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•

Page- 1 0- The Daily Sentirial

Tuesday. J8nu-v 8, 1991

Form~r area priest Golubiewski
dies
.
.

......--~Local

brief-----.
SqiUlds answer jive Monday. calh

.

church's ,transition of masses
Goll;lblewskl's body will be
from Latin to English. GOlu- taken from Waugh·Halley-Wood
blewskl also formed a Knights of . Funeral Honie at 4:30 p.m. on
Five calls fw aaislancc were uuweted by units of Meigs County
Columbus chapter, which helped Thursday. Friends an(I fonner
F.melpncy Medical Services on Monday.
. fund the priest's weekly radio parlabloners ,are Invited to acAI2:1S- a.m.. RJJ!IIIMI aquad '!'fC!It to ~riar Ridge Road for Helen
program, and the group partie!· company the body or to partie!·
JkCielland, who was tmll8pOIIal to Vetmns Memaial Hospital Al
p•ted In .community activities pate In the welcome at St. Louis
2:4&amp; LID~ .Pomero1 «ppld went to Lon&amp; Hollow Road. Ruletla ·
like parades and the county fair. Catholic Church.
Rolietls wis treated btl not lllpSpO!ted. AI II :01 a.m., Racine squad
' In addition, the chapter do·
weat to Swe Route 124 for Otis McClintock, ·who was· transported
Friends may call at the church '
nated a large Cruclt!X, a replica Thursday, 5 tQ 8 p.m., and a vigil
to~
'
of the bleeding Christ of Llmlas prayer service will be held at 8 '
. Al S:S6 p.m., S'yracuse squad went to Second and Apple Stn;ets
Crucifix In Italy, to the church p.m.
for Kelly Cook, wbo wa lr8IISpOOtld to VeiQlU!S. At 9:26 p.m.,
during Golublewskl's time In the
Pomeroy. squad went to West Main Street for Lea Harrington;, who
The Mass of Christian Burial
parish.
.
was taken to VCleJBDI!. ·
wll,l be held Friday lla.m., at St.
Golublewskl alsO oversaw the LQuls Catholic Church by Bishop.
purchase of a roller skating rink, Albert H. Ottenweller, and Msgr.
had It redecorated and opened It WW!am R. Myers and other'
for activity. In 1957, a grammar dloc~n and clergy In attend·
school was ·added to the tac!Uty, ance. He will be burled ln. Holy
Meetlna amceJied
Sorority, scheduled for IOIIight
but due · to a lack of Catholic Cross Cemetery, Grand Rapids.
REV. ADOLPJI GOLUBIEWSKI . The meeting of the Xi Glllllll!l (Tuesday) has been cancclled. The
Sisters to teach there,- the school
Mu Chapter, Beui Sigma , Phi . mcecing will be held next Thcsday
was not opened. It Is currently a
car.·~
Continued from page 1 at 7:30 IJ.m. at the home of A.R.
Head Start Center, and Is used J 1
"'•••·----___:___,;....,_---------Knight Tile meeting will be a sofor catechism classes of the
the driveway 0!1 her propeny members countered · that · the or· following receipt of a lettet from cial
church.
periodically
lloods due to a lack of dinance would allow for exceptions Middlejlort ·Mayor. Fred Hoffman
FOE Auxliiary 10 meet
Also In 1957, the priest orga1n·
drainage,
and
has,
in
tum,
·been
and
"leeway"
if
the
need
would
concerning
the
grant;
The
F.O.E. Ladies AIW1iary will
!zed the Flgl!ttng 69th Chapter,
damaged
arise
for
wmving
certain
portions
of
•
Expressed
appieciation
to
the
ineet
IOrught
(Tuesday) at 7 p.m.:
,It's plll'pol!e to Incorporate the
In addition to ohysical dainage ~ the ordjnance, and that council Was Pomeroy Volun~r }'ire Depart· There will be a poduct dinner•.
sixth and ninth commandments
· '
to fight spiritual battles with evlt the driveway, Woods said, the not in~ in ~hibiting ll!inor ment for iheir hours of worlc during
D8Dce scbeduled
,
In 11163, the' priest established a wa~r depo$its mud and debris on COIIStlVCUOD proJects on pnvate the reccntllooding;
the
driveway
which
then
be jnoperty .
.
•
Disc.
w
sed
needed
repairs
to
,
There
will
be
a
round
al!d
Catholic High SChool at Cheshire
·
"With. the ordinance," Council- Pleasant Rldg~ and the parking lot dance on Friday from 8-11:30 p.m.
for students from Gallla and remove4 by.wheelbarrow..
Village· Admi}listrator John An- man Bill Young said, "we're just · walls.
~lain!hcs ~ B_uildings:_l.?p,penf
Meigs Counties, which oi;lerated
derson,
wbo
has
investigated
the
trying
to
put
an
end
to
~me
of
the
•eaiUnDg
~ o
for about 'two years, after which problem, reponed to council that things that go on lhat can't be enBluegrass.
Roonie
Wood
will be.
It was closed for a lack of pup Us,
the
ditchlinc
ncar
the
property had foo;M."
•
the
caller.
The
public
is
invited
10 ·
,and was sold for Guiding Hand
Some eXamples lhat were cited
attend.
School and sheltered workshop. · become ov~ arid has since
been
dug
out.
In
additioo,
Andenon
by
the
council
memliets
in
favor
of
.
DaJiv
_,_
..
.
prtnBorn June 12, 19ll In Grand
said, the tile at the drainlge site has the ordinance included the junked
Y ......,.
~
Rapids, Mich., he was the son of been
opened up by villagcaews..
car
protiiCID
discUSJi:d
at
this
meet·
(.U of 1t:SO a.m.)
the late John and Josephine
n.;..:natty, Andenon said, the
·
·
f Bryce and Mark SmMh
South Cenlral Ohio
Golublewskl.
~·-ing and the persistent problem 0
of,Blut; EIIII 1o Loewl ·
· Mostly cloudy Tuesday night,
He was a gradual~ of St. drain. was· privaldy built and then unsafe and unclean . residential
was joined wilh the city sewer prope¢es and are&amp;'! within lhe vii· Am
Joseph High School In Grand lala"
system.
.
,,
!age.
.
.
.
AshlElecdt rt c Po~er .~ ........... 2 1~ with a chance of drizzle,' and a :
Rapids, Mich. · and . attended
betwel!n 30-an"d 35. ·Chance of 1
Council assured lhe Wood .family
In other action at last night's · · an 0 11 .... ·.. .... ... .. .... .. .. 27 7&lt; low
precipitation
Is 40 percent. · ·
seminary . both there and at that
the problem was in the proi:css mcecing, council:
· ·
AT&amp;T ........~ ........... .. ...... ,..... 3,0
Cloudy·
Wednesday,
with ' a
Mount. St. Mary's Seminary In of being corrected, and that the
~ Appointed Larry V(ehrung as . Bob Evans .......................... 14%
ClncfJinatl, Onto. He altel)ded the driveway would be repaired at vil· president for the 1991 term;
or
sno~
flurchance
of
drizzle
Charming Shoppes .. :........... 10¥.!
ries,
and'
highs
between
40
and
45.
Grand Selnlnalre at Montreal, ' !age expense when the drainage
-Approved the Mayor's report of City Holding Co.... :............. 14~
Chance
of
precipitation
Is
40
Canada and was ordained In . system repairs were Completed.
fines collected for December in the FGoodederal Mora! ...... ,, ........... .12%
June, 1949 at Steubenville, Ohio.
percent.
Council q:xaducted the first read·
OUDl f $2 726
year Tom. .................... 17
ing on a zoning Cll'dinance on Mon- ~ ~ted' Cl~ Brenda Morris Key Centurion ....................10%
day eveni!Jg, wilh two members of to write a letter requesting a profit Lands' End ........, ........... :.... l3~ Hospilal news
the board • Thomas Werry and and loss statement, as well as other Limited Inc....................... ,.18%
Vetei'IQIS Me-rial Hospital
Bry_an_Shank • vocing _against the linan&lt;:ial infonnation, regarding the Multimedia Inc.................. 63tj
MONDAY
ADMISSIONS
Thursday, 5.to 8 p.m., and a vigil Ordin8nce.
Blue Strcalc Cab Company and the Rax Restaurants. ,..,.,.......... !)(.. Herbert Sbield!l, Racine; Otis Me·
prayer service will be held at 8
Bolli Werry and Shank expressed transport8tiQO gral)t entered into Robbins &amp; Myers .... ;, .........18% · Clintock, Racine; Kenneth ~n.
.
p.m.
the opinion tiuit they felt the or- between Pomeroy, Middleport and ShQney's I~c .... ,.................11% Hanford, W.Va.; · and Martin
The Mass of Christian Burial · dinance was tOo restrictive 10 theMeigli Coun'l Commissioners. Star :Bank ................ ;~......... 16~
Chapman. Pomeroy.
will be held Friday 11 a.m., at St. property owner&amp;.
.
That infortnation 1s being requested Wendy's Int'l. ..... , ................ 6 ' MONDAY DISCHARGES
J,.Ouis CathQllc Church by Bishop
''This one is worse than the his·
Worthington Ind ....... ;.......... 20~ Cora Jlecgle. · ' .
Albert H. Ottenweller, DO and torical oolinance, and the· people
Msgr. William R. Myers VF and
,.
other diocesan and clergy In voted it out," Shank sail! in the dis·
cussion
of
the
proposed
ordinance.
·
attendance.
He refened to a historical or·
'' Burial will be In Holy Cross • dinance
that was voted down by the
Cemetery, Grand Rapids.
electlnte
in 1989 • an ordinance
In lieu of flowers, contributions wbich would
have established hismay be made to·a memorial fund
torical
districts
the village
at St. Louis CathoUc Church, In and a committeewithin
to
ovecsee
those
care of Msgr. WIWam.Myers, 91
districts.
State St., Gallipolis, Ohio, 4!W\31.
MaYor Seyler and other council
.
' .

By LEE.ANN THOMPSON
OVP N"'Ys Stall
The Rev. Adolph- Golublewskl.
. the longest-tenured priest at St.
Louis Catholic Cliurch In Gallipolis, died Sunday, Jan. 6 In
Sebastian, Fla., at the age of 79.
Golublewskl went to Florida In
1980 after retiring from the local
parish. where he served 30 years.
"Father G," as he was called
by parishioners. oversaw many
developments and changes In the
Galllpolls parish during his time
.here, l!CCordlng to church re·
cords and members.
St. Louts was . Golublewskl's
only parish, arriving after his
ordination In 1949 at the age of 39.
Golublewskl was "pretty· special" according to many of his
parlshoilers. Mrs. Harlett Davl·
'
son remembers
his 30 years. In
Gallipolis with fondness . Durin!!
Golublewskl's time In GaiJJpolls,
she and husband James gave
land to the church for a Catholic
·
Cemetery. .
•'God gives to us and we give
back to God," s_he said of the
c.emetery's establishment.
She reminisced Tuesday about
'the many things done at the .
parish durl~g that time, singling
ou t his Involvement with the
Altar Boys 'Ot the church, and
taking them to .hIs camp In
Michigan for a yearly summer
outing.
According to Mrs. Davison,
Golublewskl was a professor at a
boy's school In Canada:prlor to
becoming a priest.
The priest ·also was Involved
with Gallipolis· . Development
Center, serving a-s ' the faclUty:s
chaplalh, Mrs. Davison said.
Golublewskl rapidly began es·
tabllshtng programs and making
chan~es In the local church, upon
his arrival,· and oversaw the

·.

Dr. William Russell Whitney
Ill, 51, of 297 Duly Rd., GaiJJpolls

j '

· died . Sunday, Jan. 6, 1991 In
Gallipolis.
He was born Sept. 15, '1939 In
Topeka, Kansa:s, son of the late
William Russell Whitney Jr., and
Margaret ta Clevenger Whitney ..
Or. Whitney, who had practl·
ces In Galllpolls, . Jackson and
Ironton, became a licensed psychologist In 1978. From 1976-78 he
was associated with the Gallla·
Jackson· Meigs Mental Health
Center In G!llllpolis. Prior to
coming to Ohio, he was a
professor at the College of
Education Counseling and Reba·
. bllltatlon Services, Florida State
· Ul\lverslty, Tallahassee, F1a.
He received his B.A. from
Harvard College, Cambridge,
Mass., and his Ph.l&gt;.' froni
Was hington Pnlverslty, St.
Louis, Mo. He!Was a member of
the American Psychological Assoclatiol\..the Ohio Psychological
Association, the American So·
clety qf Plnlcal Hypnosis, the
American Academy of Psychoth·
eraplsts and th!l Airplane
Owners and Pilots Association.
He Is survived by his wife, Jean
Holway Whitney; a son, William
Russell Whitney IV; and daugh·
ters, Lynn _Whitney ot New
. Haven, Con~.. and Kara Lee
Whitney of Bridgeport, Conn.
Also · surviving Is one l»'other,
John Whitney of Tucson, Ariz.
Memorial services will be
conducted 11 a.m. Thursday,
· Jan . 10, at the McCoy-Moore
Funeral Home, Wetherholt
Chapel,' Gallipolis, · with Rev.
John Ja9ksoh officiating.
In lieu of nowers, contributions
may be made to the Airplane
Owners and Pllols ·Association:
·Air Safety 'Foundation, c/ o Dr.
William R. Whitney Memorial
Fund, Ohio Valley· Bank, 420
Third Ave., Gallipolis, 45631.

Stocks

Weather

UAL

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LADY'S DRESS SHOES

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In Ear.thtoae colors.
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euNGAIOOS

POMDOY, OHIO

Cards:. 5-H; 8-C;
K-D; 3·S

Page4

•

'
at.

e
Vol .41. No.181
Copyrighted 1991

·FREE
DELIVERY
OPEN ·
MON.-FRI•.9·8
SAT. 9-5 .

• !40UR8: Mon. thru Fri. 8:00-15:30; SAT. 8:00-15:00

Low tonight In mid 20s ..
partly cloudy . High
In lower 40s. Ch!UlCe ol rain 60
Pl'rcent.

Thu~ay,

!"

.

2 Sttctions, 14 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, January 9. 1991

COIID OF
GAWPOLIS .

JU &amp; GIAPE
446·3045

..
.

'

26 Cents

.A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Meigs board
·adopts budget
By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
by the board.
Just hpw that ' money-and no
Sentinel News Staff
A budget with anticipa!ed one ,seen1ed to know how much it
receipts of $7,793,300 and expen· will be--&lt;:an be spenl for only cerditures of $8,949,200 was adopted tain things, lilce buildings or
by the Board of Education of the tran!l)Xlrtation, and cannot be con·
Meigs Local School District sidered as a part of the general
Tuesday.night.
·
operating budget, it was noted by
While the budget shows a deficit Snowden . The board decided to get
of more than $75,000, it was more information on the money
pointed out by 1ieasurer Jane Fry and how much it wiU be before.fur·
· "that the board has · a spending . ther disc.ussion on how it will be
reserve of $310,189. She explained spent.
that an amount up to that figure can
Enrollment Options
·be borrowed agamst future tax col·
The board approved a policy for
lections to keep the district out of a the post-secondary enrollment oploan fund.
tions for students in accordance ·
during the organizational meeting from the lel't are Jeff Werry,
ORGANIZATIONAL MEETING • Bob Barton, fifth from left,
However,
it
was
also
pointed
out
with Senate Bill 140.
Robert Saowdtn, (Rope), Richard Vaughan, (Barton), board memwas elected presideat, md Larry Rupe, !bird from lel't, was named
that
the
budget
d&lt;?Cs
not
take
i~IO
The policy allows junior.; and
bers, Supt. James Carpenter, and Treasurer Jane Fry, who was
vi~e presideat at the organizational meetiag or tbe Meigs Local
consideration
medical
and
other
tn·
seniorn
to enroll in college on either
.
School Di,strlct_Board or Eduntlon Tuesday night. Others pictured · ' rehired with 'a four-year contract.
surance increases, nor salary in· a part-time or full-time basis with
creases which might be negotiated credits to be awarded on both the
by the Meigs Local Teachers As· high school and college level.
sociation and the local chapter of
Pan A of lhc program permits the
the Ohio Association of Public upper class students ·10 go to col·
School Employees. Both groups lege ful! time and pay their own
have contracts lbat will expire in .way, while Part B allows students
'
the next fiscal year, it was noted.
to &amp;a4 college part-time while at·
Mrs. Fry explained that the tending high school . with the dis·
figure for anticipated revenue iniO · trict to pay the expense out of Slate
the general operating fund is at l)!e Foundation Funds.
same level as the current fiscal
Supt. James Carpenter explained .
A federal mediator in Pitts·
year. She said that her com· that currently the dis tri~eives
burgh has set contract talks for
pulations provide for no significant about $2,600 per student and that
Jan. 161n a two-month old dispu te changes in laX evaluation nor State the amount would be pro-rated
between the Ravenswood Alum!·
Foundation fund receipts.
between the dis!rict and the college
num -Corp. and the United Steel·
Board Member Bob Snowden if a student' attends college while ·
wor.kers union, which represents
did note that ,since the county. is remaining in high school ·
.'
1,700 workers now off the job; the
currently" doing an updating. of
Other Business
Huntington Heral,d-Dtspatch re·
property values thiS could pos~rbly
After opening four bids for . 40
ported Wednesday.
mcrease revenue to schools.
cafeteria tables and 350 'chairn for
I
The talks before mediator
On 'the. expenditure side, the the high school, the board accep1cd
Carman Newell In Pittsburgh
treasurer said that the only in· the low bid of $15,750 from the
""II be the first meeting.; §!nee
creases she has anticipated in Farnham Co. ofWcsterville.
Pee. 12, when talks fell apart
making her estimates are one per· · Bids were accepted by the board
after a federal court overturned
cent in regular step salary inc~s from the high bidders on the old
a West Virginia court's order to
for reachers, and a three percent tn· bus bodies which the district had
negotiate, the artlcJe ·stated.
crease in several misc~llancous - for sale.
The union, meanwhile, file suit · categories to cover inRation.
. Maternity leave was granted to
Tuesday In Jackson County Cl r·
The budget coven only general Barbara Mathews Crow for thC
cult Court seeking wages . and
operating funds for the district.
second semester of this year, and to
benefits It claims the workers are
The money which remains in the Sheila Bevan from Feb. 4 through
owed for work done before Nov.
bond retirement fund (from the the remainder of lhe year. Dock
1, the day the dispute began.
retirement of bonds 0.11 Mei_gs High , days ,were granted to Sand_,Y Nap- ·
The workers' contract expired
School in December) was drscussed
Continued on page 3 ·
Oct. 31. The United Steelworkers
clalrri 250 workers arrived late
fbr work that night and were
ordered out of the plant about 1¥.,
hOurs later, after the contract
expired.
The union says that the com·
A deer accident was investigated reported Monday morning that he
pany owes the workers wages. by lbc Meigs County Sheriff's had . parlced his 1989 Chevrolet at
Unde r the old contract, any Department on Tuesday.
the State' Route 7 Parle and Ride at
employee who reported for work
Steve L. Sayre, 43, of Mid· around 10:30 p.m . on Sunday.
ws due a minimum of eight hours dleport, was southbound on State When he returned .on Monday
wages. _the article said.
Route 7 near the East Shade Road morning at 9:40a.m., he (ound that
The suit also says all 1,700 when he struck a deer that ran iniO the driver's door glass had been
union worker s are owed the path of his 1980 Oldsmobile. broken out, the hood released and
production-based bonuses·.
The deer was knOCked down, but his car battery s10lcn.
~-.
In a ~ews release, the United got up and ran. Moderate damage
,.{'}
Investigation, according 10
Steelworkers said it did not know was hsted 10 the car.
' " ''- a
Sheriff Soulsby, is continuing iniO
According to Sheriff James ' the matter.
·
sun screen, frisbees, plus lbousands of other· · exactly how much Ravenswood
LARGEST PEACETIME AIRLIFT • In the
(Continued
on
Page
3)
Soulsby,
Chris
N=
of
Pomeroy
Items tlie troops h•ve beea askina for. Joe Drury,
largest peacetillle airlift or gifts, one-half million
'
a
Wendy's division vke )l.resideat, is shown
pounds of presents, collected at Wendy's Reschecking some or the last items packed before
taurants, was sent to Saudi Anbia in operation
the mlift. '
•
Desert Shield. Some or tbe gifts Includes razors,
iMect repellllnt, rootballs, cassette tapes, books,

- Contract
talks set
Jan. 16

.

0

Deer strikes a~tomobile,
causes moderate damage

.

a

·solution. to gulf crisis
still
·
·
._ unsol-ved_ .a.ift_e. _r .4 h._o u.r ·Session

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LOW 01 HIGH lACK

•

Rev. Adolph Golubiewaki
The Rev. Adolph J . Golu·
blewskl, "79, of Sebastian, Fla.,
died Sunday, Jan. 6, 1991.
Born June 12, 1911 In Grand
Rapids, Mich .. he was the son of
the late John and Josephine
Gotubtewskl.
.·
.
Father Golublewskl was the
prtesl of St: Lout's Catholic'
Church from 1950 unUI his
retirement In 1980.
He was ·a graduate of St.
Joseph High School In Grand
Rapids, Mich. and attended
seminary both there and at ·
Mount ·St. Mary's · Seminary In
Cincinnati, Ohio. He attended the
Grand Semlnalre at Montreal,
Canada and was ordained In
June, 1949 at Steubenville, Ohio. ·
· Surviving are three sisters,
Helen Glltnsky of Sanibel Isla'nd,
Fla., Gladys Bergsfi'om of Bur· ·
ton, Micb., and F1orenceSchabof
.Grand Rapids; a brother, Harry
Golublewskl, ·also of Grand '
Rapids.
Father Golublewatl will ·be
taken from Waugb·Halley·WOOII
Funeral Home at •= 30 p.m. on
Tbunday. Friends and former
pa,rlshlonera 8.11! lnvl~ to accompany the body or to partie!·
. pat,e In the welcome at St. Loula
CathoUc Church.
;
Friends may call a 1 the church

•CLOSEOUT ON ALL
SIMMONS MAnRESS
AND BOX SPRINGS.
•OCCASIONAL CANE CHAIRS

THE FLOODING -IS OYER!

lARGE

Pit!k-3: 606

sqm

must

- --Area deaths-Dr. William Whitney Dl

I.ancer8
defeat

--Meigs allDoWtcements......,...-

'unked

Ohio ~ttery

'

. GENEVA (UPl) -Secretary levelof!lclalsofthetwocountrles situation In the whole of the
of State James Baker and Iraq's slrice Iraq's Aug. 2 Invasion of . region, · If there Is a . sincere
Intention make peace In the
Foreign Mlrilster Tariq Azlz met Kuwait that sJiarked the crisis.
Middle
East.
,
fpr morethanfourhoursWednes·
Security was tight around the
"We
are
ready
to
ne!(otlate,
"
, day , bu t there were no clear signs Geneva Intercontinental · Hotel,
that the meeting would prompt a where both men were staying. the Iraqi rorelgn minister said,
diplomatic solution to the Per· U.S., Swiss and Iraqi security "but If we go on hearing the same
sian Gulf crisis.
,
teams used metal detectors and kind of talk that has been
The two men sat down for talks dogs to check those who had the repeated tn the last few months·,
at 11 a.m: local time (5 a.m. f:ST) official passes needed to enter. · then we are going to give the
.
,
B!Jker . and Azlz were each proper answer.' ;
after firs t posing fQr photograptiers. They broke for lunch · · accompanied by seven staff , _:Baker said he wi.U use the
at 1:} 6 p.m. and res-umed at 2:28 members plus and .Interpreter meeitng ·as an opportunity to
. ·p.m: The second round broke up · ;ilid were seated other at 'a ·make It cle'ar to Iraq that the
.at 4:53 p.m. with no word on rectangularconferencetablelna International coalition aligned
whether they would resume.
medium-siZe meeting room on against Iraq would accept no·
During the June h ·recess 'Baker the•hotel's ground floor.
' thing shor.t Qf an unconditional
called Bush at the White House to .. · On his arrtval Tuesday In lraql wlthdra'wal!roin Kuwait by ·
· give " his description of events, " Geneva, Azlz Indicated that he the U.N.·mandated deadline of
presidential spokesman Marlin was determined to seek In link Jan. 15.
Baker iatd he would emphas·
Fitzwater said., The talks wer~ the Persian Gulf crisis with an
lze
to Azlz that " we really mean
"substantive," Fitzwater said. overall Middle East peace lnltla·
bUsiness.'"
Baker said Monday In
but he declined to characterize live and that the Bush admlnlll·
London
that
he will give Azlz a
tratlon's stand would not "bring
'the atmosphere.
·
strongly
worded
letter from
Baker, who.c alled the meeting about any positive results.''
President
Bush
to
be
forwarded
at a Geneva hotel "the last best
"Iraq has made Its position
to
Saddam
outlining
the U.N.
chance for peace," and Azlz cle11r from the very ~ginning.
arrived Tuesday pushing differ· We clo not yield to pressure," A:tlz · position of unconditional with·
ent agendas for the first head' to· said. "Iraq Is open to a genuine drawl and the res.toratlon of the
nead discussions between top- exchange· of views about the exiled Kuwaiti government .

