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1G-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

TUesday, March 5, 1991

I

Business
leaders ... continaedrromp.et
I
Another power plant... Think what auth~-:..:.ty,_:
. to=su.:.p.;;po;.;.;.n:..:th::.e!:..pa=pe.:.r:..m_il_.____________ Are·a
· deaths· EMS units respond to 11 calls ·
. lhat would do for Mason County," 100 percenL
liducation and Mason County

Units of Meigs County Em~r· transported. At 2:50 p.m., Racme
Lee concluded. .
.
_It's 8 small group that's protest- School System was represented
.
gency
Medical Services responded squad went to WeDs RWI Road for
Rtch Jone.s satd Me.'gs County ing the paper miU, the silent major- also,, with board member Paul Melvin Circle
to
II
caUs
for assiStance on Mon- Pearl Hawth&lt;ne who .was taken to
ltas had pracncaUy nothing as far as ity is for it. 1'm fed up with thilt Doef!inger commendinjl the steps
Word has been received of the
day
and
early
Tuesday.
Veterans. At 3:47 p.m., Pomeroy
new mdust~ goes for the last 10 · small group," Sheline said. He qath.a County is takln, in the unexJ?ected death Monday of
At
9
a.m.
on
Monday.
Racine
squad
went to Mulberry Avenue.
year~. He srud the county has not expressed concern and asked if 10
direcuon of schools. "You re going Melvm Ctrcle at his home in
squld went to State Route 338 for Betty Templeton was taken 10 Vet· ·recetved much attentton from the paper mill officials would listen 10
have 10 back the board of educa- Wichita, Kansas. Mr. Circle is ·the
Edith
Smith, who was taken to Vet- erans. At 5 p.m., Olive Township
State of Ohio, coupled .":'ith poor this small group.
lion;•· he told the group, "we have s'!n of the ~ate Howard and Mary
erans
Memorial Hospital. At 10:28 fire department went to State Route
roads and~ commun~aes. .
Lee answered, saying he hoped some hard decisions to·make." ·
Cll'Cle, Racme area. He is married
a.m.,
Tuppers
Plains squad went to 124 for an auto fire. The vehicle
Jones satd tf the Metgs Mmes .ARP would not listen to those few,
Doeffinger also said the area to the former Pauicia Blakeslee of
Vanderhoof
Road for Kenny was owned by Larry Dillon. At
a~e lost, Metgs has more to lose and told Sheline the industry would needs job training for river work Pomeroy.
who
was
treated but not 7:51 p.m., Pomeroy squad went to
Hager,
S!flce the county recetves $1.6 mil- provide 2,000 construction jobs for including pilots, deckhands and
Among his survivors are a
transponed. At II :02 a.m Tuppers Peacock Street for Carl Roach, who
0
lt~n· from tax· revenue from the a minimum ,of 30 months.
~~pe·rintendent of Mason Coon· daug.hter, Marianne, and a so.n, Plains squad and Pome;oy squad was taken to Veterans. At 8:48
mt~es. H~ an'!ounced ·a meeting at
Am Winter, director of Mason
· Mark. Funeral arrangements will be
went to Tucker Road for Edith p.m., Pomeroy squad went to Mul- :
Ohto ~mverstty for March 20! to · County Libraries, said he came
Schools Rick Powell summed up announced by the Ewing Funeral
who was taken tQ Veter- berry Avenue for Shaun Gilmore,
Reeves,
meet wtth state and .federal. officials from Pennsylvania where there is a his feehngs by saying, ''Those who Home.
ans.
At
11:18
a.m., Rutland squad who refused treannent.
~egardmg the posstble mme clos- lot of industry. He said the people say it can't be clone should get out
went
to
Meigs
Mine 2 for Anthony
on Tuesday at 3:42 a.m., Midmgs.
work together to bring industry in f[,llie way of those who want to do . . U
• • • ..
Crosi, Jr., who was ta!cen to Veter; dleport squad went to South Fourth
Jones pledged Me_igs County to that area, then. work out the
Contt'nued "•ro·m page 1
ans.
for Betty Archer, who was talce'n to
. Sh. awn Scarberry, who I1'ves to the fund Chec'-·
suppon to t.he orgamzation that details and see how it can best ben- wtthtn
should be made
At
12:21
p.m.,
Middlepon
units
a
quarter
mile
of
the
pro·
·
..,
Veterans. At 5:37 a.m., Pomeroy
I
f
P ans .to anse
rom the group efit the community.
· COQnty Counc 11
posed paper mill, said he felt not out to the Metgs
1
went
to
Bradbury
Road,
(or
an
auto
squad
went to Peacock Street. Carl
d
anen
Savre,
who works at AKZO enough information was geuing out . on Agt'ng and destgna
· ted .or
• th e acctdent, although nobody was
Alth mg
h hast n.dight's
M .. meeting.
&lt;
Roach
was taken to Veterans.
oug .c sat
e!gs County . Chemtcal, said that company works about the mill.
·
van fund.
does apprectale the bus1nesses they hard to clean up the water, spendAlso being addressed by some
· Currently the Center has three
~~ve ~n getting, most only pro- in~ millions of dollars a year. Sayre in the audience were poor road vans in operation, aU several years
v.tde1 mmunum wage JObs.
sa1d the EPA has a lot of regula- conditions in Mason County and old · One has a wheel c·hatr
· J'ft
1 •
.uled fOr today (Tuesday) has been
Herbalists to meet
• I was noted that Mason County lions that must be followed to prethe labor dispute at Ravensw'ood While the one being replaced has
canceled and rescheduled for
.
The
River
Valley
Herbalists
will
has. 143 people employed at the vent any type of pollution.
Aluminum. Wedge stated his 'hean fewer miles on it than the other
March
12 at 10 a.m.
meet
toni$hl
(Tuesd:iy)
at
the
home
Metgs Mmes, for a total of $9.2
"I just can't understand why goes out to the employees of RAC two, it has a rusty body and
of
Lila
Rtdenour
on
Route
248
in
million in .wages ll!'d benefits that a'!yone would oppose the paper who are out of the. plant and out of mechanical problems. One of the
·
·
Sport card sh!lw
w1ll be los_ttftlie mmesclose.
mtll," Sayre stated, receiving an a JOb,
·
· s has 125,000 mil es on 11· . Long Bottom.
but said the organizat·1'on other van
M
d
f
A sport card show will be held
. ea ows, rom. Gallia County, ovation from those present.
would not take a stand on the ue. while the third van has 117,000
April 7 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at
Hymn sing
satd he was steppmg in for Jack
Frank Herald, a Meigs and H
ted
miles.
·
Fowler, exec
· pres!'de nt_of Mas
·
the group
is pro-industry
. utive v1ce
. on county busmessman,
asked fore no
the purpose
of obtaining
bust'_ •
In addition to the $4,234 which . There wiU be a hymn sing at the · the senior citizens center in
Pomeroy. Cost of a table is $12.50
the
Galha
County
Communlly
tf
anyone
had
been
m
cnntact
with
1
c
ness, industry, and jobs to the area. · must be rat'sed ••or the local share of Fellowsh1p Church in Racine on and the event is sponsored by the
mprovement orporation (CIC), Sen. Byrd concerning the clean
At the conclusion of the meet- the van cost, an additional $300 Saturday at 7 p.m. with Russ and
who was tU.
.
coal tech~ology power plant Lee ·
ill be
ded
the Southern Hills Singers. The Girl Scouts. For more infonnation
Meadows satd assets must be assured hun that Byrd is now look- mg, Wedge said another will be w
nee
to put a radio in i~ public is inviled to attend.
call Sarah Johnson at 992-6890 or
promoted to attract industry. He ing into the matter.
held, with those attending being . Mrs. Thomas reported.
Julia QuaDs at 992-2442.
stated we must improve schools
The Mason County Board of nollfied of a date and time.
Food distribution
Open hymn sing
·
Indoor camp meeting
and programs, parks and recreation,
~
·
·
·
locations
are
announced
Faith
Gospel
Church
in
Long
1
The Meigs County Holiness
and promote our people.
Bottom will have an open hymn
Association
will be holding the
sing on Friday at 7 p.m. To book,
AcJ:;
annual
spring
Indoor Camp Meetcall Dolly Reed at 378,6237. Steve
cat10nally or mdustrtally w1'thout
Snow and slippery conditions wt·th a fractured left arm and left apple
sauce,
flour,
peanut
butter
ing
Monday
through
March 17 at
· Food Reed, pastor, invites the public.
educating our young people," he are being blamed for several acci- 1 T d ·
and butter to persons haiding
the
Syracuse
Nazarene
Church.
'
sa.id. Mead.ows .said Gallia County dents that occ
. urred around the area
eg ues ay · John and Cheryl Commodity Cards on Tuesday, Meeting
begin
at
7
p.m.
nightly
Services
canc.eled
Saunders
· 1ocats a_ttempung to tmprove by passing .Monday.
d d were
d' both reported in ma rc h 12 at the f o11owmg
lind
6
p.m.
on
Sunday.
Special
The monthly meeting of the
school bonds and levies, improvin~
In the most serious, four. Crown guar e con Ilion with multiple lions: ·
·
Leadmg Creek Watershed sched- music and speaker will be Rev.
trauma. John, Jr. was transferred to
MEIGS COUNTY
M ·
Thurl and Mary Kay Mann. Public
area parks, and providing arts, sue
City reside.nts .i_n. G.allia County c b ll H ·
.
. - ctgs
as the Ariel Theatre.
suffered senqus IDJunes when their Ha e - unungton Hospital in Count:- Faitgrounds, Tuppers
invited.
.
We need to put politics aside," vehicles collided on State Route
u~llngton, • w~~re he. was repon- Plains, Fire Station, and the
he said. "We need to promote our 588 near Bob McCormick Road ~u~:.rur conditiOn With multiple Pageville Town Hall.
Dance
counnes, and work.together."
·
Monday.
There will be no distribution at _ Continued 11-om page 1
There will be a round and
Meadows listed ongoing proAccording to a report from the
the Racine American Legion. Per- mothers between 1988 and 1989 square dance at the Tuppers Plains
jects in Gallia Cou~ty as the by- Gallia-Meigs post of the State
sons previously receiving com- and costs Ohio taxpayers $220 000 VFW Buidling oil Friday from 8pass, proposed new sewer system Highway Patrol, John M. Saunders,
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Mon- modines at this site are asked to go ~ day for medical expeoses, ~Wi­
11:30 p.m. featuring Rocky Mounlles~ food stamps and children's . tain Bluegrass. Ronnie Wood is the
for the RL lliO area, new shopping 26, was westbound on SR 588 , and day's winning Ohio' Lottery num- to~ Meigs_ County Fair¥"0unds.
center, and programs such as the Daniel R. Wheeler, 20, was east- bers:
Dtstrtbu.tton wtll begm at 9:30 servtces.
caller. Public invited.
To help combat the increasing .
city park, streetscape, parkfront, bound when their two vehicles colPick-3
a.m. and last unW noon or until the
downto~n beautification project, lided head-on in a curve. Both
269.
supply is exhausted, whichever rates of tee~ pregnancy and sexually transmllted d!seases, Torres
Ticket sales: $1,3l4,IS4.50 . conies ftrst
and Artel theatre. He said the vehicles sustained heavy damage
90
350
reports
that the Oh10 Department of
Veterans Memorial Hospital
chamber of commerce and CIC and Saunders and his passengers
Payoff: $4 • ·50.
~eallh has eStablished a toll-free
continue to grow.
Cheryl D., Saunders; 26, and Job~
Pick-4
HI
MONDAY ADMISSIONS 6816·
mformation line (1-800-TEEN- Doris Haynes, Middleport; Anhur
Following the presentations, the M. Saunders, Jr., II months, had to
South Central Ohio
123) to help teens make informed Roush, Mason, W.Va.; Meda
floor was opened for questions and be cut from their 1989 Pontiac
Ticket sales: $248 ,6!7. Payoff:
Becoming cloudy Tuesday
90
000
decisions
about sex.
comments.
Grand Prix.
$ • ·
night, with a chance of showers
Watkins, Pomeroy; Stephen
Th~
information
line is one Houchins, Middleport; Chester
Kenton Sheline, past .president
Wheeler and the Saunders were
C~i~~tofhearts.
toward morning, and a low
of the Mason County Commission transported to Holzer Medical CenTen of clubs.
.between 40 and 45. Chance of rain component of Teen Decisions a Young, Mason, W.Va.; Anthony
and president of the Carpenter ter by the Gallia County EMS.
is 30 percent. Partly cloudy sta~wide education project of ihe · Cors1, Pomeroy; Ethel Reeves
Union•Locall159. asked what the According to a hospital
Queen of diamonds.
Wednesday, with a chance of Ohto Department of Health with Coolville; Carrie Whaley, Shade;
people could do to help. He stated · spokeswoman, Wheeler was admitThree of spades.
.
showers, and highs near 60. Chance the ~urpose being to help teenagers and Beatrice Blake, Syracuse.
reahze the consequences of their
his organization had given him the ted and was in stable condition
Ticket sales: $48 •744 · Payoff: of rain is 30 percenL
MONDAY DISCHARGES $14,850.
·
feeL
sexual activity.
Bobby S_tanley and Flpra Bailey.

tr

ISS.

lea:~~ u~Y.J~ ~·~~~~;~oo~~~ .

Rio Grande
earns trip to ·
Kansas City

Pick 3:572
Pick4: 8471
Cards : 6-H, Q-C;

4-D; 9-S

• .

our IDJUred in Gallia wreck

x::a;~fftg~CJi:ib~ti~~

Meigs...

Lottery numbers

n:'eather

Hospital news

· Low tonight near 30.
Thursday, mostly sunny.
High in mid 30s.

Page3

•

01 T\OT.

Meigs anrrouncements

F

Ohio Lottery

' Vol. 41, No. 222

•

.

.

2 Sectlono, 14 Pogeo 25 oonto
A Mutttmedta Inc. Newop11per

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, March 6, 1991

Copyrighted 1H1

:Bids will be opened on Rutland project Mar¢h 26
By Cbarlene Hoefticb
will be opened by village officials
Sentinel News Staff
and it is anticipated that soon after
Construction of Rutland's $2.2 the opening, contracts will be
million waste water collection and awarded.
sewage treatment system is expectTo date all but 19 of the 304
ed to get underway this spring.
propeny owners have signed easeAccording to Rutlatld Mayor ment documents which allows the
James Fink, who heads uP the Rut· construction company to move
land Sewer Project Planning Com- across their land to install the necmittee, a pre-bid meetil\jl for the essary lines and equipment
· contractors-who have ptcked up
Patrick O'Brien, the Rutland
· bidding conttacts has been set for project attorney, advised that of
· Tuesday at I p.m. at the Rutland those 19 an additional nine or 10
Civic Center.
arc really to move forward with
.
ContractorS wiU then ~ave until executing the easements, while the
: March 26 at 6 p,m. to submit bids , other half have voi~ objections 10.
: on the project At .lhat time the bids the entire project
·

be established a Sanitary Sewer
District to manage the systel!l.
According to Fink, the agency will
be composed of a committee from
RuU\Ifld Village Council which will
work with an appointed board of
directors. That ~roup will be
responsible for managing the overall oper~tion including maintenance, billing, and user rates, as
well as whatever administrative
functions are necessary to better
enabl&lt;; the system to be cost effec-.
tive.
An open meeting to discuss
questions concerning the sewage
system was held recently at the

Enforcement, he said, will come
either through the EPA ot the Rutland Sewage DistricL
,
·
O'Brien
went
on
to
explain
that
p.m. to further discuss their objections to the projecL
· residents who do not sign but
O'Brien explained that the pro- decide to go into the project once
ject wiU move forward despite the the construction is completed, will
fact that not all property owners then be required to assume the cost
have signed easements. He further of the individual grinder system of
pointed out that no work will be approximately $3,000 plus a condone on properties without an ease- necting fee.
For those who go into the promenL
ject
now there is no charge whatsoHe did, however, emphasize that
ever,
O'Brien said. "Everything is
"eventually all properties will have
to be connected in order to be in · free during the construction pericompliance with the Environmental od," explained the auorney.
Mayor Fink said that there will
Protection Agency rulings."
The .grOup opposing the instaUation of the sewage syslem has ~t a
meeting for ThUrsday night at 7:30

Civic Center. At that meeling to
answer the questions of the 12
interested citizens who attended
were Mayor Fink, members of Rutland Village Council~ the Project
Engineers Kent· Baker and Jim
Andrick, O'Brien, project auomey,
and Art Carpenter, project. inspector.
Five specific areas were
addressed during the meeting project funding, monthly user rate
and maintenance costs, the effect of
flooding on the operation of the
sewer system. the problems with
similar systems in other communiContinued on page 5

Collins to leave courthouse
..post 'with -mixed emotions'
'

'

.

.

'•

.

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff

•
: M~igs County Treasurer George
• M. Collins will leave his court: house office. on Friday for the last
: time with mixed emotions.
· Ohio Department·of Transpona;. tion Dfstrici 10 Deputy Director
: John Dowler announced on Tues. day that Collins, a Repubtican, has
: been appointed to the position ol

Dowler' s Administralive 'Assistant.
Collins will report to work at
ODOT's Marietta office on Monday.
Collins' appointment to the
ODOT position follows Dowler's
controversial appoinnnent in January as deputy director. Meigs
County Engineer Philip Roberts
was recommended for that position
by a majority of the Republican
Party county chairmen in District
10. Despjle that endorsement, however, Dowler, an Athens native,
was appointed to the position by
Governor George Voinovich.
Collins also received the chair·
mPn 'o endorsement fOf hiS pOSi-

-·

'
.
··According
to Dowler, both' he
and Collins were appointed to their
positions on the basis oflheir qualifications.

"Though I've only met (CoUins)
during the interviewing process,"
Dowler said, "I'm detennined that
he is very qualified fbr the administralive assistant position. The position requires a 'people ~son', and
George CoUins 1s certamly that."
Dowler said Tuesday that
Collins will be directly reSJ?Onsible
for managing all of District IO's
430 employees. He also indicated
that while the personnel department
is the only department-directly
under the control of the administra·
tive assistant, CoUins may be given
more responsibilities as time goes
on.
"I am very_ honored to accept
th~ QPpointment,", Collins said in a
statement on Tue·sday~ "and I am
looking forward to beginning my
duties with ODOT on Monday. My
Conllnued on page 5

Lincoln Day speaker.named
Rex Elsass, Political Director
for the Ohio Republican Pany, will
be the featured speaker at the 1991
Lincoln Day Dinner. sponsored by
the Meigs County Republican Pany
Executive Committee.
The dinner will be held at the
Senior Citizens Center in Pomeroy

~-Local

briefs----

Thefts, vandalism investigated
Several incidents of vandalism and a theft are being investigated
by the Meigs County Sherifrs Department.
· Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reports that on Saturday, deputies took a repon from Winifred Dent of Middlepon, who
told the department that sometime that morning, acid had been
throw.n onto her 1989 Chrysler, causing the paint to blister. Her
vehicle was parked at the Meigs High School parking lot at the time
of the incident.
Sheriff Soulsby repons that the incident is believed to be related
to the Ravenswood Aluminum Corporation strilce. ,
On Monday morning at 4:30a.m ., Deputy Jeff Miller discovered
that the front door glass at Home National Bank in Racine was broken. MiUer, who was on routine patrol at the time, reponed that no
entry had been made at the bank.
.
Deputies later learned that the Racine post ,office windows had
been Shot by a "BB" gun but that glass had not shaaered. A residence on Fifth Street in Racine also had sustained a similar shot
Alfred Birchfield of Middleport reported that a lock and hasp
were knocked off the door to his shed and a lawn mower was stolen
on Saturday evening.
The deparnnent also reports t~at a· water pump and dog were
stolen from a Bull Run residence. According to Soulsby, Angelia
White reported the incident on Monday.

