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'

.
Tituraday,
Februaly 14, 1891·'

Pomeroy-MkldlepOrt, Ohio

P-ae 14-The Dally Sentinel

'Dangerous' weather· predicted
for
Olliq
•

FORECAST fROM H N2·1~ 9 \T07 AM 2·1 ~91

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WEAmER MAP • Snow showen 'will linger in' tile Nortbeast
as a cold front moves over lite Atlantic. A cold front Will moye
southward briDging temperatures dOWII Ia the Soutbellst and lower
Missllllppl Valley. &amp;altered rain showers wiD develop ill tile aorth·
em Plains and northern Roclda 1111 a Wlll'lll front miMI eastward.
A cold l'rOIIt wiU move slowly eastward into the NortbwtSt eausiq
rain sbowers to develop Ia W asblngton aDd Oregoa. Dry weather
wiD continue Ia the Southwest. (UPI)

-Ohio weather----

____
r

South Central Ohio
·Snow flurries likely Thursday
night and Friday; Temperatures ·
1 will fall il) between 10 and 15 by
· Friday morning, and into the single
digits by Friday evening. Chance of
snow is 70 percent Thursday night
. and Friday.
Extended Forecast ,
Saturday througll Monday
Mostly fair Saturday, but with
some snow flurries in lhe extreme
northeastern part of the state. A

.

chance of snow across the state
Sunday, ancl a chance of snow flurries in the northea$t and fair wealh·
er in lhe southwestern pan of lhe
state Monday. Highs will·be range
from lhe middle teens 10 lhe middle
20s Saturday, and from lhe middle
20s to lhe. middle 30s Slinday and
Monday. Overnight lows will range
from five below zero 10 five above
zero Saturday mornjng, in lhe teens
early Sunday, and in lhe 20s Monday morning.

•

'.

Ohio Lottery

•

. Thursday night In
east cenllll
By United Press Jntematioul
What lhe National Weather Ser· pcxtioo of Ohio, lhe snow 111viscxy
vice described dangerous winter was issued through Friday mom·
weather was developing over Ohio ing.
Cities in the warning area
early ThursdaY..
Travel w1ll become next to included Sandusky, Cleveland,
impossible over pans of northeast Ashtabula, Akron, Canton and
·
Ohio Thursday night into Friday, YounpiDWD. •
An intensifying winter storm.
lhe weather service said.
A winter storm warning was was located over southeast Obio
issued for lhe northeast comer of early Thursday mominJ. The lllllml
Ohio for Thursday afternoon was expected to contmuc to pin
through Friday morning, and a strength as it moves into western
snow 'advisory was issued for lhe Pennsylvania by midday and to ·
remainder of the. ~tate through New York state by Thursday night

As !he Slllml moves east much service said 6 10 12 inches or'snow l
colder-air will be pulled into Oruo. · is a good bet over most of northeast :As of 1 a.m., snow wa r.lling , Ohio with lhe heavier amounts m : . .
over all but lhe eastem third of lhe lhe snowbelt areas. Elsewhere, 2 10 •
state, with accumulations ranged 4 inches of snow is likely.
;·
from a trace 10 near 2 inches over
~northwest Ohio.
Strong winds are forecast to ~
The weather service said the accompany the colder tempera- •
snow will continue to fall tures. As tempc!atures plu~ge :
overnight. Additonal accumula- Thursday mght, bitterly cold wind ;
lions should be expected with chills in lhe 20 to 30 below ~em · ·
heavy amounts in northeast Ohio. range are anticipate~ by Fuday :
And the snow is expected 10 con- morning. The strong wmds and ~11· :
tinueintoFriday. .
. ·
terly cold temperatures ·w1ll conliD· .
By. Friday
night,
the
weather
ue
through Friday. . ..
.
.

Super Lotto jackpot grows to ~8 million

_ _---.Market report ---oooo!,

CLEVELAND (UPI) -Ohio's $3,070,375 and the prize payout
$4 million Super Lotto ·jackpot total was $346,920.
went unclaimed Wednesday night,
The $100,000 grand prize in the
increasing lhe ~ prize 10 $8 mil· Kicker same also went unclaimed
lion for Salllrday s game.
because no one had the winning
A
lottery
commission combinalion- 699323.
spokesman said Thursday none of . ~' were fiye tic:kelll that ~
lhe tickets sold for the midweek the fust five Kicker numbers m
drawing listed the six winning exact order, which pays $5,000; 49
numbers - 4, 16, 28, 29, 36 and ticJ:cts had the first rour numbers,
40.
wh1ch pays SI ,000; 44S had lhe
However, 64 players ricked five first three numbers, which pays
of the numbers to win $ ,319 each, $100: and 4,529 had the fli'St two,
and 3,454 plsyers selected four of wltich pays $10. .
the numbers, good for payoffs of
Kicter ticket sales totaled
$76 each.
$499,580 and the prize payout
Super L()tto ticket sales totaled totaled $163,790.

Gallpollls-7-Co.

,..., ,l!lfl
Mlllioa"'-Sieon:

:150-300 lho., 92.01).110.00;
300-500 lho., U.00-94.00;
300-100 .lho., 71.oo-88.SO;
700-Up 65.00-ll.OO.
M..... ,.,_ IWfln:
:150-300 lho., 7~.00-9100;
300-500 1111.• 65.CXI-85.00;
300-700 n... 60.00-80.00;
700-Up 60.D0-74.00.

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

Ulililiel, SI.00-68.50.
CmnoriCaltor, SI.OCI-,_,00,
YeoiCU.11: •
Choi&lt;:clpimo, 96.00-101.00.

g,~~·
900.IJO.&lt;Iolin.

''

...........,
..bJComl:

!40.00oldown.

'

~.Up to

BuldMr Boon:

68.50.

By ANTHONY 0. MILLER
modify lhe allied campaign in the
Unit~d Press International
f'crsian Gulf region. A Senior Penc
Iraq said Friday it is prepared 10 · tagon official said lhe intensified
withdraw from Kuwait but added air strikes against enemy positions
several critical conditions that in Kuwait would be "business as
include Israel's return of all occu· usual.'' .
pied territories and a pullout of
A broadcast on Baghdad Radio,
allied troops from the Middle East . monitored in Cairo, said, "In order
President Bush rejected lhe propos· to achieve a dignified and accept·
alas a "cruel hoax."
able political set~ement, the Revo-·
The Pentagon said the Iraqi lutionary Command C.ouncil has
statement would not prompt it _to decided to accept United Nations

R** Sloori...S B..t:

3CJ0.800 lbt. 67.CJ0-90JO. .

',
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.40.00-44.00.

1'111 by Heod:
ti.CJ0-38.00.

.

·The Faith Gospel Church in
Long Bottom will hold preaching
and singing on Friday at 7 p.m.
Steve Reed, pastor, invites lhe public:.

.Ingels _Jewelry

RUBY AND
DIAMOND

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$2JnM
·
7-

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446 4524

. ; .

13'.00

Friday, February 15, 9-7 O'CIQCk..;...Saturday, F•ruary 16,_9-3 O'Clock

.

,_.

LOS ANGELES (UPI) - The·
bomb shelter destroyed in a U.S .
air attack was builtto shelter Iraq's
elite and their families, it was
reponed Friday.
Officials of Saildam Hussein's
ruling Baalh Party, their spouses
and children may have been among
the casualties from Wednesday's
bombing, the Los Angeles Times
· repbrted.
Western intelligence· officers
also believe the building was
linked to a nearby collection of villas occupied by top officials and
distinguished foreign visitors,
among them Palestinian Liberation
Organization chief Y asser Arafat,
who was reportedly in Baghdad at
lhe time of lhe bombing.

'

•

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BAAGA!N MATINEE·! SAT/ SUN &amp; NlN • •
a.iRGA!N NIGHT TU(SD.lY

-

.

WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
United States is "not shrinking one
iota" from its relentless bombing
of Iraq, a spokesman said Thurs·
day, despite the deaths of nearly
100 civi11311s in an attack on a rortified building in Bilgbdad a day earlier.
White House press secretary .
Marlin Fitzwater said allied forces
were sticking by their contention
that lhe building shanered by two
laser guided bombs from an f .
117A stealth bomber was a military
command and control center and
'not a bomb shelter as Iraqi officials
insisted. ·
•c
" I wouldn't anticipate any
change in our bombing patterns,"
he told reporters. The air war began
on Jan. 17 when allied planes
struck military targets in lhe Iraqi
capital.
"The issue is closed," Fitzwater
declared. "The United States gov·
ernment has reached a positive
conclusion that was .a command
and control center. We are assured
!t was a legitimate target. The

Earring•

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'

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.,

I

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The reinforced concrete shelter
in the Baghdad suburb of AI
Amariyah was one of a number of
such buildings erected during
Iraq's war with Iran in the 1980s
but apparently never used untillhis ·
year.
,
Pentagon officials told the
Times that lhe structure was con·
verted inti&gt; a military command·and
communications center in lhe late
1980s and has been used for lhal
purpose ever since.
However, officials have refused
to provide as ·proof surveillance
photos or other evidence that the
structures are command centers,
saying 10 do so would compromise
intelligence sources.
Seeking to quell growing public

outcry over the deadly bombing,
White House press secretary Marlin Fitzwater said: "The military
has looked into this. They have
considered it. They discussed it
' publicly: announced !heir conclusion. We are satisfied that we've
looked into it and did the right
thing for lhe right reasons and we
will continue to at13ck command
and control centers."
To the suggestion that the
administration had offered no proof
thatlhe bombed facility was a command and control center, Fi~water
said: "We think that it is, without
question in our mind, through various intelligence sources, and not a
,_matter thai we have to address
again."

White House declares no
change in bombing policy

with alllhe diamonds you no longer wear.

4-Prong Solit1ira

malic mission to Yoice their anger at the bomb·
.lng of an air-raid shelter in Baghdad by Allied
pl;mes. (UPI).
·

Bombed air raid shelter
built for the Iraqi elite

Our expert diamond setter will be i,n
our store with hundreds of mountings. He is bringing his complete shop
of fine equipment in order to do a.ll remounts .... "As you wait". ,

ll.OO

before and after Aug. 2, whether it
is in land. sea. oceans and gulfs,"
Iraq also demanded that " all
weapons and hardware which some
countries have provided Israel
under lhe pretext of the gulf crisis
... should be withdrawn within a
period of not more than a month
from lhe date of a cease-fire.''
The communique said if Israel
refliSed 10 return lhe occupied teni·
· toties, the U.N. Security Council

must apply to the Jewish State the ·
same resolutions it has taken
against Iraq.
·
After about three hours of SCiU·
tinizing the communique, the
White House rejected the Iraqi
offer. President Bush called it a
"cruel lioax. dashing lhe hopes of
the people of Iraq and indeed
around the world."
Bush said the Iraqi proposal was
Continued on pjlge 10

lhe biU on Ohio at this time. There
are options available to companies
in complying with the Clean Afr
Act," said PUCO Chairwoman
Jolynn Barry Butler.
"The commission needs to be in
a position 10 analyze and question
the assumptions used by AEP in
their studies, to make certain the
company hill! appropriately considered all relevant information. The
potential consequences to Ohio's
citizens, both mine workers and
ratepayers. are too imponant for
the PUCO not to be involved,"
Butler added.
"We want to take a look at
AEP's preliminary studies so lhe
commission can make its ow-n
judgments," she concluded
The Gavin plant is operated by
lhe Ohio Power Co., one of AEP' s
operatilig eompanies:

.•

JORDANIANS VOICE ANGER • Jorclani·
an policemen try to maintain order outside the
U. S. Embassy In Amman Thursday. Several.
hundred people gathered outside the U.S. diplo-

.

Pendant Ramount

25 Conti

Inc. N-opoper

Bush calls offer cruel hoax

Photos sought for special
salute ~o Desert.Storm troops

SPRING VAllEY CINEMA

-

another

Complete
Remount

drawal shouid be linked to Israel's
withdrawal from Palestine and lhe
occupied Arab territories in implementation of U. N. Security Council and General Assembly resolutions," lhe broadcast said.
It also said an Iraqi pullout from
Kuwait "is linked 10 lhe withdraw·
al of lhe United States ... and all
countries which have sent their
forces 10 lhe region including,personnel, weapons and equipment

report by April 30 detailing its
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) The Ameriean Electtic Power Co. fmdings along with any recommenhas been ordered to turn over to dations.
AEP announced on Jan. 28 that
state officials details of its plan to
their
preliminary studies indicated
clean its· power plant in Gallia
that
lhe
costs of complying with the
County.
Clean
Air
Act would be lower i(
The order is part of a formal
the
company
discontinued using
i11quiry initiated by lhe Public Ulil·
high-sulfur
Ohio
coal at lhe plant
ities Commission of Ohio at lhe
rather
than
installing
expensive
direction of Gov. George
scrubbing
devices.
. Voinovich. The utility has until
The immediate impact Of fuel
Feb. 25 10 provide reportS, studies
switching
·would be lhe closing of
and an analysis of lhe Gavin plant
·
the
Meigs
M.ines, resulting in the
near Chesire.
The PUCO initiated lhe inquiry loss of more than I ,200 miners'
into options available to AEP in jobs. AEP owns and operates the
complying with the acid rain provi· mines.
"The Federal Clean Air Act is
sions of lhe 1990 amendments to
very
complicated and lhe rules the
the Federal Clean Air Act a1 lhe
U.
S.
EPA will use to implement
GaYin plant, which is lhe dirtiest
~ bill have not ret ~n adopted.
power plant in its system.
The PUCO st~(f_ is t.o issu~ a It 1s difficult - 1f not Impossible
,__. to Pteiljct lhe precise impact of

Semces to be lleld

'I

Mu!~med ..

•

Syracuse water notice
The Syracuse W8Jt:l Department
will be replacing some vaiYes on
Friday and water will be shut off
on College Road from Third Street
to lhe River. Next week two more
valves will be replaced from Rose
Valley Road 10 river, weather permitting.

.

A

.· . AEP is ordered to turn over
details of cleanup plan to state

Diamond Remount Show

......

Security Councii Resolution 660 of
·1990. including lhe clause related
10 Iraqi withdrawal. "
However, lhe resolution calls for
Iraqi forces to withdraw from
Kuwait " immediately and unconditionally."
"The Revolutionary Command
Council made it conditional in its
announcement that the first step
that should be implemented on lhe
part of Iraq regardin.~t the with-

.

120-:ZSO '"'· 48.50-49.75 . .

3 'Sectlono 22 Pogo1

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, February 15, 1991

Iraq offers to withdraW, adds conditions

•

CowiCdC•.

Ulililia, SI.D0-58.00.

•

Vol. 41, No. 208
Copyrighled t991

Hc:'hw 83.00.90.00.

Low tonight near 5.
Partly cloudy Saturday
High near 30.

J-D; 4-S

'..

~

c:--/Clllon, 43.CJ0-53.00. ,
!:i@llloeiaJI!Iow ...... COWl, 43.CJO.Down.

C;

Insert

---·

lbt .• 41.50-44.00.
Top ijcill:
.
,

Pick 3:401
Pick 4:5154
Cards :10-H; K·

Supplement

Meetia1 eaDCeled
The Exp:orer's Post No. 230
meeting for tQnight has been cancelled due to pfedicted weather
conditions. The next meetin~ will
lie held Feb. 28 at 6:30 p.m. m tbC ·
Common Pleas Court Room.

--Area deaths---

The Daily Sentinel is requesJ· lhe supplement. All photos must be
ing families of all Meigs County submitted by Friday 10 be included.
service men and women who are
The pictures and information
currently serving in Operation will be used in a special supple·
Desert Storm, to either mail or · mentto pay tribute IP those serving
bring into the office a photograph in the Middle ~t. A copy 'of_!he
of the service person for future supplement w1ll then be mailed
publication.
·
free of charge to each service !!U!I'
In addition 10 the photograph or woman whose photo appears m
The Daily Sentinel requesu infor: !he supplement. It will be published
·mation including the person's full m February. .
..
.
name, nicbwne, addreSs· and par. . The a~ to wh1ch Ph!!IOS or
ents' names. Those bringing in mformauon should be mailed or
photognlphs should also include a brought is The Daily S~tinel, 111
telephone number in lhe event of Court SL, Pomeroy, Oh1o, 45769.
questions from lhe staff pmparing Information can not be taken over
lhe telephone.

1991
Tax

Meigs announcements

Service moved inside
The candlelight service sched·
uled for tonight by lhe American
Legion Feeney Bennett'Post No.
128 at Middleport VillaJe Hall wiU
.
dueled
2
p.m:
Saturday
at
Maple
be
held inside the Amencan Legioll
Robert J. Bauer .
Grove
Cemetery,
Mechanicsburg.
Annex
on Mill Street in Middleport
Robert James Bauer, 53, Route
Friends
may
call
at
Skillman
·
at
7
p.m.
due to predicted weather
248, Long Bottom, died Wednesc
McDOnald
Funeral
Home,
Saturconditions.
tvfusic wiU be provided
day, Feb. 13, 1991 at Veterans .
day,
11
a.m.
to
1
p.m.
by
CJ.
and
the Cow\try Gendemen
Memorial Hospital following a
In
lieu
of
flowers,
.memorial'
·
and
Rev.
Rick
To we will sing .
,brief illness.
contributions
may
be
made
to.
the
Mayor
Fred
Hoffman
will speak·
Born Oct. I, 193 7 in Pomeroy, ·
700Club.
and roll call of military personel
he was a son of the late Oscar and
serving with Operation Desert
Lucille Amberger Bauer. Mr.
Storm will be held. Those aaending
Bauer was a self-employ¢ painter. Kenneth D. Grover
bring candles for lhe candlelight
He is survived by his wife ,
Susan Heaton Bauer; a daughter,
Kenneth Don Grover, 60, of ceremony.
Rebecc.a Susan Grate, Tuppers State Route 7 in Long Bottom, died
VMH Auxi6ary to·meet ·
Plains; lhree sons, Robert Michael Wednesday. Feb. 13, 1991, at VetThe February meeting of lhe
Bauer, at home; Brian Lee Bauer• erans Memorial Hospital· following Women's Auxiliary of Veterans
Unite States Army, Huntsville, an extended illness.
Memorial Hospital will be held
AIL: and Andrew Troy Bauer, Rio_
Born on October 15, 1930 ·in Tuesday all :30 p.m. in the confer·
Grande; two grandsons, Herben Cheshire, he was lhe son of lhe.late
room. A white elephant sale
. Letoy Orate Ill and Nicholas Dean Don and Belva. Haskins Sloan ence
will
be
HoStesses are Carrie
Bauer; as well as several nieces and Grover. He was a ~tired photogra- Ke11nedyheld.
and
Louise Bearhs.
ruiphews. ·
pher.
'
Besides his parents he was pre·
He is survived by his wife,
ceded in death by a brother. Mary Ann Grover, Long Bottom;
William.
two daughters, J .L. (Steve) Jerfers,
' Services will be held Saturday Cincinnati, and Jennifer (Greg)
81 11 a.m. at Ewing Funeral Home Wallace, of Kingsport, Tenn.; and
with Rev. Herbert _Grate. Burial two grandchildren.
will be in Meigs Memory Garden.
He was a veteran of the U.S.
Friends may call al lhe funeral Marine Corps during lhe Korean
home on Friday from 4 p.m. to 9 Conflict He was a member of !he
p.m,
Zion Church of Christ, Chester
Masonic Lodge. American Legion
Cathy Hoft' Ridenour
Post 49, Ohio State Pauol Auxil·
.
iary 27.
.
Cathy Hoff. Ridenour, 35 , of . Funeral will~ held on Saturday
7216 Long Pood Road Mechanics- at I p.m. at Ewmg Funeral Home
burg, Ohio, died WedResday, Feb. with Eu~ene Underwood_ officiat·
13, 1991, 81 ber residence. She was mg. Bunal w11l be m Me1gs Mem·
a member of lhe Urbana Christian ory Gardens.
Assembly.
·
Friends may call at the fune~
--~
Born June 1, 1955 in Ironwood, home from 4 p.m. to 9 p;m. on Fn·
Mich., she was the daughter Carl day.
.
.
Hoff and Elaine Liikanen Hoff.
· Donatmns. m~y be made 10 Oh!o
Also surviving are her hu$1nd, Valley Chn~uan Assembly_ m
David Ridenour; two sons, Pomeroy orZmn Church of Christ
Nathanael Ridenour and Cyrus
Ridenour, both at home; two
daughters, Amanda Ridenour and.
Sharon Ridenour, also at home: Theodore Strom
In yesterday's obituary
four brothers, Dale Hoff and James
announcement
of Theodore Strom,
. Hoff both of Bessemer, Mich.,
1
who
died
Monday,
Feb, 11, 1991 at
Gordon Hoff. John Hoff both of
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital, the
Cottageville, W.Va.; two sisters,
names
of
his
stepson
and sister,
Janet Cremeans . Cottageville ,
who
survive,
appeared
incorrectly.
W.Va and Sarah Hnff of Cheshire.
1
She was preceded in death by a The names should have appeared
as Richard Shaddeau and Dornlhy
sister, Nancy Hof(.
Graveside services will be con- Kumpula.

I

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information has not changed.''
The United States has' not provided any public evidence that the
facility was a command post, but
Fitzwater said intelligence sources
"don ' t feel they ~ad to offer
priJof...
Asked if President Bush had
asked lhe Pentagon 10 review lhe
rules of engagement or bombing
procedures as a result of the incident, Fitzwater said:
"No, no review, n~ change in
procedures, no change mpolicy' no
change in targeting developments
at aiL
Pressed further, Fitzwater
stressed that the United States
would not change course because
civilians may be at military targets.
"We are confident we did the
rightlhing for 1/le right reasons and
we will continue to attack com·
mand and control centers," he told
reporters. "There will continue to
be casualties. There will continue
to be civilian losses on both sides.
The war goes on. The objectives
are valid. We are not shrinking one
\~

..

iota from our responsibility to
enforce and implement the U.N.
resolutions" aimed at ousting Iraq
from Kuwait.
Furthermore, Fitzwater said,
Iraqi President Saddam Hussein
" sho!Jld never know that any target
is safe" by using civilians as
human shields at military facilities.
" It's clear that this episode is
etched in our consciousness as we
consider these targets but lhe process and the procedures and the
objectives and so forth remain lhe
same," ·Fitzwater said.
.On Wednesday Army Lt. Gen.
Thomas Kelly, dirctor of opera·
lions for the Joint Chiefs of Staff,
told a Pentagon briefing, "We're
going 10 examine our consciences
verr. closely to determine if we
can t' do something in the future 10
preclude (future civilian deaths).''
Kelly said regardless of the
decision, the allied forces will not ·
be uMecessarily restrained.
" I will guarantee you we will
continue to succcssfuly prosecute
Ibis war," Kelly said.

By HELEN THOMAS
UPI While House Reporter

Iraq, in other .gestures, has tried resolutions and do now what he
to link its withdrawal from Kuwait should have done long, long ago.''
. .to lhe settlement at an international
Bush expressed his sorrow for
WASHINGTON (UPn- Presi- peace conference of a range of "the people in Iraq and I feel sorry
dent Bush Friday rejected an Iraqi other festerin~ Middle East prob- for lhe families in this country who
peace overture as "cruel hoax," lems, includmg the Palestmian probably felt as I did Ibis morning
saying there is nothing new in it question.
when they heard the television that
and lhe Persian Gulf war will go on
But the president has always maybe. we reqlly had a shot for
as scheduled.
rejected any terms, saying that peace today."
· Bush said when he first heard of ' 'linkage'.' is unacceptable.and
The Baghdad announcement
lhe Iraqi communique, ''I must say- would reward an ~Jlessor.
was made in lhe aftermath of the
I was happy." But .he added,
Bush said lhe ' 1mmediate cele- Wednesday allied bombing of a ·
"Regrettably, lhe Iraqi S!atement ·bratory atmosphere" in Baghdad fortified building in Baghdad causnow appears to be a cruel hoax, following the Baghdad radio ing scores of deaths mainly among
dashing the hopes of the people in announcement ''renects, I think, women and children who used it as
Iraq and indeed around lhe world."
the Iraqi peoples' desire 10 see the a bomb shelter . U.S. officials
the president said the Iraqi warend-awarthepeopleoflmq claimed that the building was a
statement is "full of unacceptable, never soughL "
.
,
"command and control center" for
old conditions, but Saddain HusBut Bush indicated lhe war·will lhe lmqis and said !hey had "intersein has added several new condi- continue until "a massive with· cepts'' of communications 10 prove
lions.
drawal begins, with those Iraqi it. But they were never made pub"And we've been in touch with troops visibly leaving Kuwait"
lic.
members of lhe coalition and they
The president repeated what he
Earlier in the week, at lhe behest
recognize that there is nolhin~ new has said since lhe beginning of the of Mikl!ail G orbachev, Soviet
here with lhe possible exception of Persian Gulf crisis - ''We haYe oo . emissary Yevgeny Primakov, a
recognizing for lhe first time Iraq · argument ·with lhe people of Iraq; specialist on Middle Eastern
must leave Kuwait."
Our differences are with lmq's bru· affairs, conferred in Baghdad with
In his statement, made at the tal dictator."
Saddam. On leaving he cited caubeginning of an appearance before
"And the war, let me just assure tious hope for ending !he war.
•.
the American Association for lhe you aU, is going on schedule," said
Iraqi Foreign Minister Tariq
Advancement of Science, Bush Bush. "Of course, all of us want to Aziz plans 10 travel to Moscow Ibis ·
appeared to be calling on lhe Iraqi see lhe war ended soon and with a· weekend and will meet with Gormilitary leaders and people to over- limited loss of life . .And it can. if bachev. in what appears to be
throw the Saddam goYemment.
Saddam Hussein would comply another softening of the Iraqi posi- .
Bush stressed in his brief unconditionally with these U.N. tion.
·
remarks that only a massive unconditional withdrawal of Iraqi troops
from Kuwait would bring peace to
lhe region.
· •
"There 's another way for the
bloodshed to stop," Bush said.
"And that is for lhe Iraqi mi)itary
and the Iraqi people 10 talce matters
'
into their hands, to force Saddam
Meigs County Board of Elec- on lhe panel are Jack McKitrick of •
Hussein, lhe dictator, 10 step aside tions
Director Jane Frymyer is one Franklin County, Patricia Smith of .
and to comply with the United of nine
Ohioans appointed to an Huron County and Geraldine Lewis
Nations resoluuons and then rejoin
advisory
commiuee to develop rec- of Portage County .
the family of peace-loving
ommendations
for revisions to
·"This is a non-partisan issue lhat
nations.' '
House
Bill
23
7.
The
bill
perm
its
affected virtuslly every county in
He made the remarks after concertain
people
10
vote
by
absentee
Ohio," Taft said of the probiems
fening with his top-level diplomat·
ballot
at
Board
of
Elections
offices
surrounding
the new law permitting
ic and military advisers, including
on
Election
Day.
so-called
walk-in
voters oa ElecVice President Dan Quayle, at a
The
biparlisan
committee,
tion
Day
.
"The
committee
will
hastily called meeting in the Oval
by
Secretary
of
State
appointed
work
to
isola~
major
problems
that
Office.
Bob
Taft,
includes
six,
board
of
were
encountered
and
determine
Allied lesders noted that it -was
the first time that Saddam had men· elections officials (three Democrats how lhe law should be revised." He
tioned lhe possibility of withdraw· ·and three RepubliCans) and three ·expecu lhe committee's work 10 be
ing from Kuwait, which be had others: lhe Rev. Jesse L. Woods of completed by March 31 .
HB 237, enacted into law last
dubbed Iraq's "19th province" the Love Zion Baptist Church in
Columbus;
Janet
Lewis,
Executive
summer,
allowed people to vote on
after ~ invaded and pccupied its
Director
of
Common
Cause
of
Election Day at their local election
tiny oil-ncb neighbor last Aug. 2.
"Let me say once again, they Ohio; and Terry McCoy, Legisla· board if lhey had moved in lhe past
must withdraw without condition," tive Director for the League of .four years but had not changed
their address 30 days prior 10 the
Bush said of the Iraqi forces. Women Voters of Ohio.
Besides Frymyer, Democrat election.
"There must be full implementa·
About 18,000 Ohioans took
lion of all the Securitr, Council ~s­ election board directors on the
olutions, and there w1U be no link· ·panel are Betty McGary of Butler advantage of HB 237, causing
age 10 other problems in lhe ares, County and Phyllis Sawyer of . delays and long lines in some COUD·
and lhe legitimate rulers of Kuwait Richland Coun1y. THe three ties on Election Day
in November.
.
.
Republican board deputy directors ·
·must be rewmed 10 Kuwait''

Frymyer appointed to
·state advisory committee

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�Friday, February 15, 1991

DEVOTED TO TID!: INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
A~

.

~m~ ~.__
-r. f'T""E!:!! c::IIF=i
~v
.

ROBERT L. WINGETT

J;'ubllsher

'CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Geaerai .Maaacer

PAT WHITEHEAD

Aulllaa~

Publlsher/ Coalroller

i

A MEMBER o!Tbe United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and tbe American Newspaper Publishers Association.

Page 2-Thl DallY 8enUnel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Frtclay, February 151 1191

U.S. questions likelihood
of Iraqi deserters
.

.