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Finding for recovery of $27,566
made against.26 _welfare recipients

which names appeared .on bolh Meigs Coonty Prosecutor SlEven ·
lists.
.
Story.
.
.
. Ca~·by·casc audits of lhe "hits",
Fergusqn created the Ohio Task
Meigs County Welfare Depanmem, . using welfare and employment Force .QD Welfare fraud in 1989·
according to a report from the · records, allow assistaqt auditors 10 with the purpose of developing
of6ce of Slate Auditor Thomas E. determine which cases involved uniform investigative JCChnique~
fraud , and the amount. · ·
Ferguson.
,
designed specifically for welfare ·
The Meigs County Dcparunern fraud inv~gation, promote mutual
According to the report ·the
findiilg was made as the result ,pf of Human Services has been ad· . cooperation and provide technical
· the first ~omputer cross-check audit vised of the audit rcpons and as has assistance in each county.
·
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of county welfare roDs and slate in·
come laX data.
•
Ferguson's program of computer
matching state income tax data
with co!Dity welfare rolls was
authorized by passage of House
. Bill 242 by the Ohio G.eneraJ As·
sembly in 1986. The law ~ ef·
Election of officers was held ~llry. repons that some enterfeet -ill 1987 and Ferguso!) s.office
recently
by the Meigs County Fair ta!lliOcnt for the .1991 Meigs
immediately !!egan the· process of ·
determining which recipieniS . ~ Board and officers for 1990 will be County Fair, which will be held
received A.D.C. or Medicaid retained for 1991. They are Bill Aug. ,12·17, has been scheduled.
·benefits to which they were not en· Radford, president; Ben Slawter, Entertainment includes: "The
vice . president; Barbara . fry, · Vogueia." a SO's and 60's musical
iitled.
.
Assistant a~ditors obfa!ned com· treasurer; and Mary Gilmore, group, and "The Hollanders," a
group which plays a variety of
puter tapes fro~ the Oh•!&gt; _Depart· ' secrewy.
Aaending · · lbe Ohio Farm mlllical~electlona.
ment of Taxauon· con!ammg the
Mn. Gilmore ~ lbit a new
names and,social sec urity numbers Managm Convention·in Col.umbus
of persons who- filed state income Jan. l-5 were C.W. and Thelma demolition derby will al8o be hold
HencfcriOn .. Laurie Rood, Dan and . this Ye.' IIIII poaibly a IIIOIOICIOI!Ii
laX return's. Computer tapes ob·
tained from the various ·county Donna Jean Smith, Bill 8J1d Louise competition as well u 10111e other
Department of Hum3!1 1.Services Bradford, Ed Holter, and Roger and . new ideas wbich are prmmJy
being investigated.
offices were then matc!Jt1.(1 against ~ Gilmore.
·
M
m.1
Gilmore,
fair
bOard
the incol)'lc tax data to detennine
A finding\. for recovery of

~;~::asor~"~:~e~~:t~~

Radford narne.I head
of ~eigs Fair Board

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Commentary
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Oblo
DEVOTED TO THE INTEBEIITS OJI' THE MEIGS·MASON AREA
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.f!i!mil:! ................................. c::~ •.,.

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ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

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CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Geoeral Mana~er

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PAT WHI1'E8EAD

Aaal.aaal Publlllber/ COntroller

A MEMBER o! The United Press Internattonai, Inland Datly Press
· Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
'· words long. AU letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
name, 'address and telephone number. No unsigned letters wlll be pub- .
,, Ushed. Letters should be In good Ialiie, addressing Issues, not personall·
.·' ,ties.

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Congress incapable
of finishing .session

WASIDNGTON - Zoe Roberts
worked as a checker for the Har·
!liOn's vartety store chain In
Utah for some nine years. Our·
lng most of that time she did as
· marly of the other 900 Harmon's
employees did -socked away at
least 2 percent of her salary In a
profit sharing pension plan set up
by the company.
Harmon's side of the deal was
to match the 2 percent-contributions and Invest the money wise·
ly so It could be paid out ~or
retirement benefits.
When Roberts decided to quit
her Job In 1988, she was convinced that nine years at savings ·
had accumulated Into a pretty
healthy nest egg for her. ·aut she
was wrong,
R«ilM!rts .tried to collect , her
· money and says she was given
the runaround. Eventually she
found out why. The pension plan
had lost millions, of dollars. Now
Roberts and seven other Harmon's employee!! are taking the
only route a vallable~ to them to
bring the pension plan trustees to
account for what the eight em·

ployees say was their personal according to an audit. The Labor more, told our assQCiate Oean
loss of $250,000. They are suing. Investigators found that the Boyd that the Labor Depart·
The feileral government won't trustees of the plan were loaning ment's action was a "slap on the
.solve t~lr'prob.Jem , even though · money to a Harmon family bus I· wrist.'' But a source who worltled
the Labor · Department Inves- ness, according to a complaint on the settlement said the cle·
partment had little choice.
tigated after the .frtct and found 'flied by the Labor Department
"There wasn 'I a deep enough
Gut that the fund managers had
against -the plan trustees.
packet for every ope to come out ,
· made mUlllms of dollars In loans · , According to the complaint,
·
to a Harmon's family bustness. the business, Midwest Realty whole."
There are hundreds at cases
And because the Labor Depart- ·and Investment Co., put some of
ment has only 300 regulators to
the money Into high· risk real es· like this one. Given the mild penpollee nearly 900,000 pension
tate de~ls , oil and even ·rare . altles , It Is easy to see why. In
most cases, trustees who ·misgems.
·
.
plans around the country, · the
manage a plan are ordered to put
losses In the Harmon•s· pension
the plan trustees said they
were victims' of a slow market some. money back ln. ADd aome·
fund were not even noticed until
It was too late.
and bad Investment advice, but · times a trustee Is removed.
Karen Ferguson, wllo heads
claim they did nothing wr.ong. A
What happenea to Zoe Roberts
the
Pension Rights Center In
could happen to anyone pu ttlng lawyer for oneofthe trustees told
Washington,
says that the Har·
us that all of the employees
money Into a private pension
mon's
employees
got more than
"have been treated fairly." 1he
plan and trusting that the money
most.
They
were
~
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lucky that the ·
\VIII be well taken care .o f. Eni·
lawsuit Is awaiting trail In Utah.
Labor
Department
even checked
ployee benefit plan~ make up · · . 'When ihe Labor Department
It out at all."
one-third of America's Invest- finished Its Investigation, It ordCOSTLY VICTORY- The lat-.
ered the trustees removed and
ment capital - $2 trillion - and
est top,secret war gaming by tbe
no one Is minding the store.
ordered Harmon's to put $C mil·
Pentagon shows a decisive win
lion back In the pension fund. The
When Harmon's employees
for the United States against .
complained to the Labor Depart- company complied.
Iraq, but at the costotthousands
But many employees still exment, government Investigators
of casualties. Iraq's vaunted milwent to Utah and found that the
pect they won't get back half of
lion-man army has only about
pension plan wasloslngmoneywhat they put In over the years.
200,000 to 300,000 effeCtive front- ·
nearly $2 million In 1987 alone , Robert's lawyer, Susan DalU·
line troops. A shortage of inlll·
tary spare parts will also ham!)er Iraq's effectiveness. That Is
why Pentagon plannrs don't con·
slder Iraq to be the ultra-formidable power that It claims to be.
That Is also why Saddam Hussetri, In desperation, may turn to
chemical and biological.weapons
to compensate for what he lacks
In solillers and equipment.
MINI-EDITORIAL - Saddam
Hussein has not given the slight·
est blnt that he wUI abandon Ku·
walt. In several private co;mversatlons with • Arab leaders which were reported to Washington - Saddam bas boasted that
he Is "living extra years" . By
that he apparently means he has
already cheated death. He bas
survlveri dozens of assassination
plots and power struggles, not to
mention an eight-year war with
Iran. In other words, he has noth·
lng to lose by. making a life-ordeath stand against the United
States. President Bush must use
the one thing that Saddam fears
more than death - being left
powerless and wlthou t respect In
the Arab world.

By STEVE GERSTEL
United Press International
• WASHINGTON - It Is well established beyond any doubt that
~ngress Is Incapable of finishing a session.
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Year
after
year,
the
target
date
for
leaving
the
scene
Is
mls.'!f!d
by
1
weeks and the exodus occurs In the middle of tbe night. .
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. : :aut the Senate and House have been a great deal more adept at
·· ~ginning-a new CQngress, perhaps because the Constitution requires
tl!at they convene at noon on Jan. 3.
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: Even so, the nation's lawmakers are mastersorthedawdle, usually
Jurnlng most of January Into the first of the year's vacations, thereby
very smoothly extending the final recess of the previous session.
• "The reason given Is that Congress should not be so brash as to do any
~ork before the president gives the State of the Union address, that
usually Is a dreamy, or sometimes dreary, assessmentoftheshapeof
lht! nation.
·
•'. Now the Senate, In years past, has broken this tradition; but only
over efforts to ease the ending of a f!Ubuster, a deadl.\:.,weapon that
!vas "stopping civil rights legislation.
·
1 This year, hOwever, Is different, very different as Congress PO!lders
possibility of a war In the Persian Gulf.
::.To meet this extraordinary circumstance, Spea~er 'l'homas Foley .
arid Senate Democratic leader George Mitchell agreed to cancel the
recess and keep the lawmakers on a short leash If they have to be
tailed Into ·session.
.
.
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, In the case of the Senate, Mitchell informed his copeagues on the
Jast day of November that he would seek unanimous consent for no- "
" !ness sessions every other day and then find the appropriate time "
a full-scale debate on the Persian Gulf situation and vote on some
·
..
of ~solution.
' -Foley and Mitchell are on record, frequently, that President Bush
cannot launch a military offensive against Iraq. They have the solid
backing of almost all Democrats and probably mavy Republicans,
though It Is not a thOught shared by the president.
·
•
,. Democrats split among t,hemselves on other aspec!s of the Persian
•
If crisis, Some, Ilk~ Sen. Edward Kennedy, D·Mass., wapt to ·let
nctions and diplomacy run a full year. . · .
.
C.....,...ta_
·,.,.....,erw__;
. _e
1 ::rhe consensus appears t~ be that too much talk, or any action, could
~
on1y detract ftom Baker's efforts. But at least two senators, Thomas ·
- · rkln, 0-Iowa, and Brock Adams, 0-Wash., refused to walt.
approved a 5 cents per-barrel fee gross negligence.
Nearly two years ago, the
mechanism to diminish the reocAnd after some four hours of what Sen. Alan Dixon, 0·111., cal~ . Exxon Valdez grounded In AlasIn 1989.
·
· While the ·Intent of double·
curence of the $2 billion accident.
rgulng," Mitchell agreed to let Harkin and 'Adams tillk about their
hulling
Fee
collections
began
one
year
Is certainly understanda·
ka's Prince William Sound, ' In summary, this Act provides
.rfsolutlon - barring offensive action without congressional
ago.
The
specifics
of
how
to
ble, compliance with these regu'
for a prompt response to spills,
dumplngU million gallons of oil,
!aPproval, but permlting no vote before Baker's return.
allocate money from the fund lations will be costly for a
damaging marine life·and setting · specifies the use or a $l billion
:;enate Republlcari leader Robert Dole, who Idled while the
off a heated debate Involving the
clean-up fund and requires . were spelled out In the 011 domestic maritime Industry
mocrats met, said: "We' re all nllxed up. When we should have
Pollution Act of 1990, and Include which Is already suffering the
environmental and economic . stiffer rules and standards for
n debating, we we~~ on vacation, and now when we should be
assistance for spill cleanups and
blows of a decline In ' business,
consequences of the accident. It
tanker crews, operations and
et · we want to talk.
... .
stiff foreign competition and
. for other spUI-related matters
design.
was the worst tanker spill In U.S.
.._~~ lust for activity also Infected the House 'where members
shipping history and Its repercusActually, the Act's legislative such as research and damage to sluggish American shipbuilding.
\ifeet~ each other with great delight and then promptly returned to
natural resources and the econNo one wants to see a repeat of
sions led to corporate reexamlnaroots reach back to the 1970s
il:"tr normal partisan warfare.
.
.
the Exxon Valdez oil spUI.
. lion of operations, a resurgence
when Congress directed the omy of the affected area. Perf'"Democrats, reminding the Republicans of their superior numbers,
haps as .a reflection of the risks
of environmental concern and
Congress has been ~orough and
Justice Department to study
f\.~ted 242,160 to ch;mge a key procedural provision In last year's
associated with transporting oil
thoughtful In the e ctment of
the enactment of4he01l Pollution
International regulations relatlb11dget agreement.
legislation to prev t vessel
at sea, federal statutory liability
Act of 1990 last fall.
· • . lng to on spllls,llablllty and clean
~- ;The new rule strips the Office of Management of Budget of the
for pollution Incidents has al- spUls and provide the means for
The final report of the governup costs. · The Department's
~wer to decide whether certain tax and spending measures violate· ment's National , Transportation study was released In 1975.
ways been limited.
adequate compensation. The 011
lb~dget targets. That power was transferred to th.e Congressional Safety Board apportioned culpa:
Thus
the
Acr
ltmlts
liability
for
Pollution 'Act of 1990, COJ1pled
A subsequent series of foreign
r~dget Office and Congress's Joint Committee on taxation.
most
tankkers
to
$1200
per
gross
.
with the oil-Industry's clean-up
blllty for the Valdez spUI among
tanke~ spills prompted Congress
ton,
less
.
for
smaller
vessels
fund, Is In place and deserves
.many elements, Including the
to enact legislations on tanker
(Including
barges)
;
$75
million
ample opportunity to take full
crew, vessel owner and the
safety and , also, to adopt Internar •
. .
effect.
Any spill the magnitude of
for
Outer
Continental
Shelf
fliclll·
government. An extensive Contionally coordinated guidelines
~ ; A thought for the day: Three years after leaving office, former
ties
and
up
to
$350
million
for
the Valdez accident Is one too
on tanker design and operations.
gressional Investigation Into the
~ f!resldent NixOn told Interviewer David Frost, "When the President
many.
other facilities. Uncler the Act,
o!the
1990
rW:Intaln
the
Important
oil
spill
led
to
the
adoption
To
~does It, that means that It Is not Illegal."
llabUity Is unlimited In cases of
sptll l'ecovery fund, Congress
oil pollution control measure as a
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Is customer service getting worse ·

~,. Berry s .World

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Robert Walters

WASHINGTON (NEA) - In offered to customers of firms
can Telephone &amp; ~elegraph Co.
.
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· -------:Wis(!9nsln, a respected catalog large and small Is deteriorating
generously offered members of
sales firm disappoints thousands even as the nation's economy
the armed forces participating In plalned an embarrassed AT&amp;T
of customers by falling to ship becomes Increasingly oriented
Operation Desert Shield a week- official. "There's no way we' re
their Chl'lstmas orders on time,
toward servl~e rather than rna·
long ,o pportunity to ma!te free going . to charge people for our ·
mistake. It's as If It never ·
·Intl!llded recipients of holiday · nufacturlng functions. Some re· · calls to their friends and families
happened."
..
: In this country.
gUts get humorous' but not cent examples:
The
·company's
generosity
Is
especially satisfying holiday
-Lands' End ·of Dodgeville,
· AT&amp;T renewed theofferlnlate
appreciated. But j!ven whl!n a
greeting cards that claim "Santa Wis., long a leader In the direct
November and pledged to pay all
gift Is being offered, consumers
~t stuck In the chimney ."
marketing Industry, suffered fl. . the costs associated with the
find
It difficult to act "as If It
In Oregon, another highly
nanclally throughout much of 130,000 to 140,000 calls placed In
never
hapi&gt;eneci" If they are
r'garded direct marketing com• 1990 because of stale catalog the Middle East during each' of
victimized by the mistakes of .
pany discovers tliat a new offerings. In early autumri, how- the two weeks. In the weeks
companies that claim to provide
computer system has thoroughly
ever, It expanded Its line of before Christmas, however, a
first-rate service.
mangled .Its records. Even -after · merchandise - and found Itself botched computer program proExplanations and apologies for
Christmas, It cannot determine
unabletomeetcustomerdemand duced charges on the home
~habby treatment never will be
whether It ever shipped orders
for the new products In the year's telephone biiis of many people
an . . acceptable substitute for
reCeived more than two months . closing months.
who received the calls.
doing It right the first Ume.
""
before the hOliday.
Inventory shortages · led to . "Nobody has to pay," exIn New York, the nation's
unlllled orders, lost sales and
largest telecommunications
unexpected expenses required to ·
company promiSes members ~f handle late shipments. "It's be!ln
the armed serviCes dispatched to
one of those years," explained
the Middle East that they can . one exasperated employee.
place free calls to their families ·
A company executlv~ acknowl-.
.. . .
By United Preas International
.·
. and friends back home. In the edged that . "unanticipated
Today Is Wednesday, Jan. 9, the ninth day of1991 with 356 to follow .
weeks prior to Christmas, how- orilers•·•- posed a probtem · for
The moon Is waning, moving toward Its new phase.
ever, the firm mlltakenly bills. Lands' End In the weeks and
The morning stars are Mercury and. Mars.
months prior to Christmas -but
those who were called. ·
The evening stars are Venus and Jupiter. .;
At a time when management refused to disclose how many
Those born on this date are under the sign of Capricorn. They
consultants and corp()rateexecu· gifts had not been shipped In time
Include wom11n 's suffrage and peace movement leader Carrie
\lves are stressing •· that the
for the holidays.
Chapman Catt In 1859; pioneer psychologist John Watson In 1878;
quality of service provided to ·
What Is known Is that thouchoreographer George Balanchlne In 1904; French novelist Simone
consumers could be crucial to · sands of people who were supde Beauvolr In 1908; Rlcllard Nixon, 37th president of the United
posed to receive clothing and
business success In the 1990s, the
States, In 1913 (age 78) ; striptease, ~r~tGypsy Rose Lee In 1914;
other Items had to settle Instead
experience of tbe recently con·
actor Lee Van Cieef In 1925 (age 66~wger Joan Baez and actress
Susannah York, both In 1941 (age 50) ; and country singer Cryslal
cludlld holiday seuon suggetts for cards that said, "Santa got
· that the chasm between rhetoric
stuck In the cbtmney so the gift
Gayle In 1951 (age 40). --;- .
and reality may be wider than
I've chosen for you from lAnds'
· On this day In history:
ever.
·
End . .. will . be arriVIng a bit · In 1861, Mississippi seceded from the Union.
In 1945_,.In World War II, American troops Invaded the Phlllpplne
Indeed, there are disturbing late/' •
Island of Luzon and went on to liberate Manila. . ·
· .·
signs that the level ot service
- In mid-October, the Amerl-

Today in history

1 1990 Dy NEA InC

/A

AL-iTTLE. HARMLESS DIVERSION
FOR THE TAXPAYERS

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V~lley

Supermarkets ~.o :~sponsor Thursday's URG -tilt·

Ohio

Page-2-The Deily Sa illuel
Poma-oy-·Midd'aport. Ohio .
Wadnelday. Jan...-y 9, 1991

"'t

Bad invesbnents c08dy-,-----'---J-ac_k_Ande_rso____· n_

The Daily Sentinel

The

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The five Foodland stores operated by Ohio Valley Super.markets, Gallipolis, will sponsor
the 'l'llursday, Jan. 10 game
between the men's basketball
teams of the Unlverlsty of Rio
Grande and Mo\jnt Vernon Naza- ·
rene College. Game time Is 7:30
p.m ."
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Free ticke ts lor the game are