Truck fire investigated
The Meigs County Sheriffs office reports that Tammy L. DiUon
of Hudson Valley Road in Reedsville was turning into a private
drive off State Roule 124 on Mon~y when she heard the engine of
her 1978 Chevrolet make a "poppmg" sound. The vehicle then
caught ftre.
,
·
The Olive Township Fire Department responded to the fire,
which caused heavy damage. No injuries were reponed.

Cla rlijilCatiOn
The Charles Wright who was a defendant in a civil case dismissed by Meigs County Common Pleas Court is not Charles C.
Wright. Jr. of Middleport.

Pomeroy accident investigated

What
of new services would you like to
Why would one of the most successful banks in
see from Bank One?
.
~ertca ask such a thing? Simple.\1\.e knowrurfuturesuc(Be reasonable now. Free samples and hot tubs cess depends on making you feel good about our bank.
don't count.) If you can think of.something that gets you
So we're willing to go a little farther than the
excired about banking with Bank One, let us know.
average banker ~o win your busiQess and keep it.
No fooling. Vk want to hear about it.
Along With new products and services, and

CJ99JIIII:£11w~ ,

the convenience and stability of one of the nation's strongest banks, this unusual attitude is what sets us apart.
To see bur approach
-·
inaction,stop by the I:IAAIV_r,.,.._l~
closest Bank One.
IJII'tUWI\ - VIW'j;".
Our door's always open. \Vhatever it takes.'" ·
Membtr FDIC.

..

·
· ed
'de
th ·
·
f
Pomeroy poI.tce mvesugat
an acct nt at e mtersecuon o
East Main and Nye Avenue early Tuesdlly evening.
Aecording to the repon, Ronald Cwpenter was turning from East ·
Main ·onto Nye Avenue on a green tight. when his pt'ckup truck was
struck by another truck driven by John Greer, New Haven, W.Va.
Police reponed that Greer failed to stop for the traffic signal and
struck the front left side of the Cwpenter vehicle causing heavy
damage. There was light damage to the left side of the Greer truck. ·
Neither driver was injured.
Greer was ciled to mayor's coun on a traffic· signal violation
charge.
Continued on page 5
~-------;.,;,._ _ _.,;,..;,._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _... ,

on Wednesday, March 13 at 6:30
p.m., according to Republican
County Chairman George M.
Collins. The menu will include
both ham and chicken to accommodate different tastes.
.
"It will be an evening of good
food and good fellowship," Collins
said.
·
Elsass is an accomplished public
speaker, according to CoUins, having hosted a weekly public affairs
TV show and a weekly radio talk
show; as well as anchoring a night- ·
ly news program in Ashland, Ohio.
"I have heard Rex, and can say
he is a dynamic, informative and
entenaining speaker," CoUins said.
Elsass also served a stint as a
member of the Mansfield City .
Council. In addition, he served as
Vice Chairman of the Richland
County Rer.ublican Executive
Commtttee. n his current position
with the State Party, Elsass works
out of the State }{eadquarters in
Columbus and is responsible for
developing written campaign
strategies, recruiting quality candidates, and working with incum-·
bents seeking reelection. Elsass
regularly teaches ljnd lectures at
regional campaign seminars for
candidates, and is nationally known
for his knowledge and,ability.
Tickets for the diriner at $10 and
are available from any Rerublican
officeholder, or from Pau Gerard
at the Meigs County Courthouse.

RIGHT TO READ WEEK OBSERVED •
Stacy Shank, rlgbt, and Mike Van Meter, students al Meit~s High School, look lime out on .
Tuesday to .read to kindergarten class of Mrs.
·Mary Carolyn Wiley at Pomeroy Elementary.
Shank and VanMeter read to the students as a

pari of Rlgbt to Read Week being observed in
the county. Other students rrom· Meigs High
School readil!g lo students at Meigs Local Elementary Schools are Amy Warth, Tara Gerlac.ll,
Heather Davenport, Julie Buck, Chrissy
Weaver, Kelly Smith, Kristen Stanley, Love
Batey and Melanie Qualls.
•

Scioto County native is
killed in Middle East
in Iraq.
he had been wounded until that
A press pool report cleared by story came out,'' Wisener said.
Department of Defense censors
She said she placed· a blacl&lt;: ribsaid Applegate was wounded in the bon on an orange wooden plaque
back of the head by shrapnel, bearing his name on a spec1al tree
which required 12 stitches.
in her front yard.
Applegate was quoted in the
The oranmental pear tree
pool repon as saying, "It gives us a belonging to Wisener and her huslot of confidence in the tank and its band, Jim, has become a focal point
survivability. We went .through it, for Scioto County's patriotism. It is
and we came out OK.'.'
decorated with more than 200
Applegate's family members bright orange plaques bearing ihc:
declined to talk 10 reponcrs Tues- names of Scioto County serviceday.
men and women. Applegate's is the
"They .are aU gathered IOj!ether only sign with a black ribbon.
in that house .... Nobody wtll tell
Cathy · Crabtree, a clerk at
them who to get in touch wilh," a Fuller's Stop and Shop, said everyfriend, Virignia Wisener, told the one knew Applegate.
Columbus DispalCh.
"This is such a small town,"
She said the family wonders if Crabtree said. "When something
the shrapnel wounds Feb. 18 were happens to somebody. it takes
the ones that proved fatal.
about five minutes .for it to .get
•'The family did not even know around.

McDERMQTI, Ohio (UP!) Flags are flying at half staff in this
Scioto County community in honor
of a native son killed in the Persian
Gulfwar.
·
The Pentagon said Tuesday that
Army Staff Sgt. Tony Applegate
was killed in action on Feb. 27. He
was the fifth Ohioan killed in the
U.S.- led war against Iraq.
The news shocked residents of
this community of 2,800, where
Applegate's mother, Dolly Bellomy, lives, especiaUy because they
thought he had made it through the
war with only an injury.
The Portsmouth Daily Times
had reported on Feb. 26 that Applegate was wounded on Feb. 18 when
his tank came under Imqi artillery
fire as his unit returned to the
Saudi-Kuwaiti border from a battle

Turner has sights set on Pomeroy mayor's post
Dottie Turner, a Pomeroy realtor, has her sights set on. the
Pomeroy Mayor's office.
Turner is the owner of Dottie
Turner Realty in Middleport, but
resides on Mulberry AVe!JUe in
Pomeroy, Turner has been a Meigs
County resident for 18 years, and a
Pomeroy resident for II year,i.
A graduate of Rutland. High
School, Turner has five children.
Her eldest daughter, Denise Bunce
is an Athens attorney. Her son,
Clinton (Junior), is currendy serv·
ing in the U.S. Navy in Salldi Ani·
bia. Another daughter, Charmelle
Spradllng, is employed at the realty
office, and two other daughters,
Monica and Katrina, are students,
Monica at Ohio University and
Katrina 81 Meigs High School.
A realtor for II years, Turner
has experien·ce with income tax
preparation, operation of a grocery
, and general store, furniture re-

upholstery and a satellite dish business. Turner was also employed by
the U.S . Air Force, and feels that
her background in business qualify
her for the office of Mayor of
Pomeroy.
Turner's community activities
include ~rvice as PTA vice presiden~ four years with the Rutland
emergency squad and six years
with the Pomeroy squad. She is
also a current member of the Middleport Community Association
and on the membership committee
and the Chrisbnas parade committee.
While with the Southeastern
Ohio Rlllltors Associatio~. Turner
served as CXH:hairman of the Green
Up America program and was the
co.chairmail of the Conti'nuing
Education for the Board of Realtors.
Turner sees village improvements as a maj~rkey to community

.

for their party's nomination..
development
"I would work toward a com- Democrat Larry Wehrung is
pletely new septic system," Turner unchallenged in the spring primary.
says, "so as not to pollute the Ohio
River with Pomeroy's sewage. I
would also start to install all new
water lines that arc in bad repair."
Turner also pledges, if elected, to
repair streets.
·
~'Houses that are falling down
and are health hazards," Turner
continued, "should be tom down."
According to Turner, the village
should reevaluate its finances and
its income sources, apply for grants
and encourage community development
"We should try to encourage
pride in living in our beautiful river
town," Turner said, and to improve
the looks of our town, and' try to
.develop the river for recreation to
make Pomeror a resort town."
·
Turner wil face fellow 'Republi·
DOTI1E TURNER
can Bruce Reed in the May primary

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Wednesday, March 6,

. o·· m ment.a ry·
C

Pag~2-TheDailySentlnel

·

Ill

Court Slreel

Pomeroy, Ohio

RG nets district title; Pion.e ers fall109-100

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
. ;I~

~m~ ,..,...,__,.L--.-.~=·~
~v

ROBERT L. WING ll:TT

Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General. Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD

Assistant Publisher/ Controller
A ME MBER o!The United Press International, Inland Dally Press ·
. Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINIOr-( are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. All ierters are subject to editing and must be signed with
~ name, addres s and telephone number. No unsigned letters

wUJ be pub-

Soviet human rights activist crusades in U.S.
and President Mikhail Gorbachev
·Gorbachev played dumb . He
stripped him 'of his citizenship. ·
said the military was actmg o~ 1ts
With hardliners threatening Gor· own, and he ordered an mvest1ga·
bachev's power, he no longer hils tion. But he.also kept ihe troops
the luxury of tolerating the dissent patrolling the Baltic· cities. Gor·
that Glasnost once promised. .
bachev is desperate to hang on .to
Gorbachev , says he hasn't the republics that are pulling away
b~ked off of his Campaign to liberfrom the Soviet Union. '
·
alize the Soviet system. But the
One of the casualties of Gor·
crackdowns in Lithuania and bachev's panic is free speech. JourLatvia say otherwise. On Jan. 13, nalists are once again. bein~ c_enSoviet troops invaded Lithuania's sored. And, if Esketov IS an mdlcabroadcaSting center in Vilnius and tor, demonstrators are risking retal·
killed at least 13 ~ople . Then a iation.
Soviet militia stormed Latvia's
Esketov' s long dark hair and
interior ministry in Riga, killing beard can'thide the passionate
four people.
commitment in his eyes. Human

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

WASHINGTON • A year ago,
Almaz Esketov was an aide to two
high-ranking mem hers of the
Supreme Soviet. Today, he is
homeless in Washington, D.C.,
relying on friends to give him a
place to sleep. He passed a couple
of nights in Union Station • nicer
digs than the steam grates, but no
·place to call home.
Esketov is from the Soviet
republican 'of Kazakhstan, and he is
a peace and human· rights advocate.
For a brief period under Glasnos~
lhat was not a crime. But last fall,
Esketov led a demonstration in
front of the KGB headquaners to
. protest nuclear weapo~s testing,

With 10 seconds left, the Uni'lersity of Rio Grande's Jeff Brown
scooped up a sudden possession
loss by Malone College, swept
down court without opposition and
dunked the ball to finish Rio
Grande's scoring at Lyne Center
Tuesday before a near-capacity
crowd. . ··
. The mpve not only lifted the
·Redmen to a I 09-100 postseason
.vicuwy_ over the highly competitive
Pioneers, coached by 17-season
veteran Hal Smith, but netted Rio
Grande its third District 22 men's
basketball championship in six
'

Jack Anderson
and Dale Van Atta ·
rights groups in the U~ited Slates
are slafling to listen to htm.
A Muslim and an anti-war
activist, Esketov became an assistant to two Supreme Soviet •
deputies Olzhas Suleimenov and .
Mukhtai Shakhanov; in the late ·
t980s. He was also editor of a newspaper called Turkestan. He .
had a warm relatidnship with offi- .
cials at the U.S. Embassy in
Moscow and met with a congres- ·
sional delegation that visited :
Moscow last year.

years.

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The Redrnea, captained by Dis·
trict and MOC Coach of lhe Year
John Lawhorn, will travel to
Kansas c\ty, Mo., later this week
to prepare for competition in the
fttst round of the NAJA National
To-urnament, which begin• Tues- .
day, March 12 atKempea-tArena. ··
NAJA's national office in
· Kansas City is exl'etted 10 release
tournamentiJainngs Thursday.
Lawhorn and assistant coaches El!£1
Thomas and Jeff Lanham will
probably know which team Rio
Grande will face in the op~ning

lted the · score at 42 . Both teams
then repeatedly excbanged the lead
positioned top seed Rto Oran_de until Lester Smith's jumper for Rio
tnto the title bout Tuesday wtth Grande 11 the buzzer tied things up
second l'IP Malone, the defend· at 51 as halftime bepn.
With continued aagrenive
ing district cblmpion IIICl a 1~3-98
physical
play, the score again seevictim of the Rcdmen early m the
sawed
until
the 15-minute mark of
1990-91 scison.
the
second
half,
when the Redmen
Intensity between the equally·
matched Redrnen and 'Pioneers ~ went on a run to post theil: lrinest
apparent from the start as Rto lead of t~e game at 19 (94-'7 5)
Grande, led by a 31-poio_t, eig~t­ bef&lt;xe the Pioneers, who shot 1 disassist penorrnance by semor potnt appointing 24.1 percent from the
guard Gary Harrison, bat_tled ~ a three-point range (7-29) recovered
15·9 lead ~thin the flfSI mght mtn· to launch a spirited but belated
utes or the opening half.
ra~~r.
• Defensively, from the 15·
The effon was assisted by consecutive three-point field goals by minute mark to five minutes in the
Brown and Brad Schuben, who second half, we were a lot better
each conlribuJed three baskets from and that gs~ us that big run down
the outside to build Rio Grande's the stretch," Lawhorn reflected.
total trifecta percentage to 54.2 "We held our poise, we didn't
panic and we were in beaer physi·
(13·24).
Malone. which drew a t?Jal of cal condition than Malone. Yet,
27 points from ·center Jim Kish and Malone is an awfully good team
24 from forward Todd Rowe, con· and we knew it coming into this
tinually threatened and seized the game. We played hard - in fact.
lead (28-27) with 10:29 left,. The I've never seen us play beaer, and
Pioneers stayed ahead unttl the the fan suppoit. was tremendous."
Lawhorn singled out Harrison
5:50 mark, when Harrison's basket

rica IIICl four lOla. end two wins
in the posueuon playt?ffs which

~ tiy Thursday niRhL •
''This is a great thilll," Lawhorn
said after Tuesday's win llld subsequent victory celebration. "I'm
happy for our players because they
worked extremely hard to get to
this ' L
"~elped to have the home
court advantage, that was a key
factor to our win here tonight," he
continued. "We w9rked hard all
year to get the championship game
here, and that's wluit playing well
has done for us."·
· The
wiD enter the tour·
1111ne11t
a 31-4 record. earned
J"'OIIIar season of 28 victo·

lis hed. Lett £ITS should be In good taste, addressing issues, not persona II; ties .

Expensive elections
By STEVE GERSTEL
.
WASHINGTON (UPI) - II is an unfonunate testament to the strong
passions that Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C., arouses that the two most expenS,ive Senate elections on record both took place in Nolth Carolina.
·. The fliSt occurred in 1984 when Helms defeated Democratic Gov. Jim
flunt and the two spent, between them, an astoqnding $25.8 million, still
ranked as the costliest Senate campaign of all time.
·: A close second is last fall's race between Helms, who won again, and
Harvey Gann. The two shelled out $25 million, falling just shon of the
record.
.
•. Given that Nonh Carolirui is just lhe 121h largest slate in the country,
the credit (or debit) for lhe cost of the two campaigns rests s!rictly wilh
Helms and his ability to draw money from outside the slate for himself, as
well as for his-opponent.
.
.
. Helms, as a leader of the very conservative wing of the Republican
Pany, can hustle money almost anywhere. 'By the same token, so many
people dislike him or his positions, or both, that they contribute heavily to
his campaign.
· The great expense of the North Carolina campaign is · included in a
repon by Common Cause, a citizens lobbying group, that gives the figures
im all the 1990 Senate elections.
· To underscore the great cost of the North Carolina race, is the amount
spent in the second most expensive campaign, in lllinots. where the final
tab \Wi $13.2 million- more than $10 million Jess than in the Tar Heel
state. Sen. Paul Simoo, D-111., spent almost twice as much as Rep. Lynn
Manin, the loser who is now secretary of labor.
.' The Common Cause repon showed that Senate incumbents can -and do
get more money than the.lt ch~lengers and the spread is growing. The
reiXJn showed that spending by incumbents increased by 12 percent from
!'988 to 1990 and spending by challengers slipped by 5~rcent.
Common Cause President Fred Wertheimer said, 'Incumbents have
Glore money than they need, while challengers simply do not have have
die campaign funds necessary to run competitive elections.
: "In shon, the rich are getting richer and the poor are getting poorer,"
~e said.
• Although Common Cause is correct in pinpointing this imbalance
between the incumbents and the challengers, the end result in cenainly
~ot upset free. .
.
! For instance, Sen. Paul Wellstone, D-Pa., was outspent by former Sen.
*udy Boschwitz, R-Minn., $7.4 million to $1.3 million. Boschwitz was, ·
However. the only incumbent to lose in !he 1990 Senate elections.
·
' One heavily favored incumbent, Sen. Bill Bradley, D-NJ., barely won
against a vinually unkown and unbacked Republican sacrificial lamb.
~d Bradley spent $12.3 million for the razor-thin victory over Christine
Todd Whitman who had only $667,124 to spend.
: The Common ·Cause repon also raises the question whether incum(lents spend more money than they really needed to dispose of a challenger. For instance, Rep. Phil Gramm, R· Texas, was n~ver seriously
threatened by Democrat Hugh Palmer but laid out $12 million anyway.
• But don't feel bad for Gramm. He still has $4.1 million in campaign
mOI!IlY left over.
.

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Berry s World
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(I) 1111 by NEA , Inc.

"WE WON! WE WON!"