White House unsettling
into a wartime routine
By HELEN TH()MAS
UPI White House Reporter
WASHINGTON - Tbe While ijouse hils settled into a routine with
.
the Persian Gulf war on the daily menu.
During the first two weeks of the war, officials walked on a high len- ·
sion wire. The Scud missile attacks on Israel and Saudi Ambia came as a
surprise and were an obvious ploy to draw ISillel into the war.
But at the White House, surprises are rarely conceded and policy
changes are never .::knowledged.
The ~dent apparently has viewed as his major chore holding the
anti-lnlqi coalition together, despile slllins at tiDies. He does so With telephone calls to w&lt;Xid leaden to keep them in line. Tbe promises and other
plums Cllllle early on.
·
Meanwhile, Bush, who never waniS to appear 100 ahsort!ed in the war,
tosses off the oblcrvation: ''Life goes on.•'
And he tries to prove it by continuinJ his weekends at Camp David,
which does have a high-recb communications on the grounds. And he puts
sojourn at Kem)ebuntport. Maine, back on his calenhis annual Febl:uary
dar.
..
·

The praident also insisiS that he is geuing a fuU night's sleep, that he
· is calm and is not lonely "at the top.'.'
. •
·
.
He abjures the Linc:olnian brooding !XXU'8it of a p~esident who carries
the weight of lhe world on his shouldas in wanime. Nor does he ever
want to convey any sense of doubt He rejleats that the cause for the war is
right, just and moral.
In that respect, Bush is confident that~ made the right move, cUlling a
rudlless dicwor off at the pass, and learning from the lessons of the past
- that aggression must be stopped, bell« earlia' than laler.

Media's war undermil)es U.S. effort

It is now as plain as lhe birthmark on Gorbachev 's head thai lhe
His confidence is bolstaed immensely by the pop•lanty poDs sbo~g
coalition forces in the Persian Gulf
wide ICCepiiiiiCC of the war and his iqldership in lhe high 80s. His own
will shortly commence ~rourid
approval ratings are CllceptiOIII!ly high.
operations against lhe Iraqa lroOps
in Kuwait. This is·a good moment,
In addition, the president has been sble duough public relations and · therefore, .10 pause am,! reflect on
non·SIOP American press briefings an the war, to convey vic~ e~ery
the role.of the American media in
day with "low losses" and minimal "collaleral dsmage,' mearung cavilcovering the battle that is about to
begin.
ian casualties on the enemy side. ·
In every public statement he stresse.~ ' ' we're on schedule. we're on
· A good deal has been written coune" and the war is "going very, very weD."
.
much of it true, I am sure • about
the hostility of high American military officers to the media. They are
Of coune only i few in the inner circle are privy to the Bush timetable
supposed to believe lhat the media
for the condlict of the war, or whether his "schedule" has a timetable for
seriously undermined home-front
endingiL
.
support for the Vielnam war, and to
1n many ways, the war has to be Ill boc. And so the presadent, who
be
determined not to give them a
relies on military advice; has put a hold on .a ground war: hopinJto I~
similar
opponunity Ibis time if lhey
the allied casualties. He bas opiCd to COD'!JIUC for the ~e be~!ig the ll_ll'
war against lnlq and the CIIIJlCl B-52 bombmg of lhe dug-m Iraq• forces m can help it. If that is indeed their
attitude, all I can say is, I share it.
KuwaiL
·
.
·
'th
the
gulf
We have heard much less, how· If 111ylhing were to indicate the IJO'Sident' s preoccupation wa
ever,
about the hostility of many ·
contlict. it would be his daily schedule of public appoi~bnen~. They .are .
representatives
of lhe media toward
down to a minimum, Cllcept for the regular weekly meebn£:1 wath Cabanet
lhe
mililary.
Any
reader who supofficials and wilh fomRD visitors, mainly from allied coumnes.
Nor have there beeii many meetings with congressional leaden since
CapiiOI Hill bas DOW defened to the president, and no one, neither Democrat nor Replblic:an dares to Mooday-morninjl quarterback the war.
So the While Jfuuse rocks along. in routme fashion as the president
contemplales his next big decision.

Berry's World

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by NEA. Inc.

t..C

"Sorry, you'll have to try another mosque.
TROOPS are holed up In this one. "

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,. . . _..,. _ : _ _ _ _ _ __ _-:--.....- - - - ; - - ' - - - - J

·•

Jack Anderson
and Dale VanAtta

people in. Saddam has imprisoned sored an,air-drop behind Iraqi lines phrases for "Put your hands U,P,"
his own ttoops inside Kuwait with of more than 4 million leaflets urg- and "Throw down your WCIJlDll.
Saddam's response 10 tbe
a barricade lhal makes 'Jhe Berlin ing th!; hungry and tired soldiers to
leaflets
was to send officers out
Wall look like' a scalable Tinker defect.
.
Toy.
coUecting
them, and to make it a
· Tbe point of the leaflets was to
seriOus
o1fense
for anyone elae to
And, since the battle at Khafji - convince Iraqi soldiers that their
pick
one
up.
One POW told
when initi&amp;J. suspicions were that · cause is unjust and lhat resistanCe
debriefers
that
his friend was ·
th.e Iraqis might be crossing the to lhe allied war machine is futile •
thrown
into
the
brig
for IS days
border to tum themselves in - any a message punctuated by roundand
had
his
head
shaved
when an
defector who gelS duough will face the-clock bombing of the Iraqis
the guns of very skeptical allied that deprives them of sleep and . officer discovered one of the
leaflets in the soldier's poclcet.
·
trOOps who are ready to shoot ftrSt confidence.
Tbe leaflets suggest that anyorie
and check for white flags laler.
Just before the Khafji hallie,
Both the Central Intelligence some U.S . soldiers on the front swrendering in a tank should ccme
Agency and the Anny have spon- .were taught the rudimentary Arabic with the IUrrels turned to the rear,
but since Khafji, that may not be
convincing enough. Word spread
quicldy at the front that 'the Iraqis
accomplished the sneak atlack on
Khafji by rolling their tanks in .as
the leaflets suggested, with turrets
turned to the rear. Then the turreiS
swung around and began firing.
New leafleiS bave since been
dJOJiped ovrz .lnlqi ~ ~ntta­
tions amendmg the anstruc11ons.
Deserters in tanks should IUIIl the
turrets backward and mareh any
soldiers not needed to drive the
tank in frontofiL
But Marines and the Army
infllltry bave vowed that no lnlqis
wiD take advantage of their open
arms again. Said one Army
sergeant in a forward-deployed
operations center: "There am 't
goins to be no next time."
Sgt. James Fletch, an.l!llti-aircraft gunner from Tifton, Ga., pul ~~ .
lhis way: "~ow yw never know ~·
they're going to surrender or tf
they've got something up their
sleeves."
.
The wariness of the troops
toward possible defectors has the
CIA and the Army Psyehological
Opezations Groups frustrated One
inlelligence officer at the front said,
"This completely undermines the
entire program that psy ops are
playing up because the uext guys
that come through might get blown
away, and then there's going to be
no more surrenders."

KHAFJI, Saudi Arabia • The
first ground battle of the Persian
Gulf war fought in this deserted
border town dashed hopes among
the allied forces that Jhey will see
hordes of Iraqi defectors waving
white flags. .
Marines hcreJ·oke that Saddam
Hussein has ou itted his soldiers
with green insiCad of while underwear so they have nothing to wave.
But the truth is Saddam has laid out
an obslacle course of mines to keep
allied troops out of Kuwait, and the
same mine fields will Jreep his own

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. Ail letters are subject to editing and must be signed wfth
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be pub- ·
llshed. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personal!·
ties.
.

•

.Hannan Trace, Kyger Creek advance to district tournament

Commentary
111 Court Slreel
Pomeroy, Ohio

3

Page

I

With wins over Vikings, Highlanders,

The Daily Sentinel

The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

poses that the reponers coyering
the Gulf war are simply bloodless
technicians neutrally reponing the
facts can stop reading this column
now.
The truth is that the vast majori·
ty of lhese reporlerS nO! only know
that military mistakes and/or
incompetence make a betler news
story than military efficiency and
success, but • being the ripe spawn
of a very different tradition - affrrmatively detest the military mindset and will exert themselves
mightily to discredit it.
In the weeks ahead the American media will dwell lovingly on
the casualties - the American dead
and wounded, of course, hut also
the inevitable civilian victims as
well. ("Was !his really necessary?") Every military maneuver
will be second-guessed and implicitly criticized as mindless blood-

a

balh.
Thanks to the miracle of modem

television, it may even be possible
to switch effortlessly, in"~ time"
or nearly so, from a battlefield in
Kuwait, where an American soldier
can be seen lying dead or monally
injured; to the little frame house
somewhere in Middle America
where his mother, wife and children sit, puffy-eyed from weepin$,
while some repomr asks them af
they think lhe sacrifice was "worth
iL"

Above all, we must he on our
guard against the son of sheer dislortion whereby a miliuary victory
can be twisted, by dashonesl
reportage, into an a~nt defeat
That was the media s triumphant
achievement in the case of the
Vielllalllese communists' guerriUa
attacks on central Saigon (includ·
ing, briefly, the American

William A. Rusher
embassy) in the so-called "Tet
offensive" of February 1968.
It is now well established that
this was .• desperaiC ~,r::J: by lhe
COmMIBilSIS to tum the
of war
in their favor - and that, in military
terms, it failed utterly. But the
American media, f8Sielli1J$ on the
dramatic fact that ccmmurust suer·
riUas briefly appeared in lhe South'
Vielllalllese capital, persuaded the
American people that Tet was a triumph for the enemy. The public
discouragement was so great that
Lyndon Jolmson didn't even bother
to run for re-election.
In the days .ahead, we would do
well to think of lhe ground war in .
Kuwait as having not two _but three -, ·
major partic~~nts: the Iraqis, the
U.S.·led coalibOD, and- perched on
the latter's shoulders like some
hostile incubus • the American
media.
·

Interest groups cry foul over chicken ·
PITTSBORO, N.C. (NEA) When outsiders inquire about touring the Townsend's Inc. poultry
processing plant . here, a
spokeswoman says 1he company
has no objections to such visits bul
the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
prohibits them.
"USDA will not allow it," she
el!:plains. "USDA will not lei us do
lhat."
Those statements are untrue.
"Thai's a dodge," says an official
of USDA' s Food Safety and
Inspection Service, the federal government agency that provides
inspectors to examine Townsend's
chickens. The USDA has no interest whatever in who visits lhe dreary cinderblock facility in central
NOrth Carolina.
Owners and operators of. the
poultry facilities ·do have cause to
be concerned, however. Even under
optimal conditions, lhe process of
slaughtering and disemboweling
animals for human consumptio~
has more than iiS share of unpleasant aspeciS.
Moreover, industry critics assert
that conditions inside the plants
markedly deteriorated during lhe
1970s and 1980s as line speeds •
lhe number of birds processed per
minute • doubled from 35 to 70,
then increased again to 91.
Shortly after President Ronald
Reagan enleled the While House in
1981 , a senior USDA official
bluntly explained that his department was expected to acquiesce to
the industry's demands: .
"The political climate is such
that the special inttzest groups suppcirting the meat and poUltry industry have won and now have ~ ear
of Washington. They 'paid their
dues' and are now in the driver's
seat. ... The consumer bsse has disintergraled. We must be versstile
and adjustiO this new chaUenge."
'

Robert Walters

·The "streamlined" in spec lion board at the ToWnsend's plant here
process subsequenOy implemented once again assigns responssibility
Few of the ill-paid workers
allows chickens with blood clots, 10 the polenlial victims. "Unsafe
fealher clumps, blisters, scabs, .::IS by employees 8CCOWII for over complain because they fear retalia- possibly in the form of distumors and abscesses to reach con- 90 percent of all industrial acci- tion
missal
- and replacement jobs are
sumers, according 10 some present deniS," it says in declaring that
difficult
find in the small southand former government inspectors supecyisors will be closely watch- em townstowhere
most of the counwho claim they can no longer ade- ing workers (or evidence of try's poultry processinll f.::ilities
quatelY protect lhe inlegrity of the "unsafe work habits."
are located.
nation's poullry supply.
Dilling one processing step the
cl:•ickens are chilled through
immersion in a cold water bath so
befouled by lbeir own excrement
that it is widely known as "fecal
soup." Says Gerald Kuester, an exUSDA microbiologist: "Atlhe end
By United Prss lnlernatlonal
of the line, lhe birds are no cleaner
Tooday Is Friday, Feb. 15, the 461h day of 1991 with 319 to follow.
than if they had been dipped in a
The moon Is waxing, moving toward Its first quarter.
diny toilet."
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn.
The industry, however, remains
The evening star Is Jupiter.
seemingly oblivious to heallh conThose born on this date are under the signor Aquarius. They Include
cems of conscientious inspectors ll.allan astronomer and physicist GaJUeo GaJUei in 1564; jeweler
and concerned consumer groups. -c!lnrles Tiffany In 1812; feminist pioneer Susan B. Anthony In 1820;
Instead, it prefers to blame its cus· political leader and .diplomat Elihu Root in 11!45; philosopher and
lllmers for unsafe products.
mathematician Alfred North, Whitehead in 1861; songwrtter ,Harold
"Research has shown that 96 Arlen In 1905; actors John Barrymore in 1882, Cesar Romero In 1907
percent of all foodbome illness OUI· (age 84), Har.vey Korman In 1927 (age 64) and Claire Bloom In 1931
breaks are the result of improper (age 60); astronaut Roger Chaffee, kUied In a fire on the ground
food handling and preparation in during a 1967 Apollo I test, In 1935; and actress Jane Seymour and
the kitchen," says the National singer Melissa Manchester, both In 1951 (age 40).
Broiler Council, a Washinglon,
D.C ., trade association whose
Ori Ibis date in history:
members account fer about 90 perIn 1898, the U.S. battleship Maine exploded In Havana harbor,
cent of the 6 billion chickens sold kllllng ~crewmen and leading to a U.S. declaration of war against
•
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throughout the country ev,ery year. . Spain. .
In other words, consumers are
In 1933, President-elect Franklin Roosevelt narrowly escaped
responsible for cleaning the con- assassination In Miami when a fanatic 11~ several bullets at him,
taminated chickens they purchase. fatally wounding Chicago Mayor Anion Cermak Instead.
Indeed, the council has lhe audacity
In 1942, the British basuon of Singapore surrendered to the
to suggest that buyers must guard Japanese army In World War II.
against securing "foods from
In 1982, the oU-drllllng rig Ocean Ranger capsized and sank In a
storm off Newfoundland. All 84 people aboard ]fl!re lost. ·
·
unsafe sources."
In 1990, President Bush held a drug summit In Colombia wtth the
"Workers in poui!JY processing
. plants are frequently crippled by presidents of Colombia, Peru and Bolivia. Washington, D.C., Mayor
unsafe machinery operated at reck· Marlon Barry was Indicted on eight counts of perjury and drug
less speeds," says Thomas Devine possession.
of the Government Accountability
A thought lor the day: philosopher and malbematlclan Alt~
Project, a Washington, D.C., public
North
Wl\llehead once said, "A civilized SOciety Is one that exhibits
interesl group.
.
the
five
qualities of truth, beauty, adventure, art and peace." .
. But a memo posted on a bullelin

Today in history

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By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
. OVP Staff Writer .
Losing one or more of a team's
principal' weapons before or during
a gam~ . especially during tournament llme, can be unsettling. if not
catastrophic, to a team's fortunes.
. But as Hannan Trace and Kyger
Creek's girls cage squads demonstrated in Thursday night's Division IV Gallipolis sectional bracket-title games at Gallia Academy,
such a thing can be what can pull a
; eam more clos ~ly together and
force its players to become more
focused OJI the task at hand.
The Wildc~ts (15-4) downed
Symmes Valley 55-48 in'the up)lerbracket title conlesl, and the Bob·
cats boosted their record to 17-3 by
dropping Sou.thwestem 50-43 in
the foUowing lower-bracket championship game. Both teams wiD advance to lhe district tournament at
Jackson High School, with Kyger
Creek taking Crooksville - an 8856 winner over Trimble in the
Meigs upper-bracket finals • on
Wednesday, Feb. 40 at 6:30p.m .,
and H;mnan Trace facing Franklin
furnace Qreen · a 55-21 winner

over Ponsmouth Noire Dame in the
Soulh Webster upper-bracket title
game · on Thursday, Feb. 21 at
6:30p.m.
·
Life without Llll:y
Once again Hannan Trace point
guard Lucy Mullens, one of the
youngest professors of hardwood
.marksmanship in the immediate
area, showed what alert defensive
play, quickness in driving down·
court, perserverance and good
moves against Symmes Valley's
frontcourt can accomplish, as her
game- and tournament-high 30
points clearly show.
But the Wildcats, who · have ·
been through this before, had to
once again deal .with life without
Lucy, as the 5-5 redhead, who sat
out the last 3:07 of the thin! quarter
afler being whistled for her fourth
foul, was issued her exit visa wilh
5:49 left in lhe game.
"They keptlheir heads, because
they knew lhey depended on e.::h
other,... said Wildcat head coach
John Lusher.
Valley's leads, of which all but ··
one came in the first half, avefllged
about four points in spite of the

Viking s' leading by I 0 halfway· 22 poiniS, score just four,
through the second quaner, and
"We've got young guards, and
Trace when on top, stayed on aver- they're not used to presswe," said
age about lhree pointS ahead of the Symmes Valley boss Jennifer
Vikings in a game that saw only six Davisson. "We got away from our
lead changes and five deadlocks.
game plan, which was to get the
Tbe Wildcats, who had taken an baD inside."
·
Il-l 0 lead on a three· pointer by
Trace, which came from . 10
Mullens from beyond the key with poiniS down to lead by four at halftwo seconds left in the ftrSt quarter, tame,
·
h d to tum up 1·15 pressure·
watched Symmes take the momen- cookeradefense
a few notches,
tum from them wilh eight straight which paid off In the containment
poiniS • six of lhem in the frrst two
'gh
· · th
the towers to ea t pomts m . e
minutes of the second quaner, as of
final quarter and the Cllit of Krausz,
the red-clad Vikings began to put one offour Vikings to foul out.
their twin .towers - 5·10 junior cenValley, which tied the game at
ter Jennifer Owens and 6-1 sopho- 46 when Krausz hit a hook shot
more forward/center Cathy Krausz with 5:49 left in the game, had its
· to use as lheir game plan called c.hance to take charge after Mul·
for.
lens' final foul gave Krausz the
But lhe plan caUed for them to · bonus foul shot. Krau~z missed,
score often and together, and and the southeast Galhans made
Owens' II points in the second s~mmes pay dearly. for missing it
quarter made her the engine that wath five slralght pomts · a 16-fool "
drove Valley's. offense at that jumper from the right wing by se- ·
point, while Krausz, who scored nior forward Stephanie Dillon
four in that frame, took over the (5:21), a layup by junior center
reins after halftime with 10 points Tammy Thomas (4:43) ~d a foul
to keep the mid·Lawrence five in
contention in a third quarter that shot by Th0fllas(4:06) ·.mthe neltt
saw Owens, who led her team with . 1:4310 help secure the vactory.

Quarter tOiais
Symmes VaUey10 15 14
Hannan Trace 11 18 10

Player

Hannan Trace (55)
ls 3s Ff

~~ul~~s ~

~ I~

pte
TammyThomas2
0 4
S
••phanie Dillon 1 0
1
"'
Michelle Ours 0 0 2
Totals
13 3 20
From the field .• 16·65

9:a48
16=55

pts,

30
12
8
3
2
55

At the One" 20-38
Oft the glass • 37 (Dillon &amp;
Mullens, 8 each)
·
=k:~ ~bots - 5
Steals _ 16
Turoovers _ 16
Fo led out_ Mullens
u
· .
Symmes VaUey (48)
PI
2s 35 Ff
Pts.
ay~r
22
Jennifer Owens 8
~
20
~ ~~~ ~ 1 0
5
Julie Wilson
0 0 1·
1
Totals
18 1 9.
48
· From the field- 19-46
At lhe One· 9·19
Off the glass • 47 (Krausz 26)
Steals· 11
Turoovers - 18
. Fouled out - Conley, Krausz,
Schneider and J. Wilson

8

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from the right wing to pul KC •·
ahead IS-14. And though lhe Hig'hlanders would cut the Bobcats' lead
to one on four occasions and tie
them once after that, the Bobcats'
smothering defense proved iastrumental ln keeping Hall from scoring more than lhe seven points she
bad in the flfSl three quarters.
However, the miracle could
have· slipped away from Kyger
Creek, because with 1:3,5 left in the
game, Hall popped in a three-spot
from the rillhl wing to trim the
Bobcats' lead to 44-43. But with
1:17 left, a Highlander foul sent
Drummond to the charity stripe for · •
the one-and-one, where she made
lhe fii'St shot but missed the second. · :
Building on Cheshire's 4S-43
lead, Wolfe canned her thin! and final trifecta of the nigh\ from the
right wing with 5 I seconds left to
push Kyger's lead to five. Drummond got one last trip to the fOI!IJ :.
line with 12 seconds left. where she
nailed both free throws to creale- -:
the final score.
·
· Quarter totals
Southweslem 7 7 II 18=;43 , Kyger Creek 10 9 11 20=50
Kyger Creek (50)
Player
Zs 3s Ff
Angie Bush
5 2 0
Keri Black
6 0 1
Mary Jo Wolfe 0 3 1
T. Drummond 2 0 a
· A. &lt;1 'berger
I 0 2
Totals
14 5 7
From the neld. 19-47
At the line· 7- 17
Olr tbe glass • 23 (Black 8)
Blocked shots - 3
Assists· 12
Steals- 6
Turnovers • 21

Pts • .
16 .
13
10
7

Guts and glory
4
Kyger Creek got a brand new
50
look with two juniors, one sophomore and two freshmen on the
floor in lhe nightcap against Mel
Carter's Highlanders. Why?
Before the game tl)at rumed into
what Bobcat assistant coach Renee
Ward described as "the sweetest
victory we've had all year," Bobcat
head coach Tom Weaver issued
Soulhwestero (43)
one-game suspensio~s to his five
Player
2s 3s Ff
Pts.
seniors • starters Beth Bradbury,
18 ' •.
Lisa
Hall
4
I
7
Yon Ragland, Bobbie Jean Shaver,
15 '
Joy Skidmore and Lisa Swisher :. DanieUe Ochs 6 I 0
Amy
Metzler
3
0
I
7 :.
for missing practice earlier this
Renee
Hale
0
I
0
3
week. The "new breed" featured 543
. :
Totals
13
3
8
5 freshman Mary Jo Wolfe at point
At
the
line
•
8-12
guard, 5-5 freshman Tanya Drum.
mond at off guard, 5-9 sophomore
Amy Gindlesberger and 5-7 junior
The Daily Sentinel
Angie Bush as forwards, and 6·0
junior Keri Black at center. On lh~
(1!8PS IU·. . )
bench was 5-4 freshman Chen
A Dlviotoa ol MUIIImo!lla, Joe.
GETTING AGRIP • As Kyger Creek forward Amy Gindles.
.
berger (40) hooks the arm of an unidentified Soutbwestero player, · ,Clagg.
Published every anemooo, Monday ~ .,.;
"She
handled
it
weD
for
a
fresh·
Bobcat center Keri Black (50) and the Highlander get solid grips on
through Friday, Ill Court lt., PO·
man guard, coming in and having
meroy, Ohro: by the Ohio valley llubthe ball during tbe third quarter or Thursday night's Division IV
ILshlng Company / Multimedia, 1Dc.,
to
sel up an offense," said Weaver
sectional lower-bracket fmal at Gallia Academy. Black, a 6.0 Ju!lior
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992·11111. Second class poetaae paid at Pomeroy,
who transferred from Meigs, scored 13 points and grabbed eagbt of Wolfe, who canned her first
three-pointer of her varsity career
Oh.io.
rebounds in the Bobcats' 50·43 victory. (OVP photo by G. Spencer
to
give
the
BobcaiS
lheir
frrst
lead
Osborne)
Member: United Pre1s ln1ernatlonal,
of the game with 3:43 left in the
Inland Dally Prtu Assorlatlon and the
Ohio Newspaper Association. National
frrst quarler. Wolfe, who suffered a
Advertl.sing Representative, Branham • ~.
bruise to lbe right thigh above her
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third AVenue ,
knee in lhe last two minuiCS of the
New York, New York 10017.
second quarter afler battling for a
P&lt;m'MASTER: Send addreu o b loose ball in the paint, continued to
to The Dally Sentinel, Ill &lt;l:&gt;urt St.,
play in spite of the pain and di!aled
Pomeroy; Ob1o 451&amp;9.
... "":
long distance twice more on h~r
SVII8CIIIPI'ION RATES
way to scoring 10 poiniS • her ftrSI
87 Canter or·Mot• Boate.
The University of Rio Grande Fredrick as the guards, with Kalhy ' varsity double-digit effon. ·
Ooe Weelt .... ..... ... .. .......... ........... ll.tO
women ' s basketball team (19-8) Snyder and Kerri Kidwell at the
Oae Month .................................16.10
As this conlest transformed itOne Year .................... ............. m.IIO
heads down the stretch of its regu- forward positions. Ann Bamitz wiD self into a celebration of a rising
SINGLE COPY
lar season schedule this weekend repeat as lhe center.
star in Wolfe, it was also lhe swan.
PBICII
and early next week with four
Dally ................................ .. . 25 Cent a
Of lhat group, Barnitz continues song of senior guard Lisa Hall. Tbe
games, all to be played on the road. io lead lhe team in per·game scor- Highlanders' 5-7 scoring ace ended
SubscrlbeNI not destrtnc to pay the-ear· ...
That kind of lineup is difficult ing (13.7) and rebounding (8). Kid- a prolific career by scoring a leam·
rter may remit In advance direct to
The Dally Sentinel on a3, 6or.l2 monlh
for any team, but when a college well foUows at 11.8 points and 7.8 high 18 poiniS, a total that would
basts. credit wUI bfo rtven carr' er each
squad's hopes of making post-sea- boards a game while Fredrick is have been higher had the Fales
week.
son play hinge upon a victGry out now adding 10.7 points and 2.8 been kinder to some of her missed
No Jubscrlptlons by mall pe- mltted tn
of each game, lhe pressure is lhere. rebounds to the action. Snyder's shots.
areas wbere home carrier tenrlce ll
available.
·
But if the Redwomen can maintain averages have improved to 9.7
Southwestern led only three·
lhe lhird place slance they held in markers and 6 rebounds and Couch times in the game, with, the l~st
Mall Saboorlpll~ao
District 22 as the week began,they is lhe team leader on assists (4 per lead or significance cqma~g w~th
b!aldo Melp Coaaly
t3 Weeka .......... ........ ,,,,.,,, , fl9.2t
·may not only make the playoffs but game) while bringing 7.2 points 3:00 left in the.frrst half, when JU26 Weeka ......., .. .., ..................... 13'1.116
will probably host their frrst game.
nior Renee Hale drilled a three· . 52 Weelto ......... .. ............. ....... ... ITU6 ..
and 3.7 rebounds to lhe comesL
Doug Foote's team, cunently on
Oulal4e Melp Coaol)'
.
Barbara Easliclc's Malone squad poinler from the left wing to put
13 Weeka ....... .. .. .......... :... ..... .. .. ~.110
a 10-game streak, improved from - which feU to the Rectwomen 100the,Highlanders ahead 14-13. But
26 WeekJ ............... .. ................. 140.311
fifth place lhe week before to come 67 on Jan. 17 atllyne Center - is 721 seconds laler Bush, who led her
52 weekJ ...... ........................... m .tO
in lhas week behind Tiffin in sec- 20 entering lhe game and began the
team wilh 16 points, took a pass
ond place and perennial women's week ranked last among the 17 disfrom Wolfe and sank an 18-fooler
champion Central Stale in first. trict teams. Lake Erie WI!S 15th (6Although Rio Grande fmished in a 16), Bluffton eighth (11-9) and
tie for first place in the Mid-Ohio Findlay lOth (10-13).
Conference with Tiffin (both hold
Probable starlers include Tanya
8-2 records in conference play), Erb (5-4, freshman, 6 points, 2.5
even a shared Iitle may boost both assists per game) and Laurie Han. I
teams' chances of entering the son (5-6, sophomore, 8.4 points,
.
I
FEATURES: Upgrade carpet and pad,
playoffs. ·
3.9 rebounds) as the guards. Forcathedral ceiling, plumbed &amp; wired for washer
Final season slandings and play- wards will probably be Theresa
• '
I
&amp; dryer,' upgrade drapes, mirrored featvre wall,
.... .. ~
off pairings, set for Feb. 23, 25 and Bowlin (6-1, junior, 4 points, 5.2
'
upgrade Insulation In roof; 15 cu. ft. 2 door
27, will be decided by a rating sys- rebounds) and Laurie Jones (5-8,
tem and nol the winning percent- freshman, 8 points, 3 rebounds),
refrigerator, sprayed
ages of each team, as has been with Lisa Javersak (6-2, junior,
textured ceilings, til·
done in the past.
12.7 points, 6. 7 rebounds) at the
ed entry way and
But before they can entertain posL Javersak currently leads the .
much much morel
thoughts of the post-season, the Lady Pioneers in scoring, while
Redwomen must get past their Jones was top scorer (25) in Mal·
remaining opponeniS - Malone at one's past meeting with lhe Rio
7:30p.m. Friday; Lake Erie at4:15 ladies.
p.m. Saturday; Bluffton at 7:30
Entering action tonight, the Red·
.
p.m. Monday and Findlay at 7 p.m. women hold a 10-point, per-game
'
'
Tuesday.
margin of victory over their oppo- .
'•
For the Malone contest, Foote is
Price Includes complete set·UP with sklrtlnQ,
nents, averaging 74.6 per outing
'•
expected to go with his starting and sunendering 64.6.
a set of steps, tie downs and utility material.
lineup of Jenni Couch and Debbie
•' •

GUTS AND GLORY- Kyger Creek point guard Mary Jo Wolfe
(with ball) drives downcourt as Southwestern's. Renee Hale (32)
tries to knock the ball away in the third quarter of Thursday night's
Division IV sectional lower·bracket title game at Galli&amp; Academy.
Wolfe, a S·S freshman who scored 10 points and had several assists
while playing in pain, helped push the Bobcats to a 50·43 victory.
(OVP.photo by G. Spencer Osborne)
.

