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                  <text>Tuesday, February 25, 1992

Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

Honor rolls for the third six
weeks grading period in schools of
the Eastern Local School District
have been announced. Students
with grades which qualify them to
be listed on the honor rolls are as
follows:
Chester Elementary
Sixth grade - Kellie Bailey, Stefani Bearhs, Brandon Buckley ,
Billee Pooler, all A's; Samuel Pulver, overall; Jamie Dralce, academic.
Fifth grade - Dustin Huffman,
Valerie Karr, Matthew King, Jessica Marcum, Jason Mora, Aaron
Will, overall.
Fourth grade - Molly Heines,
Joshua Will, all A's; Jessica Barringer, Joshua Broderick, Chasatie
Hollon, Jessica Kimes, Chris
Krawsczyn , Jessica Pore, Alison
Rose, overall; Johnathan Haggerty,
academic.
Third grade - Juli Bailey, all
A' s; Kristen Chevalier, Joshua
Clark, Cinda Clifford, John Cooke,
Wes Crow, Tiffany Hollon, overall;
Justin Brewer, Jeffrey Smith, academic.
Riverview Elementary
Sixth grade- Robert Harris, academic.
Fifth grade - Christa Circle,
Julie Hayman, Heath Proffin, Mike
Sobieski , overall.
Fourth grade - Jason Barber,
Derek Holsinger, Cassie Rose,
overall.
Third grade - Amber Baker,
Chris Barringer, Renee Barringer,
Brandon Browning , Bridget
Browning, Ruby Buffington,
Amber Church. Jeffrey Marcinko,
Mat Puunan, Chrissy Smith, overall; Kelly Koffel, Andy Miller, academic.
'
Tuppers Plains Elementary
Sixth grade - Billena Buchanan,
Chris Buchanan, Michelle Caldwell, Jeremy Kehl, Joey Weeks,
overall; Lamar Lyons, academic.
Fifth grade - Jessica Brannon,
Stephanie Evans, Alisha Rojas,
Ann Wiggins, all A's; Jessica Bartram , Lacey Bunting, Greg Burke,
Sarah Householder, Sari Putman,
Heather Rockhold , J.T. White ,
overall.

Fourth 'rade - Meghan Avis,
Matthew BISSell, MaUhew Boyles.
Mauhew Caldwell, Sheena
Gilmore, Andrew Rollins, Sarah
Sexton , Carrie Sheets, Amanda
Upton, Steven Weeks, overall;
Jeremy Gillilan, Leah Sand"ers,
Dezra Wrikeman, academic.
Third grade - Joey Brown ,
MaUhew Grubb, Joshua Kehl, Wes
Shafer, Danielle Spencer, Gary
Vierlin~ . overall; Kevin Keaton,
academtc.
Eastern Junior High and High
School
Twelfth grade • Steven Barnett,
Jennifer Brookover, Kristina Connolly, Lorre Osborne, Keith
Spencer, all A's; Monica Adams,
Tim Bissell, Carrie Gillilan, Lee
Gillilan, Tony Grate, David
Gumpf, Mike Hoffman, Danny
Lawrence, Elizabeth Lawson, Tony
Maxey, Tabby Phillips, Mary Jo
Reed, Julie Riffle, Jennifer Roush,
Crissy Summers, Amy Well.
Eleventh grade - Kim Michael,
all A's; Jeremy Buckley, Nancy
Gaddis, Chad Griffith, Matt
Michael, Carrie Morrissey, Tracy
Murphy, Mike Roush, Bobbie
White.
Tenth grade - Jaime Wilson,
Andy Wolf, all A's; Penny Aeiker,
Samantha Ayers, Kathy Bernard,
Charlene Dailey, Adria Frecker,
Shelly Hendricks, Randy Kaylor,
Wendy Rach, Tyson Rose, Amber
Well.
Ninth grade - Ryan Buckley, all
A's; Charles Bissell, Marissa
Brookover, Heidi Nelson, Jessica
Radford, Vic VanMeter.
Eighth grade - Rebecca Evans,
Jessica Karr, Nicole Nelson, Brandi
Reeves, Lauren Young, all A's;
Michael Barnett, Brian Bowen,
Jeanette Cline, Melissa Dempsey,
Jessica Frederick, Brian Hoffman,
Jennifer Mora, Robert Murphy,
Rachaet Norman, Ginger Nutter,
Micah Otto, Noelle Pickens, Ccnnie Pooler. Clifford Stevens,
Heather Well, overall; Robert
Laughery, Jason Sheets, academic.
Seventh grade- Meredith Crow,
William Francis, Maria Frecker, all
A's; Angela Chaney, Laura Eastman, Traci Heines, Martha Holler,
Sean Maxey, Lisa Stethem, overall;
David Baker, Angela Bissell, Eric
Dillard, academic.

DAVID JOHNSON and LEANNA GIBBS

Birthday observed

NATHALIE GARNIER

Lenten services
begin March 5
The Pomeroy area churches will
be gathering for a series of Community Lenten Services beginning
Thursday, March 5, at 7:30 p.m. at
the Pom eroy Church of the
Nazarene with Rev. Ron Shreftler
preaching.
The series continues March 12
at 7:30p.m. at Trinity Congregational Church with Rev. Laura ·
Shreffler preaching; March 19 at
7:30 p.m. at Grace Episcopal
Church with Rev. Kris Treintong
preaching; March 26 at 7:30p.m. at
Sacred Heart Catholic Church with
Rev. Roger Grace preaching; April
i at 7:30p.m. at the Pomeroy United Methodist Church with Rev.
William Hoback preaching; April 9
at 7:30 p.m. at St. Paul Lutheran
Church with Rev. Glen McClung
preaching.
The community is invited. to
observe the Len1en season with the
area churches in these worship services.

Nathalfe Garnier, a foreign
exchange student from Belfont,
France, celebrated her 17th birthday recently at the home of Edwpd
and Rebecca Roush, Middleport,
where she resides for the 1991-92
school year.
Cake and ice cream were served
with gifts being presented from
Sherry and Shannon Riffle, Racine;
Becky and Ed Roush, Rian
Spencer, Rutland; Sharon and Ed
Hupp, Portland; Ronnie and Nancy
Russell and Mandy, Racine;
Daniel!e Scou, Middleport; Rober·
ta and Dona Lewis, Clifton, W.Va.;
and Veronica Sodomayor, a foreign
exchange student from Argentina.
Guests attending were An~i e
Teaford, Rian ,Spencer, Veromca
Sodomayor, Leslie Qualls and T.J.,
Dana and Roberta Lewis, Shannon
Lewis, Ronnie and Nancy Russell,
Mandy Russell, Dorothy Johnson,
Ed and Becky Roush, Talon Roush,
Sherry Riffle , Ed and Sharon
Hupp, Jamie, Jeremy, Jarrod, Jessica, Jina and Joshua Hupp.

Attends seminar
"Education for Excellence in
Office Nursing" was the theme of a
day-long seminar sponsored recently by the Delaware and Licking
Countr Chapters of the American
Assoctalion of Office Nurses a1 the
Fawcett Cenler in Columbus.
The day-long event included
Registered Nurses, LP.N.s, Medical Assistants, Physician Assistants, and anyone who functions as

a "doctor's nurse."
Attending from Meigs County
and earning continuing education
units were Jackie Frost, L.P.N.,
Betty Knight, L.P.N., and Kay
Logan, L.P.N. from the office of
E.S. Villanueva. M.D.

Dayton
topples
Notre Dame .

Teenage boy's eating
habits are not unusual

Eastern honor roll listed

Dear Ann Laaders: I thought
your answer about "Frank," the
"walking eating machine," was
unfair. It is obvious that you've
never raised.a boy.
I have a teen-age son who eats
like Frank. In the last two and a
half years he has gone from 5 feet 4
inches Ulll to 6 feet 1. He now
weighs 145 pounds and is in
great shape. After our last big
snowstorm he did his paper mule
through II inches of snow, carne
home and shoveled out our
driveway. Afterward, he went
over to his grandfather's house
and shoveled his driveway, 100. He
then made $30 shoveling for the
neighbors.
Yes, we spend a fortune on food,
but we don't mind. What would be
better to spend it on? -- MARY E.
RE!K, MILWAUKEE
DEAR MARY: Right on. That
letter certainly evoked a lot of
spirited comment Here's more:
From Mamosota, Ra.: Please go
easy on Frank. What he eats is
normal for him. When my son was
that age, I once yelled at him to stop
·the marathon eating and the man I
was dating, a gentle, sensitive soul,
shocked me by shouting, "ShUI up! "
He then told me thai when he was
my son's age he ate that way, too,
and it was normal, not gluttony. If
it's hard on your correspondents'
grocery bills, perhaps they should
ask Frank's parents to help out. -Anonymous Please
Seaule: This is about the kid
who is eating his aunt and uncle
out of house and home. I am a
newly graduated R.N. and suggest
that they have Frank's metabolism
tested. He should be seen by an
endocrinologisL -- Cindy
Aston, Pa.: As a registered dietician I can tell you that it is not
unusual for a teen-age boy to
require 4,000 calories a day. Also,
he should have his thyroid checked.
--Lisa
Fremont Cal if.: A boy who is 5
feet 7 inches tall and weighs 138
pounds is underweight He should
see his family doctor and eat more
bread, peanut butler and jam, baked
oear1s, rice and
-- C.W

Ohio Lottery

•

m&lt;,;o,\\.,

Ann
La_nders

'

Pick 3:585
Pick 4:2998
Cards:
Q-H; 7-C; K-D;
8-S

Low tontght In low 30s.
Thursday partly cloudy. High In
mld4Gs.

Page4

1\NN LANDERS

•

" lt91, Los A.nrelee
11mm Sfnclcate and
Creatcn Syndicate."

M.D.
Ashford, Ala.: Your answer in the
Dothan Eagle startled my husband
and me. We are the parents of five
and have been the foster parents of
27. A growing boy who eats like a
horse needs the calories to fuel his
energy. He should, however, be
checked for tapeworm and a thyroid
problem . -- Don and Marianne
Hardin
Charlottesville, Va.: Hilrry and tell
Frnnk's family that he may be a
diabetic. When 1 was a teen-ager 1
ate an enormous amount of food
and never gained an ounce -- 1
mean a dozen candy bars a-day was
nothing. When 1 was 20 and went
into labor, my baby weighed II
pounds -- and died. Guess what. I
had diabetes. My doctor never
bothered to check. -- Elizabeth
Lawson
Palm Springs, Calif.: Frank, "the
human vacuum cleaner," could be
bulemic. My daughler also ate like
there was no tomorrow and-she
never gained an ounce. It rook us
two years before we figured out what
she was doing to herself. Thai boy
,needs medical care and counseling
-- and the sooner the beuer. -- No
Name, Please
Dallas: The skinny kid who eats
so much could have a psychological
problem -- loneliness. He sounds like
an only child who has been shipped
off to relatives, separated from his
schoolmates, friends and teammates.
-- J.A. Bergman
So. dear readers, there you have it
-- possibilities galore -- everything
from tapeworm. diabetes, a metabolic disturbance and bulemia to just
plain loneliness. And last but not
leas~ he could be a normal kid with
a big appetite. Aren't my readers the
smarteSt people in the whole world?
thanks to all who wrote.

Vol. 42, No. 206
Copyrlghtld 1992

2 S.CUono, 12 Pogeo 25 oenta
A MuiUmldla Inc. New poper'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, Fel!ruary 26, 1992

West Virginia fugitive
arrested in Oklahoma

Department responded to lbe scene and was
assisted by tbe Pomeroy and Middleport Fire
Departments. An electrical overload is being
considered as tbe cause.

HOME HEAVILY DAMAGED- The one·
and-a-bait story frame bouse or Carl Hysell, Sr.,
Main Street in Rutland, wasbeavily damaged by
fire on Tuesday afternoon. The Rutland Fire

Rutland home damaged by fire
Fire heavily damaged the home
of Carl Hysell, Sr., Main SL, Rutland, and destroyed most of its contents early Tuesday afternoon.
At 12:52 p.m. Rutland firemen
were called to the scene where they
were joined by the Middleport and
Pomeroy Departments to bring the
blaze under control. Firemen were

on the scene for more than three
hours, Bill Williamson, Rutland
rue chief, reported.
He said that an electrical overload is being considered as the
cause of the fire which started in
the front room of the house. There
was heavy smoke, heat and water
damage, the chief said ..

Hysell was not at home wnen
the fire started in his frame story
and a half house. It was reported
that he does have insurance. No
estimates were given on the lose.
At 10:01 p.m. Rutland firemen
were called back to the scene when
the ftre rekindled.

HINTON, Okla. (AP)- One of
three murderers who tumeled their
way out of the West Virginia Penitentiary was captured today in
western Oklahoma, police said.
Fred D. Hamilton ,was arrested
without incident about 7:45 a.m.
EST outside a farmhouse near Hinton, said spokesman Lee Lamirand
of the Oklahoma Deparunent of
Public Safety.
About 50 officers searched most
of the night for Hamilton after an
attempted holdup at an El Reno
convenience, store about 8 p.m.
Tuesday, Lamirand said.
'
The search began after a t:::anadian County sheriff's deputy spolted a white Plymouth Sundance
that matched the description of one
used in the attempted robbery,
Lamirand said. The deputy chased
the suspect car until it crashed near
Hinton, Lamirand said. The driver
fled on fool
'
Searchers combed the wooded
area along the Canadian River,
concentratmg in a 16-square mile
area near Interstate 40 and U.S .
281.
, 'It's a real wooded area and
real ·isolated,'' El Reno police
Detective Mike Risenhoover said.
"There's nothing out there."
El Reno is about 25 miles west
of Oklahoma City; Hinton is about
30mileswestof~aCity.

Hamilton was being taken to
Caddo County Jail in Anadarko,
about 35 miles south of Hinton.
The Plymouth was reported
stolen in Millcreek, Pa., where
Hamilton was las I seen Monday
after abducting a man in another
car, driving 155 miles from Benwood, W.Va., and releasing him
unharmed.
Hamilton, 34, a native of Green·
field, Ohio, was serving three consecutive life terms with mercy for
murder, conspiracy to commit murder, ki~apping and armed robbery
stemmtDg from a 1977 Tucker
County case in which a state trooper was kiUed.
West Virginia authorities continued to search today for Tomie
Mollohan, 49, and David Williams,
33, stale police said.
. ··
The three escaped Feb. 19 by
digging a 32-foot tunnel under a
dirt-floor greenhouse at the
Moundsville, W.Va., prison.
Meanwhile, a U.S. Army mili·
tary police commander was named
Tuesday to whip West Virginia's
beleaguered prison system into
shape.
, Col. Nicholas Hun, 50, will
become corrections commissioner
next month after he retires from the
Army, Gov. Gaston Caperton said.
Hun replaces Ron Gregory, who
resigned under pressure Friday

extensive background in military
police work and as commander of
an Army correctional baualion at
Fort Riley, Kan.
"It is essential that prisoners be
secured in a professional manner
by a professional force," Hun said.
Hun said he favors the death
penalty. West Virginia does not
have one.
Caperton also ordered an independent investigation by Howard
Painter, an official with the
Re11ionat Jail and Correctional
Facility Authority, into the escape.
Caperton said he doesn't plan to
replace Carl Legurskr,, warden at
the prison in Moundsville, W.Va.
West Virginia Public Safety
Secretary Joseph Skaff said it took
the prisoners "several months" to
dig the tunnel. He still is trying to
determine how the shaft could be
dug without guards noticing it.
Mollohan was serving a life sentence without parole for the 1973
murder of a grocer in Kanawha
County, W.Va.
Williams was serving a life sentence for the December 1980 murder of a McDowell County, W.Va.,
resident found bludgeoned to death
in the rubble of his burned home.
Mollohan and Williams escaped
in 1988 by using bolt cutters and
were captured separa1ely about a
month later. Hamilton escaped

Evan Struble captures 1~92·~ ~~.~ p~~;:/!:~:t~~l~::_~d . ~'"~~~~~~land.~~ve.hasan ~~.~~~i;;:r~_t~~-~~en
·
C
,
zz·
.
·
Atty. Lentes files petition Lanham
M ezgs . ounty
zng crown for prosecutor's position indicted
MR. and MRS. JAMES

Evan Struble, a sixth grader
from Syracuse Elementary School,
will represent Meigs ,County in the
Annual Huntington Herald-Dispatch Spelling Bee in the Huntington W.Va., Civic Center on April 4.
Youn2 Struble correctly S{'CUed
"giddily'r and "gilding" to WID the
amual Meigs County Spelling Bee,
.held at Mei~s High School on
Tuesday everung.
Lauren Young, an eighth grader
at Eastern Junior High School was
the runner-up.
Evan is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Michael Struble of Syracuse, and
Lauren the daughter of Randy
Young and Rosemary Young, both
or Five Points.
Students from all 17 elementary
and junior high schools competed
in the contest, ranging from grades
four through eighL
Sixteen of those students were
school spelling champions. (Joey
Weeks, who represented Tuppers
Plains Elementary, was an alternate. Champion Michelle Caldwell
was unable to compete.)
Judges were Meigs County
Schools Superintendent John
Riebel, Eastern Local School
Superintendent Richard Smith, and
Meigs Local Superintendent James
Carpenter. The pronouncer was
Cliff Kennedy, a guidance counselor for the Meigs Local DistricL
Also competing were: Sandra K.
Young, Bradbury; Kelli Lynn Bai·
Icy, Chester; Jelmifer Sigmon, Har·
risonville; Jennifer Morris, Letart
Falls; Phyllis Clarlc, Meigs Junior
High; Renee Elizabeth Stewart,
f\1iddleport; . Wesley Thoene,
Pomeroy; Tabttha Roach, Portland;
Jesse Little, Racine; Michael
Sobieski, Riverview; Kristen

ACREE JR.

Hillside Baptist Church
holds annual banquet
The annual sweetheart banquet
or HiUside Baptist Church was held
recentl:y: .at the Meigs County
Semor Ctuzens Center in Pomeroy.
The evening began with picture
taking in front of a decorated archway designed by Gary Jones.
The calered candlelight dinner
was served on crysUil and china
dinnerware over linen Ulble-cloth
covered tables. Pastor James Acree
gave the blessing on the meal.
Several games were played fol lowing dinner and sweetheart couples of the year were chosen with a
tie between Mr. and Mrs. James
Acree Jr. and David Johnson and
Le Anna Gibbs.
The evening concluded with
prayer.
Attending were Rev. and Mrs.

Betty Acree, Rev. and Mrs. Kay
Willett, Mr. and Mrs. Bronson Laudcrmih, Mrs. Barbara Pratt, Barb
Stahl, Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Laudermilt Jr., Mr. and Mrs. John Dean,
James Dean, David Johnson, Leanna Gibbs, Angie Willett, Mr. and
Mrs. Dan Hood , Mr. and Mrs.
Kevin Waldron, Mae Roach, Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Bearhs, Ella Jane
McDaniel, Mr. and Mrs. Ron
Clonch, Ryan Clonch, Heather Cutlipp, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Willen,
Janice Reynolds, Mr. and Mrs .
James Acree Jr., Mr. and Mrs .
Chester Arthur, Juanita Arthur,
Chester Arthur, Mr. and Mrs. Greg
Peck, Greg Willeu, Trish Roush,
Lucky Landers , Tammi Jones,
Greg Miller and Willie Layne.

WINNER • Reif Herman or Middleport was
a
microwave oven in tbe second chance sweepstakes or tbe instant
Food and Treasurer game al tbe Big Bend Foodlaad. He was pre·
sented tbe oven Monday by Chuck Blake, manager, left.

Chairman seeks pageant donations
Donations for scholarships to be Chamber of Commerce, 200 East
awarded in the Miss Ohio River Second St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Valley Pageant to be staged on and designated for the pageant
April 4 at Meigs High School are scholarship fund.
Tickets will go on sale on
being solicited by Pam Newell
chairman of the pageant for the March 9 at the Chamber office.
Meigs County Chamber of Com - General admission is $3 and selec·
merce.
ti ve seating which is a reserved
Donations are $25 for contribu- section is $5.
tors, S~O for patron, and $100 or
Participant applications are
more for sponsor. Each donor will being accepted through March 3.
receive two selective seating tickets Any single female, 17 to 26, workto the pageant and his or her name ing, living, or attending school in
or the n~e of the company will Meigs, Gallia, Washington and
appea.r tn lhe pageant program. Athens Counties.
Donations are to be mailed to the

Pomeroy.

Linda Hubbard won the fruit

~~unny money auction will be

Card shower

THE VICTORS • Evan Struble Is l'&lt;teics Coaaty's Sp_e~llng
Cbampioa .ror .19!12. He correctly spelled ''Rk.:dDy" and "glldiDtl''
lo win tbe County Spelling Bee, held last night al Meiss Hich
Schnol. He is a sixth grader al Syracuse Elemeatary School. Lauren You11g, an eighth grader at Eastern Junior Hlgb, was the runner-up.
Brown, Rutland; Laticia Metheney,
Salem Center; Shera Paaerson, Salisbury; and Jennifer Lawrence,
Southern Junior High.

Middleport woman wins $2,000

Surprise .. .3 out
of .tl whO flle ataX

..

return get a refund!
Chances are that
means you. So the
sooner you file the

'

· Kathy Gardner, Middleport, was a $2,000 winner in the Pillsbury·
Bake..()ff contest held at Walt Disney W~ld's Conlelllpoouy Hotel
in Orlando, Aa. on Tuesday with tier recipe for Caramel Graham ·
Fudge B~wnies. She also woo a Sears Kenmore microconvectlon
oven. .
·
I ·
.
. Ganlnel competed witli 100:other lintllists in the contest spon·
sored by Pillsbur}o and Selin. A total of$136,000 in casb and pPze5
to contesltllts !!elected from thousands II entries were awanlcd.
.

•

sooner )'OU get
money back!

s,

Fees tbr •elected servlcea in Ohio s swe pub have been revised
for the flltl lilac in several yean, ~~ to Forbd Run State
Pllt ~IlDdy Wacbler.
The~ a ftilow• a tborouah analysis of the exltlng fee struc·
ture for doct:-ad t:lblll'lllll anci overniabt c:.nplaa fee&amp; AJ in ihe
past, 1111e paaUay·UJe ldllllel, aucb as awimmln$ ,beaches, picnic

·

, C.thneclaapqel

' .. "

·

practiced law in the Cleveland area.
During that time, he served as,staff
attomeyandspecialcounselforthe
North Olmslead City Law Department specializing in stale and federal governmental issues. In addilion, Lentes served as law director
for the City of Westlake, a suburb
of 25,000 people near Cleveland.
As law director, Lentes was
'bl &lt; all · uand · ·
responst e .or ctv
crumna1 matters within the city.
Lentes currenlly sits as vice
resident of the Meigs County
· Com · · He is presi
1anrung
rruSSJon.
dent of the Meigs County Board of
Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabilities (Carleton

~

JOHN LENTES
School). He is president of the
Woodland Centers Mental Health
Board and is a member of the
Meigs County Head Start Board of
Trustees. In addition, he is a mernber of numerous civic and professional organizations.
He also has been appointed on a
number of occasions as a special
prosecutor to investigate and prose·
cute corruption on the Gallia Coun·
IY School Board and Gallia County
Prosecutin2 AtiOOlev's Offtce.
P
&lt;,
·
ted
Lentes mdicates tf he IS elec ,
he inlends to shift the focus of the
Continued oa page 3

SIOUX 'FALLS, S.D. (AP) _
South Dakota voters siphoned off
support from President Bush in a
GOP ,primary that confirmed his
political peril. Bob Kertey ·won the
Democratic contest in a volatile
, presidential race that now becomes
a chase b hwidreds of convention
delegates.
· Republican voters on Tuesdiy
~ri'!landed Busb ,for the secopd
umc,10 ~0 w~ts. with !JW'IY. a
tblnl of the, South Datola Republi·
cans who cast ballou voting

.