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ava ilable·at the Foodland outlets
In GaiUpolls, Pomeroy, Welis ton ,
Point Pleasant. W.Va. a nd Ri ·
pley, W.Va. Holders ofthetl~kets
wlli be eligible for the 90-second
shopping spree, with the winner
to be announced at the halftime.
In addition. t ickets will also be
good for bags of groceries, and
the Cash Scramble will be held .
A donation by the stores '

owners. Bob and SheBa Eas t-:
man, has been placed wi th the•
Rio Grande Athletic Boos terS:
organiza tion a nd w111 ena ble the' ·
University to seek out and recruit
leading scholar·a thletes.
" Our hat s go oft to Food land:
for the suppOrt they shqw for the:
University and its athletic pro-•
grams," Athle tic Director Tom:
. Perdue' commented. " A strong
·athleti c program Is. onP tha t
draws the he lp and guidance of
i.u~
continued from page 1
"'0~
· · · - - - - - - people from lhP community it.
serves, and RloGrande'ssuccess'
In addition the ucasun:r was
per, Dec. 11-14, and to Denise Wil·
can
be attribute to th e backing o{
Iiams for one day during tbe llood· authorized to secure advances from . people like Bob . and Sheila
1ing of the Ohio River.
the auditor when funds are avail·
Eastman."
~;- :
able
and payable to the school dis·
Shelly Dubose was employed as
Redmen
Coach
J
ohn
.Lawhorn
'
an elementary substitute teacher for trict,·and 10 invest in,active funds at
noted that Foodland has been a ·
the most productive rates whenever
the remainder of tbe school year.
long and loyal suppor ter of his
During the meeting tb.c board inactive funds are available.
FOODIAND TO sPoNIO~ GAME - Eaa.ipoint pard Gary Harrllon and Eut·
program and other Rio Grande:
The S!lperintcndent or his desigalso en~ into a purchased ser·
man' 1 FocidlaDd owner Soli Eastman, second
man's wife Shena look on..Foodland wlllap611110r
sports.
· ·
vices contl'tlet '!Vith the Blue Streak nee was designat¢ as the agent or
from rtcht, ·preMnta a' doaatlon to the Unlvenlty . Thut.dll)''• came between Rio Grande and Molint
" Over the years , FQ()dland's
Cab Company to transport students the Boai'd of Education to apply support
of Rio Grande Athletic Roosters Clnb to men'•
Vernon Nuarerie Collece, which feature. a
has been an e ncourageto the SBH (seven: behavior han' for, receive, expend·and account for
basketball
coach John Lawhorn,
halftime promotion.
.
. as- senior
ment for our University to strl~
dicapped) class at 1..e111rt Falls. Tbe federal funds. Membership in the
to succetd," he said. " lts contlfl·
coiltrsct was for a period of time Ohio School Boards Association · ulng sponsorship of our games Is
ovu the past several months when for 199) was aiso approved. , ..
very much appreciated."
Attending both the organizatbe cab company transponed the
Betty Bonice, Middleport, cited were· WIIYJIC Salla, Letart, W. Va.,
students. They
currently being tiOnal and regular mooting of tbe
on a speedfns charge, wu required $63 sauealina lin:s; Diana Davis,
taken
to
Letart
Falls
by school bus. Meigs B01rd were members, Jeff
1
The Daily Sentinel .
to pay court costs only when she New ilaven,-$46, speeding; John . an
The board entered Into purchased Werry, Bob Snowden, Larry Rupe,
appeared in tbe coun .of Pomeroy Arnold. Pomtlfl)y. S63. expired ~services conttacts wilh two Richard Vaughan, and Bob Barton,
(Ill" ...... )
Mayor Richard .Seyler Tuesday n:gisblltion, ancl Kimberly Fife,
teachers, &lt;lonnie Gilkey and Deb- Supt James Carpenter, and
A
Dtvloloo ollllodtlmlllta, le.
Middleport
Mayor
Fred
Hoff.
night.
'
Pomeroy, $43, assured clear dis·
bie McGIIire, to provide tutoring Treasurer Janc Fry.
man stated today,' that e~eatlve for bomebound students.
Forfeiting bonds · in · the coon tance.
Pul1111~.,. ·~•ry aftern.O., Monday
thrOUJh l"rklay, Ill Court St., Po·
January 11, 1991, ·the charee for ' Wllile bids Ill! telephoneS were
mori&gt;y, Oblo, by the Ohio Valley Pubtaxi 'tokens· will be Increased . received, die bo8rd postpOned ac·
llihtna Co~pany!Multtmf.ldla, Ine.,
The charge for Elderly and Han- lion until the next meeting. Also
Pomeroy, Ohio f57e!l, fh . 992·21!!41. s.·(Continued from Page!)
.
cpnd cla11 poataaeo Paid at Po:Mroy,
dicapped tokens (blue) will now tabled until the job description· is
•
Ohio.
· Si:it people were fined in tbe aDd $25 and Costs, · fRA suSpen· be sbcty cel)ts and the charge for prepared and the salary set was Alumnlnum owes the workers.
Ravenswood Alumln11m offl·
· Member: United Press Inlomatlonal:
coun of Middleport Mayor's Coon . sian; Ricky E. W'JSe, Middleport, General Public. tokens (red) will emplormcnt of a junior high ath·
clals could not be reached
Inlancl DallyPr"" A•oolallon and tlw
$10 fine only, expired tap; Sharon be $1.20.
on Tuesday nighL
letic din:c10r.
Tuesdav
night
for
comment
on
Ohio
Nowspa_por Auoolatlon. National
Hoffman stated that thlals the
Fined wen:: E1met ·Blair. Mid· L. Ward, Rudlnd, $10 and costs,
"
Adwrtlaln&amp; !WpreHntatlvt, Branham
Orpnlzallonal Meeting
the
lawsuit,
the
article
stated.
·
Now1P•110r
Sal ... 733 Third Aveaue;
dleport, $2S and costs on one e~ired license; Donnie Stone, first Increase In price since the
Officers wen: elected in an orIn
a
news
release
to
the
N..,.
York,
New
Yo11110017.
.
charge of disorderly conduct and Middleport, $25 and costs, disor- public transportation . system pnizational
meeting
which
Gallipolis
Dally
Tribune
Wednes-__
PQin'MASTER;
Sffll
oddreu
cba
....
$15 and costs on a second charge; derly nwmcr; Mike Pierce, Mid· was Initiated In 1985. Since Its be· ~~ the n:gu..-meeuna or the
day, RAC .s tated that West
to The Dolly Sentinel. Ill COurt St.,
Vickie L. Hill, Middleport, $425 dlepon, $2.5 and COSIS, ac:cumula· ginning, the cost of operation has
Vlrglnja
residents
were
bearing
•
POmoroy, Ohio t5769.
·
gradually Increased
and the
and costs, lhree days in jail, DWI, lion of ll'IISh and garbage.
Bob Barton was re-elected pn:si·
SVII8CR!PTION RATES
·amount of state and federal dent and Lany Rupe vice president. the burden of unemployment.
,
By Curter or M,.or Boule
grants available-for this service After movinl! into executive ses· · com,p ensatlon.
"The company· today est!·
OneWeek .............. ,.., .......... ....... ll.fO
has decreased. This has resulted . sion for a penod of 30 minutes, the
· One Monlh .......................... ., .-....16.10
One Year ................................ 112.110
In 'a n Increase ln the local funds board 1\'Cnt baCk into open meeting mated that the strike by Local
5668
of
the
USWA
to
date
had
cost
SINGLE COPY
Jim
Coulson
of
Glendale,
Ariz.,
are
needed
,for
the
oper11·
which
· and hired Jane Fry as ·treasurer for
Virginia Wears
thestateofWestVIrglnlaapproxPIIICE
.,
and Paui aM Roger Couslori of tlon of this system.
· the district on a four yea: contract · lmately $3 million In unemploye25 Cen: ~
Dally
.....................
:
.............
The ' vUlage contracts with. the 81 an annual salary of $28,589.02.
· Virginia Wears, SI of West Columbus: two daughters, Marie
Subscrlbersnol~j~~;~~.~~~~~
Blue
Streak Cab Co. to provide
Bishop
of
Wauseon
and
Sheila
Columbia died Mondsy, . Jan. 7,
rter may
.Regular meetings wero set for ment compensation costs," the
release
said.
"The
company,
TheDally~"-''!~"!.
Whaley
of
Shade;
22
grandchild·
public
transportation
In
the
Mid·
1991, at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
· the second and founh Tuesdays of
basls.cr ... u
""''""''urnor
Born July 12, 1939, in West ren; and 11 great•grandchlldren. dlepott-Pome!'Qy area and reh1't· each inontb at 7 p.m. in tbe board while a contributor to the fund
along
with
nther
West
VIrginia
week.
One daughter, Mary Coulson burse the cab company on a per to- moeting. A aervice fund of $500
Columbia, she was a daiighter of ·
employen, does not pay out
No subo&lt;rlpllono· by mall pmnutet~
the lar.e Suaud and Vina Marie and two brothl!rs preceded her In · ken balls. "nle local cbst of this was approved for the board.
· nemployeement com pen sa lion
arMs
whOI't' h&lt;lmo carrlt'r 10rv1ce II
U
1
death.
·
(Lewis) McDermill
program In 1991 will be approxl·
available.
The tn:asurer was authorized 10
benet!
ts.
"
Funeral ·services will be con- rnately $12.~. The Meigs County pay all bills as they are presented.
_ oA member of the Failh Baptist
Mllllltoloo&lt;rtpl. Cburi:h of Mason, she fonnerly ducted 1 p.m. Saturday at commissiOners have contributed provided that
Ucense
granted
• 1-e Metp C..oly
an:
available,
worked at Mr. Domii 1 in Point Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral $3500 per year for the past 5!!Veral and to report monlhly 10 the board
A marriage ·license· has been
13
26 Weeks
Wee-ks ...............................
....... .. ......... ..... .... ..: :::. .: ~::al
PleaSillu., and had mOSI m:ently Home. Burlat will be In Mt. Zion years to assist wtth the financing those biDs that n paid. The pui. granted 'lb Meigs County Probate
52 Weeks ., ................ ....... ....... .
been employed at ll!e Lafayette cemetery, Gr~n Township.
of this systenl with the vUlap of chase of bonds for the troaslin:l' for Court 10 William Joseph Reiunire,
O.tlldo Melp CMIIIr
13 WetkS ... .... .. ........... .. ... .... .
Friends may call at the funeral
Balcery and Deli in Gallipolis.
Middleport being responsible for four years, the superintendent and
Jr., 23, Syracuse, and Yvonne Jean
2t \o'.''"@kS .................... . ..... ... .
Survivors include her husband, home on Friday from 6 to 9 p.m. the payment of the ballinceofS8500 the board president was authoriwt..
52 Wee"
Edwards,
22,
also
of
Syracuse.
.
Paul; two dallghlei'S and sons-in- Meigs announcements
of the local share.
law, Nancy D. and Charles Thomas
Hoffman stated that thr Blue
Fields of New Havt'n, Joan A. and
Free dotblnl day
Streak Cab Co: has provided a
The Gallia Meigs C.ommunily much needed public transporta·
Cecil R. Lyons of West CoiiJIIIbia;
a son, Danny . T. Wears of West ActiOn Agency will hold a free tion system for the area · durlnr
Columbia; one sister, Mrs. Worthy clothing day Friday from 9 a.m. to the past five years and over
L. (Marjorie L.) Rogers of Hend~· noon at the old high school build: 68,000 rliles were provided In 1990 .
son; two brothers, Robert F. Me· ing iJ) Cheshire.
· with the lar'e m~Jorlty of the ridDcnnitt of Mason, Claud : T. Me·
ers being elderly and handiDcnnitt of West Columbia; live
capped.
to meet
grandchildren; and several nieces
The regular meeting of Shade
and nephews.
River Lodge No. 453 F and AM
A graveside service will be held will be held Thursday at 7:30p.m.
Friday at I p.m. at the Kirkland Refreshments will be held. Annual
· M~morial Gardens. Rev. Jeny Scott inspection plans will ~ «!i&amp;Cussed.
will officiate.
.
All msster masons an: UIVIted 10 at·
Friends may call at the tend.
·Ten
·for assisWnc:e were
Foglesong Funeral Home on
Country music nlgbt
·. answered by units of Meigs Coqnly
ThW'Sday from 2 10 4 p.m. and 7 to . The Lotaidge Community Ccn· Emergency Services on Tuesday.
9 p.m.
ter wiD host Countiy Music Ni,eht
At 10:17 a.m., Syracuse squad
on Saturday. from 6 p.m to mid· went 10 East Mail) Stnet in
Patricia Childers
night. All bands an: welcome. Pomeroy for GeorJia Swauger,
Word haS been received of the Refreshments will be available and who was taken 10 Ve1erans
death of Palricia Childen, SO, of the public is invited 10 attend. The Memorial Hospital. At 12:27 p.m.,
-lUI
PIICI ..
Point ~1. W.Va., who died on center is located on·Athens Counly ·Ponieroy squad went to Second
December 27, 1990 at CharleSIOO Road 53 five miles. west of StreeL Della Milliron was taken 10
O' Bieness Memorial.
• WEEK ONLY! •
Area Medical Center in Clw'leston, Coolville.
.
Financial
aid
workshop
At
12:53
p.m.,
Racine
squad
.
W.Va.
She was a licensed practical
'I'llen: will be a fi'*ial aid ivent to Haylnan Road for Rb:
nurse at Lakin State Hospital for 20 worlcsbop in the Meigs High Gates, who was talcen to Ho · ·
years.
., .
SchooiLibraryat7~m. onJan.l6. Medical Center. At 2:12p.m, Tup.
the finan pers Plains squad went 10 Number
Funeral arrangements · wen:
Representauves
Road for Ray Smith, who was
hanclled by Wilcoxen Funeral cia! aid and admissions offices of•· . Nine
taken to SL Joseph's -Hopiital. At
Home in Poinl Pleasant. Services the Universlly of Rio Grande will
were held on December 29 at St. be there as well as one 1-esenta· 5:10p.m., Pomeroy squad went to .
State Route 7 for KellliCib Me·
. Joseph's Funeral Home in Mason, live from the sludcni..,..assistant_ Laughlip
who was treated but not
W.Va. Burial was in SL Joseph's
department of Bank One. ·
A 7·36
"'
Tbe workshop is open to seniors tran
t. • P·~·· romeroy ·
Cemetezy in Mason.
and their ,.,.011 from all Meigs sq
went to PCIIIl0'0 Stnet for
.
'
..-Carolyn West. Welt Will taken to
.
~hy M. Coul8on
County Schools.
Veterans. At 8:09 p.m., Pomeroy

Me.

board'

Bedmn

.

Cost of taxi ·
tokenS will
up Fn·day

__ Pomeroy Court news

are

C()ntl·act•••

--Middleport'Court
news..

--Area.deaths---

f-

Loclae

EMS ·r esponds

to 10 calls

BRING A FRIEND
MIXED SIZES
OVER 159 PAIRS
WOMEN'S

calls

SALE ROOM

ALL ATHLETIC SHOES
IN SALE ROOM

lll
1: OFF

SHOES and BOOTS
S15 012 PAIIS$25

:r='

.

Dorothy Mar Coulson, 76, for·
merly of Ga111polls, dled.Wednes· .
day, Jan.' 9, 1~9lln Columbus.
She was a homemaker ·and
attended the Assembly of God
Church.
She was born Feb. 2, 1914 In
Circleville, daughter of the late
Charles William and Frances
· Duncan Eads.
She was preceded In death by
her husband, Oscar Matthew
Coulson on Nov. 12, 1986, whom
she married.Feb. 6, 193f.
Surviving are five 1ons, Robert
Coulson of GallipOlis, Kenny
Coulson of Warner·Robblns, Ga .•

~.A.

~tror ~~ ~~

.
•eet1n1 · ·
·
. There. wil! be a new A.A. meet· treated but not lnlnspol'led. At 9:07
mg swung m Pomeroy on Sun!'By p.m.,. Pomeroy squad went to
. from 7·8 p.m. ~ workshop .IS a Pomeroy Pike ror Christy Fury
. 12-DstebepheiA.Ad.at~ff~:S=ft , who, wei!l '19 ' Vetei'IIIL At ll::z8
WI
·
p.m Middleport squad went to
in Pomeroy 81 the J.T.P.A. office,
Page Street r.or Io Alln Keys. who
I
.
.JiBS taken to Vctttaas, and later tO
Valley HOipitaJ. At 1~:49
Veterau MeiucNIII HCJIIIItal
p.m., Middleport
went 10
1UESDAY ADMISSIONS
~
~
who
Georgia
PanCIIIJY, and
Cornelius Phillfps, Rutlud.

Hospital news

...,..easan,

swauaer.

=

ALL CONNIE ·

. ALL DEXRI·

SHOES &amp;
.DRESS BOOT$.

MEN'S AIID WOMEN'S
SHOES
0/
BIIIUI
. /0 OFF PIICI

. 30°/o OFF

20

11GILAI

PIICI

. ·nJESDAY D~ES . •
Jamea B. Paanln. David Kennedl
Yonlrcr. Zelpb..SIIWIR; llld Louilll ,
Dora.
•

hrritagt house
~

SHOE PLACB
••

,.

•

...

�1

Ponwoy-Middleport,

..

•

:oJ,

Wedn•day. Jenurt 9, .1 991

Marauders. drop 112413 TV~ ·ciage battle
.

By DAVE HARRIS
scorinJ with 10 first qliii!Cr poiniS,
Sentillel Comspondent
including six from tJwee point
Tracy Bobo, Nat Watson and ~e. Hobo added five poilUs in·
Mickey Cozart oombincd for 72 CIIKiilll a lhn:c poinler, • lhe Linpoints as the Fedmal Hoc:ting Lan- cers were able to IICDie 12 of tlleir
cers used red bot sboo«ing and a 29 points on the leas r1111111 bombl.
in
good • .,...,..;ve defense to defeat :u,.;.,• .was able to stay
the Mei;"Miraudcn 112--83 in Tri- Sirik'iiia distance behind the~
Valley Conf~ action Tuesday of Shllwn Hawley, Jason Wrigbt
evening.
llld Terry McGuire who scored
The Lancers now own a 7-l four points each.
mark in the 'In·Valley Conference
Federal liocking inaelsed the
and 8le tied for sixth pillle in Jhe lead to SS-3S I¥ die half as Mille
. Associated Press state poll released Summerfield and Bolio · scored,
Monday. The Lancers ~~~e tied with seven pointS .each. ·. 'Walson added
w
.
i
•
t b

tnt~~ s~~ ~rl
has not been releBscd yet this year.
.
hiDe

~'!~rtb~~~~ . : :

*

ing 92.5 points a

pme
.

'

C:'od.

aA-

, .....

·

·

:"'~~~an~_,..,..~f

• BLOCKS SHOT- Federat Hocking's Mlke Summerfield (32)
. ; blocka shot by Meip' Jason Wright (13) durlngTuellday nl«ht's
~TVC hardw.ood contest. The Laacers rematned.la first place with a
·11.2-83 victory over MR8.

94.5 points a COIIliCSI afttZ ~fust
10 games. It was lhe fourth time
this year that the Lancen have bit
the celuury madl: defeating Eastein
116-72, Wellston 111·100; llld
Waterford 105·85. ·The I ,anc'ns
have scored over 90 points in·seven
of their 10 B_am~.
.
Federal Hocting jumped out to a
early 29-17 lead at the end of the
lirst _quarter. CoZB11led the Lanca-

fivThe Marauders came out fired uP
in the thirdoct~ and outacored
Federal H . $ . 28·22 to Pllll
within 77--63 heading into .the-Anal
~
. difli-nt tun
'w""
--· ' e8 the
uders
had a chance to cut the
Lancer lead to 12, bui Meip was
\IDSI&gt;Ie II? convert on
offensive
end._ Wnght ~ ~ third quarter
~ng for ~~ With. seven, Hat'· •
nson added SIX, L.I. MilCh five and
HllwleyandVanMeterfoureach.
Bobo and WaiSOII put the scilring.,
mach~ for Federal Hocking into
overdrive in the final period as lhe
Lancers outsc«ed the Marauders
35-20 to post the 29 point YictoJy.
Bobo threw in 10 pomts lUid Wat·

~

.

· son added eiaht more for the Lancen in the Deriod.
Bobo led the ICOrina )lllllde with
27 poinrs, WIIIOII aiJ6ed 24 llld
Cozart 21 · 11, lhey were joined
in double
by Sllllllll«field
with 16. The Llncers hit 41 of 90
from the 8oor far 46 percent (33 of
69 two ~ and ~ight of 21
tJwee pomlel'll) llld 22 ol 3S from.
the llne for 60 percent NO other
Federal Hocting Slalistics were
available .
· Meias placcd five players . in
double ligures with Hatrison lead-

=

~ wa"-rth 20 poinu. Mitch

12, rigbt II and Hawley
McOuire 10 each. The
MaiiUdcn were 3S of 1S (31 of 62
two pointers ud 4 Of 13 from ~
pom
' t
) .__ lhe ftoor ~or 47
~ u.....
"
patent ~ bit i1ine of IS from
ud

CINCINNATI (UPI) - Cincinnati BengaiJ star running back
Jamei ElrooQ aays he Intends to
play In Sunday's playoff 'iame
against the Los Angeles Raiders
despite a' dislocated left thumb.
" Nothing wrong with my
legs/' said Brooks. "I guess I'll
just have ~to outrun tllem."
Brooks, who rushed for 1,004
yards In the regular season.
suffered an open dislOCation of
his lett thumb In hitt Sunday's
Cincinnati wtn over Houston. An
open dislocation means tbe bone .
penetrated the skin.
.
''It (a bone ln. the thumb) came
right through the skin and I put It
back In on the sideline," said
Brooks. "There was blood, but
I'm not a crybaby."
Brooka- was taken from the
sldellnj! to Christ Hospital, where
the · thumb was cleaned and
sUtched. He was kept overnight
at the hospital to guard against
Infection. The tbumb will remain

j •.

.

MEIGS 17 18 28 20-83 ..
FEDERA,L HOCKJNG .29 26 22

35-112 .

.

MEIGS Jason Wright 2-2-1-11,
Shawn Hawley S..().(). 10, Mite Van .
Meter 4-0-0-8, L. J. Mildi 5-6-212, Trevor Harrison 84-4·20, 1M}'

McGuire 5.().().10, Frank Blake 00-2·2, Phil Hovatler 0-1.0.:3, John
Beatlcy 2·1-0-7, Shawn HamCII ().
().().(), Todd Dill ~. TOTALS
.
::: ~ ~
~ 31-4-9-83
FED.
HOCK.
Brad
Bentz
-1-0VanMeter and Mill:l) grabbing nine
2-4,
Mitch
Gillian
()..().().(),
Matt
eacll ud Harrison eight Meigs had
22 twnovers six steals and 10 ~- Harris ().().().(), Mickey Cozart 6-2·
sists
'
· 3·21, Tracy Bobo 6-4-3"27, Indigo
Mlrtinc:1 ~-0-1-7, Richanl Deaver
· ·

reeL :.ip

In the reserve 'contest the Li_ttle
Marauders oui$COred the ·Lancers
22-8 in the second period 10 tum a
17·9 deficit into a 31-2S lead at the
half and Meigs held 011 for a 55-S2

INSIDE PASS- ~-Trace cen!er Craig Rankin (far lett)
coafronla the defen11e offered by Jackson fronlman Brent Jewel
(3t) before paalling to a teammate during Tuetday nlpt's
non-league game on the WUdcats' court, as Wildcat forward Todd
Boodle (%5) and Ironman frontman Willy Woodard (to Bobtlle's
right) look on. Rankin scored eight polnla and grabbed 1.2 rebonnds
. In Trace's 74-412 win.

().()..4-4; Mike Sumlnerfield 5 #
16, N. Watson 8-2·2·24, · Brian
Bennett 1.().().2, Shaon Mollollan
()-()..().0, Randy Shuford 3-0-l: 7,

TOTALS 33·8·22·112

Hannan Trace...

·Hann.an
Trace
hands
Jackson
74-62
loss
.
•

•

By

: UPI tatings
;,

NE W YORK (UPII-TbeUntred

,: Press,,

In~rnauon8.1 .

Board of

' Coaches' Top 25conet~ebasketball
:· r a tings , With first-place vot.M and

, records through Jan. 6 In paren-

• th eses, total points ( baled on l~
,.. pdnta for first piace, 14 for Mcond,
: etc.) aadprevtousweek'sranlr:tne:

, Tea.n ......................, ........... PeWs ·

" 1. UNLV 1421 !8-0) ............ .... 6.!0 I
;: 2. Arkansas (13-1 ) ~ ............... :iT7 2
,. 3. Indiana (14-1 1.................... 495 ~
~ 4. Ohio Stare (12-0) ................ 4'15 6
1' 5. North Carolina (11·11 .. .. .. . :.151 7
•: 6. Ar lzooa !11-21 ..... .. ...... .. .. ... 373 3
:~ 7. UCLA (12·1) .......... ............ 3619
, 8. Syracuse (13-11 ...... ............ 336 4
• 9. CO Mectl!'UI 110-11-. .......... 24713
•' 10. St. John's, (10-1) ............. 19110
; ; 11. Duke (10-J) ... ...... ............. 172 8
~ 12. Oklahoma (11·21 .... ... .. ... 15811
13. Geo111etown (9·21 ..... .. .... 11416
_ 14. Nebras ka (14-11 ......... ...... 7915
!5. VI rginia (9·21 .. ...... ..... ...... 72 22
!6. Pittsburgh {12-3) ......... ..... 5114
17. East Tennesaee St. (10-11 A617
18. New Mexico Stare (9-1) .. .. 39 20
19. Louisiana Stare (8-3j .... .. .. 3512
20. Iowa (12-21 .. ........ : ...... ... :.20 19
21. SOuth Ca r dlna (10-21 .... .... 19 23 ·
22. OfOQ!Ia Tech (9-3) ........... 18 25
23. Southern Mlssl.,lppl (5-! ) 1718
24. Mlclllgan State (8-4 ) : ....... .13 21
25. OeO!'II&gt; iS-41 .......... ......... 10 24
NR-IICII,...kod
.
Others receiving voU!I: Ala· ·
bama . Kansas, NewOrtejons, North
Ca r d lna State . Prlncet&lt;m, Selm

·t'

Hall, SOuthwestern Louisiana,
Temple, Texas-El Paso. 'Utah,

Wyoming.
.
Note: ' By agreement with tbe
National Asscrl attan of Basketball·
Coachesof theUnitedStates, teams
on probation by the NCAA and
l""ltelble lor the NCAA Tourna' meat are lnelltllblelor Top 25 and
naUonal championship consldera·
tlon by the UP! Board of Coacheo.