B.oys.leaders.remain Four-game road tour
the same in UPI poll looms for Redwom~n
By GENE CADDES
· Toledo St. Francis, Warren HardUPI Sports Writer ·
ing, Toledo Waite and Lancaster.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Dunbar, 17·1, sltetched its lead
The four leaders remained
unchanged as the United Press · over No. 2 Willard to 45 poiniS. 311-266. A week ago, the WolverInternational Ohio High School
ines Jed the Crimson Flashes by a
Board of Coaches boys basketball
ratings headed into their final . 218-206 margin.
Dunbar received 23 first place
week.
votes
lo seven for Willard, while
Barberton, Dayton !;&gt;unbar,
Portsmouth
(15·2) moved b.::k into .
West Muskingum and St. Henry
the
lhird
spot
wilh 213.
continued to hold comfortable
Kettering
Alter, which lost-itsleads.
third game in a ~ittle over a w~k,
Barberlon-, now 18·0 following
slipped from thrrd to fourth with
' wins last week over Wadsworth
174 poil)ts, followed by Belleand Nordonia, held the biggesi
fontaine in fifth with 170. The
margin of the four leaders - 267remainder of the list consisted of
184 over Canton McKinley - m
Warrensville Heights, Vermilion,
Division 'r.
Cincinnati Forest Park, Cincinnati
The Magics received 24 of 27
Greenhills and YoungsiOwn Rayen.
· first place voleS and were second
Greenhills and Rayen were new·
on lhe other three balloiS for 267 of
comers, replacing Le)\ington and
a possible 270 poD points.
Beloit West Branch.
Following McKinley (16-3) was
West Muskingum, 18-0, held a
Cleveland Villa Angela·SL J.oseph
282-241 lead in Division Ill over
(15· 4) with 181 points, West
Orrville (17·1), which advanced
Chester Lakota (18- I) with 177 and
from third last week to second. The
Beavercreek (17-2) wilh 163. ·
Rounding out the top ten list in . Tornadoes also had a 24·3 edge in
first place votes.
Division I were Massillon Petry,

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.I

Boys UPI cage ratmgs

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!)- This week' s
United Press International Ohio High School
Board of Coacheo' boys basketball ~&gt;tin$•
(wiLh first place votes and won-lost record m
parentheses):

Division I

Team
Points
1. Barberton (24)(t 8.0)
267
2. Cantoo McKinley (16·3)
184
3. acvc VA-St. Jooeph (I ) (15-4) ·181
4. W Cbellcr l.ak&lt;lla (I) (18· 1) 177
S. Beavercreek (17·2) 163
146
6. Muiillon PelT)' (17· 1)
102
7 Toledq SL .. FmJ&lt;il (13-1)
54
8. Wam:n Harding (tS·3)
34
9. Toledo Waiu: (IS -3)
•
IO.Lancasu:r (16·3) 31
Secmd ten: II. Cuyahoga Fall• 28; 12.
Upper Arli.natoo 26; 13. Cincinnati SL Xavier
22; 14. ElidaiO; IS. (tic) Mansfield and Lima
Senior. 9 each; 17. (tie) Sandusky and Shaker
Heights, S each; 19. Toledo St. John's 4; 20.
Massillon Washington 3.
\

r ..m

Division II

Points
311
1. DaytOJJ Dunbar (23)(16-1)
2 Willard .(?) (18.0) 266
3: PoJUmi.uth (I) (15·2)
213
4. Keiterina Alu:r(2) (14-1)
174
S. Bellefoonaine (18-t)
.
170
6. Wan&lt;J~svillc Hgu (18·1)
lAS
7. Vennilion (16-1)
119
8. Cin l'olill P_.t (16-3)
74
9. Cin Greenhill• (17-1)
41
10.Young11own RayaJ (16-3)
39 .
Seoond "''" II. Lexingtm 36; 12. (lie)
Dayton Owninade·luliamo !llld Van Wert,
35 each; 14. Wen Branch 26; 15. Sprin.fJCid
K&lt;ntoo Rid&amp;e 25; 16. Colmnboo Linden

McKinley 20; 17. Maryovillel4; 18. WoosJer
Triway 11; 19. (tic) Proctorville Fairland and
Avon Lake, 10 each.

Division Ill
Team
Points
1. Well Muskingwn (24) (18.0)
282
2. Omillc (3) (17-1)
241
3. Youngstown Liberty. (I) (16·1) 205
. 4. Sarahsville Shenandoah (18-1) 161
S. N Middletown Spm&amp;fld (I H) · 137
6. Bi:llbroolc (16·2)
!31 ·
1. Cheupeake (16-2) 75
8. Convoy Cro11view (14·3)
57
9. Culonel Crawford (16-1)
54
10.Fcdcral Hockin~ (t7-2)
53
Second ten: II. New l.ondm (I) 39; 12.
(tie) Rocky River and

BeUai~,

- ·-

-·- ·

SPECIAL
INTRODUCTORY
PRICE

31 each ; 14.

BurtooBeJiuhi,.29; IS. (tie) Haviland Wayne

Trace and Aurora, 13 etch; 17. Cincinnati

Indian Hill II ; 18. Avon 9; 19. Eall Canton 8;
20. Uni010 6.

Division IV

..

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446

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BARGA !' P1AmEES

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..

Over 20 Homes·
In Stock!
14 Wides As
Low As .. 19995

Team

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Points
I. SL Henry (21) (16·1)
253
2. Colwnbuo Wehrle (4) (15·3) 234
3. Tri·Village (I) (19.0)
199
4. Franklin fu!l)aai GRCJJ (18· 1)141
S. Cin Counuy Day (18-1)
113
6. Kirtland (17-1)
.
103
1. Manofield St. Peter'• (IS-2) 78
8. Fort Loramie (15-4)
49
9. Cedanoille (16-2) 39

See John Smith or Dick Gole Today,
YOU'LL BE GLAD YOU OlD!

IO.Yenow Sprinfs (17-2)
34
Second ten: 1. Hotaatc 32; 12. Lol&gt;in

Catholic 29; 13. Libe!1y-Benla! tl; 14.
Alltwe!p 16; IS. Houston 15; 16. Miller OJ)'
t3; 17. FoemO!!lSt. looepl! 12: 18. Caldwell I;
19. Weot Unil)'. HillloP 7; 20. (tie) Moml
Ridgedale and Racine Southern, 6 each.

COLE''S
MOBILE HOMES
Located 5 Miles East Of At. 33
On At. 50, Athens 592·1972

••

·'I

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~~-

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�Friday, February 15, 1991

Ohio State nips Wisconsin
73-71 on last-second shot

-

. ._,.,
.
LYDEN . SCORES • Oregon's Jordy Lyden
(13) out battles Washington State's Terrence
. __

Lewis (22) in Thursday's 75-69 victory over tbe
Cougars in a Pac-10 game at. McArthur Court in ·
Eugene, Oreg. (UPI).

-~-~Crooksville, ~iller advance
:-

~r~vdle and Miller advanced
~ e h~stnc~ tourn~eD~ts. 'fhurs-

Y mg wt wms m IVISIOn IV
·~ sectional
play over Trimble and
·· E
Th L d c
.
1
- - as ern.
.e a y eram1cs
defeated Tnmble 88-56, while
Miller held o.ff Eastern 55-43. ·
. In the. fust game s. Burns
poured 10 27 points as the
C R • • ped
th
roo SVI 11e JUm
OUilO e early
lead and .coasted to lhe win. Joining
Burns 10 double ftgures for
- C k 'II
H S
.
-: · roo sv1 . c were . avage w1th

19 pomts and~· Sanders 14. Tere-

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Redmen
t0 I3Ce Blu
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Gr!::~~e~~ ~:~n.1~ (~~

on s. at ur d ay '

l~gllamelel2s~87.atafterLyndeeC.Ceaentintegr

tedarva

Tuesday, and were ranked first
season, they don't take the smaller nationally among all NAIA teams
' competition lightly. On any given in scoring m•...,;n at. 23.l points ·a
~· night, ·Redmen Coach' J·ohn
-...
..
gqme as the week began. Maine~ Lawhorn has said, even the lowliest Machias was ·listed second at 22.5.
~ team in DistriCt 22 can come out a Follo:oving the Cedarville game, the
-· winner over aoigger opponent.
margm rose to 23.2 as the Redmen
The
Redmen
will
take
that
atb..
have netted an average of 97.7
••
.-· tude into tlieir Satunlay night con- , mll!'kers a game and surrendered
test at ~luffton, in spite of the 74.5 to their opponents.
.; Beav~rs 3-21 record, last place _ Among the starters for Rio
, st:anding m·Dtsmct 22 a~ senes · Grande, point guard Gary Harrison
,. history of. never beaung Rio continues to lead the team in per,. Grande, dating back to the days of game scoring at 18.8 {Xlints and in
• BevoFrancJs. . .
assists. (6 per game). Shooting
•
. Based on. wmnmg percentag~. guard Mark Erslan follows at 14.7
..•· Rto ~rande IS now number one. m points and 4.1 rebounds, with
~ , the1dtslnct. Bu~~e H~n~r ra~ng power forward Jeff Brown. at 14.6
; : sy~ em, emp 0Y or e mt tune markers and 8.8 rebounds a game
~ thiS season, ap~rs to have Malto make him the team leader on the
·,. one, 24-4 after tiS 79-68 defeat of b?ards, Brown fired in a career
~~h ~~day, a few J!OIDts ahead ht~h of 32 points over Cedarville
•• 0
e
en. The raungs will be this week
.• used to d~tennine ftnal re~ seaSmall' forward Brad Schubert
son standings and playoff pamn~s.
brings an average of 13.7 points
The Beavers, under the direcuon and 4 .4 rebounds to the
o~ second-year C&lt;?ach Guy Neal, . while center Troy Donaldsognaamddse,
w 11 carry a w1 1 th
t
.
n m o . e contest 12.2 points and 7.7 boards Donald·
ahfter starbthn~g guar
. d Kdevm Gf um.fp's son is also the team leader' on 1.ndiS ol w1 0 ur Secon s 1e I 11 ted vidual field goal percentage havBluffton to a 93-92 victory over ing netted 144 of 229 atlempts (all
Wilmmgton on the Quakers coun froll! lhe two-point range) for 62 .8
Wednesday.
. .
percent. Schubert leads lhe RedThe Redmen are nding the c.rest men in three-ooint shooting at43.6

1

peicent (99-227).
. .
Leading the Beavers into battle
~re. starting guard Gump ( 6 •4 ,
JU~Ior) at l6 points a game, and
d T dd V
pot~ 1 guar .0
arvel (6·0,
JUmor) at IS po1'nts and 4 5
·
rebounds. Gump, who transferred
from Edison State Community College near Sidney, and Varvel, a
transfer from Cedarville, are bolh
in their fmt season wil)l Bluffton.
Also starting for .the hosts are
Ry!l" McClure (6-3, junior, 10.2
potnts) and Mike Minnig (6-4,
. sophomore, 8 points) as the forwards, with 6-4 freshman Jim Connor(3points)atcenter.
Following this game, Rio
Grande returns to Mid-Ohio Conference actio11 for its ftnal two season games. The Redmen, leading
the MOC at 8-2, ~ 0 10 Ohio
Dominican Tuesday and travel to
Walsh on Saturday, Feb. 23.
Redmen Notes , The Bluffton
game will he heard on WGTR-FM
(10l.S) starting at 7:15p.m. Sarurday. Chris Justice will do the playby·play and Matt Moss will provide the color commentary ... The
.
Re d men game wt'th
upc 0 mmg
S

~f'Jhk,i.~ ~~~~ ~':~

Game of the Week" on Thursday
F
()
•
eb. 28 at 6:3 p.m.

Burt Kennedv'J
named Tvc 'S
'
Mvp wrestler

'

Melp County Historical Society
· By Margaret Parker ·
. • This lrticl~ will attempt to outhoe _the purposes of the Meigs
County Pioneer ·and HisiOrial Society and Meigs County Museum and
lo acquainnhe public with the
holdings of lhe Museum.
The adopted purpose of the
Meigs County Pioneer and Historial Society shall be to preserve historical infonnation, items and real
property.: dissemin~te historical
mformauon; educatmg lhe public
to history! mainlain business headquarters and museum; and to raise
such funds needed to carry on lhe
day-to-day operations and purposes
of lite soc1ety.
·
. All purposes are for carrying on
lhe
of lhe society for educa- .
lion purposes and to operate solely
for educational purposes.
The Collection Policy of the
Meigs County Museum Library is
to maintain existing and further
colleet manuscripts and published
ilems pertinent to the interests of
Uie Society, lheteby advancing the
Society's commitment to promote
the study of Meigs County history
and encourage original research.
The Collection Policy of the
Meigs County .Museum is to build
.UJl!.ID lhe sttengths of lhe present
collection of'objects and to acquire
!hose objeets lhat meet acquis1tion
criteria. These include: a. Decorative ins, particularly of Meigs
County of lhe 191h and 20th cen •
turics with particular emphasis
upon clothing, furniture, textiles',
furni:~f:· glass, ceramics, and
base
; b. Military objects and
clothing; c. Farming and agriculture implements, machinery and
tools; d. Folk an which reflects the
fives and penpectives of ttaditional
artists and. craftsmen; e. Indian
objects; f. Fine art;· g. Business and
Government, those objects used in
commerce including accounting,
sales, and operation.
The museum has a large collection of artifacts that have played a
part in Meigs County histoll.
NOI all holdings are exh1bited at
any one time. The policy has been
to change exhibits in the main
exhibirroom to correspond with
celebrations, national and local

wonc

.of sophomore Jamte Hanning who . Otto were able to cut the lead to six from the line
ner and Roush to·fouls
'
scoretl seven first period points.
with a minute and a half to go in
Hanning 1~ lhe Falcons with 25
Miller will play· the Unioto
pearl added 15.
The Lady Flilcons outscored Eastthe
test b llh Fa!
h td
·
I
b k
·
·
Crooksville will play the Gal- ·
IS-4 Ha .
dd d
con . • u . e cons e on pomts, Roush carne off lhe bench
ower rae et wmner tn next
. .
ern
as nnmg a e seven
for the wm.
to lead Eastern with 12 10 coming Wednesday's second game at Jackhpolts lowe( bracket wmner on
more points to go in the locker
the downfall for the Eagles was · th
d half T ' ·
d son
·
Wednesday, Feb. 20 at 6:30 at room at the half with the big lead
.
.
.
Easte
m e secon
· o compoun
·
Jacksop Hi~lt School.
•
Whatever Ea . le coach Dawil
JJ?Of free throw shoobng as . rn problems for Eastern. the Eagles
In the mght cap Miller jumped Heidman said to gher tro s at the
h1t .only .mne of 23 .from the hne . lost Shelly Metzgey, Ttffany GardCROOK~VILLE • Sanders 6.
off to a 30-!2 lead at the half and h If
h
k opd
h
while Miller cashed m on 25 of 35 .
0-2-14, DenniS
2-0-2~. Knerr 3-0.
.
·
a must ave wor e as l e
. 2-8 Dav1s 4·0-0-8 Hiitkle 0.0-0-0
held off a funous Eastern rally to Eagles cut the Falcon lead to 39-27
Sa;age 9-0-1 19
lei s 1.0-0-2'
defeat the Eagles 55-43.
heading 'into the fmal period.
.
,
R
.
• · ' w 11
n
'
Miller J'umped out an early 15-8
·E
behind th · 'd Ia
Tb!lnda~c""-o
Bukolllatt Results
Texas.S.A. 83, Artcansas-L.R. 74 (0'1')
uss O-O-O-O, Burns ·0-5- 27 •
.
.
astern
e IRSI e p y
Bu
--.
Tuls 6B Bradlc 59
Lewis 0-0-4-4 TOTALS 36-0-16·
ftrst q~r ~ hehiJ!~ lhe sconng of Jennifer Roush and Stephanie
niUid -Internollonat
wOS: · Y
88.
•·
4!:
r~t
Amhent93,Gonlon71
BoisoSI.75,ldahoSt.65
TRIMBLE-Mc0elland2-0-1)I
~~v;;,e~i::~S7
&amp;l:!..OO:s':_26~~Jr.,oStSO
~oen~n6f13.·A15n,tlse~er1_o.o,,F.oou-Ots,
Dominicon 73, Teikyo Post70
Fresno St. t07 Uuh Sl. 86 Fresno St 107,
v-v\n1"

.;

CHAMPION BROO'HERS ·Brothers Jake aad Burt Kennedy
O·rl won the TVC championships 11\'tbelr respective welabt classes
in the TVC meet lilt S1turday. Jake 1 freshman won t-e 171
pound weight das, willie Burt won the 185 ud - IDled tbe
most valuable wrestler. The senior mlgbt b1ve also have tied or
broke.• state aad 01tlonll record wltb the futat pin (311ft011ds).

By DAVE HARRIS
The Meigs Marauder wrestling
team won its fmt ever TVC: Cham·
pionsh!P last Saturday afternoon
and a b1g part of thai championship
was the Kennedy brothers who
won TVC titles in their respective
weight classes.
Freshman Jake won the 171
weight class picking up four pins
along the way. On the year Jake
has a record of I 3-9 with nine pins.
· Bun won the 185 pound weight
class and was selected the TVC's
Most Valuable Wresller.
The senior picked up four pins
and had a technical fall, Bun also
will go down in the record books as
he pinned an opponent from Nelsonville i~ just three seconds. Al
representauve from lhe Ohio High
•School Athletic Association said
that the pin should at least tie a
state and national record and possibly set a record on both levels in
liis we~ght class .. Bun in two years
of varsay wrestling has compiled a
45-9 record.with 31 pins.
_The Mara~der wrestling team
will atke pan m lhe seclipnal match
at Warren Local on Saturday Feburary 23.

Da

E!.t

:.:: rJs.=a'!wille 81
lana 76, Manhlltan f:IJ
Kinssl03, Phila. Bible 88
Molone 126. Valley F"'JJe Chri•tian 36
Mwt98, Mt St. Mary, s2
.
Mus.·llotton 79,' SE Mu11chusetta60
Monrn~..·• 83 uu B· kl 60
- 119,
· NY
• Tech
· roo
·
NI Tech
10 yn
Niaam 9l, LoyOla (Md.) 96 (40'1')
77
NPhil~nh1 · r-nnacy
!_~• St. 109,
• Fitchbu'lJ St. 68
Beaver 49
Rider70,C.COIUIOC1ian6t
Roberts WaiM.an 82. E. Nazarme 61
Siena 88, Le oyne"

~~ ~=-~ f.P/~~~ner

90

Stony Brook 86, Mt St. Vincent66
Troy St 162, ColwnbuJ Coli. 130
w. VirJinia 94, Rhode Island 61