"We ·need. to work harder,"
Bu~h campaign spokeswoman
Tme Clark ~know~
Kerrey Slid the YJCIOry over fellow farm-state Sen. Tom Hartin of
Iowa and the tell of lhe Democtatic
PICk would Ignite his cainpalsn.
He Immediately left for (ioorlia
whose primary Is a week l'fi&amp;Y.
!(errey .xt he could fight on equal

terms ~st G~v. B~ Clinton of
Arkansas m Chnton s southern
base.
.
".I've got nothing ~ apo~ize
for 10 a general eleeuo~ agaanst
Geoqe Bush and I'm $00!8 to say
to ~good Demoaauc de~~s
that I~ on the hunt for~.;:~rey s~td today on CBS Thts
Mooting." ,
.
~l. SBtd vottn were m a~

mood. NQW that the cold war IS
over, now ' that tile world bas
chanaed 10 dr&amp;mailcalty, people
saw that peaceful revolution
worked .In Bastef!! Bur?pe, it
worked 1~ the ~o':let Unton and
now f!teY re beginDiJIB Ill 118)',
haps 11 can wort here at home,'
~Slid.
·
Wtth the campaign RQW set to
fan ou' into multl·state t:OIIIW, the
Democrau were lookins to the
South .llld W011, a frenetic stretch
tbal_will
CIIIIJIIi8n's style

per:

-.me

and force contenders to rely mostly
on cash for TV buys and abandon
the meet-and-greet campaign style
they've used in the less-populated
stares.
. In South Datoca, Bush mus!Ued
JUSt 69 percent of the ~ole to 31
percent for d!e uncomnutted slate.
The weak vtctory followed last
week's lac,klust;er performance in
New Hampshtr~. where Bus.h
IICorCid 53 pen:ent m the leadoff pnmar_y against ~OP challenger
l'lltrict Bucllaaln s37,pelteat,
"It's not as lhouJh we had the
full c~~n. pre~s BO!ng on," said
~ It nliale bitoftbe ~ ·
tec1in&amp; you~ in a pllcc hit hard
by rcceasioa.
Tho South D*llll vote was seen
as IIIOiher reprimand f~ Blllh .00
~ sipposl d P!*Jitill vulnerability
mthe electaon. . . .
The nearly one-tbitd of !he~
vote that went for the uncommthed

rau

,,

I

•

II

\

David Lee Lanham, 50, of Point
Pleasant, was indicted for ag.
gravated murder Tuesday by the
Scioto County, Ohio Grand Jury,
according to Scioto County
Prosecuting Attorney Lynn Grimshaw.
Lanham was arrested in Mason
County Feb. 17 and charged Feb.
18 for the death of Lewis Michael
Oliver, 40, Point Pleasant, whose
body was found in Franklin Furnace, Ohio. Also arresled for the
murder was Worthy G. Siders, Jr.,
47, of Henderson , who refused arraignment on the charge of aggravated murder, and remains in
the Mason County Jail.
According to Mason County
Sheriff Ernie Wauerson, Lanham
was picked up for questioning Feb.
17 and signed a confession thai he
actually shot Oliver. He waived extradition and was transported to the
Scioto County Jail. ·
:
La h . r
S
n am •mp •c~led iders in the
murder, which led to Siders' arres1.
The remains of Oliver's nude,
tattooed body were found in an
open field in Scioto County Feb. IS
by a subject who was looking at
property adjacent to the land where
the bo~Jy was located. The subject
spoUed the body in the field, but at
h . th
I e ume ought it may have been a
deer. When the subject realized it
was a body, the Scioto County
Sheriff's Dcpartmen1 was nott'fied . .
Oliver had bc&lt;;n shot live times;
Continued on page 3-

Kerrey score~ decisiye win in South Dakota

"uncommiiled."·

I

State parks revise fees

held Tuesday and offteers will be
Helen Neutzling will celebrate
elected Milch 3.
her birthday Feb. 27.
The I'OIIP meets every Tuesday
Cards may be sent 10 her at
at the CII]ICnter's Hall at 5 p.m. Hopewell Health Care Center,
with weilb·in and meeting at 6 Room No. 1761 Pinewood Road,
Pi.~i Fcdunber.!~.~rmcation may be Sumpter, s,c., 29151.
ouwun
Y wwu•g )'lithia Paulk
She was a former resident of
at 992-5638 or Unnle Aleshire a1 ·Pomeroy. Her husband was Roland ·
992-7464. ·
Neutzling.
~-~-----------.-..__-..:..,.--1
~

Election '92 H

--Local briefs-....,

Free clothing day
TOPS, KOPS meet plann~d Thursday
Ola St. Clair was the KOPS · The Sal\ltion Army wiD have a
weekly loser and Trina Paulk and free clothing day on Thursday from
V~inia Dean were the TOPS 10 a.m. to noon at on the ftnl floor
w y losers at the recent meeting of the buildinJ. Area residents in
of the Ohio TOPS Club No. 570 need of clothmg are wel,come to
beld at the Carpenter's Hallin come.

Pomeroy Attorney John R.
Lentes will be a candidate for
Mei~s County Prosecuting Attorney tn the May 5 Democratic Primary.
Lentes is a partner in the taw
firm of Poner, Little, Sheets and
Lentes, with Frank "Bill" Porter,
Douglas Uttle and J~er Sheets.
He is a graduate of Miami University with two B/A degrees. He
smdied at Oxford University and
the University of London in England and received his law degree
from Cleveland;Marshall College
of Law in 1985.
Lentes, prior to movi~ to Rut·
land Township where he lives with
his wife, Cathy and three children,

slate represen~ SUP(?O!t for "an
anybody-but-Bush ttcket," said
Stuart Rothenberg, a'political analysl
Kerrey, from next-door Nebraska, got a commanding 40 percenl
or the vote. Harkin had 25 pereen~
while Arkansas Gov: Bill Clinton
crossed regional lines and ran a
respectable third at 19 percent.

Fonner Massachusetts Sen. Paul
Tsong&amp;S was a distant fourth With
10 pen:ent, unable to ~-talize
. on
last week's New Ham · viciOry. Jerry Browil, the ormer.Califomia govanor, llliled with 4 _
cenL Brown will lose his elig~
for federal campaign match inK
funds un1eas he cap1ure120 pm:em
in a pimary in the DOlt 30-da
Brown capllndlllc flmx~ the
Democrllic CIIDIJiip to dele wbeo
he joad: "Bob leeirey badll'ta
'a III8ID ~ 10 1 wasaoias 10 '""
him achanco."
.._.

�Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

$MU.TIMEDIA, INC.
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Daily Press Association and ·
the American Newspaper Publisher Association.
LE'ITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They sbould be less than 300 ·
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
address and telepbone number. No unsigned [etten will be publisbed. Letters
sbould be in good taste, addressing issues, not penonalities.

Excerpts from other
Ohio newspapers
By Tbe Associated Press
Following are excerpts of editorials published recently in Ohio newspapers:
Portsmouth Daily Times, Feb. 20
" Tenn limitation is an idea whose time has come," President Bush
declared and for a while last year it appeared that a groundswcU of suppan might develop.
.
.
.
But the public's attenuon span IS too brief.
As candidates jostle for position and political observers compare the
strengths and weaknesses of the early contenders for the fealure event, the
race for the White House, the question of tenn limitation has been all but
forgotten.
Not quite.
.
.
. .
A reader advises us that the Republican Nauonal Commlllee IS pursuing the issue with an opinion survey and we can expect to hear more
about it when aU the returns are counted.
The recession, heal,th care, drug abuse and AIDS - together with the
solutions to these problems proposed by the candidates - will remain in
the spotlight from now until November but there's a growing conviction
that tenn limitation is an ingredien~ a catalyst, that deserves an opponumty to prove its effectiveness in forcing.government 10 come to grips with
the problems that threaten our way of life.
The (Toledo) Blade, Feb. 20
In this wackiest of all political seasons one might well coin a slogan
with an echo of the 19th Century: Tippy Canoe and Tsongas, too.
George Bush, stem and confident master of a stable ship of slate just
12 months ago, winner of a 100-hour ground war, lhe leader of the Free
World, and confidant of world leaders has been undone by a recession
that hit him broadside as he Wll;S gearing up for re-election.
. .
Patrick Buchanan, a man wtlh no elecuve office expenence, has m JUSt
10 weeks seriously embarrassed President Bush, who is now paddling a
very unseawonhy cmft into the uncharted political rapids along the route
to the nominating conventions.
Paul Tsongas won as expected on the Democratic side, but fonunately
for the electorate as a whole, New Hampshire voters were not able to perConn the winnowing function many observers had expected of them. AU
five announced Democrats could remain in the race for a time and try
their luck on friendlier ground in other primaries.
Neither Mr. Tsongas nor Mr. Buchanan is seen at this point as likely 10
reach lhe Oval Office. The Massachusetts senator is widely regarded as a
candidate who cannot tnmsform his regional appeal in New England into
a national base. And his relatively conservative message bothers many
tradi tiona! Democrats.
Unfortunately for Mr. Bush he cannot seem to shalc:e the conviction of
many Americans that he tacks from right to left and. b~k again in search
of political consensus and lacks any profound conv1cuons of hiS own except perhaps for capital gains tax reduction. Moreover, he is seen as a
man unable to comprehend the difficulties visited upon many Americans
in a recession. There is a whiff of Herben Hoover about him.
As for the DemocratS, one can survey the field and say, pretty safely,
that there is no Franklin Roosevelt among them.
And so a troubled nation proceeds to its rendezvous not with destiny
but with the nex ~ perhaps inconclusive primary_

Today in history
By Tbe Associated Press
Today is Wednesday, Feb.. 26, the 57th day of 1992. There are 309
days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
Fifty years ago, on Feb. 26, 1942, "How Green Was My Valley" won
Best Picture of 1941 at the Academy Awards ceremony in Los Angeles;
an Oscar also went to director John Ford. Gary Cooper was recognized as
Best Actor for " Sergeant York"; Joan Fontaine won Best Actress for
.. Suspicion."
On this date:

I

,I \

In 1802, one of the great figures of French liternture, Victor Hugo, was
born in Besancon.
In 1815, Napoleon Bonapane escaped from the Island of Elba to begin
his second conquest of France.
In 1846, "Buffalo Bill" Cody was born near Davenpon, Iowa_
In 1848, the Second French RepubHc was proclaimedIn !870, New York City's first pneurnauc-powered subway line was
opened to lhe pubHc.
In 1919, Congress eslablished Grand Canyon National Park in Ari-

zona.

"•''

Wednesday, .February 26, 1992

Page--2- The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, February 26, 1992

WASHINGTON - U.S. military official s in Panama have
uncovered a Satan-worshiping ring
of about 20 American teen-agers at
a U.s_ Air Force base there. The
military is trying to keep a tight lid
on the story, but our sources in
Panama say the cult was discov.ered by parents just in time to prevent a mass suicide the teens had
planned_
.
The teens were students at
Curundu Junior High School, a
Defense Department school on
Panama's Pacific coast. They
ranged in age (rom 13 to 15, and
most of them were the children of
military personnel stationed at
Howard Air Force Base.
A school employee told us that
the cult members cut themselves
and exchanged blood in a ritual in
which they made a pact to commit
suicide in late January . The pact
originally involved only five studentS, but it grew 10 include about
20 before it was discovered. Some
parents found out about the pact

and contacted other parents of suspected cult members.
Several of the swdents were put
in the psychiatric ward of a military
hospital in Panama.
The group reponedly carried out
Satanic rituals on the grounds of
the Air Force base. Last Hal loween, the teens are said to have
sacrificed a cat near the Howard
swimming pooL Later they kiUed a
coati-mundi, a small Panamanian
artimal similar to a raccoon. A band
of about 150 coati-mundis lives on
a hiU near the swimming pooL The
remains of the sacrificed animal
were apparently left behind by the
teens.
The military in Panama issued a
shon statement acknowledging that
"several teen-age students were
found to be experimenting with
activities associated with cult rituals" and that "students of military
service and civilian families appear
to have taken pan in these activi·
ties.' ,

Our associate Dean Boyd has
learned that the military acted
quickly to break up the ring, hospitalizing the teens and then scatter-

ing some of the families within
days to new assignments in the
United States. The military
acknowledged that some of the stu·
dents "are being returned to the
Uniled States for more comprehensive medical care."
In an apparent attempt to recruit
new members, the cult members
reportedly attended meetings of
Christian student groups. They
would befriend young students and
try to bring them inLQ the cult circle. Students described the group as
" really weird," and said the members wore upside down crosses and
black clothmg. "They drank a lot
of alcohol, smoked marijuana and
were constantly in trouble," one
student told us.
Another Curundu student told us
that the group tried to recruit her.
• 'They asked me to join them
because I knew a lot about what
they did . I said no and they got
really mad at me. But I wasn't
going to tell on them. I just stayed
away," she said. "When they said
they had just sacrificed a coatimundi, I thought they were kidding, but then I found out it was

Aceu-Weather8 forecast for

true and I didn't want anything to .

I I•

[ Mansfield 42°

W.VA.

~

Last Fall the much needed and
much anticipated national energy
strategy bill appeared to have run
into an insurmountable obstacle in
the u_
s. Senate.
After having been given a
strong stamp of approval at the
committee level, the bill appeared
headed for a close but successful
vote on the Senate floor. That was
until a small group of senators,
upset with the provisions of the
legislation that would have permitted oil and gas exploration in a
small parcel qf Alaska's Arctic
National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR)
decided to filibuster the bill, and
prevent its funher consideration by
that body. Unable to get the 60
votes needed to invoke cloture, an
action which have stopped the ftli·
buster, and having a signal from
the White House that the president
would veto the bill if it didn 't contain the ANWR provisions, the
biU 's proponents had no alternative
but to retreat and remove the bill
from consideration.
But just like the little rabbit
with lhe Energizer batteries that we
see daily on our television screens,
the bill g primary sponsor, Senator
Bennett 1ohnston of Louisiana. just
kept on going. After much cajoling,
bargaining, and amending, the sen·
ator was able 10 bring !lis bill back

4.

As one formerly associated with
the energy industry before my service in Congress, I have long been
concerned with the lack of a clear
and far-sighted national energy pol·
icy_ Our government, as with so
many other areas of national concern, has been basically placed in a
reactive mode thanks in large part
to Congresses· inability to come to
a qonsensus on such questions.
N(:IW however, on the question of
.~rgy at least, it appears we are
a&amp;&gt;ut to pol into place a legislative
framework that should permit this
country to finally arrive at some
semblance of a national energy
strategy.
.
Though the section that would
have pennitted oil and gas explo·
ration and production on roughly
seven percent of the 19 million
acres of the Arctic National
Wildlife Refuge had to be dropped,
(a provisi.on I might add, that
would have allowed this country to
greatly reduce its dependence of
foreign oil) the majority of the provisions contained in the original
biU that was filibustered, temained
in the final version that was enact·
ed_

'

While the biU is not without its
critics, it does appear to _enjoy the
general suppon of the broad range

South-Central Ohio
Tonight, mostly cloudy_ Low in
the low 30s. Thursday, partly
sunny. High 45-50_
Extended forecast:
Friday through Sunday:
Friday, fair except for a chance
of snow northeasL Lows from the

)

'

In 1940, the United States Air Defense Command was created.
_
'
In 1951, the 22nd Amendment to the Constitution was ratified, limiting
'
a president to two terms in office_
write in a non-campaigner and ' seemed confident 'and aenuinely ' 'r
they
tallced
abl!ut
what
moved
them
In 1952, 40 years ago, Prime Minister Winston Churchill announced -'-'-'';;:f:~""':':-;;· ~;.:."..;.;.;=
through the night, 'as undecideds voted for Harkin: "I've seen a lot personable." It was too late for . :
that Britain had developed its own atomic bomb.
The Great Hunt bas aone Sputh, became convinced, and once-decid· of worlcers lose their jobs. Harkin mass cqnversions, but even the : •
In 1962, 30 years ago, after becoming the fmt American to orbit lhe with five Democrats saying the eds disCovered fresh doubts.
ta11cs about this business of puttina group's only announced Tsonaas :
Earth, John Glenn told a joint mecling of Congress, "exploration and lhe pany's prize can still·be theirs Follow, first, the thi~king two lhe money back into lbe economy s,~. Dudley Dudley,~ "I , ;
pursuit of knowledge have always paid dividends in the long run.''
and perllapS two of them actually Undecideds:
to II')' to get the economy moving think Kerrey did very well, and if .; ·
In 1979, a total solar ccHpse cut a moving shadow 175 miles wide believing it. But bounty-hunters '
Hanison Workmal), 72, lobster· again. And - you want me 10 be voters were looking for a reason to · :
froniOreloh 10 Nonh Dakota before movill8 north into Canada.
Tsongas, CliniOn, Kem:y, Harkin man and bargeman, is an ex · honest? - L felt the others were
In 1984, the Rev. Jesse Jackson, il Democratic presidential candidate, &amp; Brown would be wise to glance Republican who now calls himself really too young. When a president support him, they would have .. : :
found it tonight. I wouldn't feel . ·
acknowledged in Conctxd, N.H.. that he used the word "Hymie" to refer back at the political tracks they left a conservative Delllocnl, He was is younger than me, laet scared."
uncomfortable
about voting for ' :
10 J~ws dqring·a private converiation, saying it vias "insensitive and behind in the living room of a com- tho first fellow drafted from
There were lessons for three him...
' :
WIOIIg."
.
fortable white CaPe Cod on Wood- Ponsmouth, N.H., in World W11 n: candidates that wete npt apparent
And,
fmally,
Bill
Clinton:
He'd
.
·
•
In 1986, Pulitzer Prize-winning ~ and autiKr Robett Penn Warren man Road, up in Durham, N.H_
"I boiled it down to Clilltoa and in Tuesday's election 1811ies.
once
again
impressed
some
'{hose
:
wu twnCd the fust "poet laureate' of the United States by Librarian of
These tracks tell the storr. of Kerrey. They were both forceful."
Paul Tsongas: He disappointed a
lost when The TroUbles . •
Daniel J' Boorstin.
'
. what woru and what doc:sn .1 in He ended ~ voting for Clinton. number of his voters bv not .·~he
began.
Some
that perhaps : :
. Ten yean qo: A jury in Atllllta began its delibrtations in the trial of their campaign cqurUhip of Demo- Abopt that u.p over Ctintllll's draft explaining fOIIIuightly why he hiS they'd pulle,dconceded
away from CliniOn · :
'wayne B. Willilms, who wu ICC1IICd of killing two young blacks whose cl'lllic America.
.
stauls as a youtll, Harrison laid: supported nuclear power- "I wu for all the W10111 reasons. ·
I
deldJI-11110111 aiCiriell of llayinp over a 22-IIIOIIIh period.
As tile DemoCradc_Fivo WOdted "That just didn't bother me. He hopln1 Tsonga• would be more
·
~
·1
was
originally
in
favor
of
..
i
flvo ye."B qo: The Tower Conunilsion, whicll probed tile irln-Contra their varioUJ push-me, pull-you didn't go 10 Canada or notlling like usenlve," said Tom Dudley. They
Bill
Clintonhrntll"
he
was
the
:
affair, iPtJed its report, which rebuked President Reaglll! for failina to "RR"''• .in tile last debate, 10 volcrB tbat. I'd be the first one 10 holler if weren't demanding that he agree
mOlt electable,'' aid~. Dodge' · ·• ·j
cOIIIRJI his llllioniiiiOCIII'ity aaff.
waJi:hla&amp;
0111he llv!Da-roomldevi· someone tri¢ io set 0111 of it by .with them; IIIey just didll 't like 8ee·
0ae ,_ qo: Kuwaiti reliult:e ~ dcclalctllhcmldvea in con- aioo fouod tbem~elves being ioin' 10 C••aclt, but he jUit went lng him duck, u other pols do. · a socioJoay profeasor who voted · ,
for TSODgu. He aDd oiben nld , ;
trol of dlelr ;:t,.~~ nwly · - IIKIIIIhl of lnt!li occttctlon. moved, 10111Ctime1 men tltlll once. back and took his chances on the
Bob
Kerrey:
Pur
t1IC
flnt
lime
in
tboy dinpprovod of tbe political ' :
1r1qi p,e.v.m
~ IIIIIOtiiiCed 01 BeaM"' lldio IIIII
bad They'd come aa .uodecldeda or draft."
montha, they felt irnJII!IIIsed by a use of those coauovenioa about .
ontaed hi&amp; fort:el 10 wilbdlaw tom KtiWIIL
uncenains to Ch• home of Tom
Jcin MitcheD, who used 10 clean fellow they'd dlsmiiJed 11 the infidelity aad the draft - but ~ l
Today's B~lll' MMOII AdaMI ia 73. Aetor Tony RWall Ia Dudley, (wbo Ia a local lawyer) end dormiiOrles at tile University ot campaian's
angry yout11 man. "I deserted Clinton because they 1
12. A1:1re11 Bell)'
1171. Sinpr Pall Domino is 64. PoHtlcal colum· Dudley budley (who is DO typo, New Hampshire aod is now a
think Kerrey portrayed • different COiled that, come November, the
niltlobert Norilldl 61. Sinpr Jobnay Clllll is 60.
.
but a well·knowo local poliifCil · ttou•oeplna JUptll visor ca11J bet· aide d bimsellloniibt." llid Uoi· roll of us .~,!t be swayed, by . :. ,'
~ b T - ''111ewile nb !IIMirbiiiiCifools Jepe&amp;t them." figure). Mter the debate, they ae1f alibOnl Democ:riL Sho lelned
. '
vcnity of New Hampnile Vice llepubllcln . . ada.
- iJuCb'Inell, ~!Mitllbtx (1766-1,148).
.
voted in a moclt-electlon. And then toward Mario Cuomo, but wouldn't President Phyllls Ben~tt. "He
f

eon.ress

l

I

1

,

'•

I

' I

·'

Sunny

Pt. Cloudy Cloudy

upper 20s to the low 30s. Highs in
upper 30s nonheast to near 50 far
south_Saturday and Sunday, fair
and warmer over the weekend.
Lows 30-35 .Saturday and mid aild
upper 30s Sunday. Highs 45-55
Saturday and upper 40s north to
near 60 south Sunday.

U.S. Army military police com·
mander to whip its beleaguered

Pomeroy Mayor's Court
Seven forfeited bonds and five
were fined by Pomeroy Mayor
Bruce Reci:l on Monday eveninllForfeiting bonds were: Norma
Roush, Letan, W.Va., $60, failure
to yield; Cynthia Hoffman,
Cheshire, $60, assured clear distance; D_Chase Cleland, Racine,
$80, ran a red traffic light; Samantha Loewy, Athens, $65, speed;
Paul Wilson, Shade, $80, expired
license; Roger Shoults, Racine,
$60, assured clear dislance; and

Janelle Yonkers, Pomeroy, $60,
assured clear distance.
Richard B. Little, Middlepon,
$375 and costs, DUI; Gregory
Dohtery, McArthur, $63 and costs,
open container; John Ord,
Pomeroy, $50 and costs, no fmancial responsibility; Vickie Heldreth,
Pomeroy, $43 and costs, failure to
yield right of way; and Roland
Landalcer, Pomeroy, $63 and costs,
no valid driver's license_

,..---Local briefs...---. Weight control classes to begin next week

Martin Sch"'am

I.

Ice

-----Weather-----

-Require car and truck fleets of
20 vehicles or more in cities of
more than 250,000 people to begin
operating on nongasoline fuels
such as ethanol and natural gas.
This requirement would be phased
in starting in 1995.
-Expedite federal approval of
natural gas pipelines.
·Consolidate from two to one
the licensing requirements for the
construction and operation of
nuclear generatin$ plants. Heretofore a two stage licensing requirement had to be met, first for construction and then for operation.
-Calls on the president to accel·
erate lhe ,PhaseoUt of ozone deplet· · •
ing chemicals.
-Directs federal agencies to ·'
implement all energy efficiency
improvements that would pay for
themselves within 10 years, and
authorizes $50 million to help pay
for such improvement!.
. The focus will now ~urn to the
House side of the HiU where action
on a similar energy bill is expected
to take place in early spring. Personally, I feel we've let this issue
languish far too lon~. The quicker
we can address thiS matter, the
quicker we can get a reasonable
and responsible energy strategy in
place. Like the energizer rabbit, we
can only keep going for as long as
our power source hold out It will
hold out much longer once we have
a consistent and comprehensive
policy on tiie books. .