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By United Press International

; Todiy is Wedntsday, March 6, the 65th day of 1991 with 300 to fol·

lltw:

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• The moon IS -ng, movmg toward its last quaner.
! The morning stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and SaiUm.
:The evenina Jl8r is Jupiter.
· • Thole born on lhis date are under the sign of Pisus. They include Itali.il pliniOI IIIII ICuiiJUll' Michelangelo in 1475; French dramatist Cyrano
del BQrlerac in 1619; Enalish poet Elizabeth Barren Browning in 1806·
Union Army Gen. Philip Sheridan in 1831; humorist and shan story writU
Ring Lardner in 188.5; book publisher Richard Simon in 1899; Texas

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CELEBRATES TITLE-CLINCHER· Rio
Grande's Gary Harrison celebrates tbe Red·
men's 109·100 District 22. tltle-cllnebing victory
over Malone Tuesday by taklnc a few snips or
the net following tbe 1ame. Tbe Redmen, who

--

FOURTH GRADERS • Tbe fourtb grade che.erlea~ers from
RiverYiew School recently took lint place hono'!l•n tbetr class ~t
the Nortbealtern League Tonaments recently. PICtured are Jam.e
Wbite, Jool HlckmaD, and Suzy Milhoan.
·

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The Daily Sentinel

~
&lt;:S)t,g1 ~ 'W~ ~JZ,-IEE'GP'I(t. ~

(WPIIIMtl)
.4. Dlvllloll ol Molllmodta, be. ·
Publl1bod ovory allernoon. Monday
tbrouJII Friday, Ill Cour! SL, Pomlll'OY. Olllo, by tho Ohio Valley Pub-

Company/MuiUmedia, Inc.,

lbhiDrl

POmeroy, Oblo 4!17119, Ph. 992-2156. Second claas poataee paid at PomeroY, ,

Oblo.

Mapping future shifts and -shocks
PINEHURST, N.C. (NEA) The good news from futurist David
Pearce Snyder is that within two
decades this country will complete
a profound shift to a prosperous
high-technology economy that suppons an unprecedented number of
high-value joJJs.
The bad news is that the transition will be a difficult if not agonizing period. Specifically, the
1990s will be "a decade of economic displacement and social dis- .
tress" in which the nation will be
forc_ed to confront !'a productivity
cns1s of h1stonc scale and significance."
In a speech delivered here
recently, Snyder supported those
conclusions with an impressive
array of both historical precedents
and contemporary data. His credentials include an editorial position
on the Futurist, the bi-monthly
magazine published by the World
Future Society.
People struggling. 10 keep body
and soul together from day to day
and week to week tend not to pay
much attention to the work of
futurists who seek to discern what
will occur in distant years and

decades. Indeed, they often are less
respected than astrologers, ·whose
predictions are of especially dubious value.
Because forecasts rely heavily
upon assumptions, they can never
be wholly accurate. Indeed, the
World Future Society riotes that its
32,000 members in more than 80
countries embrace a disparate range
of beliefs about developments in
years to come:
"Some futurists look forward to
·an age of technological wt;mders living computers, robot servants, ·
genetically engineered food, medical miracles and space colonies.
But regardless of how sanguine
they are about fonhcoming ttends
and events, futurists have enhanced
influence because their increasingly fact-based forecasts arc more
authoritative - and tx:causc society
needs them.
"Images of the future arc the
blueprints we use in constructing
our lives," says Edward Cornish,
the society's president. His organization ela,borates:
"Opponunity as well as danger
lies ahead,' so people need to make
far-sighted decisions. The process

I salute Michael from Baltimore,
Ron in Yakima, Cynthia in New
Jersey and a grandfather in Austin.
Some of these people told me,
on the radio, that l was wonderful.
· Others said I was a first-class jerk.
You learn a lot on the call-in
talk-show tour, from which I have
recently emerged. It works like
this:
You write a book. That $ives
you a ticket to dance on the anvil of
American democracy, alternatively
bowing deeply at the applause and
dodging hammer blows.
You come to the srudio, the host

Member: Ualted Prftslnternattoaal,

tnludl&gt;ally PrftaAuoclatlon and the
Olllo Newopa~strlallon. National
Adverttllnl

of change is inev.ilable. It's up to
everyone to make sure thai the
c. hange is constructiv~c:, When
people can visualize. a be ..r (Vture,
then they can begm to . • te 11."
ed an estimated $750 billion in .
One measure of thO: extent to communications satellites, facsimi -·
which such forecastin.g is taken lc transmission, computerized data
seriously by those charged with bases, applications software, elecplanning for the nation's future: In tronic mail, robotic production
Washington, D.C., more than 100 devices, digitally controlled
members of the House and Senate machi~ tools, fiber optikcs and a
have joined the Congressional host of other productivity-enhanc· ,
Clearinghouse on the Fuiure, .
ing technologies.
·
·
Elsewhere, those who have
helped to popularize the are
But expected productivity gains
throu~h their best-selling books
have
not yet materialized "because
include John Naisbitt and Alvin
of
the
sheer size of our economy
Toffler. Although Snyder is not as
and
the
magnitude of our undenak:·
well known, his analysis of "Amer:
ing,"
says
Snyder. "During the
ica in the I 990s" is equally intrigu1990s,
America's
immediate
ing.
national
need
(is)
to
upgrade
and ·
During the two decades immedircskill
most
of
its
workforce"
to
·
ately following the end of Wor'Jd
maximize
the
value
of
the
new
War II, from 1945 to 1965, the
nation's economic productivity technology.
grew at an average rate of 3.3 per·
cent yearly. Since 1965, however,
That daunting task cannot be
average growth has been more than completed until the beginning of
cut in half, to 1.4 percent annually, · the _next decade, Snyder believes.
SnY-der notes.
Until then, we ·must cope with ''an
To regain needed momentum, economy in transition, a society ·
employers during the 1980s invest- under stress."

chants you up, you put 9n the cans, put a haracover bOOk on the bestand then you're talking to America. seller list) . An author appearing
It is generally believed that with Larry King reaches several
.
·
authors appear on radio programs . million people.
On a talk show, the author not
in order to sell bOOks. That is pan
of the truth. Most authors ,write only purveys a message, but
because they have a message, receives one. The next advance in
Sometimes the message is about human knowledge may come when
politics or demogr~phics. Some- publishers put authors on the road
while the author is still writing.
·
times it's about lower-back pain.
Author-types
are
,often
quite
If you're in the message busi·
ness, you reach · more people on insulated. They Jive inside a Belteven a medium-sized talk show way, of some kind, somewhere.
than you will through the book- They travel to a speech. They lalk
stores (30,000-50,000 copies can to other people who reside elsewhere, but live inside similar Beltways of the mind. They try ~o make
up for it by sounding out cab
drivers and bellhops, and by looking at public-opinion polls.
But on call-in radio, an author
swing bandleader Bob Wills in 1905; comic actoi' Lou Costello in 1908; get it between the ears.
TV personality Ed McMahon in 1923 (age 68); symphony conductor
Thus: I explain clearly why
Sarah Caldwell in 1924 (~e 67); Mercury asb'Onaut L. Gonion Cooper in more immigration is good for
1927 (age 64); and actor-direetor Rob Reiner in 1946 (age 45).
America. It rejuvenates us; it
allows it to grow; it brings in the
.. On this date in history:
best people yearning to breathe
In 1836, Mexican forces captured the Alamo in San Antonio, Texas, free.
killing the last of 187 defendtzs who had held out behind the walls of the
It has been said that the primary
fortified mission for 13 days.
·
election is America's contribution
In 1857, the U.S. Supmne Court handed down its landmark ruling that to the theory or democracy. Call-in
black slave Dred Scou could not sue for his freedom in a federal coon, talk shows, an American idea now
even though his while master had.died in a "free" state.
beginning to spread globally, also

1+---------------------..J
foday in history-----------~I

for praise for ooritributing a toW of
102 poinll in the three postseUOD
aames - 40 over Tiffin and 31
apiece ·~ Findlay llld Malone
- in sptte of a lingering toucb of
flu. ·
·
"The job be did was incredible,"
the coach noted. ·
Aside from Harrison's hish.
Mark Erslan poured in 21 points
over Malone, wbile Troy Donlld·
son added 19 nwters and a season
hiJh of 17 rebounds. Brown supphed 16 poinll and eight boards.
and Schubert dumped in 15 marlt·
ers to the Redmen offense.
In addition to the high scoring
from Kish IIICl Rowe, who al10 had
16 rebounds, Malone drew 17
points from Jon Blose and 11 from
Phil Gebhardt. .
·
Overall, Rio Grande connected
on 38 of 64 field goal atrempts f91'
59.4 percent and netted 20 of 35
from the free throw line for 57.1
percent. Together, Donaldson lll!d
Brown acc;ounted for 25 of RIQ .
Grande's 40 rebounds .. The ,team
committed 12 turnovers.
Malone, which left at 30·5,
brought down 44 rebou~d,s and lost
the ball 15 times. The VISlton went
50.6 percent from the field (41-81)
and were successful on 11 of 14'
attempts at ·the foul line for 78.6
percent.
.
The victory marked the second
time a district aown has been won
in Lyne Center by a Lawhorn·
coached team. The first was Man:h
6, 1985 when the Redmen defeated
w Ish 85-68 to become the first
Rio Grandt~ basketball team 10 play
in lhe nationals since 1954,
Box score:
. RIO GRANDE (109) - Gary
Harrison, 9-1-10-31; Jawanza
Chilcls. 1..().2; Mark Erslan, 1-6-1,
21; Brad Schubert, 1-3-4-15; Lester
Smith, 2·1-5; Jeff Brown, 3·3·1·16;
Troy Donaldson, 8·3·19. TOTALS
25-13-20-109.
MALONE (100) - Matt
Miglich, 1-2.Q..8; Phil Gebhardt. 03-f..ll; Jon Blose, 7-1..0-17; Sam
Stanfcrd, 4..().8; Walt Wilson, 2-1··
S; Todd Rowe, 9-1·3-24; Jim Kish,
11·5·27. TOTALS 34-7·11·100.
Halftime seore - Rio Grande
51, Malone 51. ,

a

Reach out and dial democracy

•

Tl1e Dally Sentlnel-Paae-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, OhiO

Tournament pairings set Thursday

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---------;------------~---1~----~·~------~------:w~~~"~"~d~a~y~,Ma~~~h-8~·:18:-1-- :.

The Daily Sentinel

1991

Robert Walters ·:

·~

POin'MASl'ER:
lo The llolly Soatlnel,
·Ill
-Court ~-·
PM.eroy, Oldo e781.

BVIICaiPTlON 8.\TD

Br c.nt• tr Me&amp;• a..&amp;e
Olio WHI&lt; .. ... ................... ........... 11.10

Olio MOIItb .... .. ...........................M.t&amp;
0.. YNr .... ............................. M.UO

SINOU:COPY

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.,

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PIICE
Dally .. .... ........ .. .......... ......... 25 C.nto

-

Sublerlber• •ot destrtna to pay th@earrler may remit tn advance direct to
ThtDally . . . .elona3,6orUmonth
bub. Credit will bt J[ven carrier each

-·_..

No ••blcrlptlono by mall pmnllted

A basketball tournament for
sixth-grade girls is scheduled to be
held for the weekend of March 15·
17 at Cheshire-Kyger Elementary.
The entry fee for the tournament which is open to any girls'
team~ consisting of players in ~e
sixth grade or the lower llf3des, ts
$2S per team. There wilfbe individual trophies for the players on
the teams in the championship
game (up to 10 players per tean:'),
and the third-pla.c e team wtll
receive one sponsor's trophy.
First-round action will begin on
percent shooting from the field in Friday, March 15 at 6:~ p.m., and
the hoopfest will conunue Saturthe second half.
day March 16 11 9 a.m. The conso"I thought we played the best Jauon round will begin on Sunday.
man-to-man defense of the year; I
thought we did a good' job in our
half-court trap," said Creighton
LEGAL NOTICE
head coach Tony Barone, whose
The Public Utilities COm· ·
team clinched the Missouri Valley
mission of Ohio has set
Conference Tournament title to
for
-public hearlnQ Case
earn an auromatic bid to the NCAA
No. 91·01-EL:EFC, to
tournament.
review the fuel proc.ure·
The Bluejays upped their season
mark to 23-7, tyin~ a school record
ment practices and
for most victories tn a season. They
policies of Ohio Power
have won seven consecutive games
Compan~, the operallon
and 15 of their last 16. It was their
of its Electric Fuel Comfourth conference tournament
ponent. and related mat·
championship.
tars.
This ·hearing Is
Southwest Missouri head coach
scheduled
to begin at
Charlie Spoonholll' admitted to the
p.m.. ® March
defensive effectiveness of the
1991
at Clty Hall, Clty
streaking Bluejays.
Council
OffiCe, 218 Cleve"We made only made seven of
34 shots in the second half,"
land Avenue. S.W ., Can·
Spoonhour said. ','I thought
ton, Ohio 44702.
Creighton's man defense causes
AI Interested pll1les wiH
ttouble. Then when thef went to
be given an opportunity
l)le trap defense, we didn t attack it
10
be heard. Fufther lnfar·
enough.''
matlon may be obtained
Soilthwest Missouri. which has
been to the NCAA tOurnament for
by contactlno the Comthe last four years a,s the Mid~on·
mission a~ 180 East
tinent Conference repreaentaltve,
Broad St., Columbus,
finished 21·11 in its first year in
Ohio 43266-0573.
the Missouri \:'alley.

Wesley Kanawalsky, busti11 Millhone, and
Stepbinie·Evans. Back row (l·r) ire Coach Patty
Hayman, Craig Boso, Julie Hayman, Ryan
Rockhold, Mike Sobieski, Jonathan Douglas,
Amy Adams, Shane Church and Coach 1'-endall
Church. Not pictured Willi David Bigley.

FOURTH GRADE CHAMPIONS • The fourth
gra.cle "Riverview Rebels" took first place
recently i• tbe Northeastern League T~urna·
ments. Tbe team also took tbirdylace 111 t~e
CoolviUe Tournaments. Pictured With the te_am s
trophies are, first row (l·r), Jeremy Marcmko,

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SIXTH GRADE CHEERLEADERS • Tbe sixth Jl'lldt cbeer·
leaden from Riverview School took lint place rece11tly In tbe
Nortbelitern League To11maments. Pktured, left to right, are
Amanda MDboan, Martie Holter ud Angle BillleiL

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For 50 years. we've handled the evtr)'day and emergency
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Ferrellgas . . . the folks lo rely on whether it's the
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March 17 at 2 p.m., and the cham·
p(onship game will follow at 3:30
p.m.
.
E
For more information, call d
Mollohan at 367· 7187 or Candy
Preston at 367-01~2.

Creighton posts 68-52 win over SW
Missouri State to win MVC crown
B United Press International . · tournament, but seriously jepar·
treighton's 68-52 victorY over dized J!le Bears'.chances for an at·
S thwest Missouri State Tuesday large b1d.
ought not only proved that the Blue·
Utilizing a sticky man-to-man
~· are ·med and ready to be a and effecuve zone defense.
~l:uine fh:t i~ the in lhe NCAA Creighton held the Bears to JUSt ~

In

atNJ where llome earrler aervtce tJ

Girls' cage tourney set for March -15

Ben Wattenberg ..
deserve nomination. They are the
electronic answer to the town meeting.
Democracy gives people a sense
that they control their own destiny.
When they don't have that, they
sometimes decide to have revolu·
tions. Those reduce the Gross
National Product.
For the price of a phone call citizens try to change the world. Politi·
cians·are among the lisreners. They
know the sound of a populi when 11
voxes.
The hosts whom !·dealt with
were mostly quite intelligent and
skillful. Some of them can read a
commercial about a trade school or
~ vilami~ and then slide gracefully
mto a diSQUISUton about nuclear
deterrence.
(The host may get $25 per corn•
mercia!, which can add up to an
exrra $60.()()().$70,000 per year.)
Michael Jackson. in Los Angeles, was born in Britain. He says
Amcncans are the best communicators in the world.
·
. So, I thank that architect in
Long Island, Barbara in Fairbanks
Gene in Manhattan and George i~
Baytown. I learned from good
teachers.

ettve, Braftbam

Newopaper
oa 733 Thlr&lt;l Avenue,
New York, N"' York 10017.

992·5097
POIDOY, OliO

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MiddlePort, Ohio

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Wednesday, March 6, 1991 -

Armstrong and Oliver leave
spring training camp Tuesday
By United Press Internatioilll
Kenny Rogers failed to sho,;; Tor
It happen s every spring - . Tuesday's workout
teams and players wrangling over
They, too, were a'!gercd over
conttacts.
the club's decision 10 automatically
. The combatants Tuesday were renew their contracts. Brown will
m the camps of the World Series
earn $327,500 and Rogers
champion Cincinnati Reds and the $287,500. Like the two Reds playTexas Rangers.
·
ers they do not have enough time in
At Plant City, Fla., pitcher Jack the major~ to qualify for arbitra,
Armstrong and catcher Joe Oliver bon.
·
Brown went 12~ 1() with a 3.60
· walked out of camp one day after
the Reds automattcally renewed ERA last season. Rogers wa5 94
their conttacts. Both players earned with IS saves and a 3.28 ERA.
$107,500 in 1990 and do not have
Elsewhere around the camps:
enough years of service to qualify
At Kissimmee, Fla., the Houston
for arbilralion.
Asttos have yet to replace Glenn
Armstroil¥ , the National Davis's power but they may be
League's starting pitcher in the All- able 10 replace his glove. When
Star Game, was given a $215 000 · they sent him 10 Baltimore, they
salary. Oliver, who drove in' the lost thea only proven power hiuer
'winning run in Game 2 of the and one of· the best defensive fmt
World Series against Oakland . ~asemen bu Manager Art Howe
received $185,000.
' likes what he sees in Luis GonzaThe salaries, for players of their lez. Gonzalez, 23, from last April
standing, are far below the market- · to February played in more than
place value.
,
~ games in three teasues includLast y~, Armsttong was 12-9 mg 21 at-bats with the Astrof
~ith a 3.42 ERA. Oliver appeared
"You ·look at some guy;, and
m 121 games. He hit .231 with 8 thefre SIX't o{ sitting back, hoping
homers and 52 RBI.
they don't have 10 go in with the
Management said it renewed the foRm~ on the line, •• Howe said.
conttacts so the mauer could be put
Lu1s wanted 10 show us what be
10 rest before Friday's start ol the could do, right there and right then.
exhibition season.
You better believe that caught my
A similar ·scenario was.played eye."
out in Po~t Charlotte, Fla., when
At Sarasota, Fla., Glenn Davis
Rangers p1tchers Kevin Brown and has pu5hed slugger Randy Milligan
. STRETCHING EXERCISES • Cleveland
Indians outfielders Alex Cole (Jert) and. Mltcb
Webster (~3) support each other during stretch·

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At Clearwater, Fla., Ken How- · •
ell, the projected ace of the PhiUies ;
staff, may have a bone spur op his l
right shoulder that could require
surgery. Howell, who missed about .
half .of last season because ·of i
shoulder tendinitis, was 11nable 10 l
throw Monday. The Phillies said :
second baseman Mickey Morandini
agreed to a 1-ycar contract, leaving
. seven players unsigned.
·
At Haines City, A a., Bret Saber- 1
hagen missed Tuesday's workout
because of back spasms and will t
not start the Royals' exhibition t
opener Friday. Saberhagen was S-9 l
last season and needed elbow !
SUrgery in July.
·
'
. Pirching coach Pat Dobson says J ·
Saberhagen must be able to pitch
batting practice Friday if he is 10 ~ ·
make his first exhibition start
March 12.
.
:

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In~ ~xercises Tuesday at the Tribe's spring
trammg headquarters In Tucson; Ariz. (UPI)

CampbeU scored 25 points againSt
his former teammates in a 94-85
victory at Minneapolis.
· .
. "That felt like a playoff game
down the stretch," said CampbeU,
who scored 18 points in the Second
half, including 5 points in .the final
two minutes to stymie the Lakers'
comeback bid.