~:,l:[~~l.tc:-~~Wam 60

&lt; B&gt;Soutb&lt;D&gt;
Centonasy 84, Samford 75

g:~~~~~ ~f'Z,:h,:Sill•

2

67

E. Carolina SS; Cam
52
E. Tcnncasee s.. 90, 'bony 49
Geo'll• Muon 77, Old Dominion 75

~~~.f.'y!?9~. .~':.~;'1ia868~on
McNeese St 72. sw r ..., s.. 63
Memphis St 70, Cincinnati 63
Miles 77, Savannahs.. 73
Millican 71, Tusaolum 66
~~~ppi Coli•
91·.70w'. ~~'"a~ s7s7
.rtou
~ -,
NE Loui•iana g4, North Te"" 63
Radford 82, Charleston Southern 69
s "-•-- 92 s. Mi · · · 85
·""""""" •
"""fc 0

~~~:'!'87,sprin8Ad&gt;or7o

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE

Pomeroy, OH.

Fall 6 Winter Hours
TUESDAY THRU FRIDAY
9 A.M·. ·II P.M.
SAT. 9 A.M.·1 P.M.
CLOSED MONDAYS

SYSTEM

By United Press lnlemaUonol

Thunday 'a Toumamenl Results

Alum N63, Aleron Cent- Hower 47
Ambtrn 48, Olnuted FaiiJ 45
Bay Villaac SO, Roc:ky River 26
Berea Midpork 54, Be1&lt;1 45
Bnmnriclr: 67, Srnngsville 53
Boclr:eyc Val 53, Col Wheutone Tl
Cardingtm 48, Marion Catholic 43
CoiBecchcroft 54, Marion River Val 52
Col Hamilton Twp 59, Col Hanley S7 (ot)
CUyohoga Falls 64, Jlarberton 42
·
Danville"· Wonhington Chr 46
Eas~akc 67, Lyndhunt Brush 43
Ericvicw 94, Cle South 29
Frmkfort Adcno 53, l.a:sbu'lJ 31
Galion Northmor 39, Olentanay 35
Gatos Mills Gilmour 59, Oc ND.CL 45
Jelfenon 59, Warren Clwnpion 41
Jonathan Alder 48, Johnstown N'ridgc 43

g=~~n~;~~~t.O, Dorms 1-0-

EASTERN • 2·0-2-6, Gillian .
1-0-1-3, Clay 2-0.0-4, Ono 2-0-4- '
9, Eastman 0-0-0.0, Gardner 3;0-0- .
6, Wilson 1-0.0-2, Baker 1-0.0-2,
Aeiker 0-0-0-0, Burke 0-0-0-0,
Roush 5.0-2-12. TOTALS-17-0·9·
43.
MILLER • Marolt 0-0-0·0,
Hanning 5-0-15-25, Beattle 0-0-33, Colvin 1-0-4-6, Cook 1.0-0-2,
Rosendahl 2-0-1-5, Pompey 3-0-06, Altier 3.0-2-8, West 0-0-0-0.

.

9:30-1:30

·Ravenna 55, Kent Roosevelt 48

MUST BE 21 YEARS OLD

'

People who make more than
$51,300 in 1991 will see , an
increase in !heir Social Security
taxes, Ed Peterson Socill ~ecurity
manaaer in Athens, said recently.
That is because the wage base lhe amount ofannual earnings subject to lhe Social Security tax - will
increase to ·$53,400 this year,
Peterson said.
And, for the fmt time, the wa:ge
base for M!ldicare hospital insur·
ancc will be higher than for Social
Security. The total 7.65 percent
Social Security taX rate is really lhe
combined Social Security and
Medical hospital insurance tax rate.
Of the total 7.65 percent rate, 6.2

SAT., FEB. 16
OCCASION BAND

West.Jcffenon 4S, Utica 30
Westlake 80. Fairview Park 34
Willou&amp;hby S 67, Mayfield SS
W!)Oster Triway 60, Kidron Chr 36

Some Workers To Pay More In
Social Security Taxes

Valentine Ps,tg

Mople Hei&amp;hU 59, Bedford S2
Medino Highland 56, Copley ~3 (ot)
Newbwy 60, Cle Hathaway Brown 26
Nonh Royalton 63. Brecksville SS '
Norton 56, Tallmadge 54

SJOO

COINER OF ST. IT. 7
.and ST. I. 143
POMEROY
;.
;:
,
;:

!·

.:······················:

1•

::

~

~(..'~ONE DAY SALE

:

:

PARFAIT SUNDAE ·

:

:

BUY ONE ·-

:

•

:

: "i SUNDAY, FEBRUAIIY 17
GET ONE

FREE!!

$·1 .4' 1~?;. ~·

Gen. Heninger Pkwy ~79 Jocbon Pike
GALLIPOLIS
MIDDLEPORT
814-448-3837
1114·992·11248

3114 Eut M81n St.
POMEROY
814-982-1292

POMEROY • The Mason GaJIia Meigs Crusade for C11rist will
he held at the Old Bethel Church
located off Route 7 on Story's Run
Road Monday through Feb. 23 at
7:30 p.m. Special speakers and
singers nightly. Rev. Clyde Henderson invites lhe public.
ROCK SPRINGS • There will
be a special meeting of the Meigs
County Fair Board on Monday at
7:30p.m. to discuss insurante.
POMEROY • The Meigs Conn•
ty Shepherd's Club will meet Mon.
day at? p.m. at the Meigs County
Extension Office in Pomeroy. For
more infonnation call949-2136.

Keesee personal
Mrs. Linda Keesee, wife of Pas·
tor J11mes Keesee of lhe Victory
Baptist Church in Middleport, is
recuperating at home following
major surgery at Pleasant Valley
Hospital.

COLONY THEATRE
FRI. THRU THURS.

an

TWO SHOWS ON rRI., S~l. SUN.
SHOW TillES ~:30·9:40
MON. THRU THURS.
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
ADMISSION $1.50
446·0923

~··**********************************•~

percent is for Social Security and
1.45 percent is for Medicare.
Beginning January 1, 1991, and
6.2 percent Social Security tax rate
applies to earnings up to $53,400.
But the Medicare rate of 1.45 per.
cent applies to earnings up to
$125,000. The chan below shows
how this works.
1991 Social Security and Medicare Tax Rates
1991
Earnings,
Employer/Employee,
SelfEmployed.
Up to 53,400, 7.65 percent, 15.3.
percent.
·
53,400 to $125,000, 1.45 percent, 2.9 percent .
Self-employed people can take
special deductions that help limit
their tax liability. ConJaCt the Inter-

•••
:•.,
.,

•

nal Revenue Service for more
information.
In 1991, the amount of annual
earnings needed to earn I work
credit for Social Security will be
$540, up from $520 in 1990. A person who earns $2,160 or more gets
4 credits, the maxium for a year.
For more information about
Social Securitr, call or visit the
Athens Socia Security office,
located at 221 1/2 Columbus Rd.
The number is 592-4448: The toll
free number for Social Security is
1·800-234-5772.

Plans finalized
The Bashan Ladies ·Auxiliary
had their February meeting and
finalized plans for their smorgasbord dinner to be held March 17
from II a.m. to 2 p.m.

'

I

'

'.

Team members, several Meigs
Countians, are Carolyn Bradford,
Linda Bennett, Paula Brennan,
Carol Bush, Victoria Canterbury,
Larry Cross, Jerry Crow, Scott Dillon, Debbie Evans, Diana Hale,
Diana Kinder, Rod Sauer and Sharilyn Stubbs. The· team was one of
II to receive awards in the Ohio
Corporation. ·

::,. Attend meeting
'

$1.49

MONDAY
RACrNE - The Southern Local
School Board will meet Monday at
7 p.m. at the high school.

The Reedsville Nazarene shower for Wendy Wilfong on Feb.
Women's Society mel recently at 23 and to go to the C&lt;;iunty Infirthe church fellowship hall with Sue . inary on March 26 for the annual
Smith as hostess and Carol Easter program.
Attending with those mentioned
Kanawalsky as co-hosress.
Barbara Masters opened with were Bonnie Richards, Mauie
devotions and a reading, "In Times Teaford, Tami Putman, Lisa PutLike These," in support of the man, Sue Smith, Sue Douglas,
troops in Operation Desert Storm. Marlene Putman, Tammy Baker,
She also read a poem ''The Legend Linda Puunan, Kristi Boston, Judy
Elkins, Gloria Decker, Garcia
of the Valentine."
The group reported 91 shutin Adams, Cristy Adams and guests
calls for the month of January and Judy Hall and Tammy Cowdery.
The next meeting will be held
cards were signed for lhe sick and
·March
14 with Barbara Masters
shut-in.
and
Cathy.
Masters as hostesses. ·
Plans were made for a baby

;
The Quality of Customer Ser• vice Team of Bank One, Athens,
recently received an award for
being one of the best Quality
Improvement Teams in the Bane
One Corporation at the Bane One
. Corporation 1990 Chairman's
Quality of Customer Service
:.
Awards Banquet in Columbus.
,.

WEEK LONG SPECIALS!

AY('(, BAR B.Q. RIB

POMEROY • The youth group
observances, and special exhibits micro-film of Meigs County ne,.;sof lite Rutland Church of God will
for Heritage Week.cnd and Christ- papers; photo-oopies of term record
hold a carwash on Saturday from 9
!Das.
index, various other Clerk of Coun
· a,m. to 3 p.m. at Pleaser's in
Permanent exhibits are the records, !ll)luralization papers and
Pomeroy. Cost is $3 per car.
"Tool Room", where· workshop· other court records. The library has
FRIDAY
tools ate displayed; "Parlor Room , Meigs County history boo~. fami·
SALEM CENTER • Star
LONG BOTTOM • The Faith
featuring an upright grand piano, ly histories, books of cemetery
Grange
will hold fun night and
Gospel
Church
in
Long
Bottom
record player, stereoscope. futni- tombsto.ne inseripiions, an extenwork
session
on Saturday at 6:30
will
hold
preaching
and
singing
on
ture, and wearing apparel. This sive photograph collection, and a
p.m.
at
the
fire
station 'm Salem
Friday
at
7
p.m.
Steve
Reed,
pastor,
room has some changing exhibits; · large collection of resource hooks
Center.
A
potluck
supper will be
invites
lhe
public.
a hallway exhibits a collection of from neighboring counties. A
.
held.
All
members
urged
to attend.
riverboat picrures; "Sewing Room" micro-fiche reader was recently
·TUPPERS PLAINS • There
exhibits a loom from the early . purchased, and micro-fiche for the
TUPPERS PLAINS • The Tup1800's, spinning wheel, sock knit· International Index 10 records of will be a round and square dance
pers
Plains VFW Auxiliary will
ter, knitting machine, sewing the Latter Day Saints for most of on Friday from 8·11:30 p.m. at the
.sponsor
a Valentine Dance on Sat·
machines, carding combs, quilts the Northeastern states was Tuppers Plains VFW Building feaurday
from
8-11 ;30 p.m. at the
and several other objects pertaining obtained : The Meigs County turing Flea Market Express. Jim
VFW
buildin~
in Tuppers Plains.
to sewing or weaving; lhe theater Genealogical Society maintains Carnahan will be the eatier. Public
Music
by
J
umor
White, caller Jim
features changing slide shows relat- . their library in lhe museum and has invited.
.
CBmllhan
and
Red
Carr. There will
ing io Meigs County and is used several resource materials.
MIDDLEPORT • There will be be refreshments .and door prizes.
The museum library offers a
for program ~resentation; the "Mil- ·
a
sweetheart
dance on Friday from
itary Room ' honors those who wealth of information to anyone
. HENDERSON
Gallia
8
p.m.
to
midnight
at the American
have served our country and has interested in family or local county
company photographs from World research and is recognized as one Legion Annex in Middlepon spon- Twirlers Wester Square Dance
War I, Company rosters from the of the best small historical libraries . sored by the Middleport Communi- Club will hold a dance Saturday
ty Association. Tickets are SIO at from 8-11 p.m. at the Henderson
Civil War and Spanish American in the state.
The Meigs County Museum has the door. Music by Crossover Community Center. Chuck MarWar, artifacts from the wars, canlow, caller. Public invited.
non balls, medals, uniforms and met all requirements and is certi- Band.
several other items related to the fied by the Ohio Association of
SUNDAY
SATURDAY
military. The museum library hous- Historical Society and Museums.
SALEM
CENTER • Star
MIDDLEPORT
•
The
Grubb
The Meigs County Museum
es the archival holdings of the
Grange
will
hold
a work session at
family
singers
will
sing
Saturday
at
museum, including material for strives to serve and acquaint the
I
p.m.
on
Sunday
at the grange hall
7:30p.m.
atlhe
Ash
Sireet
Freewill
·
historical and genealogical public with Meigs. County history
near
Salem
Cemer.
Polluck lunch.
Baptist
Church
in
Middlepon.
Pubresearch. The pubfications and . through regular museum hours,
lic
invited..
·
·
research m&amp;terials will be described special workshops. programs, and
LONG BOTTOM • Jerry Cotfurther in this column. A recently open house.
terill,
Palestine, W.Va., will be at
MIDDLEPORT
•
Dr.
Suess"
·Another established venture is
converted storage room houses
theMount
·
"Pontoffel
Pock"
and
"Ira
Sleeps
Meigs County newspapers and a Heritage Weekend to be held this
Olive
Community
Church
in
Over"
will
be
shown
at
lhe
Meigs
large collection of scrapbooks. The year on June 9 and 10. Began 20
Long
Bottom
on
Sunday
at
7
p.m.
County
Public
Library
'in
Pomeroy
museum has a large collection of years ago in conjunction with the
housewares, clothing, farm relaled Big Bend Regaua, the museum has on Saturday at 2 p.m. All area chil- Pastor Lawrence Bush invites the
public .
tools, photographs, and various .continued wilh its annual celebra- dren are invited free of charge.
other collections. These arc often tion, adding new activities that
POMEROY - A 12-step AA
WILKESVILLE • There will
become a part of lhe tradition. In
used as special exhibits.
meeting
will be held Sunday at 7
be
a
swee1hean
dinner
at
the
The Historical Society Library 1989, a Heritage .Week-end kickp.m.
at
the JTPA building in
Wilkesville
Pythian
Hall
on
Saturhas microfilm of all available off dinner was added, as well as
day
at
4
p.m.
Cost
is
'$5
adults
and
Pomeroy.
Meigs County Census (1820-1910) annual car show. These have b91h
$2.50 children. Public invifed.
and several surrounding counties to proven successful.
POMEROY ·The Meigs CounAnother annual event is the
1850. The 1850', The 1820, 1830,
ty
Genealogy
Society will meet
POMEROY- Belles and Beaus
1840, 1850, '1860 and 1870 Meigs Christmas Operi House, to be held
Sunday
at
the
Meigs
County MuseCounty census is also in hook. form · on December 8, 1991. The annual Western Square Dance Club will um on Butternut Avenue in
for library use; The society has Christmas dinner, began in 1988, hold a dance Saturday from 8-11 Pomeroy. Herman and Dee Dillon,
p.m. at the Pomeroy Senior Citi- .
p,hoto-copied the birlh and death will be held on December 6.
The Historical Society invites
records from 1867 to 1908 and
these are available. Other resources the public to offer suggestions for
are: Marriage records to 1866: programing, exhibits and workmicrofilm of Clerk of Coun Term shops. Membership in lhe .Historiand Complete Records Meigs cal Society is encouraged as a way
County 1819-11839; Chancery of supporting the Meigs County
Records, Vol. A-1826-1837: Musuem.

i· Bank One receives award

, •••••••••••••••••••••!

. t'. . fA
WHFv::ER

Gallipolis, will give an account of
their trip to Ireland.
·

'

*
:

Sunday, February 17 thru sGturclay, February 23

zens Center. Billy Gene Evans will
be the caller.

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

Nazarene women have meeting

tOYER

Mccuiii's
FAMILY .REST AU RANT

:

Community calendar

Your Social ~ecurity questions

MilWAY
TAVERN

so

Richfield Revere 45, G....,sburg Green 37
Shaker Hu 62, Oe Collinwood 55
Wodswonh 63, Hudaon 39

Ashland 70, BeUonnine 64
Creighton75,Texu-EIPuo62
Deuoit 79, Volparaiso 68
Doane 93, Keamcy s.: 91
Eurdco 71, Blackburn 66
Grand VIII. st 89, Hillsdale 86 con
Iowa 82, Minnc1011 f:IJ
Michiaan SL 55, Northwestom 53
Mo. Volley 81, Evangel67
N. Miclti,an 70, Lake Soperior St. f:IJ
Northwood 99, G. Ropicb Bopt. 92 (OT)
Ohio St. 73, Wisccnsm 71
Parks BS, Maryville 6t
sw Musouri St. 104, Drake st
·
Saginaw Valley 76, MichiJ~ Tech 66
SL Louia 88, Dayton 80 (OT)
Wayne St. 79, Oakland 73
Websler 104. Fontltonne 91
Wis.·Milwatiltee 91, NE Winoia 66
Xavie1 (Ohin) 69, Evansville 56
SoulilwOII
~rlt.·Monticello 94, Hardin&amp; 76
Arkanw St 73, C. Aorida 48
Briaham Youn1 83, New Mexico 76
N. Mexico SL 80, Fullerton St. 74
New Orloonl 85, Lamar 75
Oral Robo111 82, Midwe11em St 69
Sn Houaton 68, SF Aua11n 61

GRAVELY

Girls Ohio High
.School Basketball

London 49, Logan Ehn 48

Southern 125, SE Louisiana 101
Stouoo 68 • Mon:er 55
+:~~~/.~!'tin~ Louisiana 77

·.~THE ·

~ssi~.

Arizma 67
Montana 79, Weber St 67
Nov.-Las Vegas 98, Sansa Bamara 71
Nevada 76, E. Washington 73
Nevada 76, Ea11em Waahingl01173 Oregon

Liberty Union 66, Madison Plains 38
Lodi Cloverleafs~. Medina

~: ~~~~~lt!~-~~ 61

204 Condor it.

·

Friday, February 15, 1991

Pioneer, Historical group
purpose is to preserve past

to girls district meet after. wins
College cage scores

By The Bend

'

.Page--6 .

By JEFF SHAIN
Baker's shot ended a game that
At Las Vegas, Nev., Larry JohnUP! Sports Writer
turned into a nail-biter after Ohio son scored .27 points and Greg
. Wisconsin may have executed State had assumed a 51-37 lead Anthony added 211 to lead NevadaIts defense as well as it could in lhe with 14:15 left
Las Vegas to its 32nd Slraight win.
fmal seconds Thursday night, but
Jimmy Jackson paced Ohio The Rebels ran their recmlto 21.0
that still wasn't enough to stop State with 22 points, including a in talcing their 31st consecutive win
Ohio State's Mark Baker.
key basket with 51 seconds left that at home. .
Baker hit a 10-foot shot with increased lhe Buckeyes lead to 71At J,.,ynchburg, Va., Keith Jenone second left, giving lhe second- 68.
nings scored 12 points to become
ranked Buckeyes a 73-71 victory
Wisconsin, 11-10 and 5-6 in Big East Tennessee State's all-time
over the Badger$.
·
Ten play, rallied behind 14-for-19 scoring leader as lhe Buccanners
"I hadn't. played the best of shooting in the second half and a rolled over Liberty. Jennings fingames tonight, but I hit the big shot cooler-headed responSe to lhe Ohio ished the game with 1,811 career .
at the. end," said Baker, who State press, which forced only five points, surpassing the 1,801 scored
scored 12 points and distributed g Badger turnovers in the last 20 ·by Tom Ointon from 1958-61.'
assists. "I'll take !hat anytime."
minutes.
·
At Hattiesburg, Miss., Kevin
. Baker took the inbound pass
Wisconsin's Tim Locum made McDaniels scored 19 points 10 lead
w1th 11 seconds left and waited all 4 three-point auerripts after South Alabama over Southern Mis~fore driving lhe lane and banking
intermission and scored 16 of his sissippi, Thomas Adams added 14
hts game-winner over Wisconsin's 23 points in the second half.
points as South Alabama broke
Larry Hisle and Louis Ely.
Locum put Wisconsin ahead for Southern Mississipi 's six-game
"He had to rum twice and dou· the only time of the second half 61· winning streak.
ble pump. Each of our guys knew 60 on a three-point basket with
At Salt Lake City, Josh Grant
what lhey had to do," Wisconsin 5:36left Ohio State retook the lead scored 24 points, including 18 in
Coach Steve Yoder said.
62-61 after a Treg Lee steal fol· the second half, 10 lead Utah ovef
Ohio State Coach Randy Aye~ lowed by a Jackson slam dunk with Wyoming. The Cowboys were led
said Baker ''just made a great play, · 3:57 remaining.
by Tim Breaux wilh 22 points and
That's strength, that's athleti~ abili- ·
Wisconsin tied lhe score three. Paris Bryant with 14,
ty to make a shot' like that.1'
limes the rest of the way. Louis Ely
A.t Berkeley, Calif., Roy Fisher
· With two taller players swattiqg did it fot the liist time with a three· scored 20 points and Billy Dreher
at him, the 6-foot-1 Baker was point play with 35 seconds remain· · hit S of 6 free throws in the final
forced to pump in mid-air, but mg.
· .
minute as Cal handod UCLA its
managed to get a soft kiss off the
In olher games Thursday night seconds straight loss. Tracy Murray
. backboard and into the basket
involving members of UPI's Top led UCLA with 25 poilus.
"Hisle made me change my 25, No. 1 Nevada-Las Vegas
At Las Cruces. N.M., Reggie
shot, but I just used my hang lime steamrolled Santa Barbara 98-71, Jordan scored 18 points as New
to shoot over him," Baker said.
No. 9 East Tennessee State ham- Mexico State extended the nation's
The victory improved Ohio mered Liberty 90-49, South Alaba- third-longest honle-oourt winning
State's record to 21-1 overall and rna upset No. 10 Southern Missis· streak to 29 games. Joe Small ·"
11-1 in lhe Big Ten and turns Sat- SiQpi 92-85, No. 13. Utah topped scored 19 points and Agee Ward
urday's game against Indilma into ·. Wyoming TI-72, Ciilifornia upend- added !6 to lead the Titans.
.
oneforfmtplaceintheleague.
ed No. 14 UCLA 82-79, No. 15
At Evanston, Ill., Mark Mont"We knew 'it would be tough .10 New Mexico State beat Fullerton gomery hit a three-point shot .with
play in Jl:'ladison. Our guys just State 80-74, No. 22 Michigan State · 33 secoil4s left to lift Michigan
toughed 11 out for 40 minutes,' • edged Northwestern 5~-53 and co- State over Northwestern . .The Spar· ·
Ayers said. "This win gives us a No. 24 New Orleans cltpped Lamar tans were led by Parish Hickman's
great emotional lift"
85-75.
15 points.

sa Fouts led Tnmble wtlh 22, Char

.- 4) has posted some big wins Ibis

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The Daily Sentinel

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Meigs County· Soapbox Derby
members, Roger D.
Williams, Jim Pape and Charles
Ne!llzling re~ently attended the
Oh10 Derby Ouectors meeting held
in Columbus.
The mcetiog consisted for various rule changes and policies and •
proced!llh for implementing local
races. The Meigs County Soap Box
Derby will be held June 22 and 23.
A~s~ciation

Trustees hold meeting
The Bedford Township Trustees
'held !heir organizational meeting
reeently and officers were elected:
Robert Hawk, president; Elmer
Bailey, .vice pres1dent: Wrgil King,
preventton officer.
Regular meetings will be held
the second Monday of each month
at the townhall.
•

RONDA ASH KETCHUM
\

Valentine queen
chosen by group
· Ronda Ash Ketchum was select·
cd Valentine Queen of the Xi
Gamma Epsilon Chapter, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority.
. Mrs. Ketchum resides in Hockingport with her husband, Roger,
and two sons, Kevin and Marc.
They own and operate Ketchum's
General S10re in Hockingpon.
Mrs. Ketchum has been a member of Xj Gamma Epsilon for lhe
past two years. She, was selected as
pledge of the year in 1990. In 1991
she serves as social chairman for
the sorority.
She auends the Hockingport
United Methodist Church and is
also a cub scout activity leader.

Many Meigs Countians ar·e serving in
Operation Desert Storm, ·and .
we want to show them our support ...

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On Thursday, Feb. 21st,
The Daily Sentinel will have a
Special Edition with photographs of our.
Service Personnel from Meigs County .
A copy of this edition will be sent to each one of
our local troops stationed in the Persian Gulf. ,
If you would like to be a part

this special
edition - whether professiona., business,
· · individual, or civic organization . give Brian o.r David a call at 992-2156.

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�Page-S-The Dally Sentinel

Friday, February 15,1991

Pomeroy-Middlepon, Ohio

~

7 fXrERIENCE ll1f JOY Of RELIGION

Friday, February 15' I 1991

Little progress at
global warming talks

This Message and Church Directory Spon$ored By Th.:e..Inte,rested Businesses Listed On .ThiS Page.
(row's Fomilr Restaurant
"Fttlurlng l&lt;tnlut ¥ FrledCAide~"
228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

992-5432

RIDENOUR

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FURNI~~~~L~RDWARE II
Homelile Saw •

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MEIGS nRE ·
~ CENTER, INC.
F . Fultz, Mgr.
.
\~ JohnPhPomeroy

TEAFORD REALTY .
216 s. second
Pomeroy
f9l ·ll2S

992· 2t0l

[B

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT
Nationwide Ins. Co.

CHANTILLY , Va. (UP!)-

The opening session of intcrnalioo-

~

aglobal warmmg lrea!y sputtered to a close with
diplomats making only meager
progress toward a consensus stnlte·
for combating the "greenhouse
eel.''
Despite 10 days of talks that
ended Thursday, delegates to the
United Na1ions conference only
were able to reach agreement on
procedll!'al issues concerning how
the negllliations should proceed.
Because of lengthy disputes
over those piocedural matters, the
talks never turned to what was supposed to be the real business of the
conference - the draftin~ of a
treaty laying .out a coordinated
intemalional response 10 the global
warming threat.
Environmentalists blamed the
U.S. officials for the lack of
progress, saying the Bush administnltion's continuing opposition to
concrete pollution reduction goals
was holding up meaningful discussions. •
U.N. officials had hoped delegates 10 the opening session of the
Intergovernmental Negotiating
Committee could agree on a pre- .
liminary lreaty texl that would
serve as the basis for continued
negotiations later this year.
They said a quick star! was
essential because the negotiations
~ ll!:gotialions on

ol COIUfllbuS, 0 .

104 w. Main
"2-2lll Pam,e roy

01011

•

~

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
-~
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We Fill Doctors'

'.RIIliHIS fOI -MIT OCCASION

16141 992-6454

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Pre\criptlons

106 lutttnllll A".
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Pomeroy

9U· 29SS

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SNOUFFER
Fl RE &amp; SAFETY
SALES &amp; SERVICE

1192-7075

Middltoort, Ohio
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786 NORTH SECOND AVE.

POMEROY, OHI0-992-6677

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES

EWING FUNERAL HOME

214 E . Main
992·5130 Pomeroy

112 North Se&lt;ond Awe.
· TRINITY CXlNGREG,I.TIONAL CHliRCH,

The Rev. Roland Wildman, pasta'. O.urch
School 9: l5 a. m. All!" Globokar, Sup!.; War·
s~p Scrv1ce 10: .l) a.m. Cb.olrre-heanal, Thurs·
day , 7:00p.m.: LOis Burt, Director.
POMEROY CHURCH OF 1liE NAZA·

RENE, Corrrr Union and MullETy, ReY.

992·66119
271 North

204 Condor St.

Soctltld

Pomeroy, OH.

Mlddltport, .

Thomas Glel McQung, pastor. Naman Pres·
Icy , S. S. Sup&lt;., Suruay School, UJ a.m .;
morning worshiplO:lJ a.m.: eveningse~6

992-2975

Ohio

BILL QUICKEL

"Pillnity and Service Always"
Established 1913

992-2121
106 ....,.,. AwL

p.m.: mid·W(('k service. Wffine9day, 7 p.m.

GRACE EPISOJPAL CHURCH, 326 E.
Main St .. Pomeroy. the&amp;-.&gt;. Dr. Roy C. Myers.
rector. Sunday services: U a. m . JunP through
Augus r; ll ::II a.m. Septemter ttrough May.
Holy Communion, first. second, ttird and
fourth SurDa,ys of each month: Morning
Prayer on fifth Surxlay~. Omrch school and
nursery care provided Coffee b:lur ln tre pa:rlsh halllmmedlateb' foUowlng till&gt; 5el'\1ce.

RAWUNGS-COATS

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME

()\\;(( Q..w !Boor.,
93 Mill SlrMI
Middleport, Ohio 46760
18141
- . (991 -00KSI

992-5141

264 South 2nd
Middleport
POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST•.212 W.
Mafn St,. AndreW Miles, pastor: BJije School
9:XI a.m.; Morning won;hlp,10: 30a.m.: Youth
p.m.
meeting;, 6: 00p.m. : Evening worshlp, 7:00 p.
~YRACUSE FIRST UNITED PRESBY·
m. Wednesday nJght prayer meeting and Bible
TERIAN . - Sunday School, 10 a.m.;
st\Xty. 7:00p.m.
THE SA.LVATION ARMY. 115 Butternut ' Church service, 11;00 a. m.; Youth group,
EAST LETART- MoritlngWorshlp9:00
first and third Sundays, 4 p.m .
Ave., Pomeroy. Mrs. [k)ra Wining in ~harge.
a.1.1.; Church SchoollO:OOa.m.; UMWttrst
RUTLAND
CHURCH
OF
GOD,
Pastor,
S.nday holiness meeting, 10 a.m.; Sunday
Tuesday 7:30 p.m. (Grace) .
John F . Corcoran. Sunday School10: 00 a:
School. 10:30 am. Surday SchooL YPSM
RACINE- Oaureh School, 10 a.m.; Worm.;
Sunday
Morning
Worship
11:00
a.m.
Elolsr Adams. leader. ·7: :11 p.m. Salvation
shlpU a.m.; UMW!ourth Monday at7:30p.
Children's Church 11 a.m. Sunday Evenmeeting, various SJX&gt;akers and m~lcsp:lclals.
m.; Men's Prayer Breaktast, Wednesday, 8
Ing Service 7: 00 p.Jll.. Wed., 6 p.m. Young
Thun.day. 11 :~ a.m. to 2 p.m . Ladles Home
a.m. (Grace).
Ladles'
Auxiliary.
Wednesday.
7
p.m.
Uague, mem!Prs ~ tn rharge. au women
Family Worship.
lnvttoo; 6:45 p.m. ThW'&lt;Iay. Corps Cadet
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH. Of!
OSS'iS (Young People-Bitle). 7;l) p.m. BUlle
Rt. 124, 3 miles from Portland-Long BotStudy and Prayer meeting, open to ~public.
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST. Starling
tom. Edsel Hart. pastor. Sunday School,
Massar and Oliver Sw$1n, Sunday Srhool
POMEROY . WESTSIDE CHURCH OF
9:30 a .m.; Sunday · morning preaching ·
Supts. Preaching 9: 30a.m. each Sunday;
OIRIST, :m26 Children's Home Road ICounty
10:30 a .m.; Sunday evening servh:es, 7:30
Sunday School10: 30 a.m.
Road 76). 992-3817. Vocal music. Surday WorP·fll
·
.
BOBSDN CHURCH OF .CHRIST IN
ship 10 a. m.i. Bl.biC'Study 11 a.m .; Worship, 6 p.
MIDDL EPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST
m. Wednesaay. BJ]je Shcy, 7 p.m. Speaker.
CHRJSTIAN UNION, Theron Durham ,
CHURCH , Corner Ash and Plum . Noel
Landon Hope, evangells1.
pastor. Sunday service, 9:30a.m .: evenHerrmann, pastor. Sunday SchoollO: 00 a.
Ing service· 7:00 p.m. Prayer r"neetlng,
OLD DEXTER BIBLE CHR(STIAN
Wednesday, 7:00p.m.
CHURCH, Jack Cleland. pastor; Alana Cle- . m.: Morning W.orshlp , 11:00 a.m.; Wed·
nesday and Saturday Evening Services at
land, Supt. Surtlay School 10; 00 a.m.: Youth
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
7:
30p.m.
CHRIST, Jack Colegrove, pastor. Bible
.Mrellng. 7 p.m. every Wednesi:Jay.
MT. OLIVE UNITED METHODIST Class, 9:30a.m.; MomtngWorshlp10:30a .
SACRED HEARl' CATHOLIC CHURCH
Off 124, behind Wllkesvllle. Charles Jones,
m.; Evening Worship, 6:30p.m. Thursday
- 161 MulberrY Ave., Pomeroy. Ph. 992pastor. Sunday Schocl, 9:30a.m.; morning
Bible Study, 6; 30 p.m.
5898. Saturday Evening Mass. S:lJ p.m.;
worship,
10:30:
Sunday
and
Thursday
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST, Pomeroy·
Sunday Mass 9: lJ a .m. CCD classes, 10; l)
evening se rvtc ~. 7: 00p.m.
Harrisonville Rd . (Rt.143) Robert E . Pura .m. first, second.and third Sundays or each
MEIGS
tell, minister; Steve Stanley, Bible Sehool
month. Dally Mass_. 8; 30 a.m . Confessio ns
COOPERATIVE PARISH
Supt.; Harley JohnsM, Asst. Supt. SUN·
Saturday afternon, 4-5 p.m.
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
DAY: Bible- School 9:30 a.m.; Worship
CHliRCH OF JESUS CHR IST APOS·
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
10:30 A.M. and 7: 00P.M.: Wednesday BITOLIC FAITH- New Lima Road, nex t to
Re". Sharoa Hausman
ble Study,7:00 p.m.
Fort Me igs Park. Robert W. Richards,
Rev. Charles Eaton
ST. JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH, Pine
pastor. Sunday services, 10 ~- m . and 7 p.
Rev. Seldon Jolllnson
Grovt. The Rev. Laura A. Leach, pasJor.
m.: Wednesday worship, 7 p.m.
ALFRED - Church School 9: 30 a.m.;
Church service 9:30a.m.: Sunday S~hool
MIDDLEPORT CXlMMUNITY CH\JRCH.
Worohlp, U a.m.; UMYF6:30p.m .; UMW
10:30 a.m.
57~ Pear l St., Middleport. Sam Anderson,
Third Tues!1ay, 7:30 p.n1. Communion,
BRADBURY CHURCH 0~ . CHRIST.
pastor. Sunday School 10 a. m.: Sunday
first Sund ay . (liaushman)
To111; RunYon, pastor .. Sunday School 9: 30
pventng service 7:30 p.rn,; Wednesday ser CHESTER - ·worship 9 a. m .; Church
a .m.: Larry Haynes, S. S. Supt. Morning
vice. 7:30 p.m.
SchoollO a.m.; Bible Study, Thursday , 7p.
worship 10: 30 a.m.
·
·
m.: UMW, first Thursday, 1 p.m. ; ComGRAHAM
UNITED METHODIST,
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
munion, first Sunday (Hausman t.
RENE, Rev. Thomas L. Gates It , pastor.
Pr ~achlng 9::\0 a.m.. first and second Sun·
JOPPA - Worship 9:30 a .m.: Church
Ora Bass, Sunday School Sup~rintendent.
. days 9f each month; third and fourth Sun·
Schoo\10: 30 a.m . Bible Study Wednesday,
Sunday School, 9:30a.m .; worship service
day each month worship setvtces at 7: 30p.
7:30p.m. (Joh nson).
m .; WE'dnesday evenings at 7:30 p.m .
10:30 a.m .; evening service, 6 p.m . Wed·
LONG BOTTOM - Church School 9: 30
nesday evening servIce, 7 p.m.
Prayer and Bible Study.
a.m .: Worship 10:30 a .m.; Bible Study,
LIBERTY CHRISTIAN CHURCH, Dex·
SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST. Mul ·
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.; Communion First
berry Heights Road, PomerOy. Pastor Bob
ter. Woody Call, pastor. Services Sunday
S.unday of Month (Rev.. Charles EatMl
10 a .m. and 7 p.m . Wednesday, 7 p.m.
Snyder: Sabbath School Superintendent.
REEDSVILLE - Sunday Worship SerDYESVJLLE COMMUNITY CHURCH ,
RodneY Spires. Sabbath School begins at 2
vice 9: 30a.m.; Church School10: 30 a.m.:
Lloyd Sayre, Supt. Sunday School 9: 30 a.
p.m. on Saturday a ft ernoon with worship
Bible Study 7:30p.m. Wednesday.
m .: morning worship 10:30 a-.m. Sunday
serv ice following ar 3:00 p.m . Everyone
TUPPERS PLAINS ST. PAUL evening service 7 p.m.
.
welcome.
Church SChool 9 a.m.; Worship 10 a.m. ;
RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST, Sieve
Bible Study, Tuesday. 7:30p.m.; Commu- Sister Harriett Warner, S upt. Sunday
Deaver, Pastor. Mike Swiger, Sunday
nion Firs r Sunday (Hausman~ .
School 9:30a.m.: . Morning Worship, 10: IJ5
School Supt .; .Sunday School 9: 30a.m .;
CENTRAL CLUSTER
a.m.
·
Morning worship 10:40 a.m.; Sunday
Rev. Do~ M.eadows
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST, East
evening worship 7: ao p.m.; Wednesday
Rev. Wesley Thatcher
Main St . Steve Fuller, pas tor. George
evening Bible study 7"::.1 p.m .
Rev. Frank Smith
Skinner', Sunday School Superintendent :
BURLINGHAM COMMUNJTY CH\JRCH.
Rev. KathrYJO RUey
Sunday School, , ; 30 a .m.; Morning WorBurlingham. Ray LaudennUt, pasttr, Ro
Rev. Ron F.lerce
ship 10: 30 a.m.; Wednesday evening
ben COzart, assbtant past(J'. Sunday School
Rev. Arthur Crabtree
prayer a nd Bible study, 7:30 p.m.
10 a.m.: wcrship 7 p.m.; Wednesday, 6 p.m.
R.,v. F1orence Smith
F1RST SOUTHERN BAPTIST, 41872
youth meeting; Wed .. 7p.m. churehservtces.
ASBURY f Syracuse J - Worsh lp n a.m.
Pom-eroy Pike. E. Lamar O'Bryant, pas·
PINE GROVE HOLINESS CHURCH,"\!
: Church Schoo\9:45 a .m.; Charge Bible
tor and Sunday School Director. Sund ay
mile oH Rt. 325. Rev. Ben J . Watts, pastor.
Study, Wednesday, 7:30p.m. ; UMW. ftrst
School, 9:30 a .m.: Morning Worship,
Robert Searles, ~ .s . Supt. Sunday School
Tuesday, 1:30 p.m.: Chair Rehearsal,
10:45; Choir prac11ce, 6:;JO p.m.; evening
9:30a.m.; Momtng Worship 10::JJ a .m .;
Wednesday 6:30 p.m. (Thatcher)
worship , 7:30 p.m.: Wednesday Prayer
Sunday evening service 11':30 p.m.; Wed·
ENTERPRISE - Worship 9 a.m.:
Service, 7: 30 p. m. Ml.sslon Friends (ages
nesday service, 7: 30p.m.
Church School10 a.m .; Bible Study, Tues2-6), Royal Am bassadors (boys ages e-18),
SILVER RUN BAPriST, BU! Little,
day, 7:00p.m.; UMW, First Monday, 7:30
a nd Girls In Action (ages 6-18) on Wednespastor. Stevl!' Little, s. s . Supt. Sunday
p. m.; UMYF Sunday, 6 p.m. (Riley)
days, 7: 30 p.m. Chureh-wlde Visitation
Schoo110 a .m.; Morning worslp, 11 a.m .;
FLATWOODS - Church School.IOa.m.
6:30p.m. Tuesday.
Sunday evening wprship 7: :m p.m. Prayer
: Worship. 11 a.m.; Bible Study, ThursFAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH, Bal·
day, 7 p.m .; UMYF, Sunday, 6 p.m. (RImeeting and Bible study Wednesday, 7:30
ley Ru n Road, Rev. Emmett Rawson, pasley).
p.m.; Vouth meeting Wednesday at 7p.m.
tor. Handley Dunn , supt. Sunday School,
FOREST RUN - Worship 9 a.m.;
REJOICING LIFE BAPTIST CHURCH
10 a.rri.: Sunday evening service, 7:00p.m. '
Church School 10 A.M.: Choir practice,
- 383 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport. Sunday
: Bible teachi ng, 7: 00p.m. Thursday.
Schoql10 a.m. Sunday evening 7:00p.m.:
Thursday, 6:30p.m.; UMW lhlrd Monday.
SYRACliS£ MISSION, 1411 Bridgeman
IThatcherl
Mid-week service, Wed .• 7 p.m.
St .. Syracuse. Sunday School 10 .a.m. ;
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH,
HEATH tMiddlepor tl -Church School, ,..,
evenin g service 6 p.m.; Wednesday ser9:30a.m.; Morning Worship 10: 30 a.m.;
Sunday School9: 30a.m.; Jeff Smith, supt.
v ice~ 7 p.m.
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; Morning worship 10:30 a.m.: Sunday
Youth Group. 4 p.m .; Wednesday, Bible
MT. MOR1AH CHURCH OF GOO.
study 6:00 p.m. Choir rehearsal 7: 00p.m.
evening service, 7: XI p.m.; Wednesday
Raclna. Rev. Ja mes Saucrfl eld. pastor.
(Frank Smith).
evening service, 7: 30p.m.
Freema n Williams. Supt. Sunday School
EDEN UNITED .BRETHREN IN
MINERSVILLE - Church School 9:00
9:45 a .m .; Sunday and Wednesday evena. m.; Wors hip serv ice 10:00 a.m. ; UMW
CHRIST, Elden R. Blake, pastor. Sunday
lni services. 7 p.m.
thlrd.,.Wedn esday, 1 p.m. (Thatcher)
School10 a .m.; Gary Reed, Lay leader.
MlDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST.
Morning sermon, 11 a.m.: Sunday night
PEARL CHAPEL- Church School9:00
Corner Sixth and Palmer. Rev. James A.
servlres: Christian Endeavor 7:30 p.m., .
a.m. : Worship Service 10:00 a.m . (FloSeddon, pastor; Don Wilson. S.S. Supt .:
rence Smith)
Song service 8 p.m. Preaching 8:30 p.m.
Beulah White, Assr. Supt. Su nda y School
Mid-week prayer meetlpg. Wednesday. 7
POMEROY - Church School, 9: 15a.m.
9: 15 am: moming worship 10:15 am;
p.m.
: Worship 10: 30 a. m.: Choir reheersal
Sunay evPnlng worship 7 ptfl: Prayer
Wednesda y, 7:30 p.m.; UMW. second
CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP CENTER,
m~tlng and Bible Study Wednesday 7
Salem St .. Rutland. Robert E. Musser,
Tuesday, 7: 30p.m.: UMYFSunday,6p.m.
pm: Men 's Prayer Breakfast, 1st Satur·
tMeadows)
pastor. Sunday Schoo! 10:00 a .m .; Worday each monlh 7 am In fellowshi p hall; '
s hip service-, 1:15"a.m.; Sunday evening
ROCK SPRINGS - Church School, 9: 15
adult choir practice Sunday, 8 pm; radio
service, 7:00p.m.; Thursday evening sera.m.; Worship 10 a.m.: Bible Study, Wed·
program ''Preparing th (&gt; Way'' Saturday ,
vice, 7:00p.m.
nesday, 7:30 p.m.: UMYF (Seniors), SunJ pm WMOV 1360 AM. Ra venswood, WV;
NEW LIFE COVENANT CHURCH,
day, 6 p.m.: {Juniors) every other SunLo!d ' ,~; Supper observed 1st Sunay of each
day, 6 p.m. rl!Ueyl . .
Chester, Gary Hines, pastor. Sunday
mont h.
School at 9:30 a.m.; Worship service at
RUTLAN D - Sunday School , 9: ~a.m .:
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST.
10:30
a.m.; Sunday evening service, 6:q()
Worship
service,
10:
30a.rh.;
BlbleStuy.
7
5th and Main , AI Hartson. min is ter;
p.m. Thursday , (Crabtree).
p.m.; Wednesday Disciple Class, 7: 00 p.
Richard DuBose, Associate Pastor: Mike
m.
SALEM CENTER- Church School9 :15
Gerlach, Sunday School Superint end ent.
a.m.; Morning Worship 10: 15 a.m.
Worship Service l. 8:15 a .m .; Sund ay
(Fierce)
Schoo\9 : 3Qa.m. : WorshlpSt:orvlce II ,10: 3()
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN, Char·
SNOWVILLE - Morning Worship, 9: 00
a .m.; Evening Worsh ip,7 p.m .; WednP.