What works, what doesn't for Democrats

Snow

01992 Accu-WNiher, Inc.

!

of interest groups who normally
track such issues.
Environmenlalists and energy
conservationists, though not enamored with all its provisions, find
more in it that tl!ey like than dislike. Much the same can be said for
the energy industry_Getting hack
to the former, energy conservationists had hoped to,have included in
this comprehensive measure a provision that would have r,equired
higher mileage standards for
automakers, but given the already
shalcy state of our nation 's automotive mdustry, they backed off from
pushing this proposal at this time.
The main reservation that the
energy producers•have with the
bill, other than Ute already men. tioned ANWR issue, is a provision
that would allow non·ulility companies to build, own, and operate
power plants without having those
facilities subject to.the regulations
that apply to utilities under the
1935 Public Utility Holding Company Act. These non-ulility company generating planL! would be able
to sell whatever ou!put they didn't
use to any utility company that
would wani their excess capacity'
Many pans of lhe Senate passed
bill are similar to•the National
Energy Strategy package that the
President sent to the Hill last year.
Its major provisions are as fo.Uows:
-Require manufacturers of
lamps and electric motors to meet
newly established energy efficiency standanls.

T-siMns Rain Flurries

Va., and Buffalo, N_Y., got snow.
A flash flood warning was in ·

effe~t for the mountains and

foothills of South Carolina.
,
. Meanwhile, the heavy rains that
hit Texas and much of the South on
Tuesday had relented in most areas
by today, although it was still rain·
ma mTennessee.
. More than 3 inches of rain fell
tn lhe ce~tral TeXas 10wn of Ding
Doog during a 24·hour period ending Tuesday morning_
In the West, another strong jet
stream kicked up a storm over the
Pacific Ocean- But a high-pressure
system diverted the. storm nonh

over Canada and Alaska, teepina
. conditions mild along the West
Coast from Seattle to San Diego.
Meanwhile, warm easterly :
winds blowing across the desert 10 :
the coast were expected to send the ·
temperatUre in Los Anaeles toward :
80 degrees today.
Highs were expected 10 reach
the 30s and 40s in New England
and the Grea1 Lakea states; the 401 ·
and 50s in the mid-Atlanlie, north· :
em Plains and Rocky Mountain :
regions; lhe 60s in most of the ·
South; the 60s and 70s in the Pacif. '
ic Northwest; and the 70s and 80s
in Southern California and soutbem
Florida_

Army colonel named corrections commissioner
CHARLESTON, W_Va. (AP)
- West Virginia has enlisted a

I

to the Senate floor this past week
and gain quick and enthusiastic
passage of his comprehensive energy bill by a one-sided vote of 94 to

•I Colurrbus I 42" I

•

For them, and for other teens, a
Satanic cult satisfies three needs,
"the need for power, the need for
control and the need to belong to
something_"
When the rituals of the Curundu
teens were described to McCanhy.
he classified them as beyond "dabbling ." Experim entation with
Salanism is growing among troubled teens, but "only a few get to
this P?int.' • McCarthy said. Animal
sacnfices "usually mean they go l
on to bigger things. "
!
Copyrij:bt, 1992, United Fea- •
ture Synd•eate, Inc-

He just kept on going...

a. a.

IND.

!

Cong. Clarence
Miller

By 'l'be Associated Press
Sunset tonight will be at 6:19
Another chilly day is on tap for P.Dl· Sunrise on Thursday will be at
Ohio on Thursday before a wann- 7:09am.
ing trend begins, the National
Aroundtbeoatlon
Weather Service said.
Rain drenched the nonhem half
Highs will be mostly in the 30s of the East Coast early today, while
under cloudy skies following tempenuures across the West Coast
below·freezing temperatures were unseasonably wann. Much of
overnight.
the Midwest was dry but cloudy. ·
Forecasters said things will stan
A stron~ jet-stream disturbance
wanning up on Friday and the mer- over the Rlld·Atlantic pushed heavy
cury could reach the mid-50s on rains over the East Coast from
Saturday and even the 60s on Sun· Maine 10 the Carolinas for a second
day.
straight day, with snow expected in
The record high temperature for northern New Yode ·and New Ens·
this date at the Columbus weather land.
station was 71 degrees in 1941. The
Rain fell before dawn in Bos10n;
record low was 10 below zero in New York; Philadelphia; Washing1963ton; Portland, Me.; and Richmond,

do with them.''

''powerless.··

I~

cOnditions and high temperarures

MICH.

The girl also said the cult mem- :
bers told others that they had dug
up a human grave, and had taken a
video camera to a pet cemetery to '
record the event as they uneanhed
animals.
An American citizen in Panama ·
who has children at Balboa High
School there said he had heard
rumors about the cult for weeks,
but'that his own children were
afraid to talk about iL "This is nor- ;
mally a pretty conservative group :
down here," he said. " It's not like
normal teen-age cliques in the ·
United States with booze and :
drugs,'' he said.
Panama is a fertile breeding :
ground for occult practices, but :
Rafael Martinez, a Miami consul- ·
tant on Latin American cults, spec- :
ulated that this grollp probably was ;
not linked to the nafive groups that
practice Santeria and other Afro··
Caribbean religions . "As far as
these kids being part of a larger.
religious organization? No way. It
may have had religious ovenones,
but it sounds more like teen-agers
dabbling in Satanism."
Followers of Santeria, including
at one time former Panaman ian
dictator Manuel Noriega, some-.
times sacrifice animals for protec· _.
lion, but they also worship cenain
Catholic samts. The students in
Panama said the ringleaders of the
group. there were strictly Satan
worshipers.
Jim McCarthy of Boulder,
Colo. , is a consultant to law
enforcement agencies on cultS.. He
has seen the phenomenon of Satan
worship growin~ among children
of military families, who often feel

The Dally Sentinel-Page 3

Warming trend expected by weekend

Thursday, Feb. 27

Teens' cult busted at Air Force base
Jack Anderson

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

prison system into shape.
Meanwhile, the search contin'·
ued for three killers who escaped
the West Virginia Penitentiary a
week ago today. Authorities were
looking for one of the lhree in lhe
Cleveland area.
Col. Nicholas Hun, 50, will
beeome corrections commissioner
next month after he retires from the
Anny, Gov. Gaston Capenon said
Tuesday.
Hun replaces Ron Gregory, who
resigned under pressure Friday
after the killers escaped through a
32-foot Ion~ tlDinel built under the
din-floor pnson greenhouse.
Hun, a Cleveland native who
lives in Hunicane, bas an extensive
background in military police work
and as commander of an Anny correctional battalion at Fort Riley,
Kan. He commanded an infantry
platoon in Vietnam_
"It is essential that [ri!oners be
secured in a professional manner
by a professional force," Hun said.

Hun said he favors the deatb
penalty. West Virginia does not

bavoone.

Capenon also ordered an inde·
pendent investigation by Howard
Painter, an official with the
Re~ional Jail and Correctional
Facility Authority.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial H01pltal
TUESDAY ADMISSIONS •
Aleta Billingsley, Pomeroy; Grace .
Welch, Pomeroy; and Naomi
Hosehar, Middlepon_
TUESDAY DISCHARGES •
Maaie Warner.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharaes, Feb. 25 ·• Karen
Bates, Mabel Bowens, Charlene
Donley, Teresa Justice, James
Markham, Elizabeth Oblinger, Roy
Taylor and Lawrence Wilcoxen.
Births, Feb. 25 - Mr. and Mrs.
Alex.ander Wilson, a son •
McAnhur.

exercise techniques, and other
phases of weight control.
There will be a limit as to the
number of people who can be
admitted to each series of classes
which are 10 be held in the confer·
ence room of the Multi-Purpose
Building, Mulberry Heights,
Pomeroy_
·
Residents should register as
PTO to meet
Fitch wiU be the caller_The public
soon as possible due to class size
The Chester PTO will meet is invited to attend.
limitations. with the Meigs County Monday at 7 p.m. at the school. All
Dance plaaoed
Health Department at 992-6626, parents and teachers are encourThe Royal Oak Dance Club will ·
indicating their preference for the aged to attend.
hold its fust dance of the year on
March is Fine Free Month at the Meigs County Public Library,
Monday or Wednesday class.
Boosters to meet
Saturda~ at Royal Oak Resort.
in a monetary sense.
The Meigs 1unior High Aca- Music will be provided by ~e
"We know the people of Meigs County have big hearts." Library
demic
Boosters will meet Thurs· HaD from 8 to II p.m. Membership
Director Ruth Powers said, "so we hope to tug at our patron's heart·
day,
March
5, at 7 p_m_ in the dues will be accepted at the door.
continued
rrom
page
1
strin~s by offering • in exchange for non·perishable food items,· the
school
cafeteria,
not tomorrow, as Dues are $40 per year.
forgiveness of all fines on library material, with the exception of
was
stated
in
yesterday's
issue of
Alumnl1ame plalllltd
prosecutor's
office
from
solely
nal cases and I cenainly will prosevideos-'
The
Daily
Sentinel.
Parents
and
The
Southern Local Alumni
criminal
prosecutions
to
using
his
cute such cases with ftrmness and
Patrons with overdue videotapes will sliD be charged a fine,
basketball
game will be bekl March
specializeil
legal
knowledge
to
aid
teachers
are
urged
10
attend.
fairness," Lentes said. "However, .]
Powers saidPastor recogoltlon day
7 at 7:30 p.m. at Southern Hiah
all governmental bodies in the intend to use my position as legal
All you have to do during fine free month is bring in overdue
The
Silver
Memorial
Free
Will
School. It will be preceded by three
county
to
effectively
meet
their
counsel
for
the
cOIDity
commissionitems and non-perishable food item and your fine is forgiven. If
elementary games at 5:30 p_m,,
goals
of
improving
quality
of
life
Baptist
Church
in
Kanauga
will
ers, trustees, boards of education
you have already returned your library material, but still owe a rme,
Letan versus Portland; Racine ftfth
for
people
in
Meigs
Comity.
host
a
pastor
recognition
day
on
you can also make a donation and your fme will he cleared.
and other officeholders to take an
grade
verses Syracuse fifth grade;
"I
believe
the
sheriff's
depanSunday
at
2
p.m_
There
will
he
active role in improving the educa·
All collected food will be donated to lhe Meigs United Methodist
and
Racine
sixth gl)lde verses Syrament
does
an
outstanding
job
of
preachmg
an
singin~
by
different
tiona!, economic and environmen·
Cooperative Parishinvestigating and preparing crimi- tal prospeciS of the area. I believe groups. The public IS invited and cuse sixth grade.
Racine Couoc:il to meet
that it is time for the countY •s chief refreshments will be servedThe
Racine Village Council will
Band boosters to meet
Four calls for assistance were answered on Tuesday and early
legal officer to concentrate on the
The Meigs Local Band Boosters meet in special session on ThursWednesday by units of Meigs County Emergency Medical Services.
interests of the law abiding citizens
Cootloued rrom 1
wiU
meet Monday at 7 p.m. at the day at 7 p_m, at Star Mill Parle for
On Tuesday at 12:52 p.m., Rutland, Pomeroy and Middlepon
of Meigs County."
high
school band room. New offi- the purpose of taking action on
and was missing three appendages.
units went to the Main Street residence of Carl Hysell, Sr. in RutLentes said although he is runland for a structure fue. Carl HyseD, Sr- was the propeny owner.
Oliver was reponed missing in ning as a Democratic candidate, he cers wiU be announced and aU par- Issue 2 applications for the water .
Rutland fll'elllen returned to the seene at 10:01 p.m. when the fue
Mason County Nov. 8, 1991, by his intends to be a strictly non-partisan ents are urged to attend- Carol well project.
Reminder
Crow was the winner of a bear
reldndled.
sister, who said he was last seen prosecutor.
Residents
in the Village of ..
At 7:42p.m., the Racine squad went to State Route 124 for Debwith Siders.
"The prosecuting attorney's used in a fundraising project
Racine are reminded to place their
orah Morarity who was taken to Holzer Medical CenterServices slated
Services for Oliver were held office can have nothing to do with
The Faith Full Gospel Chun:h in trash for pick·up at the curb by 8
At 7:51am_ on Wednesday, Racine unit went 10 Main Street for
today at the Wilcoxen Funeral politics. A criminal suspect will be
Carroll Teaford, who was treated but not transpOned.
Home. Burial was in the Henderson charged and tried the same regard· Long Bottom will host preaching a.m. each Tuesday.
Barbeeue planned
Cemetery.
less of his or her political party. In and singing on Friday at 7 p.m. feaThe
Pomeroy Fire Department
turin~ local talent. Pastor Steve
the same sense. my lCP.l assistance
Reed
mvites
the
public.
FeDowship
will
have
a chicken barbecue on
to county officials will be equally
Sunday,
March
8, beginning at 11 ·
wiU
follow.
forthcoming whether those offiCials
Dance planned
a_m. 81 the fue station on Butternut
are Democrats or Republicans. The
There
will
be
a
round
and
Avenue. Cost is $3.50 for the din·
welfare of the county is too im~­
Charges were 10 be filed today vice after being shot' Monday at incident, Sheriff Dennis Salisbury tant 10 play partisan politics with," square dance at the Rutland Ameci· ncr including a half chicken, roD
said Tuesday morning.
can Legion Hall on Saturday from and beans, or $3 for just a half
on subjects involved in the shoot-· approximately 8:3Q p.m.
he said.
A hospital spokeswoman said
8 p.m. to midnight with music by chicken.
ing of a Waterloo woman, GaUia
The Galha County Sheriff's
CJ. and Counll')' Gentlemen. Ray
County Sheriff Dennis Salisbury Depanment is conducting an on- Owens was listed in good condition
Wednesday
morning.
said this morning.
soing investigation concerning the
Katie Owens, 30, of 21846 state
Route 141 was transported 10 HolzAm E!e Power ................... 31 3/8
er Medical Center by the Gallia
Ashland Oil _, ........ ............313!8
County Emergency Medical SerAT&amp;T.-............................... 37 1/8
Kathryn Johnson
Marvin H. Jones
Bank ane._ ........... -..............50
Bob Evans ..................... --..26 5/8
Marvin H_ Jones, 65, of Grim
Kathryn M. Johnson, 79, of
Charming
Shop........ ..._, .....27 1/4
The name of a granddaughter Mason, died Tuesday. Feb. 25, Road in Shade, died Monday, Feb.
City
Holding,_,,
................ 17
was not repcl'ltltl in Monday's obit· 1992, in the Pleasant Valley 24, 1992 at O'Bieness Memorial
Federal
Mogul..._..
.......... -...15 3/4
Hospital following an extended ill·
uary of Ora M. Sinclair, 84 , of Hospital.
GoodyearT&amp;R ..................621/8
Born Aug. I, 1912, in Clifton, ness.
Sumner Road in Pomeroy, who
Key Centurion .. _.. ......... _.. , 15 1{1.
Born in Middlepon, he was the
died early yeslcrday.
she was a daughter of the late
Lands' End ,,_,,___,,,......33 1/4
Also surviving is Diana K. Thurman 0 . and Florence L. son of the late Harley and Donna
Umited Inc_...................... 29
Massey Jones_ .
'
Bowles of Pomeroy.
{Knopp) Young_
Multimedia
Inc ............_.. ...27 114
He was the former owner and
Rax
Resi8ItranL
...., ...._,, ,l 3/4
She was also preceded in death operator of Jones Upbolstering on
Robbirw&amp;:Myers
, _,,_, __..... 17 1{1.
The Daily Sentinel
by her husband, Howard W. Brady Late Road in KenL He was
Shoney's Inc........ __,,_,_, ... 26 1/4
&lt;USPIIIS-NC!l
Johnson, in 1973; son, £mest F.; a former employee of Tru-Car,lnc.
Star Bank ..........._ ...._ ..........26 3/4
Pub1ithtd '"ry af\ernoon, Monday , brother, Howard Young; and sister,
and Lobein Upholstery in Kent,
Wendy Int'l........................ l2 1/2
lh"""" Friday, I D Court 8~ Pomeroy,
Elizabeth Young. ·
and CarroUs Upholstery and Grand
Ohio by lhe Ohio Valley f.ibtiohing
Worthington Ind. ...............24
A member of the Mason United Upholstery in Aleron. He was a
Compaoylllalll....thi loc, Pomeroy,
Stoelt reports are the 10:30
Oldo 46711!'1 I'll. IWHIIMJ. 11«0nd cla11
Methodist Church, she was also a member of Athens First Baptist
Lm.
quota proYitled by Blaut,
poolop poiG II l'm10.,, Oldo.
111ember of the Ladies Au~iliary of Church and served in the U.S.
Ellis aact 1.o,ew1 or GaWpoUs.
the Mason Volunteer Fire Depan- Navy during World War II.
Mamber: Tho Aooadalod ..,_ lnlond
Daily J&gt;r.. Alaoclailon ood lha Oblo
ment and lhe V:F.W. Auxiliary
Newtpt,.r Ataoelation, National
He is sutvived by his wife,
Stewan-Johnson
Post 9926 of
Adf"ertittnc a.preeentative, Branham
Beuy Fritz 1ones; two daughters,
N.,..papor S.lea.._ J33 Thinl
Maslin.
N... YOR, NtwYura 10017.
Surviving are fivo sons, Howard Mn. Thomas (Sharon) Hunter of
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
W. and Brad. both of Mason, Kent and Mn. Ilon (Judith) Savage
P08TMA8TER: Sand od..._ chon.- to
446 4524
Tho Dolly Senllnot, Ill Courl St.,
Roben Ray of Sunrise, Fla., Glen of Shade; I son, Micbael1ones of
....,_, OHio 41571111.
•
u•u•=:n..-~.;_-,,..-'·
L. of Letart, Charles F. of Mid· Wooster; four sisters: Beatrice
8Uili01IIPTION IIATEI
Christy and Clara DeWeese of
dlepott,
Ohio;
two
daughters,
(OFF REGUlAR PRICED MERCHANDISE)
lly Corrlor or Moto&lt;ll.,.to
·
NWOC" I I - U
Kathryn E. Wood ,of Mason, Belva Kent, aod Grace Medley and
Ooa Weok. ......._..................................$1.80
.
.. -·Ooa Monlh.........................................l6.11i1
F. Miller of Pomeroy, O~io; four Pauline Konkle of Pboenilt, Ariz.; a
0 "" YMr......iiiNoi.i'ooi'Y·- .. $83.20 ·
sisters, Margaret Nunn of Mid· brother, Carl of Drayton Plains,
PRICE
. dlepon, Francea Johnson and Bess Mich.;l4 ~dcbildren and four
Dafly......................................... - ;26 CenCI
.
'
Ingels, both of Mason, and Belva great-grandcbilcRn.
Roush of Clifton; I 7 grandchildren,
Subocrlbon not deoirlrc to poy lho ...nBesidea biJ )llmlll, be wu preor may nmil In odvanco dlncl lo Tho
seven great·grandchildren, and one
OaDioiJIIi Dolly 'llibano on 1 U 01' t2
Ceded
death by 11011, ~ H.
step great-pantlchild.
. J01101, inJr.,
and I brother, William
-~~~ - · t'rodll will bt ~~- carrier
oochwoak,
I
• The fUJIClal will be Friday, 1:30 Jones.
No o-pllona by moll pormillld. la
p.m., at the Mason United
Funeral service~ wiU be hold 011
' IIUI wMn home ;anier •errict t1
'•
Methodist Church with the Rev. Thunday at I p;111. 111qen and
l.ll..OII, OliO
Bennie Steven~ ofBclidll8- Btml Sons Punlnl Hine In :A.IIieu with ·
' lloitiUoortp'OPEN EVERY FRIDAY 'TIL 8:00 P.M, '
1 - a.JIIa Cfta!J'
wiD be In the Kirkland Memorial Rev. Bill Wellmaa offlclatinl.
$111.84
Burial wiU be ill AIMander CemO•
..._ •. _ .._,, ...............MS.ll
GllldensLAYAWAY -NOW FOR SUMMERl
Frientls
may
call
at
the
I 18 .,I '&amp;iitiiiiiQ.~-CM·,;;ij"IBUI
Foglesong Funeral Home Thursday, *{;rientls may call at lhe funeral
liW
·..............- ..................113.40
~··
• .....___,,... ,...._ .. _,_,_,,,,,f415JIO
2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m., and at the bome from 2-4 p.m. and 7·9 p.m.
011 Wednetday.
chun:h one hour prior wservice.
.. ,.
Continued lrom page 1
areas, hiking trails and launch nunps still wiU be enjoyed by the VIS·
iting public free of charge. However, fees for ovemigbt usage have
increased for most Ohio State Parks.
Fees for camping at Forked Run State Park in Reedsville will be
$8 a night beginning April I, and the nightly fee for the "Rent-aCamp" program wiU be $18 per night
"Camping fees have not increased in five years, while inflation
and opemtin$ costs have risen steadily." Wachter said "The new
fee structure IS still very reasonable and Forked Run continues to be
a good recreational value for the money."

Fines waived for canned goods

The Meigs County Health
Department will begin a series of
six week classes for weight control
next week.
There wiD be a choice of nights
for the classes, either Monday or
Wednesday and classes are free to
Meigs County residents.
Each class will be of two hours
, duration. Attendance is required at
only one of the weekly two-hour
sessions. Classes will include nutri,
tion education, stress management,
weekly weigh-ins, relaxation techniques, recipes, diet recall sheets,

-Meigs announcements--

Atty. Lentes..

EMS units answer calls

Lanham ...

Charges to be filed today in Gallia shooting

--Area deaths--

Stocks

DON'T MISS THE

BIG LEAP YEAR

Name omitted

'

•

SAVE

A.,....,

::::J

STOREWIDE

ON THE .,.IN·MIDDLEPORT

..-.

1J:::: . ,_. . . . . . . . ,_,_.. . .

••••.,•••• , Ltttl • .,..

••

I

_

_

O.:.....ON IOO. . . . . .

,.

