jalen Rose scored 26 points and
Chris Webber had 21 for Michigan
(12-4, 4-3 Big Ten). Shawn Res-

By DAVE HARRIS .
Senlinel Corespondent
Meigs jumped out to a 30-6
halftime advantage and roared to a
68' 24 victory over Trimble in girls
Tri· valley Conference basketball
action Wednesday evening at Larry
R. Morrison G~nasium.
The win g1ves the Lady Marauders a 10-1 record and 13-2
overall, and Trimble falls to 0-11
and 1-13 overall. The Meigs gals
are tied for fmt place in the TVC
with Federal Hocking. Meigs will
host a tough NelsonviUe-York (9-S.
6-4) team tonight.
With Ron Logan playing eight
of the 10 girls in uniform in the
flfSt period, Meigs jumped out to a
12-6 lead at the end o( the period.
In the second period the ·rout was
on as Meigs outscored the Lady
Cats 18-0 to take the 24 point advantage into the locker room at the
half.
Vema Compston led the Marauder attack ·with 22 points as
Me ills placed all 10 girls in the
sconng column . Kim Hanning
added 12 points and Tricia Baer

and Lori Kelly added ei~ht, while
Lee Henderson added stx. Angie
KeUy led Trimble with IO.
Meigs hit 26 of 55 from the :
floor for 47% and IS of 30 from .
t~e line for SO%, the Marauders ·
pulled in 34 rebounds with Missy ·
Sisson, Katarina Turner and Tricia ·.
Baer grabbing six each. Meigs had
12 turnovers, eight assists with ·
Compston getting three and 20 ·
sleals _wilh Compston coming liP
with seven.
Quarter totals
Trimble .................6 0 12 6 = 24
Meigs ................. .l2 18 23IS = 68 :
Trimble (24) - Chaslly Antle .
2-0-1 =5, Jenny Shank 0·0-o..o.
Angie King 1-2-2=10, Amy El·
tringram Hl-0=4, Anna Downs 10-3=5. Totals- 6·2·6=24
·
Meigs (68)- Reva Mullen 2-00=4, Vera Compston 8-1-3=22,
Lori Kelly 3-0-2=8, Tricia Baer !0·6=8, Kim Hanning S -0-2•~2.
Lee Henderson 3-~-0=6 •. Katanna
Turner 1-0·1=3, Missy SJSSOD 0-01=1, Ginger Findley 1-0-0=2, Mary
Cremeans 1-0-0=2. Totals- 25-1·
15=68

Sports bra'e~s
1:

Hockey
CALGARY, Alberta (AP) JOe Nieuwendyk signed a threeyear contract with the Cal~ary
Flames for $2.5 mtlhon.
Nieuwendyk, 25. will earn
$800,000 this season and $850,000
in each of the next two seasons. He
scored 45 goals last. season has 13
goals in 38 games th~ season.

M/C SPORTS CARDS
FROM MATHEWSON TO VAN POPPEt-

IF WE DON'T HAVE IT, WE'LL GET IT.
OPEN 11-7 MON.-SAT.; CLOSED SUN.
35 N. 2nd ST.
MIIDDLEPORT
Across from Western Auto

ALL THAT HARDWARE- Clarence Moldea of Pomeroy
(left), a stair member or Jhe Bia Bend Youlb FootbaH League, presents Scott Lucas, Velerans Memorial Hospital administrator, wilb
two plaques and a trophy. Tbe bosr.ital, as a part ol Its community
serv1ce program, sponsored the Do phins, coached by Andy Vau,ban assisled by Pat O'Brien, Tiny Williams and Frank Seth, durmg
the past season. Tbe Dolphins bad an undefeated season .in league
and tournament play. The awards presented to Lucas mclude a
plaque ror team sponsorship, 8 lraveling plaque for sponsor~g lbe
league's championship team and a lrophy won by the Dolphms as
the top team In tournament play. The league Is composed ol fifthand sixth-graders from lhe Meigs and Mason County areas.

KCHS club to sponsor tourney
The Kyger Creek High School Pep Club will sponsor a men's
league basketball tournament scheduled for Feb. 29 and March I.
The entry fee for this double-elimination tournamen~ which will
be open 10 the first eight teams who enler, is $100 per team.
For more information, call Tom Riccardi at 367-7377 (Kyger
Creek H.S.).

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The University of Rio Grande's
Kathy Snyder poured in 17 points
Tuesday Ill lead the Redwomen to a
76-66 Mid.Ohio Conference victory over Ohio Dominican on the
Lady Panthers' court.
Snyder, a 5-10 senior forward
from Gahanna and co-captain of
this year's team, added nine
rebounds to the offense as the Rio
ladies shook off OD's defense of
its home court.
OD, led by Nikki Bolte's 20·
point performance, didn't allow the
visitors much breathing room, but
found itself behind by four points
at the half. The Redwomen held
their turnovers to 13 whlle innicting 17 upon the hosts to help build
a small margin throughout the second half.
OD dominated the rebounding,
posting 54 to Rio Grande's 41 .
Ann Barnitz added IS points
and 10 boards to the Redwomen
game and freshman player Melanie
Miller contributed I 0 pomts and
eight rebounds to complement Snyder's leadership on offense. Kari
Riebesell had 15 points, while
Katie Moeller and Kelly Hovest
chipped in .with 13 markers apiece
to maintain the Lady Panthers'
threat. Hovest had IS rebounds and
Mary Tressler added 12 10 cement
OD 's control of the boards.
The Redwomen were successful
on 28 of 71 attempts from the field
for 40 percent, including three of
14 from the three for 21 percent. At
the line, Doug Foote's club sunk 16
of 20 lries for 80 percent
OD posted a 30 percent finish
on shooting, and hit seven of 18
attempts at the three for 39 percent. .
They were less successful from the
line, hiUing eight of II for 78 percent.
Rio Grande improved to 18-5
overall and 7;2 in the MOC, and
OD went Ill 12-8 and 3-5. The Redwomen rewrn Ill action tonight at
7 in Lyne Cel\ler against Malone,
while the Lady Panthers host
Mount Venion Nazarene Saturday.
Box score:
OHIO DOMINICAN (6ti) Kari Ri~besell, 5-5-15; Katie

Moeller, 2-3-0-13; Jennifer Ewanski, 0-1-1; Nikki Bolte, 3-4-2-20;
Kelly Hovest, 5-3-13; Mary
Tressler, 2-0-4 . TOTALS 19-7-3·

66.

RIO GRANDE (76) - Gena
Norris, 24-8; MicheUe Crouse! 21-0-7· Jackie Hannon, 2-0-4; Tnc1a
Collins, 3-0-6; Mindy Montgomery, 1-0-2; Ann Barnitz, 5-5IS ; Stephanie Gudorf, 2-1-0-7;
Melanie Miller, 2-6-10; Kathy Snyder. 6-1-2-17. TOTALS 25·3-1676.
Halftime score: Rio Grande
34, Ohio Dominican 30.

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health...home...

="""

2989

car...business.

21f• Ton
360' swivel

saddle.
I 5·6275·0

2

Terry Seat
Cower

Floor .Jack
1

Bucket size.
Asst. colors. ·
Pr. 67· 1570ser.

97

22-8802·7
22-7118· 1
22-7183-1

287

r-'-...,..-,

Call olsloday lor the quality
pralection and profe.sionol .
service you deserve.

J--

·~,-.

i

"'"''

•

,_

"I

i

SUI:IIIIO
Trulntent
1 bonte good for
st;).OOOmiles.
78· 1206·8

2387

'~1898
Enalne
111to Tnna.
Fllild

JEFF WARNER
INSURANCE

Dexron II or Typo
F. Ql. 37.307~79

118

302 W. 2nd

POMEROY, OHIO

We1tern

614-992-5479

.,,., Plllnt
Decorator coloro &amp;
prlmtrt. t 1 ounce
con. 73. I 795 oorieo

29

a..tarers&amp;
Lullrlcallt

Cleans carb .. fuel
ayatem. 12 oz .
pour, 78·8947 ·2

Reatores horse·
power. 78·1230-32

188

4·Cyii ............. S.H
e.Cyii ............. 7.H
I·Cyl1.............1.88

CHAMPION
Spark Pll•l•

PRESTOIIIE Plwtr

....... Ru"

Standord or

12 oz. 78·3077-2

relistor.

I

ggc

·133 :

fltlliiWMII . . . . . . . . . ~ ... ~~
t41:11N ()loa ()It rrw.or.ic1t PIUs,
Qt GZII
firlllnidt ' lll ........... . . .

c:owe.

•ot ~ ..... N~n~Ccllfll"'

-,---- .,

"ITS TIME FOR DOMINOIS PIZZAII

.--"""·l~.i)
I ~~~

1

.

~

ss.99

I~

I ,~~

1

I
I

sto.991
OneLarge . I

PRICES GOOD THROUGH FEBRUARY 8TH, 199Z

I Deluxe piu.a. I
·Pepperoni Pizza 1 plus 4 colas 1. .
I
I
_.
I
I
I
!U II
I
992~
I
QneLarge

..

2124

,~

:\

••

Gas charged. ·
IO·IIago valving.
81 ·4700ser.

':1999

Associate Store Horn.- o~•••

I

DONALD &amp; EDNA WILSON, Owners

'·

49 North.Seen• Avenue - Phone: 992·5515'
y.,., Woolom ..,. Doole&lt;-.-...., hie ••llll...,...;, •"' 1o _....,.,.of!""~

\

I'

FIPS 13'187 .;.,

'.DDUPORI, OHIO 45760 12-6370
Dlll!I'NIUr
IIIGGS ,.
-.m1
·

.- - " - - -·RttM..-'"'""'• - ....._._..,._.,....... COII""'-NT
nnn;
•···-·....,
·
.QEDIUYAIWLE
............ ... CIM . . . . . ,........ . .., . . . . . - .......

\

~I
•

scored 21 points f&lt;l' the Bruins.
No. 14 Kentucky !16, Ole Miss 78
Jamal Mashburn rebounded
from a bad game with a good one,
s~orin 24 point.s as Kentucky
s
a two-game losing skid.
ashburn, who had only four
points in last Saturday's 105-88

Redwomen outlast OD 76-66

PA
271
311
362

(YII'IIIJ)
Weekead ldioD
Frldlj - North Oallia. at
Southern: Symmea Valley at
S.outhweatern; Hannan Trace at
Oak HiD; EtUCa1i at Kypr creek
SaturdU - SouChem II $outh ,
Point: Eurem at Waterford; Oak
HiD at South Webll«

Southern Cal coach George Raveling said.
. ·
In other games, No. 14 Ken tucky beat Mississippi 96-78, No.
15 Michigan defeated No . 13
Michigan State 89-?? in overtime
and No. 18 Oklahoma topped
Texas Southern H0-85.

0

David Grindstaff, a member of the Southern Athletic Boosters
Club, announced that the Southern High School boys basketball
team will be sponsoring a men's independent basketball tournament
scheduled for Feb. 22 and Fe~ . 23.
The entry fee is $100 per !O-man roster. Trophies will be awarded 10 first- and second-place learns, and there wiU also be first- and
second-place sponsor trophies to the champion and the runner-up.
For more infonnation, please call949-2025 (Racine).

(Reserves - SVAC only)
Ttlllll
W L PF
Southem .............. 8 0 445
Eastern ................ 7 I 377
Symmes Valley ...4 4 345
Kyp Creek ........3 4 268
Hanlllin Trace ......3 S 327
Oak Hill ............. .3
318
NOrtb Oallia ........3 S 303
Southwcslern ....... l 8 281
TOTALS •..,..•.:.32 32 . ~

regroup. I knQw we'll come back
now that this undefeated stuff is
over with."
UCLA (14-1) was off to its best
start since 1972-73, when it went
undefeated. The Bruins, trying to
match Duke at 15·0, instead fell
behind by 22 points to the No. 25

ni~~ven the great Bill Walton lost Tro).r~~: ~~~~r!:;'fth!~ the uctA~~~ ~a~~\!]ili;'fJ~~~ ~~~tof~~~utes~ baskets Meigs beats Trim bIe 68-24

Southern basketball team
to sponsor men's cage tourney

-

.

pts./game) will give the Vikings
plenty of headaches unless they
establish the inside game w1th even
more conviction than was shown "i~
their loss Ill Kyger Creek.
In that game. layups by senior ..
forward Andy Lester (game·high
25 p.oints) and senior ~ivotman
Chfiis Blake ( 17 pmnts, II
rebounds) showed that Valley can
open up the inside, but KC's manto-man defense proved effective
against such a crowbar.
·
If the 6-foot-1 Mandeville
expects to control the 6-foot-3
Blake (11.5 pts./game) or the 6foot-2 Lester (13.4 pts./game) in
the paint, Mandeville must conb'OI
the lane and the Highlanders must
box out against an overall taller
Viking squad. If not, a McCartyless Southwestern squad Uunior
point guard Aaron McCarty twisted
his ankle in the Eastern game and
isn't likely to play against
Symmes) will be in for a long
night.