les Domtgan, pastor. Sunday School Supt .
a:m.;
Church
School10
:00
a.m.
fFlorence
say, 7 p.m. Prayer meeting.
Morning Worship 9: J) a.m.; Sunday School
$mlthl
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF THE NAZ·
10: 30 a .m.; Evening se'tvtce, 7:00p.m.
ARENE, PASTOR Rev. Lloyd D. Grimm,
SOU'111ERN CLVSTER
MT. UNION BAPTIST, Pastor: Joe N,
Jr., pastor. Jean Kimes, Sunday School Su·
Rev. Ke•eth Baker
Sayre, Sunday School9:45 a.m.: Evening
perlntendent. Sunday Srhool 9:30 a.m. ;
ReY. Rerer Grace
worship 6: 30p.m.; Prayer Meettng, 6:30
Mqrnlng Worship Ser'v1ce, 10:30 a. m.; SunRev. Carl Hlcb
p.m. Wednesday.
da,- evening service. 6 p.m.: Wednesday
APPLE GROVE - Church School 9:00
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF .
evening service, 7 p.m.
a.m.; MornJng Worship 10:00 a.m.: Bible
CHRIST. Robert Fos.ter, paator: Howard
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF TilE NAZA·
Study Sunday 7: 00p.m.; Prayer meeting
Caldwell, Superintendent; Church school
RENE, Rev. Glenn McMillan. pastor. Jim
7:00 p.m. Thursday. (Hicks) ·
9 a :m.; Worship servlce9:45 a.m. and 6:30
.Cundiff, S. S. Superintendent. Sunday
BETHANY - Wonhlp 9 a .m .; Church
p.m. Everyme welcome.
SChool9:30 a.m.; morning worship, 10: 30
Schooi!O a .m.; Bible Study Wednesday 10
CHESJ'ER CHURCH OF TilE NAZAa.m.; Evangelistic service. 6 p.m.:
a.m.: Dorcas Women's Fellowlhlp Wed·
RENE. Rev. Herbe:t Grate, pastor. lloug
Prayer and Pral$e Wedn ~day, 7 p,m.;
•
nesday U a.m. (Baker).
Bl!lell, supt. Sunday School 9: 30 a.m,;
You th meeting, 7 p.m .
CARMEL - ChUf!:h School 9:30a.m.;
WC?rship service, ll a.m. and 7 p.m . Sun·
UNITED PRIISIII'TERIAN MINISTRY
Worship, 10: t5 a .m. Second and FoUrth
day, Wednesday, 7 p.m. P.-ayer meeting.
OF MEIGS COUNTY
Sundays; Fellowship dinner wJth SuttCI'I
LAUREL CLIFF FREE METIIODIST
Jlev. O'Qullul Kelly
third Thu n day , 6: ~ p.m. (Baker) .
CHURCH . WUIIam Wllllam1, pastor; RoHARRISONVILLE PRESBYTERIAN
MORNING STAR- Church School9: 15
bert E. Barton. Director of Christian EduCHURCH - Sunday: Worship Services
a .m.; Worship 10:30 a .m.; Bible Study,
caUonl Steve Eblin, asslltant. Sunday
9:00a. m .; Church School9:f5 a .m ..
Th~, 7:30p.m. (Baker):
School9: 30 a.m.; Morning worship 10:30
S
MIDDLEPORT PRESBYTERIAN N - Chureh School, 9:00a.m.:
a.m.; Teens In Action , 6 p.m. ; Evening
Morning Wonhlp 10: 45 a.m. ltnt and third
Sunday School. chOdren and adults. 9 to
Worship, 7: 00 p.m. Choir practice 8 p.rh.
Sunday1; Fellowship dinner Wllh Carmel
9:45 a.m .; Worship service. 10 a.m.:
SUnday. Wednesday evening prayer and
third Thursday , 6:30p.m . (Baker ).
Youth group, second and fourth sundays, 4
.
Bible study.

~t

1

DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Roger Watsoo., minister; Norman Will.
sup!. Sunday School"9:30a. m.; Worship
service 10:30 a.m. Bible study, Wednes·,
day. 7: 00 p.m.
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS
CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAINTS. Port·
land-Racine Road. WUIIam Roush. pas·
tor; Janice Danner, church school director. Church school 9:30 a:m.; Morning
worship 10:30 a .m.: Wednesday evening
prayer services, 7: 30p.m.
BETID..EHEM BAPTIST. Rev . Earl
Shuler. pastor. WorshiP serv'rt'E!, 9; 30 a.m.
Sunday ~choo110: 30 a.m. Bible Study and
prayer service Thursday, 7:30p.m.
CARLETON INTERDENOMINATION·
AL CHURCH , Kingsbury Road. Rev.
Clyde W. Henderson, pastor. Sunday
School9:30 a.m.; Ralph Carl, Supt. Even·
lng worship 7:00 p.m. Prayer meeting,
Wednesday 7:00p.m.
OLD BETHEL FREE WILL BAPTIST
CHURCH, 21lfi01 State Route 7. Middleport. Sunday School10 a.m.; Sunday evenIng service 7:30 p.m.; Tuesday service,
7:30p.m.
HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH ,
Bob Grimm, pastor. Sunday School9: 30 a.
m. : Worship 10:45 a.m.; Sunday evening
service, 7 p.m.
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bald
Knob, located on County Road 31. Rev.
Roger WIIJford, pastor. Sunay Schpol9: 30
a.m.: Momlilg Worship 10:45 a .m.; Sun ~
day evening worship 7:00p.m .; Wednesday evening Bible Study 7:00p.m .
·
WffiTE'S CHAPEL WESLEY AN . Cool·
ville RD. Rev. Phllllp Ridenour. pastor.
Sun48y School 9:30a.m.: worship service
10:30 a .m .; Bible study and worship service, Wednesday, 7 p.ril.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST, Eu·
gene E . Underwood, minister. Sunday
School, 9: 30a.m:; Morning worship, 10: 30
a .m.: Evening Worship, 7:00p.m.
RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST, Rev.
Ivan Myers. Sunday School9: 30 a.m. with
SOnny Hudson, Supt.; Evening service
7:00p.m . Prayer meeting and Bible study,
Wednesday, 7 p.m.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
RENE. Samuel Basye, pastor. Sunday
School9:30 a.m.; Wofshlp Service 10: 30a.
m .; Young People's Service 6 p:m.
Evangellsttcserylce6: 30 p.in. Wednesday
service 7 p.m.
.
· .
MASON CHURCH OF CRRIST, Miller
St., Mason, W. Va . Sunday Bible Study 10
a. m.; Worship 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. Wednes·
day Bible Study, voeal music, 7 p.m.
LIBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOD, Dud·
ding Lane, Mason, W. Va: J . N. Thacker,
pas tor. Evenlng service 7:30 p.m.; Women's Ministry Thursday. 9:30a .m.; Wed·
nesday Prayer and Bible Study 7: 15p.m.
ffiLLSIOE BAPTIST CHURCH, St. Rt.
1f3 just ott Rt. 7. Rev. James R. Acree Sr ..
pastor; Rev. Mike Willett, Asst. Pastor;
Joe Humphrey, S.S. Supt; Sunday School
10a.m.; MorntngWorshJplla .m.; Sunday
evening servlc·e 6 p.m.; Wednesday pven·
Ing 7 p.m.
PORTLAND F'IRST CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE, William Justis. pastor. Sun·
day School Supt. Sonja Justis. Sunday
School, .9:30a.m.: morning worship, W: 40
a .m ."; Sunday and Wednesday services,
7: 30p.m.
MIDDLEPORT COMMtlNrrY CHURCH,
575 Pearl St., Sam Andersoo, past..-. Sun:lay
mornlng service, lO a.m.; Evening servtces,
SUnay and Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION. Hartrord, W. Va.
Rev. David McManis, pastor. Church
SChool 9: ~0 a.fll.; Sunday morning service, 11 a .m.; Sunday evening service,
7:30p.m . Wedn~y prayermeettog. 7: 30
p.m.
FAIRVIEW BIBLE ClillRCH, Lelart,
W. Va., Rt. 1, James Lewis, pastor. Worship aervtcft 9:30a.m.; Sunday School11
a .m.: Evening wcrshlp 7: ~p . m . Tuesday
cottage prayer meeting and Bible Study
9: lO a.m.; Wonhip M!'rvlce, Wednesday
7:30p.m.
.
OUR SAVIOUR LUTHERAN CHURCH,
Walnut and Henry Sti., Ravenswood, W.
Va. The Rev. George C. Weirick, pastor.
Sunday SChool9:30 a.m.; Sunday worship
Ua.m.
·
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH, located on
Pomeroy Pike, County Road 25 near Flat·
woodJ. Rev. Blackwood, pastor. Services
on Sunday at 10:30 a.m . and 7: 30p.m. with
S•nday School 9:30a.m. Bible Study, Wed·
nesday, 7: 30p.m.
SPIRITUAL FAITH CHURCH. State
Route 338. Antiquity. A. Stewart, pastor.
Sunday Momlng, 10 a.m .; Sunday evening
7::Kl p.m.; nursday evening 7:30p.m.
MIDDLEPORT INDEPENDENT HOLJ .
~ESS CHURCH , Inc .. 75 Pearl St. Rev . .
Ivan Myers, actina paator; RogetManley,
Sr., Sunday School Superintendent. Sun·
day School 9:30 a.m~; Morning worship
10:30 a .m .; evening ·worship 7::1&gt; p.m.;
Wednesday evening Bible study, prayer
and praise servtee, 7:30p.m.
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST APOS·
TOLIC - VanZandt and Ward Rd . Elder
James MIJler, pa1tor. Sunday •School,
lO:JOa.m.; Worthlp service, Sunday, 7:30
p.m .: Bible Study, Wednesday .~: 30 p.m.
CALVARY PILGRIM CHAPEL, Harrl·
soavllle Road. Rev. Victor Roulh, pastor;
Clinton Faulk, Sunday School Supl ; Sun·
day School9: 30 a.m.; morning wonhlp, 11
a.m.: Sunday evenlna aervlce 7:30p.m.
Praver Meetin•. Wednesday, 7:30p.m.

SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOD.
non-Pentecostal. WoNihtp service Sunday
10 a.m.: Sunday School U a.m. Evening
worship service 7: 00 p.m. Wednesday
prayer meeting 7: 00p.m.
MT. HERMON UNITED BRETHREN ,
IN CHRIST CHURCH, Located In Texas
Community off Ct. Rt. 82. Rev. Robert
Sanders. pastor. Jeff HoltH, lay leader;
Ed Roush, Sunday School Supt. Sunday
School 9: 30 a.m. ; morning worship and
children's church 10:30 a .m.; evening
prear hlng service first three Sundays,
7: 30 p.m.; · Special service fourth Sunday
"evening, 7:30 p.m. ; Wednesday Prayer
Meeting, Bible Study and Youth Fellow·
ship, 7:30 p.m.
CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY.
LocatOO on 0. J. Whit~ Road of·Htghway
160. Pat- Henson, p8stor. Sunday SchoollO
a.m. Classes tor all ages. Junior Church 11
a.m.: Morning wo"Nlhlp 11 a.m. Adult
Choir practice 6 p.m . Sunday. Young Peo-ple's, Children's Church and Adult Bible
Study, Wednesday at 7:30p.m.
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL, 570 Grant
St .. Middleport. A!llllated wllh Southern
Baptist Convention. David Bryan, Sr., Ml·
nlste-r. Sunday School 10 a.m.; Morning
worship 11 a.m.; Evenlng worship 7 p.m .;
Wednesday evening · Bible study and
prayer meeting 7 p.m.
BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST, St.
Rt. 124 and Co. Rd. 5. Derek Stump, pastor.
William Amberger, S. S. Supt .; Sunday
School9:30 a .m.; Morning Worshlp10:30
a .m.; Evening Worship 7:30p.m. Wednes·
day worship 7:30p.m.
ST. PAUL LUTHERAN CHURgJ,
Corner Sycamore and Second Sts., Pomeroy. The Rev. Laura A. Leach, pa.stor .
Sunday School9: 45 a.m. Chqrch service 11
a.m.
SACRED HEART .CHURCH, Msgr.
Anthony Glannamore. Ph . 992· ~98 . Si.tur·
day Evening Mass 7:30 p.m.; Sunday
Mass, 8 a.m . and 10 a.m. Confessions one
half hOur before each Mass. CCD classes,
ll a.m. Sunday.
VICTORY BAPTIST .. 525 N. 2nd St ..
Middleport . James E. Keesee,. pastor.
Sunday morning worship 10 a .m. ; Even·
lng service 7 p.m. ; Wednesday evening
worship 7 p.m. Visitation Thunday 6:30 p .
m. •

MORSE CHAPEL CHURCH : David
Cur1man 1 pastor. Sunday School, 10 a.m .;
worship service 11 a.m. ; Sunday night
worship service 7:30 p.m .; Midweek
prayer sei'vlce Wednesday 1. p.m.
WESLEY AN
BIBLE
HOLINESS
CHURCH ol Middleport, Inc .. 75 Pearl St ..
Rev. tva~'! Myers, p~stor ; Roger Manley,
Sr., Sunday School· Supt. Sunday School
9:30a.m.; Morning Worship 10: 30 a.m .;
Evening Worship 7:30 p.m. Wednesday
evening Bibl e study, prayer and praise
service. 7:30 p.m.
FA1TH GOSPEL CHURCH, Long Bol·
tom, Sunday School, 9: 30 a. m.; Morning
Worship 10: 45 a.m. ; Sunday evening 7:00
p.m. (summer 7:30 p.m.); Wednesday
night 7:00 p.m . (summer 7; 30 p.m .).
NEW LIFE COVENANT CHURCH OF
GOD, Chester- Gary Hines, paatcr. Sun ~
day School 9:30 a.m.; worship service,
10:30a.m .; evenlngservtce, &amp;p.m.; Olsd·
pleshlp class. Wednesday, 7 p.m.
MT. OLIVE COMMUNITY CHURCH,
Lawrence Bush, pastor. Sunday School
9: 30a.m.; Sunday and Wednesday even·
lng worship service, 7: 00 p.m.
UNITED FAITII CHURCH, Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By· Pass. Rev. Robert E.Smlth, Sr,
pastor. Melvin Drake, S. S. Supt. Sunday
Schooi9:JO a.m.: Morning Worship 10: 30;
Evening Worship 7:00p.m.; Wednesday
Prayer Service, 7:00p.m.
FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH. Railroad
St., Mason. SundayScbool10 a.m.; MornIng worship 11 a. m.; Evrntng service 6 p.
m . Prayer meeting and Bible Study Wednes~y , 7 p.m.
FOREST RUN BAPTIST. Rov. Nyle
Borden, .pastor. Cornelius Bunch, supt.
sunday School 9:30 a.m.; Second and
fourth Sundays worship service at 2:.'1&gt; p.

m.

~suWose&lt;Jtoproduceatreatyfor
U.N. ralificalion by June 1992. .
However, )he opening session
bogged down amid c·ontroversy
over the refusal of U.S. officials to '
jOin other industtialized nations in
committing to specific reductions
.
.
10 carbon dioxide , lhe main
" greenhouse gas" of concern.
u.s. officials.~so angered Third
World nalions by balking at their
demaqd that industrialized nations
agree up fronl to provide financial
assistance so they can buy the
expensive technology needed to
hold dowll their greenhouse gas
emissions.
In the end, the only a$reement
10 emerge from the fracuous discussions concerned the establish·
men1 of two diplomatic "working
groups" that will seek consensus
on key issues.
. one group will address methods
for reducing Clll'bon dioxide emis·
sions through improved energy
efficie]\cy; protecting forests,
which absorb carbon dioxide
through photosynthesis; and trans·
felring pollulion control technology to Third World countries.
.
·The other group will prepare
language to be incoryorated in a
treaty spelling out financial and
legal mechanisms for financial
assistance to developing countries.

JUST WAJTING • United States Military Pullcewomen Jennifer,
C!ary, rear, Suzanne Reed, left md LIDdl! Cook relax silting on their

vehicle on -F~b; 14. They are waiting to be posted nearer the front

lines where lbey wUI guard prisoners of war. (UPI Reuters)

Black farmers in ·South plan
produce markets in North

MT. MORIAH BAPTIST. Fourth and
lllaln St., Middleport. Rev. Gilbert Craig,
Jr.. pastor. Mn. Ervin Baumaardner,
Sunday School Supt. Sunday School9: 30 a.
m.; Ww-IJhlp Service, 10:4.5 a.m.
SUCCESS" ROAD CHURCH DF CHRIST
- Joooph B. Hool&lt;Ins, evanrell.lt. Sunday
Bible Study 9a.m.; Worship, 10 a.m.; Sun.
day evening aet\llc&lt;' 6 p.m.; Wedneoday
evening •~rvtc~. T p.m.
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY, Ractne,
Rt. 124. William Hoback, pastor. Sunday
School 10 a .m.; ~unday evening ·s ervice 7
p.m. Wedaelday evenlna: service 7 p.m.
CARPENTER BAPTIST. Don Cheodle
Supt. Sunday School 9:30a.m. l\lornma
Worship 10: ~ a.m: Prayerservlce, alternate Sundays.
THE CHURCH DF JESUS CHRIST,
APOSTOLIC FAITH - New Lima Rd.,
next to Fort Metp Park, Rutland. Robert
Rlchardl, pa1tor. Services at 7 p.m. on
Wednesdays and Swutaya.
HARRISONVILLE HOLINESS CHAP·
TER of the Waleyan Holiness Church.
Rev. Earl Fleldl, pastor. Henry Eblin.
SundiY Sdtool SUpt.; Sunday SchooiiO a.
m.; Morning Worship ll a.m.; Evening
service 7:30p.m . Wednesday evening service 7: 30 p.m.
STIVERSVJLLE WORD DF F_A.ITH,
Gary Holter, pastor. Sunday services 9:30
a.m. and T p.m.; Mldw~ek servi~. 7:30 p.
m. Thurlday.
COOLVH.LE UNITED 1o!ETHOOIST
PARISH- H. E. Allay, pastor. Mike lftd
Jane KJna. lay supply put&lt;ra at ToJ1!h
Church. COOLVILLE CHURCH, Moln
aad Fifth Sts. Worship Service, 9 a.m. :
Sunday SchooiiO a.m.; Bible Study Tuea·
day, 7 p.m .: BETHEL -CHURCH: Town·
ship Road 4611C: Sunday School 9 o.m.;
Church S.rvlce,IO a.m .; Bible Study, 10
a.m.
Wednl!lday;
HOCKINGPORT
CHURCH, Grand Street: Sunday Sdtooi!O
a.m., ChurchServlcella.m.; Bible Study,
Wedneodlly, 8 'p.m.; TORCH CHURCH,
County Road 63: Sunday School 9:30a.m.;
Worlhp Service, 10: 30 a.m.

NEW YORK (UPI) - South· opponunity to map out details of
em-based marlceiS feawring home- the plan.
According to the U.S.· Civil
grown produce will sprout up all
over northern cities if a consortium Rights Commission, there will be
.of black fanncn and bpsiness orga- no black farmers in the United.
·states by the year· 2000, if they
ni211tions have their way.
Their plan 10 curb lhe·number of continue 10 disappear at the rate
black farmers who lose their land ~ are now declining, Samp8on
- and to servit:e inner-city resiHis group wants to stop that
dents who want fresh produce wiD be the subject of a conference · trend in its "Fro!D the Farm to the
in Washington, D.C., from Friday Kitchen" program.
Ten Southern and •lO Northern
10 Sllllday.
The Rev. Alben Sampson, pres· cities, within a 12-to 18·holl!' drive
ident of the National Black Farmer of each other, will be selected to
Harvest and Business Trade Corpo- participate.
ration, Inc .• in Chicago, said the
"This is the fmt time in the his·
three-day conference will provide tory of our people that black farmfarmers, restauranl owners and ers frOm down South will be meel·
other proSJiective businessmen an ing with black consumers up North

.

in the form of a marriage ," said
Sampson. ''The vegetables will be
the wedding ring."
Ambassadors from several
African and Caribbean countries
also plan 10 attend the conference.
Sampson, who is one of three
ministers ordained by the Rev.
Martin Luther King, said the program to save black land was devel·
oped with the civil rights leader in
mind.
·'This is a piece of the dream of
Martin Luther King that was shattered as a result of his assassination," Sampson said. "I hope to
fulfull this piece. "It's a shifl from
the ,Picket line to the produce line
to economic stnltegy."

Survey: More Americans buy
food with eye· on fat, but ....

MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL. Third
Ave. Re . Clark Bakeor, pastor. Carl Not ~
tlngham, Sunday School Supt. Sunday
School 10 a.m. with classes for all ages.
Evening services at 6 p.m. Wednesday BIble study at 7::Kl p.m . Youth services Frl·
day al 7; 30 p.m.
ECCLESIA FELLOWSHIP, 128 Mill St.,
Middleport , Brother Chuck McPhersoo,
pasloc. Sunday School 10 a.m.; Sunday
eveDing services at 7p.m. and Wednesday
serviceS at 7 p.m.
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST: KeMeth Smith,
pastor. Sunday School9:30 a.m. ; church
set~Nice 7:30p.m .; youth fellowship 6: 30p.
m.; Bible study, Thursday, 7:30p.m.
FliLL COSPEL UGHTHOUSE , 33045
Hiland Road, Pomeroy. Tom Kelly, pastor. Danny Lambert, S. S. Supt. Sunday
momtng aervl~ at 10 a.m.: Sunday even Ing service 7:30p.m . Tuesday and Thursday Services at 1:30 p.m.
NEW HAVEN CHURCH OF THE NA·
ZARENE, Rev. Glendon Stroud, pastor.
Sunday.School9: 30 a.m.; Worship service,
10:30 a .m.: Youth service Sunday 6: 15 p.
m. Sunday evenlnglervtce7:00p.m. Wed·
nesday Prayer Meetlng and Bible Study
7: 00p.m .
NEASE SETTLEMENT CHURCH, Sun·
day afternooo services at 2:30. Thurllday
evening services at 7: 30.
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH, Mason, W.
Va. Rev. Wallace Mings. paitor. Sunday
Schoo110 a.m.; Sunday evenlne service, 6
p.m.; PrayH meeting and Biblr study
Wednesday, 7: :1) p.m.
RUTLAND FREE WILL BAPTIST, Sa·
Iem St. Rev. Paul Taylor, pastor. Sundiy
School lOa.m.; Sunday evening 7:00p.m.;
Wednesday evening prayer meeting 7:00

'DOMESTIC PARTNERS' - Couples walt
their turn to proceed llownt tb eceremonial
stain in tbe San Francisco City HaD Rotunda on
Valentine's Day arter registering their r~lation-

t

NEW YORK (UP!) - Fear of unchanged over the past seven
fat and cholesterol has changed the years.
way Americans shop, but many
Geographically, easterners led
still bave a weAkness for greasy the way, with 59 percent worrying
junk food, a survey says.
about food's fat comen1, followed
The survey of 1,250 adults by 58 percent of southerners, 54
released Thursday also suggested percent of westerners and 52 pet·
that women tty harder !han men to
cent midwesterners.
~·
W.ICh What they caL
As 10 worry about cholesterol
Since 1986, the l!umber of levels; easterners led with 54 perAmericans .putchasing low-fat, cent, followed by southerners .with
low- choles1erol products has . 49 percent, midwesterns with 47
jumped from 36 percent to 61 per- percent and westerners with 46 pet·
cent, according to the survey by cenL
Louis Harris for Fleischmann's
The survey also showed that
products and Prevention magazine.
women pay more auention 10 nutriFony-nine percen1 of !hose surtion, price and brand than men
. veyed - 56 percent of !he women
when shop~ing, and people most
and only 41 percent of lhe men likely to examine a label for its
said they were trying "a lot" to contents are blacks, women and
limit their inlalr;e of high-cholespeOple over age 50.
·
terol foods. The figure shows-an
Of those who read labels, 73
increase of 8 percent over the past perceilt said they could understand
sblps wilb lbe city. Feb. 14 was the clay a Domes·
three y~. the survey said.
tic Partners law went into,ell'ect in San .Francis·
the informalion on them well
Fi.fly·six percent - 62 percent
co. (UPI)
women and 50 P,CtCCnt men - said
Alink is equal to 7.92 inches, or 0.66 they.were tryinr hard 10 avoid eat·
feet. or ·0.22 yards. or 0.04 rods, or ing too much fat, a total almost
O.QJ chams, or 0.20116811)eters.

Rubella cases up sharply

p.,n.

SCUTH BETHEL NEW TESJ'AMENT
CHURCH, Sliver Ridge. Duane Syden·
stricter. pastor. Sunday School 9 a.m.;
Worship Service, 10 a.m.; Sunday evening
service, 7:00p.m. Wednesday nlghl Bible
study 7: 00 p.m.

"PRAY FOR PEACE" ·
Ron my younger brother, who is a pastor in Owosso Michigan, sent me a
copy of a story he had come across. 'The fable went something like this.
A sparrow once asked a wild dove, "'Tell me the weight of a snowllake."
"Nothing more than nothing," the dove wwered.
"In that case I must tell you a marvelous story," the sparrow said. •1 sat on

the br~ch of a fir. close 00 it'strunk, when it began oo snow . not heavily, not
m a ragmg bltzzard · no, JUSt like a dream, without a so!Dld. md without any
violence.Since I did not have anything beuer oo do, I CO!Dited the snowllakes
settling on the twigs md needles of my branch. Their number wu ex~~~:tly
3,741,952. When the 3,741,953rddropped onto the branch, nothing more than
nothing, as you say, the branch broke off.."
•
Having said that, the spam&gt;w Rew away.
. The dove, since Noah's time an authoritr, on the matter, thought about the
soory for awhile. Finally she said 10 benelf, 'Perhaps only oqe person's voice
is lacking for peace to come to the world."
\ t'
I ask you; what is the weight of a prayer? Nothing more thAn nothing, you
say?
Could it be that one more prayer for peace miltht make the difference? 1
don'tknow.ButldoknowlhatGodhupromised toncar us and to IJ!Jwcrwhen
we agree together about a matter in prayer.
Are we agreed that this old IOJ!IY·lllTY)' world.is in need of peace? Are we
agreed that is aPJl'?l'riate to pray for peaoe? Afc we agreed that 000 will answer according to his promises ... and according lo the need?
Then if we're agreed, let's not sl110ken our pace of praying. Let's pray
earnestly for a speedy end to the war and the establishment of peace. May God
bless you!
. Pastor Glen McCllDl(. Pomeroy Church.ofThe Nazarene.

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-7

Pomeroy-Middlepon, Ohio

..
,

•

..
"

ATLANTA (UP!)- Federal small, the CDC's Dr. Lauro Fehra
health officials reponed a major said health officals are concerned
upswing in the incidence of rubella, because they represent a complete
or German measles - an infection reversal of what had been a sharp
that 22 years ago caused an esti • downward trend for bo1h rubella
mated 20,1)00 cases of birth andCRS.
oof~
·
"It's of concern that this trend
The federal Centers for Disease has been reversed,'' said Fehra.
Control said Thursday the total of Cases or CRS, she said, are a
I, 093 rubella cases reporled in "marker" for rubella. Because
1990 represented the highest total rubella is a very mild disease in
since 1982, and was five times most cases, sometimes producing
.-1.high!:r than the all-time low of 225 only a itchy rash, the CDC suspects
cases recorded in 1988.
that there are many more cases of
Rubella is a contagious. viral both rubella and CRS that are not
disease characterized by a fine, red · known to health officials.
rash, fever, swollen lymph glands
"We know there's a lo1 of
and respiratory infecltons. The iiJ: under·rCP,Drting of rubella and also
ness is mild and usually needs no of CRS, ' she said.
special treaunent.
Rubella became a nationally
' However, if a woman gets reportable' disease in 1966. 1n 1969,
rubella during the first three there were 57.686 cases reponed to
months of pregnancy, she may mis- · the CDC.- In tliat same year, an esticarry the fetus, or give birth to a mated 20,000 infants with CRS
stillborn baby or one stricken with birth defects were born 10 mothers·
deafness, mental retardation, eye who had contnlcted a rubella infecoofects or bean disonlen.
tion. An effeclive vaccine against
• Accompanying the recent rise in rubella also became ·available that
rubella cases was a jump in lhe year and that marted the beginning
number of cases of rubella-related of fewer and fewer cases until
birlh defects, called congenilal 1988.
rubella syndrome or CRS, federal
officials said. In 1989, there was
Despite the increased incidence
only one reJ!!II of an infant born in of rubella in 1990, the CDC
the United States with CRS. For empllasized that the rate for 1990
1990, there were 10 confirmed still represems a decline of 98 pet·
cases with laboratory confumation cent from that for 1966-1968, the
pending for an additional case.
period immediately before the vacAlthough the numbers were cine became widely available.
I,

enough to make a buying decision.
Twenty-two percent said they had
problems with the wording.
Eighty-nine percent said their
primary concern in reading nutri·
· tional labels on products is the fat
or cholesterol contents. Seventy·
five percent said they were looking
for calorie contem, 70 percent mineral content and 60 percent fiber
content.
At fint byte
The world's first computer programmer was Lady Augusta Ada ·
Lovelace of England. In 1852, she
worked with Charles Babbage, who
invented the analytical machine, a
forerunner of modern computers. She.
is. credited with telling a machine
what to do by using punch cards to
program algebraic patterns. The U.S.
Department of Defense uses a programming language named ADA in
her honor.

Mason Family Restaurant
FRIDAY NIGHT IS

SLIP ON.

BUTJ'ONUR

NOTHING WORKS
UKERUBIIEII
Only Ttngleyl 100% 11n1t1:t1y Mar 10&lt;nch
Button BOot oilers vou .. thelt be11811bl, .

4 P#M.-11 P.M.

""IOrlgMt-..,
rnonly-.,..

• Tingley I~ ,_larnaltltion ptCJWidli
""beit1raCiitll'l.
the
tirelt quollly jOitr
• Madtt '"USA

•SEAFOOD
PLAnER
lnclu.,: 5 oz.

• wan·t-cr&lt;HCitllt:ad,......
• EMyon.Eaayl"f.

• Exlrl~~~~r.....-­

Catfish, Clams,

•lrlllnldR:ullhll:llw
0 ~ijl lie lmolcllci: ICliiC*I-pill
• no aDollielt•IWIIIt.nllrlld: tlilbCid at

CraltCalrt,

Popcorn Shrimp,

Fried Shrimp.

-lll*!ll

•........
Aipllw•• ' oua-•• on WO(""*Wihlp ana

• Atlo ..

I

....

in "'p-qq . , . . . . .

nNGLEY
SUGAR

110--YAVI.

9tJ·J115

MILLS
POMEROY

•BAKED FISH DINNER ••• S$79
.
•SHRIMP
DINNER•••••••••• $699
All dinners stned with potato service; rice, onion
rings, all you can tat soup, fruit and salad bar.

Mason Family. ·Restaurant
Rt. 33

(3041 773-5321
(Next to Mason Exxon)
••

Ma son, WV•
\

�..
Pomeroy-MiddlePort, Ohio

Page 8 The Dally Sentinel

'

People in the news

Shuttle Discovery hauled to lapnc~ pad
(UJ&gt;I) -

The shuttle Discovery

was hauled to its oceanside launch

pad ·Friday for blastoff March 9. on
i

gic Defense Initiative - "Star
Wars"- insii'UIIIents in Discovery •s CBrB9 bay Saturday, but deteriorating weather could haQlper ·
other weekend work at the launch
complex.
High winds were expected Friday afternoon and temperalures at
the sprawling shuttlepon were
expected 10 plunge 10 23 degrees
by Sunday morning.
"It's going 10 he uncomfonable
foe the people working out there,"
said NASA spokeswoman Lisa

. Mounted atop a ponderous
crawler-ttansporter, Discovery and
its mobile launch stand began the
six-hour trip from the Vehicle
Assembly Building to launch pad
39A at 12:43 a.m.
Engineers plannecJ to inslBII
experiniental Air Forte and Slnltc-

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.

an, unclassified ei~ht-.day "Star
Wars" research m1ssion to learn
more aJx&gt;ut detecting missilc:s in
ftighl
.

World's oldest person dies
PALATKA, Fla. (UPI}- Car'tie White, believed to be the
warl\1'~ oldest person, has died in
nwsin' home at the age of 116.
.
• Wbite died around 2 a.m. Thursday at Putnam Memorial Nursing
Home, where she'd spent the final
fi~ years of a life lived mostly in

a

menllll.inslitulions.

·;Marjorie Allen, White's cafetaker for the last seven years, said
White had lleen in failing health in
~weeks and had not been
"gnizing her. But she said that
White became alert and responsive
aPia shonly before she died
;·;~~~ was a good day, which ofr.en
hap.pens before the end," Allen
sa1d: "I'll just miss Carrie being
hire aild caring for her. That
leave"a big void in my life."

rec-

will .

White- had been named the
world's oldest living person by the
Guiness Boot of' World Records,
which was trying to determine who
now deserves that distinction.
White was born in north Florida's .G adsden County in 1874,
when Ulysses S. Grant was president and George ·Custer was still
two years away from' his last stand. '
In her last request, .White had a
message sent to former President
Reagan, sayin~ she would save a
place for him ' up there." Reagan, ·
who turned 80 this month, had
ealled her during her last birthday
•'
party Nov. 18~ ·
Her room WllS decorated ·by a
.pink and gilt banner that read,

came in Dmlmber.
• The goal of.the 14th post-Challenger shuule !Jiission, the fint of
seven p~ for -1991, is to te.n
more ~~how to detect iOckets in

flight, a critical element of the
Strale8ic Defense Iniliative missile

defense program.

Commander Michael CQats, 4S,

a Navy

staff . Discovery · during the
overnight, oc "red;" shifL •
··
Gregory Harbaugh, 34, Air
Forte Col. GUion Bluford, 48, and
Air Force · Lt. Col. Donald
McMmagle, 38, make up the daylime "Slue" shifL
Assuming an on-time launch~
~ding is scheduled for 11:14 a.m.
on .March .17 at EdwardS Air Force

agency facilities.
•·
An offiaal launch date will not

tOp NASA man-

agers hold a liigbt readiness review
Feb. U and 27 but engineers are

''Sweet SiXaea.. ''

Base, Calif.

shooting for a MarCh 9 liftoff at
3:49 a.ni: to end i. winter lull in

Classifie'

'

...

captain, co-pilot Blaine

Hammond, 39; a lieulenant colonel
in_the Air'·Force, Richard Hieb, 3S,
and Charles Lacy Veach, 46, will

,.

,.6.

""'• '

ers IIDy·StelnbeJ'I and Tom KeUy.

·

Discovery's seven-man crew
will work around the clock in two
shifts lluoughoUt the buSy mission;
launching and retrieving one satellite and deploying three other
smaller "sub-satellites" during the ·
course of the flight:

Nonetheless, Discovery's crew
plans to fly to the Kennedy Space
Center on Monday. for a dressrehearsal countdown Tuesday and
Wednesday that will end with the
.UOulatcd ignium and shutdown of
!he shunle 's main engines.
Sowces said Vice PresidcnlDan
Quayle, .c hairman of the NatilinaJ
Spnce Council, plllls to visii the
spacep&lt;n Wednesday for a tour of
he set until ~ter

,

cia! flight - in the coach section - to prove that the skies are safe. ,
despite the threat of war-related terrorism. "I'm not afQid to fly. I'm not •
going to he held hostage," Bush said just before boarding a USAir · '· ;
with her Secret Service escorl One of the bodyguards sat in !he cockpit but a USAir spokesman said no specili1 anangements were made foe the
ftrst lady. Once she arrived in Indianapolis, Bush visited a Veteran •S. :
Administration hoseital and Grissom Air Force Base near Peru. lnd.• and
planned to take a IDllitary flight back to Washington. '
·
~
'
"
.
.'
~ .
ESTEFAN CRANKS UP SOUND MACIDNE: Gloria Estefan says .
she's Slrollg enough 10 go on the road again. Estefan will be taking th ' :
Miami SC)Und Madline on tour, starling with a March I show in her· '
hometown of Miami. Estefan 's last tour ended in disastrous bus crash in·
Pennsylvania in March but she says she's fully recove~. from a bio
'
back and promises "a oelebratiori, not just a show" thiS ume around.
feel fantastic, " Estefan said. "I feel so good about what is happei)ing,; ·
We're deep into rehearsal and will he rehearsing right up until we open,
our tour in Miami." Estefan haSn 'I toned down her act because of hezr .
· injury. "It's going to bC more phrsicallhan it was in the past," she says. In addition 10 a rilonth of dates m Florida, the tour will .take the Sound· ~
Machine overseas before coocludirig in New York in September. · · '

--...
'•

,!! , '

..

~
', ~,

•POLICIES
"Ads oul!ildl.' Mt:tHS. Galha or Mason

counll~

Days

1

3
.6

: F'rell ads

'
Rate

Words

. 15
. 15

.

'ov,r 15 Words

...
$4.00
$6.00
$9.00
$13.00
$1 .30/day

11i

10.
Monlhly

.15
15

!»0 d1scoum tor ad( ptud Ill adv,u1cc
GIVeaiNilly and found ads undm 15 word' wrll be

.06/day

----~------~--~--

( .i /q.~si.fi••d flnJW-~

wrll' ttlso •liJP e ar '"the Pt Plu.~mu Re!Jrstcr and the Galh
• Puhs 0.1!1Y Tr~lMuw. rcaclmiH ovur 18.000 homtl5
·
DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
11 00 A M SA,TUR.DAY '''

;:, . ·• MONDAY PAPER·
TUESDAY PAPER

2 QO PM MONDAY

•

Gall111 County
Ara Code 614

Margs County

446 GaU1potis

992

"
:

2 00 P M WEDNESDAY
2 00 P M THURSDAY
2 1)0 PM FRIDAY

t 388
245
' 256
643

Mason Co . WV ,
' Area Code 304

Mtddlepor1

Pom•oy

965 Ch•1er

Vrnton

Rio Grande
Gu,_n Ditt
Arabia Ditt.
3~9 WMnut

8 4 3 Por1e.nd

247 Lttlf1 fills
949 Raane
742

Rutland

667 · CoOhtille

675

Ern ploy nenl
S1:r vI Ceo
11

Help WMt tid

12

Stluateon Wanled

13 lnauranc.
1S
16

' ,7

Pt PIM..nt '

4&amp;8 ·Leon
116 • Ap'ple Grove
773 M•ton
812 New Hotven

8!15 letart ·
.937 BuffaAo

. ...

Public

.IUllETIN ·BOARD
r .....-

----

-

'.

••

::J!lJLLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
: ·w 4:30P.M. DAY BEFORE
. PUBLICATION
'

...

'

;

SIMONS PICK-A-PAIR
HAS MOVED TO THE REAR OF
'
THEIR BUILDING

• - the Complelnt within
twenty·olght (281 doysllftor
tile loll public8tlon of this
Notice. whicll will bo 'publllhocl onou ....tl fllrolx(ll
The loot
public8tlon wll Ill on t1t11
22!1d doy .on"llfGit. 1111'.
end the -•tv-oltht 1281

SIMONS PICK-A-PAIR .
ln.the Heart of Pomeroy "

.,-. w-•·

.

mence on lllat dots. In tile
0111 of yo,. flllu,. to oniowor or othorwi11 reopond

,MATTRESS OR BOX SPRINGS
FULL OR TWIN SIZE

'. " '"'&gt;

.., ....
~

'
'

..

' ,,,,

REGUL'R .... ..................................... '78
FIRM ............................................... '88
EXTRA ARM ......,.................... 198
ORTH&lt;WEDIC KING SIZE SETS.......'350 &amp; UP
QUEEN SIZE SETS ............... $275 &amp; UP
BUNK MAnRESS .......................... 148 &amp; UP'
BED FRAMES
REGUUR .,...................... ....... 1 25
QUEEN ......... ;............................................. 135
KING ..... .\ ............... ................ 1 50
HOURS: Ml)l. IHRU SAT. 9·5

PH. 446-0322

Schl!)ols 1., lnslruchun·
Redto. TV &amp; CB R1tpour
MlltelliiOWOUS
. .

~:n=ryo,

2

RICHARO JUNIOR
JACKS '
Who left us four
YHrl ego.
I will never forgot you,
Nor do I intond;
·
I think Df you often
And will tHI the end.
Gone, end forgotten,
By tome you moy be.
But deer to my memory
You will •1-ya be.
Your Loving Wife,
Frede. Chlldron
it ren

a...

,.

21

Busin•• Opportunnv

22

Mon., to Loen

;"::....,::01::':-=:e=:;

Judgmnt of dmull wMt lie
reruhtred ogolnot 'IOU ond for
lho rolllf demonded In tlut
Complolnt.
Doted thio 11th doy of
Febtuery, 1981.
•
Larry Spencer,
Clorlo of Courts
(21 16, 22;
(31 1. 8. 16, 22, Stc

4 Dr 1
..
d
• ewnM', r - s,
Iii boots, original wistdow
,tidier, fully ....,. with
&lt;eHular phon~. tr&lt;eUint
condlfl•, ..... /doo skin.
$16,1DO.DO.
614-~4,7·41" 1'

VANDEN ·PIAS

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
• On Fw-y 11 , 1991,111
tile Melp County Proboto
Caw~, .. c- No, 21.111.
....,.. a. , Woblr. 40941
Ku•ur l'ollrvd Rood,
Pu11•or. Olllo 411711. and
. ...,.._ A. lruwn. 44810
......., HIIIIDw Ro8d. Pomeroy, Olllo 41718, w•e appolnetii-MmlnNtratrtxeo,
DIN. Ill t i l e - ol Arthur
L. lpe: ur, deoiUFd' lett of
R - 3. ,......,..,, Ohio

417tl.
110ber1 E. lluGk. Judge
. "Judith R. w.,.,, Clerk
(21 ']1': Z2; (31 1. 3tc

'·'"'

.~~:,;:..-·-

...

-

An~lqtJ8S

57

.,

lie:.~_- ....

2011 NORTH SECO"D AVE.
MIDDLEPORT. OHIO
OFFICE 182-2888/HOME 112-11812

I. TURNER.

BROKER

iurwo- Btldl Grove lid.- Approx. 2 ~res and acute

II; story home w~h 3 bedrooms, a deck garden area part

basement, and a dming room. Owner wants an offer.'

'

$26,000

RUTLAND - S11itb Run lhl.- Beautiful' start, approx. 3

bitJ.&amp;.

~UALlTY

992.5335 er
tiS·U61

ISID, APPUARCIS
90DlYWIIIAm

WASIIIIS-$1 00 .,
Dl1'~$".,

llfiiiiiiATOII$-$100 .,

UNGES-..,_Boc.-$1U.,
fiHJEI5-$ US ., · .
IICIO OYEII5-S7t .,

Paint ~asant· 675-6925

J&amp;L

INSULATION

·~-1.,-·..:.. ·- GR~~M

•VInyl. Siding

•Roptoce"""t
· Wlndowl
•Roofing
• ·olnaulltion

Grooming
for All Breeds

742-22Sl

EMilEE MERINAR

&amp;38 Bryt,n Place
Middleport. Ohio
I ·14-IITt

••

RunAIID - Stitt lllltt 124 - Building lot. Bi&amp; 2 acre lot
that 11 leweland has a lot ol frontap. Public water and elec·
tric naillble.
'
, JUSI $7,000

-

POI(IOY- NO DOWN PAYIHfiT- Own~ will carry 2nd
mort111t on this two story home on' good street. Hasalarae
family room, seme haldwood ftOQrS: 3 bedrooms, and a din·
inc room. Has vinyl siding for low .maintenance.

•

'

ONLY $24,000

LAfiGSVILU - ll1ltvtl Lot - Side siHing porch, new

kitchen, vinyl siding, new carpeting, 2 bedrooms, big living .
room. plus 1 3 room h011se for storage or rental,

JUST 125.000

'I

·

'

992-5526

'·~­

Tui7iu.:~; Hc ;,1 rr

IIIg,

ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT
Full-limo pooH ion wHh '011111
~~
~-•
H I
~ Molgo C.A.A., aw8hlre, Ohio.
~N: - ·
URI "!!
, !JesirM In luol._ Adminlolra. YtolniiY::.O.J. WNta Rood. I
lion or climonotraled •-m*4111
lng oxporienco In oil of
occaunllnglnclucllng llaaki!Mp1
Yard $ale
In; ond po,.r~, 111101 hive u:==~~~ii;=:::= loolllnl
lyplng lidlll.
AMIIobll
1ranopon111on;
~~~ obll
IO porlorm dullll,
com•
munlcltlon
oldlio,
goood
a. VIcinity
knowtogo of Soclol SIMco Ext. 313.
Programo,
ond
highly
ALL Yonl Soloo MUll lo Pold In moti'llted. Mu.. have axten11¥1
AdVInce. DEADLINE: 2:~ p,m. oxporiiKICO In balh aronl wrtllng
the dly belont lhl od lo lo Nn. 1nd budget•, boTh on thi
Sundly eclllon - 2:00 p.m. Fed.ral and st•t• ~nl.
Flldlty. Mondly lllllon - 2:00 Relponolblo lor compilollon,