'

�I

Wednesday, February 26, 1992

Sports

Th~

•

Urbana erases deficit
to edge Redmen 83-82

Daily Sentinel
Wednesday, February 26, 1992

'

.
.
The University of Rio Gtande's

Page-4

Brad Schubert launched a threepoint aueml?t at the buzzer Tuesday
tn a last-ditch uy to derail host
Urbana University, but the shot
failed and the Blue Knights
emerged with an 83-82 win in MidOhio Conference action.
The loss snapped a five-game
sueak for the Redmen, who wentto
22-8 and 10-4 in the MOC. John
Lawhorn's club is futishing ·its season with three conference contests
on the road, which had gotten off 10
an encouraging stan over the weekend with an 80-75 victory over
Shawnee State.
Jeff Brown hit 22 points and
netled seven of Rio Grande's 43
rebounds to lead his team, which
outdistanced Bob Ronai's Urbana
crew by 18 at the half. Balanced
scoring by Brown, Schubert, Matt
Powell, Mark Erslan and Troy
Donaldson spurred the Redmen to
a run that put them ahead by 2 I
early in the second period.
But Urbana, which had handed
Rio Grande a two-point loss in
Lyne Center last month, was not to
be denied and overcame its 20
turnovers 10 get double-figure scoring from all of its scorers. Things
remained tight until the 37-second
mark, when a pair of free throws by
Urbana ~uard Wade Goins put the
Blue Kmghts in control.
The game proved to be another
case where the Redmen did every-

SVAC to invade Rio Grande
for boys Division IV sectionals

OUT OF SIGHT also meus out or band ror
Notre Dame's LaPboaso Ellis (right), wbo has
tbe baD knocked away by Dayton's Wes Coffee

during Tuesday night's game In Dayton, Ohio,
which tbe Flyers woo 60-58. (AP)

Pitt beats No. 24 UConn 86-77
. By ALAN ROBINSON ,
AP Sports Writer
PITTSBURGH (AP) - 1\ few
weeks ago, this game figured to
affect the Big East Conference
race. It did, son or- Connecticut
and Pittsburgh now lind themselves
tied for the second-division lead.
That's what losing six of seven
games did to Connecticut. That's
what losing three in a row and four
of five did to Pittsburgh.
Such second-half slumps can be
disastrous with 10umament time
just two weeks away. Coaches
know it's difficult to build postseason momenrum when a team is losing - and losing, and losing -

late in the season. And the NCAA
selection commi11ee frowns uP.On
choosing teams that are on dectded
downers.
That's why Pill is again talking
up the NCAA tournament after its
much-needed 86-77 victory Tuesday night over No. 24 Connecticut
-and why the Huskies are looking down on fewer and fewer teams
in the Big East standings.
"The coaches said this was the
most important game of the season," Pitt point guard Jerry
McCullough said. "In practice, all
tlley said was, 'Connecticut, Connecticut, NCAA tournament.' ''
In the only other game involv-

ing a Top 25 team, No. 22 Syracuse scored a 76-70 victory over
Boston College in ano\!ter Btg East
game.
Pill (16-12, 8-7), which has at
least four games remaining, realistically needs to win twice more to
make the 64-team NCAA field. A
loss to Connecticut ( 17-7, 8-7),
which had beaten Pill five straight
times, might have shifted Pin's
focus from the NCAA 10 the NIT.
"All we're focused on right
now is the NCAA," said Pin center
Darren Morningstar, who scored 19
points. "We haven't been as consistent as we should have been, but
(See HOOPS on Page 5)

Scoreboard
Buffalo~. c.~&amp;ur 3

Tonight's g11111es
Mon1niiJ at Minnclol.a, I:OS p.m.
Wiruupes at Edmomoa, 9:35 p.m.
Quebec at San Joac. 10:35 p.m.

Thursdlly's games
Tomnto at Bolton, 7:3S p.m.
Hud'ord II PiUIINrzb. 7:35 p.m.
Dccroital Clliclp,l:35 p.m.
Walhinjton at SL Louil,l:35 p.m.
Philldtlphia II Cai&amp;lt)', 9:35p.m.
Queba: It 1A AnfdOI, 10:)5 p.m.

. . .. . . . . . .

g:~J:i·d::=~ :~

:m

7.!

.l71

13

Allan11 ................... 2B
Milnu.too .............l!i
lndiana .................. .25
CbuloM ············ ...19

27

.l09

16.l

l9
31
36

.463
.446

19
20

.345

2l.l

DouoiL .............•..... 32 1A

Ohio high school

basketball scores

o.nu .....................

S..alo .................... !O 2l
L.A. Lol;as ....•......29 2l
L.A. CiA"" ·········27 2B
Sacrancno ............ tl 37

704
.62!1

4

.145

8.l

.537
.491
.327

Cin. Maq 61, Cin. s- 41
Cin.
5l, Amo~U 52
C1e. Mmh.U 51. iAnin 52
O.y .......... l4. Dty. WhiiO 43
Frtmcr~t Ron 42, Tiffm Columbian

9
ll.l
20.5

55

Walkin• Manorial 53, Lickina Vall
Dlrial0111 m
Arcanum 62, Mihoo·Union 41
Brookville 56, Venailltw SO
Cin. FiMeycooo 55, SordinU Ea....,

47

an. McNieholu 15, Cin. Radma 51

Cin. W~49,Cin. lndim IIlli :14
Ft. Foye 59. Ridpwood 45
Oanway 67, Buokoyc Tnil64
Kenton RidRG 64, Day. Ouiltian 41
......,llle VaUeJa.. W. Un&amp;on 5t
Ma1Wiftl10. C1dil6l
Rlc.moad D1le Southu1tern Ill,

22
llamilioo 53, Cin. Win"" Woodl 34
Lcitaoll, ChUll- 37
Manlfic1d MldiJao 14, Sao®ky :lO
N. Obnowl63.Cle. u..otn-Woot40
ToL Bowolw43, ToL Woodward 39
Tol. Cenllll76, Anth&lt;llJ Wayno 28
Vandtlii·Butler Sl. Keuerin&amp; Fair·
mont l7
w. a.... LUota ll,
39

Belldoruaine 62, Day. Northridge 31
Bi&amp; Walnuc 62. CoL WhtiiUl110 55
Cioc1oYiDe 74, CoL NO&lt;Ihlond 61
CoL
u, r ..,. v.n.lt
CoL wa...... 62. Whitehall 55
D•,J· CuroU 53, Benjamin Logan 4~
Edi.lon S. 63, Beaver Loca1 62, OT
London 74, Lopn Elm 56
Muyavillo l3, Buokoyo Vall . 36
River Vall. 68, Col. Boccbcroft 66,

40

s,"""'"'

5
9

.712

l'unJand .................31 16
Aooenl&gt; ............ .....J l 21

~ 45, Delianco 39

CB

PaclR• Dl.toton
Golden Sta\C .: ........37 15

ar

ot•lao I

16.l
20.1
26.S

W~e S. 16, Delawm:

o.sm.

Glr·ls-toumament action

WESTERN CONFERENCE
MWw•tDif"Wen
Ttam
W L Pet.
Utoh ...................... 38 19 .¥&gt;7
SanAtnonio ...........32 23 .582
HO\IIton .................~1 27 .S09
O...va ...... ........... 20 34 .310
l6 38 .296
MinnetCU .............. IO 44 .185

M

Dlvlllon 0

w"'""""".. . . ..

Ctnln.l DI'Woa

Dl~lllon I
Cin. Q]en Este 52, On. SL Xavier 48
Cin. Toll 62. Cin. l!lder 60
We~tcrville N. 71, Upper Arlin&amp;ton

Loa Anaele~~4, Vanc:ovva 3

EASI'l!RN CONFERENCE
Atlanllc Dt.tolon
TW L
I'd. GB
New Yolk ........ ...... J4 20 .630
Bot1AXt ....................lO 25 .545
4.S
MUmL. .................26 29 .473
U
P!lilaclolp~Uo .......•...26 29
.473
8.l
New Jeney ............ 24 31 .436 lO.S
.ts 36 .333 16
Orlando ......
ll 4l .236 21.5
M

Boys-toumament action

W......,..5,l'llllbu:JO l

In the NBA ...

Wh&lt;tltnbtlra",s. Webater c

DIYIIIon IV
BM&amp;-'74, Woodofield 63
Cin.Madeira 56, Cin. s.v... llillo 53
Cin. Sllllllllicl9, Cin. l.an*"m 56
NMhmor 40, Muion C.lh. :II
SUut&gt;ura 75, ru........, Calh. 59

Tuesday's scores
New Ieney 109, U..... 95

R11ular·...., atlloa
A1aoa El1et 51, Akron SL V·SLM 50
Akron Fiatanc 74, Stow 60
Amh. . 76, Lenin Soolhvicw l2
Anlhony WayneS3, Miumee 52
A&gt;ehbo1&lt;l 66. Shoroood Foirviewll
Fi!do 55, Cani'Wd 54, OT
Bllllb 72. Onnpl4
Calnzy 0.. 1S. hcbon·Miltcn64
Campllel1 Manorial67, NW. 60
a..mPion S6, Ma\hcwt31
a.-1 73,1ndepondalco &lt;9
Qe. Benedictine 71, Clo, Univmity

QadcJQc M, Milwali:cc 12
Dr:trcill~. Chi.ctJO 106

s.n ......... 123, Milmi 101
Utah 106.L.A.CUppenl01

By ROBERT MACY
.USOC:illted Press Writer
LAS VEGAS (AP) - Jerry
Tarkanian, who claims he is being
pushed off the coon by UNLV officials, may futd himself in court iii a
last ditch bid to save his job.
Attorneys for the UNLV basket·
ball coach say they 'II go to coon if
he is not allowed to rescind his resignation and continue coaching
next year.
Meanwhile, a UNLV professor
has joined in the call for a two-year
suspension of the basketball program, a suggestion rust made last
week by a Las Vegas newspaper
columnist.
Attorneys for the coach delivered a letter to UNL V president
Roben Maxson Tuesday, declaring
Tarkaninn's resignation of June 6,
199lto be null and void. The !l'si&amp;·
nation was to·have been effective
July I, 1992, but Tarkanian told
supporters Sunday night that he
was withdrawing it.
The five-page lettet to Maxson

A"'-

TonJcbt's cames

w_.

lodilnaalkllan, 7:30p.m.
Phi' d ':' '•at0duldo.7:30p.m.
O.U.It Minnelc&amp;l, I p.m.
aw.,,l:30p.m.
Golden 1ww 11HOUikln. 1:30 p.m.
Miami. Decrva-, 9 p.m.
Oeftlarut at PMtntl, 9:31 p.ra.
New YcD: 1t L.A. Labn, 10:30p.m.

61

Tbunday'scames

PmlMd at New laiC)', 7:30p.m.

Pbi!~allQidouo.7:30p.m.

WiJ.wt It Datrolt, 7:30p.m.
Ooldon Stata at San Antanio, 1:30

,.,.

s.alut Utah, 9:30p.m.
New YcD: atStcnmeniO, 10:30 p.m.

In the NHL ...
WALES CONFERENCE
PllrklllliW L T Pta. CrGA

T-

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N.Y•. _ .... «120 4 141A9:ZOS
31 :111 5 79 16620t

:Ill 9 73 :134192
- . , ......... 27 :t6 I 622.11:134
N.Y.!IIiMolo •• :16 :tl 7 59 22l2AO
'•MO.. M22 2S u SJ 117201
,.:,

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...,.............. :M 2110
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TIMI 101·
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•HAND TOOLS
•LAWN.TOOLS
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T
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:II)

said Tarkanian was "coerced and
pressured" into signing the resignation agreement.
Both Maxson and Don Klasic,
legal counsel .for the Nevada University Sysr.em, have said the resignation is legal and binding. Maxson
has called Tarkanian's resignation
a dead issue.
Attorneys Chuck Thorn~on and
Alan Jones contend a ' civility
agreement," which was pan of the
resignation was violated by UNLV
officials. University offictals have
confumed the civility agreement,
but say it was violated by Tarkanian, not UNLV.
The leuer charged that UNLV
ofrtcials:
-,-Intentionally distributed false
(See TARKANIAN on Pqe 5)

center- Phil Bradbury ( 17.2
pts./game) and sophomore. forwards Chris Crace (11.2 pts./game)
·and Paul Covey (9.2 pts./game) as
their major net burners.
However, senior guard Marc
Villanueva (93 points), whose ISpoint effort against Symmes Valley
last Saturday was only the third
time in his 2 1/2-year varsity career
that he has scored 10 or more
points, can't be left out of tile mix,
as his defensive skills and team
leadership have helpecj guide the
Bobcats more smoothly through
their game schematics. Fellow
senior guard Craig Kingery, who
scored a game- and career-high 25
points in the season finale against
Symmes VaHey, could burn Southem if the Tornadoes fail to take
him seriously.
Southern has tbree big hitrers in
senior center/forward Roy Lee Bai·
ley (15.4 pts./game), who scored
fewer than 10 points for the second
time this season in Racine's 75-58
win over Eastern last Saturday,
senior point guard Jeremy Roush
(12.9 pts./game) and junior forward/guard Michael Evans (12
pts./game) leading a cast of teammates that have scored between 20
to 160 J?Oints for the season.
Havmg six to eight fresh players
who can put in three, four or five
points in tile limited time they are
on the floor can make a difference
in putting plenty of distance
between the Tornadoes' opposition
in the second half or having to battle for the win for 32 minutes -or
more.
Trimble vs. Hannan Trace
Hannan Trace (10-10) won five
consecutive games in the middle of
the season, including a 78-68 win
against archrival Southern at
Racine.
But if Mike Jenkins' Wildcats
expect to meet Caldwell's crew one
more time sometime in March (it
would be in the district title game
at Ohio University's Convocation
Center on March 14 at 1:30 p.m. if
both t~s get that far), they will
have to get past Greg Holbert's
Trimble Tomcats (11-9) and their
talented Gatchels - seniors Charlie and Dave.
The Tomcats have shown
improvement in comparison to last
year's 7-13 showing in the regular
season, but the nonh Athens five,
which have some beef in the
Gatchels and senior forward Justin
Day, will have to deal wiih a Wildcat squad that has a pair of dangerous three-point shooters in senior
forwards Jimmy Brace (the SVAC
three-point shooting champ, who
averages 12.3 points per game,
ended the season with 49, nine
more than Southem' s Roush and
10 more than KC's Bradbury) and
Chad Swain (17 pts./game) in addition to an effective postman in 6foot-2 junior Dave Poling (12
pts./game).
When the Wildcats have scored
30 or more points by halftime this
season, they have gone 6-2. Otherwise, they are 4-8.
Miller vs. Symmes Valley
Based on records alone (Miller
is 7-13, and Symmes Valley is 614), tliere 's not much to pick from
as far as a winner is concerned. But
Skip Ricketts' Falcons have to control the inside, which means con,
trolling an Andy Lester who averages nearly 14.5 points per game
and a Chris Blake who averages
nearly 9.5 points per contest as
well as pulling the clamp·s on a
Jerome Fuller who enters ~st-sea­
son play with a team-htgh 14.9
points-per-game average.
Kevin Lewis' Vikings have
improved in the second half of the
season (4-6) after going 2-8 in the
ftrsl half. But playing break-even
basketball won't do in tourney
time, and if they can't find a war to
score at least 30 points by halft.ime
(the Vikings are S-3 when they do
i~ and 1-11 when they don't), their
chances are winning are virtually
nil.

lfP271

(I
C(

Pick•Up Two OfEvefYthing·During Kroger's ...
.
'

99 Mill St. • 992·6549 • Middleport, Ohio

-8PICJAI,..

--.
•

RIO GRANDE (82)- Lyndell
Snyder, 1-0-2; Mark Erslan, 2-3-1,
14; Brad Schubert, 2-2-4-14; Troy
Donaldson, 6-0-12; Matt Powell, 32-2-14; Jeff Brown, 10-2-22.
TOTALS 24-7·13-82.
Halrtime score: Rio Grande
50, Urbana 33.
(Continued from Page 4)

finished yet, even though he had
more points before halftime than
he's normally scored all night of
late. He was 6-for-6 from the foul
line in the second half as Pitt, a 61
percent free-throwing shooting
team, finished 24 of 28.
Still, the Huskies were tied as
late as the five-minute mark before
Pitt scored seven of the next nine
points- starting with freshman
Orlando Antigua's 3-pointer - for
a 77-72 lead.
Connecticut never got within
four after that in a loss that may
cost the Huskies their Top 25 ranking. And more.
"We really don't care about
rankings right now," Burrell said.
"We just want to get back on track
and get a good run entering the
(Big East) tournament. We want to
tum it around and tarry it on into
the NCAA."
No. 22 Syracuse 76
Boston College 70
In Syracuse, Lawrence Moten
and Adrian Aull'y, both scoreless in
the first half, led a second-half
comeback that helped Syracuse
snap a four-game los.ing streak,
Moten scored 18 points and
Autry added 14 as the Orangemen
(17-7, 9-6), held to a season-low 21
points in the ftrst half, overcame an
!!-point halftime deficit.
It was Syracuse's sixtll straight
victory over Boston CoUege (15-9,
7-8) and 16th in the last 17 meetings.

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ADVUITII(D rmi NiJCY-Each of theN ldvtrliMd ltomolo requ~od to
be oudily available for sale in each Kooger Store, oxcopt eaopec~lly
noted In this od. If we do run out of an odvertiled Item, we will oft•
you your choice of a comparable Item, whtn available. rtftectlng the
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.

(Continued rrom Page 4)
negative publicitY about Tarkanian
While the flap over the resignato the media;
tion continued, a UNLV professor
-Presented Tarlcanian in a called on the school's Faculty Sen" false light" and "demeaning ate 10 pass a resolution calling for a
manner'' at a secret Board of two-year suspension of the basketRegents meeting last year;
ball ,Program.
·
-Provided false information to
Jun Deacon, UNLV professor of
the NCJ A to "weaken and' bioiO$Y and director of the school's
dimish" the basketball program's envir.onmental stu~ies prl!gram,
ability to defend itself against tile· submttted the resoluuon, saymg the
agency;
furor over the high proftle baskt:t·
- Disseminated "false and ball program has resulted 10
fraudulent information" to the Las "irreparable damage."
Vegas community to embarrass
Dean Juipe, spans editor of the
Tarkanian;
Las Vegas Sun, :iugges~ last Fri- Conspired with certain day !hat the only solution to .the
regents 10 create circumstances to ongomg problems at UNLV mtght
embarrass Tarkanian.
be to shut down the baskeiball proThe letter contends that if gram fortwo years.
Tarkanian had known or such cirMaxson said Tuesday thai such
cum stances he would not have a moratorium was ~tan op~~·
resigned
"We're not gomg 10 ehmmate
It also contends that Maxson men's basketball," Maxson said.
and UNL V legal counsel Brad "It's our i.n~ntion 10 continue the
Boote forced Tarkanian to meet great tradition or UNLV basketthem outside the presence of his ball."
. ,
.
.
atiOmeys and told the coach he
Tar~aman s ·~es1~nauon came
"would be destroyed in· the folloy.omg publtcauon of phot,os
media" if he didn't resign.
showl;'lg three forme~ play~ wtth
Booke said it was "perfec.tly convtcted sports ftxcr Rtchard
ridiculous" to suggest Tarkantan Perry. The No. 7-ranked Re~ls.
was coerced inio the resignation 24-2, are·banned froll! televlston
and said it was the· coach rand his and pos~ play thts year as a
followers who violated the civility .final resol~non ,of a 14-year battle
agreement.
·
.
between ~ubnian and the NCAA.
Maxson Tuesday tepeated previ- . Tarkantan and members. of the
ous statements that Tarkanian's team have vehC~~~ently dented the
resignation was legally binding, rumors.
•·
addin~ ~·the matter is cloaect"

~

HAIDW-1~

27-8-5-83.

Tlle Dally Sentlnei-Page--6

COI'YRIGHT 1982 • THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND PRICES
GOOD SUNDAY, FEB •. 23, THROUGH SATURDAY, FEB. 29,
t982. 1N. P9meroy
WE RESERIIE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. NONE SOLD
TO DEALERS.

Tarkanian,, ,

. -.'

ALL

thing rightas they reCorded a 52.5
percent showing on shooting (3159, seven of 17 from 'the three for
41.2 percent) to Urbana's 46.1 percent (35-76, e,ight of 23 fronl the
three for 34.8 percent).ln one of its
. best performances at the line, Rio
Grande sank 13 of 14 attempts for
92.9 percent (Schubert was four of
four) and the Blue Knights were
successful on five of 12 tries for
41.7percenL
The Redmen held their
turnovers to 16, and outboarded the
hosts, who had 34, eight of them by
Art James. Schubert was Rio
Grande's top rebounder with 10.
Urbana, which led the conference last weelc, improved 10 21-8
and 11-3 and will host Findlay in
its season finale Saturday, The
Redmen drop the cunain on the
regular season Saturday at
Cedarville.
Box score:
URBANA (83) - Wyatt Goins,
6-3-0-21; Jerry Ligon, 2-2-2-12;
Wade Goins, 4-2-10; Marty Socha,
3-3-0-15; An James, 5-1-11; Cornelius Woody, 7-0-14. TOTALS

hOOpS, ••

keeping our focus now shouldn't
be a problem. We know what we
have to do."
What the Panthers did was push
the ball inside to Morningstar and
Chris McNeal, who had 23 points
and 12 rebounds in his best game
in weeks. McNeal had scored more
than 12 only once in Pitt's previous
six games and hadn '\ scored this
many since his 25-point game
against MarshaU on Dec. 19.
"I tllink this was a coming out
pany for me," McNeal said.
It certainly was no party for
Connecticut, which has skidded
from 16-1 to 17-7 in just three
weeks and no longer is throwing its
weight around in the Big East.
"Pitt's bigger than us and heavier than us, they're a tough match
for us," said Scott Burrell, who
finished with 21 points. "We usually come in here and play well, but
we were flat and they rook a victory from us."
McNeal scored 13 ooints in the
first hall as Pill opened up leads of
as many as 10, mosU y by holding
the Huskies' top scorer, Chris
Smitll, to five points. Smith had 28
in Connecticut's S7-77 victory over
Pitt on Jan. 14.
With h;s acceleration and shootinpange, it's difficult to contain
the 6-foot-2 Smith for' an entire
game - and Piu dido 'L He scored
17 in the second half and finished
with 22.
But the 6-foot-9 McNeal wasn't

.,

UIOI. ~~ , . r...-Miillilfli .__ _ _ _ _._.

I

c0llege

'4

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE

.,_
· !Ill
wL
.,.....____

Attention basketball junkies!
Those who are can get their fiU
Saturday at Lyne Center, when the
North Gallia-Southwestem winner
will face Eastern (11 -9) in the
day's only second-round contest at
3p.m.
Other first-round action will
have Kyger Creek and Southern
taking tile court at 5:15 p.m. Hannan Trace will play top-seeded
Glouster Trimble at 7 p.m ., and
Symmes Valley and Hemlock
Miller will stan the final game at
8:45 p.m. (all times approximate)
At Athens High School, SVAC
co-champion Oak HiU (15·5) and
Nelsonville-York (14-6) will begin
the Division msectional Thursday
at 6:30 p.m. The winner will take
on Tri-Valley Conference champion Belpre Saturday 816:30 p.m. for
the upper-bracket crown.
Southern vs. Kyger Creek
The mantra "I took this team
from 38 turnovers· a game under
(predecessor Larry) Markham to 15
this season~ or Kyger Creek head
coach Tom Riccardi has been a true
expression of the Bobcats'
improvement in the last two years.
However, his troops will have to
have laser accuracy from the field
and at the foul line against a taller
Southern squad .that beat them by
42 points at Racine and by 21 at
Cheshire for yet another regularseason series sweep.
As time has gone on, however,
it's getting harder to beat the Bob·
cats, a team that two years ago languished in the conference basement. Hammer's rap hit ''Too Legit
to Quit," played before each of the
Bobcats' home games, has been
their battle cry and their creed. ·
Even though KC allowed opponents 61.6 points a contest in the
second half of the season (5-5 over' all), the defense has tightened the
flow to 58.2 in the last five games
(3·2). The offense, which has averaged 60.2 points per game in the
last 10 games, has been ccnsisren~
posting a 60.6 points-per-game
average in the last five games.
Conference co-champion Soothem (13-7) has scored an average or
73 points per outing while surrendenng 63.5. In the last five contests, Howie Caldwell's Tornadoes
have averaged 72.8 points scored
and 5I points given up in continuing a six-game winning streak.
Vegas has Southern penciled in
for the upper-bracket title game on
March 6, but the Tornadoes may
find their hands full or a team tbat
penned in an 11-12 overall regularseason mark, the best since the
1987-88 crew, starring 6-foot-5
Milce Bradbury and 6·foot-3 Mike
Reese as forwards, 6-foot-6 Bill
Loveday at center, and guards
Chad Leach and Alan Denney,
among odiers, did the same in Scoll
Stemple's fmal year as KC's boss.
Today's Bobcats have senior

Tarkanian may have
day in court ifUNLV
snubs resignation nixing

Adett~44

em.-

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
OVP Stair Writer
The Division IV Rio Grande
boys sectional tournament, which
will be played at the University of
Rio Grande's Lyne Center, will
begin Thursday with the North
Ga11ia-Southwestern game at 7
p.m.
Pat Stout's Pirates (8-10), who
swept the Highlanders (2-18) in
their regular-season series, will try
to win their third game this Season
against a team that completed its
second straight regular season in
the Southern Valley Athletic Conference basement and without a
victory in conference play in either
campaign and finished this season
without a win at home.
A good sign for the undermanned Pirates is the return of
junior guard Ryan McCarley, who
returned to the Pirates' lineup last
Friday against Hannan Trace.
Though not tested intensely in that
contest, he seemed to have most his
range of motion restored after sitting out tile Bucs' 84-69 win over
Eastern last Tuesday.
In beating Southwestern 76-55
at Gage on Jan. 3, North Gallia got
ahead by 10 ~!Dints in the first quarter and witll the help of five players
-Kevin Hunt (16), McCarley and
Charles Peck (14 each), Darin
Smith (II) and Rob Canady (10)
- scoring in double fi~s, rook
full advantage of the Highlanders'
second-quarter brownout (eight
points, compared with the Pirates'
21) before being outscored 33-31
by the hosts in tile second half.
On the Pirates' home court on
Feb. 7, North Gallia survived a 37poim net flaming by Highlander
postman Chris Mandeville by
outscoring Southwestern in every
quaner but the third and posting a
90-83 victory.
What will the Pirates need to do
to assure itself of a chance to meet
second-seeded Eastern on Saturday? First, they will need 10 swarm
guards Adam Simpson (10.6
pts./game) and Jamie Morse (18.8
ptsJgame) in an attemptiO keep the
ball away from Mandevill~, a 6foot-1 junior who averages a !e310·
high 15.5 points per contest. Tben
they will have to get double-figure
scoring efforts from Hunt (16.8
pts./game), who was held to single
digits (nine) in the their 65-48 loss
to Oak Hill in their regular-season
finale Saturday night. as well as
Peck (16.7 ptsJgame), Smith (12.2
pts./game, 12 games) and Canady
(8.4 pts./game).
With these figures, North Gallia
is the odds-on favorite to eliminate
Southwestern, but if the sailorS are
looking ahead to an Eastern squad
that saw the home teams win in
that regular-season series, Mandeville (and maybe Simpson and
Morse as well) could make them
pay as he did the last time his crew
faced the Bucs.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

••

..