Symmes Valley's current fortunes
in mind, but Jagger &amp; Co. wouldn't
be blamed if they did.
·
Why? The Vikings are in the
grip of a five-game losing streak
that has seen three of those defeats
come at home.
This time the Norsemen, who
had to come from behind in the
fourlh quarter to beat Soulhwestem
55-54 at Aid in late December for
their first win of the season, would
like to put the Highlanders under
their thumbs a lot sooner in this
game. That is, unless senior Adam
Simpson and juniors Chris Mandeville and Jamie Morse, among
others, have something to say about
thaL
Simpson (10 pts./game), in collecting a game-high 24 ~ints - a
career high - in the Highlanders'
76-66 loss to Eastern Tuesday
night, sank five of his team's eight
three-pointers, while Mandeville
(12.8 pts./game) had more
rebounds (18) than points (16).
These two and Morse (10.2

By The Associated Press
So much for that big battle of
unbeatens between Duke and
UCLA.
Southern Cal made sure UCLA
would not go into that March
matchup unblemished, bouncing
the No. 2 Bruins 86-82 Wednesday

~·

JOU ......... J'III_ .. . , . . .

AUTO PAllS

.S~TTON PAm

.

�Ohio

Ohio

Familr
Medicine
john C Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

Qaesll011: There are numerous
commercials for ibuprofen and
TylenQI/ but! usually lake aspirin
when I get a headache or sore
joints and muscles. Is there anything wrong with laking plain, old
aspirin?
"aswer: The "active ingredi ent" in aspirin is acetylsalicylic
acid. This very effective pain killer
and anti-innammatory agent is
classified as a salicylate by
chemists. Salicylates have been
used for thousands of years since the time of Hippocrates at
least - by people worldwide to
llelp aches, pains and fever.
For instance, North AmeriCan
Indians and the ancient Chinese
knew of the benefits of willow bark
- an unrefined source of salicylille. The use of salicylates moved
from folk remedies to mainstream
medicine when the Rev. Edward
Stone of Chipping Norton , England, submitted a letter to tile Royal
Society in 1763 describing his disc'overy of the benefits of willow
baric for treating arthritis and fever.
Willow bark extract, though
effective, had several major problems. In addition to its bitter taste,
which most people probably found
quite annoying, it caused noticeable stomach upset. Because of tile
sllliii8Ch irrilation, it was very difficult to take for more than a few
days and was unsuitable for illnesses like arthritis where treatment
lasts for years. Felix Hoffman, a
chemist working at Bayer Industries in Germany, designed a more
digestible fonn of salicylate for his
falher, who suffered from rheumatoid arthritis. His discovery acetylsalicylic acid - was given
the trade name "Aspirin." It
became commercially available in
1899 and has since hecome worldwide in its use.
. Aspirin, which is no longer tile
exclusive.trademark of tile Bayer
Co., is not without its side effects.
Although to a lesser degree than
onrefined salicylate, it still causes
some stomach upset. When taken
ln large amounts for prolonged
~ods. it can also produce kidney
~age. It can even cause death if
it is consumed in huge quantities
~l at once.

'

lt

~Ohio

Despite these potential risks,
aspirin safely provides benefits to
millions of people each day. It is
primarily used - as you described
- for tile relief of everyday aches,
pains and fever. However, it also
reduces the inflammation of arthritis and the risk of heart attacks. It is
truly an amazing drug with nearly a
century of experience to document
its safety record. Most of the problems with aspirin only occur when
it is taken in large amounts (more
than 12 tablets per day for an average adult) or for extended periods
of time. So go ahead and take
aSpirin when you need it, but follow the package directions to avoid
complications.
Question: Should I buy brandname or generic aspirin?
Answer: It probably doesn't
make any difference. However, I'd
recommend that when you buy
generic you pick a high-quality
generic aspirin - such as that sold
under the name of a national pharmacy chain. These products should
work the same as the brand-name
varieties. But be sure to watch tile
expiration dates on the aspirin
products you buy. They can go bad
silting on the shelf in the store or in
your medicine cabinet at home.
One final point about aspirin. It
is still the standard by which the
other drugs in its class are evaluated. For _general use, none of the
Olhers is clearly superior to aspirin.
You'd never know this, however,
from the advertising blitz that's
heing conducted by the manufacturers of the products you mention.
The companies have spent a lot of
time and money in developing
these aspirin substitutes and they
want to recoup tlleir invesUnents.
Their direct goal is to take some
of the revenue away from 115pirin
sales. That 's no small potatoes
either. More than IS,OOO tons of
aspirin is produced 'in the U.S.
annually. Wow, that's a lot of
headaches and a lot of money to
fight over. I get a headache just
thinking about ill
"Family Medicine" is a weekly
column. To submit questions, write
to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio University College of Osteopathic
Medicme, Grosvenor Hall, Athens,
Ohio45701.

AT YOUR 3 AREA
Rainbow
Trash Bags

~Ultra

IOgallln

Surf
Detergent

ID caant

Dun
·'-

Frosting

FINJ\L CLEAN-tJP
ON

SALE SHOES
FRIDAY, SATURDAY &amp; MONDAY

BUY ONE PAIR
OF

SALE SHOES
AT

¢
16 oz.

...........
r;;

~Cfiap111an

We Have Beautiful
Balloon Bouquets
and Arrangements
for Your Loved Ones
on Valentine's Day.
Place Your Orders
Early.

VALENTINE'S DAY
PHOTOMUG ~~
SPECIAL

TUBULAR HANGERS

,
·
0

Choice of backgrounds. Mug is fully
assembled and dishwasher-safe plastic.
Price lncluds !Oprint from nogaUve. .

I JAN 27 THRU FEB 2 1

WANTED TO RENT: House in
country with at least 3
bedrooms and some land to
put horses on. Need
immediately. Call
304-882·2246 anytime.

. . . . ..

ServiCM...ooMo•ooo••••••••••2.100
2 ~=~:.~~
1,000

Public Notice

Public Notice
Actlvttiel .............- .. 4,500

G3-7·AlNCOIE TAX
ADMlNISTRAnON
210 PeraoniiStrvlcn
. 211 Solr Ill .

Wages..,,,_ .......... 1t,OOO

212EmploJM
Benlflll..................8,400

230 Contnoo ...l

Servloea........................ soo
240 8uppll11 IFIId
•
.....,....................... - 500

Tollt Income Tox

Admlnlatrlllon............28,400

CLERK, TREASURER
210 PtraonoiServlcn
211 Solorllll
W~g~~, .... _ .., ...... 12,100
212 EmplofM

8eftefttll. ••••_ .......... 1,100

Othlr Cllnlrrll .
Oovamment

21

2

~JAJMAR

GOLF COURSE

..................24,000
G:~·roriL'iiPEciit000
s.m~

RACINE GUN
CLUB

SIMON'S
PICK·A·PAIR

GUN SHOOT
1:00 P.M.
SUNDAYS
Starling Sept. 22
. 12 Gauge-Factory
Choke Only

Last markdown
on shoes
before closing
store.

POMEROY

CONSTRUCTION

RIIIOdeling

·

Stop &amp; Compart
Free Estimates

~~----•U,IOO

Tolrlllltrotlillllri--.
' ond llatlolr__..:..:...tt,710
Tolrlllof ttMa Hlahwoy
lmpro-nt FUnd

1

zsot JACKSON AVEMUE

· AI...-) '

pOINT PLL\SAMT, WV :ISSIO

SALE nNIIS

(Jo4l671-UGS

...ou
,-i'2 PRICE

._I
"ao

J64 JACUON PlltE·

OAI.I.iPOUS. OIL
(614) 446

Shoes

-

PainUng

(FREE ESTIMATES I

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

985·4141

(No Sunday Calls!

New HoMes • Yi1yl Sidi•g
New Gara1•• • Replace meat Windows
Roo• Additions • Roofiilg
l:OMltfERCIAI. and RESinENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES ·

614·949·2801 or 949·2860

J&amp;L BLOWN INSULATION
MASTIC®THE NATION'S FINEST
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS
•UDbeltlble C1C11J laYiDp
oCuoiDm 111-.01111111111101-

""'"' nqutNo polotlll

- d h-lll!. . .y&lt;llolilltl
olJ!IO!nalllml-

, kif~• --~- ....... 100

.

c.ar... rr..

...........

Will lUll
M2-1772

••u"•

----·1,700

711 "01\TH IECOND IT.
MIDDUEPOR'J', OIL 41'760.
(6141, .......l

POMEROY'S QUAU'I'Y SHOE STORE -

. I

\

'

." {,

'

.

II

12/.111911

Nowln
Stock ·
AIR CONDinONERS • HEAT PUMPS IIIII
FURNICEUOR MOBILE &amp; DOUBLEWIDE IIOMlS'

'

.c.
.
.
.
.
.. ...re:·· _,

MICROWAVES
VHS CAMERAS·
AUTO RADIOS
REPAIRED

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

1-6-1 mo. d.

tltbployoe
.....,..;___ __1,000

"

. MARCUM
COHIUCIING
-New Homes
-Remodeling
-Garages &amp; Room
Additions
11·22-92·1mo.

,

6-12·QO.dn

1-7-92, 1

11· 14·'90&lt;1

. OPEN 9 AM-9 PM

210,.IMIIIItr'.tau
211'
I IEII __ _.,rad
w....__..:,

I'&lt;?

low Grade Oak
Saw logs
$150 per 1,00
Delivered To
OHIO PALLET CO
Pomeroy, Ohio
614·992•6461

949·2826

PROQRAIII.-

•

CARPENTER SERVICE

14 TANNING
SESSIONS - sl4"
· Offer Good Thru
Feb. 14

'

.....,.on'
::JwwlilnltiUre
(llpeoW

WANTED

539 Bryan Place
Ohio
· 1111 4/tln

PARKI AND RECREAOON
FUND
.
LEJSURE
ME AC1MTIEI

.

YOUNG'S
-Interior &amp; Exterior

BILL SLACK
992·2269
USED RAILROAD TIES .

391 WEST MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO
614-892-3524
1-22·'92-1 ...

12-2-91·1 mo. J)d.

oom AddiUona
utter Work
-flectricoland Plumbing
-Roofing

LIGHT
•
HAUUNG
•FIREWOOD

H.E.C.

614-992·3394

J&amp;L
INSULATION

uc·

2':!:t.'"...............42,000 .

1-fOURS:
8:30am-4:00pm

Middlapor~

~=;;::::~;;;;~~

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER&amp;
. SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS &amp;

Or Call
742·3020 Evenings

SECTION 7: Thltthwt bt
epproprllttd from tha
FOREVEIJ
= n g ENTERPRISE
BRONZE
Wtllf Fund:
INE
210 PwtOnoiSirvlcn
211 Sollrllll
S~&gt;Nithlart s,.clat
•..•. 88,000

by ERTL
Displayed at The
Quality Print Shop

JAMES KEESEE
992·2772 or
742·2097

985·4473
667·6179

Starting at $235 per mo.
Very nico 2 or3 BR, 2 bath
houoow/baaementand
CALL'61~-~~s\"2s or
385-8227
12-11-1 mo.

OPEN FRI. &amp; SAt
I0:00 A.M.·3:00 P.M.

•Vinyl Siding
•Replacement
Window
•Roofing
oinsulatlon

l•,iar•lllll

REMOVAl

EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING

DK's FARM TOYS

1211211 mo.

!=======~
BISSELL &amp; BURKE

REVENUEFUNOAPPROPRIATION........... _,771,5t0
SECTION 6: 11111 !hart bt
opproprloted from tha
following CAPITAL PRO·
JECTS FUNDS:
CONSTRUCTION FUND
Watw lyallm lrnprOVIIIIenl
Fund
271 Tronafwl..............35,000
Totai·Program-..........35,000
Tollll for Conatructlon

TRIM a111d

COUHNOTMREYPMAORBKILE

nY can_par mo.
614-992-5528 or
385·8?].~1-t mo.

1/2/tln

9-6-d

Total Ullllr Control

ContriiCtuol

lr11

RENTALS
Available In

has nice homesltes
available for up to
80 homes.
JUST OFF RT. 33
0 I $75

Call 614·997·66 37
St. RU
Cheshire, OH.