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

.

Qollpolio FIN lllrkol: JcUIO I
311; Opln Salurdly A Sundoy,
, ~~blo, inolde a out

computltlon; and/or JKWMI'III·
tlon of progr•m ntertal and
preJNUtlon of timelY and Gam·
ploto roporto lnalucllng but no1

3681ast'. . .

-.__ _ _...:;11,::11;,::9;::ll;.::l.:mo:::.~-·!;.
Pomeroy, 01.

.

-~

CARPENTER SERVICE

•Remodeling end
Home Repairs
•Roofing
•Siding
•Pointing

-~oomAddhlono

-Qu...,worll

-EIOcmto.l ond Plumlllng
-Rooting
-1-loraE.(FRI!E UTIMATESI

NO JOB TOO SMALL
FREE ESTIMATES

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

CONSTRUCTION

P-Ing

CEDAI
992·6648 or
698-6864·

P-lly, Ohio

il·i4·'90 lfn

12-31·tO·tln

•VINYL &amp;IDING
•ALUMINUM SIDINO
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

1-PIJIDINT

CAIPIT CUANIIS
and 11ll FLOOI CAll
•RnsoMblo Ratea
•Quality Work
•Froo Eatlmecea
•Co'"' .Haa Foot Dry
Tlmo
.
•High 01011 on Tile
Floor Finish

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
N. . . . . . . . .
"Froo Eatlmotos"

PH. 949·2101
or ln. 949·2160

*I LEWIS. Owoor
lt. 1, l .. lalld, OH.

.

NO SIINDAY CAW
3-11-lfn

742-2451

•',.
,.••

UP"OLnERY
lllddleport

YOUNG'S

,..•

ol Midi/•''"

614-992-6820

limBed 10 Ftdorol ond lllllt Tox
Ro= -ordo lnd corroo
onco. AppllcllloM oca; Public Sale
ceptod lhroug/1 lho Ohio a.... u
of Employment SoPVICoo 0Hico
&amp; Auction
Ooiiii&gt;OIII, Ohio. lnllr_.oa1
C.A.A. tmPIO¥- oro to opply
Rick Pol,_, Auction Company 11
1111 ChHhlro otllco. .Ap.
now ~ euctlone, ex· pllcotlono will be -,.fed
through clou of buatneea on
~ Oil!!,_ Konluoky, Will MIIC~ 1, 1H1.EE01Aftlrmlllvo
Vlr;lnlo, 304-rr.o-117811.
Action Employer
9~ wanted to Buy
"'.. To Bur Serop Mllll, 614- AVON I All Arooo · I Shirley
441-35e0.
SpNrw, 304-175-1428. '·
Wo,.ed to buy, Slondlng limber,
lob Wlllomo l Son• 514-HZ-

---·~~~--­

~··!:,,

Hand Tufting
Custom Drapes

••

36 \'ear• Experlenre

614·992·2321 '

We Soy Wllot We Do,
We Do Wllot We loy,

10-19-1 mo.

BISSELL
BUILDERS

REMOVAL
eLIGHT HAULING

CUSTOM BlaT

HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At leosonoblt Pric11"

•FIREWOOD
BILL SLACK
992-2269

PH. 949·2101
or ln. '49-2160
' Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CAllS

USED RAILROAD nES
.

4-11-11-lfn

1-12-10-rfn

.,••
••.,
:

""
•'

,.....BI,_.SS-ELL
__&amp;_B_U'"""IKE....., ~~
•..
CONSTIUCTION ••"

.,
••
••

ollew Home• '
"oGorap•
oCompletl
••_ . .lng
Stop &amp; Co..pare
frH Estlmatos

.,.,•i
;:'·
••

•'••
...••

985-4473
667-617~

5-31-'90 tin

·-~••

r-=:-:::::~~,~-••

BEAT THE RUSH! :;

Gtt your ltrwn and gar- ~!
dtn llplipmtnt tuned up ::
and blades · sbarl!fttd ;:
for the coming - n l

pick.. and
dlllwery In I'OIIllt'oy
and Middleport city
lirnitL
.
"- froo

WE ALSO SERVICE
CHAIN SAWS

•'

::
,.,

DAVE'S SMAU li.
ENGINE -EPAII ~ :
253 West Main St. :·:
Po•ror, Oh.
:;

PH. 992·3922
______
.;.,-J;2-4-::;'w.-;;
••

I

i

•

-r

aut~, low

mileage, 11~ 441 I Dl

1988 Ford Tempo LX ......,,

~lno

Looking lor Borber, 91ylltlo. 514441_.803, 114-441..355.
Nlghl coall nuded II Vllllgo
Plzulnn, opply In poroon.

Employment Serv1ces
. Help wanted

54 Mlacellaneous

P1rt tim• . .1et1nt to Avon
man~.
...... recruHing,

45

1-rlcotlng holplul, Solory
"-'ding on oxporlonce, 3041113-3117.

Fumlshed

· Rooms
AIDOIMI for rant ·wok or month,

Slorll:2 oi 1120/mo. 011111 Hotel.
114 •

1580.
Slotplng roomo

'

wnh cooking.
Aloo
lroliM'
·
·
All hook-upo.
Coli oftor 2:00 p.m.,
304-771-

~4_9-=-~F~o-:r""Lea--se==~

For Rent Or lAMe: RlltiUrlnl

In C.own City, Equlppod. 814258-1283.
Worahouoo Spoot In Gotllpolil,
Ap-. 1000 llq, ft. Including
olflc11 amf,''' perilng, unloedlng
toclln.... 14-oW~-0~61, w .

LNrn
Fr11 voc, Trolnlng

WV &amp; Ohlo Youthl .. Young
Women 1nd Men 1&amp;-21 ,.,. olct:
frM room 1nd bolrd, m•dlc•l ·
•nd d•ntal c•r•. ependlng 11- RN'1 to $31/Hour. Full·tlme
loWIOCI 1nd IIVIngl provided. Ptul~lmo Hoopilol ICU,

---~---~-..._

E,.rgoncy Room, Control
Soullitm Ohio. Coli For An ApDOintment. Wlllom -col
!lolv!coo.l14 841 83!18.
Tolophono _,..,, Pll'l-tlmol 2
or 3 nonlngo

1 - . Poy p

Wanted

live-In

commiulon. 114-tOZ-5837.