Tholl! schools are llllnots, Ken·
tuckY, Marshall, Maryland, Mia·
sourl, Northwest Loulslana and
R&lt;&gt;bert Mo'rrts.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPi ) - The
first 19!K&gt;-91 United Press International Ohio High School Board of
Coaches' girls basketbaH rat ings

(with ti rst-placevotf!s and won•lost
records Jn parentheses) :
~- -

Team

Potnh

, I. Plckerlngtm (10) (ll-0 ) .. :.... lSI
2. Grnd Hils Trinity (3) tll-1) .. 79
3. Beavercre ek 19-1) .................. 54
· 4. Lorain Senior 121 111·0) ..... .... 11
5. Toledo Central Cath ( 11-( 10-0)40
' 6. Woosrer (2) (1~) .................. 37
7. Cuyah011a Falls !8-0) ............. 36 ·
8. Vand al ia BuUer 1!0-0) .. . ...., ... 33
9. Oeveland Heiahts (11-0 ) ........ 27
lO.Reynoldsburg (9-0l .......... .. ... 26
Second len ; 11. Hie~ Brunswick
ond 'Rocky River Magnificat , 23
eadl: 13. COlumbus SOuth 22: 14.
(tiel Boardman and Lima Senior ,
17 each; 16. Cantoo McKinley 16; ·
17. (tl•l Milford aDd Lorain Adml·
rat Kina. u •ach: 19. (lie) Mansfield Seator and Sylvania South· ·
'vi.W. 13 oa ch.

T....,

.

Dtvlatoe n

1. West Holmes (21

(!~ )

.

.

· Pola&amp;s
.......... 97

2. Cln Men:y (5) (11-0) .............. 84
Urbana (1 ) (9-1) ..84
I. Drftd.en TrWI!tey (2) 110-0) .76
Lottan ( 2) (13-0) ;, 76
6. Da y !CII Dunbar !2) (9-0) .... ; ... 48
7. Canfield (31 (ll·11 .................14
8. LoUisville (11-01 .. ... ................ 34 ·
9. Sunbury Bll Walnut ( ll·l ) ..... 33
10.Colorilbua Beecbcr&lt;tt 110-1 r ...25
Second ten :. 11. Tlpp aty Tippecanoe 24; 12. Willard 22; 13. Elida
20; 14. Akrm Hoban 19 ; i~. 11101
West Geauga and Copley, 18each;
17. St.uthers 17: 18. Mantua Crestwood' 16: 19, Bellaire 14; 20.
Je ffers c;r~

Area 11.

--Dtvillon 10

Team
1. COldwa ter 171 19-01

Points

1&gt;12
Heat h 161 110-0 1 lll
3. Sherwood Fairview 110-11
73
t . Br ooltfteld (8-11
56
• 5. Versailles {9·2 1
42
6. Doylestown Chlppew (111 12-

1)

.

Tuesday's soores
.OIIIo Rip 8eb... lukolboll .·
By UaMe' I'!Mio l!ator-01101

l'ueoday.l•• 8
Anthony Wayne 63, Maumee 62

AshtabulA Edgewood 93, Ashtabula
54
Athens 61, Chillicothe 58 (01)
Aurora 77, Beachwood 63 · ·
Barbertm 90, Akra1 N 71
Beallavllle81. Tyler Cty (WVI67
Beavercrek 68, Fairfield 51
Bloom Gar roll 79, Berne Unlm 62
Bloom~eld 86, Thompson Ledgemoot 82
. Brl.ltol 66, Grand Valley 58
Brool&lt;fte!d 67, Champion 57
Bru111wlck 53, Bn!oksvllle 52
Buckeye Locj~167, Oak Olm (WV)
51
.
.
Buckeye Trat178, cadiz 69
Cat~ll93 , Woats!leld 70
Cambridge 88, Barnesville 47
canfteld 72, campbell 6f
Chardon 67, SOlon 63
Cln Country Day 97, On Summit 64
Cln LaSalle 91, an Wsn Hilla 81
Cln Landmark 78, Batavia 75
Cin Pun:ell 48, On Forest Park 39
Ctn R&lt;&gt;ger Bacon 84. N Collet~e Hill
56
Cle Heritage 52, Medina Bop! 19
Cle Luth W 53, COlumbia 49
Col Brookhaven 69, COICentenlal56
Col Chu 70, Grandview 6~ I
Col DeSales 73, Gahanna 60
Col Eaatrnoor 78. Col Wal Rldge72
Col Fallll 76. CO! World Harvell 31
Col Uadea 92; Col Eut 79
Cot Norlhlalld 81, COl Mtmtn 61
Col Soulll 71, Cql Mar Frank 6f
Col Weot 75, COl Independence 66
Col Whetatme84, OoiBeecbcrolt 63
Columbiana 59, LowetlvUie 58

Conneaut 9&amp;, MadiiCil 79

Girls ratings

Dlvlllon I

lO.Mans!leld St. Peter' s (8-2 ) .... .27
Second ren: 11. Uberty-llentoo
25; 12~ Zanesville RoEerans 24; 13;
Rockford Parkway 23; 14. (tiel
Worthlngtm CbrlsUan and East
Cantm , 18 each; .16. BerUtJ HUand
15; 17. (tiel COnvoy CresMew and
Gilmour Academy, 12 each; 19.
(tiel Ottwnte, Hardin-Northern
and Centerburg, 11 each..

~ -

7, Belltrodl (134)
33
8, PY!iultuntna Vatey (10-0)
31
9. West Muatttneum (8-11
28
lO.Otlliwa-Giandorf (9-21
:II
tn: 11. Sprtncfleld Kenloti Rldle 23; 11 (U~) Tuocarawu
V"lfl'andGeace,11oa ch; ll. (llol
Gre11911ltAWIAlldonvtl)e,14each; ·
11. ' Wbetl......,ll 12; 17. (tie)
• .....,... .... C..talll Marp ·
!Wtlli, 11 Ncb: 19. Hunlll 10; 20.
lJblrtyUn ... 9.
Dl•loloa IV

1'.-n
· Pollts
L Fori Recovory (9) (7-1) .. ..... 128
2. SC SolltiiMi tern (I ) (10-01 ..... 73
3. Kalid a 17-1) .. .... .....................70
I . McDolllld (3) (11-01 .. . .-.......... 51
5. Mlcldlet""" F•nwlctt (9·21 ..... il9
6. Ho.lpto (1) (8-1) .................... 37
.
Buck.,.. Cent111l (8-3) J 7
8. New Rl,.el (1) (11-4) ..... . ........ 3.1
9. Danville ( I ) (9-01......... ........ .. 28

Cuyah011a Falla 81!, Raveaaa"Jo
Day Belmont 99, Fairborn 88'
Day Northridge 62, Bradford 61
Day Patterson 87, Day Je!f,..l101170
Day Wayne.66, Spring Oreenm 52
Dresdeu Trl Val M. Riverview 62
(Ot) .
.
•
.
E Palestine 65. CO tum CreiMew59
Eastlake North 8,1. Ora!lge 52
East}Vood 71, GenQI 59
ElwdOd 68, Olblonburg 67
Esn Brown 53, Hillsboro 52
Fairbanks 78, Degraf Riverside 57
Fairfield Un 60, Liberty Un !50 (Ot l
Fed..-al Hockin&amp; 112, Mel&amp;a 83
Fostoria Wendelln 80, Arcadia 66
Frank Fur Green 76, Ports ND 36
Frel!port Lakeland 85. RidgewOOd
58
.
Fremcn1 Joe 74. Margaretta-69
Frm11er 74, Slcyvue 6!
G 'ville Garfield 54, CrestwOOd 53
Ge neva 70, Ashtabula Harbor 57
Goshen 63, New RlchmCJ&gt;d 56
• Gr~envtUe 74, Clayton Northmoot
65

.

ol. SPENCER OSBoRNE

teams on our schedule."
The first quarter..saw Jackson
get the opening tip and ln)medlately go Inside, bl! t the Ironmen came away empty and
watched Wildcat g~.~ard Jason
Black shik a 14-foot jumper from
the left wing 20 seconds Into the
game to give Tracea 2-0 lead.

OVP Staff Writer
Defensive pressure and Ironman efforts from , a pair of
Hannail-Trace cagers - senior
· center Craig Rankin and senior
forward Todd Boothe - ivere
among the lngredlenis the Wildcats Deeded to eounter Willy
Woodard's 33-polnt, 15-rebound
clinic In Tuesday night's nonleague encounte~ and hand visitIng Jackaon a 74-62 loss. .
This victory . makes ,the Wildcats 2-2 against non-league opponents and 3-0 against Jackaon
County teams, as Trace swept Its
season series with Oak HiU.
"Our game p)lln was to gn to
Willy, but when Hannan Trace
collapsed on him, we were in
trouble,' because our outside shot
' wasn't working," said Jackson
head coach Toey Bornhorst, who
added that ''HT Is one of the best

SVAC standings
(Overall)
TEAM.
W L
Hannan Trace .....9 2
Southern ...... ........9 3
Eastern .. .. ...........7 · 3
Symmes Valley ... 6 . 5
North Gallta ........ 4 6
Oak Hill ...... .... .... 3 8.
Kyger Creek ....... .'2 9
Southwestern .... ;.. ! 8

PF PA
800 ~90
866 · 738
674 685
676 675
783 814
729 814

655 800
530 655

(Conference)
Hannan Trace ..... 7 0 557 351
f'JIDP.
Southern .. ... .. ....... 7 1 614 498
~- - , - Eastern .. ..... .... .... 5 2 498 493
Symmes Vlllley ... 5 3 479 472
(All Games)
North GaiDa . ... .... 4 4 646 618
Team
W L Oak 1:11.11 .. .... . .. .. ... 2 6 503 596
Fed. HocKing ................ ... .9
1 Kygetr.Creek .:...... i 7, 473 · 597
Wellston ............. :........ ....&amp; 3 South~ terl! ... .... 0 8 441 586
Trimble .... ... ............... ... :.5 ~ . TOTALS ........... :31 31 Ull 4211
VInton County ....... ...........5
Alexander .... .... .... ........ .. .5
~
(Reserves)
Belpre .................. ...........5
4
(SVAC only)
7 TEAM
Meigs . ............. ......., ... , .. ,.2
W L PF PA
Mlller ............................. .2
9 North Gallta ........ 6 2 473 345
8 Southern...... .... .... 6 2 444 338
Nei.-York .. ...... :...............1
Hannan Trace .. .. . 5 2 377 299
Oa!t Hill .. . .... .. .. ... 5 3 i51 410
TVC Games-.()nly
L Eastern .. .. .... .. ..... 4 3 336 354
Team
W
Symmes ValleY ... 2 6 364 462
Fed. Hocking ......... ..........7
1 Soulbwes tern..... .. 2 6 284 400
Wellaton ................... .... ...5
2 Kyger Creek........ 1 7 309 430
Trimble ......... ...................
2 TOTALS .. ........ .. 31 ·31 3138 SOU
2·
VInton County,............. ....5
Belpre ....... .. ......... ...........4
3
Tuesday's scores
3 Hannan Trace 74, J.a ckson 62
Alexall!ler .... ....... , .. ........ .4
Meigs ................ :..... :...... .2
5
Raceland. (Ky.) 72, Symmes
Mll!er .. .......... ...... ~ ... :., .... .!
6 Valley 58
7
Nel. -York .. .. ,........ ... ~ .... ...0
Southwestern 81 1 Hannan
Tuesday'• resuflaf ·
(W;Va.) 69
Trimble 72 Alexander 70
Federal Hocking 112 MeigS 83
Friday's action
Miller 63 Nelsonville·York 57
Southern at Hannan Trace
VInton County 70 Belpre 62
Eastern at Southwestern
Wellston - open
North Gallta at 'Oak Hill
Frldq'sgamea:
Kyger Creek at Symmes Valley
Meigs at Nels-Yorli:
Saturday'sgames
Vinton County at Miller
North Gallla at Federal Hocking
Trimble at Wellston
~ymmes Valley at Ironton St.
Federal Hocking - Open
Joe.

TVC

standinJnl

- ·'
proved to be

The first of the game's three son's Brad Munn ties came when Rankin, ~ho the Wildcats' getaway weapon,
according to Wildcat head coach as ilentor point guard J . J . Bevan
Mike Jenkins "showed guts by gave the Guyan sql!lld some
playing with ·a sprained ·right l!reathlng room 'with such a shot
an.kle/ ' blocked Woodard's shot 50 seconds into the second frame,
which gave Trace an ·18-p l~ad,
attempt In the paint and fouled
him. Woodard canned both free And though J ackaon was able to
throws, and the game was tied tie the game twice by ouJ.scorlng
their hosts 8-3 In the following
2-2.
From there, Trace got eight 2: 12, the Wildcats l!roke the 21-21
tie created by Woodard's basepoints from Boothe, who finished
with a team-high 18 points, which llnl! Jumper In the lane at the 4: 58
proved Instrumental In pushing mark when senior forward Rl·
the hosts to a J.5.131ead'at the end chle Cornell canned a trey from
the left corner 40 secondG ta:ter.
~f a first quarter that saw
Jackson In Its most competitive
Continued on page 5
form of the night.
·
In the second.qUatter, Trace's - ...... ~ports briefs,-defensive pressure began to be
Palittcs
shown on the. boards. Though no
South and North Korean offl·
Wildcat could challenge ·Woo- clals will meet next week at the
dard when he went to ·the hoop, truce village of Panmunjom to
Rankin, who had mo~ rebounds discuss sports exchanges and
(12) than points (S!!Ven), and unlfled Korean teams at major
Boothe kept their extremely busy 1competitions. The two sides
hands around the ball whenever previously met Nov. 29.
It gnt Into Woodard's airspace.
Skiing
But the 6-foot-4 Woodard, operatCanada's Alain Vllllard bas
Ing 'n the Ironmen' s three-guard, flown home with an Injured shin
open-post offense, wasn't the and will miss Sunday's World
only red-clad eager victimized Cup slalom at Kltzbuehel,
by Trace's high-Intensity defen- Austria.
sive pressure, as 6·3 forward•·
/center Brent Jewel was held to
two points.

Ti~e

&gt;

The three-point shot ~ something done on·ly once In the first
quarter, and that was by Jack,
~

To.
Check The
Furnace.•..

WE-HAVE

78
.
· Hannin Trace 74. Jackson 62
Hemlqck Miller 63, NeiiCIIvtlleYor1&lt; 67
1101 Sprln8 73, Syt Southview 51
Howland 86. You Cbuey 54

1
Northwood 71, OtEgo 6f
. Ottawa HUll 69, Tot Chr 61
Paden City (WV) 70, Hannibal Rtv

67

.

Palnes Harvey 69. Jel!eraoo Area .

50

Palnes. River side 61 , Ashtab John

16

Pefbies 60, McDermott NW 63
Perry 76, Chardon ND Cath 62
Perryabul'l69, !Wilford 61
Peler1bU11!63, Marietta 58
Petdavllle61, Maum .. Val Ctry SO
Plckermetoo 81, Weotlanc171 (2011
Rldlmood Hta 68, B'odll)'ll 54
Rtwr Valley
~IQa Eletn 38
7
.
1,

Rootat.,..n 64, IllamCIId SE 62

Shadyllde 74. llaiiOp Donahue
!WVJ
Sllertdall 62. CrooklvUte
&lt;Ot!

eo ·

eo

~I

·
,·
··.
'
··
'
'

Mason family Restaurant

T4uttroay ·Night is
•Spaghetti

.

•Chicken •
CacciatQrie •
•

l
DittbmServed With Our all-U..Car~To-Eat
•

All

.

.'

&lt;

'

~~:

•

•

•

•

••

,.

We prepare all kinds of

.

{3(M) m.532t ·
CNIXT 'IOMASON IDO(Q&gt;41

CLEARANCE PRICED

income tax returns, from

the simple to the complex.
Whatever your lax situation, we can ·handle it.

HIAILOCit
Nnerica's Tar THillPut us to worlr for you!
818

POMEROY
STREET

'

•

•

•.

30°/o To 70°/o OFF
•

.MANY TITLES TO ClHOOSE FROM
BOTH RELIGIOUS· &amp; NON RELIGIOUS

return to SVAC and SEOAL
action, · respectl"ely, Hannan
Trace, 9-2, will host archrlval
Southern, while Jackaon, 6-4, will
host Gallla Academy.
Score by quarters
Jackson ........... , . 13 16 12 21-62
(SIZEs 12 MONTHs AND -up)
Hannan Trace .. . 15 21 ·19 19..;.74
HANNAN ·TRACE (74) Boothe 7-0·4-18; Bevan 3-1-5-14;
Black. 4-0-6-14; Cornell 0-3-1-10;
Rankin 4-0-0-8;, Unroe' .1-1-2-7; '
I
Uoyd 1-0-1-3. TOTALS- 20-5-19·
74
.
· From the field- 25-52 (48.1%)
Beyond the arc- 5-12 (41.7%)
Charity lo811e8 - 19-29 (65.5%)
On tile boards -30 (Rankln12)
Bl.ocked shola - 5 (Boothe 3)
Aaalsla - 16 (Black 5)
.., MIDDLEPOU
93 MILL ST.
Steals- 12 (Black 4)
220 EAST MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO
. 992-6657
Turnovers - .11 ·
JACKSON (62) - 'WoodQb
, ..
12-1-6-33; Morgan 4-0-2-10; Mullti"" r-;.__.....:.--------------------~----'-----.,.---------1-1-2-7; Valentine 3-0-0-6; Wal'
"
burn 2-0-0-4; Jewel 1-0-0-2. ToTALS - 23·2-lO.-i
· From tile field - 25-71 (35.2%)
Cbarlty lo811e8 - 10-11 (90.0%)
On tile boards - 42 (Woodard

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Rt. 33

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For 50 years, we've handled the everyday and emergency
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lleating, Water · and .
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4 P.M. - 9 P.M.

" I'll carry the ball In my right
hand and protect It with my left,"
he &amp;ald . "I've gnt four fingers. If
they can't catch me, there' s
nothing they can do. It's all
upstairs, I let mY mind take
control of lt. I won' t let It affect
my running."
"l:le'·s got the heart of a lion;''
fellow running back Harold
Green said of Brooka. "There
will be pain. But he wllf play. It
can be done.
"~'s a righty, so It shouldn't
be a problem carrying the ball.
Blocking might be tough, but
they'll probably bandage 11 up.
Catching passes might be a
problem. "
Bengals running back Coach
Jim Anderson said he hopes the

Injuries.
•
Raiders figure Brooks can' t
All-Pro
tackle"
Anthony Munot •
catch passes.
suffering
from
a chronic
Is
"Don't coVer him · a nd ·nnd
Injury
and
tackle
Br uce ·
shoulder
out," said Anderson.
Reimers
has
a
sever
ely
sprained
"The way I hear people talk·
ankle.
lng, I think he'll be all right,"
~ld Anderson. " It' s . not a
......
Warren Moon-type Injury, where
Will FLOWIIS
a nuarterback can't play because
"
To .... olloooi•U,.
he can't throw. A running back
.......... ••••ill
doesn' t have to throw. But 11 will
. .........Jnt
take some adjustments. ••
eoll ., •loll
Even If Brooks plays Sunday,
POMEROY
he may have trouble running to
FLOWER SHOP ,
his left because the lett _sldeofthe ,
"Tho IF'oy Ameri"" So•d• L""o"
·
Bengals' offensive line Is gyes- •
PH. 992-6454
:•;
tlonable for the'.game beca11se of
t--...:..:::..:.::.:.;;:;:;:.;:._ _.a. : -:

IN STOCK

'

Napoleon 62, Wauaeon 59 (011
'New llostoo 81, S Webaler 60
New Concord 7L N.,. Lnlnrtm 67
· New Miami 58, an S...n Hilla 52
. ~~t~ f:alla 93, Co r11and Lake-

·•

•••

Howland Cbr 60, Sharm Chr 25

!nd_....ence 62. Cuyah- Hts 56
Jolin Marlllall (1!\'V) 79,Bellatre67
Kao- Lakoto'M, .Woodmore 52
Kent 12. Al&lt;r Spnne 67
·
Ktrtlanel65, Gat Mil Gilmour 52
Labra~ II, Bad1er 58
Liberty 89, Hubbard 66
Llabon M. Unlred lo&lt;al 63
Locklancl70, Cln Bernard 65 ·
Lou'vl Aqulnaa 75, Heritage Chr2S
MaplewOOd 58, Pymatllllfng Val 51
Marton ~Ieosa'lt 80, Cardlngtm50
Maysville 78, Mol'lan 60
.
McDonald 79, Jacksm Mlltm ~ .
Medina 70. N Royaltoo 53 .
Middletown Chr 71, Miami Va t 16
Mtdnd Cardinal 91, Newbury 65
Milford 54, NOIWOOd 53
Millbury Lake54, 1lowUneGreenU
Miller City 75, Umo CC 69
Min Ridge 58, Ber Ctr Ws n Res 48 •
Mingo 75. Welrtm iWVI 60

Trace later boosted Its -lead io six
with another Cornell threepOinter (2:51) and one from
junior sixth man Brlan Unroe
(2: 09). All _tpld, the 'hosts led by
seven at halftime.
·Boothe, a 5-11 forward , was
unheard from In the second
quarter, but his bold drives Into
the paint netted him nine points
In act three, which combined
with slmUar penetration from
Bevan and Black helped expand
the Wildcats' lead to 14 at the end
. of the quarter. One Instance of
the control · the Galllans exercised In the paint was when Black
fired a pass to Boothe through
; heavy Jackson tr11fflc In the las I
' 32 seconds of ihe ·frame, with
Boothe seorlng and being ·fouled
on the play. Boothe's bonus shot
gave Hannan Trace a 55-411ead.
After that, Jackson never got
closer than 10 points the rest of
the way.
In the preceding reserve contest, the Wildcats won 64-38. Cha&lt;l .
Barnes and Jim Brace scored 19
points each to lead Trace. Rob .
Travis led the Ironmen with 13.
Friday night - Upon their

eonunuedfrompage4

heavily bandaged this week.
Although the Bengals list
Brooka as " questionable" for the
Raiders game, Brooka bas given
· himself the thumbs-up. ,
.

.'••,

•

Grove City 61. Col Brlligs 60

Hamiltm Badin 81, Lemon Monroe

..