I131 1921I mo.

TotaL ......... ................ 104,000
PROGRAM I- SECURITY
OF PERSONS AND
PROPERTY
UTTER CONTROL FUND:
230 ContriiCtuol

Selda•• ·--....-"11,110

,r.,~R!:o~:,ra,~
Esii.at-25 Trs. IIJ.

,J0U~~~s~g~E

COUNTRY MOBILE
HOME PARK

Quality
Stone Co.
·
·
SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

MEMBERSHIP FEES
Men
...............'77S ea.
•0111 ·-·-·--·--..·-------· 1 •
w
·
~25
o~~~:PECIALREVENUE
omen.......... sea.
REFUSE FUND
Couple...............
_450
230 ContriiC...I
Famlly............1SSO (4)
'
1650 (4)
8ustness.........
Strvl-................. 113,000
T~~~'t:':M r~~c~1~~ ~'i:nts..............:l 00
OF~~WTYAND
· O ge ... .. -- ..... .... ISpd.O

230 Conlnotull

F&amp;A TREE TRIMMING &amp;

1---------r--------,--------.,...------~ L-;:;;:;;:;;::;~(1)~3::;,1~-.~
..
~.
r
MEIGS
Newly Re-Done
NICE 1 and 2 BR
SHRUB &amp; TREE .

1o,ooo
!'zt,nt-L....- ..........,.27,430080

Wag~~.......... -

1;::=====~

&lt;II aft• 6, ... -992·2921

Servlcea.................104,000

~..- .....7,100

_______. . _______

Business Services

. . . . . .50

w...--.. .-........30,000

For

~=;i·~;-- -·- - 1 •000
26o.bl
.......................

r--------..t....----~--..._

REVOLVING LOAN FUND
230 Contnootull
ContriiCtuli
s.Mcee..................... 1,000 230Servlcet
......................S,OOO
271
Tranafwl
..............47,000
2=~~
Tollll
RIYOivlng
Lolli
Tollll Clark,
Fund. ........................S2,000
TrMSurw........- .. t 4,700
ODNR WATERWAYS
County
Audltor'a 111d
SAFETY FUND (Sptclel
Tr_ __.,
Rannuo)
Feea..................- .24,500 230 ConlriiCtuol

21~~-=J
..
2II 8rlilrllll

1o $} 00

TolaiSIIII GronL.......25,550
PUBLIC TRANSPOR·
TAllON (Speclrll Revenue)
210 Penonol Strvlcn
211 S.llrllll
W
212 =:k;y;...........a,eoo
Btnolita..................3,710
230 ContriiCIUII
2:::;:;·;;;;d"'"' t61,t5o

Progrii!IIV Tr..,portlliorl...•...lt,710

lOS

.,,

Tr••

";.A'OGl•·v-:·:=c

$179

$2.29 ·~-

W11J11 ....................2,000
212 PtrNnnel
Tolll for Swimming
Blntli11....................300 Fund Approprllllon
Progrom lll-L.alaure nme
220 TriYil
portlllon.................... 2,400 Actlvltln ................37,500
230 ContriiC...l
OTHER ENTERPRISE
FUNDS
.
Strvl-...................11,050
240 Olhtr OperaUon •d
Poro.,nol Servlcoo
Mlln.....,ce.............4,250
250 Copllll 0Utlay........5,000 2t1 811.-loo/
210 Tranttwa...................soo
Wtgtt.....:............ 24,000
Tollll Fir• Equlpmanl.25,500 21
B11·1•XFIRE TRUCK
~n~fJ=~~........ 13,000
(Spacltl Revenue)
230Controc.._l
23(1 Conlr11Ciual
Strvl-..................... 1,250
s.m-..................... 1,900 240 Supplln and
Materilla...................3, 750
261 RIII!IIRenl ol
DobL ........................&amp;O,OOO Tolll Ctme..ry............42,000
262lntwnl .......,_.....11,100 Tolll for Olhw Enterprllt
Tolll Flro Truck. .........73,500 Fund (Cirntllry).....42,000
GRAND TOTAL ENTERFEDERAL REVENUE
PRISE FUNDS APPRO·
SHARING FUND
PRIATION.............A45,900
ISSUE li·FUND
METER
DEPOSIT:
(Spaclll RIYIIIUI)
257 Refunda ............20,000
230 ContriiC.._I
Servloea...................66,000 Tolll Metw DepoaiL... 20,000
Totalluua UFund......&amp;&amp;,OOO GRAND TOTAL TRUST AND
ECONOIIC DEVELOPMENT AGENCY FUNDS APPROPRIATIONS.............. 20,000
FUND (Sptolrll Revenue)
TOTAL ALLAPPROPR~
210 Plraonol Strvlcn
AnONS.............$2,001,5QO
211 Sollrllll'
w..................... 11,000 And lha Village Clark Ia
horoby authorized to draw
worronta
Vlli11Je
21=~----···---.2,650 Troaauror onlor thtpoymonta
230 Contnoolull

210 "*-IIServlctt
212EmploJM
: w11111- .......- ....S140,ooo Berrll'tti.
•.;..................I,IOO
Conlllclull
:~'~.............71,100 230...~
....~--75,100
'230 ContriiCIUII
240S.
lind
.
' Strvl-......................000
~ .................22,500
.240 8upplilltnd
210 Debt RtllromenL...I,800
· ~ 118111ria11,..,_.,,.,......1t,OOO Tollll
Othtr Gwllfll
Tolol Pollee L8w EnGovammenl........ t13,100
: • forc-L ...........$236,100 Tollll Progrom YU-4ontral
Tolol Progrom I -Security . &lt;aov.nment.........:lffl,tSO
ofl'wlonaond
Othlr Una ol Funda:
600 211 T,..r.ro...- -.241,550
Total Othtr u- or
. unUTY SERVICES
. F.-..................241.550
·Other Bulo iJtllty
GRAND
TOTAL GENERAL
: • Strvl-: Str•t ~ling
FUND
APPROJIRI.
230 Controclull
AnON.--.......
- ...721,100
8ervi~.............." •.2S.OOO
SECTION
4:
Thotlh
. . bt
Tolll Progrom V-lllalc
•pr.roprltltd
.
from
tht
Utlltv Ser.ict.--..28,000 lot owing: SPECIAL REV.
PROGhAII VI - GENERAL , ENUE FUNDS. Slr11t
. OOVERNIENT
ConatrucUon, MolrltiiiiiiOI
~ Admlnlttrlllvt
tnd R~r Fund.
I&gt;ROGRAM VI210 l'erlonollervlcll
TRANSPORTAOON
211 8rolwflll
StrMIMoin-ce

CARESS
BEAUTY
SOUP

PLASTIC

Servlcn

211 S.llrllll

· aua.toreo~

WE WILL DELIVER.

Photo Special!

MIIMII11....................2,000
Tolll tillturll

MARLIN'S
WHITE'S HILL BAND
COUNTRY MUSIC
Willie Nelson1 ~ollnny CashJ Elvis
Presley, Merle Haggara,
George Jones and RanCfy Travis
type music ..
(Rutland legion Hall
Beach Grove Rd.,
Rutland, OH.)
Every Friday Night
. 8to 12 P.M.
Admission $3.00
Par Couple SS.DO-Under 12$1.00

ANNUAL APPROPRIATION
ORDINANCE
VILLAGE OF MIDDLEPORT
An ORDINANCE to moko
opproprlllllont for Current
Exponua ond other
ExPMcllturll of the Vllllge
of lllddoport, Sill.. of Ohio,
during tht flacol yaor
.,.tlng Qoc. . blr 31, 1H2.
Section 1. BE IT
RESOLVED by lht Council
of tho Vllllge of lllddltport,
Sllto ol Ohio, thot, to
provide for tht current
tXptOIII ond othor
••r,:nditurll ol the 11ld
Vlloge of llickloporl during
.the ftac•l ytlr ending
·Oactmbtr 31, ltl2, the
:hollowing auma bt Mid lhty
liro hereby ttt uldt ond
opproprllllld u followa, viz:
: · Stc:tlon 2: Thot lhwe bt
·ipproprloted from the
.GENERAL FUND:
· : PROGRAM I- SECURITY
'
OF PERSONS AND
.
PROPERTY
·Pollet L8w Enfor-t
.210 Ptraonol Strvicll

~PRICE

'

r--~:=========::;---t 12:s:t:;:;·;~d..........4,000

1112

ANDGETTHE
SECOND PAIR OF
EQUAL VALUE OR·
LESS FOR *I 000

GROUP Of eta OREN'S

PRICES GOOD
THROUGH
SUNDAY,
FEBRUARY 2nd
ONLY

18 oz.

Literary club
to hold meeting
The Middleport Literary Club
will meet Wednes day at 2 p.m.
(note time change from 1:30 p.m.)
at the Meigs County Public Library
in Pomeroy. Mrs. Chester Erwin
will review "Livingston." Roll call
. is to name "A place I'd like to visit
....-in Africa."

HURRY,
QUANTITIES
ARE
liMITED

Hines Cake
Ready-To-Spread Mix

Young, all of Pomeroy; Nancy J.
Parker Campbell, Paul Bryan Harris, Tammy Dawn Holter, Kathryn
Louise lhle, Michaella Ann Jones,
Michelle Eileen Winebrenner, all
of Racine; Mark Allen Murphy,
Kirk Dean Reed, Reedsville;
Daniel Scou Kennedy, Rutland;
Kevin Victor King, Ellen Ruth
Waugh, botll of Shade; and Lori A.
Crow, Syracuse.

CLEAN SWEEP
CLEARANCE

f

Duncan .
Hines

Rannua)

CONSIGNMENT AUCTION
EVERY FRIDAY EVENING
7:00P.M.
. 202 NORTH SECOND ST.
(Old Firestone Store)
Middleport

$ 99

U. announces dean's list

•
: Thirty students from the area
who are atltllding Ohio University
have been named to tile Dean's List
for fall quarter.
: To be named to the list, a stu,dent must have earned a grade
point average of 3.3 or heuer on a
scale of 4.0 for the quarter and
have earned 16 hours, 12 of which
were taken for a letter grade.
Named to the list were Emilie
Ann Sisson, Cheshire; Suzanne
Gaul Clay, Chester; Amy Joanne
Penick, Jennifer Marie Stephan,
both of Coolville; Trisha Anne
Spencer, Long Bouom; Allen Glen
AmoU, Cynthia Lynn Rifne. Melissa Lynn Woods, all of Middlepcrt;
Melanie Sue Arnold, Kevin Donald
J(ing, Kristin M. King, Larissa Lee
Long, Sandra L. Carleton Needs,
Leigh Anne Redovian, Jennifer
Leigh Swartz, Monica Layne Turner, Amy Lynn Warth, Susan Renee

86c

BULLETI
DEADUNE
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

18Use

z,.rsaoo

250 c.pilll Oudly........4,000
Tollll RocrMion
Progrllll................... 12,100
CUIIUrll FIICIIIIIM
COUNCIL FUND

4ROLL

COTTONELLE
BATH
TISSUE

Public Notice

Public Notice

In Memory of
LUCY CHESSER
Who passed away
January 30, l987
When He cometh, to ·
make up His jewels.
And they shall be
mine salth the Lord
of Hosts In that day
when I make up my
jewels.
Loved and MISIIIH
Sister

Qhio University
· College of Osteopathic Medicine

'.,

rBENNEn' MOIIU
HOME
HEAnNG&amp;
ltc11114• Wflnl SdletiiLtfl lt.l41
(6141446·9416 tr 1-I00-172-SH7 .

..

�I " ~

Thursday, January 30, 1992

Ohio

1\nno unce ments

..

SNAFU®
. by Bruce Beattie

11

Wanted: library clerk, computer
llperltnel MCIISiry, IVtnfngl
and Sunday ho\n, 1101 1111
th1n 20hra. per wHk, $4.35ptr
hr., apply at Uaigs Co. Library.

Cilmponton, Box C-29

wv

18

O Rearrangs

e:oo 11J
C2l • Cll
New•

•

i

Giveaway

rtSteiio. .,.

LUC

r

II]) Rln Tin Tin, K·t Cop

R

:ktllo ... Cf

lot i· 'Walktr dog, btlck, brown
&amp; whllt, namt on tags, Norrlt
Nunn, 614-387-7520 or 304-77'J5738 collect, loti at Mint 12,
A.ward

A

PRINT NUMSERED

I!)Tioo Ja-Ul

(l)lnlldo Edllfon t;r
&lt;l)MacNtiC
NawtHour
(I). 01
llalkllblll
Wast VIrginia at St. Joseph's

BRIDGE

edition • 2:00 p.m.
Friday. Monday ldillon • 2:00
p~m. Saturday.