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off first base and probably into left
field.
"Nothing against Glenn - I
lilce him as a person, and I respect
him as a lx!Uplayer," MiUigan said.
" But somehow, I just feel slighted,
that whatever I did wasn't
enOU$h."
M11Hgan last season separated
· his shbulder Aug. 7. He batted .265
with 20 homers and 60 RBI. He
says he his shoulder .has fully

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Timberwolves post first win over LA
By FREDERICK WATERMAN
UPI Sports Writer
The Minnesola Timberwolves,
who aren't likely 10 enjoy playoff
. success for several years, last night
got a taste of w~ it might like.
'!'he ~ond-ycm: franchise post·
ed us fust-ever v1ctory over the
Los Angeles Lakers as 1Tony

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"The intensity was .,eally th~re,
and the fans even got into iL I told
our guys: 'If you have an open shot
- take it, because you have to take
it to a team like that or they'D beat

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you."'

The victory was an unlikely one
for the Timberwolves, 19-38, who.
had los! 10 of their previous 12
g8111es and against Los Angeles had
failed-to win in seven meetings.
The Lakers, 42-17, have the
NBA's third-best record but their
second straight loss was irritating
to star playmaker Magic Johnson.
Girls tourney scores
"We were out-worked and outhustled," he said. "It was almost
embarrassing. We didn't play
Ohio High School Tournament tonight We're not supposed to lose
Scores
·
this way. We disrespected them ·
By l,Jnlted Press International
arid we got just what you get whe~
Tuesday, March 5
you disrespect any team."
Girls
"Minnesota just out-played us,
they
beat us on the boards and they
DIVISION I
got every loose ball," said Lakers
.
AtParma
Coach
Mike Dunleavy. "'With the
Rocky River Magnificat 59, Men- ·
exception of Buck (Johnson, who
tor 39
.
had 32 points), I don't think we had
At Muslllon
anyQJJe
else in lbe game that did a
Wooster 61, Massillon 53
decent
job."
.
Cuyahoga Falls 70, Lancaster 40
Minnesota
Coach
Bill
MusselAt Bellefontaine
man
used
a
motion
offense
to move
Celina 63, Reynoldsburg 50
the
Lakers'
big
men
away
from
the
Pickerington 73, .Syl Nonhvuew 37
basket.
.
At Vandalia
"The Lake~s do a lot of postBeavetcreeck 58, Mt Healthy 40
ups and two-man games, and it's
Vandalia Butler 49, Cin Seton 40
Important for us to get motion to
Division D
get their height moving so they
At Stow
can't rebound," he explained. .
Canfield 65, Jefferson Area 51
The Timberwolves' 42-35
Louisville 60, Norton 43
rebounding edge was a welcome
At Willard
,
sight for Musselman, whose team
Swanton 73, N Royalton 48 .
Up Sandusky 43, Medina Buckeve is 2-26 this year when it comes in
REACH FOR LOOSE BALL • Sacramento's
40
~
ter of Tuesday night's NBA, game in Sacramen·
secorid on the boards.
Lionel
Simmons (lel't) and Golden State's Chris
to, Calif., which the Kings won 100-92. (UPI).
In other games Tuesday night
At Lancaster
Mullin lunge ror the loose ball in the first quarCol Beechcroft 59, Washington CH Indiana downed Charlotte 112-101'
Atlanta OUkplayed Denver 139:
50
127, Houston triumphed over New
Logan 60, Dresden Tri Valley 46
At Dayton
Je~sey I 12-100, Chicago defeated
.Urbana 61. Cin Mercy 59 ·
M1lwaukee 104-86, San Antonio
edged Philadelphia 104-99
Day Dunbar 78, Big Walnut40
LOS ANGELES (UPI) Tyson's-heavyweight belts but
Tyson, 39-1 with 35 KOs, is
Phoenix stopped New York 101: Refusing
to dismiss Mike Tyson's Tyson pulled out because of what ~op -ranked by the governing bod102, Miami nipped the LA Clippers talk as either bravado or hyp~. he claimed was a respiratory ail116-113, Cleveland outlasted Seat- heavyweight Donovan ''Razor' • menL Ruddock publicly questioned Ies. Smce the Tokyo defeat, Tyson
o.f Ca!skill, N.Y., has recorded
tle 113- II I in overtime and Sacra- · Ruddock
Tuesday called the former Tyson's motive$ after Tyson
Transactions
mento surprised Golden State 100- undisputed champion unprofession- bypassed him and signed 10 fight fust-round knockouts of Henry
92.
.
Tillman and Alex Stewart.
al for saying he would only be sat' Buscer Douglas.
·
"If I do my best, I'll do very
Tuesday Sports Transactions
isfied with "killing" Ruddock .
Douglas ~ a huge underdog,
Y;'e,ll,"
the fanner champion said.
By Uaited Press Intenational
when the two fight March 18.
knoc.ked out Tyson in Tokyo three
College
ratings
confident
I can handle the sitI
m
Baseball
"Mike Tyson has been saying months later.
uation.
I'm
prepared
and ready 10
Baltimore - Signed pitcher
Copyrlghll99t by UPI
that he wants to kiU me," Ruddock
Ruddock, 25-1-1 with 18 knock- do baute now."
John Mitchell to 1-year conttact.
NEW YORK (UPI)- The Uniled Pn:u
Promoters Don King and Murad
lntemational Boord c1 Cooches' Top 2S col- said a1 a news conference attended outs, is ranked No. 2 by the three
Chicago (AL) - Agreed to
by both fighters. ''I think as a pro- .maJOr governing bodies. His lone Muhammad have been attempting
lege
basketboU
ratin&amp;J,
wilh
f111s-pl&gt;ce
votes
terms on !-year contracts with
and ,.colds lhsoo1h Man:h 3 in panmlhe101
fessi&lt;_Jl1al, you don't .say thin$S like loss came in 1985 when he was to stage the scheduled 12-round
pitcher Alex Fernandez, infielder
lOW poinu (hued on IS paints for font place: that m the media. He took tl to a stopped in the eighth round by
bout a1 The Mirage in. Las Vegas,
141or second, e~e . )andtmvious wer.l:'s nonk- personal level and now it's person- Dave Jaco.
Cesar Bernhardt and outfielder
Nev.,
as a World Boxmg Council
Derrick Lee.
al.,
ul know a lOt of you don't know title bout.
.
(36) (27.0) 540
I
· ·
Philadelphia - Signed second
2. Ohio State (2S·I) 503
2
Tyson,
who
has
made
such
me,"
Ruddock
said.
"I'm
not
here
baseman Mickey Morandini to !3. Indiana (2S·4)
429
7
statements before many of,bis to talk a war. I respect Mike Tyson,
4, S)'TIItUIO (26·4)
40S
6
year eontract
fights, said Ruddock misconsttued I respect all my opponents. But I'm
5. Duke (25-6)
398
8
San Francisco - Announced
the intent
the real thing.
3
6. Arkansas (28.3) 389
five-year agreement to continue
289
5
7. Arizona (24-6)
"There's no personal resent. "You can throw the coin up and
holding spring ttaining in Scotts·
8. North Carolina ('22·5) 281
4
ment,"
Tyson
said.
"When
I
made
fhp
It, same on both sides. The
9. Utah (26-2) ,
268
10
dale, Ariz.
that
sta.
t
ement,
as
the
terminology
same
goes with Mike Tyson."
10. Kansas (21-6)
162
9
Toronto - Named Mike
of fighung, that means that I'm just
II . New Mexico State (23·4)154 II
by MTD
McAlpin manager of Knoxville of
12. Ea11 Tenneuee Sr. (28-4)108 18
going to kick his butt. We're sonna
Southern League (AA); signed
13. Nebraska (24-6) 98
. 13
see. We're gonna see how bad
14. Oklahoma State (21-6) 70 12
pitchers Harry Muir and Robert
Razor Ruddock is."
IS. UCLA (21·8)
46
IS
Pauerson.
16. Miuissij'Pi Slate (20-7)39 NR
Tyson and Ruddock, a Jamaican
Basketball
17. St. Ioltn a (20-7) 29
14
living in Ontario, Canada, were to
17
18. Louisiana St11e (20-8) 21
LA Clippers - Placed forward
have fought in November 1989 for
19.
So.
Miuissippi
('21-6)
17
16
Ken Norman on injured list; acli·
20. DePaul (18-8)
14
NR
valed guard Winston Garland.
21. Alabama (18·9) 9
20 .
20 AND 22
San Antonio - Aclivilcd guard 22. Prin&lt;eUII (23·2) 8
19
INCH CUT
23. Selal HaU (t 9·8) 7
22
David Wingate. '
We Ruarantel! your salis24.
Louisiana
Tech
(it,9)
6
NR
laction. And our experi'
Seattle· - Extended guard 25. Tous (20-7)
l1J2 HOISEPOWEI
4
23
ence
in
preparing
complete
Ricky Pierce's cODUKt through
NR -1101 ronted
MOTOI
and accurate lax relu.ms will
1993-94 season and ccnler Benoit
Olhen recoivina ,.,..., ArUala State
C:O...O.U...~Crolahiiii,MidlialiiiSiate.North
give you peace o( mind.
Ben" in's through 199S-96.
Stale, Pepperclino ond VirJinio.'
~x Falls (CBA) - Carolina
' Note: By a.,... .... wilh the National
111 Second St., Pomtror
Announced assistant General ManAssodllllon of llaskelball Cooc:bes ol the
ager Leo Parent will become Gcn· Uniled Sla1e1, 111111s an pro!&gt;otion by the
YOUIINDIPEIUIIIft'
Amerlc.'• T• T•m - Put .., 10
NCAA .,d inellaible forlbo NCAA Tournaeral Manager AJri I.
-'*fer you/
1110111 ae laoliJitile for Tcp 2S ond natimal
AGENTS SEIYIIIG
CoiJtae
HOURI : Mon. tllrufrl. I •m-8 pm
championohi!JoomidonsionbytheUPlllaon!
MDGSCoum
Brown - Announced resiiiOI·
IM. 8 •m·ll pm
of Coocba. Those schools JJOIIlinois, KenPOMEROY
111 E. MAIN ST.
tion of basketball coach Mike lUCky, Marshall, Maryt...t, Miuouri, NonhMASON,
WV.'
SINCI11161
wesoom Louili~na and Raben Morris.
HZ·II74
Cingiser.
'

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Sports·scoreboard

,.,

Boys tourney scores

..v.,)'

Ohio High School ·Tournament
Results
B.Y United Press InternationalBoys
Tuesday, March S
DIVISION I
Westlake 65, StrQngville 63
..yrn Rarding 65, Austin-fitch 60
DIVISIONW
Avon 88, Elyria Cath 82
t.liUer City 109, Ottawa Hills 70
New Lond 80, Col Crawford 71
(40t)

Mew Midtown Spring 62, Waterloo
41
Shenandoah 66, Bellaire 53
Tusky Val 57, WeUsville 51
DIVISION IV
(!onvoy Crestview 59, Hicksville
44

Fremont Joe 58, Mansfield Chr 55
Holgate 66, HiUtop 57 \
1
Kirtland 63, Ber Ctt Wsn Reserve

49
Lib Benton 77, Fostoria Wendt in
SB

I,;orain Cath 69, Gat Mil Gilmour
64
t.laplewood 61, Ashtabula John 47
Nlinso
Shadyside 47
St Henry 59, Minster 47
tusky Cath 49, Freeport Lakeland
47
Wayne trace 66, Ottawa Glandorf

so.

61
•

(!ollege scores
Tlaesday Colleae Basketball
RaulII
B1. United Press International
Trans-America Athletic Confer·
ellj:t

Ql!arterfinals
~tenary 93, Samford 82
~sas Little Rock 70, Georgia
Southern 65
Georgia State 70, Stetson 64
TeiW-San Antonio 77. Mercer 55
E..a Cout Conference
Fluls
.
TCIIIl/11011 St. 69, Rider 63
ECAC North Atlantic ConferSlilllflnals
HMiford BS, Vermont 65
80slllll U. 88, New Hampshire 57
Mid-Continent conrerence

~reen Bay 56, Northern llli-

nols39
rurl Valley Conl'erenc:e

1\g

=68,·Balalo6S
,
C4f11:. Millolli 96, Missouri South- .

.64
'.
1Af lo'ylle 16, Men:ylun&amp; S8
fdtlloari W~ 8S, SB Missouri ·
81173

Nebraska Omaha 62, Mankato

. s.-e.59

-

Solidi De!rm '11, Mol•...... 91
w;tpl St. 107, YOPDII'OM SL 71

r•llfrwni• QO Noi1111iclle Sr 711

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ContiDued from page 1

~y

Four fined, eight forfeit bonds

·

"'t:

Four
finedRi andhardeight Others forfeited bonds in the court o{
110111eroy yor c
Seyler Tuesday night
·
F'IIICd were Mark Kimes, Racine, $375 and costa, OWl and $63
and costs, open ~ontamer in a motor vehicle· Micah Large
Pomero.y, $313 and costs, destruction of J?ropcny, and 563 and
costs. disorderly conduct; Kenneth E. Manlrin, Pomeroy, $113 and
costs. dismlerly conduct and three days in jail; and Carla Chaffms,
Ra~~ W. Va., $63 and~· expired operator's license.
8 bonds were Etta W1sc, Rutlalld, $45, speeding; Denver
R. Bush, l'cmeft!Y· $63, expired registration; Laura DeUavaUe Rut. land, ~8. speeding; Clay Holbrook, Racine, $49, speeding; Robert
J. Ohlinger, Letart, W. Va:• $63, expired registration; Snellen Eshei~;!!~ISne, $43, speeding; ~urt C. Graves, Holly, Mich. $48,
~r-:-- .., • .tacey D. Barnes, Pomt Pleasant, W. Va., $63, failure to
disp
. 18Yreg~sttauon, and $20, no seat belt

EMS responds to six calls

,

Sili calls for assistance were answered by units of Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services on Tuesday and early Wednesday
On Tuesday at 3:13p.m., Middleport squad went to North. Second for Robby Clonch, who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital. At 5:07 J.l.m., Mi.ddiCport squad was sent 10 South Second for
Franc1s ~n. Martin was ttansponed 10 Veterans. At 7:45 p.m.,
Tuppers Plams squad responded to East State Route 681. Jason
Coleman was taken 10 O'Bleness Memorial H&lt;&gt;Spital. At 9:27 .m.,
Po.m~y sq~ was called to East Main Stteet for Helen wiiJ'ams.
Williams was taken 10 Veterans.
.
.
.
.On Wednt;stlay at 12:08 a.m., Tuppers Pb,ins squad went 10 State
Route ,1 for (!ardon Caldwell. Caldwell was transported to St.
Joseph S HOspital. At 7: 17 a.m., Rutland squad well! to Meigs Mine
2 fm: Tho~ Cross, who was transponed 10 Grant Medical Center
by Life f11ght.

- - -·Area deaths·--requests that contributions be made
to a local church' or 10 the Meigs
Methodist Cooperative Parish.

Louise Grace
.

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Melvm G. C1rcle
Melvin G. Circle, 50, of Wichita, Kansas, formerly of Racine,
died unexpectedly Monday, March
4,1991 at his residence.
Born on Aug. 27, 1940 at
Carmel in Meigs County, he was
the son of the late Howard w . and
Mary F. McElroy Circle. He owned
an.d ~perated a Dairy Queen in
W1ch1ta and was a member of the
Eastillinister Presbyterian Church
there.
He is survived by his wife
Psbicia Blakeslee Circle, Wichita!
a daughter. Marianne ·Circle,
Olathe, Kansas; a son, Mark Circle,
a student at the Univer.sity of
Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas; two
brothers James Circle and George
Circle, of New Haven, W. Va.; a
sister Helen Perry, HoUand, Ohio;
a sister, Clara Pierce, Athensc
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by two brothers,
Wesley and Harry.
:&lt;
Funerai services will be held at
2 p.m. Friday at the Ewing Funeral
Home. The Rev. Don Meadows
will officiate and burial ;will be in
the Carmel Cemetery. Fnends may
call at the fun~ral ho~e from 9
a:m. Fn~y until the time of serVIces. In heu of fl~wers the family
requests that donations be made to
the American Heart Association.

'

DOY,INING CHilDS
MUlLEN MUSSER

INSURANCE

Pickens

Hardware

. a new ttessurer will be appointed
by the Republican Central Commit·
tee not sooner than five days, nor
longer than IS days after Collins'
res ignation goes into effect. No
. meeting has been set for the purpose of the appointment
.
According to Collins, who also
serves as the Meigs County Republican Chairman, several applications ha-:e already been received
for the treasurer's position. That
appointee will have to run for the
office in 1992.
ODOT has .requested that
Collins als.o resig!] as the pany's
county chairman, and Collins indicated \Yednesday morning that he
would tndeed resign that position,
~ut gave no date for the resignation.