..~ks vows to play Sunday despite injury·

victory.. Bobby Johnsllo led Meigs
with 14 poiniS, Todd Dill add¢ 12 '
llld Jolin Beadey and Jay
emn... added 10 each. Bennett •
led Fcdenl Hocting with14.
.
Meigs will travel to Nelsonville
on Fri~y flilht to llbg1e with the
Buckeyes. Nelaooville 63-57
losers on lhe rQad at Mjller tllesday
night

•

The

Ohio

•

290
Nortli

j

y

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BANIC ONE1 ATHENS, NA

SKoncl
Miclcllepart

Alhtnt. Ohio

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Page-6-The

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Ohio

G BEND•••

The Daily · Sentinel _~·

By The Bend

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Wednesday, Jenuay 9,1991
Pege-7

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Free schooling being offered_

. Middleport has
Christmas play

F~:ee schooling is being ofl'ered office class. Both of those classes
begin· on Jan. 28. The office
Middl~lelllenwy recenlly to sin~ parents and homemakers will
specialist class will teach the basics

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to eqwp them to be aelf-supponillg
by the Gallia-Jackson-Vmton Joint
ey·, Cluislmu Carol,
Vocational School District.
~~= - - ; e dthe"Money."
kinderThe single parenrftlome~
garten
grant is a non-repayal)le tuition
The first gmde class ~onned "0~ grant for those who are widowed,
What a Merry Cliristmas Day. divorced separated, or single head
"Under the Mislletoe" was pcrfor· of ho~hold and includes a 100
med by the seconcll!llde. The t!Dtd • holir support chaS dealing with
grade_J&gt;CI!ormed "What a Glonous personal development, survival
Mominf· and the fourth" grade per· skills, career expl&lt;l;"ltion,- C!lffiily
formed 'We Have Love.
management and ,JOb readiness.
Travel and child care allowance
may also be available to assist
those who are involved in a skilled
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CHRISTMAS PLAY· Middleport Elemeatary
receatly beld its Cbrlstmas pJ'OII'IIIII, ''Mickey's
.Christmas Carol" .Tbe cast iD~Iuded, from the
kindergartea, tint BDd sec:oad IP'ade, Tyson Lee,
·town crier; Andy fnace, poor IIWI ad beaari

Heather Fry, Cratchil cblld; EriD Ralstoo, crier;'
Tara Wyatt; Cratehit chDd. Back row,.Whitney
Ashley, Isabel; laD Story, youag ~e; Derek
Jolmsoa, Fezziwig; Bobby Ku!m, TIDy · Tim; .
Andrew Boker, JICQ' man BDd beggar.

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Children's trust ·
,fund is available

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•-t Jan. 12, tlf91.Jl
G·-" tllrll ... ..
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WH\TE _ PRINTS
NORTHERN

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BAlH ·t\SSUE

MICKEY;S CIDRSTMAS CAROL • Mick·
Future; 'IODUDy Roush aiul Brut Dboa,
ey's Christmas Carol was the program pre&amp;ellted
IIJ'IIVed:g:n; BraDdy Thbla, ~DriD1er. Back
recently by studeats at Middleport Elementary.
row, J
Da~, Ebellezer Scroolei Lulie
Pictured are dst memberS, 1fcill Uae lhlrd ad &amp;uloD, ·11..-tltor; JllliD Hafrls; Bob ~ratclllt;
fourth grade, Jessica Evaas, Ghost or Cbrlstmas ', Reaee Stewart, Mrs. Cratchlt; T.J, Kial, DeP.hew
• ·Past; Mellsha Swisher, Ghost or Christm&amp;ll
Fred_; Mindy HaUey ·and Christ . Galkey,
Present; Jessica JohDSoll, Ghost or Christmas
solic•tors; Adam WIUlams, Marley's GhOst.
..

First Baby Contest remains open
Noon on Friday is the deacume · THe Dliily Sentillel · pnor to . the
for Meigs County parents to enter deadline for enll')'. The rules fur.
the First Baby of the Year Contest ther specify that in the e~~ent of a
which again this year is being tie, awards will be distributed at the
sponsored by The Daily Sentinel. discretion or the oowspaper's conPrizes from 20 local merchants wiD · test committee. ,
.
be awarded to the first baby of
The prizes ~a $10 gift certifi1991.
cate flom The Food Shop, a $5 gift
According to the rules of the . certificate £rom the Middleport
contest the winning baby must be Department Store, a free meal for
born to parents who are legal · the parems from J'leasers, a' $10
residents of Meigs Com~ty. · To gift certificate £rom the Pomeroy
qualify parents m.ust submit to The Flower Shop, a $10 savings acDaily Sentinel a '~tten statement .count from Cenlral Trust, a $5 gift
·from the attendilfl! physician as Ia certificate from The Fabric Shop, a
the exact time of the birth, and that $10 savint~s account from Racine
iDronnation must be p~ted ra .Home Nanonal .Bank. '

A free meal to the parents from
Crow 's Family Restaurant, a baby
cup £rom Clark's Jewelry, a case of
baby formula from Krogers, an ice
cream cake from the Dairy Queen,
a $15 gift certificate ftpm Heritilge
House of Shoes, a diaptr bag from
Fruth Phannacy, a $25 gift certifi·
care from · POwell's ·Super Valu, a
$10 gift certificate from Buttons
and Bows, a box of diapers from
Foodland, a $5 gift certificate and
10 percent off all prescriptions until
the age of six £rom the Prescription
Shop, a $25 gift certifiCate from
vaughan's . Cardinal, and a three
piece feeder set fJom K &amp; C.
Jewelers.

The Meigs County Children's
Trust Fund Advisory Board has announced that applications are now
being acceplarfor grants from the
Children's Trust Fund for programs
designed to reduce child abuse and
neglect
· Applications may be obtained at
the office of the Meigs Counl:y Su·
perirltendent of Schools. Deadline
for submitting completed ap- .
plications has been set ror S p.m.
on January 28.
·
The MeiRs Board has set a public
hearing on January 29 to approve
the applications following review.
The public meeting will bci held in
the Meigs County Superintendent's
office at , 7 p.m. . NJI!roved applications must be submitted to the
state by March I.
Meigs County has been alloted
$10,000 · as its share in the
statewide progrsm.
·
Members of the local advisory
board are Carl Hysell, carot ·Tan·
nehiU, Ed Bartels, John Riebel and
James Diehl.

The Meigs County Division of progmms. ..
the American Heart Associatil)ll has
In Meigs County alone, lhe AHA
ont:e again organized county Itas a variety of progrsms available,
volunteers to conduct the annual funded through donations. 1bese
residential drive.
include Heart 'Iieasme Chest. Food
J]le Meigs AHA will direct Festival, Geuin$, to Know your
volunteers' efforts to educate Heart • '!Whiclt will be implemented
county residents about the human in all elernelllllry schools this year,
toH of'heart disease and stroke as and Speaker's Bureau, a service of
well as about the prevention of speakers knowledple On various
heart disease. The latest statistics topics cif heart ·disease to talk at
show that bean disease accounts · club meetings.
•
for nearly SO percent of all deaths . ''Without research suppMed by
i!!__Meigs County.
the American {lean Association,
:Volunteers will request con- we might not have available
tributions from individuals at their- modem medical miracles such as
haines. in suppon ·of the American · pacemakers and surgery to help
Heart Association's research, chi,ldren with heart defects," said
education and community semce