Rick Pearson Auction Company,

w..t Virginia, 304-m-5785.

Recllnll', $5.47 WMk, Swtwe\
Rocker, t11:1 W..k.lunk Bad
Com~tt• 18.41 W11k, 4 Dfawar
ChHt, $3.21 WHk; Pootitr Bod·
room Sulo, 7 po., 111.17 WNk,
lncludH BtddlnQ.Counhy Pine
Dlnlltt Whh Bench • 4 Ch1ira,

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBUSHING CO.
thll you do butl·
""' with people you know, 1nd
NOT lo tend monty llwough lhl
mill unlll you have lnvlllfgaled
r~comrMndl

Wanted to Buy
Farmall Cub Tractor With At·
tiCIHntnll. Clll 614·998-6528.

Llny Li,.ly. 614·3118-9303.

Part lime help wanted, Duke
Cluners, 2410 Jtcklon A.ve,
oppty botwHn 8:00 &amp; 3:00PM.

Top PricH Paid: Ali Old U.S.

Slyllst wanted

Wil'llltd To Bur: Junk Autot
Whh Or Whhout Motors. Call

Coins, Gold Rings, Silver Coins, Eaay World Excellanl Payl AsGold Coins. M.T.S. Coin Stlop, Nmbla Products At Home. Call
TOll Froo, 1-800-46H588, Ext
151 S.Cond Avanut, Gallipolis.
313.

to;

high traffic

23

Professional
Services
MONEY FOR COLLEGE

lnlormotlon: 1-11110-821-536.

WANT
ADS
WORK!

Want to:
PIN down EXTRA

CA8H?H

Apartment
for Rent ·

1-bdrm

dgwnlltaira,

t~ .oHoting.

salon, no ctlentala nec...ary,
WI can help buhd ya~.r future,
You Or Someone You Know
for appalnlrMnt call· Carol King, ItNMdt
FJn~nclal A11illance For
614-446-8922.
Col'-tgt Wt Can Help. For FrM

a few pennies spent n ......
comes back folding money

44

Real Estate
31 Homes lor Sale
;z brick hom1s, 1 with poot,
loetled 4 milts at Rl. 62, 304675-6979.
3 UnJt Rtnlal, Situated On 112
Acrtl..a! 1Mtlntenlnce FrM, EJt:·
cellenl:.:mtpe, 614-446-8588.
3 BA Home for 111t. Low 20't.

New kitchen, wiring, hutlng,
ciiY• Point PINNAl, WV. 304·

81S-6131.
Ont Story Duplax: 4 Rooms
Each Sldl, Balh, Glrtg!, Patio.
Routt 35, North. Ctll ror Appolntmenl . 814-446-6850.

RodueOd To Soil: 149,900,

Chnhl,., Ohio. 104-932-8959,
904·932·767'D, 814-367.o649._
W1nlld to buy, houH and/or
property In Gallla County on
land conlract, pric.ct In the 20'•·

304-675-11'1911. .

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
1 Acrt With 12160 Total Electric

Trailer, In Kygor CrNk Sohool
Dlotrlct. 117,100. 614-36~7267,
E"•nlng~.

14 acrea, 2 bedroom mobile
home, country wtllr, ~1111, WV,

116,100. 304-1195-3-121 '"" 5:00.
1912 Hillcrtll 12ll55, 2 Mdrooml with porch, nic•, $3,750.

view of rivar, til ulitll in
$250mo 614·949·2528

2 bldroom 1pt and 2 bedroom
housa, bpth in New Havan, WV.
304-382·3752:

Apl lor rtnf, good cond, good

B~~eh

t :nll 1111r uiJ;r:P fm · fmifl in arlllanrP mlr·~!

I ..________
2. ------------~-

9, _ _ _ _ __
Jo _ _ _ __

,'J.- - - - -- - -- J.l.- - - - 12 . --,---_ _ __
4··-r,, ___________________

1.1 . _ _ ,___ _

Musical
Instruments

~~

1910 Niooon pick-up, groy,_bod :

llrMr, 5-apNd, 21,000Ml, AMIFM .
tterto, perfect cond, $6200, 614· •

Kayboarda, On• Octawt Fool
P1dllt, In Good Condition. Call
814-448-0i't7 AnytlrM.

VI'RA FURNITURE

quired, 304-182·2510.

614-4*1732aftor 5.19,300.

2586, •

1916 C~yton Mx70, 2 Bllh, :lbr,
'hro PorchH, TOial E*tlrc,
112,100. 114-441-4734; After

Ntwly raclecor"td 2 badroom

B\ly or 1111. Riverine AntlqUII,
1124 E. Main Slrtll, Pomeroy.
Hours: M.T.W. 10:00 a.m. to 1:00
p.m., Sunday 1:DO to 1:00 p.m.
614-912-2526.

Chtyy S..10 truck.

Excalllnl ·
condition. 304-175-1965 or 304- "

..

1:0:'~ &amp; ~lml:::~~, :&amp;s-1:~~·

Very nice 1 BA lumlthtd apart-

ment on Mt. Vernon Ave.
Upetalri:. Privtte. 1235 plua
electric. Rei. I dtp. 304-1752651.

45

458 tcre farm Uti bttwMn AI .

83 and kln~whl River, 4 miiH
ll'om Pt. P•. :104-t7S41179.

Fumlshed
Rooms

lor

e11oo

4492

1917 Dodat Cllrtnn, 71,000 :
MIIH, Will Kept, L.o.decl,
$8,500. 114-387-1212.

a
a

1iH Full ~u Bronco XLT,
Loaded, Elctlttnt Condition,

Cali Anytlmo, 614-3117.011H.
74 MotOrcyc•-·
::19:::18::-:K;-:a-WI~II-:':ki~LT::0-4~54':',-vory­
aood cond, 4,400 miiH, bolt·

EEKANDMEEK

II 1120/mo. Gllill

SHE-'S 1W LAl£: 1
m:u::;,/-11 MOST OF
"®SE M::l::. Ali&lt;CADr'

ar1nn, $1600, 814-IMI-2877

CD NBA llaskolbiU Chicago

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessqrles
B~ Tnnomlnlonl, Uood I .
l"'bl.uH, star11ng at $11; AUla
Porta. 114-2411-M77, 114-379- ·

Ill A~ You Being Solvecl'l
liD. DnHII's Clua Drexel!
moonlights as a driver's _.t

79

lion. lor

mort

I

Stereo.

~

Stereo.

!

•

304-etum

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
HEY, I-.IA€i'f'Y M~Rf5
BI~Cl'.Y 15 NEXT"

weetc:.

'M: 0:::&gt; 10
Sr-10N HIM WHATWIS
THINK OF HIM'¥

stereo.

liD.

fof family

rtiCf'lal:lon f2,115.

engine, MOO. 304-175-eit .

3114.

304-117'1-t!M.
11179 Chryolot Cordobo, now
Aoh Slloot Fnoo. Will lopt
" lot point, now Urn, 11000, 304-e75church hla 15 pewa fOf ~~~.
$20 tach, wHI ttlul olllrlng for
aU t5, 114-912·7818 .
1
Billiard tabtl, r1gul1tlon llze,
othluH!'L 12·\nch Mate, SIOO

&amp;IS5 afttr 5prn

1m Olcll Cutl111 Suprema,
Good COndition, Runt GrNt Y·
8, $1,$00, Coli Aftor 1:30p.m. 114·
388-1110.

BASEMENT

.

Ul-.dlt'·IH.
Local ,.,_i11Cirno
...... hariiF,_ MlimltM. Celt ooltect 1• •
614-:m-out, day or ..... '
Rogn BUtmant 'Watlripioo- '

ling.

.

614-192·&gt;027
11179 T-Binl, ••7.,j.ood cond, · c:om,to4oll- Homo lot Upo,
Firewood I« oolo, 114-992-6265 l'!.~~kopt~,!304
~.~~··~-~~~-:-:c AIIMilrl: Conw;•latl, R; tl t r
1171 Tr1n1 Am, Excellent Condl·

A1oo Win Hlut Llmntona. 614-·
448-f3211.
FOI' Saio: Good Uood Doora, Ell·
1 - Doora And Polio Doora,
" - b t o Prtco, 114-4414301.
Holrtiond I~ Inc. YMr
.Ctoa-llit211
End lltorago -DE $471.- otoh
11om, J04.17Min.

614-441'1510.
propo~y. Thonk you. Somorviilo
RNIIy, !12 Fifth 54, Pt. f'tltunt, SIHPiila -.no Wl1h -king.
Also lttilllf IPICI. All hook·upt.
WV. :104-t75-3030 or67S-3-13t.
Coil oftor 2:00 p.m., ,304-7735851, M11on WV.
34 " Business
BuJidlrigs
46 Space for Rent
L - Trolor for Motorcycle
Butlnatt proptrty, torml)' Or. 8111ment tor rtnl ltoi'IQI onty, Orl:W;~ Wlrwd, Aoldng
Rankin Ray Pfc!Wtt oHict, 501 30447'1-1451. . '
11Z1.11444Uia. .
S. 3111 SL
$400mo
&amp; Troller lot lor ront wHh lull-.
'"IIHioo, t
231
up ond out bldg, 304471-7113.
35 Lots &amp; Acreage ,
r,l e rch andiSC
120 Acrt F.-m On Burntlta Run
Rood, 2 Miln ott '"· 1, Good t
Roomo And Both. Porm Houoa,
A11 Elootrto. Clood Form lulldoro 5I
Household
Ovar 12 Hundrod Pound lobboca 1aoo, Cl1y ac-_ A,.al
Goods
WI"!!,;_ Roocly To 110¥1 Into.
111-. Coil '-&lt; A.-tnt"*":
·~1111, 114-44t'321:1, 114-

=•"·

tlaf .... GolhMUII. II
Plllllblna, Eloo1rlcot. -

~h Jl4:

c.- Aiicoptod. 114-251-111\
Cutfll ' Home

1982 Chlvetle, low miiH, new
po~l, $800. '1872 OM&lt;; ollort
Mel truck 6-cyl, 1100. t-or uta

N - - A- Addhlonl,

1-.

r11ra

a

a Llny tQng

8

BARNEY

Foundation

Won,

ITALIAN
GRITS II

.•

Pass

Opening lead:

Pau
Pus

+5

South won the first trick with the
club ace and cashed the A-K or hearts.
Now Kaplan set out to try Ia endplay
an opponent who might have the doubleton spade ace. He exited with a heart
to West's queen. Back came a club, declall!r rulfing East's king. Declarer
led a low spade to the nine and 10.
When East returned the opacle siJ:, Kaplan played the seven from his hand.
West won with the ace and led the diamond jack. Judging that West would,
have led a diamond initially if holdint
the Q-J, declarer won with dummy•.;
diamond king and finessed his dia-:
monel 10 to land the contr~t
tr&gt;.-.wwalltRINIWUtaua&amp;.

(conate~

Tyr
of blood
co

54 Small vailtty

55
58

Al~lntlnfo

57 Female
58

1::1:s

11

3 lntarsst· •
boorlnt
carttftcalt
4 Tennis player
lilt5 DlmlnuUYI
oufflx
6 BaHbaH

DOWN
t Tula

2 Hawaiian

toad filh

e

Uve

(l)A-..sofR-

~-1'11'11 ·

ASTRO-GRAPH

0030.

claim

Co~
iotded, ID~·

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL
i,.,..t¥!11 build roomo,
polio . tlocka
put _,. vt;;;l
lllding Of troiiOr llllrtlnt- iM:
~-tt52.
.
.•
Plumbing &amp;
Healing

Ill De Knoll Landing Val
Is offar_.t a large sum to
$1.25 ptuo .a long, seil·addroued, ~g·(July21-Aug. 22f'Try to be helplul
otamped envelotHt to Astro-Graph, c/o and of serviCe to others today, because
thilnewei&gt;-. P.O. Box 91428 ·Cteve- thio ls-e~;·u roaprewardo. And, II
land, OH 44101-3428. Be NO to state
,~
zodiac otgn
you malce 1 gen~lne cont~bullon, you
W~11 (Pill. aG MIF. :Ill) Tlka ad· W!lll't hive to oak lor companaatlon.
vanllfiO ofiiiUitlont at thlo lime IIIII · Y1IIGO (A11f. 21-llopl. 22) You could be
enable you to n\eet new people. Volu· exCIIItlonally lucky in andoavora you
- -contocll can be eotaJ&gt;IIIIted trofn . personally Dflglnlla or manlfiO. Degatherings of people you've met. pend on yourself and not oth11'1 to do
ARIII (-.It 11-April 11) Y011r aHI· thlngl IDf you today.
tude 11 exlrantoly Important today, 10 L*1A (llpi.IIJ.Ocl Zl) Timing II your
try to makl your llllgrt!Mrtllllbora of oceln till hole today. Lot thlnga delle!·
love lrtlteld-of jull lhlngo IIIII IIIUif be op at thotr own ...... Don't try to occ:el·
done. Being pooiiiVIt e n - your woto, Important "'"ora nor mike a
obeblllty for ,...,...
- • clllnge of courae.
~AUIIUI (Aplll ......; :111) EndOiwOrS KOIIPIO (oat. 24-Now, 22) Thlo Is a
tltllltM boon tntllllldaUng you - t - Pfopitloul day tor you to liter your cuoty
01- .a or lmpor· tomary rCKIIIM. Try to do ~hlng dlf·
' · __...,_
I'QIIble""'ay You're· -witH I - fr~ youve boon
-~r-lny,,
· .., .. man ·
""'
'·
_._ing 1 bit tat""'
' Good things
not_,.or
~r- .