�Page 6 The Dally Sentinel

. Pomeroy-:-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, February 26, 1992

.

By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel
Wednesday, February 26,.1992
Page-7'

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

Familr
Medicine

.

.

See Store F.or Details

John C. Wolf, D.O.
· Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

The Big Bear Hug!

Question: Recently, my roommate and I adopted a cat. After a
few weeks we realized that my
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She has ex-tended sneezing
attacks as well as swollen eyes and
coughing fits when she is at our
apartment. She even seems to be
getting worse. She can only stand
being in our apartment for approximately an hour before the coughing
and sneezing forces her to leave.
Obviou'sly, my roommate is
unhappy with this situation, but
neither of us wants to give up the
cat. Is there anything we can do to
stop or reduce the severity of his
girlfriend's attacks?
Answer: There are many things
that produce allergies in humans.
About one-third of the population
has some form of allergy, usually
to ragweed, house dust, or other
common substances. Being allergic
to cats, though, is a fairly common
problem. The reaction may be due
to cat hair, cat saliva, and/or cat
dander. As i~ all allergic reactions,
the best treatment is to avoid the
offending substance. In this case, it
might be ~sible for your roommate's g1rlfriend to avoid the
offending cat allergen by staying
out of your aparunent, but you said
in your letter that that was not
desirable.
There is a second approach that
might work but is, unfonunately,
not likely to be as effective as the
first option. Try reducin~ the
amount of cat contaminants m the
apartment by restricting the number
of rooms the cat is allowed in, and
by keeping the entire place meticulously clean - including changing
the cat liuer regularly.
My veterinarian also recom-

You'l Love Our Daly G•IIHI

Grouitd Freah Mcmy Times

ee

Not Less Than 70% Lean
Sold In Packages Of 3 las. Or More

Tyson Holy FG iau Fresh

Chicken

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U.S. No. 1 • Russet Baking

10
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mends that you bathe the cat at
least once a week. This redilces the
amount of cat hair and flakes of cat
skin that come.off on the fumiwre
and carpet and in the rest of the
aparunent These measures reduce
the amount of allergens in your
aparunent, but they will nLt totally
eliminate them. ,
Your roommate's girlfriend
might also get some iemporary
relief from her allergic reaction to
the cat by taking an antihistamine,
such as Dimetapp or Drixoral,frior
to coming Ill your aparunent I you
combined the efforts of reducing
the amount of cat dander with use
of antihistamine, it is likely that she
will be able to tolerate being in
your apartment for moderate periods of time without developing her
allergic symptoms. At least it's
worth a try.
Yet another approach would be
to try allergy shots. Bu~ again, the
effectiveness of this treatment
varies widely from person to person.
All of the steps I've mentioned
are worth trying, but I should caution you that there is no guarantee
that any of them will work with
your roommate's girlfriend. Once
an individual has developed an
allergy, it only lakes a very small
exposure to that same allergen to
produce the allergic response
again. You may fmd, therefore, that
there is no satisfactory way for
your roomate's girlfriend and the
cat to occupy the same environment.
. "Family Medicine" is a weekly
column. To submit questions, write
to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio University College of Osteopathic
Medicine, Grosvenor Hall, Athens,
Ohio45701.

Wildwood gardeners meet
Launa Carafiol, a missionary
from Bolivia, was a guest at the
recent meeting or the Wildwood
Garden Club held at the home of
Doris Grueser.
·
The guest was introduced by
Betty Milhoan and she read from I
Corinthians - the love chapter.
The meeting opened with the
club creed in unison and for roll
call everyone brought and showed
a Valentine they had made. A
thank-you note was read from
Kathryn Miller.
Nava Couch was welcomed as a
new member.
The Ohio Association of Garden
Clubs bulb book was distributed
and orders were taken.
Members will meet at the home
of Janet Theiss to finish the berry
·baskets started at an earlier meeting.
Doris Grueser had the arrangement of the month using arborvitae,
corkscrew willow, red roses, pine
cones 'and holly in.a basket
The monthly report given by
Kathryn Miller was on the Snow-

•• •
Yow Gaalce ef Pulhet; P••••

a.u•r Mlxecll'rult Or

Limit 2

Per Famly Please

Libby Lite

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Card show slated

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.21

.......
MIIJ

'

Bacon·

drops. She n.oted they are the .first
flower to burst into bloom each
year, usually late February or early
March. Permanent plantings of
snowdrops should be set in partially shaded locations and they like
their companions, the winter
oconites. Bulbs should be set three
inches deep and tWo inches apart
and soil should contain plenty of
humus with leaf mold being the
best form available. Varieties
include single, double and El wesii
green-tipped.
For the program, the topic
"Taster's Choice," was carried out
with everyone tasting an array of
food rangmg from breads, relishes,
jellies, barbecue sauce, dips and
crackers.
The program concluded with
Ms. Caraliol teUing her missionary
involvement or the two new
churches in Bolivia, one a Bolivian
and Indian. She also told about all
the different kinds of flowers and
herbs there. The herbs are used
mostly in teas and for medicinal
purposes. H~r favorite flowers
were the Bird of Paradise, the Wild
Orchids, and the Reigna Victoria, a
large lily pad which is four to six
feet across.
The meeting closed with the
hostess serving refreshments to the
members and guest, Virginia Fish-

SCHOOL CHAMPIONS • These were the competitors in last
night's Meigs•County Spelling Bee. Pictured, h-ont, 1-r, are Sandra
K. Young, Bradbury; Kelli. Bailey, Chester; Lauren Young (Run·
ner-up), Eastern Junior High; Jennirer Sigmon, Harrisonvllle;
Jennlrer Morris, Letart Falls; Phyllis Clark, Meigs Jualor High;
Renee Elizabeth Stewart, Middleport; and Wesley Thoene.

Moaday 7 Lm. thru
Saturday MlduJte
Suuday 7 Lm..
'tO 10 p.m.

Prices Good ·4 Days
FebruaJ"! 1992
Wednesday, February 26 ·
Saturday, February 29, 1992 ·

port Youth League will meet
Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at the Middlepon Council Building. Anyone
interested may attend.

Community Calendar items
appear two days berore an event
and the day or that evenL Items
must be received weD in advance
to assure publication In the calendar.

DEXTER - The Meigs County
Women's Fellowship will meet
Thursday at 7:30p.m. at the Dexter
Church or Christ. A program on
genealogy will be presented by
Vada Hazelton.

WEDNESDAY
RACINE - There will be a baseball and softball umpiring class on
Wednesday at 7 p.m. at Southern
High School for anyone interested
in attending. Funher information
may be obtained by calling 9492448 (evenings).

MIDDLEPORT - The Bosworth
Council No. 46 will confer the
S.E.M. degree on Thursday at 7:30
p.m . at the Middleport Masonic
Temple.

POMEROY - The Wildwood
Garden Club will meet Wednesday
at 1 p.m . at the home of Peggy
Moore.
THURSDAY
RACINE - OAPSE 453 Southem Local wiU meet Thursday at the
high school at 6 p.m. AU members
are urged to attend.

.,

STIVERSVILLE - Evangelist
David Carpenter of Belleville,
W.Va. will be at StiversviUe Word
of Faith Church on ThursdaY. at
7:30 p.m . Pastor David Dailey
invites the public.
POMEROY - The Salvation
Army wiD have a free clothing day
on Thursday from 10 a.m . to noon
at on the fust floor of the building.
Area residents in need of clothing
are welcome to come.
TUPPERS PLAINS - There will
be a joint meeting of the Tuppers
Plains VFW Post No. 9053 and
Ladies Auxiliary on Thursday at
7:30p.m . Dinner will be.served
prior to the meeting. All members
are urged to attend.

••

.••

•

BIG bEAR SIDRE
'

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.,~

-··

FRIDAY
POMEROY - There will be a
special meeting of the Meigs County Commissioners on Friday at
2:30 p.m. Ill open bids on space for
the Meigs County Board of Elee·
lions.

REEDSVILLE - The Rivezview
Garden Club will meet Thursday at
7:30p.m . at the home of Janice
Young, hostess. Kila Young and
Phyllis Larkins will be co-hostesses.

HARTFORD - A benefit gospel
sing for the Eddie Caslll family at
the'Father's House Church in Hanford, W.Va. will be held Friday at 7
p.m. with singers Victory,Joy and
the Turley Family. Pastor Clyde
Fields invites the public.

POMEROY - The regular meeting of the Meigs County Public
Library Bolird of Trustees will be
held Thursday at 1 p.m. at the
library in Pomeroy.

PORTLAND - The Lebanon
Township Trustees wiD meet Friday at 7 p.m . at the township building in Portland.

The Wellston ()hillco Society
MIDDLEPORT - The Middle·
will host a baseball and sports can! er.
show on Saturday from 10 a.m. to
5 p.m. at SL Peter and Paul Parish
TUPPi!RS PLAINS - The TupHall, Southern Pennsylvania Ave.,
pers P.lains· VFW Post No. 9053
Wellston. AdmisSion is $1 for indiand Ladies Auxiliary will hold a
v(duals and $2 for families. Hourly
round and square dance on Friday
door prizes will be given. Baseball
form 8 1011:30 p.m. with music by
cards may be bought, traded, or
C.J. and the Country Gentlemen.
!Old at the sbow. Additional inforPublic invited.
mation may be obtained from Phil
Jenkins, show.chainnan, 384-3850.
MIDDLEPORT - The United
adoption services
·
Penteeosial Church of Middleport
A free training program, "Prewill have a chicken-noodle dinner
dictable Stages in Adoptive Family
· on Friday from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Development", will be offered by
, Deliveries are available in the MidPost Adoption Resources of Southdleport and Pomeroy areas.
east Ohio on March 6 at the Quality Inn in Nelsonville. The training
POMEROY - Church Women
is gea~ed toward mental health
United will meet Friday for a plan· providers and social workers. The
ning meetin' for World Day of
conference speaker will be Claudia
Prayer on Fnday at I p.m. at the
Jewett Jarratt, a nationally recog·
Trinity Church in Pomeroy. AU key
nized author, therapist, and uainer.
women from Meigs County
On March 7 Post Adoption
churches are urged to attend.
Resources wiD sponsor a f'ree·train. ... . . - --' .. . ."' " .... ·-·'
ing pro~ram "Promoting Self'I
Esteem m Adopted Children" for
aU ~~ve parei!IB on March 7 at
the Oh10 Uruve11ity Inn in' Athens.
:
.'
Janatt. an adoptive and foster par·
ent, will be the speaker at that
meeting also. ·
PAJNTING • Terry .PIIIlllp1, lllliateaaace clepartmeDt employ·
'
ee, spra:r palata oa ot Rm'li !reel wbldl wW be .eel u Eater
decorlllioalat Vetei'au Mn~orlalllolpltaL The ftlte !reel will be
decorated with wooden qp luerllled with u•es aad will be
called "lood eu !reel". Relldeatl ma:r pllce tile of their ·
favorlte.I'Jood •a'' a a tree lly•diD&amp;_tlle DIBle IJid S5 to the
.
Wcnlea'a Auxiliary, Vetei'IDS Memorial.,oepltal, 115 E. Prfemarl·
The Eutem Albletic Boosters
II Dr~ Pomeroy. The trees wiD be ID place from Mll'cb 19 lhrilu&amp;h
will meet Muth 3 11 7:30 p.m. 1t
'
AprD 19.
'. .,
the hiah ICbool

.Boosters to meet
cafeeen..

.

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{.

'

World Day of Pniyer, an annual
worship event sponsored in the
United Stated by Church Women
Unites and oMerved simultaneously in 170 couna-ies and regions of
the world will be held Friday,
March 6 at 1:30 p.m. at the Trinity
Church in Pomeroy.
"Living Wisely with Creation"
is the theme for this 10Sth World
Day of Prayer. The service was
written by women of Austria,
Switzerland and the Federal
Republic of Germany. It expresses
deep concern about the threats to
the environment through the
overuse and misuse of modem
technologies.
·Each year Church Women United prepares and distributes the wor·
ship resources for more than 6,000
U.S. communities and churches
where World Day of Prayer is
observed. The material is translated
into hundre4s of languages and
dialects C3Ch year making Wprld
Day of Prayer one of the most
widely distributed pieces of literature in the world and also making it
a SijPiificant instrument for informallon, education and inspiration.

HOCKINGPORT - There will
be a round and square dance on
Friday from 8-11:30p.m. at Hockingport at the Kenny and Millie
Reynolds. Music will be provided
by the Hot Point String Band. Ronrue Wood will be the caller. Country, bluegrass and gospel music is
played there every Monday at 7
p.m. The public is invited to attend.

INSURANCE

111 Second' St., POIIIIrll
YOUR INDEPENDEN
AGENTS SERVING
JAliGSCOUin
SINCE 1861

Scouts from Salisbury Cub Pack
246 participated reoenlly in a
Camp-In Program, an indoor,
overnight camping. adventure, at
Ohio's Center of Science and
Industry (COSI) in Columbus.
Campers from across Ohio and
five surrounding states experienced
for themselves the exciting exhibits
on An~tica, dramatic shows on
water lite, and fascinating hands-on
science workshops about time and

REEDSVILLE - Girl Scout
Thinking Day will be held Saturday at 4 p.l)l. at Eastern High
School.

crystals.
The informal workshops accomodated the 1000 scouters or students that visit camp-ins each
weekend and strived to provide
lasting educational experiences
centered on science and technology.
Attending were Jamie Boyd,
Jeff Michaels, Shawn White, Matt
Milhoan, Jon Hill, Danny Hysell
with Steve Hysell and Billy Young
as assistants. Adult leaders were
Joyce Hysell and Bill Young, cub
master.

News notes
During the 40 days a mother
monk seal goes without eating
while tending her pup, the infant
wiD gain from 125 to 175 pounds,
but the mother may lose 300
pounds before she goes on a feeding binge, notes National Geo·
graphic.
·
Hawaiian monk seals are
to rest in leef caverns after
feeding; if pinned down by a cruising shark, a seal may wait out the
menace by drawin~ air from bub·
bles it has exhaled 1nside the cave,
according Ill National Geographic.
thou~ht

JefF Womer l"""ronce

liS 'II'. 211&lt;1

p_,.,,, Ohio
614--992--54 79

The rust pubiic schools for girls
in Saudi Arabia weren't approved
by the government untill%0.

._OIItO..,.._,._........_OH4JN

11 PC. SHRIMP

$1'.49

WITH FRIES........$2.19
0

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ADOLPH'S DAllY VALLEY

.

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........

............. c...., ......... ' - '

Special of the Week!

,

DOWNING·CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

Camp-in held

'

•

'

CHESTER - The Shade River
Lodge annual inspection will be
held Friday with dinner at 6:30
p.m. Members bring two homemade' pies.

SATURDAY
REEDSVll.LE ·There wiU be a . · TUPPERS PLAINS - A Prom
teen rally at the Fellowship Church Dress Exchange will be held Saturof the Nazarene Thursday through day at the Tuppers Plains VFW
Saturday with Jeff and Kathy Post No. 9053. Dresses may be
Edman of Parkersburg, W.Va. at 7 dropped off between 9 and 11 a.m.
p.m. nightly. The public is invited and a fee of $1 will be charged for
each dress. Unsold dresses and
to attend.
money should be picked up by 6
RAe!1'1E • The Racine. A!n~­ p.m. Call 843-5137 or 985-4161
can Legion Auxiliary will meet for further Information.
Thursday at 7 p.m. at the hall.
RACINE - The Racine Youth
. Buckeye Girl's State delegates will
League
will hold its sign-up for
be chosen.
baseball and softball on Saturday
POMEROY - The Big Bend from 10 a.m. to noon at the kinderGirl Scout Leaders will meet garten building. Other days for
Thursday at 7 p.m. at the Trinity sign-up will be Tuesday, March 3
from 6-8 p.m., Saturday, March 7
Church in Pomezoy.
from 10 a.m. to noon, and SaturMIDDLEPORT - The March day, March 14 from 10 a.m. to
meeting or the Meigs Junior High noon. If this is the first sign-up for
Academic Boosters will be held a participant a birth certificate copy
Thursday at 7 p.m. in the school must be furnished. The cost is $10
cafeteria. Parents and teaehers are for girls softball and $15 for all
· others.
urged t attend.

.

Bear
Minimum
·Prices
Items and Prices Effective only at:

Annual worship
event planned

Community atendar

,

.

Pomeroy. StandiDg, 1-r, are Tabilha Roach, Portland; Jesse Little;
Raeine; Michael Sobieski, Riverview; Kristen BrOWD, Rutland;
Laticla Mltheney, Salem Center; Shera Patterson, Salisbury; Jen·
nlrer Lawrence, Soutllern Junior High; Evan Struble (Champion),
Syrac:use; and Joey Weeks, Tuppers PlaiDs.

..

•

�Sentinel

ZESTA
SALTINE
CRACKERS

STORE HOURS

Monday thru Sunday

1.POUND

8 AM·10 PM

(

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH..
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES.
.

.,

MIAMI BEACH, Fla (AP) Rapper Luther Campbell of 2 Live
Crew has been hit with a $10 million lawsuit by a woman who says
poor security was 10 blame for the
shootin~ death of her son at Campbell's mihtclub.
Ken Reyes, 19, was slain just
outside the entrance to Luke's
Miami Beach in December. ~yes '
mother, Maria Prats, sued Campbell on Friday.
"Mr. Campbell had taken every
step possible to assure the safety of
the patrons at this club," said
Campbell's lawyer, Bruce Rogow.
"It's a uagedy that this happened,
but it wasn't his legal responsibili-

•:.

TIDE

'

ROYALTY CROWNED· Royalty wl5 crowned at the Valentine's Dance beld at Riverview Elementary. Ryan Hawley was
selected as king and Lorrajne Lawson was crowned queen. Door
prizes were won b Lee C6ne, Dustin MiDboan, Lori Harris, Suzy
Millboan, and Craig Boso.

ULTRA

DETERGENT

$179

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

Chuck Steak••••••

$ 99

lB.

PREMIUM.

LB.

Chicken •••••••••••••••••••La.

$169

ECKRICH SMOKED

CLOSED SUNDAY

POLICIES

• Ad. ouldd:e CaW., M~n or Meip countiu
• Recei.. dio&lt;ouat r•• ado poUd in adnnce.

49

MILIL

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
1 :00 p.m. Saturday
1:00 p.m. Monday
1:00p.m. Tuesday
1:00 p.m. Wednesday
100 p.m. Thursday

446-G~llpollo

367- Cheola..
388-Vintoa
245-Rio Graade
256-.Guyan Dial.
643-Arabia Dill.
379-Walnul

or

992-Middlepol'li
Pomeruy
985-Chetler
843- Portlaad
949- Radne
742- Rudud
66 7 .....(:oolviUe

a few pennies spent here
comes back folding money

"

VALLEY BELL

,,

1ou.PK\o -

..

HANGING ROCK

ooz.

~••·••• eetellteee TALL CAN

.,

MAXWEll

COFFEE .

390Z.

$479

.uoz.99·
c
an.
a.MOillrAIP-ri·Y·
OH.CioMIIl~lln ·F&amp;2t, lft2
·
!WI I hr'"'.

'

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••••••tYzGAI..

WIENERS

.

12 OZ. PKG.

SUGAR

.14'·. ,
'·

c

Rates are for consecutive runs, broken up days will be
charged for each day as separate ads.

--------1

33- Farnu for SaLe
34.-- Bwineu Buildinp
35-lolo 8: A&lt;-ro

58-

r..;, .t v.,.....to.

59- ~ Solo

T odo

I II( II 'I 1'1'1 II'
,\ I II I ' I r II 1,
6

....,....

62- Wonted to Buy
63- Live.toelr. .
Hay &amp; Craia

36- R.. t Ealate Wanted

Soed A Ferllliar

41- Ho~ for Beat
42- Mohile Ho.nea for Rent
43-- farm~ for Renl
44-- Apartment (or Rent
45-- Furnilhed Room•
46-- Space for Rent
47- Wnted to Rent
48- &amp;fuip•nl Cor Renl
49-- For Leue

Truck• (or Sale
VaM&amp;4 WD'a
Motottycle.
Bo.tl &amp; Mo_Lon (or Sale

AuiOifor Sole

l - Announumenll
4- Giveaway
5- Happy Ada
6- Lo.t and Found
1- l...oat and Found
8- PubUc S~e &amp;
Auction

11- Help Wanted
12- Situation~ Wanted
13-- ln•unnee .
14-- Bu.ine.• Training
15- Sc:hoola &amp; lrutruc: tton
16- Radto, TV &amp; CB Repair
17- Miacellaneou.a
18- Wanted To Do

51- Houoehold Good.
521 Condo
53-Antiqueo
54- Mj1c. Mcrc:handiae
55- Buildir~~ Suppliet

s,.ru.

AulD p,.., 8: A"'eooorieol

•

Auto Repair

C.mJ&gt;iatJ Eq.;,,..,.

....

Plwob"'l 8: Heatins

'

Exeanline:

Ele&lt;triool&amp; Refr\pntio~

General Ha ulint
Mobile Home Repair
Upho~tery

Imperial R. Metal
Cut To Lllgth

I WEEI DEUVERY
Jl.y(olon

C...u.tltadi . . .

2114/'U/1 mo.