GOURMET

GROUND
~~~-...;;;.BEEF .

Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Allen Myers
and daughters, Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Cleland, Erma Cleland and Greg
Hibbs were ChriSimas dinner
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard
Myers and son, Keno. ·
·
Mr. and Mrs. ~arry Wade,
Richmond, Va., . visited recendy
with Enna Cleland.

2FOI99•
LAYS ·

COKE., PRODUCTS
2UTER

10mr

POTATO CHIPS :

99•

6.5
lAG

oz.

•z

•.... •.... ·$ .

21 oz.m.
SQUEEZE .

KETCHUP
ASST. YlllliES
12 OZ. JAR

HEINZ ·GRAVY
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WrTH (:OUPON BELOW

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S,_., with

potgto ond g9.{lic Joost plus

010'1 iU· You·Cm~ · Eot Grrmd BU#Nt~

POIDEROSI\

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7120191

PONDEROSA'S

KIDS
MEAl
(FOI KIDS 10 AND UNDEI)
YOUR CHOICE OF: Hot Doll &amp; Frieo, Hrmrhutrler &amp; Frit1

or AJ/oYou·_Con·Eat Gtond lfuff.t!'

'disab:f

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MARY RANKIN

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PONDEROM

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Rankin birthday ·

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AII·You•Can• Eat
Grand Buffet"' Lunch
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GALLIPOLIS
UPPER liVER RD.
(Across from tht Airport)
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HURRY/

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Charbroiled
Ribeye Steak Dinner

Chester ·community happenings_

. YUBI YOGURT

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• M!lry ~n. Tuppers Plains,
celebrated her seventh· birthday on
Slinday at the home or her parent,
John and Connie Ranlcin, Tuppers
Plains;
' A "Batt Simpson" theme was
with games played and
Pray~.!' and pledge to the
their daughter, Linda and Dan Frederick and famqy, Middleport. • carried
won
by
Anthony
DeFreitas and
by lnzy NeweU, opened the
Zimmennan lmCI family. She then
Mr. and Mrs. Delmar Baum
·
auxiliary meeting at the Cllestec . returned to •Logan and spent the spent the holidays in 'Mic;higail with Chelsea MonlgODieey.
A~ were Etie, Chelsea
firehou~. Paula Wood gave the weelcend wlth Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Mr. and Mrs: ·David Smith and
and Lynda Montgomery; Candis
secretary's re~ and Opal Hollon Grueset.
children.
.the treasurer s reporL Money for
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce. Myers spent . Mr. . and Mrs. ·Larry Cleland, and Deidro Shaffer; April V8(lc«
cards and dues was collected and the holidays with their daughter
_ Erma Cleland and Greg Hibbs Anthony and Valerie DeFreitas;
bills were paid. Committee reports and ramily, Mr. and Mrs. Tony spent Chrislmas eve with Mr. and Terry Farrar: Diana, Jeremy and
Bryan Cowdery; Tony, Shirley and
were given and cards were signed ' Westjohn GuJ1ixn.,Miu,
Mrs. Wilbur Young, Rutland.
Judy
Jones; Jack Ralikiil; Brian and
for the sick of the commWlity. ,· Guests' of Mr. and Mrs. Harold
. Mr. _and Mrs. Charles Eichinger,·
Kathy
Fryar.
·
Refreshments were served by Ethel . Newell durillg Christmas week Pickerington; .Mr. and Mrs. Jeff
Sending
gifts
and
cards
were Mr.
Orr and Opal Hollon to Dorothy were Kenneth Newell, Columbia, Horton, Worthington; Mr. and Mrs:
and
Mrs.
Marvin
Buckley
and
Hawk, Bonnie Landers, Ciani Con·. S.C.: Kathy Newell, Gallipolis; Mr. Dellnis Eichinser llld Dane, and
Ronild;
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Jack.
roy, Paula and Chelscy W~ tnzy and Mrs. Steve Meek and family, Mr. and Mrs. Don Eichinger, nf:
NewU, Betty Newell, Clarice Allen, ML Srerlin1. Ky.; Addie Newell, . fany and Justin, spent CliristmaS RichardsQn and Hennon Carson Sr.
.. . Jeanie NeweU, Lora Damewood Middleport: Mr. and Mrs. Bob day with their lnother, Opal
· • and Enna Cleland.
Dailey, Mr. and Mrs. Milre Dailey, Eichinser.
.
Ethel Orr spent ~ holidays wilh Brad and Jill, AlheM; and Mr. and
Erma Cleland, Mr. and Mrs.
Accordlna to American folklore,
he( daughtec and hUJband, Marilyn Mrs. David Lilldaey, Nalllie 8lld . Norman McCain Lettie McCain Belle Starr (Myra Belle Sblrley, 1841. and Ed. Newnan, Oalioa. She ac- Juon; Plebrinlton.
. . and Mr. and Mrs.'Barry Wade were 1889) led a hand of cattleptlen and
· cochpaaied them to Soloa, Iowa,
Bonnie Laailen ·hid Christnw supper 'pealS on ·Christmas of Mr. hone tblevea thai made replar raids
Oil Oklahoma ranches.
where they spent Christmas wilh dinner wilh Mr. and' Mrs. Jack and Mrs. Gale McCain.

·ASST. FLAVORS

G~LL0~$29. 9

Dr. Wilma Mansfield, President of
the M_ eigs County DivisiOn of the
American Heart Association. "New
research wiD help us continue to
benefit from nedical ·discoveries
and reduce the late of death from
heart disease and stroke, America's
leading killers."
·
The American Heart Association
is the nation's largest voluntary
health otp~ization dedicated to the
rcdllttion of
and death
from heart and bl
vessel d,isease~. which annually. kills almost
one million Americans. Last year,
the AHA spent more than $\72 million (or research suppon and public
lind professional education and
COIJ!mUDity progrsms.

,.

Chester

Heart Association meeting conducted

· ORANGE
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Racine

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Smith personal

. Rev. and Mrs. Frank Smith entertained rec;ently with a Chrisnnas •
open bouse at the Heath United
Melhodist Chw'ch Parsonage.&lt; A
tour of the decorated parsonage
NS has a wi!S conducted and refreshments
Chad R. Did41e: son of ·Mr. and - 300 hour N~. Aide class and a . were served from . a decorated
·
Mrs. Tom Diddle ef Raciile, enlis- 120 hour translbons from hothe to Chrisnnas table.
ted in the Air F~'s Delayed En- ·
lisnnent Program today, according
to TSGT !Widy Frisby, Air Force '
recruitec, Athens.&lt; Airman ,i)iddle, a 1991 graduate of Southern
High School, is scheduled for enlisnnent in the Regular Air Force in
' Jm~e 1991. Upon graduation fronf
the Air Force's six-week . basic
training course near San Antonio,
TeJtiiS, Airman Diddle is scheduled
to receive technical training in the
structural career field.
Airman Diddle will be earning
credits toward an associate degree
J
in applied sciences through the
Community Colleg~ of the Air
Force w.hile auending basic and
technical training schools.

man enlistS

·~Mt

of calculators, typewriters, filing,
accounting; and word processing.
The nurse aide class prepares the
student to take the nurse aide cer·
.tification test which is requin!d IIJ
worlr: in many. nursing homes and
hospitals. ·

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�· ~~~:~~~~~~~~~~~p~M~..~~·~~~.~1!99!!1________~~--_:·__~------~---p~~~m~Mr~O!Y-~M~H~~!~~·e~~~~~~~~--~~~~~========~===The~~·go~~~V~.~S~Igi~~J~·~-~~~~g~l~9~ '

~rong
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uriderwear may cause y~t ·ihfeetion,
paiiiUie
.
Of, ibt

BY,·JOBN C. WOJ..r, D.O.,
. •• ' h Pul ,

vail-, two lbinp

~ avOid .,;.bblo balbs

dol.-

a¥

l!eca!• !heae can irriiJ!Ie
liauo' by ,INIIblo ...... !bo delicelr vqiniJ !issues.
..
..... tllll••*COp
doucbea, or to!!ll~!"' llucll
It is.alao a aood idca!o wear cot·
fl OIIIINpadlk Me!lcble
aile ll!lllre )'CIIl infecliolll 1011 uridc:rpiDII, l1llher than nylon,
,
COOII;I!OO in IJCI!Iili¥0 iDdl~
bcCI!!I!C COilDl allows moisi\n and
• Qaut.._,: I _..paiD&amp; ye8ll · Coodilionl !Mt al!Dr !bo body's ~ 110 eecape belller. I recommend
lnfectionl in my W&amp;i"' 1 lhil* 1 clef- '}"*"' .caa a1ao pmduce dlli,ly washing with ·an lll!IID
llld 10 ._ ycer. It SIR iJ a
wnvt U.CocUon• For elumple, twist. Relearcllea • !he University
..;ibem?
nuilince. W\Jit CliO I do 110· Sklp chcmc4Jl!l•apy
women
wbo
mUll!bo· lpftlld
We .of
Florida
College
of does
Medicine
110 i*C+Ciil
fOUDd
!ypica1
washing
not
. , Alilwer. Wbat we call ~ Ia of c:ancer or diOie wid! 'AIDS ba\'0 eiiminalc yeiiSt from ~ undtl•.ctullly • fun&amp;us,ICalled Clodida impaired immune tyllriliS lild IUf. ft41(, but miaowaving me underilbiCIIIII. 'l1lil crpnl"" Ia p:uelll fer from yeast infecliou II!OlC of-. · wear &lt;in higb fur five minuUis while
on lbe skin. under !bo !l8i1s; and in 1m. Diabef.Ca also Jeduca !he 110- it is still wet will do t!le trick. What
!bo coiOG in IIOCIIW indMduals. At ca1lcd "immune re"" ,..., , and . will !hey think up ntXt?
.
· tiiJies it Win IIePa ~· pow . IIIII produces higher sugll' Ieveii
. 1111!1 !bo
· .Your doctor will prescribe
.reprocluc;fi YfS'J .'JaPidly in lhe ·~ llulil ~ Well. S~!bo medicadon 110 clear up !he current
•VII8inL T1li8 ~ICC(I while !hkt . yeast can C11111e this 111811' II food. . infeclion.D SUggest slrllegies !bal
· ~ ilong Willi llunlillg IIIII djebttjc women frequendy ~w .
reduce-tile lmjuency of atirii!alion of Jbo lkiJi' IIOUIId lhe recurring Yll8ina1 infecticllJ.
. . · Rcscarthtn at · Hwzel
vagjlla. Yi.st infec:tms are not unQuestion: So what sllou1d I do Hospilill, li JIM•of Wayne S!a!c
COIIIiiiOil. Most women bave ao to reduce l1lc number of infoctions 1 .. Univcnity ·~ Delroit, found !bal
episode CVCIC'f few yean, but lhe get? ·
monthly usc of one 500 mg;•
problem you desc:ribe is, obYiously,
Answer: You should ~nly dOirimazolc. •vaginal. tablet wa,s
more 'severe.
sec yolir dpciOr. He or she will oced · · successM m reducllll lbe fre.
There are scvaal mcdicaljnps to mae sure 1hat you don't hlivc ·. queacy of repeated aaacts by two!hat 'are cftectivc~O,::=ng di•""'r.s or another serious ;hcaldl !hinls. Perhaps this a sttaUigy !bal
Candilf8 albicans.
- problem !hat is the undallylng
sold as a ~ medication.- reuon for )Our Jllpeated infectiQns.
for yem -has JUSt been ~ I'm sure !bal.he or she will suess
·
.
.
. b&gt;:
lJ.S. Food and ~ · Ad· lhc. ilnponance of bathing . daily .
·
, . ' ·.

,_a liD. Qemiclllrrtllliaa 110 die

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JJUIIIS~on for sa!e ~t . a .. wid! a mild soap 10 ~ . the
"A New Year HQpC for ~mor~n. ~'. · aild amowu of yeast on your skin· Y~ . row" was the theme of the program
~veril prescnpU~-oqly ~gs ..
..
· presenled by Katherine Riley, leeusuBily cure yeast ~ecbOIIS wt!h .
turer, at thC recc
. nt meeting of Star
one trealilleiiL
··
'1 '
1
0
. Why doesn't it .wort. in' w~
"The 'Livmg Praise" • of
~in,.s includi:d "l'oo Young,
like Yf&gt;U?. The infec11011~g ~ount . Vernon Nazarene Co~ · Too Oid,'i' by Lv1v Montgomery;
yeast IS Jdl1ed by !bo med!"'"Oil, . will. ~t . l;hc gospel of Jesus "New Year's siDgS;t and ReciPe for
but ·~ ~~ ladies ~ Clvist m mUSIC on Sunday at !bo Good Luck for 1 New Yeat' by
another ~ecu011 apii- and(~ Symcusc ~azarene. &lt;::"un;h.
.
Christine Napier; "Resolutions" by
. - ~ ~- .
· . · .·• · TheY will be 11UIIIS~g .~ Pauline Rife; "Hope Makes a DifReinf~ ,\~ obvious cause . the .10:30 a.m. ~g; wOrship ferencc" by Neva Nicholson;
... of repeated ~bODS, ?JII be due scmce. The public IS mvttecl 10 at- "WIShes for 1 New Yeai"' .by Maxi. to poor hyP,enc, ~ ,types of tend,
.
nc Dye,t, "What IS 1n Your Hciuse'l"
• underwear. or an infeCted sexual .M'
· . C.h · d
· qUiz
by an; "Letter tb .a Tired ·
Jllllll!er.Tight plii!S !WI panty hOse
Jlousewifc" by Opal Dyer; "Joys of
can 1ncreasc the.moiStUre and ~em- . . The women Alive meeting has Jandarv'·,by ~therine Riley; "New
Sutton truStees.
been· rescliedu!Cd for Monday at 7 YI!M Challenge" by Dorothy J;loleJ_J;
· •
p.m. at the Kyger ~ Club "Hc'J Got tllC Whole World m His .
.
House.. Refreshments · will be Hands
.
" by all; p:a_~er for the New
meenng
..__._ sml .
·~ SulliOII 1bwrlsbip Trustees . . provided.
Year by..,....,
.
' elected Otis Knopp ·as board
chaimian at !hmr Orpnizalional
· rneetin8 for 1991. '
•Delbert Smith W. elected vice
cliainnan and FomiSI VanrMeler is
!bo third member of the bOard.
Re~ ~gs · ~ be 'held
!bo fil\lt Monda}' of every mood! at, .
7:30 p.m. m . the .S}'I'IIl;USC
Municipal Building.

Group tope...lorm
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me,.. .

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held

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•',-

or·-··.,

ange

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why~ women take all !bo.
proper.pec:aub~ 10 pre~t yeast
infectioas buts~ ha~~2!"' • , .
1
. Fi.nally,l'd like 10 ~.,... ,a.recurnng myth about USI'!$ yogun. 10 ·
~ yeast infections. Sunply staled
- It ~n't 1?0 II;DY,P,Xil .J¥181
}'og\irt if you like II, 11.,IS. a, gOod
food. But. don't put tt ~ )'(IUl
vagina. I nv.:ll not ~ t1ie nor.mallattobac~ ~bich ll~th!a ·
"Family Medi~JIItl" is. a ~ ·
~lumn. To submit qDelbOp, wrt!C
to .J~ C. Wolf, D. &lt;7., ~ .
. Uru~ty College of Os1eop8tltic
)~CIIIC. Grosvenor HaD, A!hens,

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Grocery 5

Bl&lt;; Bi' \ R COl PO\

Regular
·or Quick

Betty Brown
6 Pack '

18 oz. Box

Quaker_Oats
With Thla Coupon And •to
U..atl
One .Coupon Per Cuttomer.
Addldo1181
Jan. 12, 199t
VallcJ 1bru

HI&lt;; IH' \R COl PO\

Bl&lt;i

Bakery 6

. F......... T

Top Frost
6 oz. Can

Limit 1 Free With Tbil cOUJIC)ft ADd •to

Adclltlooal Pun:hue. One Coupon Per Cuatoma-.

VallcJ .'lbru s.tunlay,. IZ, 11191

BIC IW \I{ ( 01 1'0'\

BH; Bl' \I{ COl 1'0'\

Dalry9

Florida
Indian

Fooci Club
lb. Quarters

lib. RoD .

I

Fresh sausage

·Margarlne

Uadl 1 Free With Thil Coupon And
,Atldftlon•' !'un:bue. One ~oupon Per Cutomer.

Uadl I Free With Thla Coupon And '10
AddftloNI Purebue. 0oe Coupon Per c~.
. v.Bd 'l1ml s.tanlay, Jan. 12, 11191

v.Bd.'lbru S.hlnllaY, Jan. t2, 11191

('Oli'O\

ge Juice

English M. . .

Jamestown

1 10

BF\1~

-;,

R.tver

Pink Or .

·Uadl I Free With Thll COIIpoa .And 110 .
Addltloul Purdlue. One Ca!JIIICII' Per C1111mm tr.
Valid Tbna
Jua. IZ, 1891

I
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Jan.19-17. Da~ld Dlibal, a cl.trten4 of the vtrm.o. will

preaent •lecture andchia-tn·

t1on on tile Iut day'at tile ball. A.
dllplq of Horowitz pbotqp'apba

and

-

SURGEON GENERAl'S WARNING: Smoking
Causes lung Cancer~ Heart Disease,
Emphysema, Alld May Complicate Pregnancy.

~~ will ~m­

JI&amp;IlY· tile plano OJ1 !he tour.

.

h

·

•

'

Demils ~ere accepted from · El- '
don and Rose BJII!Ows,
· Catheriap Colwell, ·women's ac- .
tivities chairman, asked members .
10 remember the hooleless. She also ·
asked . the group 10 tee)":!
household itcnls. She 8iliiOIIIICfd ·
lhe sewing and needlewark ~UISIS
willbejudgedandJunc~!lllg. ,
Communi'6as~ BnliOUDCed
that IS fruit
_.. delivered
19 community sa, ~ldedy. ' and
shut-ins.
. .
· , ..
There were33 members; ~~~to~
and juniors present.
• · •
·
The next meeting will .be a ftih
night on Jan. 19 at 6:30 p.m. at the
grange hall. A poduck ,suppec will :
be held followed by games. All
members and inJerested·persons we
inviled to atrend.
. .' "'. .

Promo_..,

.

· /',

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SATURDAY
. JAN. 12, 1991
3:00 P.M. ·
'

·pruo, &lt;tS101.

NO , ClBITIC8, l"LEASE .;_\
ROck star Prtace Introduced Ills '
• revamped band, New PoWer
Generation, at tbe Glam Slam
· •night .club in Minneapolis one
nlg!tt. this week. There had been
speculation he wowd Introduce
all new material blltlaatelld, ater '
a ,tune. led by ;J;apper Tolly M.,
Prince went ·Into some of his
trled..nd-tnie material. The club
·· milna~r refused admittance to a
ne'f,{spaper's.muslc critic, apparently because Prince did not
want a Wrlften'.. review of his
work . . · ·
NEWMAN'S FOOJI8 WORTH.
ANt11'11EB 18 MQJJON TO
CBA-.n .- Actor Plllll New·
man' cele'Qrlty Joodl business.
made 11 fortune~! year and he
has tlonated $8 mUllon of It to
more than· .00 charities world·
wlded. Tllli.amount 'Is Newman's
share of the' pi'Qflll frOI'I) Newman's oWn company, which hal
raised nearly $3&amp; million for
charity by selling popc'om, s&amp;.d
dresatng •nd other fooda IInce III .
Inception elibt years aao. T)le
recipient cbarltleti nu'lge from •
one-roem scbqolbouae for the
chUdren of m~~rant workers to ~
victims · Qf f)liods, hurricanes.
famines and' other· diiiBters.
Newman's Own start8d with
spaghetti sauce Newman made
In his kitchen for friends and still
' Is based In his hometown of
westport. ·It also sells lemonade, I
salsa and other sauces.
BOCK 'N' BOU. 'N' BOLL 'N',
ROLL 'N' BOLL - 'Die decibel
Iev.el In 'Rio de Janeiro will rise •
perceptibly later this mo.ntb
when promoters present Rock In
Rio II, uequel totbel985festlval
that featured BOd ll&amp;eW1Irt and
other ·International ·stars . This
..
year's blowout w111 take place ·
· · Jan. 18-20 and 22·27 In .the
170,0()0-..~t ldBtJICW Stadlllil\,
the largest &amp;Occer stadium In the
world. Amoag' tbe•ta~on tbeblll
are G'eo11e · aQcll••l,' GUDI .1'1'
. Roses, Bllly Ido~ NeW IUdl oa
the Block, loe (;Geller, et al, and
many. Brazilian atari.
Bobei1o Medlilolnleilds to stab. llsh Rio 11 the "City of Youtlt''
· and ·to promqte lntetnatlonal..
• lolldarlty throu&amp;h musli:. ~
· dlno aaya )II! l!lCpecta 1 million
people to attell!f lnd another !1M) ·
·mllllon to watch 011 ~lbl!:..o..
BOitOWITZ PMNOTO TOua
- Tbe Stelnway plano favored by ·

tamed planilt Vlildlmlr Borvwlb .
will malre • !WO.yeu tour of 75 ·
u.s. cltli!l atartlq :this month.
The pliUIO wiD be on d~ at
Stelmfty HUI In New York on'

HOLZER
CliNIC
DAY..

plain

.People in
tbe.:·news .

------------------

•

Familf
. Medicine

Star.
.. .G
. range. mee·rs·

!he

!'

..
...
•

would'holp you.
-.
·.
. One inlmlBtil!i ·but ~moo
cause'
Yllinal infec~is an a1lrqic iedon IC? yeast. ·
··~
Umi\ld 10 lbe ~.._~ ..~
JaCtion produces a uur '"''II ,_.
comfm lild discbarge !bal provides
John C. Wolf, D.O.
-·~
II!OlC food for !bo yeast 110 ~·
Associate Professor
Ideolifica!iaD and ueaanent ollhil
of
Medicine
;.
problem,
!bo ~
~es, ·butis itstill
mayinevcalllllly
ex- - ,.. ~====~~~====::=:=:~~:=:::;;::=::!..;"

:b

..

Ohio University
Co~ge of Osteopathic Medicine

Rio ·Grande ·

.-.

· University

~

,

Y$•

Defiance.
College
.
.

•

. At Rio'i Lyne Center ·:

..

.,~

~

·.·.'
'

· •Prize rorawii'QI
at Halftime.

.

'·•.

· HOLZER CLINIC
992-2188

L.
f'

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�Page 1G-The Daily Sa •tiull

Wedn•day. January 9, 1991

.community calendar
me

tiviUes room of
Middleport
Branch of lhc. Meip Couiuy Public
Library.. Mrs. c.rt Horky will

l'llmc:roy

Flame Fellowship Clllpl« wif1
~beh&lt;l
.·;:ssCdl&amp;~ Faye Wallace meet Thursday 81 7 (IJI!· • the
.. "'
.
Senior Citizens Cc:nrcun PomeaO).
·
-l1 ..,
Jenny Cadle, Leon, W.Va., will. be
CHESTER. · , • · The Past \ 1be speaker. The public is invited to
Councilor's Cub or the Cbestrr aaend.
··
WEDNESDAY
Council 323 Dqbtcn cif America .
RACINE
The Soulbem Will meet Wcclnesdly at 7:30 p.m.
POMEROY- The PrecepiCr Bela
Boosters will ~ Wednesday at at the h&lt;lrne of Eslber Smith.
Beta Chapter, Bela Sigma Phi
7:30 p .m. at the higll school and all
Sorority will meei Thursday 81 6
prents. coaches and advisors ~~e . LEBANON .TOWNSHIP • The p.m. at the Grace Eplscope1 Church

Lebanon Township 1\'ustees Will for a chili supper.
meet in special sesson on Wednes-

mged to attend.

MIDDLEPOIU - 'I1ie Mid- dadliny .at 7 p.m. 81 the IOWDSbip buil-

. dleptlrt Lita'ar)' Club will meet at
1:30 p.m. Wednesday in the ac-

st

from 4-9:30 p.m... 111e

THURSDAY

. POMEROY • The

Meigs SW9) auxiliary offers
packets, ground &lt;:overing·

Peter

and
Plull'lrllh
Souib hn
IIS)'Ivuia
·AyeoueHall
ill 011
wen..,
· ID!aim is $1 or 52 ~
.

The ··-:!I"
v..;.. Soil -"
.._
. "-.
'-"'1
~fllioo Dillril;t I acties Auxiliary
ftlldecl.
1-61 •
apia
ofr;!!torco~
384-3 SO for informadon.
Pllnll. •
,
ROCK SPRINGS • The Rock ~ QUID'":., year's aeol~ ~~
spnngs
· ~ meet ThundaY as follows:
-• blmdles
·-wbiiC ni-, 2.5 for $7;
817:30p.m.
· c:alelofSOyesn "-..will be alllllnlcd. Mauben urged 10 .,...,.cb pine, 2.5 for $7; ColondD
attend.
•
. Blue Spmce, 2.5 for $7; Canadian ·
Hemlock, 10 for $6; Common
O.....Lo
• "-- 10 ,or
~
$S : WhiIC
POMEROY - The Pomeroy ·-.- ....,..,
GroupofMand .. "'-will
Flowaillg Dopood, 10 for $5;
ftlniiUII
meet Black Locust, 24 for $7; .Sweet
if:t~t:,.r ~:.:0. ~
own, 10 ror ~ and fruit tree
informali011 C1111-800-333-5051.
paclcel, _.for
.
. .

Door=

:eo .,...es Y:C.

S::

g.

.,

Oround

~

0
·

available

.
'·

this~ include: crow Vc:tcb.
~
s72

for 20; .EnsJisb 1~, "" ,or 15;
PaclJio~/:0
wildfloiver seed packets and bini and
butterlly seed packds which COO·
tain ooe ounce or seed for S2.SO
These packets wiD plant llp•
proximately 250 !IQ~ 1eet.
For more inf00118tioo; or 10 order
these packets, conta:t the ~
Soil and "'"''""
,..,... "'-·--"'~·- Districi0ffice81992-6647,orstopby
the office locarcd at 33101 Hlllnil
Road in Pomeroy.
All packets rnuSt be .paid for
when the order is placed.

,e;eric:ail

.•

-..•·.
....
.... ".' .
...
:-- _·

'

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WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES . NONE
SOLD TO DEALERS.
.
UV&amp;i IIIIIIIIPIU:Y-EIIch of theoe odvenilld ittmll it requ~od to be readily oyeilab\l for
·In MCII K,_ Stote, exc"'t 11 opeoliclly notod In thio od. If w' do run out Df on
lldvenilld 118m. we wiU offer you your choice of 1 comporoble ~em . when.,..;-.
reftKtina the oamo 11vin111 oi 1 rlincheck which wilontitle you to purchele tho ecivtrtlud
item ot the ..tvertiood price whhin 30 davo. Only one vendo&lt; coupon will ~ occepted poe

......

TAkEs ·SHOT - Rio Grande's Brad Sehuber&amp; (left) sboota·
befere a Wilberforce player can block bls shol durf111 Tuesday
nl&amp;h4's1ame at LyneCenter, whlc'h lhe Redme,n won 110·72; (Pbot4!
by Kazamllwase)

·

GOLDEN RIPE

Dole ·
·aananas

•

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•

•

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·( lassifie

•
,•
•••

Kroger Chunk.. !(roger Real
Mayonnaise
L~ght Tuna
1Hz. Can

. ~Ads

••

.·

'COPY DEADLINE
MONDAY PAPE~

.

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1.-

Ground Chuck
;

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Dueker
Instant Oatmeal

. ·'

12:·18-oz.

15-18-oz. Box

·.POillld

,.

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· 3 Announcements

2 lnMemory

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446 GaHtpOiis

992

~88

Mtddl~

Pomeroy

Vi.ta~on

985 . Ch•••
Rio Gr•nd•
843 Ponl~nd '
266 Guvan Dist. · 247. · L••n ·Fatls
ti43 ArabiaDiu 949 Ratirtia
319 W.tnul
· 742 R11tland
&amp;~1 Coolville
245

2 00 PM . FRIDAY

I
I

frank W. Porter. Jr .. TrUitH
Undor Item V ofthll.loitWIR
end Teotarnent of Jone
loUIN D. 8mlth. Deceued.
ESTATE NO. 2811119- fl·
nehnd Dlllrlbutlvll Account
of Wllllom Bohr, Executor of
tho Eotete of M1ynerd L.
Bohr. DeceoHCI.
ESTATE NO. 21111311 - fl·
nellnd DlllrlbutlviiAccount
of Dorothy Joon Alkire. Exo·
culflx of the Eototo of Aline
H. Woove•, Decoolld .
ESTATE NO. 211120- Fl·
nellnd Dlotrlbytlvll Acciounl

MasonCo ... wv

·

Area Code 304

675 Pt.

••e

.'

1~

·21

I
•

!
l

loaft

2l -·"JI,oteuion ... Serv•cn ,

937 8Ufta'o

Robin W ner

57

Mullcallnurumenls
Fruth &amp; Vegtt~•bles
For Sale Of lr•rte

I

h.c~•ting

El18ct•ic• &amp; Refugtw•tion
Gun...-al Hauhng
MolKie Home R'l)•lf
UphOlstery

J

__:.

..

________

. -

...:.._ ...

BISSELL &amp; lUilE
CONSTIUCnON

YOUNG'S

Banks

FIRST AUCTION TONIGHT

H_.,

CAI'ENTER SERVKE

Construction

•New
•Garaps

-Room Addltlono
-Gutter Wortc
.
-EIIctrloll • Plumbing
-Cone-Work
-Roofing
-Interior • Elll8rlor
Pllntlng
(FREE ESTIMATESI

NEVER ClEAN YOUR

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

•.••otlelllltl
Stop &amp; c-;are
Free ltflmatBI

Y. C. YOUNG II

,..,..,.,,

GUARANTEED!

FIIEE ESTIMATES
12-19-'10·111

667-61

THL

SHRUB &amp; TIEl

GROOM
RQOM

TIIM' 9nd

REMOVAL
*LIGHT HAULING

•Remodeling end
Home Repelre

AUCTIONEER: Rodney Howery
7231

Alllrtlds .

•Painting
NO JOB TOO SMALL
FREE ESTIMATES

BILL SLACK

HOMES &amp; GARAGEI

CEDAR
CONSTIUCnON
992-6641 or

USED RAILROAD nES

PrKn"
..... 949-2801
., ias. tit-2160
· Day or tiFt .
"At bolllflllalt

Co~pllte G1ooming

*FIREWOOD

BISSELL· '
BUILDERS
CUSTOM IULT .

General

•Roofing
•Siding

EMILEE MEIINAR

992:.2269 •

Owntr &amp;Operltor

614-992-6820
Paflllwoy, Ohio

fl.12·80ttn

..

.

69i-6164
1Z· I1·80·tflo

NO .SUNDAY CALLS
COMPLET£

DAN'S
11111SIIISSION
and AUO liPAll

20&amp; lliOATH SECOND AVE.

.

.

$1.;000

POIItiOY '-. PHCOC' Avt. - Completely remodeled with
new window; new carpet, new 1lmost evervtlting. Hn adin•
ina room. hvtng room, 3 bedrooms, Ioyer..kitchen with new
cabinets, new blth,1nd aluH basement with lalsotw1ndows
and its own new lurnace. ·
lUST SEE $34.000

.

.

PEACH FOIIID•...:. Showcase kitehentiibuitt·in dishwiSher,
Jenn·Air 'r~nge, oven and microwaie. ree bedrooms, run
bnement 1nd lois of big nice !ret$ for shlde -sittinl on 2
pretty •cres.
,
' •
134.~ .

8-lallzlngln
Automttlo
Tronaml•lont,
T'"*'P· 011 Chengt.
Clutch Repelri
FREI! I!ITlMATEI
IYeilro!rt....-.co

a.-..;

....... .

992·5517
,.P•••n,,OI.
.

ElECTRICAL SERVICE
Rtsidtntiol and
co-rcial
REWIRING AND ·
TROUILi SHOOTIIG
C..llfllll Itch IodeN
Fr•lttl•.tes

IANIS
CONSTIUmON
992-5009

L....;..-....,:.ll2;;:·1.:;,1·'

THE HARDY OUTSIDE WOODBURNING
HEATER WITH INSIDE THERMOSTAT
•

Iu

- ..

(/1/tl/1110.

CPATENTEQ)

-.

t_
_ '-rno,........;...-;.,. ......
....-,....· -_
--

..... _ ... houlolloll_,

lu Hupp.......... MI-2257
J• Trussell .....948-2110
Jo Hill ..............115-4415
Ofllct ................ tt2-225t
HAS

.........
-u....,pr-. _ ,....,
_ .,..

J&amp;L

WE NEED,LISTINGSII

INSUUnON .

Fi!ii;rl:::

•Vinyl Siding

·~
liN'S Atf1JAIICE
SERVICE

Acr_,_,..

HI-SUS ortiS-3561
'

.

I

·.

VICKER'S WOOD HEATING
Dltltt 11

. IAMISDISII
.. . •

1

LOAD fVEIY 12 HOUD

CALL

•lneulatlon
Hl-2772 741·2151
1131 lryen Pleas
MldciiBDOrt. Ohio

oillyllo-1\lotOOieotllollh . . .

I i - - - .......

•Replacement .
Wlnclowa
•Roofing

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

PltGM CiMI11M21111W l p.m.

.·:

11,./1111

f
. I'

.

.,

. •'

985~4473

992·6215

I
•

Bl
84
85
86
87

-

i.

........

homelnlprovements
82 ,. Plumb.ng \ H•••ng

58
59

GunEIS AGAIN.

. .

:

81

Building Suppli•

a~Helmet
Gutter
"

January 9, 1921
RACINE - Acrn - Acr1114 :_ Acrll(l- Approx. 26
Jenulry 7. 1978
acres of land. Has a'~prox. 6 acres tillable. Great place topu_l
On thla day we re'
a hoine.
•
114,500
meniber the tpeclal
thing•, the epeclal
. UTART ..J BET YOU'Ll lOVE IT -' Just fi&amp;ht lor a flmily.
tlmee, and the love
Has 4 bedrooms, dining room, new ~itd\\in cabinets. n.ew
you gave to NCh of 1 r1nge and entire home has been remodeled ntcely- tnside
.1nd oltt. Also has a view of the river.
123.900
ua.
Though you · lett
EASY LIVING -In this 4 vr. old 14x60 Sunnybrook mooile
ut before
your
home. lt has a catheclrll tilling tor dimension 1nd a laundry
grandchildren wore
room with shelves lorstoraae. equlrped kHchen, two bed·
born, they wllllcnaw
rooms and I10 balhs. It is beaut1fu and in new· condHion.

oS+-J
.......

Services

Pe•• for Sale'

-----====U==o=n===----..
ARENTION! ·

DOTTIE S. TURN.ER. BROKER

hllllrtl.
ledly ml•ed by
~end ChlciNn.
Alloe. Jeolde •

:11;;:..-:-

Business Services

I'.

WAGNER

epeclel ,__ In .our

"'.,:a;~

• ! ,;;;.. \

77 Auto Repu
78 Campln£1 Eqmpnutrtl
79 Cilmper• &amp; Motor Hornttll

Anhquas
Misc. Metchand•••

___ ______

"!..C..,
---~
·.,..;..--:rc..

Acc•50f•t~to

76 , Aulo P•h &amp;

Equtpmenl tor Runt
For le•e

992-5009

MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

lives end hold a v.,Y

64
55
55

Busin•s.OpponuRII-;

22 ~Monav to

S~ce tor Rent
Wanted to Rent

52 - Spor1ing Goods

ljhFhiMtiil

New Haven
let• I

Apjttment for Runt

Merch ~ nd1 se
' 53

~~­

· Autos for s...
Truclu for Saht
V1tns &amp; 4 WD ' s
MotOicycl•
Bo111s &amp; Molars tor State

71
72
73
74
75

51 .' HOlasehold Goodl

Ple.-..nt

loon

576 Appte Growe
713 Mason

::f

46
47
48
49

...

""' ~­~
,. ~

Transoortation

~o.uses fOf Aent
42 Mobile Homes hn Attn I
43 Farms tcu Rent

44

. .. .

,.: "l'.a.i

62 Wanted •o 8\ly

I;Adlill

W11neci To Oo .

Public Sale
&amp; A ell

Real

'&lt;.....

• 4;......

63 Livestoc~
64 Hay &amp; Graln
65 Sultd &amp; ~,'l•tttlnr

45 - Furni1hed Rooms

____

OFFICE 982-2e&amp;e/HOME 982-e892

much e pen of oilr

~·

61 -- Farm Equepmunl

Real htlte WW~Ied

___:

CHARLES H.

do. ,
You ere 1tiU very

'

' '

&lt;

I' '

Meigs County
Area Code 614

Code·614

Remembrance .Of

.end love v~•• we

~

•

In Loving

J6

Warned to Buv

fllmliy end frllnd1.

..

•

Are~

Tenn tram ue II ·
,.,. IIOD· Loved •nd
ucily mined by her

-.

Mobil11 Homtn tor Sal tt
Fiirrhs tor s•e
3 I Business Buildin05
36" · lots &amp; Acreage

11 Help Wanted
12,,. Situ1t10n Wanted
13 Insurance
14 Bu11n•s Tr~tn•ng
15 Schools &amp; lns1fuct1on
16 Radio, TV &amp; CB f'upau
17 MllcellantKtus

jollowiiiK lt•l••phmll' I'Xt'IIIIIIKI'.~ ...

2 .00 PM . TUESDAY,
2 .oo' PM . WEONESOA"Y
2 :00· P_M THURSDAY

IN LOVING
MEMORY· OF
SANDI HARDEN

ASSORTED PRE-PRICI!D PACKAGES

\..

Cla.~sifi•••l fWJW ·~ l;lll 'l'r I Ill'

2 00 PM MONDAY

8

Home. tor S•le

32
-33

AnnoucltfQenU

4 Give,.w-v
5 Happy Ads
. &amp; , ""ost and Found
.
1 Y•d Salelpaid tn advenceJ
8 Public Sale &amp; Auctton

HOUSEHOlD F..NJlURE: living loom Suitt,
CoffH Talllts, End Tables,
Choirs/Tallln, Stands
MISC. TOOlS, CONSIGNMENTS
ALSO lOTS OF CANNED FOODS AND
· GROCEIIES,CEIIEAl &amp; MISC.
TERM$: Cash or Ch~eks With ID
Refreshments bailable By l~gion

••

.

2 lnMemory
3

WEDNESDAY EVENING, 6:30 P.M.
RACINE AMERICAN LEGION HALL

s-Ib.' Beo

-

31

Serv1c~s

GaU•a,County

.......

.,.
..
- .. -.
....
.,
-'-·

Form Su11P:1es
&amp; Livestock

Real Estate

1 Card of ThWlks

En1ployrnent

of Mortlyn S - r . EXICU·
trlx of tho Emte of Wilbur
Thlobold, DecuHCI.
~. Unl... ·~c:-~~tlona .. an:
fllod thereto, llid eccounts
will be for hNrlng before
nld CO..rt on tho 13th dey
of Feb......,. 1981, otwhlch
time lllkf eccounts wll be
cOnlldeNd end continued
from dey to dey untl flnolly
dl-•d of.
•.
Any peroon lnl......d
moy fill written oxcoptlono
to uld ocoounta or to mott·
ero pertelnlno to thl ..ecu·
lion of the truot, not 1111
thon five deyo prior to tho
delt
__.;._.;._
ut.for hurlng.

Ore Ida
Golden Crinkles

Single Bars

Announce n1ents

ov., 15 Words
Rale
.
.20
S4.00
16.00
.30
. 42
$9.00
.60
,$13.00
.06/day
$1 .30 / dav

41

tuo, on Incompetent Per••·
ESTATE 1\10. 20121 Twenty-Second Account of

'

•

15
16

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF
SETTlEMENT OF
.
ACCOUNTS,
PROBATE COURT,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Accounto ond vouchoro of
the following nelllld flducl·
erleo hew bNn fllod In
the "robete Court, Melge
C~nty. Ohio, for opprovol
end Hltlement:
ESTATE NO. 211101 Third Account of Mery Ann
Horrio. Gu•clon of the Por·
oon end Eottte of nmolhy
E - Herrio. In lnCOIIIJM•
11nt Peroon.
ESTATE NO. 22412 Tenth
Robert Annuol
B. nluo, Account
Guordlen of
of ·
tho Eoteto of Sloven E. n-

I
I

..

15

PubliC Nollc:e

'l

M &amp; M Mars .Brand
Candy Bars .

.

PubliC Notice

1-oz.

P11111d

15 ,

Public Notice

FROZEN

Banquet
Dinners

·English Roast ·

0

..

REGULAR
RETAIL

u.s.

, •l

*~
•

1

·~

~

'

' ;

Cereal

••

~ ..

'

59¢

.

•.

1·

·~

Ra1es arc tOr consecu1iwl runs. broken upd.-ys will be ch•glld ·
tor each d., as ·~·~ate .-cis .
·

·

DAY· DEFORE PUBLICATION '
11 .00 A .M . SATURDAY

.THURSDAY· PAPER
tHIOAV PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

f

••

Cap'n Crunch

must be pr11
.

Vatd Siilt.'S

lUESOAV PAPER
WU)NESDAV PAPER

''

lb.
• •

coun~les

·

15

367 Ch•fWe

I

U.S. Grade A Rockingham Cut-Up Fryers 11&gt;.

'

· "A cli•llfle;l adl,itmiMunum plo~ c cd m the Oo:hly Stmluuti(N
. ct!pt
ctass1hud thlplay . Buu1ou Cafd ;md lt."tlili nottCIIS)
w•ll abo itppe• 1n lht: Pt Pluill.llnt Reg•ster and the Galh
pull&amp; Douly lr•b.uw. 1tH1clnng ovor 18.000 ho•l~es
l ·

.,'

.

,

Ill Mt:OlOI Iiltll

••

Fry

outsldtJ Mo•gs. Gallii or Masun

paod

•1 pomt lu\e lypu only used
·s~••n. tll tS not respons1bht tot erion ilfhu l•nl ll~ !Chuck
for llllfUfS first d.,. ~d runs II\ u;~perl . Cttll btlfore 2 00 p m
d~ ahttr pubht:aiiOft to mitktl conechun
"Ads th•t must be ~1d •n adviln~ ar•l
Card ollh i,rlks
Ho.ppy Acts

·,

Stokely's Finest
, · Golden Corn ·

his third year of eligibility, was
elected with one vote to sparenamed on 334 ballols (75.3
percent).
'" '
'
The last player to be elected to
the Hall of Fame with one vote to
'
... •
spare was Ralph Kiner In 1975.
.,
Carew, Perry and Jenkins will
•.
be Inducted totheHallofFame In
,
ceremO\IIes July 21 In Cooperstown,
,. - . N.Y.

• The Area's. Number ·1· Marketplace

"Puett ot .c1 tor an capullettiiVs 1s doubl'c pncu ot ad cost

••

OR

36

Words

10
Monthly ·

$."50 d•scount lor ~~odf patd m actwancc.
'freu ~rJ• 1GiveaWay i'lnd Found ads under .1!? words wtll be .
run 3 darts at no ch•ge.

•••

•

'

' "Rue~,:

•••

GREEN

Days
1

CLOSED SUNDAY
POLICIES

'

32·0l.

Wllberloree 88. ·

RATES

MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

••

SALAD
DRESSiNG OR

.,

'

TO PlACE AN AD CAll 992-2156

IN WATER

' t

· Ralttlme~eore: RloGraadeU,

·- 1 ~

...•'
-lbs.

B~ad Schubert, J·tt-0-24; Terry
Farley, 3·1·7: Joe Edward~.
0-1·0·3: Lester Smith, 5·3-13;
Kyle Schroer. .0·1·0·3; Jeff
l3rown, H!:2; Tim Christian,
2·2-6; troY Donaldson, 3·1·7.
TOTALS 28-11-7-111.
WJLBERFOBCE ('It) - ebrls .
Dacosta, 4-1·9; Fred Harris,
5-0·10; Robert Cummings, 7·1·4·
21; Derlc Adams, 2·1·0-7; Chris
Bunch, 7-1·0-17; Jarrod Grant,
1-1·3-8. TOTALS 18-4-8-'lt.

Carew, Perry, Jenkins · named to HofF

••
'
•'
-.. ''

COPYRIGHT 1991 • THE KROGER ' COi ITEMS ~D
PRICES GOOD SUNDAY, JAN. 6, THRoUGH SATUR·
DAY, JAN. 12, 1991, IN I'OMPCII'ITOIII

il:em purchaled. ·

With a. bench of only six · the century mark on a two-point shots. The te$ms cut turnovers
players, Wilberforce ga'l(e the goal by Jawanza Childs att 3:12. sharply as Wilberforce commit·
Rio Grande Redmen a ru'n during · Harrison tolaled 11 aa\Sbta, while ·ted 12 and Rio Grande had 10.
the flrat half Tuesday at Lyne . Brown, Donaldson and Erslan
The Redmen hOst Mount Ver·
Center, but John Lawhorn's club each supplied seven of Rio non Nazarene In their second
pulled away tor a 110-72 ·vlctory Grande's 56 rebouncjs.
Mld·Ohlo Conference encounter
and boosted Its season slate IQ.
Robert Cummlllgs was lllgh
of the campaign Thur5!!ay at 7: 30
12·3.
.
man for the Runnln' Bulldogs
p.m. Wilberforce (2·13~ travels to
Mark Erslan fired away for 26 With 21 points and 12 ot his team's Boca Raton, F1a., for a Saturday
. points and Brad . Schubert 45 boards. Rio Grande shot 45.3
game with Florida Atlantic ••
chipped In with 24 to lead Rio percent (43-95)frornthetloorand Box score:
Grande, but again ' Lawhorn' COMected . on seven of nine '
RIO GRANDE (110) - Gary
bench, with Lester Smith bring· attempts from the foui line for
Harrison, 4·1·0·11; Jawanza
lng down·13 points, received an 77.8 percent. Wilberforce was
Childs, 1-1·0·5; Lyndell Snyder,
oppoFtunlty lo see action.
42.3 percent (30·71) on shooting 0+0·3; Mark Erslan. 4·6-0-~; ·
Wilberforce opened sqongly and 57.1 percent (8-14) on foul
and remained In contention,
narrowing the host's advantage
to eight (44·36) In the '' latter
portiOn of the half before the
Redmen went on an 8-2 run to
JEFFSBAIN
eligibility, named on 401 of the
lead 52·38 entering ·the second
UPI Sports Writer
443 ballots cast (90.5 percent) by
period.
NEW YORK - Rod Carew i a the Baseball Writers Association
seven-time American League of America. Players must re.
.The Redmen Injected their
batting champion, and Cy young celve at Jeast75 percent of at the
· starters sparingly to build a
pitchers Gaylord Perry· and
cushion In the second halt, then
votes cast by BBWAA members
Ferguson Jenkins became the with at least 10 years of
retired their opening •lineup of
newest members to the Baseball membership.
Erslan; Schubert, Gary Harrl·
Hall ot Fame late Tuesday.
son, Jeff Brown and Troy Donald·
Perry, In his third year of
son to let the bench carry the rest .
Carew became the 22ni! player eligibility, received 342 votes
of the game. Rio G,rande broke
elected ·In his fil'l!t year of (77.2 percent). Jeltklns, also In

Cl\

'".

�•

2- The Daily Sentinel

--........
=.a.,• ...

LAFF-A-DAY

18

01 a 1M Pwuktl

ADOPTION

r'

ooiii0Wll-1llil

3 Aimouncemente ·
.

· "The Daily Sa ntinei- Pitga 13

Ponwov Midclapon, Ohio

JUT 'N' CARLYLE~ by Larry WJiPt

WMtld to Do

'fJO'D Til~, fo'lnl
MOOI.lbH~

~­

~rn .CLos

=r-· ,_..lit_

....

Television
Viewing

UMI

Hopplly martlod _,.,. couple
~=- to
~ warm I lovl!lll
to a 'whlta r - .. Eli·
pon- paid. Call T.,. and 0Guo

I

Giveaway

I

IVIHING

l

1:00 (J). Cll Cll. Ill D.

•I

colltct ""y)IIM ....... , . ..

4

="'

good cond. 114-446-

v.,.,

Sllrtno Club oo l u l -·11-.
trtandly and ptayfll. 114-

. o .....
I

r

•I

.w;.41)5o1.

21

!1!=-~~

·(ti 8ql I 8 One.,.N"I;I
~~q

Bullneaa
0pponun1ty .

a
a IR

-.

2br In

t -·

ence with the hearing aid
. ..."
m

aa

1

dapolll,

"

54

Apartment
for Rent

Real Estate

AM ""6··111' BttAT

aaa,_
........

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Ride PMr.qn Auction Company
· , _ - n g auctlonl, ex·
portenc:o maUl U. cllflnnce.
u.on-d Ohio, Kllf1luokr, w...
Ylflllnla, 30C-7T.J..a7115.

......_..,,

ANY

OM.adet,lheWI'Otll

~tsreo. l;l .
OCrlagalttketllall

8

8MDnerlltte
llcarecrow and Mra. King

tx12 ............. 110. ·Kllchon

NiiM! II YIL IIOitahar!

:30~ ~~TontthtS\sreo.l;l