;r'.utt.

·=or~:.-==)~':::: ==-_!!:-llii~DIIe::-10.~:::

wrllt a blogrlphy about

446-2342 . 675·-1333
992-2156

·

aili~Q

0 700 Club- Pot
ADIIlrtiOn

10:30&lt;1) Antoriclnlnterttll
SIWoo.
,
Gl Croo« and C:itiiH
11 :00 (J) • (I) (I) (I) • 1111

=·
'A•

I

IIJ(!) Ne&amp;IWIWI
A1Hn10 1t111

s..,... ,

0
\
a~.: Stereo. "(/
eQ IMitlhtt
~po~~alartlght
stono, Q

CELEBRITY CIPHER

QMbl1ty Clphlr .Q'YPtoarMII . . Cf'IMtd ~ !IYOtlliD• br ............ and Jnllnt,
lien I«* In tM OIPhlr ..... .., ....... 1'1111y .. '*'-: 0 tqUillf L.

i

..11:30 (I) Kollk
(J).IafilluuLHIII'I OM

I

nllllt today oo don't be oil n kldlo81ed today. If you 1011 .
coorio IIY tndMdulll willl negative ani- . you•,. anilllod 10 • , ..., ...,... or..,..
~ I'OIIoW your lncllnallonl u to· 01111 lftlllt!lnl, lind • wey to got tho ,. .~-*' "cloM
••
ttool' • .
.~
·c
,,_ IWtilr ..; LAdy 1:u01c CAJ111Cl0111 (DeL ....,. 11) Mike n
. . 111 tieing IMir bift 10 m111t I" ad 10- • paint II tltll-10 kelp In touDII wttlt
. . . . . . . . . . lor ,ou today••• go. good ...... wllo ....... ,.,.., from
gl1llr In'"- you 10 pwtlOipltle In you.lomlal•ln .... gro4ll) miOftt IDIMIItlntl po11n11111y promllfntl, give" .. koloulltlno _PiopoeiiiOn lor you.

' I M

I !I!?.::.Crlmt
.t.a:-llft
R:: """ l'lt1ttl
....... - .
onOM

&amp;::(2:00)

......_
........

.

•

~~ -

I'

!

L t/•

·

A F 'I

'

L 0

X W V 0"

IM

IIIIJP

i

JHIXWILI. '

~

HA 0 M
J ,L I H 0 G M .
.
,
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I'm
an actrala who can """'" 1 Clialoctw. 1
play me." - Mory Ty111 ,Moore.
..
.
30
(l , •
. , MIA: ....

no1

_

•
1

__;,___;,__,;;,.__ _:.....,.-....-:.,~---_;;;-1
''

I&gt;

M

M 'EWGWDK

.

.

IMJP

E W I W 0 G H V P ,,

. (I)

•=:--.
.
.
.11=-=.o..::c

~;

•

Pass

latlonl
53 Author Anoia

MJ•-

~er!~l'ltttto

Rooli!!a, ,

""'* '*'"'"

.

4•

e

6, _ _ _ _ _ __ 14-._ _ __;_ _ _ 1
7._ _ _ _ __ 15...________
IJ, _ _ _ _ __

•'

!NT
3.

Soulham Mlsaisslppi 81
Tullnt (l)
10:00 (2) 0 LA. Lnr I!&amp;Ckar
become• a pawn in a power
s1)'11e. Stereo£

11,000 Or Bnt ottor. 114-441·

211-1211.

Pus

Pass
P aBB

1D Cologo -llliil

KltchtM And lathl. FrM £i. •
tlmat11l Rtt.renc., No Job To '

82

Pass

1•
I+

ill) Wlnga Joe and
Brian try to save lhair
chlldllood home from being
tom ctowri. SIWoo. C

9:30 (J)

}

1112 Y.W. Albbll, Gasoline, 4
lpHd, Real Nice Condition,

1119 Uncoin Town

u..t

Fallttr Dowttng

Ton. Poir ol
pupo, Big Or-11)4-4~.
.
moio &amp; fomale. Wolllor pup,
F,..,._,.,
Plu~
And
Meat·~
llmolo, 6t4,ilt2·'111:14
lng, 114-251-.11.

&amp;

Hllll, 10210

NABF Junior Ughtw&amp;lght
Championship: Gabriel
Ruelas (25·1, t3 KOsi vs.
Ban Loper (tB-8, t3 KOsi,
12 round1, from Reseda ,
Calli. (L)
Niolhvlllo Now Stereo.

I
&amp;...,-lmptoVIIMnll:
On OtM I

t7H.

or trado, ~oglotlro!i , mole, Bluo

111oclatlon

18 Tranamlltld
17 Legume
t8 Cr1111 peroon
20- Gantry
22 Kinds
24 Soap
ingredient
26 vau~
30 Property
manager
31 Color
32 Numboro
(abbr.l
33 Low watero
12 wdl .)
37 8ye-~ye

1D1 TutldoJ Night . . . .

OFF WITH
TH' HAT, PAW-·
ON WITH
TH' 81~-·

Eall

P"s

··~· by

14 EnJY"!I
15 Potlllcol

teams Andrea Is in lha ~
dlslrlct. (A) Stereo. g

·.

WATERPROOfiNG

Nor I~

saiUng
451ntemne
(2 wdo.l
4U Hochr org.
50 Caton-nn Roof
52- Major

among

The SChOOl admlnistntlon

contolnod, OXC cond. 1981 71 .Autos for sale
Ford F·110 truck, 110911 cond.
IIIIMaf•, ,..... call after 7:00 '
~= ,:~..,= idoc:r'pla!: tm Ptymoulh Horizon12robuil1 PM 01 tNvt mtnlgt, 304-t'JI. ·.

Hil

W.sl

company

olhero

e

Home
Improvements
Atlordabto Prolaoolonll Homo :
Ropolr. Eioctrtcal, Ptutnlolng, •
Rooflng, No jolt too lftllli, rroo ,

22 ft Monhor camper tr1ller fullr

Soat~ ·

&lt;40 Act of ttCIPI
43 PrtHnll,

tO Ulygenuo
12 Inter - :

IIIDDr-

~T o.N

81

Merchandise

e

11J Chun Fraiser and
Ullth get a surp~se ol their
own at!rrlcl&lt;'s party.
Stereo.
. &lt;1l 1JJ IWJI Tennison Ia
accused ol harass.ment. (PI 2
oi3)C
(I) "fo Be An110U11Ced

9:00 (J)

• 1- 30

·

lnlarmaUon call ·

t A 10 4
+A
Vulnerable' Both
Dealer: North

39 Theatrical

1 Baby lion
4 Convent
Inmate
7 Acorn, e.g.

II]) You Aotc_.t fDf It, Again

•

campers&amp;

Motor Homes
t2x55 Buddy TroiiOr, lair condl-,

ACROSS

lnotructor. (RI Stereo. C

a American Muolc Stt6p

2213.

•

Bulla II Houston Rockets (l)

76

1qu1re bl~. ctlll14-112·3821

Firewood For Salo: Bitt l.oodo, lion, II4-245-M19.

Hotol.
.

e

1

oole, 11.26

o.liveM And St~eked, 145; 1112 8111Ck Trtnt Am, 114-441·

Sll~lna

in progrns; a ~file Ot an
artist. Stereo. 1.,1
liD
SlmpiOIII Homer
Is commm_.t to a rest home.
IRI Stereo. C
1D1 Murder, 6o Wren Q
On t111go swoo.
P11utNaws Q
0 Tlllfl My Doil Stereo.
8:05 (!) MOYIE: Sybil (4:00)
1:30 (J) Dlff- Worlcl
Whitley's bola makes sexual
ps~vances toward her. Stereo.

1il8 S.1o ·a .. nr 4x4, biUJ, a.
apltd, 11k 15,000, call &amp;14·115-

Servtces

Tra ns port ali on

tvtnlngt

RooMe for r.nt • wNk or month.

0trapped
IIJe Top Copt A
diver; a kldnaPI)Ing

Body, Fire Damogo, P.T., 1515. ·
614-448-1234 Aftor 5p.m.
·

lbo 130. Tim-Rock Form, -

54 Miscellaneous

apt, reltr-.nee &amp; dapo11t requ ir.d, no pets, 304-e?s-5182.

\Zl

1m J11p 314 Ton 4 wo, Ftlr .

175-4301.

Top quaiHy hoy

7:36 (J) Santoni and Son
1:00 (J) 8 Collty ~ CIIH Ia in
charge ol the ref!!garalor in
Clair's absence. 1;;1
I!) lulls Ell
(I) Co11oi0 lelkllbiH Ohio
Slate University at Illinois IL
lite Aolrauomen Stereo.

OUT TH ' ARMYf

+KQt061

•AKSIS

The British magazine Bridge began
publication in 1926. Its present owner,
Maxwell Macmillan, has started to
publish bridge books. The second on
the list is "Famous Hands rrorn Famous Matches" by Terence Reese and
David Bird ($15.93, 212-866-3860).
The work covers most of the history
of contract bridge. )i:ach deal is set in
problem form on a right-hand page.
The reader may consider how he
would have played and can then tum
over to read what actually happened,
good or bad. The text is light in style,
and American readers in particular
will not recognize many of the hands.
But.ignore the index - all the page
numbers are \I')'Otlg.
Today's deal caught my eye. The declarer was Edgar )(aplan, one of the
best players never to win a world Litle.
North 's one-n()-trump response was
a tactical gambit that backfired when
he caught partner with a strong hand.
Four hearts seemed certain to lose
four tricks: two spades, one heart and
one diamond.

a Crollfl,.

'

tQBS

+KJ12

By Phillip Alder

D Co1fo11t Beskolbllllluke

't"OU DID ? G-At&gt;~RY.'
I'D 6E:TTER ' Ar.LL.

tmCJ7Y-IJHp, newexhault, .
duallumbo tll"'t, real nice, 3Q4. .
6?5-6l31.
.

11.80. Round belal 1ppro1 1,000

FOliUM
eF-,Foud

..

.

&amp;14-1112-3"2

'='

Q
1a W1tH1
Be a Star Stereo.
81 Florida State (L)

862-3525.
TKO&amp;s Bon Amp 1125.304-675- 73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's
6182.
Farm Supp lies
&amp; L1vestock

S"ter~. -~

fLAjTFf'lft&gt; Mf/

.?

.QJ 5

A history
of great hands

&lt;ll MICHil~hrer
flews-

.SNAPPfi&gt; lACIC ANI&gt;

.,

"

+QIOB6

SOUTH

c

FA~ THIS ytA~ l j

91, 2 bad·

Ntw Hav.,, one bedroom tu,...
nitt.cl
apl, depoatl and
rtfwtnct required, :104-182·

Wt lfl k1 nMd of flrml 1M
IC,..III. Wt have bupll.
PINII, give U1 a Cllllf you Ire
lnt.,-.,ltd In aaiU!"t your

.

614-m-3755
64 Hay &amp; Grain
1175 Country Alro 32 a, flfth
room tumrtshod opt, '"11Hin5·_;,3__.....,A_;,n.,:tl,.;q:;u,.;e.;;s.,..,.,..._ ::FI~rot~c~utt:::lng~~orc~ho~rd~gra~oo~'::'al­ whMIJ. wjawnlnQ, alr cond, nlct, ·.
loilo hoy oq. boloo 4!1-50 lbo .0

Middleport,

1981 N11hua mobllt horM,
14x64, 2 BA , 1 balh, newty
fiCirptltdh WAihlfldryar, 8116
front pare . Park Lint Court.

33 Fanns for Sale

bum, 814-992·280~

1919 Nlaun pickupl ttarao, AC, .'
$4,800. 304-675-263i&gt;.

..-.-2.