Reai Estate General

PUBLIC NOTICE

RACINE GUN
CLUB

Publto tloo~ng
Tho vtlloge of lllddleporl
wtP be 1pplylng faf Commu·
.

nt1y Dovolapmont Black
Grint Funda Utrough lite

GUN SHOOT

a--If provttlono of Ute FY

11112 CDBG progrom 1nd Uto
ln\oun1 af fundi IVItllbfe.

. -AIIntlf•tod piftano 1re
lnvttod to 111ond to moke

•uisl..tl&lt;m• on varlou1: ac-

dvltln whloh moy be undrw·
!Ikon by the vfllogo undor
tltloprog,...
·
Wri- oommlnll wtlf bo

oocoptod undl 7:30 P.tl.,
llorch t, 1tt2 1nd moy be
m1tlod to ll1yor Frod
lfolfmlln, 237 Roco Stroot,
lllddtepart, Ohio 45'180.
Fred Hottm1n,
llayqr VIMogo
ollllddloporl
1

(2):21, 1TC

Read the Best Seier
ltead.the

Q.ftSSRD RDS

•VInyl Siding
•Replacement
Window
•Roofing
olnaulatlon

205 North S1ccnd Ave.
Mlddlepolt, ott

Middlopor~

"SPEctAuztNG tN SLATE
OR CANVAS"
39115 Gold Aklgtl Road
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

WANTTOOWNAUTILEBlTOFHtSTORY·Andhavean
Income lrom "' II'Slhe CJiia Riwr loci&lt; houoo and campground willt 22 CMIP~lH end room for mara. Has 3
aparlmenlS, 4 ho181 room1, end lite campground has lots of
river lron~ag&amp;. Fnxn the park boatel' have 75 miles af
umslric1B&lt;f water way wllhbut loct&lt;lng. Good fishing and
watankiing a1 its belt 1111 lound in one ol the cteanesl·
s1111idtes of lite.riwr.
ALL FOR $112,000 ·

.

POIIEROY-NoDownPiymont.Qwnerwllcarry2n&lt;lmort·

gaga on ltis2 •IDlY home on 1 good • -· Hu large lam\~
room, oome hardwood llaort, 3 bedrooms, end ditilg
room. Hoo vinyl1icllng for low malnlononce. $24,000

SUN'S UP
IAIIIIIIIG
· ··U..hltl
. lnbtl_.

CIU 742·2771

ISS.t1111
12 S.lilll

.'*..

~5.00

'20.00
1
12.00
I SeeM
'150
flU SlSSIOII WIIH MIT

IIJIWAl
S..lltllWtolleilels
SCA WOlfE tiDS

RT 33-BeiiMA- rldg•10 actVI of nict ll~ng land ID
elllter build a home on or 10 "''11·
JUST U,OOO

31o1S

.

' AIKJIIIO
. 146,000

n-

lltODLEPORT-3id 8t•lf~ou need ta be cloaeta tho IChool
lhiolslltt houM lor you. Thl• homthal2bods-. tmge
N'llng room, ditlng'room, and
w~ fullllooe, "',1:1

•-flomeorrenlllpooperty.

NOWI14

.

•LIGHT HAULING

•FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK

992·2269
USED RAilROAD TIES

NewHo-.
Adclntona, Sieling,
B1m1, Pllnllng,

GlrqN!.~roh·
Fl&amp; ESIIIIIAIIS

614·742·3090.,
304·773·9$45
NO lUNDAY CAI.UI

Jlt41'1111

1-tn

•••••

992·7013 ar
992·5553
OR TOLL filE
1-IG0-141.0070

.........

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING
PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER&amp;

TROWY STMIOI
Felt~

cum

10 ..rwl•

S'peclal Valentine
Hours-10toa

•

lft.JI-MIIIIIIIbl
a-•-1:11~

FEB. 24 -II IIIli• Mrylc
PoUngctMe -

F• . . W.c.l
614-992·2549
Opon-...... , . _ , . .

_,,. ,..

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

Quality
Stone Co.
SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

llewlo••• • VU.JI SWI..
.llew hl'll..l • lephlct. .lt . . . . .
toe• ltltlltlols • INti..

.Coll614·992-6637
St. Rt. 7
Ches.lre, OH.

614·949•2101 or 949·2160

COMMI'.RO.U. . . . BESiaEN'IUI.
ftUZ ES'J1M..\'ftS

t• S11ti1J Clllli)

117/tfln J.1

6-12·90-tfn

CONSTRUCTION

NEW l USID PARTS

7131ft1/lln

$20.00

BISSELL &amp; lURlE

•

RActiE-11 axnrnercla\21101Y l1rick blikllng wllh 4 IPIW1·
man I uplllln. Hu • Q111alrenllt potlntill. or put your own
buolneu-.sllirslndrentlhe ~upolalrs . Hu

Brjght Idea!

Cua- PllnUngo
G14-tt2·2242

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

Sptclallzlntln C1st• ·
frame le,.lr
lMODlLS

Welcome Slates

POMEROY-Union Avo.Home hao 3gaocf olzacf bedrooms,
nice balh. and a fun buemonl. HOme has been been
compieloty redo.......,. wiring, lumaco, wl.ndaws, pluint..
ilg, brnlier box, end roof. tt has a built.jn hulCit, celin!l
lana, and II in 1 g111al neighborhood. Hallow utilities an(l
a one car garage,
.
$25,t00

Xptliryn
9leabuJs

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARIS
FOR AlL IWES

1·22-'92·1110.

539 Bryan

12 Gauge Factory
Choke

.

1/31/92/1 mo. pd.

391 WEST MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO
614-992-3524

992-2772 or
742-2097

Starting Sept. 22

..ssso !41

Fe~~~lly..........

B•siless.........S650 (4)
St1dents..............Sl 00
College...........~....11SO

H.E.C.

JAMES KEESEE

SUNDAYS

11

purpaao ol dt.cuaalng 1he

INSULATION

1:00 P.M.

Ohla lloplrltM!tt af De..,_
opment Comprehenalve
Houalng/NIIghborhaad Rm.
lltllltton Pragnm.
A publto h•ring wUt be
hold llondoy, llorch 1,11112

7:30 P.tl. tn lito council
.........,.locltedlt237Roco
SlrHI, lltddtopon, lor Uto

MICROWAVES
VHS CAMERAS
AUTO RADIOS
REPAIRED ·

POLE BUILDING
MAnRIALS

CHEnEI

Public Notice

MEIGS
GOLF COURSE
MEMBERSHIP FEES
.................SIJ.75 ea.
Wolllta..........1225 ea.
Co•ple.................14SO

fRDY-BI£1'

BlUM
LUMBER CO.

.

DAIRY LANE

23- Prol. .ioul Sei'Yictt

..'
•

56- Peu for Sole
57- M...ie.llutrw.enll

Business Services

ACCIItMiftl

IA.

C4RNATION EVAPORATED

21- BUlin.. Opportunity
22- Moaey to lo•n

32- Mobile Holllflli ror Sale

9- Wanted to B11y

\

WANT
ADS
WORK!

s
99
Cauliflower•••••••• 99c
$ 79 GROUND BEEF
2°!0 Milk•••••••••••• 1 5
13
GROUND
Large Eggs•••••
CHUCK
$ ,)9
s
1
ou. Pl'\o .
Grape Jelly•••••••~~oi 89c Wh1te Bread••• 1
1
2. $1
FRANKIE
$1~ 1.9
· · ·

$1.30/day

I I \ I\ I I I I

~----~------~~------.-----~~-------L--~---L------~==~~- ·

32 oz.

3 PAK

675-Pl. Pleuanl
458-Leon
576-Apple _Grove
773-Muoa
882-New Haven
895-Letart
937- Bulralo

247-Letart Fall•

WHIP

,

.20
.30
.42
.60
$.05/day
$
$
$
$

$4.00
$6.00
$9.00
$13.00

Galli a County Meige County Ma!On Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

' 1 po;nt t;.., type only oood
• Trilnme U. not reapon1ible (or error• after firat day (check
for error• fiJ'Itday ad run1 in paper). C.U be(ore 2:00p.m.
day a(ter publinlion to make correction
• Ada llt.at mu.t be Jlll-id in ad'fance .rc:
Card Thanlu
Happy Ad.
Ia Me~~~~oriam
Yard Sale.
, ' A clauitted adwcrtbemenl placed ia t!tc CaUipolil Daily
Trlbuae (except Cluaif-1 Oi.play 1 Bu.iacu Card or I.epl
Notice.) will allo appear in the Point Pleuant Regiltcr and
tl.e Daily Sentinel, re~~.ching over 18,000 homea

MIRACLE

RHODES,

Over 15 Words

Classified pages cover lhe
foU-ing lelephone exchanges ...

f\ID 3 day. et no charl:e.
• PrM!e of ad (or all capital leuen il double price of ad c:o.t

KRAFT

GAL

10
Monthly

Rate

.,.;dr__s~__da~yP~aper~~~~=1=:00~p~.m~.F~ri~da~y-----l

be pr

• r... Ado: c; ...woyand Found odo undu 15 wonlowill bo

s

$189

LONGHORN

MoN. thru FRI. 8A.M.-5P.M.- SAT.8-12

2 LB. BAG

LB.

COPY DEADLINE
Monday Paper
Tueoday Paper
WedlleodayPaper
Thursday Paper
Friday Paper

Call992-2156

PEAK
PINTO
BEANS

79(

15
15
15
15
15

6

120Z.PKG.

PIC·0-CHIC PARKS

Sausage•••••••••••••

MEAT or CHEESE

Words

I
3

14.75 oz.

lB.

Round Steak•••••••

Days

WHITNEY
PINK
SALMON

1
SWI!l
$ 39
Sliced Bacon....... 1
s
$ 39
Eckrich Franks
1
Loin Chops •••••••••

$249

99

LB.

MIXED PORK

USDA CHOICE BEEF BONELESS

s

·:

:
•

·.

•The Area's Number I ·
Marketplace

30 USE- 70 OZ.

-:
:
:
.·

ATLANTA (AP)- Georgia
lawmakers needn't worry: Ted
Turner says he's had lots of opportunities 10 move his broadcasting ..
and sports empire 10 other stares,
but he's never given it niuch
thoughL
ty."
"I figured if the civil rights .
movement
could be headquartered
NEW YO.RK (AP) - Donald
here,
it
would
certainly be fmc to •
Trump lost his limo 10 a thief but
have
our
little
busineas headquargot it back an hour later, undamtered
here,"
Turner
told the Lepaged, when the black Cadillac was
lature, which honored him Tuesday
found abandoned nearl!y.
"Nothing was stolen. It was just with Ted Turner Day. ·

·'

PRICES EFFECTIVE FEB. 23 tbru Feb. 29, 1992

amazing," Trump said. "I had an
honest thief."
. Trump spokeswoman Nora
Foerderer said tlie developer's
chauffeur left the keys iD the ilni·
lion when he went to meet Thunp
and his girlfriend, Marla Maples,
outside a Greenwich Village
restaunmt early Tuesday.
Police said the couple got a ride
home from their dining companion.

GUN

RACINE
FIRE DEPT•

Ia••••
l•lltling
· EVERY

Sit NIGHT
. 6:30P.M.
ltartlna Sept. 21
12 hl!t•

Strictly

"•ke01ly

,.

Air Condilionen .
&amp; Heal Pump~ · ·

•100% 2 year partallllbor w.rlllty
•1 o yr. heat pu~ CO!T9fHHr w.rwtty
ofr• llllmlt•
.
.
Bennetts MobUe Home Headna .t ~

1S92

.......
,.....n.w
·

�Ohio .
Ohio

The
Announcemenls

11

Wednesday, February

'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

Help wanted

71

Television
Viewing

26, 1992

Autos lor Sale

1188 Subtru ltatlon wagon air
amlfmlcatMite power toC:kt'
ltterlng, I windowa; lugg1gt
cover, fap r~clc. S2,000MI ellrt

•

WED ..

cloan, 14400, 614-149-2225
1181 Goo Motro LSI 5!,000 mlloo

4dr 1m-tm ca...ne 5tp 50 mpg
Vary dependable etr $3,500 c1li

1:00 ()).

With Sunroof, Will Tako Good
Uood Plck·Up On Trodo 114·
446-3485.
.

1t76 Oldomobllo Culluo, $500

or bt1t offer. 614-446-4982.

For 111• 1m Chevy Capric:•
Clnak:, 305 automttfc ps pb

Trtlltr lot tor rent. W1t,r, tewtr
•nd s1nltttlon Included. $110

$375, 814-742-1400

month. 304475-1806 or 175-5037.

4

9

Giveaway

&amp;-.puppln, part Chow 614·742·
3062
'
8 wk old p11rt Ttrrltr/Gerrnan

Shophord puPOioo, 3 malo&amp;, 2
~5-3925.

f•maln,

Fomoll Pltbull I 3 PltbuW
Shophord pupa, 61H49-247t
Pallett for aDDOlntmenl CIIU 304675-1612 atli: tor Bruce. Mon-Frl,

6:00 un 4:00.

(I) full· otock
rooettra, 614-7142·2754

Slz

6

11

Harley Davidson, ru10nabLI CONSTRUCTION ALL TRADES

prlco, after 5pm 614-843-5271
uk far Jim
Uud llobllo Homoa, Call 614448.0175. .
Wantld To Buy: Junk AU1oo
Wllh Or WllhoU1 Mo1ora. Call
Lorry Uwolr. 614-386-t303.
Top Prlcoo Paid: All Old U.S.

'

ALL SKILLS

lntamatlon11

Must Relocate. Housing Ana

Traveling ExpenMI Pald.-ExctJ.

lent Salarlu And Btntllt .. Clll

Waokdays t A.M. To 7 P.M. Sun·
dar Noon To 5 P.M. VICA CORP.
305.036-IO'IU.
Conltructlon

wamiCI

new

3336.

Rotundod.

Reward: lor ml11lng female
Rotwtller. Lost, ttr~yed, atolen,
kiiiH. Ala. 218/790, Mtrctrvllla.

AVON I All Ar111 I Shirley
Spoart, 304-675-1429.

Havolnlo.? 614-256-6369.
Yard Sale

$550 wklr., PT· FT, all ohlfto,

AVON got In on tho g!l&gt;und lloor
of Avona new 11mlng structure.
1-IDO.!I'l2-8356.
Avon It changing ! Mort w1y1 to
make moneyl Rtprtltntatlvu

M1IWFtmala.
Trtntp.illoutlng. Call E.I.C.

Nowl 1·206-735-7000 Ext. 1617B8.
Cartlllld Nurolng Alllolanl

Rick Puraon Auction Company,

Nlldtd,

Private

Home

30

Mlnutu From Gllllpolla.' D1y
full time 1uetionMr, compl1t1 Shift, Mondor Thru Frldoy.

1uc1lon 11rvlc:e. Licensed Ohio,

Will Vlrglnlo, 304·773-5785.

Aetr~ln
Now!!!SoulhNJ1em
Bualn"• College, Spring Valley

labortrl wanted to $15. hr no Plou. Call Today, 614-446-436711
oxp. Will train PT.fT. Light lac- Raglotoratlon 190-0S.t274B.
tory wor1&lt;. 1-ID0-572·5203.
LABORERS WANTED
:;18;;::-;:::W:-a-.:n"':'ted;.:.;,t:..:;O.,.:D:.:O:.._..,...,.
To $15 HR No Exp. Will Train PT· Will Bobroh In Mr Homo. Rod·
FT, Llghl Factory Work. 1-800- ney Aru. Rtftrencta Available.
572·5203.
Call114·245-5687.

Llbortrs W1nled
to $15hr,. no experience, will

troln, part·llmo, lull-limo, light
lactory work, 1-BG0-572-6203
LAW ENFORCEMENT DEA, U.S.
MARSHALL'S Now Hiring. No
Expononco NocnAry. FOr Appllcallon lnlo. Call 2111-755-6661,

C1ll1.

Rtftrenc11 Required. Call 614-

75-1957.

Mitt Ptula't 01y Clrt Ctnltr.

Sail, aHordoblt, chlldcaro. 11-F
I a.m. • 5:30 p.m. A~ 2~10.
Baloro, oftor Khool. Drop-lno
welcome. 814-446-82:24. New Intoni Toddlor Coro, 614-446-6227.
wtll Do Babysitting In My Homt,

Financial
Business
OpportunHy

21

512-3010.

with paopta you krM&gt;W, ond
NOT to ttnd money ttvouah the
mall vnUI you h1ve lnvntrgatH

ntll

tho offering.

Real Estate
31

Homes lor Sale

In town, two ltory, thr. .

1·112 car

bed-

rooma, full btnmtnt, 14'2 bath,

•tt•chld

gtr1g41.

Ctnt111l hut and air. Ev1nlng1

Coli 614-441J.f7Q7.

Roducod To Soli: $49,to0,
Chtlhlro, Ohio. 1104·132-6851,
1104.032·711'1U, 114-317-o648.
Slctlonal Homo For Salt: Abovo
Averag1 COndhlon, 14 Yurt

Old, fti,OOO, Nagotloblo. 614·
388-54et.
Small 3 room houn with both.
Lot-IOzt!IO. $14,000. 304-8757771.
Tupper Pl1ln•, 1-lllory 2-bdrm

1',,.,. your duller into cash,
Sell it the easy rvay .•. by plwne,
no need lo leave your /rome. ,
l'lace your classified ad today!
"15 words or leRs, 3 ·days,
3 papers,$6.00

houaa, utllllr rm, otlochod
aoraao, 1.1 acro, otorar build·
lng $21,500 114-DIII-271 .

32 Mobile Homes
lor Sale
Tax And Tlllo Down. Proownod
Mobile Hamea, UN Your Tax

Rtl\lnd. 50 Homoo To Chooao.
Ellll Homo cantor, 1-IDQ.5811o
5710.
1817 Flomlng 141'1U, 3br, 2 Full
· Balho, CA, · Undorplnnlng
Storago Building, Wllhor An~
D&lt;yor. IIDvuot Sao lmmodlototr.
T1kl

Cnll our nf/it:e for paid in ndl"nnr.n ralt!~!

Tab

9 . _ __

_ _

10....__ __ _

wer

PIYtMnla,

monthly. 514-44U321.

S2M

2 ICrwl wnh 12181mollllo homo,
$7,500. 304-571-25a0 aftor 5:00.

a.-

.12.,_ _ ..,...--_ _
5._ ___;__ __ 1.1 ........__ _ __

6. ------"-'' -~:::...:-

14.,_.....__ _ _

7.·-

J.'j . _ _

,,,___

~o

TJma en Job? Paot c HIIlorr A P - 7 Many
Rtpatnu•~ Mobile Hom. To

4. _ _ _ _ __

- -- ---

Pa_yment,

Short

.1- - - - - - 11·- - - . - --

____:_

tr

Roaoonable OHor Rol\11011. 114·
448-1037.
tltt 14x60 Sunahlno Mobllo
Homo, 3 Bldroomo, 2 Blth.O,

'

2. _ _ _ _ __

Hud approved, 304-675-2722.

2 Bedroom, Kanaug1 Ap·
pllancn, Water, Trat h, ClOst To
Shopping, · $230/mo.
Plus

_,..

____,..~

tmtllanlrnale and auppl...

Ntw!Uald

Hounho1d lumlohlng. V2 mi.

Raglotllld

Fnlftl. Small Down
Parmont. Call
1111 571t

uoo

.....,.,.

14 lohuKz. 14dl, . 21RL 1 1/2

llllh. CA, ,W,OOO. 304'f1S.mt
.

Ia., ... \1.,

To••
~=·=~~-

Horo And

33

2, J. l'llt -

..
Horo. IUee You'rw

Fanna for

lllnlattwo

Jtrrlcho Ad. Pt Plnllnt, WV,

Scflnluz.,. wlptdlai'HI 1-wkl
old, 3-maloo lalf. wormod,

ohoto, $150, 614-1185-WO
Tht Rl ght pow Training Cantor
Dog Obad- Ciao-, Stort·
lng 317m, Call 114-448-1864 For
Information.
.

Work booto. 514-446-31511.

Farm Suppl1es
&amp;Livestock

TV1: 1 color, 1 BIWi frMzar;
ratrlglf'ltor; clothll dryer; other

miK. 614-255-1238.

Solo-flex IXIfCIH
phono, 304-992-6677

53

eytttm,

Antiques

Anllque 1ofl, love 111t &amp; ctl1lr.

814·3118-11111.

Bur or ttU. Riverine Antiques,
1124 £. Main Str11t, Po~Nroy.

I way blade,
very good condition, $4800, 114·
:J85.3W
Dour 1D· 340

JD Trtctor Manul'l Sprudtr,

Befort ?p.m.

Furnlttled 2br Apartment, 458
Second Avenue, Ollllpolll,

Your LOll. ~881-731~

OUr Mocltl, 114-

Caramlc Sail going out ol buaf.
..... All groanwaro, point I
ouppiloo 30% oft. ltvorty Col·
1~11. 304-875-43011.
Eloctric Whtolchalr With Char·
aor. F01 ...,. lnlarmatton. 514441-3040.

•:t:attte
; MatHy

From 14
Fer-

guoon -or. 7 Foot CU1, Com·
_ . Ro-Dono Soctlono, All
1111arponld Or Rllllacld And
Palnfod. 514-367-111011.
·
Now Holland 478, 7ft hayblnd.
Now Holland 460, 1 ft har bind.
Now Holland Super 717 Iongo
"""'lllor. Gold grlndtr·mlxor.
Ollvor 10 a tranoport dloc. All
good cond. 304-273-4215.
Wanlod: Uaod lorm oqulpmom
anYihlng you wont to All. c.tl
614-2a.t3011, 25W040 oftor 6
p.m.

64

Hay

....__wv.

Sl

.H ounhold

,Goods

mu•

WATER OAURANTEED! 1 * - :IIOW7N440.

m'l.

FILL

Nawlltour
WheeiFOIIIMI;I

i/"if/111 I

Ita Ia

1-'1."

" ' .. T'"'"Vfs

South Carollna at Kentucky
(l)
® Bulla Ere
(I) Colftallalkalbllll Ohio
Stete at Purdue (L)

Van-1890 Chevy Aatro

iJ
D • Davit Rulea Gwen
tries to wim Dwight against
lnvesti~na partnership.
Stereo.
·

oe 1

: AannlnQ
Sclild (A) (2:00)
GJ UniOivtcl IIMtitOrellll.,rliollt Two
suspects are Involved In a

only

4:00pm, $15,000

EEKANDMEEK
Sf'Rit,.G IS riJ U AIR .. .

robbery In Nevadei· a family
reunion. Stereo.

iiJ Murder, 8hl

Alvlfbolla Singer and
aongwrtter John Hartford
relates !he history of
rlvarboati. (1:00itereo.

lor Sale
BOATERS
Gulnno Mercury !Iorino Sorvlco.
Mercury,

e

8PilmeNe••
IIIII •odlll

M1rlntr, WercruiHr

apeclalltl. Merc·ury certlfltcl.
Mobile, Wt come to you. 614- ·
25U1711.
.

76

1:30 W NIA lalkelball
Wallhlngton Bulle18 It
Chicago BuRs (l)
(I)• Wonder Yllrl Kevin
end Winnie help each other
get hoi dates for 1111 spring
form~!. Stereo. 1;1
1 (!) AN You llelng lerW4I'I

1977-1!119 Lincoln body par1t,
door, hood, trunk, render, bl.m·

per, 135. oftor 8:00 PM 3114-875· :

1181.

Budget Trtnamlulons, Und &amp;

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

robuTII, otartlng It $!19; lront

wheel drive atartlng 11 $14G.OO

614-245-5677, 614-99U2t3.

Travll UoiOI horne:

n

AAE~INS

l:XPERIENCINE{

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

iO CORRECT 11-E

TI:CHI-JICAL

!1916.

Alan llld his frleltde
advantage of an
unllipermed weekend. (R)
Stereo..'II ..
ManiiC MIIIIIOn Stereo.

e

)

J

J

Dodgt

·=·lllooltlynllrtdgt
take

A6411-11Wll.I..YA'i

Pf&lt;OeLEM .

Dl FFia.JLTie5 .

chllllt, tully 11lf cont ained
Low mlllogo. 55,219. &amp;14-sai

HEY, Fl..O'I'D,
I&lt; iCK "f'H&lt;I.T

Ol.lR I:NQINEE:Re

WeARE

1:00 ID Amlllcln Plavt!OUM
Small·town life of 1111 19501
Ia turnecllnslde out.
(I). MOVII!: 'When Jlerry
Me! Iaiiy••.' AIIC Motrll
8010111 (Ill (2:00) Stereo. 1;1

a

Services
Home
Improvements

81

BARNEY

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

•

WIM build pa11o covoro, dackl
ecr- roomo, pU1 up ;,"ii;l
eldlna 01 trallal lkllllng. ·ei4;
245~t
'
Plumbing &amp;

wodd~ns ,...
. .,
·AIIo
1'l'or.....
l'or Or ,.,.
To II.