Bids will be opened...
Continued from page 1
structed a new sewer system in
ties, and why the Rfinder pump sys- 1986. Their system is caUed a step
tem was recommended over a i:on- system using a Rfirider pump and a
septic tank in conjunction for each
ventional gravity system.
user. They have experienced
Mayor Fink today issued a
numerous
prtlblems with their sys- .
report on the questions raised at ·
tem.
For
instance,
constniction
·t1tat meeting and the answers given each grinder pumpatstation
had a
by village officials and the engiplastic
check
valve
which
would
neering fmn representatives. It is as
not withstand the pump pressure
followsif ·
· which in tum resulted in the valves
breaking and allowing the sewer
Question: What are the
waste 10 back up into basements.
amounts of monies to be borrowed
The Rutland system is engi.
by the village and the interest rate
neered
to correct this problem by
10 be paid on these amounts?
Answer: The Environmental · using cast iron check valves and a
sbut off valve on the discharge side
Protection Agency has committed
of
the pump station. Also, the
the sum of S1.5 million in grant
Rfinder
pumps used in the ·chesamonies; Federal Issue II has propeake/Proctorville
system did not
vided a grant in the amount of
have
an
automatic
shut
off feature
$617,000. These amounts will be .
to
prevent
them
from
overheating
given to the village for the conand burning up if clogged with a
sttuclion of the sewer system and
foreign material. The pumps in the
.there will be no obligation ,to pay
Rutland
system will have this feaback these amounts.
ture
along
with a ·bener type of
However, there will be !'Pproxigrinder pump.
mately $300,000 of additional
In
summary,
the
, monies that wiD be borrowed from
the Ohio Water Development Chesapeake/PrOCtorville sewer sysAutho~ity at an interest rate of . tem is an entirely different type of
system. The Rutland sewer system
approlllillately 7 1/2 to 8 1/2 percent per annum. The rate of interest will not have the problems experiwill be set at the lime of the loan.
enced by the Chesapeake/Proctorville system. ,
This debt Will be paid over a 15
year period from the monthly user
Question: Why was the grinder
pump system recommended over a
fees paid by the respective property
owners or users. The debt serviCe is
conventional gravity system?
Answer: The project engineers
calculated in the projected monthly
cost per 1000 gallons of water. .
in conjunction with the EPA did a
There will be no up front costs cost effective analysis for various
to the property owners.
types of sewer systems. Their fmdQuestion: . What will be the
ings show, taking into consideraanticipated month! y user rate and
tion the maintenance and effectivethe maintenance costs lind how wiD
ness, that the grinder pump sy~tem
they be paid?
is best for the Rutland area.
Answer: Each propeny owner
The Rutland Village Council
will pay approximately $10.00 per and Engineering Associates believe
year for the additional electric used
this system to be the best for the
to operate the Rfinder pump situatRutland community. There have
ed on the respective properties.
been many hours of study and
The monthly sewer rate is based
preparation prior to the grinder
on the amount of water used by the
pump system being approved to
property owner. It is estimated that
determine this is the best sewer
for each 1000 gallons of water used
system for the Rutland area.
that there will be a sewer charge of
During consttuction there will
$7 to $7 .50. .
be on-sight inspections from the
For those users that do not have
Ohio EPA., Engineering Associa metered water supply, the sewer
ates, and the Army Corps of Engirate will be based on the average
neers to assure that the system is
· water usage for the number of peoconsttucted properly.
ple living in that partiCular household.
Maintenance of the system will
be perf~rmed by a trained employee. Maintenance cosl, are also fig·
A Pomeroy man was cited for
ured in the monthly user rates.
failure
to stop after a crash Tuesday
There will be a number of extra
following
an accident on State
Rfinder pumps available for immeRoute
7.
diate replacement if a particular
Paul A. Hornfeck, 22, of 83
pump breaks down. The replacePomeroy
Road, was also cited for
ment time for a pump is approxif~ilure
to
conttol
and no operator's
mately one hour. Upon breakdown,
. there should be littl~ or no down hcense after the two-car accident in
Salisbpry Township. ·
time for the homeowner's system.
According to a report from the
Question: How will a flood
affect the operation of the sewer Gallia-Meigs post of the State
Highway Patrol, Hornfeck was
system?
southbound
on SR 7 when he lost
Answer: All Rfinder pumps will
control
of
his
vehicle and slid sidebe in a water tight fiberglass casing
ways,
striking
another southbound
unaffected by flood or ground
car,
driven
by
Aaron
B. Sheets, 17,
waters. The waste ueatment plant
of
32700
Cotterill
Road,
Pomeroy.
is now in ·the 100 year flood plain.
The
impact
innicted
moderated
All nood plain regulations have
been complied with an the EPA damage to both vehicles.
Neither driver was in{' ured.
and the Army Corps of Engineers
Sheets'
passenfer, Hoi y A.
have approved the plant and project
Williams,
16, o Pomeroy, was
facilities.
uninjured.
Question: How is Rutland ' s
sewer system similar to the one in
Chesapeake and Proctorville and
how can the problems they are
Pick-3
experiencing be avoided?
572.
.
Answer: Personal contact was
made by &lt;;ouncilman Steve Jenkins
Ticket sales: $1,316,24 1.50.
with the Chesapeake/Proctorville Payoff: $883,030.
Sewer system supervisor and their Pick-4
8471.
problems were extensively discussed.
Ticket sales: $250,359.50. PayChesapeake/Proctorville con- off: $152,700.

----Announcements---...:
:tens will hold a blood pressure;
clinic on Tuesday from 10 a.m. to
noon at the townhouse. Following
the clinic all members arc urged to
anend a meetinR in )Which there
wiD be a St. Patrick' s Day potluck
Girl scoat cookies ror sale
The Letart Junior Troop No. dimer and .three month observance
1290 will be selling Girl Scout of birthdays.
Cookies on Saturday a1 Kroger' s in
Sports banquet
Pomeroy from 9-11 a.m. and at
The
Meigs
Athletic Sports Ban·
Fisher's Big Wheel from 1-3 p.m.
quet
will
be
held
Monday at 6:30
Cost is $2 per box.
p.m. in the cafeteria a1 Meigs High,
Residential center board to meet School. All baslcetball ·plar.ers,
The regular meeting of the wrestlers and cheerleaders w1ll be
Hocking Valley Community Resi- honored. Meat, rolls, dr inks and
dential Center Board will be held tableware will be provided and parMarch 13 at the QualitY. Inn Hock· ents are asked to bring two eovered
·
·
ing Valley in Nelsonville from 11 dishes.
a.m. to I p.m. The board meets the
Chamber to meet
second Wednesday of each month.
The Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce will hold its regular
Special meeting
monthly meeting on Tuesday at
There will be a special meeting noon at Overbrook Center. DirectOr
of the Hocking Valley Community Elizabeth Schaad will be·the speakResidential Center Board on March er.
27 BJ the Quality Inn Hocking Valley in Nelsonville from 11 a.m. to I
Lodge to meet
p.m.
. ·Pomeroy Lodge #164 F &amp; AM
. Retired teachers to meet
will hold 11,5 regular meeting and
The Meigs County Retired conduct lhe FC degree on Wednes·
Teachers Association will meet day at 7:30p.m.
Saturday at t2:3o p.m. at the Mid- ·
dleport American Legion Hall. Call
Mary E. Chapman a1 992-3887 for
South Central
a reservation.
Cloudy Wednesday night, with a
chance of rain or snow early, and a
low near 30. Chance of precipitaSpaghetti dinner
A spaghetti dinner will be held tion is 30 percent. Mostly sunny
at the Hockingport United Thursday, with highs between 35
Methodist Church on Saturday at and40.
Ohio extended forecast
5:30
Cost is $3 for adults and
Friday through Sunday
$1.5 for ages 12 an!l under. A
Fair weather Friday and Sunday,
crazy hat show !lfld auction will be
with
a chance of rain on Saturday.
held at 6:30 p.m. All proCeeds will
Highs
range fro111 the low 30S:
go to the UMYF Steeple fund.
to.the loW 40s Friday, an.d in the
40s Saturday and Sunday.
Girl Scout Sunday
The Coolville United Methodist
•
Church will celebrate Girl Scout
Sunday on Sunday at 9 a.m. The
Coolville Girl Scouts will partici- Am Ele Power ...................... 28 3/4 .
pate in the morning worship.
Ashland Oil ........................ 33 3/4
AT&amp;T ........................................ .34
Items collected
Bob Evans ......................... .. .18 3/4
The Coolville United Methodist Charming Shop..................... l4 3/8'
Parish collected items for care City Holding ......... .............. :....... l4 ' ,
packages to be sent to military per- Federal Mogu1... ...... ,............17 5/8 ' ·
sonnet in the Persian Gulf. Items Goodyear T&amp;R ... ..................23 3/4
such as hygiene protlucts, sta- Key Centurion ...................... 11 1/2 ' 1
· tionery, reading material, hard can- Lands' End .................................20 ,
dies and homemade cookies were · Limited Inc ..................... ......25 1/8
boxed up and mailed. A total of 17 Multimedia Inc. ........... .........72 3/4
care packages were sent to military Rax Restaurant ....................... ! 1/8
men and women known to the Robbins&amp;Myers ...................26 3/4
parish..
Shoney's Inc......................... IS 3/4
Star Bank ............ :.......................23 -.
Wendy
Iiu'J. .......................... ,8 1/4
lood pressure clinic
Worthington
Ind. .. ...·..•...••...........23 .
The Harrisonville Senior CitiGroup 10 sbig
Dan Hayman and the Faith Trio
wiD sing at the Fun Gospel Church
in Long Bottom on Friday evening.

Weather

8.m.

will

VICTORY TREE • This tree at tbe Melas County Public
Llbrar,J: In Pomeroy was completed tile day of tbe Gulf War ceasefire. Tbe tree features 84 red, white and blue ornaments tbll were
made by Carolyn Thomas, Diane Hawley and Norma Hawthorne.
Each ornament features the name or a service person in Operation
Desert Storm. The tree Is also decorated with yeUow ribbons and
two American ftqs. Pictured Is Trevor Depoy adding tbe Rnisblng
touches to lhe tree which will remain on display for tbe remainder
of March.
.

GOOD USED
WASHERS, DRYERS,
IEFIIGERATOIS, TYs,
GAS &amp; ELEC. IANGES
'

Hospital news
Vetei'IIS memorial Hospital
WEONESDAY ADMISSIONS
·Ruby Durst. Henderson, W.Va.;
Benita Marcum , Vinton; Betty
Archer, Middlepon; Linda Imboden, Racine.
WEDNESDAY DISCHARGES .
- Laura ScOtt and Loshia Mitchell.

'

COUNTY
APPLIANCES
627 3rd Awe., Gallpolls

PREEASTER

SA~INOSI
HURRY IN
TODAY ..•
RUSSELL STOYER

I'

CREAM EGGS

' 12 oz.
REG. *2.55

REG. 45&lt;

ONLY$18 3

ONLY

Solid Milk
Chocolate· Rabbit
12

~=~5

ONLY$219

.

COLOGNE

BILLFOLDS

•

MEN'S &amp; WOMEN'S

40°/o OFF

4'

TY-PAP EUXIR

LIL SOniES

((OIU'AK AJ nLIIIIOLJ

WITH Fill ORAL
THI-0111111

STUFFED
ANIMALS
ao. •5.oo

ONLY $2 99

ONLY$2 69

2--4 ·o L lOftUS

--- ·-·---

-

SWISHER LOHSE

OFF II

Pharmacy

NOW

•
tt.nnln" ltPh.
,
Mon. thrv 111. 1:00 e.m. eo 1:00 p.m.
lund" 10:00 1.m . to •:oo p.m. 1

PR£SCRIPTIONI
PH. 992· 2955
E. M•ln
Frl...,dty lervke
Pomf'II'OY, OH.
O,MI WOalo Nltflta ' II t

.

•

GOOD
THROUGH
SUNDAY
MAICI10,
1991

'I

"

'

AMITY

ONLY$1

446-5244

oz.

NAVY
0.1 oz.
REG. 12.25

PULMONARY
REHAB

33C

RUSSELL STOYER

REESE'S PEANUT
aunER EGGS
REG.40C
ONLY 27c

BLACK LUNG CLINIC

•

RUSSELL STOYER

JELLY BEANS

HOLZER CLINIC

... 446~1699
.HO.S: I AJI.-6 P.M.

·.

Stocks

Lottery numbers

IN STOCK ·

LAWN

goals are 10 ~ a part of makmg 0001' more productive and a
better plate for all employees to
worki..J.l!IW .flat fhavc done a good
job as 1I'C8SUrcr and-hopcfully I will
be able to do the same for ODOT.•
"I have milied feelings about
leaving the Treasurer's office,"
Collins continued. "All of the
county officials, courthouse
employees, and different agencies
of goVClJIDient, and most of all the
citizens of this county have been·
exuernely kind and helpful to me
for the past 16 years. I will never
forget that.~
CoUins aniicipates tendering his
resignation at Wednesday's regular
meeting ol the Meigs County Commissioners, and his resignation will
be effective at 4:30 p.m. on Thursday. His term expires in 1993, and

• •

Pomeroy man cited
for hit-skip

r\oo.v

MOWERS

f/liall

CltJiahloo68, SW Missouri St S2

·'

---Local briefs... ----. C0 //ins ... -Continued from page 1

Louise Grace, 64, of Osgood,
Irid., died Tuesday, March 5, 1991
in Madison, Ind., following a long .
iUness. ·
BOrn Jan. 28, 1927 in Honaker,
Va., she was a daughter of the late
Melvin and Ida Blankenship Griffith. She· was a member of the
Osgood Church of the Nazarene
and president of the Nazarene
Women's Missionary Society in
Osgood, Ind. One ol her sons, Rev.
Roger Grace of Racine, · is the
director of the Meigs Methodist
Cooperative Parish and pastor of
the Racine and East Letart United
Methodist Churches.
She is survived by ber husband.
Joseph E. Grace, Osgood, lnd; five
sons and daughters-in-law, Mr. and
Mrs . David (Pauline) Grace,
Marysville; Rev. and Mrs. Roger
(Sue) Grace, Racine; Mr. and Mrs.
Mel (Penny) Grace, Jackson.
Mich.; Mr. and Mrs. Tom (Vickey)
Grace, Westport, Ky.; and Mr. and
Mrs. Steve (Candy) Grace, Madison, Ind.; a daughler and son-inlaw, Mr. and Mrs. John (Anita)
Graham, Westfield, Inci; 19 grandchildren and one great grandchild.
Besides her parents, Mrs. Grace
was preceded in death by a brother
and a sister.
Services will be Friday at 11
a.m. at the First Church of the
Nazarene in Madison, Ind. Burial
will be Saturday at 2 p.m. in Pleasant Township Cemetery in Marion.
In lieu of nowers the family

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-5 .,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Razor cut by Tyson'~ words

GREENBRIER

ella

''

Wednesc;tay, March 6, 1991

•.

�The Dally sentinel

I

'• •

'·

Annual·
•

Page-7

Star Grange meets with S i~eme
1

"SpringtiiJle" was the theme for
t!Je program conducted by Star
J!IDiot Grange at the recent meeting
Of Star Grange.
Readings included "As~·
by Eric MoniJ\)mery: "Bunmes 1n
Spring" by Whitney Ashley;
"Spring Bouquet~ by -Ginger Holcomb: "·The Le11end of Blarney
SlOne" by all jumors: "SP.ringtime"
l!y all jUniors. "Kum Ba 'Yah" was
stgned by Chip Ml!comber and
sang by all juniors. A word game.
"Springtime" was played by all
with the winner being Keith Ashley.
Elllon Barrow gave the legislati~e report. He discuSsed the situation with the Meigs Mines and
Gavin Power Plant
Catherine Colwell, women's
activities cbainnan, askel1 members .
10 make lheir quilt blocks and for

DIET RITE

and

R. C. COLA
24 PACKS
~ALUE

BUNDLEI

S-12 OL PIGS. COLUMIIA lACON,
s -12 oz. PIGS. SUPEIIOI HOT DOGS,

s-12-0L PIGS. MOUNTAIIEEI

oz: CANS

Wednesday, March 6,1991

'

'

'

24 PACK .

SAUSAGE,

AU For

$1995

:0

dates were given the obligation.
May 3 at 8:30 a.m. at •Kroger's ln
Opal Dyer, women's activities , Pomeroy.
,
· ,,
chairman, asked members to bring
Eldon Barrows gave the legislain old eye glasses and hearing aid ti.ve report. He reported that an
S!qr&gt;~, lectuier:
,
. , batteries at the next meeting, 10 be a!JQrtion bill is being rec"'led, He
• Readings included "Waitipg for taken to deputies conferonce in also discussed the Drug War Will
Spring" by Pauline Rife: "Mom- May. There is a contest for the and the Living Will Bill. .
,
in( by Virginia Carson: "Plow- county with the most eyeglasses.
The Meigs County Grange Ban. map" by Rose Barrows: "Spring
Dyer also announce&lt;! that the quet was announced for April S at
Cleaning" by Linda Montgomery: state bakiqg contest for subordi· 7:15 p.m. at Salisbury Elementary
· ~ spring Gifts" by Maxine Dyer:
nate, juniors, youth and young School. The speaker will be Gene
"Buds in Bloom" by Allegra Will; adult and young marrieds will be _ Esbenshad.e, young agriculturalist,
on the 1991 National Grange
'~Ptayer at Springtime" by Neva held at the next meeting as well as
Nicholson. A word contest was the wreath contest ror youth and Youth Team. Entertainment will be
h~fd with Linda Moiugomery' being youn~ adult WQO!CD and the purple by Bob and Kendra Ward Bence.
marun bird hbuse ror youth and
There were 27 members ~sent.
th~ winner. The PfOBillm closed by
singing "God Bles11 America."
young adult men. ·
' Harrisonville Grange will serve
ifwo applications ror memberA ~ sale was announced for ret'reSbments in May.
- ,shij&gt; were accepled and the candi-

River-Va/ley Herbalist meeting held

----------~-----rr--------

·
1

II

ENTER AT STORE

· or GIFT CERnFICATES

I
1

Sunchips
·

I

MT. DEW, DIET
or REGULAR

Name: ............................................................................ ~

Nome: ............................................................................... 1

Addrosa: ..:.......................,............................................ ~

Addreu: ............................................................................. 1

City: ....................................... St.: ............................. 1

I Ph: ..........................................Zip:

................................

!

fll!utot be 18 yeer1 of ige to enter. _No Purch11e1
1
Neceaaary. Drawing Sat., Mar. 30th.

Pepsi~Cola

.
I
Clty:............................................Stote: .............................. 1
Ph: .............................................. Zip: .............................:.... :
Drawing Saturday, AprH 9, 1991. No Pun: hall I
Nec...ery.
1

09.

FRirO-LAY-8 OZ.$1

Win A MO-PED Cycle I Win A FREEZER MICROWAVE I

Cheese

9 9 c Crackers
ZESTA SALnNE

PEPSI PRODUCTS •••••!?.!.~tS~.'!

$459
.
.
.
Master Blend Coffee ............

-

-

-

.

-

~

liD

EASTM~N'S FOODL~ND

Surf

I I
I I
I I

99 h

DETERGENT

I
I I

oz.

BOX

Yellow
Onions

I I
I

With Coupon 11nd Additional PurchaN. Good ThN Sat., Mar.. 9, 1991

,

•

MEDIUM

I I

136

·' . '

E.P., ADC - 34.5 OZ.

$2 99

I
I

.

Friendship potpourri Wllll made
meeting. Permission WaS granted 10
hold the 1991 H~rb Fest at the with each member conbibuting one
River Front Park. The Historical cup or ingredients.
Refreshments were provided by
Society and Senior Volunteer
groups have consented to partici· · Connie Hill. Sheila Curtis and
Peggy Moore. They included sour
pate 10 the event.
·
Mrs. Theiss gave the herb or the cream-chive rolls with cream
month report on Thyme, "When in cheese topping, ·rosemary-oatmeal
doubt; use Thyme." She staled that ·muffins with lemon frosting, lemon
thyme is an ideal plant for the gar· pound cake and lemon verbena and
den and for window sill containers. spice tea.
There are over 100 varietiea or . It was noted that now is the time
thyme. It can be used freSh or dried 10 plan and design your hero garand is essential in poultry season- den.
ing along with parsley and sage.

5LB.
BAG

•

,.Guests attending were District
~2 fresi'!eDt of. VFW Ladies Auxil·
tary Chns Smtih accompanted by
her:husband: District 12 senior vice .
df the VFW Ladies Auxiliary
DaWn Warner: Disaict 12 historian
ch11irman or the auxiliary June
Smith: Athens County Commissioner Tom Atkins, Dutch Forrider,
district cqmmissioner ror scouting:
Scott Cleland, disttict executive of
scouting: Red and Rose Carr, VFW
Post 9053 Tuppers Plains.
. Awards were _given from Disbicl 12 Ladies Auxiliary VFW 10
Du~-th Forrider ror 41 years of service with youth and three years in
helping Pack 376; a citation award

scouting and workina with the
youth: Scott Cleland received a
Desert Storm poster that scout
· Zackery Wise made and a Statue of
Liberty made by den leader Linda
Tippee.
Certificates of appreciation were
given to Chris Smith, June Smith
and Mary Garwood· for service in
working with youth.
Leader appreciation certificates
were presenled 10 Franklin Washburne, Robert Haper / s·hirley
Haper, Linda Tippee and Robin
ThornhiU.
Mother I!J'Preciation certificates
went to Linda Wise and Jeannie
'

..