Compltllr Furnished mobllt
homa, 1 milt below town ovtr·
1910 Spructrldge, 14ll70, 3- looking
rlvtr. No Pets, Cl. 614·
bdrm., 1·btth, hill pump, 2.75 .
441.0338.
acr':a~~~- north of Chllttr,
61492
Plttllnl Uplltll'l Apt, 509 1/2 S.
2·bdrm, new carpet and paint, 3rd StrHt Mlcldltpon, living rm,

Sell ;, the easy wuy ... by phone,
no neetllo leot'e your home.
l'lace your· clflssified ad Imlay!
15 wm·tls m·less, 3 days,
3 paper-s,$6.00

condl1ion, $65001 •ldon Woi·

t9J9 Ford 4x2 F-110 XLT Llriol,
Puppln for 1111. Fltalltared
mlniatul"' Dlchehunds. !04-675- $8,410. 304-675-2592.

location, new appllancn, cor614-44f-3158
ner 101 Sixth St &amp; Main, 30f. UVING ROOM: So1a &amp; Choir,
675-5936.
I199.00L Roc:linor, l14t.Do:
Swiwtl Hocker, $1HJ.OO; CoHN &amp;
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT End Tabin, $89.00 'SotDINING
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON ROOM: Table With 4 Padded 61 Fann Equipment
ESTATES, 531 Joclcaon Piko Chlira,
.$140.00; Country Pine
from $192/mo. Walk to thop I Dinette With Bench And 3 ln1ornational, 424 DIMM Troc:1or,
movi11. C.ll614-441-2518. EOH. Choiro • $291.00; Matching 2 Blllh Hog, $3,396; 10ie imarnotlonll 16,195; 100 Ford $2,050;
1
Complltly Fumllhed Small Door "11ch $3-19; Dr · $519.00 John Dttrw 1020 Sh1rpl $4,195.
HouH, $250/mo. Plu1 Utllhi11, Sot; Oak Tobio, 42162· Wllh s Owner WIH Finance. &amp;14·288Bow
81ck
Chairs, 1522.
And DopooH. 614-441-4338. Coli $829.00.BEO~OOM
: Pootor Bod·
Btlor-. 7p.m.
room SuHo (5 pc.l, $349.00; 4 Jim''a Farm Equlprnenl , SR. 35,
EHkiency apl. tor 111n1 1buutltul Drawer Chnt, S44.Mi; Bunk Well Ollllr.::·llt, 114~1-8777;
carpal, nice couch ana bar, 304- Bod, 1229i_Comploll Full llan Wide etlect on new &amp; used farm
175-6042
!!'11 1105.uu Sot; 7 po. Codor 1rae1oro &amp; implomonto' Buy,
Maroom Suitt, IBHJ».OPEH: ttll; tr1dt, 1:00-5:00 WHkdaya,
Fumlthld 3 Rooms And Bath Monday Ttvu Sllurdl~m. to Sal tlli Noon.
Upatalr1, Clun, No Ptt1, lp.m., Sundoy 12
Till
Aafarenc1 And Deposit A• Sp.m., 4 'MIIH OH Aouta 7 On Millie Hanl1 Poney trtctor
wlcuftivttor, $1.500. 304-175quirod. 114-4411-1519.
Routt141 In C.nltnlry.
2467.
Fumlahed Apartment, 1br, naxt Walh.- And Drylf, EIICirlc
to Ubrlry, partlng, ctnlrll hNt, Rangt, Full~~~ ~MI.
63
Livestock
air, rwtirtncn. 614 448 0331,
Wlterblda • 2 Queen Sbe, 114·
Bltora7p.m.
till AQHA Golding 7 ADHA
448-2230 Aftor S P.M.
Poln4o. Youth Hono Of Tho
Fumlahld
EHiclency,
All
YMr. Uted 14ft. Block Trell•r,
Ulilltl11 Paid, Share Btlh,
Bia BillY Royal Show Soddlo.
$135Jmo. 919 Slcond Avenu1, 52 Sporting Goods
Gallipolis, 614-446--3~5.
12-gtg, model 10, Winchester
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bad- ... o, 30" '!'!~- good lhlpo, Pi go lor oato, 614-742-2633
room apartmenll 11 Village $3251,14-992-Rogiotonod Yooriing Anguo Bull
Mtnar
and
Riverside Sunbulll Eagle hun1ing lioh1, • A.1. Brooding, 114-441-4447.
APirlmJnta In Mlddiepon. From Mtt'OII, llkl new, compltt•, $225,

1196. Coli 114-992-7787. EOII.

$'TPf1CHfP MY
HO/..IPAy /U{)GfT ,$0

l

PS, no Nit, 12,DOOU1 nry gooa

SWAIN
Lowrey Ch1tlon Thtatar Style 992417319112-2015
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 62 Homt
Organ. 1Wo Ughted
Olive St., Gatllpolle. New 6 UHd

3 room apt. Kilchtn furnlslled. fumllurt, hu:t•ra. w... wn •
AU utllltts lncludld . 5275 mo.
Ground floor, private entrlnet. Wortl boota. 814,..41-3159.
Locttad It 180 Radmond Rldga Uood Cloodioo 2-lloytog Wringer
Rd. Henderson. 304·61!--8563.
W, 65,000 WIM g11 heit1r, port·
ab41 wnhtr a ctryer 24.. stick
3 room unfurnished apt, 304- woohor/ dryer Haggorly, t:MIIiii
675-1090.
St.Middl~

5p,m.: 614-44Wt04

1hrn your duller· intt) cush,

MIIN On Routt 7 On Route 141,
In Cantanary.

1\

IOidld, 51,000 mille, by ownw,

110.96 WHk.OPEN: Monday
Thru Salurdoy, 11a.m. 1o 6p.m.1 3521.
fum, Sundoy 12 Noon _Till 5p.m. • .,..

paid, refertncll &amp; deposit r•

Hlatory A Probltm? Many
AtpotlltNd Mobile Hom1;1 To
Choou From. Smtll Down
PayrMnt. Cell 1-101).581-57'11.

Flth Tank, 2413 Jacklon Ave.
Poinl PINIInt, 304-675-2063,
full line Trop~ll li1h, blrda,
tmall 1nlmal1 and suppiiH.

btaulilul

304 -773-51~.

$3000, 814·949-2521
Sho~ Timo On Job? Put CrodH

1i86 Ford F250 XL; hoawy duty
aupar cab, 4 wheat· drive, aUioJ

w....

So1a &amp; Choir, 111.10

tlmt auction"'· complele
Hrvkt. Licanud Ohio,

a ~Jon

II

...
"

&gt;11-tt

EAST

WE'BT

+H

tJ ?2
+J98 S3

==lnt
II])Tioo Wallorts
7:05 CJJ Addlms Family
7:30 (2). Jtoperdyl
Ill NOw HCon Belold
(I) E""t'flnment Tonltlht

RENT'20WN

114-44f-3158
Wra Furniture

PHILLIP
ALDER

Centir

1D1 Mil

'

+11

c e !:~Tonight
Stereo: ,_ C

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

f\ill

NORTH
+Bl
.10942
t K 963

~Affllr~
~: 11il Nell,

S~o~nday

'

FORI I I I I IA I I I I

&lt;ll LIQIIIIIIvtt u~

ALL Yard 511.. Must Be Paid In

Ad'llnCt . OEAOUNE: 2:00 p.m.
the day befon the ad Is to run.

·-

,
•

ha\18 to finish the BLUESI"

(l)

8

•

SCitAM-UT$ ANSWIIS
• - •~
Asylum - Ebony • Queen - Plaque • BLUES
"To do the wash prope~y," says the mom, 'you have
to separate the whites from the colors. • "I know,• replied
the coed. "I've done the wh"es and yellows, but l still

7:00(2). WitH! of FOIIunt Q

Yard Sale

7

_

8 ~~~~:RMBLE

cecas-sQ
.AndyGrtfftth

6:35 (!) Andy Grtfftth
.

-tle~~~~~.

p-.::-1~• ...,u,,...o...,,r.:-,
. .

.

~ LETTE RS IN SQUARE S

II]) Now Zarro Sloreo. Q

Goods

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

'"

lho chuckle quolod
by lillin; in lho milling words
'-...1.-.a......l.-'-...&amp;.--' you dovolop from ~op No. 3 bolow.

1D1 Scooby Doo
ID UpCioH

Household

RY

--FIL..;;E,_I

. ~£~-'-::roo.
Q
8qun OM TV Stereo.

i

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a Wctrld Tadey

(J) S.vtd

t---~1 J
~~ camp.

'"

OursonwasetNayatboot .
We got areal laugh trom
s
~ 0 one ot his letters. He wrote that
·L.
• ....1..--.1..---1..---I._.....J_
before he signed up he never
. - - - - ' - - - - - , knew that 4:30 came around

Clly Target

S"tareo. Q
8:05 (!) Beverly Hlllblllleo
8:30 (2). 01 NBC .._

'•

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

~Game

RI6~T5, TOO, OON'T T~EY ?

·',.

""""r;.;,.;Y;_;;i...;.,G

Rud~
· Ralnbow C ...

ID Stir

BUT I 6UE55 ANIMALS f4AVE

''.

letters of the

~--1

Square OM TV Stereo.

~

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(J)Y*o-

Wanted to Do

-

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Cll • 111

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'

four ICrambled word• b.
low to form four Jlmple worda.

EVENING

ltoillotorolion H0-05-121'1B.

e~re Pt. Pit. Atglltw, 200 Main
~.Pl. Pleeunl,
25550.

THU~ 1 JAN. 30

Business
Training

Rttrain · · Nowii!Southtlltam
Buoin- College, Sorlna Volioy
Pluo. Coli Todiy, 8--431711

WlntiCI: lernlle companSon to
11¥1-in. age~ 25 lo 45, if lntt,....

4

OF'I'o\I~Z.'I Pem'~

41 Houses lor Rent

S~\\~lA-~t.~~·
_ _ _....;,_ 1411H tty ClAY .1. I'OIIAit
TIIAT tAlLY
PliZILII

Television
Viewing

1'10... AA 8-1V£K, IF
VOU'v6 60!" IT.. .

•

14

tod -

BOaNLOSER .
V'IXl VW H~ve; " 118:01~~6

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrlgbt

Rentals

Help Wanted

.

~ntlnei-Page--.8 ~

l11e Dall

Pomeroy--:Middleport, Ohio

'

I

.,

�Ohio

Sentinel

0-The

Community calendar

Consider this ...

Community Calendar Items
appear IWO days bel'ore ID event
and the day of that event. Items
must be received weD iD lldvance
to assure publication in the cal·
endar. •

By Brian J, Reed

help him?
If you can help Mr. Correia, you
may reach him through me at The
Daily Sentinel.

Suzy Carpen,ter and her second
grade class at Pomeroy Elemenrary
School· are responsible for the creative artwork thai hangs in what's
left of the main lobby at Farmers
Bank and Savings Company. Major
renovation efforts at the bank continue right now, and sraff members
of the bank thought that the children's brightly-colored pictures
(most of them detailing bank activities) would brighten up the lobby
area while the mess was at its
worst
The renovations, meanwhile, are
expected to take most of the winter,
and bank personnel insist that the
tar paper walls are not a pan of the
permanent interior design of the
bank.

--

Blood donors, take note. The
February visit of the American Red
Cross bloodmobile at the Meigs
County Senior Citizens Center has
been canceled due to a scheduling
conflict on the part of the Red
Cross.
The next Meigs County bloodmobile date has been tentatively
set for April 15, 1992 from I p.m.
to 5:30p.m.
Meigs County continues to
depend on volunteer blood donors
like you to help replenish the area's
blood supply, so "pencir' this new
date on your calendar and plan to
donate at that time. By then, the
cold winter days will be behind us,
and you'll be looking for an excuse
to get out and enjoy the SPRING
weather conditions. 1promise.