~~~~ i.m,.nr

Bc-tltrs
7:31 Ill Andr antlllll
.1:00 (J). iiJi UnaoMcl
Mrlllsrlstt The Controvertlll
DMth of 1 Spokane. Wuh. :

Gove~NMfNT

........_'\1.-r.·

(IL~N·

~~~

Teaneatr Stsreo. Q

I!) MOVIE: The lletilort (R)

(2:00)

Stereo. Q

. tum~

led- - . ......, palntod,

1177 Dulo Crown Royal

lrallar,

SI.OOO. Cell bit 11n 1-1 p.m.
114111:1~
.

whMo; - - 1 .
CARPET
FURNITURE
, ........ I Carpota.
RL 7 · till 4411'1144.

ALL MAI(ES
Iring It In Or

saw
cheir:!l and -iii!cesaorlee
•Kero1ene Stoves &amp;
Wicks

55

'

Building
Supplies

1117 1411711 ClaWion Fantuy,
!lUmp.
Can bilall onaliSO;
1111, 30M7144JI.

_ Pick Up.

We Do Wick Repair·

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SEIVICE

MORRIS EQUIPMENT

992-5335 or 'tll~•-nol

-r.

.
·Coli 1114 441 oat.

14172. -

Cll~.?c-try Jo-Ei

SOMitr. Jimmy C. Newman
And Doug ~trShiW perform
c:lltlie CIJ"'\ tongt. (1 :00)

• l'rlnleNews

_......,..&lt;,

-........
....

..._._
Cojun
ftiOIIorj
-

'~

...-~.-.
.• • .

'1'ii'iii:i r: u Rr. ;; IT y

UPHOLSTERY

,...... ,..

&lt;.
.

MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
A GriFT CE:!:!TIFICA"''"E
F~M MI'CY!s.

205 N. Second Strllt
IIDDlEPOIIr, 0110 4576
Offka 614·992-2116
Home 614-992·5692

Hand Tufting

Cu..om Drepe1

38 1'e81'11 Experience

614-992·2321
213 North Second

Ill Colttgt ltllcetbiH .
e l8nr lCing Uvel .

8:30 (I) Cll. Mlrrled People
RuiMI Interviews a
atreetwlae New Yorker for
11\e job of nanny. Stereo. t:;1
10:00(J)Hewa
Cll (I). Equlll JUIIICe An
AIDS-infected man 11
proaecuted for knowingly
lnlectlng 1 Pllrtner. Stsreo.

DOmiS.II•a.•om

_ _____

We Say What We Do.
We Do What We Say

;;;,
11·14-11.&amp;

(!)

Ia stricken.

IDiimllllc Amtltnn
Fron..,. The IOng-'term
elfectl ot space flight ere
tumlned. St.reo. 1;1
.
1111 c • Jut 111c1 t1te
F - A P&lt;O-BP!Irtntid
Ieider trtes 10 convince Jakt
9f her Innocence. Stereo. Q
0 MOVII: Thla Gun for HliB
(2:00) Stereo.
Ill Nlilllvlllt Now
(lJ

tultw•
' ••~ j:-•

....... ·Iii ,...

•

Of Ml4.1eport

aomeone c:loH
Stereo. I;!

117217 II• . . _ . . -

.

Aow-.

Cll. Daaglt
M.O. Ottttn beCOmeS
pertOIIII lOr Doogla Iller

tor sale

Cal~1......

1;1

(I)

75 Boals &amp; Motore

comalllt ....... -

CAIN'S

Mike and Juon attend a
seminar to work oullhelr
dlfltrlnell.
1:00 ()) • . D Huntsr Hunter and
a dttectlve lnvettlgttt a
serlea of college cempue
r'nurdera. St.reo: D

-"1

LE.f'T IS 1t£ SI.IJIVEL

l•lloaiiY
... kl .-.

-

I'OMIIOY

12·24-90-1 mo.

I.CO&lt;...i'Hr.SE M&lt;E 11-\£
~IOCI1E.'&gt; ... ALL L4.£ GOT

...... ...

tna,
_..,

217 L S.C. '!!l'ltrO¥

Sidehill load, lutfand

I •

......

AO'IIU .....

742~2455

11ri1Mt18(2:00)
1:06 (J) 8helcl Zulu (Pi 3)
1:30 (I) (J). Qrowlng Palnl ;

Ulla

HOU&amp;ESoi.OT..FARMS
•COMMERCIAL
'lVI! NEED USTINGSI

I

•

11-!-110-lfn

Now In
. Stookll

g(!)~

r:11 rn ·~ n;p!,i~'l
(~

HE RAISED
HIS HAND IN·
SCHOOL TODAY

I_ 'I.H' ,!(;\:k

1111 1D. WIOU Ttte WNDY
newaroom suffers after lt)e
·· staff goea on strike. Stereo.

AN' HIS ARM
COULDN'T STAND

TH' SHDCtc II

R
~ ... Trail: The'Ntllt
o...........

8CNNI-.gNewa
D 'llplrllual Worlda In
Conlllot' 700 ClUb IDtoilll:
.......,_. Worlda In Conflict

(1:00)
10:06 (I) MOVII: The'Oelidly
• rowsr (2:00)
-10:30 Cll CfOolt Mel CltiW

..

-

IELIR'S CUSTOM BENDING
We Han Changed fb,r Location To
1t/1 llllts East on -t. 241 through
Chuter, Oh.

......;:_
~ _....;_

•Custom Bent Exhaust Sy1tems
•Complete Une ·of Exhauat Supplies
•tt.ndle and lnateff Monroe Shocks .

12

SHuatiOn
Wanted

For AFree lupectlon

aad Ea&amp;lmale

Pl. 61.·915·3949 1108110 QWI
t.tg lett'""

47269 St. 11. 241 .

SOLU170NS, INC.
.O.C.L. COMPUTER
.
.

•oN.sn.ll SERVtCil;REPAIR

,

•SAUlS
•ON ~SI TE CUSTOM TRAINING .

.1116 JAQCJON PIKE · SUITE 20J '
f1MIIPOUS, OHIO 4J6J I

4) 446-6000

Aolroln

Nowtl-...-atom

Call•.-..u:J l;lll
Pl... Call Todiir. - - ...,.
Bulin•••

"CUSTOM PROGRAMMING.

Ji . . . t'A.&amp;Uf PIIOFl!SSION.tL BUIWINC

....H lllan .....'IDII.

'11 · Wanted to Do

cAfl~
·-'"':.t
27111•-...........
- .,,
. , a,, .....
-

- · ,........ 1114

•.

•

'

.

0 Miami Vice Stereo.
Ill Cljun c-try Jo-El
Sonnier, Jimmy C. Newman
and Doug K!lflhlw perfOrm
al

·"fifOihlng's oerte1n except deeth, toxee,
and one Chrlltmu tree naeclle I'll
alep on this August .'•'

you

..

.

: '·&amp;'

'

'I

.L

.'

.

88clrsorft 8nd Mra.

King

11:30()). iiJi Tonight BMw

Stsreo.

I!) The 1101 IIIII
(Il Amellcs'l DttfstiN,

l'a II

ct=i .

I.Arlt..=T-.

.

G lpa tsCI ... Y-In

IIOVfl: llutw••malallrte (2:001
11:11 (I) MOYII: The ..... liMine
(2:00)

(l)llglltllnel;l .

~·

.

+Q 76 5 4Z

SOUTH

.. ~~-••-K J D-6-1.2

.KJ

•

• 10 2

+IOU

Vulnerable: Nortb-Soutb
· Dealer: East
s..t~

Welt

)'lor"

l!'.all

Pua

f

t

Db!.
B+

tt

~·

Pus

pAU...-

·.

Opening lead: • 4
with only a five-card suit. He hlld to be
leading an unusually low dllmolld for
a reason; and lha'l reason could CIGly be
to encourage East to return • club If
he won the first trick. So Eat returned a club, and West ruffed to let
the ~lam.

·
.
:

:
,

job
42 Lowly
workers

DOWN
1 Shutter. bug's
need
2 Deriva·
lions
3 Typo·
graphical 15 Dickens
symbol ·
nickname
cast
4 Whirlpool 17 Keys in a 28 Builds
5 - Moines
story
29 Red wine
6 Cajole
20 Cut oH
30 Bouquet
7 Writer
21 Use a
31 Hamlet
Jong .
hassock
and
8 Of the
24 Near'· ' Ophelia
fleet
sighted
35 Rational.
. 9 Yonder
cartoon . 36 Vauk
11 Congress ·fellow
38 Cartograman's
25 Zoo
phy .
term
barker
creation
,..,-..,........,--..:.:...-.:,--,

field's
forte
39 Signs of
the fulure
40 U~derway

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES - Here's how

' .

to work It:

1/9

AXYDLBAAXR
•

is LONGFELLOW

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three I.'s, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters ,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hinta. Each day the code letters are ~ferent.
CRYPTOQIJOTE

1-9

NS

liD~•=~: 14nnllh

i:allllalll

•· ..

t.KQJ9'76&amp;4

41 Lawyer's

1 Like spy
. messages
6 Copper
10 Take lor
-(trick)
11 Syn!l·gogue
scroll
12 Heeds
13 Relin·
' quish
14:Like
meringue
15 Hobo's
transportalion
16 Poke fun
at
17 Trifle
18 .Heady
brew
19 Studies
22 Terminal
23 Targets
26 Partridge
perch
290Hone's
rocker
32 Bro's sib
- 33 Impair
34 Mistake
f11aker's
need
36 Auclion
37 "Goodbye, Mr.
Chips "
slar
38 David

lnlpane•u•
.

•Into

=~:;;;;

••u
s
tAS
t4

by THOMAS JOSEPH

.X L

Cll 1.811_¥-._

EAST

,

CROSSWORD

8 lporta Tonight
11:31(1) Clttterl t:;l
12:00 (J)
lite NlgiiiStereo.

=•

+AKJ9

One of the more·importaDt rea10111
for sipllng at bridge is to show suit WESt'
preference. This often occurs wben +u
the opening leader is going to bold tile .1062

trick, and a look a~y tella blm
tfult a switch II absolutely mand8tory.
ID tfult type of situation, a hlgb ctrd'
from. partner asks lor the lead ~ ".
hiRher·ranking suit; a low cards ug, ges'- the lead · of the fower-rank!Dg
suit. That's fairly o~vious. Wbat is not
so obvious is that the openina le8der
also can have ao opportunity to lbow
suit preference, as In todsy's deal.
In third position and with lavonble
vulnerability, West opened lour till·
mondrl. Nortl! doubled for takeout lad
East got in the oppooenta' way with
five diamonds. South risked bldcllni
five spades, and North bid the sr.m.
Everyone pasaed, lea,iog West on
lead.
Abandoning the standard lead from
K"Q-J, he· led the diamond lour. East
won the ace of diamonds and re81ly
had an easy play. Even thougb South
pl8yed the diamond 10, etftlcealin\:
deuce, it was apparent tbat
would not have opened lour diamonds

~·-tl

••

By JIUIIes Jacoby

·=~1- (1:00)

"*"

Canlor.

ILOL
-=~~Draplne
1•10•
...._ • .._

.\

~==CI

-VOI'II

--Palo•llot,10
Will~

..

V:::,

a•

llli

Cll •

NORTH
+AQI07
· ·AQ54

I

Copper,

!Ill. Araenlo Htlll;l

CANCEII ( J - 21-.luiJ 22) Tlwe Ia 1
very thin line today ~ being GOII·

ex·

•(

..

_ _ _ _ _ _;..__ . romance? T~e Astro-Grapn l.tatchmak·
er can help you understand what to d9
. to make the relatlonahlp work. M.all $2
- - - - - - - · to l.tat~er. c/o thl• newop.,.,,
P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland, OH 44101-

structlvely aaaertlve or lmpulllwly t~g·
gresalve. You'll be llble to lot the mvk,
provided you do not hive to &lt;*II with 1
3428.
feisty obstrucllontlt.
AQUAIIIUI (.llin. :IJIH'ell. 11) lllnre 1 LEO (.luiJ :13-Aug. D) Much C1i1 be ecBERNICE
baltlng per1011. I'd put money down 0!'1 complllhed today n you adhere •to 1
• BEDE QSOL you to wtn today In altuetlona lhll hive · Mnaibla agenda and ~ youi'MII
pr011ounc:ed competitive elaments. Ttte wtaely. lt you ruah to flnlah ~hlng toy
odda favor you, aa long aa you don't do quitting time, your thUmb mtiY get In llie
anything rllh.
·
ttte hammer.
PIICEI(Feb.20 Mr chiO).Y.au'renot.
(Aug.t.l lajlt.D)Yau'*'i*·
likely to be reluetllll In ,giving lrltndl lonn 'up to your 8liiMCIBtlona I~ H
adviCe today; mott of your 11 tggeillonl you only have to con1Md wl1~ llllnliMI
will have m.lt. Hi:lwever, _ , tttet• aupervtllon. little bOll atlfla pu lng
bleure turned, you'(e not11pt,!o be re- o- your ahoulcle&lt;, your produttlwceptlve to Input from otiwnl.
~ could tepidly.decline.
. AIIIQ (......., 21·Aprll1t) Conditlona u.A (lept.II-Oot. 21) Yo'u're unci«
· , In genaral are lavor1ble and thll could lavorable flnanQII aaptcta toelty, •but
be a profitable day for you, provided there II a -nlng for you to avoid
...
,__10, 1111
· you don't plug ttle leaks up with one -~~~ wl1ll extr~Vt~gMt
.•
hand and pull ttte corka out with ttte lrlenda. 1t could lalld to your unclalnQ.
Fi'landJ will play canatrvctiV4 rolae In . ott....
ICOIIPIO (Oct. Jt Mait. D) 81gr'MIC8nl
your lflllra In lite,.... ai!Md, but liMy TAUIIUI (April 30 llal 10) You mlghl .
will be belt« ~
.,. not IIUiy to be of mucll htlp wheN havetocontenclwl1hiWIOuldt'•tlop- t~ay w1111 u w people ae panlllle.
'JOUI aomti•CIIII lilt~ In con- ment
You'd be - t o INII n In Two It acceptlble, ..,_ II 1 111. .anaa
- . . ,. Dan't Ill
get lrlvotwd In •n
potltlve man- without and tour Ia out Of the qttlltlan.
yow )'a'.
IAQITTARIUI I*'· D he I'll Mill·
CJU¥D ...... 8 1r1tl,..._
ef. - ,.,.01~181~ . . ._
.....,., Ill tt181r II* dtMn a
llllilllly lectlve
toc141y
tile N1U111 01 ducted o~ tacley, but
and you're no uaeption. H- fun and your· lndut1~ lhOulcl iWIIC1 11. not be u alllcl · 11 teldng ... ton.a.te
enJouaur811fladaY. butknoW-'-ta ·. H _ ,, beCirllulnottotllctonmore -··problema. Give 111aug1tt before
Clll n quill. T'Y!ng to patch up • brOIItn thin you CM manlige.
volunteering.
1

,,

•

&lt;Ji

IIJ .....

ASTRO-GRAPH

SPECIALIZING IN ....

Come lll!d See Us

11:00 ()) •

BRIDGE

ACROSS

D MOVII: Mr F.,.,...

1177~oalton .,.......,
, 4

nice,

MOVII!: Clltndlr Girl
MUi1llr8 (2:00).
IMUfder,lheWIOtll

Pats for Sale

ta... Pel -

-

wi·

•

• 48 Houra Stereo.

56

OVEN REPAIR

.

Cll (J). The Wondtr y..,_
Kevin Ia triCked Into running
to• prelklant of the si\Jdant
council. Stereo. Cl
(Il (!) National Oeographlc

o_,
and &amp;upptr ~
G_,lna. All~ All

•Any length

__,

7

fr.

tUN. R. , lfotth. ·-11144.

12·24·90-1110.

YARDMAN &amp;
ECHO DEAlER

'

rMV.(T'

PA/l'1'
of $OMI
- .
".

r.1c rch iincll sr.

Ch•k Out Our Law

7U·2455
Sidehlll 1111111, Rutland

110 SUHDAY

fEN/'~

1:01 Ill 111ppy Dttr•

IT

- . On

GOOds

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT

PH. 949'-2801
or Iss. 949~2860

..

ANYfVIO~E •.

HousehOld

"Free Estimates"

n81ghbor has a nicer house than yours. It may help when
you wanfto SELL YOURS."
.
·. ·
.

.

IIJ !Je•II!IG' Cap 1111~ ltaW
of Itt . . . Add u (Uve)

: fo/OT"HING $fEMS
TO MA/(E
. '-.

Pricft an "Hnl" lttGr

OuStto-E/ude - 0/den-SYitem-SeLL YOURS

8tlts Of
the . . . . . . . . Legltl111
Ill Wllttel ol

•~

1- 1

~ne woman to another, "Oon't feel badly that your

(!) Gaw.,_.a 1"1

I

Plus Other Name Brands

q...-,.

Cb0111fploto ~ chuckla
y II ling In the milling -cis
. \'011 "--op lrom 11ep Nil. 3 below.

IN

. (J) • llovernol'a ltn o1
the11811M111111
.

I

T"'ctan and Equipment
NDW In Stock! .

I ' I__. 8
. . . PR INT NUMSEREO . I'
9 lETTERS
SQUARES

-~

·~TODAY!

•

SERYI(E AND REPAIR
ON ZETOR TRA(TORS

I'

ICIAM Lin AN1W111

a•
GOv•mor"• 111MB ot
the . . . Addrni'1111

AND ERNES.T

BISSELL
SIDING CO. -

I

. llllntltle Edition 1;1

IID·~CourtD

41N78S.

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
• .• IOLUIWN IN
INSULATION

=

·
· • have, It would be a very silent
;:::
. :::;:~
, ~:;:..:.,wor1d II no birds sang except
N U T ~U E R \those that ,••• ····:" .

,._1;1

3'1 · Hom11 for 9ale

... 1111..... heat ......
Rt. 31"- _ . . Fort, ......
workl1t 211 " "

Quote from a succeealul
actress. ·use the talent you

oi . . . Addrnt

oMe-01127- 2p.m.

Jlelgo County -

I

.

·1!1

E A S . T £1

·1
I· 1• I'
_ . . _

®I a- Of Jtan."'ii

Merchanc:IIN

Fum..._. or UllfurnAihed. 114-

1111111adular' - · IIR, a lull
- · tumlohod
•
batlllll.·-- tO . . . .. - . llapM!I,
114 4iuailt
11M ...R._IIMIIw. nowty lo.m.I'G~eel. Alldng $40,00o. 114-

II

THOGS

. 17

8:31 Ill Ali4'/ Glttfttll .
7:0012&gt;• WV Gaw.,_.tllats

Ml~eellaneous

I

A I'L B A L

· ....&amp;.._,__.,.~_.._.L.
1......1..:..

. !::=:~1;1

••

Business Services

PGATour

1n11c1e ...

~Mc:"il;l

........ pluo
and
..-...

.lit. ·

(

I

__ .

~ Allbatt and Catlrla

••• ~ Wrhin Area.

I

. ._,.,
1---r-1...,.,....1'"T""""ll

1:111 \i. D N8C Nlghtlr Noia

44

8

1;1

L-oa()) ......, 111••••

troller 1ar ..nt. . -

·-· .0

" ... and now notice the differ-

0

•

Gl Wolld TOCIII_
I)OurHoi!eel;ll

~-.,-

homn. 3()4...875-!{35.

.WED.. JAN. I

Ir

Found:
· Blroelo,
Till of
&amp;
Whlto, WJCOIIar,
'lldniiY:

PersOnal Pound Pupp&amp;el, eut•
- a can be, thtv Wild QOOd

•

R S I

..
U S F N
•

•·

WSL

.

.E TUG M
TN

G. S W V

HTXW L

ETUGM

AtLLFB

MSC

HTXWL

MSC

US W' L

GXDF

SLRF 8

II F S 1i G F . - V F S B V F
A S S 8 F
Yeet.Ne.,•e ·Crvptoq-te: AS TO nJE IDEA '
THAT ADVERTISING MOTIVATES PEOPLE. REMEM·
BER
.. THE EDSEL - PETER D~UCKER
.

"
••

.'

I

�.

Pc?meeov..:.Middaport.

'
Wednesday. January 9, 1991

Ohio

ZESTA
.SAlTINES

STORE HOURS
Monday tbru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

.

"

.

"

.

·'

Ohio Lottery

Trojans

Pick-3: 683
Pick-4: 8153
Cards: 7-H~ 8-C;
J-D; 8-S
Super Lotto
~ 7-38-40-43-48
Kieker 527919

top .Division

L

II ratings

16 OZ. BOX

Page4
)

•

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
PRICES EFFECTIVE JAN. 6, 1991 THRU JAN. 12, 1991·

.

Low tonl1bt In lbe upper 3Gs,
rain. Friday, high In mid 40s.
.CbiUice of rain .near 100
percent.

•

at

.I

1 Section. 12 Po goa 2&amp; Cent a ·
A Muttlmodio· tnc. NowopopOf

'

Vol.41, No.182 ·
Copyrighted 1991

Pomeroy-_MiddleportJ Ohio, Thursday, January 10. 1991

·.

'i

Commissioners study Rutland sewage ·Issue
of

. By BluAN J, REED '
diction over the area oulSide the
Sentinel News Staff
· cmporation ' limits, and .therefore,
· DiscuSsion of an ~~ bet- accordfug to O'Brien, they must
· ·ween the Village of Riitland'lilul-the pi approval to such a district ·
Meigs County Commissioners
O'Brien reported that the district
regarding a new sewage system in - to be called the Rutland Area
Rutland was one of the subjects of Sanitation District • would: after its
Wednesday's regular meeting of the establishment. operate as a separate ·
commissioneiS.
and independent · governmental
1
The $2.2 million sewage project, subdivision.
funded through Ohio Public Works · Commissioner Richard Jooes
Commission and lbe Federal En- e~ssed concern that residents
. vironmental Protectioo Agency, is unmteresled in the service would
. ·expected to begin Jale.r this year. 00 forced to COMet! with the sys.All residents within the _village•. as · tem anyway. .
well as. several others m lbe tm''My · concern," Jones · told
niediate area, will be served by the · O'Brien, ."is with granting authority
·new projecl
·
·
to one body, which in tum can give
Pomeroy
Attorney
Patrick authority to force someone to do
· O'Brien, who represents the village something that they don't ·want tO
: in the project, presented the com- do:"
missioners with a proposed agree. Despite this concern, O'Brien
.mept pennitting the village to in- reported that once the dislrict is in
• elude lbe area outside of the city place, that authority will be as welL
limits in a new sewage dislrict.
O'Brien also sai!J that each resident.
The commissioners have jwis- in the surveyell dislrict will

CHICKEN

Leg Quarters •••·•• !~. 4 9(

$1· 19
1/4 · Pork Lo
· ··n •••••••• $1 59.
._....... 5· l •.
••••
•

IMPERIAL

-TRASH

•

•

lB.

HOMEMADE

BAGS

-

Por.k SOusage ••• ~!'; $119
$.
T-Bone Steak ••••• !~ 45~
·BUCKET BEEF ·
· .$
..
Cube Steak ••~~-~ •• ~ • .•269
U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF

.

'

. 30 QT.-20 CT.

.

.

99&lt;

'

5

. ·. $
IOXIS

'

STILL LOC~ED OUT • Members o; Steelworkers Loc:al
still man their picket stations on SR 2
at the entrances or RaveliSWOI!d Aluminum CorJIOration, as they have since Nov. 1. Tbe negotiating teams
from .the steelworkers and.RAC are scbeduled to 'resume negotiations .on Wednesday, Jan. 16 in Pittsburgh.

Sus

WIENERS·

Unio.n local . president calls
latest ·RAC st.a tements 'rash·'

69&lt;

KRAFT AMERICAN

-~

3 ~lAMOND

.

·.

I' $

.

Pmeapple ....m!·r:• 2
ST~KEl Y GREEN

BEAN$ ..

•

1

•

:'

...

.I

Plastic Gallon

$ 169

.

.

• .

.

HAMS

a

. . 10-12

Signs found .

•

KEMP'S

Corn,. Peas ••••••••• S/S2- Ice Cream •••••••••!I•• $. 2·99
14.5-16
OZ.CANS

CLOROX BLEACH ..

79( '

... Ollr At ,....., Iuper Valu
....
" .........
12, '"'
lllslt
I , . C.t-

•

S QUART PAll

WHITE ClOUD

CAiiNAnON

TOILET TISSUE

EVAP." MILK

99(

4 ROLL
PKG.
GeM

Onlr •• ,...., s.,. v•

GeM Ja 6 thnt Ja II, I ttl
lilllt I Ptrc.t••li

.

'

.

Health care reform tops agenda

PICNIC

IWS Chees·e ~ ••••':.o:~. 1 '.~9
BANQUET
.
.. . oz.
T·V D1nners ........... til. 9.9(
.