•

FRESH
TROPIC ANA

MAXWELL tiOUSE

Orange Juice

Instant
Coffee

46 ot
CTN.

12 oz.
JAR

.iil '-~itil!

COUNTY LINE

American
Singles

ASSORTED

REG. S2.19

Mike-Sells
Potato Chips

12 oz.
PKG.

Limit Two With Coupon and 4dditlonal Purchll8. Good ThN Sat.. Mar. 9, 1991

oz.

IADDinONAL ouANnnES......st.79l .

-

I1IJ

EASTMAN'S FOODLAND COUPON

s

00

OFF

.:
I

The Midnigh1 Cloggers, under
the direction of Bruce Wotre.
Racline, have been sche.duled to
perform at Dollywood in Pigeon
Forge, Tenn., and at ()pryland USA
in Nashville, Tenn., th!s Summer.
Tbe 1f0UP will perform at Dollywood on June 10 and 11 with
fiye shows each day at 10:45 a.m.,
U:30 a.m., 12:15 p.m. and 1 p.m·.
On June 12 the JIOUP will travel 10
Nashville whiR members will prepare to perform at ()pry land USA.
. IJ.ast summer the group made
appeanux:a at Opryland USA, Sea
Wilrld of Orlando and at Walt Disney World Resott's Magic Kingdom.

l)ollywood will be llp0lliclin1 a
clolging comped doa during the
same time the clog&amp;fn will be per-

.

\

.

.,

Dolly Reed. 378-6237. Steve Reed,
pas10r, invites the public.

POMEROY - There will be a
hymn sing at Hillside Baptist
Church in Pomeroy on Friday at 7
p.m. reatliring the Gospe! Tones C?f
Point Pleasant and others. Pubhc
inviled .
SATURDAY
RACINE • There will be a
hymn sing at the Fellowship
Church in Racine on Saturday at 7
p.m. with Russ and Southern Hills
Singers. Public inviled.

.I

forming. Team member. Betty
Lathey, Cottageville, W.Va .., is
planning to compete in her age
division as a freestyler.
Other performances for the Midnight Cloggers Include shows at
New Straitsville Moonshine Festival on May 26; several appeanccs
at the Pleasant Valley Nursing Care

cates were presented to Zackery
Pvt. William (Scott) Phillips,
Wise, MitcheU Wise, Andy Baker, son or Ann Fausnaugh, Reedsville, ·
Mathew Baker, Scouy Tippie and and Bill Phillips, Columbus,
Raymond Tippee, Nickles Thorn- recently completed his basic trainhiD and Troop 52.
ing and AIT at Fort Jackson, S.C.
· Receiving bear badges and He will be leaving for Germany on
arrow points of gold and silver and March 19. Phillips is a 1990 gradugraduation 10 webelos were Scotty ate of Easte~ High School.
Tippie and Nickles Thornhill. •
There will be an open house ror
A cake ror ~1 years of scouting ~L Phtllips at the Tuppers Plams
was made and donated by June . Ftrehouse on Saturday at 2 p .m.
Smith.
Friends and rarnily are welcome.
Mitchell Wise received a
pinewood derby pin for his work
with that project
The Lotbidge Community Center also received a certificate of
appreeiatiQn l'rom Pack 376.
'
The Meigs County .Church
Women Uniled held World Day of
Prayer recently at the First Baptist
Church in Middleport. The theme
was "On lhe JOUTTlllY Together."
Mrs. Erwin Baumgardn.e r
presided and gave the welcome.
Key woman ror the· church. Mrs.
Dwight Wallace. was the lead&amp;.
Talcing pan in the program were
Mrs. Mary KauiZ,'Mrs. Ted Downie, Mrs. Bill Downie, Mrs. Edith
Sisson, Miss Rhoda Hall, Mrs. Karl
Grueser, Mrs. Lulu HampiOn, Mrs.
Arnold Richards and Mrs. George
Skinner.
Greeters and ofrering assistants
were Mrs. Bert Bodimer and Miss
Rhoda Hall. Mrs. saumgardner
gave the offering prayer.
.
Mrs. Arnold Richards sanl! a
solo, "Just a Closer Walk wJtb
Thee." Other songs were sung witll
Miss Glenna Rummell and Mrs.
Bob Parker as pianists.

World Day of
Prayer held

Board

Center in Point Pleasant, W.Va.:
the New Have·n "Friends or the
Library" Sprin' Fling on March
23; at a fund ratsing event for the
Eastern High .School Marching
Band in May: and at ~he annual
Racine's Harvesr Moon Festival in
OciOber. .

of Election recognition.

The program or recognition of
long 1lne election board wn workers wiD be continued by Secrerary
or State Bob Taft
Jane Prymyer, director of the
Meip County Board of Elections,
is askina that anyone who has
served 2S y~ or more and are
canendy a Poll worker contract her
I•

'

'

'

•

'

•

.,

...

•

Cloggers to perform in Tennessee

BAGS

Limit Two With Coupon and Additlonll Pun:h..e. Good Thru Sat., Mar. 9, 1991

•

; ,. -(.1

The Mldnight-Cloggers
10-11

.

Special of the Week!

~ub

~~~

2 liter

RACINE - A Support Gro~p
meeting for those atrected by the
Gulf war will be held Thursdlly at
7 p.m. at the Racine United
Methodist Church.

•
•

••
'

TUPPERS PLAINS • There
will
be a rolDld and square dance at
THURSDAY
the
Tuppers
Plains VFW Buidling
RUTLAND - The Rutland
on
Friday
rrom
8- 11:~0 p.m. fellTownship Trustees will meet
turing
Rocky
Mountain
Blue~ .
Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at the RutRonnie
Wood
ts
the
caller.
Pubhc
land Fire Station. The public is
invited.
in vi led 10 attend.
RACINE - The Racine American Legion Post 602 will meet
Thursday at 7:30p.m. at the hall,

\

REEDSVILLE - Revival at the
FellowshiP. Church of the Nazarene
in Reedsvtlle will be held Thursday
.
through Sunday at 7 p.m. with Jim
POMEROY - Tbe Meigs CounKitUe, Winchester, Ky., as evangelist. Special singing nightly. Rev. ty Chamber or Commerce will ,.
John
W. Douglas invites the public. have its annual sping banquet din· •·
POMEROY - Revival at
ner and dance on Saturday at Royal
Believers Fellowship Ministry on
RUTLAND
There
will
be
a
Oak
Resort. Advanced reservations :
County Road 18 Kingsbury with
meeting
for
residents
who
oppose
required.
Rev. Ralph L. Savage. Call 992•
•
the Rutland S.ewer System on
2463.
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. Call Bill
REEDSVILLE - There will be :
MIDDLEPORT - The Middle- Nicholson at 742-2454 toi informa- an organizational meeting ror any
port Literary Club will meet lion. ,
women, 18 or older, interesled in
Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. Mrs. Sib. . · playing softball at Eastern High
ley Slack will revtew "Genghis
RACINE- The Southern Jumor School on Saturday at! p.m. ·
.•
Kahn" and ~s. Roy Holter will High A!hletic Boosters will. meet
..
,
review "The Emporer' s Winding . Thurs4ay. at 7 p.m. at the JUntor
POMERO! - p~vtl and
SheeL'' Mrs Wilson Carpenter will high building 10 discuss the spons Damel Mouse and Ftsherman •
be the hostess. Roll call answered banquet
.
.and His Wife" wiD ~ shown at the ;
with cus10m or the Middle EasL
Me1gs County Pub be Ltbrary on •
MIDDLEPORT • The Evange- Saturday at 2 p.m. All area children
•
. POMEROY • Meigs County line Chapter No. 172, Order or the are invited. Admission is free.
'
Garden Club will meet Wedneday Eastern Star, will meet Thursday at '
MIDDLEPORT - The Middleevening at the Meigs County 7:30 p.m. Officers are to wear
street dresses.
port Youth League will have sign •
up day Saturday and again on FRIDAY
March 16 rrom 9 a.m. to noon.
POMEROY - There will be a Players signing up should bring a
round and square dance at the birth certificate copy . Call 992- :
Pomeroy Senior Citizens Center on 6961 for inrormation, .
Friday from 8 to II p.m. with
music by the Happy HoUow Boys, · BURLINGHAM
The
Athens. Those attendipg br_in_g Burlingham Modem Woodmen or
snackS for the snack ~&amp;ble. Pubhc ts American will sponsor a potluck •
dinner on Saturday at 6:30 p.m. •
invited.
The camp will furnish spaghetti
and
meat balls, tossed salad, bread, '•
LONG BOTTOM • The Faith
Gospel Clturch in Long Bottom corree and tea. Those attending
will have an open hymn sing on bring a covered dish. There is no
•
Friday at 7 p.m. To book, call · charge .
•

. .WIUUim S. Plli1l/ps
·Blue
and
9old
Banquetrecogniz~_s
Scouts
. Scout Pack 376 held its :.vas given 10 Edward Tippie, cub Baker. Completes basic.
Blue and Gold Banquet recently. - master, ror time or ·three years in
Cub scout's appreciation certifi-

coLBY _
LoNGHoRN ·

-----------------------·
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IIlJ i11 ..I . --------EASTMAN'S FOODLAND COUPON
--------------------~

·$1 9 9
la. , .
$ 119

'
.... Several matters we~ discussed
at (he recent meeting of the River .
Valley Herbalists held at the home •
i;lrJanet Theiss.
·
It was announced that a steering
committee met in January to set
goals, plan the calendar and to
review the b)'-laws or the grpup. A
bt)ciklet containing th6se items was
dis!fibuted 10 ~vei'Y'lne present at
the meeting.
·
. ~onn~~ Hill, Anne Kelly, lao
Gerhold aild Linda McCoy,reported that they were well received at
the Ravenswood City Coqncil

Extension Orftce in Pomeroy. This
is tile meeting that was rescheduled
from Monday.

~

·. "It Must Be Spring" was the
theme for the PfOjl'aln conducted at
the recent meetmg of the Meigs
County Pomona Grange ·by Rosalie

..

Community calendar

the men llllb IJieir wOocsen la,;m~ Pomeroy.
oi1UIIIletlis.
Tbe Meigs COUilty Orange BanCommunity Cal.e ndar Items
Neva Nichoi!IOII, deaf activities quet was annoUIII:ed for Ajnil S at appear two days before an event
chairman, read an article "Hear, 7:15 p.m. at Salisbury Elementary ·and the day ot that event. Items
Hear."
School.
must bt received well in advance
BCIJliCe Midkirr. community
The speaker will' be Gene to assnre publication In the _cal·
service chllltman. reported that the · Esbenshade, young agriculturalist, . eadl![.
sign, "We Support Our Troops" has on the 1991 National Grange
been completed and erected in Youth Team. Entertainment will be
frontorthegrangehall.
·
Bob and Kendra Ward Bence.
WEDNESDAY
Mid-AUantic Youth Conrerence Tickets are available from any subRACINE - Revival at Mt Moriwas announced for April 26·28· at ordinate grsn'-e master.
a,h Church of God will be held
Friendly Hills Grange Camp. MasHarrisonvtlle Grange will visit tlirough Sunday at 7 p.m. nightly
ters, secretaries, womens activities on Aprif 6.
·
with Donald Stacey, evangelist.
workshop was announced for April
There were 34 members and Special singing. PasiOr Jim Saner6 from 10 a.m. 10 3 p.m. at Friendly J·uniors .--...nt for the meeting.
field invites the public.
' .
Hills.
Me~b~· enjoyed soup. and
.An invitation was read from other r.efreshments following the
TUPPERS PLAINS • There
Athens Grange 10 their oyster sup- meeting.
;
will be an offtcer's meeting of both
per on Man:h 14 from 4 10 7 p.m.
The next meeting will be a fun VFW and Ladies' Auxiliary or Post
A bake sale ror Meigs County night on March t(i at 6:30 p.m. at 90~3 on Wednesday at 7:30 p.m.
Pomona Grange was announced for the Salem Center Fire Station. AU a1 the post hall in Tuppers Plains.
May 3 at 8:30 a.m. at Kroger's in members are urged 10 attend.
POMEROY - Salisbury TownI
ship Trustees will meet Wednesday
at· 7 p.m. at the home of Sarah
Gibbs.

Pomona Orange meeting conducted

s 16-0Z. PIGS. SUGAIDAlE SLICED IOlOGNA

liMIT 2 WITH ADDinONAl PURCHASE ·

---

The Daily Sentinel__~

By The Bend

I ER AR

12

•

'

Revival set
The Hobson Church of Christ
and Christian Union will be in
revival March 11-16 with Noonan
Taylor, Services"begin at 7 p.m.
nightly. Rev. Theron Durham
invites !he public.

-···

WilliTo_,
FLOWIIS
•..._.,.,.,

so that arrangements can be made
for the recognition ceremony which ·
is'plallned for sometime this spring.
. Cenifleates will be presenled 10
lhC longtime workers. Either Secretary of State Taft or a representative of his otrice will be in
· Pomeroy to recognize lhe workers.

-··-"'..
......... ••••Ill
eel1 or •leh

"TIIo

· · ·

,,

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP

ril.fm•lee Send• Love"
p 992-6454

PIZZA BURGER
'.

S1.54

WITH FIIES.......... $2.24
..

ADOLPH'S DAIIJY VALLEY
"At Thllnd of the P.....roy.Maton lrllfte"

POMIOY, OliO

PH. 992·2556

�.
Wednesday,

Page 8 The Dally Sentinel

-People in the newsBy United Press International
. DOG BITES QUEEN: Queeo
Eli:l:abetb 0 found herself in the
midst of a dog fight during the
weekend and ended up on lhe losing side. The queen was out with a
pack of her pet dogs on lhe grounds
of Windsor Castle when several of
the corgi.s started fighting. When
she intervened, the queen was bitten on a knuclde on her left hand
and had to have three stitches.
Members of lhe royal staff heard
the ruc.kus and rushed in to break. it
up and the queen mother's chaufreur also was billt\n. In 1989 one of
the queen's dogs, Chipper. was
killed by a pack led by her mother's corgi; Ranger. Corgis, short-

legged, long-backed dogs originally bred f&lt;x' herding livestock, haye
areputationforsnappingatpeople.
ASTRONAUT'S WRITE
STUFF: Scott Carpenter , astronaut, test pilot, and undersea
explorer, now is an author. ~nter's "The Steel Albatross'' is a
techno-thrill er-science fiction
adventure about conflict between
lhe Urtited States and Soviet Union.
Looking back on his other careers,
Carpen ter says his underwater
work mar have been less glamorous but was just as crucial as his .
work way above sea level "It's not
the ultimate frontier," Carpenter
says of space. " You go to space

once and you're an instant hero. In
lhe ocean. you put your life on lhe
line just as surely and nobod Y'
~nows or cares about it. That
always disturbed me.:• Carpenter
was one of the originai.Mereury
astronauts and also led a 1965 Sealab experiment in which he lived for
30 days at 205 feet under the Pacific Ocean.
TENNIS FASIDONS: There's
competition in the stands as well as
on lhe courts at the Vriginia Slims
of Florida tennis tournament under
way in Boca Raton. While~&gt; Jen·
nlrer Caprlatl, Stem Grar and
Gabriela Sabatioi are going at it
· on lhe court. desig11er Oleg Cassin!
will be checking outlhe audience
daily and presenting a $1,000 gift
ceni~cate 10 the moSt fashionable

fan. cassini says he's 1101 necuserily looting fer the bc:sl du:lSSC!I person but "the most beautiful, most
elegantllld best put together."

.. _, .

·Meigs County land tranfers

Com Ued by·
Terry E. Hysell, easement, to
Emmogene ~olltelni Congo
Ohio Power Company,J'Ilmeroy.
John James 1t. and B~ E.
Recorder, Melp County, Ohio
HAMMER TIME AGAIN:
Court House
James, easement, to Oh1o Power
MC Hammer, wbo was a Ilia wiD- ·
Danny Darst lnd Sharon Darst. Company, Pomeroy• .
ner at tan month's Grammyt, is ease111ent,
to Ohio Power Compa· . Kenneth Turley ~!ftd Karen E.
still gathering awards. Hammer ny, Salisbury.
.
. · Turley, .41A, to MariQn D. Slotec,
was honored Ibis week with 111110
Charles
b.
Buckley
and
Wilma
SutiOn.
- the Canadian version of the
Grammy- for the best interns- J. Buckley, easement. to Ohio
tiona! album and he also .dazzled PowerComOIIIy. Sutton.
Edward L. Baer and Ruby Baer,
the audience at the awards ceremoeasement,
to Ohio Power Compa·
ny wilh a high-stepping version of
ny,
Sutton.
his "Here Comes the Hammer."
Other big Juno winners were
Madooaa, whbse ··'Vogue" was
named international single of the Leonard Cohen won a Hail of
year, and lhe Rolling StoRes, who Fame Juno while Cellae Dilio of
took international entertainer hon- Quebec won for best female vocalors . Montreal-born fol~~if!.ger ist and best album.

.-

'

March 6, 1991

" " ...

'

QUESTION • My daughter is a
distance runner and eats a vegctari.
an diet. I'm concerned lhat her. diet
isn't providing enough of lhe neeessary uutricnts. What do you
lhinlc1
ANSWER • We humans are
equipped biologically to eat food
from both animal and plant
sources. In scientific terms we are
"omnivorous" because of the varied nature of our diets. It would
seem.that Ibis tremendous diversity
of diets would make study on the
effect of diet relatively easy .
Unf011W111tely, it hasn't worked out ·
that way. Individuals can remain
apparently healthy for years·on a
diet low in certam nutrients like
calcium or iron, or high in substances like fat, without showing
adverse effects. Only after a period
of years willlhe problems start to
show up. Because many other
things which could also affect
health ciccur over this same period
of years, it is difficult to demonSlrlle a cause and effect relationship wilh diet
.
·. We aU need small aniounts of .
iton to replenish itw w~ is lost
asredbloodcells .wearout Women
have an additional demand for iton
to replace the monlhly menstrual
loss. Iron is present in·plant materi- ·
al, particularly in green, leafy vcgetables, but this plant-bound form
of iron is 1101 absorbed effectively
by the digestive uact. Therefore,

strict vegetarians have difficulty
wilh anemia produced 11r low iroD
levels. In addition to being female

IDd a ve~ your daoghter has
an additiooal risk factor for this
type of anemia siDcc she is also a

dis!Mcel'llllllel'. ·
R

ch published in the IIIIer·

11atio11al JoMrllal of Sports

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

FamilY.

Medicine

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

People born after 1937 will have
to be older lhan age 65 before they
will be eligible to receive their full
Social Security retirement benefits,
-"' accorl!!ng to Ed Peterson, Social
-- SecuritY. manager in Athells.
Wh1le life expectancies have
increased dramatically since Social
Security was enacted in 1935, lhe '
retirement age has remained the