Business Services

;...-------r-------"""!
,·:; l·~­
il1 CQUEIUfl•

Now In
S#oekl/

..:MOBILE HOME FURNACES- HEAT PU.MPS
, Bfl11RIII-

I,

ALL FURNACE PARTS

e=.·~1=~~;~dy In good
14

Business
Training

42 Mobile Homes
for Rant
2 l:il*oom mobill

home, ~ 3313

Moam1n Avenue. Phone 304-

EHicloncr
eon

op~~nmoN

only

on

..,. por-

Roueh

Lane,

: , located On Safford School ld. off It. 141

' 16141 446-9416
'
or 1-800-172-5967

KELLER'S CUSTOM BENDING

ret•renc11

Alvtrolde A!llo Doltlllng. 114- Trolltr AVIIioblo Morch 1tl.
448.elll0
Prlvoto Lol, Crown CHy. 114-281Will boby ollln mr homo, clooo 12113.
lo ochool, 304-87!1-27114.
-:-:~------Will bobroM In my homo loclted 44
Apartment
~~~~llo, In Clly Llm.h•.' 114for Rent

We Have Changed Our location To
11ft Milts East on Rt. 248 through
Chester, Oh.

; SPECIALIZING IN ....
•Custom Bent Exhaust Systems
•Complete Line of Exhaust Supplies
,, •Handle and lns1;all Monroe Shocks
Come and See Va For A Free lupectlon

21

""

· PH. 614-915·3949

IDDIIn lliln
Long
Oh. 45743

:: ..._t.WRC PS 1000
:; DELUXE SATELLITE TV SYSTEM

unlden·

Business
Opponunlly

Ave, mjd 20'1, 304~75-1370 after

1 IR, 1300/mo.; 2 811, •400/mo. ·
2 , _ A bllh'- 117!1. AI1
!IIIIIUoo lncludld. uopoon "'
qulrecl. Coli Loflyttllo IIIII 114441-7733 01 441-4222.
""--1
2 ~
_ , _ ~c_l'ou poy
oltclrlc, Pll' Ill Olnor utiiiHH
(Cibllln
phont not
Citon l•l pointed,
piO)'lncludld}.
ground,
ICIIYIIIM, clo10 lo
oolsooi, bonka ond ohopplng.
11110
- uk obout
oppolcote.
Colllt tiy
ond
Uoreh moving
In
opoclol. EHO, --3711.

:r

S~amln

12
Borre!,

.,.,.,,1.,.- ....,.,,.,,
,.
a.,.,,
,., """'' .,., ,....

...e
•UHF

.,. s.... ..
~

CDMf'IETI - .
NOTIING

mr TO IUYI

S1 1 895

Enloy over 100 chon· ,
o, 8H lho nowo LlYE
II It hoppeno - 24
houro. IR 0 oyotem lncludoo docod•,
CAll TODAV
FEBAUAR 'UPECIAl
ONlY
M

hoi,..

ZENIX VIDEO

~ ~
~

t..... " '

Sylvln 12ft. v.aonom .... wllh
IWIVII INti, battery,

Holil

114 Heese .
8111 dtlrotllng 17 cu. ft. Kon-

motor! oh- londr lrolt!!._IIIIF. •

6
7

-

lonko" ••ov. good condllloft, M
rutl. oliO: Pfiono 304-411-.._

Colore,

Budgel

U.. l

Transml••lon~.

•

•

,.

Campers &amp;
'
MotorHome1
••
19711 Tomkin lrolltr, 45'- Ml

79

'

anytime 1fler 8 p.m. ~ ...

~
371~57·~--------~-- .:
·111r3o 2 BR compor lrolllr. ._.. ~
condHICNI. 11800. '-'1111 IFI -

Services

•

IJIIIHy Building SPL: 30'x40'xg' - - - - - - - - - Eovo, HS'xs' olldlna door, ,_,.
Home
,:
m•n door: 11,2!5 Erected Iron 81
Wolf• enttm t1nnlna bed ...,.. Bull-. ' 14432·81115·
Improvement•
"Eioctrlc Sun• Model IIF2~8.
lox ot ..., bulbt Included. 64 Hay &amp; Grain
~~~~· 304-675-7S1I or 814-317- ~o~ood=.~,,.::-,::'o":h::or::-,-::...,=:nl;:n::goo::-::be::-t-

w•" 1:00 and 12:00,
304-t?l.

4430.

55
B lldl
U ng
Hoy for 1110, 114-111·27!14 or
;;:;:::;:-::~~~~~"'::::~ 11112.11313.
I·
1411' lor Solo. Clover &amp;F1Tl14mo11hz-

•1 'lr Milt W. ol HPiltr H
. 1~fll.f!"

Lousy timing for a graffiti

l .

•

•

114-441-314toftor7p.m.

serv1ce1

•"

Jackeon County. 614-241 Ita
.n.,
7::JDpm.
.:

Oro""''*''"'
.c:ottory Porolon,
Slomond Hlmoiopn
11111. ..

Profeaslonal

•
;

robulh, lllding II IH; ....._ •
sen, &amp;14-379-22113.
~

monlhe. :104-111-2201.

PICKENS FURNITURE
. Ntw/IJitd
Houtohold tumlohlng. 112 mi.
Jorrtcho Ad. Pl. Ploounl, WV,
coll304-875-1450.
RENT20WN
114-4411o3158
Solo ond Chllr, 18.115 par-k.
e Polco Woodgroup, $14.01 por
- · L.Shopid Bunk Bldt,
Bidding ond Chell of Dnwero
lncludoil, 113.14 por - k.
Swivel Rocker, $4.44 por -k.
Rocllnor 17.7!1 per wNk. Dlnollo
wllh4Chllrw,l7.50por-k. 4
Pollor BPIII Bed, 112.20 por
w.....
Ch..
DriWOIW.••3 o
50 r
- -wllk
AI 141of
Miln
'
O
tt·
Al.'7
In
c.O..~ory:
. 4HOURS: Mondor lhru Solurdoy,
lll.m
5p
m...p.m.; Sundty, 12 Noon·
· ·

Auto Pans &amp;
AccBssorlea

111185 truck bed IHith liner, dull :

SPL: 2TI31'xl',
Door, 1·3' Min
13

~

Fox F 111 II Croea·Bow, •ue. 1M- •
358.. 521.

moro Horvtll, iCICd rolrlg. 1200.
3 6011-S 12" on wh- flO 11. 2
205 15" rodlol .,., 110 N. 1 225
l'x5' wood ent1n1lnment cen· 15" on wheel .,., tzo. 1 now
ter; bt1ck luther awlvel disk whMI I tiro lor oompor f.7J15 62 wanted to Buy
chair; rust/brown .ofl, m1tch· $15, 8 P-235 15" rodlol.,., !It N 2 horN oulky plow, 114-3'79lng chllr; m1pJe end leble; 114-812·2805.
l.. ther recliner; bed, Ch11t 1 Stump removal. Yard work. 2552.
drHHr wlnaw nttr... 1na
Shrubo Sol-.! Flrowocid:
oprlngo; 21 ou. H. Sooro irMzoi; $45
pick-up lold dollverecl.
...,.r.. blko. &amp;14-441-2234.
Don'• Londlcaplng. ~NIW 8 ..1'1 30.. gil renQa 1nd 11141.
ralrlatrOior. UNCI only thrM

SUI IN.

23

"""-a

I-

='f.

toMI'tij( SYStEM

105 CIM David Brown Tr~ctor 73 Vans &amp; 4 WD'a
with lnd..lrlot i.Didor,_, Q,!l50;
1800 Dlhl., 01-1 "Hh ln,- '114 Chovr Blozor Slhroreclo.
duolrlll Loodtr, 14,150; 450 ln- euto, •lr, tiH •nd cruiH, Alli-N
l.,..llonol 01-:JzJ'e'S, OWner c••Htle, $4,500. •xe coftd, lOt
Will Flnonct. 11
522.
896-3321.
' •
EVIntl UotOI'I, 1530. E1at1m . 1179 C.ISjHp V-8 ongl';;o~
A""nuo,
Oolllpollo,
OH. milo, good cond, $2, ._ 104:
'-'"'"' Ntw 1110 oeno 1111 875-4435 oftor 5:00PM.
G - k Slock Trolllr, Woo
1986
llozor-Tohot
510,
.
.
$3,135, N- $3,200; Now 1g10
Dolo 2011. a-neck Fill 521000 miles, new llree. . .
Troller Woo $4,011, Now Juot acnock, $7,800. 304·882-211L
t3,200i Everydl)' low ,price on
Pondii'Oea 1111 Bumper Hll:ch 1916 Joop ChOPokoo, 4 aJ1. I
soood, PS, PB, air, good - .
Llvloloclc, $2,500; Monr Olhlr $5,000.
304-837-2371.
Fill • Llvttlock • Horoo
Trolt.. In otock bv Hill-, n Chevy Yon. Nlco rlmo a .....
J.B. 11~8-IIH. run• gOOd. 11000. CaUJiolt, Big Z.r. Old AQHA Groy Filly, 441·1801.
BIG Soddlo Wllh Loll 01
StiVer, 111vor R!'f•' ultd &amp;how 74
Motorcycles
Soddll With !Woot Slrop a ::;:;;-;:::;:::;:-::;;;-:;:::=;:::-:::=
Hltd &amp;loll, 114-211M522.
1g82 Hondo 100 Cuotom. _ , "

OVor

PoJ-•

•0• kr•• Gr.,Nu -

.

527&amp;.
Plttoburgh Woll Fr"!~l llol lotox
polnl 112.80 gil, Spo~col order

INOTICEI
OH IO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
rocommonda Ihot you c1o buol, _ wllh pooplo yau kMW ond
NOT ,..
lo oond
I""OUV~ lhl
~~~~~_:_~---I
mou
hlvo lnvtllfgiiiCI
11 I""'money
1•- _....,
·~ oln....,.ory,
.. - • .,.
I :::==~::::::::::::::J.::========~ 56 Pats lor Sell
No
No
No 1=",.::',;,.,, ~':' 0po,!l',':l SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie
OPOOm ond SuJtP!r Shop Pol
Wol., Ylndl~ Mochl-. Full·
GPOOming. All -·AU llrlu,
lomo Pol Food Oottlor. Jullt
limo or Ptul~lmt ElWobb. Cl111'14&gt;441 0231.
1011 No Expo...,_ Ntc-ry.
11.1~ Aoqulrecl. Coli 1-800-4 Coon do@ pu- 3 monthl
1183 Ell. 2.
~~ Wolur-Biici ·a Ti~ 114-11127
VENDING ROUTE: l'or Solo,
Slrong, oolld cooh - - •·
.,
AKC GPMI 0ont puppioo, towno
High lrtftlc, locol loclllono. ond btlndill, lhote ond - oquipmoltl. 1.ati0-214-VENO.
med, hoonh auora-:.,gnomWOLFI TANNING BEDS. Com·
•
b1ooC1 u-.
·U'*•·
F"""
341
·
1189.00. Lompo-L!OIIoM a.-AKC
Roglolored
Ylllow
llonlltly
t..
Lltb-r
Rol....,.,
-a
Ao 111.00 Coli T'odll' FREE
lot
oholo.
S1IO
·.
114-281Color Colllog. 1_228..2112.
8733.
AKC Rogloltrecl, Atct IIIII
22 Money to Loan
Dobtrmon l'or ltucl - .
llucl , .. 1180. 114-2fll-tll0,
LOANS BY IIAIL
Up lo Q,OOO In 12 houra. Wt
Blue~ t 112 mo. old, l'tllltcon hllp rou 1111 • ,_,.,
Loon ly Moll. I-.:M8Uoo.
=·~· boluiHul,

R••.,.

Pl)'mlntl, 30+882·

Now ond Uoed Fonn Equlp,.nl:
50 Ulld Traclon to
Guogo A!llomtllc Rib
crFrom. Now Mo- For$2711; Mo~ln 22 llognum Rlllo
Foni-Now Holllnd. ·ond
uoh Hoa Equlp~~~onl, Politi,
w/8
- ·20-Clultao
•• · 1200;
Sltvono
Pump,
Alb And SorYiot, Aloo Flnondng
Borrll,l135. 614-:1!1-1270.
Anlllbleil c.- I Sono, Joclc·
HouH tor 1111 2111 Gortlold Soorw
Duly Oryor, 135. eon, PH W..218-M11.

2br trail• al RJccoan Trailer

Juet

K1111ugo. 1--Jlt'r.l.

.,.

1110 M-r Forgu-lroclol, 5
h - · muot HliaJ:ko over

Lost Your Mary Kay COnlu ... nt?
8 Yt•rt Experience. 304-e75-

Remington 1100

haul your loa• to the mm

Pork, Can be -n 10 mil• OUI
141. 114-3114-4431.
IVIIllblo 304-875-"7811.
Nlco 2 bod,_, moblll homo, 2
Mill Poulo'o Doy Core Conltr. both•• compiOiolr rumiollod,
Sola, oltordoblo, chlldcoro. M-F 304_.,5-3030 or·815-3431.
1 o.m. - 5:30 p.m. Allf• 2 ·10. Nloo 3br, txpondo lvl"!!""""·
BoloN, onor ochoot. Orop.ln• Unl\trnlohld,
Llrlll
jord,
welcome. 114-448 ..224.

;:,, BENNOT'S MOBILE HOME
:·
HEATI,.G &amp; COOLING

61 Fann Equipment

RocondHioned WoohoiW, Doyora.
Quorantood prompl oervlct lor
Ill ll'llkH, modtll. The W.hlr
Dryer Shoppo, 114-441-21144.

wanted to Do
Goor;11 Portoblo Sowinm1_dan,

18

ctunlna,

40 yn. b"""' oorpot 1100. """
1112·2524.
Aohlor Woodbumlng t11011o,
ueec11 winter, eldeloeder, PDO.
114-441-4233 oftor lp,m.
Blkot: 1-27 'Inch 12 opted Tourlng~1441nch 10 opold., 1-Hully
Bib 20 Inc~. 814&lt;1411oiMI5.
Clorinll !of - · coli Jim 114812-2113.
Concralo &amp; plolllc ltpllc lonllo,
Ron Evant EnterDI'flel, J1ck·
oon, OH 1-IOD-53741128.
Craft1m1n Uwn Mowr, 11HP,
5opd, 38 ln. cut wlboglltr • 2
Soya Blcyclel, 2 glrll 10
opteclo. 814-387·7800. '
FI,...OOCI, 11110ntd h i - .
140. pickup lood dollvorod locally. 300.1175·1~.
For Solo: Full Figured, Pluo SIZI
Wedding Gown, (Approx Slzo:
24·211 Dncrlptlon, Vlcloilon
Slllvto, ond ChaDII Length
Troln, VNoclc Lint, Wllh LoaO a
Soquonco, Aoklng Prlco: 1300.
614-448·7140.
Gil cook oto"" 115. Couch ond
2 chiiiW $50. Olhlr mloc. 300675-6512.
-

wallpaper, 20 Ia 30% off book
prk:l. P1lnt PIUI, 304-175-4014.

Unl\trnlohld, 2 bedroom houll
,nloo -lon, 304-175-7373,

ChHhlro, Ohio, 304-773-5828.
4:00 PM.
,....-,...--,--::-:;,-:-::--:
2br Unlumlohld lloblll Homo Moving: Mull Solll All good
For ,._nt: No Pile, No AI· condHTon. 42" llblo, gluo lop,
cohollct.l14-317o11131.
ratt1n bl11, 4 m•tchlng chalrw;

Houu

; 47269 Sf. lt. 24,1

~~i~ijlura. 'oU75-1450.

178-5104.
2 bod"""" mobllo homo, Send
Hll Aatd, 304-175-3134.

Plozo.Coll
Rogillortllon

eoll304·175-1l57.

and Esttmale .

uo

com· !of

_ _ _.,.._ _ _-:-I.PinlonJisouuk-r

Merchandise

Merchandise
1xtr111, 1,000 mlln,
Fot Solo: 3 bdrm hOu.o, 405
Ev1n1 Matorw fa now renting 11702 after 5:00 PM.
Spring Avo, Pomorvy. Flnoncllvollock trolloiW, Coli 114-441'
lng. liking prlct; $31,8000.~. 51
15121or dOiolio.
HousBhQid
11100.00 4-n, $331.21 por
nionth Dololll IOI-1115-211lt. Or
Gooc:ta
lnauJ•ted 43 ft 1tor1ge van.
.... lar 1325.00 manthly,
30 Inch Electric Rang_e, 2 Pickup beclo, Ford, Chn,
$325.00 dopoell.
Aefrlgerltorw, Plck1n1 fuml- Dodllf, no Not, 304_.711-1218.

Eorn Whllt You

Allllllcltlono will be -..ted Tilt Dept. ol Lltbor'o Job Corpo.
FM.'181hN lloroh 1 lor OPPf!tn- Rtp. will bt liking opplleotlono
llct plu-re ond plpolllloro. Wed, Fob. 20, 10:1f0 AM till 3:00
AppUcotlono mor bt plckecl up: PU, It tht Point Ple. .ant Job
Ohio 91111 Em!liO¥moN Office S.JVIce office Sixth StrHt,
or 2134 O.Hio Sl,'Portomouth, Point Pltllant, 'wV. For more In·
formt~tlon can 1-800-124-1111.
OH.E.O.E.

f·a1 m SupplieS
&amp; Lrvestock

2411\

end raterencea required, 304882-3373.

t:

i:

Pal I w•
-· 1 ,

30HI75-2583.
1tl8 Eoglo Wogon, lull .......
tow whool dn,., ono .....,

Nltd pro 1MO ll.ood -lon.
Sond pholot ilnil -~ptlon IO
1 Ponon, Alhonl'rOhlo 411U1 or
coli 114/192-5e5 or 1'141582·

botho, •-n by oppolniiNnl,
114 441 0041 oftor 4:~ PM.
Fifth Slroll Now Ho..,, d-H

:: _
:;

::

Pontiac

Brouaham,lc:t~.Md,low

p.m., !jundoy 1:00 10 1:00 p.m.
614-tOZ-2521.

5111, U.10n WV.

"

, DURING FEBRUARY

SHIUB &amp; TIEE
TIIM and

.,
,,.,
•o'

44f.o815,•

1ill

Hours: M.T.W. 10:00 e.m. lo B:OD

-

992-5587

1tU 4dr, CelobriiY. IZ.ZOI. -

Antiques
53
Babr Or1nd P11no. Exc. cond,
15,000; Aoklng 12.~0.
'Buy ot 1111. Rlvortno Anllq.... '1wonh
1124 E. lllln Slroll, ..-roy. 14-245-11147.

.....
---~~ ··

..

2!18-1210.

Help wanted
AVON • All oron, Coli Morilyn
Woovor 304-MZ-at45.
.
ACfNOWI
Excellent wao-t Bpt~re time ...
oombiY. Eoor wor!&lt; 11 hoiN. No
oxpor..,_, Coli 1-ao4-e41-7771
&amp;.1. !1214. Open 24 houro, In·
olucling Sundoy,
Eooy World Excollonl Poyl a.
Hmbll Produclo ol homo, Coli
fer lnlomlollon. 1104-84MI003

.,.-,

213 No,'S.Cond

Z'll·9l·tto

2 lA opl. Upolf!lrt1 11ove I
refrlaiNtor tumlenea. w.ter &amp;
lraofi tumlohld. 114-441-3MO.
2br opo~monl, oil•ulliHIM pold,
I2811Jmo. All rwwly pointed,
ocr- lrom Unlvtrwlly of Rio

11

Help Wanted

Pl..unt 304-115-1188.
By OWMr: Pt. Pll:. INa, IJrCIIIent
location, , double lal, brick &amp;
framl apllt tevel, 3 bldroome, 2

&amp;peclollrlngln
.~
,
Automatic '
TranemiMionl. Brakel. 1'":Tuneup, 011 Chltnge.
.:
Clutch Ropolr. '
FREE ESTIMATE&amp;
s ·veoro Er!portence .

air.

S2,500. For Solo or Tr.._ -

d - locke, . ,_ ltnoo;
light blu• se,ooo mlioo, croon 14800.~ 114-t4t-2MI of.
lor 5PM.

4 bod100m hou• In Polnl

-

eytlnder, automatic, wllll

eutontlc, air, AM.f'M 01111 r ••

MobrleHumc Rtpt~rr

••
DAN'S
·_,
TIANSMisSION
and AUTO IEPAIR ::::

R•nao• 4 .,.

1tn
t r
outomotlc, SI.~OO; 1114 iieiil
Tempo. 4 cy_l!ndor, o•4
M
wHh olr, 11,aoo; 1NI T - 4

2 111 droom rurnlehld In N. .
Hown, WV. hCuriiY d-H
lind ..- . requlrecl. :104-

S280/mo. 114-418-2300.

,.

:~~

Autos for Sl..

•P'-·

11011, 304-171-1m 1111' I:DO.

Counlry -111 Homo Pork,
· ROido 33, North ol Pomoi'O)'.
Lotl.!~nt..., parll, ...... Clill
114-W&lt;-11179.

''

71

Homes for 811'11
Orondo. 114-318:f1841.
:114 IR ~ 1 2 "'ory. bt_,onl, 2br, Aponmolli', Col\lrol HNI,
Chtthlro.._""· Exc. -.I. Woolt: olr, ldNI lor coiJI)Io, No polo.
804.132-71170 or Homtt IIM-832- t.oc.led on 141 Fourlh Avonuo,

'

Owntr &amp; Operator
Pomeroy, Ohio

SERVICE

. •Garages
•Room Additions
•Kitchanl • Baths
•VInyl Siding ·
•Restoration
•R&amp;Pi'lr Work·

31

5441.

Complete

JAMES HISEl
992·2772 or

m:soo
'

E -.cwatmg

Cllln- bod,_

46 Space for Rent

~~~ 'ROOM

liEN'S APPLIANCE
992-5335 .. 915-3561
A1r011 fr11111 Pest Offlct
I'OMEIQT, OliO

lttOW'ttlf

BfUfrby

acres of vacant gtound wrth adug well, bam, stock tank and
is jenced.

Roctcy Allen Nave,
Dlltondant
c ... No. 90 DR 271
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
Vou· ore lllreby notlfed
that you 1tew bien nemetl
Dtfendarll In the action ontltlld · Jocqulilrw M. Nave,
PlolntHf. ve. Rocky Allen
N..o. Dllfondont. Thlo action hlo boon lllignod c ...
No. 90 DR.271, Indio pendIng• In the Molgo County
Common P1111 Court. Slid
diVorce wu filed qn Docem-

86

SIGNS

liN'S APPLIANCE
. SIIYICI

out

Real Estate

81 Upholstery,

cteati.ue

l'lcll· Up.

J/1/ID/Ifn

----·

.

AU. ....S .
trt• It hi Or We

PO.IOY, 0110

acre of ground wrth aone story home that has vinyl siding L·
shaped deck, rear porch, satellite dish, a.nd has 2 bedrooms.
Has an assumable loan. Could be yours fo• $2,000 down and
assume a loan of $27,039.90 wrth • 9ll% rate lor 281; yrs,
Payments are $270.00 a mooth which includes insurance &amp;
taxes.
·
.·

IN THE COMMO'N
PLEAS COURT Of
MEIGS 'COUNTY. OHIO
Jocquollne M. Novo,
Pllintltl

83

KIT' N' CARLYLE&lt;II by Lmy Wright

lhlo
......,.. to P:o. lox 72IF ct1N of
lilt Dolly ....:'.111, ....,,.. "¥ OH 1124m

84 E lectm:!lf &amp; Refr~g'tution
85 Gunt~tal Hauljny .

Sa~it Of Trad ~

•ciOWAYE
OVEN IEPAII

Acrfta ,,.., ,... Office
111 L s-.11 St.
"IIIIOY, 0110

:==r~-=
~ldl&gt;1ciUII. To

flncl

a. Motor Horn us

·

R.L MASH
CARPENTRY

DOn:IE

Campe,s

.

Musical lnstn•merits

For

Camp.ng Equ1pm~11

79

•

Aplnment
tor Rent

81 Home lnlplo\tttment s
,82 Plumbmg A Heahnu

58 · Fru1t1 S. Vegatables
59

78

Vomslr4WO's
Motorcvch•
Boats &amp; Moton tor Sal~
Auto Parts &amp; Acce5JDI'ICS
Auto Ropan
·

Services

.

-Concnte work

Public Notice

,,

Equ,pment lo1 Runt
for le•e

Autos for Saltt
Trucks, for Salt!

"I

....
·_Bus,loess· S··e rvices

101301'19 Ill

IOC~ SPRINGS ROAD - Great' location·- and approx. I

Public Notk;e

Wanted to Rent

54 Mise f!ll•chandrse '
55 Butlding Suppli•
56 . Pe•storSale
.

Prol•lional Sttvttt~S

'1o "'-1

RNI Eltati General

'

Futntlhed Roont:o
Sp•ce tor Rent

Merr.handise
6]

..,•,

71
72
73
711
75
76
77

.

1986 JAGUAR XJ6

..
The Daily Sent1nel has
an enormous amount of
Happy Ads, In Memory
· Of, Etc., dating back at
least to 1988. P1ctures
must ~ picked up at
The Daily Sentmel office
before March 30th to
avoid being destroyed.

Rent

51 Hou~ehold Goods,
62 - Spon1ng Goods

1B ,Wanled To Oo ·

23

;"ul:.""~~v:V~'!'::,~

3 MILES OUT BULlVILLE

Mobile Homes tor R6tnt

----:-~----,.t----~~~-~------"-------

d•yefor•n.... wlntwlllaom-

LAYNE FURNITURE

..

'

ber 7,,.1890, ellfl - · CUI•
'tody o.our two minor children on-beholf Df 'lOUr wife.
Jacqueline M, ·Novo. • Tile
ComP'-Inl for DIWrce ol• • lhll VO'I' ltllvo boon
gulltr of lfUII negloct .of
duty fnd ... ,.,. cneltytowanl your wlfo ond - s 1
divlllian of P101*1V end
debta. coota. ond ottomey

•••You '•re required to an·

'·

PLEASE USE COURT ST. ENTRANCE

'

Notice

Houses

42

~

'

I

41

45 ·
46
47
48
49

•••

Trons orlolion

43 hrms fof'. Rvnt
. 44 Apartmen1 to• Aerll

.

14 Busm••Tr•n•ng

tOr

.,,
"•

61 Farm Equrpmunt .
62 Wanttd to Buy
63 ll\tt!SIOCk
64 Hay &amp; Gr•m
65 Stted S. Ft!rhli.rer

l;tDI11

,

Ct/l't•r 1l1 ;.

Aru C&lt;Mie 1}14

367 Ch•hfre
~

2 00 P M fUE'SOAY

W(ONf,SOAY PAPER
' THURSDAY PAPER '
t-HIIJAV PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

4;

.32 Moblht Homes lor S&lt;tl~
Jl Farms for Sale
3 I Business Butldtngs
3!; loh &amp; Acreage
36 Rut Estate Wamed

6 ' Happy Ads
6 Lost end Found.,
1 Y•d Slle(PAid rn actvancc)
8 Publit: hie &amp; AIIC:IIo!l

ft~l/l·,;vitrj{ lt•/t'/~·hlllll' I'X.:iWtiJW·~ .. .

• A cl ,lfilailf!L'd advtHIUietnunl piJCclllll ll1 t! D,uly Sr•rr 1111 t!ll u
c~t
c l~ts.:a;tht..od drsplav Bmomt..'l&gt; S Card ouHI lttjtal notrees)

.

Honuta tor Sale

9 Wlnted to Bu.,

' run 3 davs at no chatgtl

. COPY DEADLINE

Jl

3 AnnouCements
4 Gnreaw.-y

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Farrn Supplies
&amp; Lrveslock
,,

Real Estate

1 C..-d ot+Thanks
2 In Memory

.30
.42

Raeesa,o lo' con•cutwe runs. bloken upd-r• wtll bech•ged
lo' eiCh ~.., as separate ads
'

"Pr•Ct!' ol •d tor 1111 cap•tall~lt!'rs rs doublu Pflce ol ad cost
"1 purnt IHIII! type onty ust'd .
·::.Surrtmd rs r_1ot tt!sporrslbl~ lm errors after lusl LillY !Chuck
tor vrrors hrsl diJY att rmrs m•papml C,dl hdorc 2 00 p. m
diiW almt pubhc.atronlu rnakl! COiri!C:Irult
•
~ ·~ds that must be pard rn advan ct!' 1111 1
"'
,&lt;:~&lt; '
.
[,',!'
C.ud ol Th.tnks
Happy Acb
In M~.:nrorr ~111
Y ;lld S,rlus

,

Ann ouncr,ments

.20

'

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musl b•! prt!

'· ~·.,a·d

"fteC~I! $

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44

ProfeuloMI

Sllrvlcea

".r •

· RATES

. ~.~ TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-2156 .
.,.MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
; ,., 8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY .
CLOSED SUNDAY .
"

.23

FIRsT LADY GOES COACH: Barbara Bush is a fearless flier. The' ';
ftrstlady ftew from Washington 10 Indianapolis Thursday on a .commer- :

~.

'

LAFF-A-DAY

:;

• The Area's Numb,r 1 Marketplace

.

Ohio

NOT LIKE A IDLLBO.LY: Max Baer Jr .. who pJayed the
;:
hick Jethro Bodine on "The Beverly Hillbillies," was a~ $2 millioo. .
Wedneldly by a Los Angeles jury in a dispute over screen rilthts to; :
MldCil..'s song "Like a Virgin." The jury decided thai ABC-1'V.had· ·
illtimidaled the soogwritm of the hit tune into awanlins film rights IIi
oetwCllk instead of Baer, wbo had submitled a higher b1d. Poring the Six-; :
day trial, Bael testified th8t ABC-TV tried 10 take advt111tage of Jethro's' •
·"big, dumb cluck" image, treating him like an "idiot" before songwritJ ,

shuule missions. The last flight

Malone.

1991

Friday, February 15, 199t.

l•

Round Bollt In lhe • . 1 •
":14:.:5-I~IN-'::-::=-:;-=-:::::-:::;:::::
••
of •- ~Squato - 1oo •~Y ·- 11 11 •
114-892-5533.

,.,_

Transportation

71 Autos for Sale
·
1171 Cull- Slorro, outo, PS,
PI, 1500. 304-1571-2701 oftor

82

~:00,

1171 Pl•o.. 1rr• Mercury Mor.qulo, ltltl uoago K-Cor. 114·3581111.

1171 Aobbll $550. 18115 CulliN
$2,700, 1111 M..ury MotqUio
11,800. 1tl1 Dodao .Horizon

-n

h,IOO. SQ4.171.244G:.
1110 AMC Splrll, 4 cylltldor,

out-.110, mony RIW porto,
$800. 114-2111-1441
lll.nl.-10p.m.
1t111 M- Corio w"h T~-.
!'URI good, body good 114-812·

Plumbing &amp;
Heating
C.rter~1

.

Plumbing

andHutlna

Fourlh ond Plno
Qllllpollo, Ohio

~---~358~1"""":_ _ _ _

84

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

Rllhilnll•l
or com••alll
wiring, new Hrvlc• or . . .