Do you remember Stephen Correia?
He is a graduate student at Penn
State University, doin~ a graduate
disserration on the subject of Meigs
County native T. Jesse Jones.
Jones, who is credited with
The Meigs County Chamber of
establishing social studies as a Commerce continues to accept
course of study in public schools, is your letters in support of a state
a well-known sociologist of the prison site in Meigs County. Your
early 20th century.
letter is important to the communiYour letters and information, ty, in that it will help to show that
solicitaled through this column last the community is behind the prosummer, were most helpful in get- posal. The ~tate is not interested in
ting Mr. Correia to this point of his locating pnsons where oppos1Uon
work.
is voiced, and there has been such
In a recent letter to me, Mr. Cor- opposition in at least one of the
reia expressed a need of infofllla· other two counties being consid·
tion regarding Mr. Jones ' high ered. You may write to the cham·
school years (1887-1891). Could ber at 200 East Second Street in
there be anyone in the readership of Pomeroy, and they will forward
this newspaper who might have a your letter to the state.
local yearbook from those years, or
Do it today, please.
any other school records that might

THURSDAY
POINT PLEASANT, W.VA. ·
The Crusade for Christ at 22M
Street Chunch of God of Prophecy
in Point Pleasant, W.Va. runs
through Saturday at 7 p.m., with
Rev. Rick Towe, Pastor. Rev. Paul
Chapman and New Life Singers
will perform Monday night's service.

ly Singers. Pastor Steve Reed
invites the public. Fellowship will
foUow.
SATURDAY .
RUTLAND · There will be a
round and square dance at the Rutland American Legion Hall on Saturday rrom 8 P·"l· to midnight.
Music will be provided by the
Country Kin Band and Ray Fitch
will be the caller. The public is
invited.

SALEM CENTER • Star
Grange and Star Junior Grange will
meet Saturday at 7:30 p.m. at the
grange hall. Presenration of 50-year
POMEROY· The Ohio Young membership certificates and of the
Democrat Club will hold an organi· fourth degree will be included.
zational meeting on Thursday at 7 Bring a favorite recipe for the State
p.m. at the Carpenter's Hall in Grange Cookbook. A potluck supPomeroy. Anyone between the per will foUow.
ages of 17 and 36 interested in
attending may do so.
POMEROY · "The Day the
Kids Toole Over" and "Koko's Kit· ·
PAGEVILLE • There will be a ten" will be shown at the Meigs
public meeting at the Scipio Town- County Public Library in Pomeroy
ship Building in Pageville on on Saturday and Sunday at 2 p.m.
Thursday at 7 p.m. to discuss the and at the Middleport Library on
installation of water into Pageville Monday at 4:30p.m.
Village.
POINT PLEASANT · The LibFRIDAY
erty Mountaineers will perform
TIJPPERS PLAINS • The Tup- Saturday at the Senior Citizens
pers Plains VFW Post No. 9053 Center in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
and Ladies Auxiliary will sponsor a
dance on Friday from 8 to II: 30
SUNDAY
p.m. with music by the Happy HolPOMEROY • Any person who
low Boys.
is single, never married, divorced,
or widowed, who is willing to
HOCKINGPORT • There will become pan of a core group to plan
be a round and square dance on opportunities for other singles in
Friday from 8 to 11:30 p.m. at Meigs Canty is invited to the
Hockingport on Route 124 at Pomeroy Uniled Methodist Church
Kenny and Millie Reynolds. Music on Sunday from 4-5:30 p.m. A
will be provided by Don, Buddy light supper will be served.
and the Smokey Mountain Drifters.
Jim Brown will be the caller.
LOTI'RIOOE · There will be a
Country and bluegrass music is smorgasbord dinner at the Lotplayed there every Monday night at tridge Community Center on Sun7 p.m. The public is invited to day from noon to 2 p.m. Cost is $5
attend.
for adults and $2.50 for children
under 12.
PORTLAND · The Lebanon
Township Trustees will meet FriCHESTER ·Paul Tafoya, presiday at 7 p.m. at the township build- dent and a director of Arm of the
ing.
Lord Ministries in Dallas, Texas,
will speak at the New Life
LONG BOTTOM · The Faith Covenant Church of God in
Full Gospel Church in Long Bot· Chester on Sunday at 6 p.m. and
tom will have preaching and Monday through Wednesday at 7
singing on Fnday at 7 p.m. w1th p.m. nightly. The public is inviled
David Dailey and the Dailey Fami- to attend.

Forest Run UMW gather

Kathleen Scott lead the Q~iet
Edith Sisson presided at the
Day Service at the recent meetmg meeting which opened with all
of the Forest Run Umted Methodist praying silent prayer and then the
· Women _for a Call to Prayer and Lord's Prayer.
Self Demal.
.
Officers reports were given and
Mrs. Scott read several pans and 60 si ck and shut-in calls were
DAN MILLER
other readers were Ednh Sisson, reported. Thank you notes were
Mary !'lease, Evelyn Hollon, Faye presented and the death of member
W1ggms and Mary bel Warner. Lillian Napper was noted
and is the mother of one daughter, Three songs included "Be Thou . Refreshments were served by
Rachel.
My Vision" and "Open My Eyes" the officers to members present and
Both are available for appoint· and ''Take My Life." Following the a guest, Marybel Warner
·
ments Monday through Saturday special offering there was·a unison
during business hours.

BRJNDA DAVIS

SBC names new employees
Dan Miller and Brinda Davis
were recently appointed to the staff
at Southeastern Business College,
according to Robert Shirey, presi·
dent.
Miller of Jackson , has been
named assistant director of admissions, while Davis was appointed
to the position in job
placement/public relatious.
Miller is a graduate of Jackson
High School and attended the University of Rio Grande. He is a
member of First United Presbyteri·
an Church of Jackson.
Davis of Vinton, is a graduate of
Gallia Academy High School and
auended the University of Rio
Grande. She is a recording artist
and composer and has graduated
from Profiles Modeling Studio. She
inurrently attending New Life
Christian Bible College, Jackson,

'

t

!

SUPER BOWL WI
~ Prizes were
awarded MoDday to wiDnen or the Super Bowl
coloring coolest sponsored by the Video Depart·
ment of Vauahan's Cardinal, Middleport Michl

OSU honor roll
Three Meigs County residents
have been named to the honor roll
at Ohio State University for the
autumn quarter. All three have
ac6ieved high academic averages
for their quarter's worlc. They have
received a grade point average of at
least 3.S on a 4.0 scale and were
enrolled for at least 12 credit hours.
Named to the honor roll are:
Jared Andrew Sfieets and Amy
Michelle"' Wagner, both of
Pomeroy; and David Eugene Rice,
Reedsville.

110:1

Jonathan Perrin
Recezves degree \ . .
·· • Jill XrUtini Eibridge. Coolville, receives degree
leRL

•

A FOND FAREWELL- Joan Tewksbary, R.N., retiring Meigs
County Tuberculosis Nurse, was honored with an open house yes·
terday at the Meigs County Health Department. Well over 100
people attended the open bouse to wish her well and to thank her
for all she had d011e. Pictured with Mrs. Tewksbary is one of tliose
well-wishers, Manning Roush.

OVAL trustees meet
The Board of Trustees of the
Ohio Valley Area Libraries
(OVAL) held their monthly meeting at System Headquarters in
Wellston on Thursday, Jan. 16,
1992.
The Board re-elec led the current
officers for 1992. Harold Felton
representing the Herbert Wescoat
Memorial Library in Vinton County was elecled Presidenl Frederick
Good representing the Logan
Hocking County District Library in
Hocking County was elecled Vice .
President Roxie Underwood representing the Jackson City Library in
Jackson County was elected Secretary.

Theora Bradley representing the
Portsmouth Public Library took the
oath of office as a new Trustee. Mr.
Felton and Charles Mentges, representing the Gamet A. Wilson Public Library of Pike County also
took the oath as reappointments.
OVAL trustees are selecled by the
local library boards to serve a two
year term.
The Board also approved a resolution reco¥,nizing "with great
appreciation' the services of Jay
Brushart. He left the Board after
seven years representing the
Portsmouth Public Library.
The Board approved the annual
meeting schedule. The Board ,
decided to maintain the third
Thursday of each month as their
regular meeting date.
Queen E. Lester, representing
the Chillicothe and Ross County
Public Library and chair of the
Budget and Fmance Committee,
presented the Board with revised
budget figures to accommodate the
5% cut mandated by Governor
Voinovich. Travel budgets were
slashed, the annual meeting and a
cataloging workshop were postponed, and other budget lines
reduced to meet the targeled reduction of $20,600. "I hope the econo·
my turns around" Director Eric S.
Anderson said "so that no further
reductions are needed." This is the
third budget reduction for OVAL

_ _ _ _ _ _--~.._ _ _ _ _,~___ _ _ _...J

2 Section a, 14 Pageo 25 cento
AMuillmtdlo Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, January 31, 1992

in the last twelve months. The
Board approved the revisions.
Anderson also compl imenled
Extension Services Librarian Leah
Griffith because statistics show the
number of users of the Bookmobile •
service has increased 12o over last
year. He also pointed out that
Books By Mail circulation was up
29o for the month of December.
A contract with Mary Stahl, of
Athens, was approved for proofing
and editing the 1992 edition of the
Union Serials List. This is a list
showing the magazine holdings of
OVAL and three other Regional
Library Systems. This 600 page
document is the prime tool used by
more than seventy libraries
throughout the state of Ohio to harrow copies of magazines from one
another. Also approved were two
hundred hours of staff time to key
and update the document and addi·
tional computer hardware.
The Board also approved an
application for Library Services
and Construction Act (LSCA) Title
I funds for a grant to improve
County Jail Service for inmates in
Athens and Jackson counties .
OVAL will coordinate the grant
and it is hoped it will serve as a
model that other libraries can adapt
and adopt.
· Established in 1973 as the first
state-funded regional public library
system in Ohio , today OVAL
administers through local public
libraries a variety of program s
designed to improve and extend
services to local residents. OVAL
is made up of public libraries in the
counties of Athens, Hocking, Jack·
son, Lawrence, Meigs, Pickaway,
Pike, Ross, Scioto and Vinton . The
OVAL Board of Trustees, which
consists of one trustee from each
member public library board, determines policy, controls finances,
and makes final decision on what
services will be offered.
Wanda Eblin serves on the
OVAL Board and represents the
Meigs Coun Public Library.

WASHINGTON (AP) _The
government's chief economic forecasting gauge fell 0.3 percent for a
second strai ht month in Decemher, pulledd~wn by a slide in manfact ring activity and slipping
~onsu':ner confidence, the government reponed today.
It was the third decline in four
months in the Commerce Department's Index of Leading Economic
Indicators, which is .designed to
forecast future activity in the U.S.
economy.

Today's report suggested con·
iinued economic weakness m the
months ahead, and is in line with
many analysts' prediction that there
will be. no appreciable turnaround
before the spring. It could be summer or even fall, some economists
predict, before the economy shakes
off its sluggishness.
In the December index, six of
the II forward-looking indicators
were negative, including a drop_ in
orders for new plants and eqUipment, falling orders for consumer

goods and a decrease m unfilled
factory orders that suggested slack
demand.
.
Other ~egauves_ were faster
delivery times, wh1ch Indicates
dechmng orders. Also falhn~ was
the money supply and the mdex
measunng consumer c~nfidence.
Only four of the_md1cato.rs made
pOSitive contr1buuons: a JUmp m
bmldmg ~rmns, nsmg ~rices for
raw matenals suggesung mcreased
d~mand , a longer workweek and
higher stock pnces.

. The building ~ermit activity
mdicated the housmg sector could
agrun lead the _economy out of the
recessiOn as It has dunng most
other post-World War II downturns.
One indicator was unchanged:
the number. of weekly jobless
msurance claims.
The weak outlook for the
nauon 's manufacturing sec tor
reported today follows other recent
bad news from the government on
factory act1v1ty. On Thursday, the

Commerce Department srud factory
orders for durable goods fell an
unexpectedly steep 5.0 perccn~ m
December. That was the fiCSt
dcchne m three months and the
largest m more than a year.
Man)' analysts believe the economy will remam weak until consumer confidence~ one of t,he. negat1ve components m today s mdex,
picks up and sumulates spend mg.
Consumer spendmg a~counls for
two-th1rdsofthe nal!on seconom1c

acuvity. .
. The vanous changes left the
mdex at 144.8 percent of Its 1982
base of 100. The mdcx has edged
up JUSt 0.6 percent from July
through December, compared to
J~St 2.4 percent during the previous
SIX months.
.
.
The mdcx ~as VIrtually flat m
Octobe~. when 11 mched up a barely
perceptible 0.1 percent after slippmg_an 1denucal 0.1 percem the
previous month.