Htatlng

~.
......., Oownei'W-Or ......

C:!!~~
._.,...,plno

=-~~=i'HII.

GalilrloiiL OltiO

tl'f14MIII .

. . lillll In ......
00. Pill II! I
llld WNio 1'- 0!1 LIIL

Refrigeration

Salt

446-2342 ,675-1333
992-2156 ~0

'

. . . . ' .,

'

Eut

1....------- ----J :"

,-The
-------------------------------World Almanac® Crossword Puzzle
1

ACROSS
1 sr•nlah hero
E4 Lui-cutting
, ant

' 8 Crlektl

politionl
11 Cutterd
lpple
13 Tender
14 Recent (prel.)
15- - time
(navtr)
16 Acidity
11 Public olflelll
20 Rowa
21 co..rtd
ontr1ncoa
23 Blu11 alngar
- Smltlt
25 Pttty querrel
28 Haalht
1blllty to
3D wr•ll32 Crude metll

Anowor to ProYIOOio Puula

36 Edwerd'a
nickname
37 Attentiongottlng

104Nld

3e Wild 11\etp

41 Block
44 Hogllke
animal
46 Aelten Reynold•
50 Renounce
52 Many (2 wd1.)
53 IIHirld
per10n
54 Pol10nou1
plant
55 City In
NIYidl

56 Y1tch

.....,

57 Kind or
Income
5B NIYII lbbr.

3 Fender

33Long-

t Actor J1m11

(II.)

2lt1Yo - -

34 Social ml1llt

d1m1ge
4 NaUYIOfln
ancien I
empire
5 AI woll
6 - or Con...

DOWN

Now s

'

St;;'61111 bench.

10:00 ()). GJ Otllnlum """
Sam ilapl·lntO 1111 11ft of a
blac:k gWI, 1111 I!!!W In • '60o

ASTRO-GRAPH

~-.~twm. l;l
Cll O!lloerll: l!llllr!llltcr
RnpaHM

p.o.

Astro-Graph, ·c/o this newspaper,
lime. II you do, you could create · your
Box 91428, Cleveland, OH « 101-3428. • own logjam.
Be sure to state your zo&lt;rlac sign.
UIIIRA (Sept. 23-0at. Zl) Your alilllty to
BERNICE
ARIEl (Mm:II21·Apri111) Conditions ge1 along with people lrom .U walks ol
BEDEOSOL In general should be quiteiiYOrable tor life Is your greatest-today. lnatlnc·
-'cou today, owing to your phlloaophlcal Uvelr. you'll know what to say, when to
'liutlook. And 11 ybu happen to lose, aar It - and when to bunon your Up.
you'll know It's really victory In disguise. BCOAPI9 (Oat. M-Mo¥. 22) Something
TAUIIUI (Apr1120-May 20) Something · rou're preaanlly lnvo~ In can genet·
PfOIItable could ~!!Y8lop lor you today · ate more substantial returns than
through an unexpected c:hlnge. You'll 1 rou 're now receiving . II you lludy this
be able to recognize Its worth yet stm , manor today, ,...r chance at llgurlng
k110W ltln Its elemental stage. ,
out how Is exe&lt;!llant.
GEMINI (118J 21-.lune 20) A plrtner· , IAGinAIIIUS (Nov. za.o.c. 21) It 's
llhlp COilld produce mutual benel~tatO-j . Imperative today you don'tlet the con·
day, Pfa\llded your counterpart II a WIN I trol ol lmportanl eltuallonssllp,thtough
rlak· taker and at loUt bolder than you. ' your hindi. 6\/tlyone Is apt to do better
, . . . 111!1
CANCEII (June 21.Julr 221 A .-INir-: In errongements - · rou'rt holdlnQ
.
Your potential lor IUCC4itls will be CGn•i kot can be QPO!I1ed at thle time regard· , the relnt.
lidorably anllanced_jlthe r-r ahead . lng a product or l8lvlc:e ~have to 188., , CAPIIICOIIN (Dec. 22-.1111. 11)
Rework your lilt or proapecta, end don:t ·thing good mlghl pop up lor you today,
yOAif 1n1bltlonl end ...
Thllla
be .alrlld to make cold calla.
end ~ · n be anldoul to tall&lt; abOut It to
forti will be lnleltaltled cilmpa!lbly:
UO
(.IUIJ
:11-Aifl.
II)
If
you
are
In··
otlterl. However, It might b e - to lei
'PIICII (Ptlt. • Mmt •1 Achieve,_, ol an ob(eotlw ,... . prevloullly ~Oived In en endlavor "'"' - a l oth· It develop lurthet' b.llore you tpreed any
1
'
lhought_. out of ' - " II poHible to- er1, don't ra«gaallu thing~ today with· .,.....
out
thalr
approval.
You
might
not
attow;
ACIUAIIIUI
(.len.
10-feb,
11)
There'
I
day. If you know you C811110 It, lhat'llll j
the motiYatiCift you'H need. P'-. treat , lor contlngenc:'" wit~ Yihlell they're .1Uatlflc8tlon lor rour optltlltern today,
, prOVIdecl It pertains to tiOmllhlng you
yow'lllll to a birthday gift. Send lor PI- l1n1lllitr.
VIIIQO
(Alii.......
22)
Timing
11
. .wanttodoyourtellandnottolltUIIIOnl
Allro-Graph predlcllon• tor the ,
year ahMcl by mai!I/IG SU&amp; pi\11 I tong, very lmportl(ll today, IO·don't attemPt! where you h... to rely on otlterl.
Mll-acklretltld, ltlmped envelope to ' tlj .flnlllle lnuft that atlll require more , ,.
'•

i

North

Wt st

It is said that one peek is worth two
Pa'l 3 •
Pass
finesses. In other words, if you have , 4I ••
Pass Pass
Pass
seen an opponent's cards, you will
know which way to take all the fi.
Opening lead: K
nesses. However , I'm sure rriy readers
would ne~er try to catch a glimpse of
an opponent's hands. They prefer to
use their skill to bring bome tricky
contracts.
defenders took four tricks: two .s padt!s.~: ;
Cover the East-West cards in the di- one diamond and one club.
agram. West leads the club king
"How unlucky can you get?" wailed :
agamst your contract of four hearts, South. "Both key cards were wrong." ·
reached via a limit raise of three
North was unsympathetic. He had :
hearts by North. What is your plan'
noticed that South had the right idea in ;:
At the table, the first .trick went diamonds, but that he had slipped up.··;
club king, ace, 10. two. Declarer drew at trick one. I! he had just let West whY'"'
trumps ending in the dummy and then that trick , South would have been sale :: · ~
ran the diamond jack. He wanted to He could win the club continuation, · ·
try to protecl his spade king from at· draw trumps and run the diamond ·;
.tack. But West won with the diamond jack to West. Now East would have no
queen and returned the club six. He entry, and eventually South could dis· •
judged that East's club 10 at trick one card one of his spade losers on a dia· :.•
was a signal from length. promising mood winner· in the dummy.
.. ::
the nine, rather than a signal from
Usually it is a good idea to cut tm..:-shortage. East won with the club eight defendera' communication.
@ 1-. ......ANIIINIIIWIW A11t1.
and switched to the spade queen. The

~ glvel up hll

(!) ANrtc1n Pllrtl DUll
~town 1111 of 1111 19501

a

1s turn1c1 1n11c11 out.
• 41 Houni Halt Cl1ifita lllCI
1111 ktCrt Ill of PfWI!!!liCIII

r.:y-1;1

0

v

TOO~

··---·---··cELEBRITY CIPHER
~ C)pMt OtYP'OGI'.,. .. or-.d hM t1

CaN of llllllniater 8pll1t

.

(2:00)

1ctaoi=...sa-'
11:00(2). Ill
Olllw

s-

(1) • •

(I) ...... c:.ur;t 1;1

=·

IDitiwew 1. •

A• A~MR~D 11111 Sllrlo.
a ,

l!!:- ...

.

F't ....

-NIIIrlllrlll' .;;;:"Hllllord

:till
hll!lllr ol
rlvnoatl-(1:00) aw..o.

•

__.,.,. __,_·--E-1.

Willi Pot

IIIUI'III" •
10:00 (J) MOY1I: Perry . . . . . Tht

"*'

\

By PbiUip Alder

t:ao GJ llgllt COurt Harry

'*"'"

Electrical &amp;

Vulnerable: East· West
Dealer: South

p.::,~uaa•tO ~Mtw,llloiiiiM'IM•

Ronovatlona, Add Ono, Rapalr
Pointing, QuaiMy World Call
Rogor At: 114-146-15611.

- -Yoe
Sorvlco,
Cro.k Rd. Pa~o, oupt.~ztkup. and "'Ivory. 614-

-.

...

VIrginia II Duke (l)

N - Homoo. Room Add•lont
Foundotlon Wor1&lt;, Roollng'
Khchono And Botho. Froa ~
llmataol Rtloroncao, No Job To · ·
Big Or SmaKI114-441-G225.
.

D,ovlo

'

• Unr King U..l

lmpranmenta:
Yoaro Exparlonca On Qldaf 1

~

1111 . . . .

Ill Calaga lalkelball

Cunla Home

I'IPI!rl.

..,

• 7 6 53
+10984

SOUTH
+K6
.AQJ98
t A 84
+732

Skill is better
than two finesses

1111

Stereo.
iiJ MOVI : Tht ~
1'11101(2:00) Stereo.

CompllloMobilt Homo Sal-Upo
Repairs; Comm.rlcll, AISid1n!
till lmprovementa. Including:
Plumbing, Ellctrlcal. lnouranco
Clalmo Accoplod. 614·256·1111.

IQ...
applllnct
wv·
304-5711-23DII Ohio IM-448-2454.

tQ2
+KQJ 6

./lfrY ca~ a ride In a limo.

ling.

Ron'o TV Sorvlco, -lai::':J
In Zonhh alao wvlclng
ot.. r.branclt. Houot Olfta,-

•s

•su

car br..ke down, he and

TATE II

1rs OL' ~-

Rogtl'l BIHmtnt Wtt1rpr-.

EAST
+QJ IQ%

fatmiii·Sterao. £;!
· .GJ 811nftkl After George's

SHERIFF

LDDKY WHO'S
CDMIN', PAW tl

Uncondnlonal lifetime QUII'In.

tao. Local raloroncao tumlohod.
Frao llllmatn. Call collacl 1·
114-237-4418, dar or night.

=·,..:c.

=-'terao~

Ill

WEST
+AB7 S

PHILLIP
ALDER

a Stereo.

1:01 (J) MOVIE: , . , Mil- Tht
CaN of tllllllurdtnd
Mlidanl (2:00)

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

79

rote

talanloa. Fldclta and

1 cA '-1 sv.ru. rr

75 Boats &amp; Motors

:J!:8plllc

Special Stereo.
(I) • Dlnoaaure a~ tries to
persuade Robbie to leave the
~ttlelleld . (Pt 2 or 2) Stereo.

'

prtelate can 114-1512-2901 afllr

Nallon.ll

·•'

+A&gt;

+

1:00 ()). Coital Bllketblll

{II

+943
.K 10 7 2
t K J 10 9

Sooth

• Fa,., FIUII
1 SUir Stereo.
Ill Crou!IN
7:3&amp; (J) 8llllon1 and Son

4 WhNI Drive, Runt Good'

:Z

""r!""

.

~=::::c~
Wllh Chlldrwn

ll&gt;fA$' "TO

PB, AC, AT, Vorttl V-1 motor,
304-&amp;75-5118 or 304-895-3696.
195M) Dodge Clrtvan LE , 7 Pllungor, 614·379-2122.
For Silt: 1983 Full Slzt Bronco

&amp; Grain

Hay: Squarw Boloo, 114-441-1771.
Firewood lor Ail: bla loado
145, del'td. &amp; atacbdi Alao,
air, refertncu. 814-441-0338 houlllmaatono. 114-441.0321.
Transportation
Boloro 7p.m.
'
Firewood
lor
aolo:
Dak
aoh,
&amp;
Groclouo living. 1 ond 2 bod· hickory. Dallvorod locally 140 a
room apartment• 11 Village load or 3 tor f100. tt4-3l7-'1013.
71 Autos lor Sale
Minor
and
Rlvtraiat
Apartment• In Mlddltport. From ~~ Anglo lfl&gt;n. "'
$4""5,_
0 obo.,.;.,;.1;.96;.0_For;.;_:d:.;:Fa.:lr-m-on-t,
$196. Coll614·992-7787. EOH .
runa gr..t, nlld1 muffl1r, 614Middleport Nonh Third, 1 bod· Largo plata glaao: tlntod, 7ft. 7 !192-8131
room fumlthtd apt, nf &amp; dep ln. tong
3 II. wlda. $100. Ed 'II
Cllobrlty.
2.8L·FL'OD.
roqulrod, 304-882·25611.
Brown. I 311 ia73.
loltlod. I26SO. 614-387-ot:U •••
Mlddllport, llaoch St, 2 bod· Lot 111 holp ,... buy or ooll your tor 5pm.:...---::-- - - room tumrto..d apt, utllltloo ,..... gowno. flO. los. . Foxy 1HI Mullarta Fttl lick; 1885
paid, roloroncao • dapoott ro- Loeb, Now Hovan, · S.tO Chtvro!Ol, 614-3711-2645.
qulrod, 304-882-2511.
3714.
1117 Chewy Novo SS. Aloo
Modern 1 Badroom Ap.lrlmtnt Plnaburgh 11111 coiling paint· c:..otllnor
11ft boot wnraUor I
814-446-0310.
' $10.111 par gallon. Wolf • l~m
Ill HP Evonruda motor. Call al·
Newly decorated •ffldtnc:y, fllf flat 111tx ptl.nt• tn.H per Gil· tor Bpm. :104-115-7133.
&amp; diP ,.qulred, no petl, 304- Jon. llml-giHI lltex palnt.
$14.111 Pit aotlon: 6 ft. wood 11171 Uncotn Conllnantal, good
6-5162
·~
·
otop loddor·l1t.lll. Burpao gar· lhapo, $1115. 304o882-2052.
Compltlly Fumlohld moblla don oaodo- 20% olf ragular
home, 1 mile below town ovlf· price. P1lnl Plu1, 2415 Jacklon 117t Pontiac Flrobl.!!', v.e. outo.
Chromo -Ia. $rvv. 304-6J5.
looking ~vor. No Palo, cl 514· Avo. 304-8J5.4014.
1112t or 115-7133. .
446.0338.
Pln~h 111ex eotilna paint·
Ono ond two badroom $1D.II
Wolf I trlm 1110 Codlaao Noodo Work, Runo
apartmonto lor rent. 304-815- llal 111tl
nt· ftt.H per ga~ 1400. 614-317-7723.
2053 or 675-4100.
ion. Sam
latox polnt·
$14.111 Pll tllflon, 6 II. wood 1114 Chlvrollt Carn~ra , rwd,
1lr, Ult, AMIFMitttrtO,
Small tumlohod apartment, 116 Olop -·l11.H. lurpao..,. auto.,
Stoto St. Call et~351.
clor\ 20% olf rocrUiar now. tlroa, lady d~von. axtra
==:.:::.:::::=:;::;.:~.:;.;::::;.~,.... I prtco. Paint Pka, 2415 Jaobon olwp. IIUII - $4 500 nogollablt. 114-311-0401 alior e p.m.
Smalllumlohod 1111 on Ill. VIr· Avo. SDWJ5.4014.
non Ave, upetai...-.V1 b1droam,
$225. plu. alec, m I ct.p, 304- Rainbow lwl1p~ 111 lttiCh- 1814 Dodgo Arlto, 4 door, block,
175-2651.
~11, lllict 0\200. .rtlooll AMIFII1 ca-•· 4 cyt, now ox·
$100. uaod 4 llmoo, 304-IJS. hautt, o14oll2-7231, ..tnlngo
Tan1 TDWnhouH Apt.: 2 lr, 2 2125.
1814 F.lrtlblrd, Vo4l auto, T~opa,
llooro, 1,110 oq. laof, 1-112 bath,
.,., car, Nno a-. Rocondhlonod wu .. ro ' obo,
114·1112-2317 aftor 1:00pm
CA, CH, dlohwa-1 clt-1. dryoro, aach $100 ond up. Wo
Playground, 2 I)OO!o, llartlng aorvlca oil mlkoo. Tho Waohor • 1814 Now Yorltor, 4 Cylinder,
not: Ellclric nollncludod. 814' Oryor S h - e--2M4.
Turbo, Auto, Air, Tape Now
317·7150.
. I
Saaro rol ftOO. Fl- inodot Braltao, a.ooo 11111a, b.zoo,
.
otoroo $10, OlaA top ldlcllon 0.1.0. 114-14~-~~~H.
45 Furnished
tablt 1 4 0 . - oOwlng ,... 1814 pty-h Rolltnl, no NOI,
china $50. "'-oro. Honda 3
Rooms
"'"' good, parlocl lnt.ror,
lh- - · $200. 304-871- 22MPO, .aoftlng 1850, 114-'1112•
R_,olor ront • - o r rt10ftth. 1511.
S14'llfter 4pm
·
Storti;' II $120/mo. Gallla 110411.
114 4 HpO.
1114 while Floro, IU11111ao rack,
auto, AC, PW, PL.. AJI.fM cue,
11....... wl1h ·-...g.
~co;t~ linn.
Aloo'trelior - · All hook-upa.
Colt after 2;00 p.m..
Twin
bad, braN' - · 1. . Plrleltnne Pant~
bo-ngo.
- - .......
- ...,..,..... sow ......
tlqua oal with 4 . - .
$JOO•i .....,.. ltJ"
auplln~ r.1erc ild 11 CIIS!!
PlJmNh Turtemo, low
m; 14-112-Ha aftar 5pm
....... .... 1001, tr,OOO. 1117
WATt~
~Lll
DRILLED: Hortlorl .40 mil• gal, t1,NO.

-711-

If

fNOLI6H

1988 8·10 Blazer 4 wheel drive,

13,000MI, h11 t-11rtland convtr·
lion piCkage. Mutt 111 lo ap-

2 Prom drouoo, ollt 3-5. 304675-5115.
Big 4 Bodroom Dako11 DrAm
Homo1 ~,_IIIII I Up. BuiH On

"-

Chltf

2 gard•n rototllltrs, electric
w1ter pump, Duplex com
crua .. r, ontlqui Iron bodstood,

Iron 6 othor ltomo. 304-815-3821.

·0_---.. ...(

iJl l'ow«f. tT~j

WagonHr, 4dr., 4wd., lulll
loa~od. good cond., BO,OOOM,
$4600, 61~·149-2585

$2,200, O.B.O. 614·256-8251 .

tractors &amp; lmptemante. Buy,

Ct..nua
To 18 Inch,

!'"'&gt; ' -:::: /

7:01 (J) Addeme Family
7 30
'
(I) Enll!!!lnmtnt Tonight
Ste~:.lll

Ntw tires &amp; biHtry. uoocl con·

Merchandise
1111, trade, 8:00-5:00 wMkdayl,
1 Compltlo Sot Of Bunk Bodo, Sat. till Noon.
Now CondHiori. 114-388.0614.
1 :-:
111-...,....;.;_~Ft~l'li-UIOn-..,P-tow-o,""H_Ig_h

e·""w-""-'·

.--- - -- - ---....:;;";;
NORTH
!-11oft
,

BRIDGE

lll~riiM
~ Tht Wallane

4 WD's

Charok11

··-· · · ·~ -

Cahge aa2etbll
Georgetown at Seton Hall (L)

·

Jaap

Wife to husband as they left party, "You might as
well have told everyone my age after bragging about
how low our home MORTGAGE is!"

Tonight

Stereo.

HS

Rarely - Thigh - Omega - Medium - MORTGAGE

111• 101 Wheel ol Fortune

~=··
~
ANP THf CANPI{}ATf.f
$!!}/.. PON'r HAVf

develop lrom "P No. 3 below.

Pi! NT NUM B E ~ED ,
LETTEIS
1

li""lldit

Turbo, Automatic, $2,000. 614!

1984

you

Nt=-~rw

V,..-

O Co
Dl 1 th
h kl
od
by fill~; in~h: ~~ssitg ~:d,

SCRAM-LETS ANsWERS

(I).
Clmtrll
(!) Leglllltlve ~

10 Plck.U P Runo
, Naodo
Somo Bodr Work, $1,750; 1985
Chryolor LIBoron, Good Conditlon, 74,000 Mlloo, 4 Cylinder

dillon. $3500. 304-675-1450 or
614·3118-1773 (ovonlng)

.L
. -1...-L.- L
. .-l

I I I I I I IoF I I .·1 I

~ lnlklt Ed~t~onl;;r

O:so
~':;,u~on~11f:;"t~cy~3~

18111 John 0ttro Modal 0, Alllo
Chalmara, H.D. 5 o...r, Hrotor
Eloctric Fork Lift. 114-446-2351.

7

~-.L.-

D. CIS Nlwa 1;1

IJ) Tht JtllerlontD

Nlc1 Condition, Only· . 28 000

2 bdrm. apt. In Middleport
utlllliH lumlohld, $2751 mo.'
614·149-2217
'
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 536 Jocklon Plko

And Dapooll. 614-446.0338. Call

7:00

Mlloo,, $4•200.i 1t67 Dod_ge

61 Fann Equipment

rI' I I' I I
e

~Stereo.

iiJ lcoobr Ooo
=~
~ New Zona Stereo. !;I
1:35 (J) Andy Qrlllltll

'7t CJ-5 Joap. Now top, 53,000

52 Sporting Goods

Square Ona

·

5

• Andy Grllllth

Up, 4 Cyllndtr, 5 'lipoid, Roll

Houro: M.T.W. 10:00 o.m. to 6:00 Call Boloro 7:30 A.M. Or 9:00
P;':':t..!".:l'!'r. 1:00 to 1:00 p.m. P.M. 614-245-0237.
Jlm'o Farm Equlpmoni~.SR. 35,
Wool Galllpollo, 614..,.5-1777;
54 Miscellaneous
Wldlaetectlon new &amp; ulld firm

Compltlly Furnished Small
Houtt, $250/mo. Plu1 UtiUtltt,

I

For S111: 1988 Dodge D-50 Plck-

mllu. $1800. 3114-675-1264.
1983 Dodgo Ram 112 ton pickup.
LW.B w~oppor. Auto, PS, PB,

.

~&amp;·,.:t..... ~

Dloool, Tri·Axlo, Good Shapol
11
_::"",2:-:::...:.cg
56-64 =-:4:,
. ..,--,..- - 1eas Ch ovy 314 Ton Plck·Up, PS
PB, AT+ AM.fM Coooone, 351i
Dull
1nka, Du1l Exh1u11
$3,1100. 614-446-4153.
'
'1985 F d F
or ·150. Automllllc 8
cyl. Good condition. 3~J5.
5148 oftor 7pm.
t985 Ford Ranaor, v-s auto, low
mllu , oxcoptlonol cond, 614·
Jll2·3020 aftor 5pm wHkdayo
tiel Dodge Dakoto nlct truck
l01dld, prtcld to nil, 304-6~
21 •• 1 • 5 00
- "" ' ·

Vans &amp;

It scientists really want to
end world hunger they sh()uld
. . . . . . 0 .lind out how two ounces of
sour cream can turn into five
_,....C...,u_P_,.H,...:A.,_..._N~, ...... of ···!

l:aoiil:~ NBC~~~e"C R

72 Trucks lor Sale

73

l

r.-,P~U,..:.U.;R~S:,_~F
I' 1 1 1 ·I_
1

0 Rln n..11 Till, K·l Cop
!flereo. 111
1:05 (J) Btvelly HUibllllee

hllchbock. Good condition.
$1000. Coil 304-882·2239 after
5pm.