Ill- Uconud oloiiObtolon."!.'.!~
Aldtnour EIICiricol, i1M4J1.

11030.

1111.

1tU .,..,.,, 'Morqulo, Plloo
~~tplonoblo, or •Mitrodo tor •
41411.
pick-up. 114-281ttU lubtN lllllon wogon_,_!ooood• ..-d -lon 0111 - ·
m-M41• 11124010.

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boll In llimHuro upl.4.
Col! 304ot75-4154 lor lfoll •
llmoln.
·

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Page-1G-The O.lly Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Friday, February 15, 1181

•

Sund&lt;ly

Northern Ohio hit hard by winter: blast
By United Press IDtenlaitonll
Northern Ohioans wen: greeted
Friday morning with as muc!l as
one foot of snow and, with a forecast calling for up to another 12
inches in some aress, many nonessential activities were brought tO
a hall
Most schools and many museums were closed across northern
Ohio Friday moming, with ·some
closings in southern ponions of the
Stale.

· WEATHER MAP • Snow sllowers will develop ahead of a
froat in tbe Great' Likes area. Scattered rain sbowen will·
develop ill tile cotrll bi&amp;b l'llinlas ID upper level low pressure
system llleds witb a weall cold froat. RaiD showen are likely in lhe
.Northwest. The Soulllwest will he 1l'llrm and dry. The Southeast
wiD be cool but IIOII!ly SIIDny. (UPI)
Wll'IB

------Weather forecast---Sonth CeDII'II
SUIIdly through Tuesday
Becoming panly cloudy Friday
A chance of rain or snow Sunnight, with a low near five above day and Monday, with fair weather
zero..Partly cloudy SatUrday, with on T~sday. Highs will range from
highs near 30.
. 30 to 40 each day, with ovelliight
Exteilded.forecast
lows between 15 and 25.

Meigs EMS answers calls
Six calls for assistance were
answered j)y units of Meigs CounnEmergency Medical Services on
'Thursday and early onFriday.
On Thursday .at 10:34 a.m.,
Pomeroy squad went to Pomeroy
Nursing and Rehab Center for
Georgie Marlow, who was .transported to Veterans Memorial Has·
pital.
.
.
.
At 1:23.p.m., Middleport squad
went to Viuage Manor. Rick Johnson was taken to Veterans. At 1:27
a.m., Pomeroy station went to Rose
Hill to the Robie residence for a
container fire, and returned ar 2:05
p.m . At 2:42p.m., Pomeroy rue
·depanment went to Crow's Family
Restaurant and were back at 2:56
p.m. At 4:34 p.m., Tuppen Plains
squad went to Reedsville for Bill
Anderson, who was taken to Veterans. At 6:06 p.m., Pomeroy squad
went to Lincoln Heights for Becky
Hauser. Hauser was treated but not
transported.
At 1:01 a.m., Pomeroy fire
department went 10 :rownsbip Road
207 for a structure Ore at the old
landfill, and arrived back at I :30

:-a.m.

Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
responded to nine ~aDs for assistance on Wednesday and early
T~sdaymoming.

·

On Wednesday at 6:32 p.m. the
· Rutland unit was caUed to Star Hall

Road for Dorothy Peck who was
taken 10 Veterans Memorial Hospi·
tal.
· At 7:28 p.m. the Tuppers Plains
unit went to Route 248 for Robert
Bower who was ttansported to Vet-

erans.

The Middleport Fire Department, at 7:~1 p.m., responded to a
Structure fire on Little Kyger Road.
The department returned to quarters at 8:25p.m.
At 7:55 p.m. the Pomeroy unit ,
went to Route 7 for Kenneth
Grover who was taken 10 Veterans.
On Thursday at 2:30 a.m. the
Pomeroy unit went 10 Nyc Avenue
for Lisa Lilly who was talcen to
Holzer Medical Center.
At 3:05 a.m. the Rutland unit
was called to Meigs Mine No. 31
for Ron Conger, also taken to
Holzer.
The Pomeroy unit was called to
the Pomeroy Nursing Rehabilita·
lion Center for Inez Ash who was
taken to Veti:rans.
The Middleport unit at 4:57a.m.
we~t to South Third for Marv
Bacon who was iaken to Holzer
Medical Center.
FinaUy, at 8:11 a.m. the Racine
unit responded to Third Street for
Richard Swanson who was transported Pleasant Valley Hospital. .

Iraq ...

Lesser amounts of snow were
. Strong and gusty northwest ·· zero to about 5 above. . .
generally MJlOited for the n:main· . winds were expected to complicate
Except for a few mommg flur- ,
der of the state, with the National
snow removal operations over pans ries in the extreme northeast, Satur.
Weather Semce at 8 a.m. reporting
of IDiheast Ohio. Most roads were day promises to be a better day, but.
S inches on die ground in ToledO, 3 snow covCied and~ ~·
another fast moving low pressun:
inches in Findlay and Mansfield
The weather serv•ce wd much area will be threatening with more"
and l inch in Columbus Cincin- . of the snow activity will taper to snow by Sunday. .
nati, Dayton, Zanesville aftcl Hunt- flurries Friday night. Western and
ington, W.Va.
.
• southern parts ofOhio will begin
Snow and snow squalls were clearin$ Friday night and bitter
expected to continue over the cold Will set m over the state.
warning area into Friday ni~L . Ovemiglit lows Friday night will
The weather service Sllld addi- range from a few degrees below
tiona) new snowfall could accumu·
1a1e 4 to 8 inches over the extreme
. n~t 1Yith !IS 11111~h as 12 inch·
es m persistent squalls. Over the
remaindez of the warning area, 3 to
6 inches of additional snow was
Because the Siberian Express
· expected Friday, with 2 to 4 inches has chosen to make yet another
in the advisory area. · .
.
visit to the ApJ)alachian hills, the
A winter storm warning SVAC's boys basketball slate has
remained in effect Friday f(ir an been postponed for tonight, with .
area stretching from Vermilion to three of the games to be played on
ToUih One 55 lloath
·••
Ashtabula and south ,the.·Medina, Saturday.
430 CCA.
Akron and Youngstown. And a
66·6626
.....
39.99
IL
Oak Hill's doubleheader with
winter weather advisory was issued Southern ar Racine will begin Satfor the remainder of northeast
urday at 6 p.m., and Southwest·
Ohio.
· em's twinbill with Kyger Creelc at
Cheshire will start Saturday at 6
p.m., with a sweetheart dance to
follow the varsity game ar approxiAm Ele Power ..................... .28 3/4
mately 9 p.m. Symmes Valley's
Ashland Oil........................ 29 1/8
games
with North Gallia at Vinton
·
AT&amp;T ...................................34 1/8
wiD
start
Saturday with the reserve
. Bob Evans ................................. .18
·
game
at
6:30
p.m. Eastern's conCharming Shop., ......:......... ,....... .l4
tests
with
Hannan
Trace at MerCity Holding .. ,........................... .l5
cerville
wiD
be
moved
to Tuesday,
Federal Mogu1 ..................... .15 5/8
Goodyear T&amp;R .................... .19 7/8 with the reserve tip-off set for 6
To•tll , •• 71
Key Centurion ............................ 11 p.m.
Up to 075
4 group 1 i1~1 .
:
Lands' End ........ ......................... 17
15·72261tr.
...,.
Limited Inc...........................23 3/4
Multimedia Inc .....................73 318
Marriage licenses have been
Rax Restaurant ................... ,......7/8
granted
in ' Meigs County Probate
•
Robbins&amp;Myers ......;..................24
tri
Bronson Lee Laudermilt, · ·
·court
·Shoney's Inc......................... l4 5/8
Star Bank ............................. .l9 1/2 17, Middleport, and Jewell Augusta
.,
Wendy Int'l. ,.......................... 8 1/8 Brumfield, 17, Pomeroy; and to
49 North Second Ave. •
Middleport, Ohi
Worthington Ind ...................23 1/2 Darrell Alan Sands, 24, Hartford,
'
W.Va., and Sherry Ann Michael,
16, Pomeroy.

CORRECTION

Foreclosures

A foreclosun: actillll baa been
filed in Meigs County Common
Plo8l
1a die li\IQer 11ame
N81ae' 1ft of Racine apillt
Denver ....... Pomeroy,- oth·
era, in die 11100nt of Sl9,337.63;
Monty Hlrt, Racine, and others,
epl• It .t LLC11 Buildings, Inc.,
aDd adllll, oi...W11 Unial, N.Y.
J~ ICiioat have IIJo been
filed an lhe matter of Transohio
Savinp Blllk, Cleveland, against
Charles Wayland. Middlepon, in
the amount of $16,135.35: and
Mynlc Holler, Rac!Mo lpinst Sean
Ramey, Columbul, llld olhen, in
the amount of $6,.49231

caan

oe

GAHS
gains slice
of title C-2

.

Search for

missing boy
continues

Stocks

Vol. 26, No. 2
Copyrlghlad 199 I

Take Advantage 01
Law lntaresl Rates

:. ,:·

. ..
'

• UDIOD
• says ·COa J
M tne
Swl.tch'WI. II cost'J. obs
.

Parents Night

· Talk To Chuck Wingett About One
Of His 150 Different Floor Plans Today! .
Ctiuck Wingett Builders
1 Carol Ln., Athena Oh.
592-41 19 or 592·37 49
'

JERUSALEM (UPI) - A day
after Iraqi leaders caUed for an end
to the Persian Gulf war, Iraq
Jobbed another volley of Scud missiles at southern Israel Saturday,
the 14th attack since allied forces
started their braising air assault on
Baghdad.
.
"Two miss1les were launched
from western Iraq. They feU in several places,'' Brig. Gen. Nachman
Shai, the chief lsrael.i army
spokesman, told citizens across the
country on all radio and television
channels. Alarms blared in the
streets at 8:15 p.m. and the missiles
feU a few minutes later.
,
It was the first time Iraq
launched its Scud-B warheads at
Israel's southern Negev desert,
which accounts for a full half of the
country's tiny geographical area
wedged between Egyp~. Jordan and

UNITED NATIONS (UPI) Iraq said Saturday the Persian Gulf

Hours : Tues · Fri 3-6
Sat 1-5. Closed Sun &amp; Mon

.

Tolal Electric Kllchen &amp; Laundry Available
Feat.uring Energy Elficlent Heat Pumps

Dnl.llt1ta•l!5

BU.Y FROM AN -L.P. GAS
•
DEALER WITH .EXPERIENCE
BUY FROM•••

.

,.,.,. . .,.,.,. .,. . ,. .,;,·.,.,. . .,.

·

* SCHULT 52112 2 BEDROOM
OIIILY $10345 PEl MONTH
4 YIS.
* IIIIWOOD 60112 2 BEDROOM
5 YRS.

*FLEETWOOD 60112 3 BEDROOM

* 1910 WINDSOR 70114 2 BEDROOM

RUTLAND FURNITURE
and BOTTLE GAS

Deluxe beth. b•ywlndow, ilcrowave, ·

8 YIS.

ALL HOMES FIGURED AT 10% DOWN. 13.0% APR

.....

Jullctlen lt.
n &amp; s9s

Open
Mon.- Sat.

ligan I

1:30-1:00
Closed

Nth41n¥illt .

Home delivery price of both lhe Gallipolis Daily Tribune and The Daily
Sentinel will increase to $1.60 per week effective March 3.
Carriers will receive a signific3)lt part of the increase. This is the first
home delivery price adjustment in two and one-half years. ·
Single copy price will continue at 25 cents daily and -75 cents for the
s da T1 s · 1

~;;;un~y~·:;;m~e~s-~e;n~un~e~·;_=============~·

Kuwait, de~anded an immediate
and .unconditional Wllhdrawal, and
the Immediate start of "intensive
negotiations" to .setlle the.differences.
. Al-Anbari said his.g.oven:tment
IS res~ndmg to prov1.s1ons m the

rc5?!UbD!J.

. .

..

, '·~aJ-*w' ' IMI"•ilegdouatJOns, . he
sa.1 ·
e are rea y to negotiate
w1th. the parues that. have~~. con.ducung the.war agamst Iraq.
The Bag.hdad plan also demanded the abohuon of II UN. resolu-

GEORGE GRATE-MANAGER
STATE ROUTE 124

Sunday

I

1.

PROJECT DONATION • Wayne Beason,
(left),"manager Hills Department, receDtly
donated rroceeds from the "Keep Gallipolis
Beautiful' eanlster aDd fish tank located In the
store. AcceptiDI the check is Kelly Bosworth,
KGB treasurer, and looklnJl on Is City Manager

RUTLAND

·'[

'

••

•••
•

"',.

-~

...

Dale Iman, KGB chalrmau. The proceeds will
be put toward the DoD-profit oriiDizatlon's
wiklnower project, set to be1ln In March. Donations may be made with any city or county mer·
chaDt. (Times-Senliael photo by Kris Cochran)

·- .••if'•

uons that spelled out measures
such as economic sanctions and use
of force against Iraq. Baghdad also
asked the U.S.-Ied allied forces to
pay for the destruction. caused by
the maasive air strikes against Iraq
and Kuwait that began Jan. 17 in an
effcm !!l.!ii!Ciate Kuwait. .
..

''H!\'11111'1111'111! 'l:o'lidiuon· Zsta

by Iraq will take months to negociate and he accused governments
!hat have rejected the plan of wantmg only the destruction of his
country.

Farmers Bank
board appoints
new member
By BRIAN J. REED
Times-Sentinel Starr
POMEROY • Pomeroy attorney
I. Carson Crow was appointed to
the Board of Di~tors at the Farm, :
ers Bank and Savings Company. ;
when the board met on Tueaday;
The announcement was made b~- :·
Farmers Bank President Theodore•. :
T. Reed late this week. Crow was·:.
sworn into office by Sybil Ebers-&lt;·
b~h. who was employed as.a !ega!-:'
secretary by the Crow family law&gt; .
firm, Crow &amp; Crow, for
over 60 :
.

years.

lhe bank's baard. SweariDR Canon Crow into
otrJCe is Sybil Ehersbilcll, wbo 11'115 1 legal secretary· in lhe Crow Jaw practice for over 60 yean.
(Times-Sentinel Pboto by Brian J. Reed)

Legislation provides health
care for -state reservists

.By KRIS COCHRAN

$1 0951 PO MONTH 5 YEARS .

OILY $1JJ76PEI MONTH

Newspaper home delivery price increasing

sponsored by Rep. Mike Stinziano
(D-Columbus) requires group
health care plans to provide
reservists and their families with
the opportunity to continue their
coverage when a service member is
called to active duty.

Wildflowers next projectfor
"Keep Gallipolis Beautiful" ·

New furnace. n- carpet.

OIILY

draw from the. occupied West B~
and Gaza Strip and for the alhed
forces to withdraw from the gulf.
T~e .United States, J7ranc~ and
Bntam among others re.JCCted 11.
Al-Anbari told rer.orters the
annou~ment was a. g.esture of
peace, and the I~q• w•thdra~al
s.howdtoberesolacc~th
. f!Y.~:.redUJ~ ,
uons
. ve e c~SIS as . .
for by Secunty Counctl Resoluuon
660.
.
Resolut!on 660, ad.opted. hours
after Iraq s Aug. 2 mvas1on of

COLUMBUS ·The Ohio Ho!lse
of Representatives has passed legislation that will help the families
of military reservists on active duty
in Operation Desert Storm.
According to State Rep. Mary
Abel (D·Athens), House Bill 56,

7 Yrs•

$10958 PEl YEAR

r

Pattiot missile-kiUers were fii'Cd at Strip, as well as occupied areas in
the Iraqi warheads.
the Golan Heights and southern
The auack came just a day after Lebanon, that President Bush disIraq asked tbe U.S.-led coalition to missed the offer as a "cruel hoax."
call otT the air war and said it was
Israeli leaders also dismissed the
prepared to withdraw from Kuwait. · highly conditional offer as a gimBut Iraq's Revolutionary Com- mick and some called for nothing
mand. ~?ouncil a~tache~ so many
less th.an the . o~erthrow ' of Sad~
cond1t1ons to ns . wnhdrawal, Hussem. Palestiman leaders haded
including ISrael's withdrawal from the proposal. as a br~throug~ that
the Palestinian territories it occo- should be giVen scnous cons1dera·
pies in the West Bank and Gaza lion.

Iraq calls on allied forces to begill:.negotiations

* 1979
CHAMPION 60114
2 Bedrooma. wood siding.

OIILY

the Red Sea. OfficialS said the missiles carried conventional highexplosive warheads and did not
contain chemical weapons.
Although the. Negev region is
not heavily populated, the desert
contains many military bases and is
home to Israel's Dimona nuclear
plant. It was not made clear if the
missiles came anywhere close to ·
such targets.
After telling people to take off
their gas masks and releasing them
from their sealed rooms at 8:55
p.m., Shai said there were no
reports of injuries or damage from
the attack.
Following an Israeli policy that
has evolved since the missiles staned falling Jan. 18, Shai would not
say exactly where the missiles fell
or whether U.S.-manufactured •

war will end only through negotia·
tioo.s and urged the aUied forces to
begin talks based on Baghdad's.
proposecfplan for conditionlll: wi.th·
MIDDLEPO!tT ....., United Mine scrubbets will he consumed by the drawal from Kuwait.
WQCke!li wlion .officials ~~is losses t.o Oh~Q's "~onorily as cited
Iraq's U.N. Alnb~dor Abdul
no· need .fA~;;APM~l•M ,
, .~c above(Le., jobs, payrou.~ 1111" •.,(\rnJfjr ..t\1 •ll'qj11 ~-.plan.
Power to swucli 10 low sUI coal
• "Fuel switching wiD seifacon- whic was announced Friday, c.oo·
at its G(lvin power plant on the , somers' doU!!fS out of Oh!o !0 pur- tained Iraq's "rights."
.
Ohi6 River.
· · ,. . .
chase compliance coal while scrubT)le plan pegged the lraqt pullThe statemen~ was made in a bing Gavin will result in nearly a out of Kuwwt to a string of condiletter issued by Gene C. Oiler, billion dollars worth of construe- tions,including for Israel to with·
prcsident of UMW Local 1886. tion work in Ohio in the ne~tt five
Willian\ Oiler, COMPAC, repre- years, plus give us an opponunity
sentative of the local and George to retain the mining jobs m Ohio.
Thacker. president of Locall857.
• · "Fuel switchi.ng will not
.Gerald Maloney, ex¢cutive vice remove as much sulfur from the
president of AEP, said recently the air; scrubbing will remove an addi·
utility was considering a switch to tion8150,000'tons."
low sulfur . coal rather than
The officials stated that they
installing scrubbers and using "have been discussing (a change in
Ohio's high sulfur coal as a means legislation) with those parties who
of cutting down on poUution.
can bring about such legislation, as
The UMW officials say the well as those citizens whose supswitch to low sulfur coal would port is needed to show the legiSla·
eliminate 1,258 mini rig jobs in ture that this is what is best for the
southeastern Ohio.
State of Ohio."
·
The statement said if the miners
The Public Utilities CommisJosc their dObs, they will take with sion of Ohio, at the direction of
them $81 million in wages and Gov. George Voinovich, has
benefits, more than $4 million ordered AEP to detail plans to
spent on supplies locaUy and more clean up the pollution emitted by
than $2 million in property taxes.
the Gavin planL
·
The utility has until Feb. 25 to
"We know our jobs and will
continue 10 do what we have to do provide reports, studies and an
to ensure our survival," they said. analysis of the Gavin plant.
"One thing we know for sure is
The PUCO initiated the inquiry
that we cannot survive without the into options available to AEP in
installation of scrubbers at the · complying with the acid rain proviGavin Plant."
sions of the 1990 amendments tQ
.The statement also cited several the Federal Clean Air Act at the
reasons why scrubbers.&gt; were a bet· Gavin plant, which is the dirtiest ·
NEW OFFICER • Polaeroy Attorney I. Cartcr allemative economically to fuel· pOwer plant in its system.
.
son Crow, far left, was sworn ia earlier tbis
switching.
The PUCO staff is to issue a
week as a director or the Farmers Bank and
• "Any savings (the consumer) report by April 30 ·detailing its
SaviDgs Company, succeedlDg bis father, Fred
may see in (his/her)
bill as findings along with any recommen·
W.
Crow, Jr., far
who has resiped from
0
the result of f ue I ~~~~.... daf"ulil·111n111
s._liiiiiiiiil

· THERE HAS NEVER BEEN A
BmERTIMETO
PURCHASE THE HOME OF YOUR DREAMS

13 Sectlono. 88 Pogeo
A Mu!llrnedlo Inc. Nowopopor

Iraq attacks Israel again

PAYING REAL. ESTATE TAXES. Ernie Sisson, left,
Power
Company, presented a check ror real estate taxes for the fint llalt or
1990 (or the power tompany to Meigs County Treasurer George
CoiUns on Friday in lb~ amount or $617,293.93. According to Collins,
Ohio Power is lhe largest real estate tax payer in Meigs County. .

granted

.

$12254 Per Month

Partly sunny. High in mld-40s.

Mlddleport-Pomeroy~alllpolls-Polnl Pleasant, February 17,1991

CCA5 599 !

Licenses issued

Divorce actions have been
The Gallia County Sheriff's granted by Meigs County Common
Department is currently searching Pleas Court to Kathryn D. Johnson
for a boy and his father that were from Charles F. Johnson, and to
reported missing earlier this week.
Rankin Ray Pickens from Mary R.
" Jeffrey L. Halley, 36, and his Pickens, aka Mary G. Pickens
son, JeffreyS. Halley, 12, weJe last . (third party plaintiff), and Ray ·
seen on Feb. 8 on State Route -7. Rankin Pickens (third party defen. The two are believed to be togeth- dant).
er.
Jeffrey L. Halley is described as
being five feet, ten inches tall, and
weighing approximately 165
pounds. He has brown hair and
Parents Night will be observed
brown eyes.
on
Friday night when the Meigs
Jeffrey S. Halley is described as
Marauders
host the Nelsonvillebeing four feet, five inches tall, and
York
Buckeyes.
Also being honweighing approximately 85
ored
are
Marauder
Seniors Mite
pounds. He has brown eyes and
Van
Meter
and
Jason
Wright.
brown hair and .was last seen wear'
'
in~ a black puUover hooded sweat·
shift, blue jeans .and white high-top
sneakers. He is a sixth grade student at Washington Elementary.
•
The Sheriff's Department is ask. Th~; Kyg~r Valley Boys will
mg
anyone with any information as
smg at the FII'SI Bapbst Church in
to
the
whereabouts of the two to
Pomeroy at the 10:30 a.m. service
call446-1221.
on Sunday.

Offt.Y

Along lbe River.~-1-7
BusiDess .D-1
Comlcs..Jasert
Classirleds...D-2-1
Dealbs...A-6
Editorial • .A-2
Farm."D-1·8
Sports...C-1-8

James Sands: Steamboats, carpentry
held promise after Civil War - B-5

•••th .

Divorc~s

ON USED
WE WILL NOT REFUSE ANY
REASONABLE OFFER

Inside:

.

Membership in the Business
Advisory Council was discussed at
the recent meeting of the Meigs
County Board of Education.
Four people· have agreed to
serve on the .council and other will
be contacted this month.
The board approved a course of
study for "Introduction to Comput·
er Science."
It was noted that state funds for
a summer intervention ·program
which has been ·approved are not
available due to state budget cuts.
The board also discussed
employees' contracts and special
classes at Carleton School.

JEFFREY L. HALLEY

.

Signs of the time: War, peace.on
minds of Gallia residents· B-1

SVAC postpones
basketball games

Singers to appear

MeiiS County Sheriff's deputies
are investigating a report o( theft
from Dave Wooten of Jackson.
Wooten advised the department
that within the last two weeks,
items weJe taken from a home on
Old Dexter Road. He advised that
theJe was no forced entry.
Several items were taken,
including a freezer, television, a
boUied gas tank with regullta and
household items.
In other news, the department
reported that 33 year old Thomas
Steven, Jr., Vance Road in
. Pomeroy was char1ed Wednesday
with driving under tile iaftuencc,
driving under suspension IIDd failure to maintain control of a 1982
four-door Plymouth on Happy Hollow Road following a one~ acci·
dent there.
Moderate damage was suffered
by the car, owned by Catherine
Schuctzman of Vance Road.
'··

Saturday's college scores - C-1·

Board discusses
•
varmus
programs

Game .rescheduled

Sheriff's report

75 cents

WESTERN AUTO ·

Hospital News

VETERANS MEMORIAL
WEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS
-Belle Dunla~in, W.Va.; ·
Rebecca Ward,
y; and Jdm
McKenzie, Pomeroy.
CoDtiDued from Pllf 1
WEDNESDAY
DIS·
CHARGES • Claude Cunningham
•' full of unacceptable, .old condi· and Clifford Lambert.
tioos." But he noted that there was
THURSDAY ADMISSIONS •
one "possible exception" that
Ocel Sears, Middleport, Dorothy
"Iraq must leave Kuwait"
White House spokesman Marlin Higgins, Pomeroy; Benny Dent,
Fitzwater said the statement made Pomeroy; and William Anderson,
no chanIf in the· war apinlt Iraq, · Reedsville.
THURSDAY DISCHARGES •
aiKl a IICllior Peniii&amp;OO official said,
"The air, land and aea campaign of Iris Williams and George Hicks.
Desert Storm contin~s. Very definitely it's business • usual." ·
Soviet President Mikhail Gar·
.
bachev's chief spokesman, Vitaly
. Nelsonv•De at Meigs boys' varIgnatenko, quoted by the official . sJty basketball game has been cannews 11ency Tass, said, "Moscow celled and re-scheduled .for S~tur­
received with satisfaction and hope day· The reserve gam~ will bf?gm at
the positive information from 6 p.m. Parents N1ght will be
Iraq," but the Foreifn Ministry observed.
said the staierncnt required study.

· Motorists in the Toledo area
reported interswe traffic crawling
along at IS mph and speeds in
some ponions of northeast Ohio
were not much faster. Officials
were having a difficult time keeping the East Sboreway, Stale Roulli
2, dear in Cleveland because of
winds coming off Lake Erie. ·
At Cleveland Hopkins International Airport Thursday night,
American Airlines Flight 1002
from Chicago slid off a runway
while taxiing to the terminal, but
no injuries were reported. One runway remained closed Friday morning.
·
.
Snowfall amounts varied dramaticaUy over northeast Ohio. Up
close to Lake Erie in Lalce and
Ashtabula counties, 3 to 5 inches
feU overnight, while just a little farther inland over the same counties
6to 8 inches of snow accumulated.
Eight to 10 inches of snow was
common over Lorain, Cuyahoga,
Medina and Geauga counties, with
a few reports of 12 inches in Geauga County east of Cleveland.

.

Times-SeDtlnel stair
GALLIPOLIS · The "Keep
Gallipolis Beautiful" committee
members have been hard at work
with projects to help.keep GaUipo·
lis and Gallia County litter
free,according to .City Manager
Dale E.lman.
Orie of the group ' s projects,
scheduled to begin in March centers on wildflowers. "Several city
and county merchants are placing
canisters in their stores so citizens
can put their change t.oward KGB's
wildUower project," said !man.
''The money from the canisters wiD
be used to purchase wildflowers to
be planted in hard to mow areas

throughout the area."
The local non-profit organization, a member of "Keep America
Beautiful;'' is also kicking off
"Adopt·A-Biock". The blocks,
painted with "Keep Gallipolis
Beautiful" are made by Wayne
Benson of Mercerville, and are
available for any civic or social
organization wanting to participate.
Anyone wishing to make a
donation .to KGB may with mer.chants located in the Silver Bridge
Plaza, Ohio River Plaza and
throughout the city and county.
Any civic or sqcial organizations
wanting to become a part of the
Keep Gallipolis Beautiful dfon,
can contact Iman at 446-1424.
~I

.

-••

Crow resides in Chester Town.,:
ship with his wife, Barbara, their&gt; :·
daughter, Morgan, and son Crock:-:·
ett He is a graduate of Ohio Uni-;:
versity and Ohio Northern Law·:
School. He was admitted to prac- •
tice before the U.S. District Court :
for the southern District of Ohio on
August II, 1976.
While at law school, Crow was
named to the Honors Committee
and was honored for doing the best
appellate brief. Crow has practiced
law since 1975 with his father,
Fred W. Crow Jr. The firm, begun
by Carson's grandfather, Fred W.
Crow Sr., has been in existence foe •
over 84 years.
.
••
A member of the Meigs County::·
and Ohio Bar Associations, Crow.
served as Assistant Meigs County •
Prosecuting Attorney for 12 years.·
and currently serves the Village of :
Syracuse as the Village Solicitor. ;~
While attending Ohio Universi:, •
ty, Crow, a three-year starter;•.
played center on two Mid-Amcri· •
can Conference championshiJl foot- •
ball teams includin&amp; the 1968 Tan,·
gerine Bowl team that was ranked
12th nationally. Crow earned All •
Mid:American Conference honors · ,
in 1969 and in 1970 and was •
named Most Valuable Player iri ,
1970 by his teammates. He has·
coached football at the Meigs'•
Junior High School for over 10

years.

Carson succeeds his father on
the bank's board of C!i~tors, wbo
was one the board since February
14, 1956. Carson Crow is also the
son of the late Eleanor Karr Crow.
His brother, Rick, is Meigs Coimty
Common Pleas Court Judge, and
his sister, Linda Crow Beeglt,
resides with her family in Wor(SII FMlMER'S, fltlfl A.B)

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