Meigs County Grand Jury
indicts 11 on various counts

John C. Goodman, representing Architect/Engi·
neer Burgess &amp; Niple. Second row, 1-r, are
Ronald R. Schultz or Burgess &amp; Niple; Carol
Guinther representing tbe Meigs County Health
Department; Village Clerk Brenda Morris and
Village Administrator John Anderson. The project is expected to be completed in October.

GROUND BROKEN • Ground was broken
on Thursday morning ror Pomeroy's new $1.2
million sewage treatment plant. The plant will
be built near the existing facility, behind Bob
Roberts Field. Pictured,l·r, are Estill Howard of
Titus Construction, the general contractor;
County Engineer Philip M. Roberts; Mayor
Bruce J, Reed; Councilman John Blaettnar; and

Spencer files petition
for clerk's position
he is a member and a past president of the Board of Directors of
Meigs Industries.
Spencer also belongs t_o _the
Ohio Clerk of CourtS Assoc1auon,
and is a past president of that organization's second disaict.
· As clerk of courts , Spencer
maintains all public records per·
taining to the Meigs County Common Pleas Court and Court of
Appeals. He also ~versees the o!ltr·
ation of the Me1gs County Tule
Office, which processes all auto
and boat titles in the county.
If elected to another term,
Spencer will set total computerization of his offices as a goal.
"Through tlie cooperation of the
Meigs County Commissioners and
the State of Ohio," Spencer sa1d,
"we expect 10 have a fully-comput·

Meigs County Clerk of Courts
Larry E. Spencer has filed his petition with the Meigs County Board
of Elections as a candidate for that
office in the Republican Primary in
May.
. Spencer has served as clerk of
courts since January, 1973 . A
native of Racine, he is married to
the former Kay Avis. They have a
son, Michael, and an infant granddaughter. The son of Elson and
Dorothy Spencer of Rae ine, he is a
graduate of Racine High School.
He is very active in the Racine
Masonic Lodge. A former Past
Master of that lodge, Spencer is
presendy the Worthy Pauon of the
Racine Chapter of Order of Eastern
Star in Racine. He is also a member
of the York Rite organization. In
addition to his masonic activities,

LARRY SPENCER
erized title department by March
30. In this next term, I hope to
computerize the legal department
as well."

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel Ne\vs Starr
. The Meigs County Grand Jury
Indicted II individuals earlier this
month.
Ranging from drug offenses to
grand theft r.ounts, the indictments
were filed earlier this week in
Meigs Common Pleas Court.
Jon Yowell of Athens was
indicled on a count of trafficking in
marijuana, a third-degree felony,
and cultivation of marijuana, a
felony of the fourth degree.
James and Mammie Hanmon of
Langsville were charged in a single
mdiclfl!_ent on counts of trafficking
m manJuana, a third-degree felony,
and cultivation of marijuana, a
felony of the fourth degree.
Indicted on a count o! possession of mii'ljijana aiR! (: bvation of
marijuana, third and fourth de~
felonies respectively, was Eddie J.
Smathers of Dexter.
Timothy Jenkins of Pomeroy_

was indicted on three counts of vey Michael O'Dell of Albany with
trafficking in food stamps. Those charges of trafficking in marijuana
charges are felonies of the fourth and cultivation of marijuana,
degree.
felonies of th e third and fourth
Terry L. Brewer of State Route degrees, respccti vel y.
248 in Long Bottom was indicled
Additionally, Woodgerd was
on two counts of trafficking in mar- indicted by the grand jury on
ijuana, a fourth-degree felony.
charges of having a weapon while
Robert W. Bays of Portland was under a disability, a fourth-degree
indicted on two counts of grand felony, and two counts of receiving
theft, both third-degree felonies. He stolen property, third -degree
is charged with the theft of a 1981 feloni es.
Oldsmobile station wagon belong- ' Priddy, O'Dell, Bays and Brew.
ing to George W. Capehart, and of cr was arraigned on Thursday afterscrap stainless steel' owned by Don noon. Brewer's bond was set at
Johnson. Bays' indicunent includes $1,000, Bays' bond at 1,000 on
a prior-conviction specification, each of two counts, O'Dell 's at
which states that Bays was previ- $20,000, and Priddy's all ,000 on
ously convicted of felony charges.
each coun~ Each of the defendants
Eric Priddy , Middleport, was arraigned yesterday was permitted
c)lll!1~d wi!h three f9urth -_degree
to post 10 percent cash.
felony counts of trafficking m mar·
Trial dates were set for late
ijuana
February and March. Pomeroy
A single indictment charges Attorney Charles H. Knight repreBrian L. Woodgerd of Pomeroy, sented all four of the defendants at
Becky S. Trout (also known as their arraignment s; Brewer and
Becky Stites) of Pomeroy, and Hac- Bays were declared indigent.

Meeting with high-ranking state
official productive; legislators say
A meeting with a high-ranking
administration official concerning
the possible siting of a state prison
in Meigs County was productive,
reported State Rep. Mary Abel (DAthens) and State Sen. Jan Michael
Long (0-Circleville) Thursday.
Reginald Willcinson, director of
the Ohio Depanmcnt of Rehabilitation and Corrections, met with
Abel and Long at the Statehouse in
Columbus.
"We requested this meeting in
order to reiterate and emphasize
our support for this endeavor,"
Abel said. "We pointed to the
receptiveness of the communities
of Meigs County and the entire
region for this projecL We made it
clear that the people of our area are
willing to work with the Administration to provide whatever support
is necessary."
One topi~ the off!cials discussed

was the oiler by 0~10 Power to
donate 300 acres to the state for use
as a possible site.
"It is clear that the Dcparunent
is well aware of the overwhelming
suppon of Meigs countians for this
site proposal," Sen. Lon~ notes.
"Since an announcement IS likely

in February, it is important that we
maintain this effort," Sen. Long
emphasized.
The legi slators added that the
Director make it clear .that a decision would be made on the prison
site , among Belmont, Meigs, and
Noble Counties, before March.

Home sales down during December
WASHINGTON (AP) - New
home sales feU in 1991 to the lowest level in nine years, resuming
their slide in December after two
monthly gains. the government said
today.
.
All regions except the Midwest
shared in the annual losses.

The Departments of Commerce
and of Housing and Urban Development said sales of single-family
homes totaled S04,000 in 1991,
down 5.6 percent from 1990 and
the lowest since 412,000 in 1982
during the previous recession.

Gallipolis man shot during disp_ute
Gallipolis Police Department ,
By JIM FREEMAN
Williams allegedly shot Jamison
OVP News Starr
A Gallipolis man, Bill Jamison, with a .357 magnum revolver durage ull11lJlOned, was listed in sta&amp;le ing a dispute.
According to police, Williams
condition Friday morning after
being shot in a dispute on Fourth · a.llegedly shot Jamison once in the
Avenue, Gallipolis, at approximate- leg. The· slug apparently passed
through one leg and lodged in the
ly 3 p.m. Thursdax.
-..J;&gt;wayne A. W!lliilms, 28, of 125 other, police said.
Williams was arrested soon after
River S~. Gallipolis, is being he)d
in the Galli a County Jail on ·a the shooting by a deputy from the
charge of felonious assault in con- Gallipolis Sherifrs Department.
The Gallia County Emergency
!JCCiion with the shooting.
According to a report from the Medical Service transported Jami-

4 P••··l P·•·

This Wee•'s Buffet Speei11l

SE~FOOD SPECilL
95

son to Holzer Medical Center.
Several people expressed concern that the incide.nt occurred
close to a school at approximately
the same time students were being
dismissed for the day.
The incident is still under investigation, a police spokesman said.
Williams pleaded not guilty to
felonious assault during his
arraignment Friday morning in the
Gallipolis Municipal Court.
The court appointed Richard
Roderick to serve as William's

attorney.
Bond was set at $25,000. A preliminary hearing has been scheduled for Feb. 7, II a.m., in the Gallipolis Municipal Court.
If convicted of felonious assault,
an aggravated felony of the second
degree, Williams could face an
indefinite term of incarceration
ranging from five to 25 years.
Since the incident involyed the use
of a firearm, William~ may also
face an additional three year's
incaroeration if convicted.

/

Rutland
man til be sentenced in March
.
.

Meigs County SheriffJames M.
Soulsby reports that Shawn.Minshall of Rutland,· 19, appejlied in
, tlje M~igs County Common Pleas
.. C:ourt on Wednesday on a Bill or
Information filed by the Mei~s
·County Prosecuting Attorney s
qffice.
.
&lt; That bill charged Minshall with
l:ireakinllllld entering and vandalisin to.louery equipment 81 D&amp;M
~ in Syracuse. He was released
an bond and is to appear for scn~ing In Marth. · .

NINIIOI

Mn"'i".aon.DellfJC; and Penny

Jonathan Pcrrilt,son of Gay Per· ·
Woodraneitll t.fartin, Shade, rin, Pomeroy, has received a Juris
. I iecei..S I BICbclor of Ani Degree Doctor ilegree from the CoUcp of
flllll Ollio Uni_vPIY at the end of Law 81 the Unhmity of Cincinlllli
fall ....,
fohow!ng the 1991. fall quarter•.

\ '

LoW tonight in 20s. High
Saturday In upper 30s. Cloudy

Economic forecasting gauge slips in December

FRIDAY
BUFFET
SPECIAL

..

;

Page 4

Vol. 42, No. 1aa

received 1 Bachelor of Business

I

8-H; K-C; 2-D;
4-S

Copyrighted 1992

King, left; preseated prizes to Jarrod Gilmore
and Katbl Johnson, rroat, 11d T011y1 Miller,
back. A WIDDer Dol preseDt was Toni Martinez.

$8

Pick 3: 086
Pick 4: 9918
Cards:

L-~-----------L----..,:_

PWC
meets
Members of the Presbyterian
Women's Circle of the Middleport
Presbyterian Church mel recently
with the new chairman, Mrs. Guy
Harper, presiding.
Due to the death of Mrs. Jack
Coleman, Mrs. Paul Haptonstall
was appointed treasurer . Mrs.
Harley Brown was appointed Least
Coin chainnan.
Mrs. Brown read "Doers of the
Word" as the Least Coin offering
was taken. She stressed the need
for action and deeds in promoting
peace and justice and concern for
others.
Mrs. Guy Harper used an article
on "Influence" as her devotional.
She tied it 10 the theme of the study
iesson of the evening, asking mem·
bers to consider what difference
one's faith makes in how one acts.
Christians must be willing to face
iJpposilion and to live lives that are
different if they are to influence
others in a positive manner.
The book study was presented
by Mrs. Carl Horky using the new
bOoks 011 Discipleship. After introthe book, Mrs. Horky disp. Good News People. As disciples of Christ, Christians must be
JOod news people who spread
Ood'l JoVe and grace 10 aU, follow·
iill His example as described in
MltlheW 9:9-13. .
Mrs. Rjch8rd Vaughan served
remsbments to nine members pre-

Ohio Lottery

Meigs girls
•
wan
over
Buckeyes

-'

..
..

.

\

ydfs probation along with fines of month jail term, which was susMinshall also 8ppeared in Meigs $50
and costs on each. ~estitution pended to' 10 days and $50 plus
County Court ori \Vednesday ·on . was also
ordered.
costs olio each charge. He was also
charges of petty theft involving
Also appearing for his partici- placed on five yea~s probaiion.
stolen soft drink bottles from Super
paling
in the D&amp;M Pizza incident Restitution was ordered.
America in Pomeroy, and the theft
was
Thomas
Stobart II, .19, of · Two juveniles were also arrest·
ofitems·rrom a bus at Edwin Davis
Racine.
He
was
charged with ed and their cases are being han·
and Sons at Danville.
receiving
stolen
property,
con- died through the Meigs County
Minshall wL'I also ·charged with
has been st;n·
contributing to the del.inquency·of a tributing to the delinquency of a Juvenile Court.
millot
and
petl)'
!het'l
inyolving
the
~need
to
the
OhiO
Youth
CommJS·
minor, and entered guilty pleas to items from the bus at Dan viDe .and s1on and has been lriiiiSP_Orted
.to
the charges. Judge Patrick H.
cigarettes
from
the
Super
America
·
Col~m
.
b!JS·
Th~
second
Juvenile
O'Brie11 sentenced Minshall to a
six month jail sentence, which was store in Middlepon. He entered a case 1s sun pending.
su,spended to: 10 d~ys and five guilty plea and was given a six~

9De

TREE COMES DOWN • Workers
awaytbe large maple tree that stood lit.- tile · War monumnt
at tile Melp COIIDty Court HOUM 011 Tllursday. Tile dim 11 d tret
was nmovtd becaue tbe couDJy dllllmisslontrs felt it posed a tlillety bliZII'd to p1158ersby.
\

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