256-5251

Cll e 1118 De

GIWarldT*r

'

Dapoaii.I14-245-92JII.
2-bel rm, plrt fum apt, newly
redlcorattd, WID hook-up,
~::;;oroy, 614-!192-5886 '""

Fumlshod 3 Rooma And Bath
Uplttlrs, Clean, No Ptt1,
Rafaranct And Dti'Od A•
qulrod. 114-446·161t.
Fumlohld Apa~mont, 1br, next
to Ubr1ry, parting, ctntrll htat,

Flotwood Aroa, Pomt!l&gt;y, Lorgo
Country Home, New Kttchtn
Bath! 6 Corplllng. Low S30'o:
Oualllld Buror. 614-441-2358.

__,_

$10.00 night, $50.00 WHk, 614•
149-252e
2 b1droom ape, utllltltt plld,

$225/mo. Referenc~~. S.curfty
~·" · 614-4-41-2231, 614-441!-

PIN down EXTJU.

___ __

1-bdrml uUII!111 tum, nlct river
view, 110wk, S250mo. Room't

movloo . Coli 514-446-2568. EOH.

recommtncll thlt you do bual-

}.

Apartment
lor Rent
1-bdrm I pl. In Mlddlaport,
utllltlt• turn, dtp rtq no petl
614-992·2218
'
'

from $192/mo. Walk to 1hop &amp;

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBUSMINO CO.

Pets for Sale

I

2·bdrm mobile hom• In Mid·
dlopo~. 614·!192·5851
2•1 R trailer In country, $17&amp;

GET CAV&amp;~ T IN
THIS STUPID PAIL ?!

SWIMMING POOL WOULD
BE EMPT'I' AND '(OU~
CAR WOULD BE DIRT'!' ..

Bodr Rapalr, Contoct: Harold
Goorgo, 614-446-5345, 8:30a.m.
To s:oo p.m., Mondor Th"' ·
Fridoy.

1 Cockor Spanlo a. Special
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
prlooo. 304-575-2207
Compa.te horne fuml1hlngs.
Houro: Mon-Sot, g.5, 614_.16- AKC Rtgllterod Yorltahlra, Malo
0322, 3 mlln 0111 Bulavlllo Rd. Plla COot Bobv Fact. $150,
F Dell
Qru.t Wtth Chlfdranl 114-258~
roo
very.
1683.
Maple roundlovtl dining room
2 badroom opt, 2101 V2 Jollor· table, hutch, 4 chalro 1425; Baagloo-ARHA Raglolorod, 2·
.;.•o"::n;.;B;.;I•;.;d::...3;.;114-17.::..;,;.;5-;.;1:;38;:5;_.---1 wooaan apaco IIVI&lt; crib 115.00. maloo, 2·1omalall all tyr old.
.
Call 1-304-a75-7127 01 30U75- AKC roglotorld, omalo 1 1/2yr
42 Mobile Homes
2H4.
old, 614-~2·2081
lor Rent
Maytag wllhor/ drror, not Bordor Collla fomalo pup, both
;~~~~~:::[ bU1 vory cloan, working $150pr, 111111 oloho4o. 514·2118-2411.
2 BR,
Stolnlloo 11101 olnlt, $10, 614- Floh ~1 k 2413 J
R1t.rence
992·7536
' n '
acklon Ave.
304-862-3287.
Point P'-nl, 304-6-3,
PICKENS FURNITURE
lull tlno Tropical llohl blrdo,

;

HOW DIDM'{ FOOT

WIT~OUT RAINWATER '(OUR

::;;;~==--:-::--=-:AKC Chlnte~ Pugt\ PlklngeH 1875 lntarnatlonal Dump Truck.

Goods

44

work. C1n give reference. Ctll

CAc?,H?H

56

fumhurt, hu:tm, Wat•m &amp;

614·245-9171.

Want tc:

Household

Experienced Mother Will Ctrt

Trimming, TrH Removal, Htdgt
Trimming. FrH Es timates! 614-

MLT For A Fully Equ~
Phyolclano Olllco Lab.
BtnoiHo, No Shift Work. Apply Anytime. Rttponalbll AduH.
In Parson: Mtdictl Ptu1, ~~ 614-446-2652.
Jockoon Plko, Galllpollo.
Young mtn looking lor firm

Little things
Rrt Worth A lot
in
tht CIRssified Stction!

51

•

oe~-el;l
llnalda tit PQA Tour

dor,
5 Spatd,
Ston·
11m 41Ford6ooouol1Mlloo,
Ton Tn.~c:k,
eCytlnRoar Whoolo, N ~~========:;:====c:•:"':·"::"'"'::"':·:_j dord,

367·7t5T

E I R TREE SERVICE. Topping,

Do yo.
Aroo. l14-245-9266.
MLT (ASCPI Or Equlvolonl For Geargn Portable Sawmill, don't
Holzer Clinic, Proctorville, Ohio. htuiJ:': logs to the mill just

Frid1y. CompeUUvt Slltry, Ex·
ctltent Benttlla. Send Rtaumt
To: Ptraonnel Dtpartrntnl, Hoi·
zer Clinic PO Box 344 011·
llpollo, OH 45631. No ~hono

~~RRv
WIU*II'f

-,

monthly pluo dopooH, ullllllu, coii304-575-1450·
rollronco roqulrld, 614·149-2833 Sola Uko Nelli $300 Firm. 814·
441·1221, Allor o:OOP.M.
SWAIN
2br Mobile Home, Rtftronces
And Dtpotll Rtqulrtd. No Ptlt. AUCTION I FURNITURE. 62
OIIvo Sl.• Golllpotlo. Now • Uaod
114·255-1922.

For Your Chlldrtn In Her Hame.
Frttndly Almosphara, Hot MNII
And Snacb, Any Shift; Orop-lnt
Eit. OH155 81..m. To lp.m. 7 Welcome, Rio Gr1nctt Ohio

Open1nga.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Business
Training

Full-Time Poeltlon, Mond1y - Clll

ALL Yord Salao Mull Bo Paid In w1nltd, he gift with tlgn up,
Advance. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m. call
Koy 114·1192·7160
the dty MfroN lht ad Is to run.
S..ndoy odftlon • 2:00 p.m, CANNERY WORKERS/ALASKA
Frklty. Mondty tdlllon - 2:00 Hiring $100• Wkly. Ovor 6000
p.m. Saturday.

14

Driven

1-ID0-327-6381

~·U.

3 BR ronch, 112 acro lawn. Now
homo. Excollont oondlllon.
S.curhy depoeh 6 referencn
roqulrld. 31i4-675-87lll or 304·
862-38111.
.Fumlohld Ono Bldroom Cot·
tago, In Town. No Pots, oa-n,
Reltrtnce RequlrMI. 614-4462543.

Prolect•1

MVtf'll openings now available,

Lost &amp; Found

lolt: Black &amp; ltn femtle fox· Trantportltlon,
407-212-4,.7,
hound In Leon arta. 304-895- Ext. 571. h .m.-10p.m. Toll

8

Major

Employment Serv1ces

CALL YOU.
Found: Moll Puppr, Tan With NO eXPERIENCE NECESSARY.
Graon Coller. VIcini~ Found On
1-ID0-255-0242.
~;::J:~114 ~~~~5I. Old. Gol· !- - - - - - - - Found: Near Kerr Road, Aodne~ Pomeroy- Nursing I R1h1b.
y
.., Ctnler Ia Accepting ApPlkl lnt ooctl
er
on, 1 ounw Pl'icatlont For Part-Time LPN.
Fomolo, Black Lab; 1 Young Rotallrt;Shlft Avallobll. Sal•~
Fomolo Block And Whho Baaglo.
-,
•2•'5112
BaAd
YAro Of Exparlonct.
11~
·~
·
Excollont Bonolh Packogo. Call
LOST, It rayed or stolen, Rtd Carol Kanawalsky, AN DON For
Pomoranlon
lomoll
dog, lnlo!VIow Atl14-fi2-&amp;6o&amp;. EOE.
RE.WARD, td Roybum, Pllfn
AUSTRALIA W'NTS YOU
Valley Ad, lAtart Routt.
Exctllenl
Pay,""
Btnafhe,

7

Help Wanted

Coins. Gokl Rings, Silver Coins PfO)oct at $22. hr. Caflllnloro,
Gold Colno. II.T.S. Coin Shop' laborero, palnloro, drywall,
Bantr 151 Second Avenua, G.llipolla. ' masont &amp; htt,.,.. 1-800-5510163.

To glvnway- 1 hameter 614·

!192·2211

wanted to Buy

RAINWATER FAL LS FROM
T~E SK'I' AND BECOMES
SWIMMING POOL WATER
CAR WASHING WATER...

For .....1983 Chtvtttl, 4-door

Rentals
41 Houses lor Rent
3 bdnn. houM In Mlddlopo~.
$3001 mon. ptuo utllhlto,
roloronco &amp; clopoaft roqulrod,
114-!192·7103

'

28

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(I) VIdeo PoWf
~ Square 0na TV Stereo.

19D1 Muet1ng QT Rtd Lol dld

77 Chovrolot Vaga. S450. 304.
175-2352 oft0r spm.

(I)

GJIIewe

614-446-7604

FEB.

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PfREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I r..cl tilt newspaper lvldly. 11 Ia my o eantlnuou• flctlon." - Aneurin Beven.
0 1llllfl'-. ....

1omi
21

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I

. ''

•
•

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•'•

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P1g1

wednesday, Febr~ry 26, 1992

12~The~D=a~lly~se~n~~~~e;I. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .~~~~~~~~O~h~lo~...

··1·!•••

.

--~--

.

-

~

..

EASTMAN'S FOODLAND SPECIAL COUPO N

Your Community Minded
Low-Priced Supermarket

I

'

O-hio Lottery

Brides

1992

Pick 3:598
Pick 4: 7177
Cards:

4-H; 2·C; 10-D;
10-S
Super Lotto:
1-9-11-25-30-38
Kicker: 071925

Insert
EASTMAN'S FOODLAND SPECIAL COUPON

.,,"

Low tonight In mld..JGs. Friday
partly cloudy. High In mld·SOs.

••

I
I
I
I
I
I

a1

I
I

II

I
I
L

Vol. 42, No. 207

EASTMAN'S FOODLAND SPECIAL COUPON

'""

Copyrlghtod 18112

3 SecUono, 31 Poge. 25 conto

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, February 27, 1992

AMultimedia ,Inc. Ntwepap.r

Health care problems said ·
'extreme' in southern Ohio
TENDERBEST QUALITY ASSORTED

PORK CHOPS

$ 29
LB.

FROM THE DELl ...
SUPERIOR'S

GOLD 'N FRESH

MIXED FRYER PARTS

c

CHOPPED HAM

IL99c

House sends health care
reform bill to Senate
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Major provisions of a health care
reform biU approved by the House
and sent to the Senate on Wednes·
day:
Creates the Ohio Plan, a major
funding pool to help pay bills of
Ohioans who cannot afford or .
acquire health insurance. It would
consist, in part, of $I 00 million to
$125 million a year raised from a I
percent fee on_insurance premiums
and a ~ x on hospital income not
related to hospital business. Some
Medicaid money may become
available.
,. . tdoplifie~,p.«Jple !lJis ~bw for
· ci&gt;verage by the Ohio Plan·ns: ·•
- Those who have been turned
davin or had coverage canceled by
two insurers.
-The self-employed whose
income does not exceed 200 percent of the poverty level.
- Any ~n not covered by an
employer if the employee's income
does not exceed 200 percent of the
federal poveny level (now about
$6,620 a year for individuals and
$13,400 for ,a family of four). The
Ohio Plan would establish sliding-

LB.
ARMOUR SLICED

COLUMBIA BACON
12

$

oz.

PKG.

scale premiums charged to employ·
ee based on ability to pay.
Specifies that Ohio Plan cover·
age will include major medical and
hospital services. "basic" medical
surgery - inpatient and outpatient
- mammography screening, pre·
vcntivc care for children to age 18,
diagnostic X-r~ys, and tes.ts ~nd
drugs that requrre a prescrtpl.lon,
including insulin and syringes.
Medicaid and Medicare recipi·
ents are not eligible for the Ohio
Plan, but it prohibits health care
providers from billing for charges
that exceect amounts set by Medi·
carorOhio-Pian would cover retired
people or surviyirig sp(j~ses l oo
young to qualify for Medicare.
Requires claims to be filed on a
standard form and instructs the
departmen~ of health, human. ser·
vices and msurance to devtse a
provider reimbursement schedule
based on fairness and equity.
Protects businesses that employ
three to 50 employees from cancellations and provides tax breaks for
small businesses and self-employed
people who buy and maintain coverage for employees.
~

. '

J\":0:·-.-..

WASHINGTON (AP) - More
than 1.5 million Ohioans don't
have access to basic health care
services. and the problem is most
extreme in the state's soutbern tip,
acc&lt;l'ding to a study released today.
Nationwide, about 17 percent of
Americans have inadequate access
to a health care, the National Association of Community Health Centers concluded.
Some of those people live in
nual counties with few doctors. For
others, finding a doctor isn't as
much of a problem ns paying for an
office visit, medicine, vaccination
or prenatal care.
In Ohio, a doctor shortage
accounts for a small part of the
"medically underserved" head
count, the repon said.
Researchers identified most of
the estimated 1.56 million medically needy·people in Ohio by lOOking
at such· things ns deaths from preventable diseases, babies delivered
too small or too early, and emer.
gency rooms used as a substitute
for regular medieal care.
The estimates considered those
and other factors as well ns doctor·
patient ratios.
"In only a small proponion of
states does a physician supply
problem alone lead to medical
lDlderservice,' ' the report said.
The study concluded that based
on the 1990 Census, 122,451 people needed better care becanS~: )hey
live in comrpiiJl!ijes where dOctors
are 'scarce. The other 1,443,339
were so classified for all the other
reasons.
The study identified Cuyahoga
as the county with the greatest
number of medieally needy people:
289,203, or 20 percent.
But the percentage wns greater
in eight other counties, most of
them rural: Adams, Jackson, Jefferson, Lawrence, Mahoning, Meigs,

Pilc~~do~~~o:.

home

Youngstown. is an urban county.
Jefferson is largely rural but
includes Steubenville. The others
are in the southern tip of Ohio, in
counties .with long-depressed coaldependent economieS.
"We had no idea that it would
be so widespread," said Daniel R.
Hawkins Jr. , one of the study's
authors.
The researchers concluded that
42 million Americans are medical·
ly needy.
· The government, by compari·

,

READ WEEK • The week of
March 2-6 bas been proclaimed Rilbt lo Re.d
Week in the Meigs Local School Dlslrlct. Etlcb
district school' will participate in the obser·
vance. Piclured are Righi lo Read coordinators
from ea~b school. Slandlng, 1-r, Karla Brown,
Bradbury; Vicki Haley, Harrisonville; Marsha
Radabaugh, Middleport; Liz Slory, Middle·
port; Ron Drexler, Meigs Junior High; Janet

~f

A drainage problem on county
propeny was discussed when the
Meigs County Commissioners met
in regular session Wednesday
morning.
Water has drained from the bank
behind the Meigs County Jail for
several months, but the problem
has increased in recent days.
The commissioners • suspicion
that the water drainage is from an
abandoned coal mine has not been
verified. Water samples are being
collected from the site, and will be
analyzed by the state.
The commissioners authorized
spending to improve drainage at the
site, including trenching and
installing a French drain and
drainage pipe.
.
The commissioners expressed
their "thanks and deep apprecialion" 10 Pastor Eugene Underwood
and his committee for the fund
drive to purchase a new piano for
the County Home. The piano and
related items were dedicated at an
open house at the home on SlDlday.
(See related story.)
Commissioner Richard E. Jones
reminded the board that the time
was appoacbing 10 discuss repairs
, to the exterior of the jail. Work

.·•.-:•:•.

Potato Chips

Coca·Cola

$ 59oz.
10

2 LITRE

BAG
40Z.
BI-RITE

Black
Pepper

PIANO DEDICATED • Residents at I he
Meigs Coanly Home are aow enjoyln1 their aew
Baklwln Studio plaao, purthued witll donatloos
wblcb eame tram ..e community. Plclured with
tbe Instrument, are l·r, resident Artbur Reeves,

Eu1e.ne UnderWood, who h.eaded up the fund
drive, resldenl Leona Martin, county home
employee Mary Letaad and resldeal Josepblae
Mallory.

• ·
h
d
R
Meigs County Home receives aczne man c arge
•
• assau lt
new ·piano;
open h ouse he}d wtt• h fielonzous
YELYET-Yt GAL.
IATUW ROUNDS $259
ICE CREAM~••••

(I

.

·r_,

.....

---

- ~1 ICE

ASSORTED HilTZ MT.

DE
PIG.
...

12P-I

$149 '
'
IJIIIII au....
• Prlolll!llllollve lllrv llolr:::-1"..,

CREAM
SAN

Following a successful public
appeal', the Meigs County Home
now has a new piano.
·
The Baldwin Studio ~iano, dedi·
catcd duriag an open use ceremany Sunday, now occupies I spe·
cial pla:c in the dining room at the
Meils County Home.
·
The need for a new piano was
lint recognized during the holiday
ICUOD last yell', when the home's
old piano w~ deemed 'irreparable.
A fu~drive was Initiated.- with
Joan ay or RutIand .ervIna as
treuurer. ~ bepn 10 J,IOUl'
in f10111 lndiviUUIIIII, orpnizlliOnl
and a few
llld the DilDo
waa purchased, aionl whll an.
atlniCtivelnillamp and a bench
-'.
· ·
,_.Accordlna to Busene Undcr·

,.,a_.,

'

wood, who headed up the fu_nd·
raising C81!lpaign, the drive wns so
successful that the group had extra
money, which bas been, and will
:L
continue to be used for oUJer
need·
ed improve~nl$ at the hoine.
Dining room tables have been
repaired and•scats were replaced
with a pan of the extra money, and
Underwood iald that plans are in
place to complele other repairs al
the bonte ns funds allow.
'
Donati0111 are still being accept·
ed in care of ..
,..._•.' May at Ban k
One'sRUIIand branch.
SO'"'I wore led and _.,aimed
at thodedicatlon b6.:!,Je'wtse,
Donna Jenldnl IIIII's
Hawley,
who alona with Ralph Werry
aervec1 on the piano selection commlaee.

.

.

-

'

Hoffman, Pomeroy; Jonl Jeffers, r~~r~;::J
Bryan Zirkle, Rutland; Paula Cbucey,
and. Harrisonville; Cindy Allen, Salem Center,
and Barb Mathews Cro\'f, Salisbury. Seated are
James Carpenter, superintendent, and Wendy
Halar, director of federal programs for Meigs
Local. Not plclured • Ellie Blaettnar, Mei~s
High School librarian. (See story ou page 8)

Drainage problem commissiQn topic

to

EAGLE THIN

SPRITE •DIET or REG.

is doing just that. asking for a $90
million increase for community and
migrant health centers in the presi·
dent's 1993 budgeL
But last year, the administration
wanted to puU $24 million out of
the program to pay for an initiative
to reduce infant mortality.
Congress eventually provided less
than half of what the administration
requested for the infant mortality
program but did it without taking
money out of the community health
system.

son, estimates that about 35 miUion
people live in areas with inadequate
access to health care.
The group that commissioned
the study lobbies for improvements
in health care for needy areas. It
gets its money from membership
dues, Hawkins said.
The study said .the solution to
the problem is for the government
to put up money " to develop and
support community-based comprehensive health care."
The Bush administration says it

such ~ roofing, chimney and trim Elections. The bid opening was set
repair, taM window replacement is for 2:30p.m. Friday. The lease on
being planned. The board will pre- that space is about to expire and, by
pare a complete list of necessary law, must be re-advenised,
work and an advertisement for
bids.
Attending were Jones, CommisNoon Friday was set as deadline sion President Manning K. Roush,
for submitting bids ror office space Commissioner David Koblentz,
for the Meigs County Board of and Clerk Mary Hobsretter.

Eason seeks county engineer
position on Republican ticket
Robert H. Eason , a registered
professional engineer and surveror,
is seeking the Republican nomtna·
tion in the May S primary election
to run for Meigs County Engineer.
A resident of Morgan Road in
the Flatwoods community, Eason
graduated from North C_arollna
Srate University, College of Engi·
neering and Agriculture in 1950.
He is a veteran of World War II.
and has lived in Meigs County for
the past 40 years. He has more than
39 years experience in engineering
and management, and is currently
retired from Gavin Power Plant ns
the performance superintendent
Eason says that he has the man·
agement supervisory training and
experience which he feels can be

~a~~~~~~!!~.igJi;~~ri~::~

~;:r~·:a~ki~;m:u::~=~~:

includes work with engineers, tech·

maximum sentence of three, five, construction and repair work.
A Racine man wns charged with
. •
He has been a member of the
felonious II3SIIult following a fight seven or up to 25 years 10 pnson, American Congress or surveying
that sent another man 10 a Colum· along with a S7 .SOO fine.
· d
·
d th Pro' 'onal
'181
Roush
wns
folDld
indigent
and
an
mappmg
an
e He
oesst
bus hospt ·
, ed p bl ' D f d
Land SurVeyors of Ohio.
served
Detner "Pete" RoUSh IV • 22, has was reoeiT to u tC• e en er as a member of the Carleton Schciql
been cliarged ·in :t&gt;{eigs County ~~.les H. Knight for lq)resenta· Board for six yearS, the lnst two ns
Court with feloaio.us assault, an ""''
ITesident. He is a member of the
aggravared second-degree felony.
· Roush remains in the Mei~s · nited Methodist Church and
""Roush appeared before Meigs County jail•.According to Shenff Drew Webster Post 39, American
County Cliun Judae Patrick H. James M. Soulsby, the hiah bond ,Legior
O'Brien Weme.clay, Inc! O'Brien 'Nil aet due 10 the serious 'lJIUre of
~oo and his wife, Nora, have
set bond at $50,000 cub. O'Brien theclagC.
~
'
h'ldren
thC.ir oldest
1
· ...,......,,
_...._ by Iaw, "'.,.,_
a Plea Racine,
Jeff Conno'II'J.
·•ao of .our
•
JS
,..
llstod m . 23 "'concli·
lives cat home,• R
R:, a profes·
11 In-"'ve -"-- Un""u·
in the case. If probable catUC is ••An m· tbe
sional surveyor, -lives In Pomeroy
11
r,..-" tbe 111111er 'I'DI be lbferred to ""
_.. .....,,.
lth his w"e Krista and dau""tcr
~on Plea Court lot poeaible GranI Medical Ce111er followlnj · ~- H~bert "&amp;eyw wboiive8
grand jury "'Uon. The probable ~IIJpry !aletooa:uonbydatjf~'CN~ at home and is a IWdent at Ohio
cause "hcarlna has been act for ll'IJISI)Orledy
• ..._ .... ;.,..ldont .,..;.-.::!~
University; and Linda Wamer, 1
Wedneldl
_ ,v,
·
sbortlv aftr. w"' .,..
..,....... ....,
contlnue.a" ·on pa•e· 3
lf'convicted.
f
Roush could race a
Continued on .....,.
"""" 3

An=la

-r·

t

ROBERT H. EASON

Sales of existing
homes decline
WASHINGTON (AP} - Sales
of existing homes fell 1.5 percent:._;.
in January, the first decline in four :~­
months, a real estate lr~de group ::
said today. All regions except the ·:•
Midwest posted losses,
· ·-·:
. The National Association of:.:
Realtors said sales of previously: -::·
ov.:~ barnes totaled a seasonally: :;
ad)uated annual rare of 3.22 mil' •··
lion, down from 3.27million in .::;
Decetnber•
't .....
•••
The Reallin lllribured 1bc ~ ••
to riains mi!"PP rates llld al30 ~
said ~ beginrilnl 'of tbe year Is a ·
slo~ tilDe for home Iiies.
,

.1" .

•
•

•

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