~~~: ~~t~~e~~n~~~~ :a~ i~

'
By WILLIAM
HARWOOD
sQlar- powered spacecraft uses
UPI Scleoce Writer
rad&amp;r beaitis instead of visible light
Lava from planet-wide volcan- to "see" through' the lhick clouds
ism apparently resurfaces vast that bloclc the planet's surface from
areas of Venus eve~ 500 million view.
.
years or so, and wh1le direct eviThe resulting data can be prodence of active volcanoes has yet cessed by computers on Earlh to
to be seen, scientists are confident create photograph-like images of
NASA's Magellan probe will find Veuus's surface, showing features
sucb proof in lhe months ahead.
as small as 350 feet across - about
"The entire surface appears to lhe size of a football fteld - and
have been reset in the last half a 10 times better~ the beSt previbillion years or so," Laurence ous data.
Soderblom, a geologist with the
The data also can be used to
U.S. Geological Survey, said Tues- make dramatic movies. Project
.day during a briefin~ at the Jet . officials unveiled a breathtaking
Prof!ulsion Laboratory m Pasadena, computer video Tuesday lhat simuCahf.
lates a high- speed dash over two
"What's suggested is that every towering Venusian volcanoes half a billion years or so ... major whether they are active or not is
eruptive events oc.cur that com- unknown·- several impact aaters
.· plelely obliterate the (imJl!lCt) cra- and a deep "rift" valley.
tering record. So we don I see ... , Despite problems with a data
farther back in time lhan a billion recorder and a computer unit that
years or so. In fact, we probably occasionally !mocks the craft out of
see farther back in places on lhe contact with Earth - lhe fourth
' Earth than we do on Venus."
and most recent such incident hapAs for whether Venus is vol- pened Monday night - Magellan
canically active to lhis day, Magel- ts expected to photograph 82 perlan project scientist.Siephen SaUD· cent of Venus's surface by May 15,
ders said he is ''positive that at
some place on lhe planet there will
be acnve volcanism."
But the flood of data from lhe
Magellan J1!dar mapping probe has
not revealed any evidence for lhe
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
. kind of slow-moving continent- (UP!) - NASA engineers are
sized ·"plates" that make up studying a tiny crack in a hinge
Earth's surface.
aboard the shuttle Atlantis to deter·
"We haven't identified anything mine if the ship can be safely
·that looks lilce Earth-lilce plate tee· launched without time-consuming
tonics," Saunders said. "The · repairs like those grounding the
plates appear to be perhaps a little shuttle Discovery.
squishier lhan on Earth. On Earth,
A teleconference was scheduled
we have a few ex'tremely rigid · Wednesday aflernoon to resolve
plates and all the activity takes the matter before Atlantis's sched·
place along lheir margins.
·
uled move from its hanj!ar to the
"Up 10 now we've seen kind of Vehicle Assembly Building Friday
a hodgepodge of tectonics and vol- fer lltaChment to a pair of boosters
canism and not been able to see and an external fuel tanlc.
enough of an area to reveal a pal·
Rollout to launch pad 39B is
tern," he said. "But as we're loolc· planned for next wr:elc with liftoff
ing at larger and larger areas, we're on tap around April 5, one day later
· able to see patterns emerging."
than originally planned. The goal
The Magellan probe. launched of lhe flight is the deploymeot of
from the shuttle Atlantis on May 4, the 36,000-pound Gamma Ray
1989, slipped into orbit around Observatory, a space telescope
Venus on Au~. 19, 1990. The built to study exuemely high-ener-

Pound

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NEWAYGO. Mich . (UP!) Army Spec. Melissa Rathbun·
Nealy - the first American
woman taken prisoner in lhe Per·
sian Gulf war - is being flooded
wilh offers for the film, book and
television rights 10 her story.
Among the offers is $100,000
for an exclusive inlerview wilh the
Globe. a weekly supermarket
tabloid, her father, Leo Rathbun.
said Tuesday.
But Rathbun-Nealy, a Grand
.. - Rapids uativc who will tum 21 on
Saturday, does not consider herself
a hero, her father said.
"I'm no hero. I just got sbiCk in
the sand," she told her parents
when she called Monday night
from the U.S. hospital ship Mercy
following her release with five
other American POWs.
. Talking to reponers outside his
Newaygo home, Ralhbun said his
. daughter would spend up to four
. · · _!lays· on. the Mercy, followed by
· !Wo diya of rest before her return
to the United Statoa. He and his
wife JCBJ, lliU are waiting 111 learn
exacdy wbell and bow they wiD be
reunitild with lheitdau.dtter.
~bun-Nealy told her P'!fCD~
she ipllllt mudl c1 her c:aptiVJ~ m
Baglldad 1lono in a room w1th 1
window through which lbe could
see aUied bolllbl dropJJiJ1I on the
. · ·: city. Silo laid the 'WII ire8ted well

r·

I

'

• -~

•

·-

same.

People who are reachinj! retirement age now can stan lherr Social
Security benefits as early as age 62,
but thetr benefit amount is reduced.
If lhey wait until age 65 to start
their Social Security,lhey receive a
full .unreducc:4 benefit.
The usual retir~ment age for
peo~le retiring n'?w is age 65 .
Soc1al security calls this "full
retirement a~e." and the benefit
amount tllat 1s payable is consid·
ered the full retirement benefit
Beq!Use of longer life expectan·
cies, lhe fuU retirement age will be
increased in gradual steps until it
reaches age 67. This is lhe result of
legislation enacted in 1983. This

change starts in the year 2000, and
it affects people born in 1938 and
later.
Look at the chart below to find
your full retirement113e.
AGE TO RECEIVE FULL
SOCIAL SECURITY BENEfiT
· Year of birth Full retirement .
age
)re-1937
65
19.38 65 and Jwo months
1939 65 and four monlhs
1940 65 and six months
1941 65 and eight monlhs
1942 65 and ten months
1943-54
66
!955 66 and two lflOnthS
!956 66 and four months
1957 66 and si;x months ,
1958 66 and eight months
1959 66 and ten months
1960+ .
67
For more information about
Social Security ·benefits, contact
the Alhens.Social SeciiQty Ol'fice, ·
221 1/1 Columbus Road, Athens,
592-4448. The toll free number is
1-800-234-5772.

..

·Seminar on co-dependency set
"Co-De!lendency: Women Who
Love Too Much" will be the pfogram topic. for a free educational
program to be held at St. Joseph
Hospital in Parkersburg, Monday
from 7 10 9 p.m. on the hospital
conference room.
HERS Women's Services is
SJionsoring the program which will
be presented by Carolyn Escandon,
Clinical Director of St. Joseph's

characreiistics of co-dependency,
such as dependenc~ on other peepie, feeling lilce a v1ctim, expecting
self-perfection, trying to please
olhers rather lhan oneself, and feeling responsible for other people's
feelings, well-being, needs or
actions. It will also explore reasons
for lhese and other characteristic:- :·
behaviors and will offer healtJcy;.';
altemauves and resources.
· .::; ..

Venus -~ Me~~~::muni!mfocusonthe (3~~~~~i~ionis4encouragci~1:
Ven4s·s thlclc atmosphere shields ---L·e_g_'1.-o-n--A-.u-x-I-.1-1-.ary------i·'i~

lhe end of its initial 243-day mapthe planet from smaller impacts
ping run. ·
The National Aeronautics and and affects lhe way latger impact
Space Administration intends to craters are formed, giving scientists
continue mapping beyond that ~f~;:r:~yingthecomposition
point, however, to include coverage
"The atmosphere of Venus is
of the planet's south pole region
and to fill in the gaps left from lhe quite lhiclc," he said. "Thinlc about
primary mission.
the case of firing a pistol into an
In many ways, Venus is Earth's aquarium. The effect on lhe {bullet)
twin in the solar system. Both plan- is to decelerate k The other effect ._
ets are roughly similar in size and is 10 accelerate lhe atmosphere.
mass; both are relatively close to
"So there's a timing going on
the sun, lind both probably were here !" which ~n impact ~1111 and ·-almost identical very early in the the eJecta, _which IS a comcal sheet
history of lhe solar system .
of material that comes out of the
But somewhere along the way, crater, will take several seconds to
the environments of Venus and form . Soon thereafter, the atmoEarth diverged, leaving Venus lhe sphere arrives with a giant blast
victim of a runaway greenhouse having been accelerated by the paseffect in which the solar radiation sage of the body."
uapped by the planet's lhick cloud
That column of air then smashes
cover produces surface tempera- into lhe cloud of material thrown .
tures of 900 degrees Fahrenheit up by the initial impact, which has
hot enough to melt lead - and lhe result of "folding lhat conical
pressures comparable to those sheet down onto itself."
found at an ocean !lePth of 2,500 to
The a~ce ol the resulting
3,000 feeL
· "splotch ' can provide valuable
S()derblom said the density of insights into lhc nature of lhe surface material ejected by lhe impact

• · Atl ant•lS h•tnge crack
NASA. stud leS

timit2 With

~

Full retirement age listed :

Magellan stripping mystery from

Ribeye Steak

,. •

The Dally SenUnei-Page-8

Medicilae found a· Significant
decrease in iron concentration in because .of lhe associated calories. tain large amounts of fiber and lhat
the blood of distance runnen. This This can result in osteoporosis, reduces the risk. of colon cancer.
loss axnes about from an increased which is the weakening of bond
Let me put this aU in perspecred blood ceU destructioo produced because of loss of calcium contenL
tive. It. is JQsible to eat a vegetariby running, microscopic bl~ing
You may be surprised to hear an diet. ~ an athlete and be ~lhy
into the urine and bowel, and loss the word "osteoporosis" in this . • but it takes work. I'd su~ that
ol irou in sweaL This tesejU'Ch and context. While the condition is she see a doctor to .be tested forp:aclical experience suggcstlhat it · more common in the post- anemia. This will indicate if she
IS very difficult to maintain ade- , menopausal woman, young female
should be taking an iron supplequate iron levels in vegetarians athleies can indeed become its vic- · nienL Testing for calcium content
who are physically active. This is tims. In the most Serious cases, ihe of bone is much mere diffiCUlt and
particularly true if they are female.
young athlete has bone pain and expensive. r lhinlc she should take
Calcium is another esseutial stress fractures while still in her supplemeutal calcium to ensure
nutrient. It is needed for the con- 201 and 301. Typically, lhough, the lhat she is consuming a suffiCient
traction of muscles, the functioning alhlele just loses enough calcium quantity of lhis essential mineral. I
ol oerves. and other tasks, includ· from her bones that she develops wouldn't recommend testing for a
iDg the fcrmation of the hard min- . osteoporosis very soon after calcium deficiency unless she is
eral pan of bone. In individuals menopause.
•.
who do not consume enou$1J calci.·
While .J've concentrated on
urn 10 maintain normal blood lev- some of the negative aspects of would be wise to see an endocriels, calcium is ''borrowed" from . vegeterian diets in active, young nologist wbo deals with bone disbone to ~p lhe blood level con- women like your daughter, there case. Together, they can decide
stanL
are advantages to reducing or elim- what testing is necessary.
Competitive distance runners inating meat from your diet We all
"Family )'tfedicine" Is a weekly r
tend to be .very lean and wali:h the know that consuming less saturated
calorie content of their diets close- fate wid cholesterol reduces the risk column. To submit questions,
ly. Calcium-rich dairy products are of heart disease, and it's great news write to Jolin C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio
one of a kind food lhat is usually lhat vegetarian diets are low in sat- Unlver$lty College ofOsteoplllblc:
reduced er eliminated from lhe diet urated fats, Further, lhey also con- Medicine, Grosvenor Hall,
Atbens, Ohio 45701.
, ·
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~------------------------~------~--~----~=---~--

--

'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

female athletes on vegetarian
diets have special needs .

wednesday, M•ch 6,1991

. Pomeroy-MiddlePort, Ohio

..... .

be
ed
.
sm IIOihly, Dtscovery WI 11 mov
back to pad 39A; for a lau.nch
attempt .around Apnl 25.
.
But 1f NASA managers decide
to fix the crack aboard Atlantis,
hardware from Ende·avour likely
would be needed. In lhat case. lhe
hinges from the shuttle Columbia
could be pressed into service for
use by Discovery.

gy radiation from deep SP3ce.
"I'm through tryin~ to figure
out how lhis decision IS going to
go," one National Aeronautics and
Space Adminisuation manager said
of the crack issue. "I· thought last
week we were going to clear 'Discovery for flight. I'm not sure how
this decision is going to turn ouL ••
Discovery's launch on a "Star
Wars" research mission, originally
set for this Saturday. was canceled
last week because of cracks in lhe
hinges of two critical doors in lhe
belly of the shuttle lhat must close
properly in orbit to aUow a safe reentry.
While Atlantis's hinges initially
were believed to be crack-free. a
detailed inspeCtion over lhe weekend turned up a tiny hairline defect
in one of the hinges. Indications
Tuesday of a second crack later
were discarded, althou~h stressrelated corrosion and pitting was
seen on several hinges.
The confirmed crack is much
smaller than lhose aboard Discovery and does not appear to extend
aU the way through lhe metal of the
hinge assembly. . .
Fixing the crack likely would
delay Atlantis's launch up to two
weeks. While the engineering com·
munity appeared to favor flying as
is, how NASA might justify such a
decision was unclear J!iven the
agency's groundin~ of DISCovery.
lust after midmght Wednesday,
Discovery is scheduled to he roUed
off pad 39A and hauled back to lhe
Vehicle Assembly Building so it
can be removed from its external
tan1c and towed into a nearby shutde hangat.
Engineers plan to replace Discovery's flawed hinge assemblies
wilh door-closing hardware taken
from lhc new shuttle Endeavour,
currently being preoarcd fer delivery to the Kennedy ~pace Qlnrer.
Assuming lhe re~..~orlc goes

·

d
se1ects e1egates
·

Buckeye Girl's State dele gat~
and alternateS were selected by the
American Le~ion Drew Webster
Post 39 Auxiliary at its recent
meeting at the post home. .
Selected as delegates ore Barbara Anderson, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Don Anderson; April
Hudsorl. daughter of Mary Hudson.
Alternates selected are Julianne
Buck daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Buck· and Healher Davenport daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
JerrY Davenport.
It was announced that poppies
have been ordered for May Poppies
Day to be held May 23·25.
Girl's State teas will be held
May S at Wellston at 2 p.m . All
delegates .and alternates are to
attend and parents are also weicome to attend.
All Unit 39 members as well as
the public are being asked to sign a·
letter and send to Congressman
Clarence Miller to keep religious
programs on radio and television as
well as to keep the pledge of allegi@nce in school.
-.- -The-unit sent 96 leuers to service men and women from Meigs
and Gallia Counties serving wilh
Operation Desert Storm.
· ·

4 P.M. - 9 P.M.

Spaghetti
- .. .

•Lasagna

SPRINfl VAllFY CINfMA
! 4h

Tournament set

,, 1)? l

•ChiCken
CacciatQrie

._, ,ec--

All Dinners Served With Our all-U..Care-T~Eat
_ .~- Soup, Fruit &amp;: Salad Bar&amp;: Garlic Bread,
Or Try One Of Ttie Other Fine Menu Selections.
Take Out Or4ers Available.
"Senior Citizens Receives 10% Discount
.

Mason Family Restaurant

Am!&gt;'

Rt.33

..

''

-~

·-

Family Restaurant
·rhursda ·N. l is

Sadie Turner, longtime resident
•
of Meigs County, observed Mr - olo ~
961h birthday SaturdaY.. Cards may
be mailed to her at me·Brenn-Fiekf
Nursing Ulnter, 1980 Lynn Drive,
Orrville, Ohio, 44667.

~

'.

',. .·.'·ff·~·.
.

Two named to
·dean's list at school

Observes birthday

..

The group sent eight birthday :f=
cards with $5 each to the Xenia --::
Veteran Children's Home and $500 •.•
to local and department donations. ••
Mildred Hudson, community
service chairman, reported on a
project to lhe Athens Heallh Center
and thanked anyone who conllibut':
ed.
••
A birlhdat dinner for the Drew ;·'Webster Post will be held Mareh ·~ ! :.
19 at6 p.m.
':1:;
"',!',..,""
. .............--:.

The doors in question, called
Two Meigs County students at
exlemal tank umblical doors, are Mountain State College in Parkersfolded back and locked open dur- burg earned a grade ~int average
ing launch aUowing 17-inch-wide of 3.5 er above to be listed on lhe
fuel lines riom the external tan1c to president's list for the recently
enter the belly of the orbiter to flied~ completed fall quarter. They were
lhe ship's lhree main engines.
- , ~tacr Hysell !If ~omcroy, a major
After the tank is jettisoned in m hildter .accounung managern~nt;
space electric motor$-drive the and Jenmfer Johnson of Rac1ne,
doors SbuL Both doors are covered who is studying dependency elisorwith heat-shield tiles and failure of ders technology.
cilher panel to close properly could
prove disastrous during re-entry
when the belly of !he shuttle is
exJQed to extremely high temper·
atures.
la&lt;!&gt;vn
Engineers said last week the
cracks ~ to be lhe result of
metal faugue . and stress. Sources
said Monday that Discovery's doors had been opened and shut, or ·
"cycled," 80 to 100 times since its ·
last flight as part ol routine ground
processing.

and even managed to gain weight. .
"She said the Iraqis were absolutely beautiful people, that lhey
took excellent care of her," Leo
Rathbun said.
·
She told her parents the wounds
she sustained from a bullet to one
upper arm and shrapnel in the
lower .m when she was captured
1an. 30 were mosily healed.
Rathbun-Nealy and Amty Spec.
David LoclceU were talten prisoner
when their truck got stuck in sand
near lhe Kha(ji bauleground at lhe
Kuwait-Saudi Arabia border. Lockell was also among the POWs
released Monday.
The former prisoners arrived
aboard the hospital ship near lhe
Persian Gulf emirate of Bahrain
after 1 17-bour llip from Baghdad
via Jordan.
·
Rathbun-Nealy carried flowers
as she boarded the ship about an .
hour before dawn. Once on deck,
the and lhe others were able to call
A men's independent basketball
t~eit f1mili~s for the first time ··tournament will be held Marth 16,
stnce ~ re.raM.
17 and 24 at Meigs High School.
· OD Taeaday, IDOther woman, Entry fee is $90 per team wilh a 10
Maj. R~da Leah Scott Comum team maximum, double eliminaof PreoVIlle, N.Y., was among 1!5 tiim. F'trtt. sct:ond and third place
Amer!can POWt released. A awards will be given. Entry fee
Detroit woman,
Staff ~gt. must be prepaid. Call Zane Beegle
Crystal Rlclc.ea, 'WII liJied as IIIISI· for Information at 992-6626 or
ing in action when she someho1!" 247-44SS. Mouey raised will be
.JOt lePIIIfed.from a convoy as tt wed Ill fllld spring sportS at Meigs
Ctumil Kuwait on Feb. 26.
High School.

...
::.

Muon,WV

�Wednesd~,

Page-10- The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

March 6, 11t91

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-1 1

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, March 6, 1991

.,

-

Read the Best Seller

·Read the CLRSSIAED RDS

Classifi8

•

•

.•
•.

.•

.•

Davs

for e.ch dort as sep ar at e ad a:

ovu• 18 . 00Q

·-· --

-.