~~~z.

CANS
GeM

2f$1.
.

Onlr At Pewll'• Iuper Yalu

Gae4 -

6 lhnl .... 12, 1991
lilllt 1 "' " ' ' - .

·MAXWELL

COFFEE
• 39

$499

oz.Onlr At Pawll's Super Yalu

Geoil

Gae4 -

6 tlnv .... 12, 1991
.
.

ll.lt I Ptr CUll-

BANQUET

PO-T
PIES
70Z$

-

•

3

PIES .

•

.
• · · . . three
.
d
De·puties investigate · · .. ·acci ents;
.

•

1

·
Three accideniS and a car &amp;re
were inves~ted by the Meigs ·
County Sheriff's ' Department on
Wednesday.
According to a department news
release, the car fire oeeurred at 8:SS
a.m. on Salem Street in Ruiland.
Henry J. Catle of Rutland attempted
to start his 1987 Plymouth and it
bacldlred, . igniting the ' engine.
Heavy clanutgc was listed to the
vehicle. Rutland fire depai tn~e~tt
responded to the fire.
1
•

•
At 6:4S p.m... Timothy W. Molden, 19, Langsville, was eastbound
on Slate Route 124 itear Rutland
when · he sttuck a deer with his
1984 Buick.
· At 'S:30 p.m. Marilyn Cooper of
Portland ~ injury when the
1979 Ford ptckup truck she was
operating oo County ROlli 3S,went
olf the pavement on the rigbt.
suuck an embanbnent and ovmur·
ned on iU top. Heavy damage was
listed u:i the vehicle.

."
"

\~

)

Meigs County .School Board
=~l:':S. ~o~~y~;te~gn~~ reorganizes for new tenn
Route 338 marker·and three county

vehicle damaged by ·fire in Rutland ~l~~b:~~~~~=;

'

'·

.' '

WASHINGTON (UP!) -Pres"We've got to keep trying but
The president learned of .the
lderit Bush Is 'proceeding .with a this was a total stiff-arm, a total
disappointing details of the
muttary buildup In the Middle rebuff," said Bush of the BakerBaker-Azlz talks during a meetEast after receiving a "total Azlz meeting during which the Ing with bipartisan congresstiff-arm, a total rebuff'' from Iraqi minister refused to accept sional s1:1pporters of a resolution
lJ«q- on his · Initiative for a
from Baker a letter from Bush to he Is seeking endorsing the use of
{Uplomatlc solution to the Per~ Saddam . outlining the U.S. force In the gulf.
.,.
.
slan-GuU ·ei"lsls.
: · ··position. "
'"" · · " ·
Congressional oeiliocrats and
Bush acknowledged he was
But at the same time, Bush · J;tepubllcans headed for a partl·
discouraged that Wednesda);'S declared that he Is "more deter- san shoWdown on a potential war,
talks lp Gene"'a between Secre- m lned than ev~:r" to Implement
denying aush's appeal :for a
tary of State James Baker and the U.N. mandate aut)lorlzlng
"solid front" against Saddam.
Iraqi Foreign Minister Tariq the use offorce to drive Iraq fron\
As Republicans rallied behind
Azlz ended with no sign !bat lbe Kuwait after next Tuesday If Bush's proposal that. Congress
two sides would reach a dlplo: Saddam has not withdrawn his endorse the U.N. resolution that
matlc solution before the·Jan. 15 forces .
would allow him to launch a
U.N. deadline for Iraq to with·
Along those lines, Fitzwater military offensive to drive Iraq
draw Its troops from Kuwait.
said Bush Is "proceedlngwltlt the out of Kuwait, Democrats coaThe president said he had not military buildup of forces !rom .. lesced behind a leadership plan
surrende!.'.ed hope· for a solution Germany, Including several that wauld call for extended
without war, saying, "It's nottoo thousand tanks and olber sanctions coupled with the threat
. late." But he doubted Iraqi equipment."
of war.
President Saddam Hussein
More than 300,000 U.S. troops
Senate Democr atic leader
would respond reasonably, say- are In the gulf region along with George Mitchell of Maine said
-~ !ng, "The ch61ce of peace or war
an estimated 220,000 lnterna· · the Senate debate - perhaps the
Is really Saddam Hussein's to tiona! forces aligned with the most fateful since the days of the
make." Iraq says the d~lslon Is . United States against Iraq. Bush VIetnam War - would begin
up to the United States. ·
has ordered the deployment of Thursday, with hopes for a final
On lbe diplomatic front, White 440,000 U.S. troops to the region. vote Saturday.
House press secretary Marlin There are roughly 500,000 Iraqi
House Democr~ ts and Republl·
Fitzwater said the United States troops In lbe desert region.
cans scheduled ~arly caucuses
would be supportive of any
In another military develop- Thursday, foUowed by a meeting
moves by U.N. Secretary (ij!n- ment, Defense Secretary Dick of the I'tules Committee to
era! Javier Perez de Cuellar to Cheney ·announced he was pre- consider resolutions and decide
forge a peac!!ful solution when he . paring to Invoke legal authority which can be raised for debate.
meets with Saddam Saturday In to extend the actlve-du ty status The House also expects to vote
Baghdad. France also may send of military reservists In critical Friday or Saturday.
·
services for as long as two years.
an envoy to Iraq.

work with "scabs."
scheduled, but he !eels if some
.According to company officials, movement is made the negotiations
"I t,hink the company is trying . they can run the plant with fewer · could be extended. Stidham said if
to intimi~ members of Local than 1,700 workers. · Company there is no movement by the com5668 by making rasb statements at spokeswoman Debbie Boger said, • PIIJlY, he would assume they do not
this point and time they can't !f the worken re~, they will step w~t to reach a result He added the
guarantee," said United : Stales ' IRto whatever Jobs permanent ·uruon had made the last movement,
WASHINGTON (J,7PI) - Con- ployment and chlldrens' welfare. on the domestic agenda for the ·
Steelworicers of America· Local replacements have not already which involved deep cuts and
filled.
·
sacrifices
for
the
union.
gressional
leaders, chiding the
At a hearing Thursc!ay, House 102nd Congress. I expect that we ·
5668 President Dan Stidham. .
Democratic
leader Richard Ge- will begin work In earnest on
"We
don't
have
as
many
jobs
a5
The
union
filed
suit
on
Tuesday
•
Bush·
administration
fqr
"appar·
This remtulc came after
pharcit,
DMo.
, charged Pres!· major health care legislation In
we
once
had,"
Boger
said.
"But
the
in
Jackson
County
Cin:uit
Coon
for
ent
Indifference"
to
the
health
Ravenswood Aluminum Corpora,dent
Bush
with
allowing hfs . the early . months of the first
- lion annoUJiced yesterday tb!ll the ones tba1 are available, we'd like to the company's payment of lost , care crisis, said Thursday health
administration
"to
remal!l sus- session," Gephardt said.
have the steelworkt;n come in and wages for the wortm who repor- care reform will be lbe highest
700 Itplacement worken they have
pended
for
two
years
In a slate of . · Senate Democratic leader
·
tedlate0ct.,3l. Workershadrepor- Item on the 102nd Congress's
. hired would aiay oo the job,.. even take them."
and
apparent
Indiffer- George MltcMII of Maine, who
'Inaction,
Mcl&gt;owell slid the replacement ted for the midnight shift betw~ domestic agenda .
after a conttact is reached. The 700
!eplacement woricers will lake the workers would be liken out either II p.m..IUid 12 a.m., not,knoWlRg '· The Senate Labor and Human ence to the heal lb care crisis that provided written testlmonytolbe
by Jaw Of negocialions The uniOn is the status of the conttact Resources Committee Is holding Is lbreatenlpg our people."
jObS of 700 of the steelwmtc:is locommittee, also promised health
llecause of the apparent void, care to be a top Senate Issue. .
waitint oo a National ~ negotiadons. The workers were told a series of bearings this week on
cal.
'
· Stidham also said oo one will go Rclatioos Board ruling that would to. ~ve the ptopllty shortly after !be major domestic challenges Gephardt said, Congress Is about
"Each- year the Congress Is
·
.
facing the nation, Including to take action.
· back to work uniil all 1700 are declare the worten were locked mulnighL
laced with recommendations for
"WIIbin the next feW weeks, deep cuts In the Medicare pr~
The cootract they were under at health care, education, unem. guaianteed job. Accordilig to ouL
the
(House) speaker will an- · gram and a growing demand tor
· · Charlie McDoWell, grievance
Union and company negotiating ~~ time staled that a worker
·
nounce
that health care leglsl!l· Medicaid coverage tor lbe
chairil)Ut for the local and member teams are scheduled .to meet in Pit- . ~g to ~on: would receive .a
r,"
tlon
will
be our highest priority Mitchell said.
of the negotiating IUIR, the union 18burgh on ]tin. 16 with a federal mmunum of etght hours wages plus
Several road signs have been
won't have fellow workers oui and mediator. According to Stidhain, shift differentials .
· found on a rural · Meigs County
the inembers ·would not go in and one day of negotiations has been
road. :
According to Meigs County
By Micbele Carter

SMOKED

$·

.

l

.

2°/o Milk ···········••i{ "
·

•

•

12 OZ. PKG.

Banana$ ............. !~. 39(

.

l

BORDER
'

I.

buildup after diplomacy fails

KENTUCKY

.,

' year

.....• --

MACARONI
&amp;
CHEESE

Smoked Sausage ..': $)99
I 0 LB. iOAF - BAR S :
$
l Chopped Ham •••• !~ 1·29

Litter Control account per a request
from Prograln Director Kenny
Wiggins;
·
· set Wednesday at I p.m. as a
dedication . time for a plaque in
honor . of long-time Courthouse
Custodian John Stahl, who died a
ago; .
• signed a resolution recognizing
1994 as the !75th anniversary of
Meigs County, and establishing the
Meigs County Pioneer and Histori- ·
cal Society, Inc. as the liaison for
all related artivities. Margaret
Parker was appointed chairperson
. ·or the celebration, and an anniversary committee was established by
the resolution.
Present at the ·meeting were
Roberts, Jones, .Commissioners
Maiming Roush and · David
Koblentz, Clerk Mary Hobstetter,
Highway Superintendent Ted Warner, and Garage Manager David
Spencer.

Bus~ proeeeds .with military

GOLDEN WHEAT

HILLSHIRE FARMS

FLAVORITE

agreement, however, was .takeilo!l
The first, l'rom Crane, Inc;; was .
probably bC forced to panicipate.
''Everyone .must be on the sys- Wednesday. However, O'Brien in- s~bmitted for a Fiat loader, and was
dicated that time'reslrictions on the in the amount of $63,137. Gtess
tem to make it successful," 0 'Bnen
said. "If not, the one propeny not funds required prompt action .by Equipment of Marietta submilled a
included may be the' one which is those involved.
bi3 oo a John Deere loader of
Bid openings were conducted $57,000. Southeastern Equipment
causing lbe odor or contamin!ltion
yesterday for three pieces of riew of .Gallip(llis submitted a bid for a
problems.''
Approximately ten residents on equipment. for tbe Meigs County Case, $72,500.
.
Action on the bids were tabled
Depot Street in Rutland are in vocal. Highway Deparunent.
On a new dumptruck, two bids pending revi~w ,.by County EndisagiCe~~~ent . with the proposed
system, Jones said yesterday, and were received . both from Gibson gineet Phil RoDertS.
Motors in Athens. One bid, for a
In other action on Wednesday,
~ of diose people have personally cootacted him or the coni- Ford dumptruck, was submitted in the COI))IIIissioners:
- approved a request for 1991
missioners office .with their com- the amount of $39,853.27. The
other, for im International, was'for Furtherance of Justice (FO))
plaints.
.
mimies in the amount of $15,830
After more discussioo among the theamountof$43,237.50.
On the advenised flatbed truck, for the ·Meigs County Sheriff's
board, their legal representative;
·
Prosecuting Attorney · Steven L. · Gibson again submitted two bids. · .Department; ·
• approved bond for Lisa Roush
Story, and O'Brien. the commis- On a Ford. Gibson's bid was in the
sioners agreed to •· execute the amount of $56,986, while on an In· · as deputy clerk in Meigs County
agreement with the stipulation temational flatbed, the , bid waS Court for acceptllnce of personal.
being made that the agreement will submitted in the. amount of ·· recognizance bonds. (Roush is
secretary to Sheriff James M.
only be in effect for one year or un- 1$51,3 76.
Bids on a new wheel loader for Soulsby);
·
til the disttict is fonned, whichever
the
highway
deparunent
were
·
tranfened
$12,000
in
rnat~:hing
comes first.
·
local funds to
the Meigs County
No action on the proposed received .l'rom three firms,
.

Township worlcen discovered the
. Racine F"tre Dejxuunent sent a · signs along the roadway. At that
pumper to the scene to wllli down time, there were several sign posts
the spilled g~1ine.
· with the signs. However, wben the
At 10:10 p.m. on Wednesday, signs were recovered, someone had
Todd Tripp, 24, . Pomeroy, was , talcen the posts.
·
eastbound on State Routes 7 and
124 (bypass) 81 Rocksprings, feU
mee~.:.a
a§leep and struck the guardrail at
---e
the u.s. 33 in~lii.·
· .
His 1986 Oimaro sustained
hesvy damage. The Pomeroy squad · A special meeting of the Meigs
was called and tniiiSpOIIed Tripp to County Board of Elections will be
VeteranS Memorial, where he . was held at 2 p.m. Friday at the
·· treated for a head Jaceralion.
Mechanic St office.
·

Spec•'al

planned Friday

organizational' meeting
preceded the regular meeting of the
An

$80 per m~ting, not to exceed 12
mecungs per calendar year.
Meigs County School Board on
During the regular meeting the
Tuesday.
· ·
bo~d approved the minutes of the .
Oris Smitb was appointed Presi. December meetin,, approved the
dent Pro-Thm until officers were treasurer's financial repon • and
elecled.
paymel)t of bills.
·
.Following the [OU caU, Harold . The board also approved the
Roush was re-elected as 1'resident purchase of liability insurance for
and Bill Quickel was elected Vice the board and stff from Harc11n InPresident.
surance Ageney/Nationwide InMeeting dates of the board were surance.
set for the second Tuesday of eadl
Also discussed was •CIW 11•
month at 7 p.m., to be held Bl the lion for a Busineu ~ ­
board office in Pomeroy V'tllqe Council. SuperinteJICienl lollia
Hall.
. .
Riebel reponed on a Sllllllller la, Compensation of lnembCn for tervention Progiant.
attending the nteetiPgs w.S set at

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