'

. BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30P.M: DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION·

America's 1
11

•
•
•

•

SIMON'S
PICK-A-PAIR
SAME LOCATION

•
•

Use Court Street Entra nee

••

POMEROY, OHIO

Gallia C ounty
Are a Code 614

446 GaUipohs
367 Ch•hH e
388 Vinton
245 ' Rio Grand e
256 Guya n Dial.
643 Ar•bi t Oin
379 w..nut

Meigs ·c~unly
Aru Code 61•

991 M1ddl.,or1
985
803
247

949
741
667

Pom•ov
Ch•ter
Portl.-.d
' Letart hils
Racine
Rull.nd
Coo t"'•le

773

H~en

895 leiMrl
9J7 Bull~

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columb&lt;ll. Ohio
•-·-ry 111 1991
F."""'
'
Copy
Co nt-- Soloo m,•l
·-·
No . 1.1-21
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
IRZ-11303 f11
S-d propoNII wnl be
roc ..v... It I h• o ffl co o I the
Director of the Ohio Deport·
mont of Tr.,I!Porc.tlon. Columbuo, Ohio, untM 10:00 A.
M .. Ohio Stondord Time.
Thurodoy,
Fobruory 21,
1991, lor improvomontoln: .
Molgo County, Ohio. on
ME0-338· 0 .81 ,

drolnlng. povlng with I I·
pholt concrete on 1 bltuml·
nouo oggregota beM ond by
conlln&gt;ctlng:
lrldgo 'No.
MEO •338 •008•v. 1 th rM
opon compotlto preotre111d
concreto box on cop pod pile
obutmonto .,d T-type plero
(opono 811 loot • 0 lnchoo,
roodwoy 32 loot - 0 lnch01
bel alOin guordrollol. ovor
Yoltowbulh Creek .
Plojoclllnglh - 4IIO.OO ln.
lwt or 0.0811 mh.
Wort&lt; length - 870.000
lin. foot 0&lt; 0 .127 mlo.
Povomont width - 22 foot.
The Ohio Doport-nt of
Tronoportollon h-by notlfloullbl-ruhotHwHiof·

;

11

~~~~3;3~8~1n~S:utt~on~~f~lrm~ll
Real Elllte 1v~oliy 1n~.,~re~t~ho~t~ln~o~ny~
entered Into pur·

POMEROY, OHIO
992-2259

Starting At .$795
FREE DELIVERY
HOURS: Mon. thru Sat. 9-5
PH. 446-0322
3 Miles Out Bulaville

•'

12

Situa ttan W anted

F~ r m

W M1te-d t o Bu y

livestock

64
66

Haw &amp; Gu11n
Sued &amp; FtHI IIi.ter

Transportation
71
72
73
74
75
76

Autos lor Sal o
Trucks for Sid e
V11ns &amp; 4 WO 's
MotOJcy ch•
Boats &amp; Motors lor S•le
Auto Pa1t s &amp; Accessou U!!i
77 Au lo Repil•r
7 8 Cilm p•ng Eqm pmen t
79 Cotmpe rto a. Mot or H omt:s

4 S . Fu rnis h ed flo oms
46

Space f or R ent

47

W;mted to Rent

48

Equ ipm ent tor Runt

49 f or l ease

1~
18

Wanlecf To Cio

21
22
23

Busin•s Opp or tun.l y
Mon l!l'¥ to l o•n
Pro l•11ona l Set vices

Merchandise

Mt~oc•U in uo u s

Public Notice

1

bldo.

8 1 Home lnuuovomenh
8 2 Plu mbm g &amp; Ht~"'" U
8 1 E~~.c ..,. alm g
84 Electu c .. &amp; Rv tug.,.Ot tt on
8 5 Gunl!fal Haulm y
86 • Mo bile Hunt e Re:pa11
8 7 Upholsturv

Publll: Notice

ouont to thlo -rtillmont,
minority bu-ll enter·
NOTICE OF
I
Ill ~ ~ ded fu
APPOINTMENT
pr- w - ••~r
I
OF FIDUCIARY
opPGrlunlt'f to oubmH bldo
. On Fobruory 1&amp;, 1891, In
In rooponM to thlolnvHotlon tho
Molgo County Proboto
ond wMI not be diocrlmlnotod
Court, CoH No. 283411,
-lnll an tho nroundo
of
•
J . 8. O'Brien, 100'1. Court
roce, color, ornotlonolo""ln
.,.
Stroot,
Pomeroy, Ohio
In conlidorlllon lor on 411789 w11 oppoimod Adoword.
mlnillrotor Do Bonlo Non of
" Minimum Wlgl rotol for
the
"'ole of Woyno Auotln
thlo project hove boon pro·
dotormlnod 11 required by Hetzer, doceoaect. toto of
lllw ond 0 , . _ . forth In tho 421118 Coolville Rd .• Reedo·
bid propoeol ...
ville, Ohio 411772 .
" The dote Ill for comploRobert E. Buck
lion of thlo worlc ohlltl be 01
Probeto Judge
tonh 1 1he blddl
By Judith R. Worry, Clerk
:'..1... n
ng pro- 121 20, 27; t31 8 , 3tc
El!ch bidder oholl be ,..
qulrwcho filii wHh hlo bid 1

JERRY WRAY. DIRECTOR
DF TRANSPORTAIQIII.
(21 27; f31 8 , 2tc

Services

5 1 Houaeho ld Goods
62 - s.,Ot'ting Gpods
53 Anliques
5 4 Mrs c. M erch andi se
5 5 ~ utldi ng Su pplle&amp;
5 6 Pets tor Sal e
5 7 Mu tic alln1trumenh
5 8 Fru•h &amp; VegY\abl •
5 9 Fqr S a l e or Tr aft e

Public Notice

chock
lorchoctc
on omount
oquol
certified
or coohlor'
to flvo per - • of hi• bid. but
in no event more th1n fifty
thou11nd dollllra. or 1 bond
lor ton per ..,, of hio bid.
poyoblo to the Director.
Bidder• mull opply, on tho
proper lorrno. for quollflCII·
tton1 It le11t ten d1ya prior
to tho dote ' 101 lor opening
bldo In otQOrdonce whh
Chllptor 1111211 Ohio Rovl11d
Code.
Plono ond opecltlcotlono
ore on fllo In thll Deportmol!t
of Tronoporlltlon ond tho office of tho Dlllrlcl Deputy
Director.
The Dli-ector reaerve• the
right to reJC!CI ~ny ond oil

Equrpmunt

63

Hou ses t or R en t
Mobile Hom ~ lor Runt

Busin•s Tr.a.tn •n g
Sc hools &amp; ln sh uctmn
R8dio, TV. CB Repa u

•
•

&amp;1

62

43 farm s lot Rum
4• AparJment tor Rvn l

Muon

182 New

Public Notice

contr~~et

He4o W~t ud.

lij

675 PI Pl u.s~l
458 l eon
576 Apple G• o ve

Sofa -&amp; Chair

'•

e;rmma

Bu y

11

14
15

M ason Co . WV
A•ea Co dlio 304

PubliC Notice

2 pc. Liv. Rm. Suites...:J450
GOOD SELECTION BUSHLINE

-

W ~ U,..IO

11 In sura nce

.full 1•win!{ I dt• l'htlm• .t'xdwtll{t's ...

SPECIAL PURCHASE

'r

V • d S .. e lpar~ •n advimcel

Serv 1ces

t:/m .~i/it • t/ ptl/{1'.~ I'OI 'I T lilt'

LAYNE FURNITURE
'"

Publu: Sille &amp; Auc t iOn

3 J Bu sines s Bud CS.ngs
36 l o t s Ill. Acr u g e
36 Re al Estaht Wan ted

Employ men t

horne~

BULLETIN
BOARD
-

1
B

33 F•ms tor Sale

42

DAV BEF OR E PUBLICATION
COPY DEADLIN E
11 .00 AM . SATURDAY
MONDAY PAP ER
2 00 PM . MONDAY
TUESDAY PAPER
2.0 0 PM TUESQAV
WEDN ESDAY PAP ER
2.00 PM . WEDNESDA Y
THURSDAY PAPER
. 1' 00 PM THURSOAV
.. HIOAY PAPER
2 IJO PM. FRIDAY
SUNDAY PAP ER

FROM BIG BEAR

HIIPPW Ad s

Lo ll a nd Found

3 1 · t1onu:s tOt" Sale
32 M obil e Hom eli for Sa lt~

41

" A clauthod otttv e rtisetnt.'lll pl ac~Jd 111 l htt Da tly S1m1 md (HI!.
c eyl
cli1s sthtld dt ~o pluy . Bus muss Card illl d l t.·u ~ nOII Ct:S I
w•ll ah u itppllik 111 lhu PI Pl uil5&lt;ml · Rt!'(I !Sitn illl d lhe "Galh
1 uach111 ~J

.

6

6

Farm Su~pl 1 es
&amp; Li v es t oc k

Real Esl ale

1 C ard ol lh 811 k1
2 tn Memo•v
3 Annou.: tmenl 1
4 G ive.W,.w

9

'free ttds
G iveaway a nd Found ads .under 15 w ords w1tl btt
run 3 d._. s a t no ch•ge.
• p,,ce o t ad t o• all c aptalt eUttrs 11 d oubtu "p u c~ o t ad cos t
• 1 ~int lm e type onty uMd
.
' Senlirlllt ts not respDf•s lble tor errors ahtu fir st llil'f' .. ICheck
to r en ors t int dav ad nms "' papurl . Call b~ l or e 2 00 p.m
" d ~_ alh!r pu bll ciJil •on 10 m il k i!. CO ifi!Ct iD n
'Atk that mu st be ~d 1n adva n cu cu 11
Card ol Thanks
H11 ppy Ads
In Mum ottam
Y;u d Salt.'$

pull'- Oottly Tf!bunt!.

R•te
$4.00

15
15
15
16
15

R l t eJarc for con se c:utrve tuns. broken up d~s w•t 'b e ch•ged

pn~

, ... d.
"FhtCtllll't! ' S O d•uo unt for ildf ~M i d i fl athl a n cu.

.'

flnn nu ncemen ls

Ov,r 16 Words
.
.20
·ts.oo .
.30
.4 2
s9.oo
$ 13.00
.60
.06 / day
" $1 .30/ da y

W o rds

1
3
6
10
Monthly

POLI CI ES

"Ads o u h ide Mergs, C.llia or M uon counlrM mu st b e

'

'-

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 SUMDA Y

•

• The .Area's
Number . 1 Marketplace
.

. Public Notice
ADDEDUM TO ITEM 8
SOUTHERN OHIO COAL
COMPANY - MEIOS
MINE N0.2
Southern
Ohio Cool
Compony, P.O. Box 480,
Atheno, Ohio 41701 hoo
oubmhtod appllcotlon Num·
ber R-031111-23 to revioe
coat mining permh D-031111 .
to tho Ohio Deportment ol
N1turel Reeource•. Divleion
of Roclomotlpn. Tho permit
ore• I• looo'tocl In Molgo
County, Columblo Townohlp, Soctlono 19, 211. 21
end 31. ond Mtlgo County.
Salem Townohlp, ·Soctlono
17. 23 ond 24 on tho prop-

erty of Southern Ohio Cool
Camp1ny. The permit 1ree
encomp11ae1 117 ecre1 1nd
lo locetod on the Wllk11vllo
Md Voloo Millo 7'1. Minute
U.S .O.S . quodrongle mopo,
opproxlmotoly
1 . 1 mlln
eouthwelt of Point Rock,
Ohio.
The 1ppllc1tion propo•a
to incorporate •• e pert of Ita
perm1nent .-rmlt a bllatlng
pion.
The opplicotlon loon lllo ot
the office of ihe Mollll
County
Rocordor, Mtlgo
County
Courthou11, Se·
cond Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
411718 lor public VIewing.
Wrihen commen11 or re ~
qua111 for 1n inform~l con·
ference may be aent to the
Dlvlolon of Reclemotlon•
Fount81n . Squore, Buldlng
H-3.
Columbuo.
Ohio
43224. written thirty doyo
of the loot dote of publicodon of thlo notico.
121 13, 20. 27; 131 6 4tc

Public Notice
LEOAL NOTICE
TUPPERS
PLAINS -CHESTER
WATER DISTRICT
Sooled bldo will be rt·
celvod ond oponod by the
Tupporo Plelna·Chollor Woter Dlatrlct 1t their office,
39681 Ber 30 Rood, Reedo·
ville, Ohio unt112:00 P.M. on
Morch 11 . 1991, covering
the pointing, both Interior
1nd Exterior for one 50,000
geUon elevated water 1tor·

Public Notice
tonk.
Additionll
inform•tion
and apeclfl.c atlonl f!11V be
obtolnod ot tho office of the
Dillrlct ot 39881 lor 30
Rood. RHdovlllo, Ohio, on
Fobruory 28, ·1991.
Eoch bid mull be . .cloHd
in 1n approplr1tely marked
and aealed envelope and
muit contain the fuU name
of every pereon, firm and/ or
corporation inttreat in the
Hme. 1nd mu8t be .ccomponiod by 1 100% Bid Bond
in the full amount of each
propo111 to the utllfactk»n
of the Dillrlct Boord 11 o
guoronty thotilthe bid lo IC ·
cepted. 1 contr1ct will be entered Into and Ito performance 11curad. On bida that
ere rejK:Ied, the gua111ntee
·will be promptly rotumod to
tho blddoro. On the bid thll
11 occopted, ouch Bid Band
will be retumed to the auc-

Ill

CIIIful bider upOn eKecutkm
of the contract .

There will be ono tonic In·.
opoctlon on
Thuredoy,
Morch 7th . Thollnopoction
tour wllllelvtt 1t 11 :00 from
the Diotrlct ofllco.
Tho Tuppora Plolno-Chtoter Water Dlltrlct reHrvea
the

r~ht

to waive Informal!·

tle1. to-reject any end ell bk11
or to 1ccept auch bid th1t
will beat 11rve the Diatrict.
Tuppero Plolno-Chutor
Wotor Dlotrict
By: Herold Btockoton,
preoldent of the Boord of
Director~

(21 27; 131 8 3tc

•'.

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Cheshire/Kyger Elementary
Cheshire, OH.
MARCH 15·16·17
For int.ormat1on call: Candy Preston
367·0122 or Ed Mollohan 367·7187.

..•

Business Services

REDUCED - REDUCED - REDUCED - NOW
CAN
OWN THIS COUNTRY HOME AT THIS REDUCED PRICE ~ ~
story brick home nestled o~ oppro.. 1.48~ acr~ ot. pn~ocy .
You and your t.amily cans~ 1n your 181'! x 17h~lngroom
and curl up to the warmth ot. this gorgeous '.1replace. No
worry about space either - this beauty has 4 bedrooms, 2
baths lamily room wrth woodbumer and many othe[
leatuies that. can ma~e this country home, "Home Sweet
Home" lor you. CAll FOR YOUR APPOINTMENT TODAY!!

GIRLS 6th GRADE
BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT

LINDA'S
PAINTING

,,

iilliN.:~.; Rc ;.n Y

FOIEVEI IIONIE
PROM TANNING
SPECIAL
1st SO High School

205 N. Soconcl Slr11t

Students

.~

11111101 • 0111101
FREE ESTIMATES

Toke the 'pain out of
pointing.
let me do it for you.

-'

r;.;-- .. -·- -

I
I
I
I
I

Food
Club
Margarine

I

I
I
I
1

Grocery II
-----~--, ~------.IIi--

1 lb.
Umit I Free With Coupon and '15 AddltloDal Purcbue (e~~tludlngl- prohibited by law)
Coupon Good Tbru s.turdlly March 9, 1991

II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
11

--------,.
Food
Club

Syr~p
12 oz.
Umlt I Free With Coupon and ' 15 Additional Purcbue (excluding Items prohibited by law)
Coupon Good Thru Saturday March 9, 1991

(614) 985-4180

3 -1 -'91 - 1 mo. pd.

I
I

EQUAL NOII.WO

I
I
I

•1

--------,r-------Meat 13

Produce 14

:
:

One Pound ::
Of Bananas ::

:

1
1
1

From The

::

Produce Department II
. 11
Umlt I Free With Coupila and '15 Additional Purcbue (ew:h4;1 !tau problblted by law)
11
Coupon Good Tbru Sallll'day March 9,
I

I
I
I
I
1

DOniE

8 oz. Box

•

TURNER . BROKER

Swift
:
Brown N' :
Serve
:
Sansage 1

SIIOWVILLE - Shows TU: -A 40 acre !arm that~ all rol·
ling clnred pasture land. Approx. 20 acres fenced. Large
metal barn. and an Immaculately clean 3 bedroom newer
home wrth free aas, equ1pped kHchen, and public water.
Must see.
$55.000
lAUREl ClifF ROAD - Sectional Only .- NO LA.~o -:- A
three year old 24M52 home that has at.am1ly room w1th alire·
place, 3 bedrooms, 2-beths, cathedral ce11ing. skylight. utra
msulation, hnt pump, and many more extras. $30,000

1
I

MIDDLEPORT - A 1975 Wmdsor mobile home that is
12x60. Has 2 bedrooms, hu&amp;e livm~ room, equipped
krtchen. l.ots of windowS; and utirdy area m bath. Very ne~~r
set up on a) OdOO lot.
ONLY $15,000
MIDDlE POll - Hl&amp;h Strtel - Avery deep.lot in I grnt
neighborha()d. Imagine your new home on thiS le~ellot all
utikties evaillble.
$11.000
RUTLAIID - Sllem Strtel - Why look lonprl - There are
3 bedrooms in th1s Iii story ho~e. on a 50d40 lot. Has
newer heat pump, skyHaht, ~myl s1dm~ and a p1cket fence
t.or pri¥1cy. Seller has Iiiii the are.11100 wll not reluse any
reeianable offet. end may consider 1 2nd mortpp.

'

''

'
-

'

S.

GRANT ST. - MIDDlEPORT - A one story home wdh 5
rooms, 2·3 bedrooms. some· new carpetm g and some new
plumbing. Immediate possess1on.
$8,500

L-----------------------------~L-----------------------------~

I

1!!.:~-~-

RUTlAND - Nice lenced back yard and a 2 story trame
home wHh 4 to5 bedrooms, dining room, and b1gh~mgroom ,
carport, playhouse, and storage building. Assumable loan
a~ailable with $3,000 down payment and assume the loonol
$24,441.99. The monthly payment is $310.00, which m·
eludes principal, mterest, taxes, and Insurance. There IS24
yrs. left to pay and the interet rate is 12.5%.

--------,

. Umlt 1 Free With
Coupon and •15 Additional Purcbue (exi:tudlnglteme prohibited by law)
·
Coupon Good Tbru Satlll'day March II, 1991
·

.

OPPORTUMTY

208 NORTH SECOND AVE . .
MIDDLEPORT. OHIO
OFFICE 992-2881S/HOME 992·6892

L---~-------------------------~L-----------------------------~
~------~II
I
I

VERY REASONABlE
itA VE REFERENCES

Real Elllt' Gonoral

--~

"'

BISSELL
BUILDERS

'.

DO
AND VICTORIAN
I
it. you , i
i
you! 2 story older
i
original
se~eral unique fireplaces. II also has
3 bedrooms, equipped k4chen, central air and a lot ot.
storage to add lo thiS greal buy! $39,900.00.
RACINE - Cute I I! story home w~h 3 bedrooms, I 1\ baths,
nice hardwood lloors and some carpeting. Sitting on a nice
lot close to town! ONLY $29,500.00.
MOVING INTO THIS HOllE IS liKE MOVING INTO ABRAND
NaY liOIIE - THArS JUST HOW WEll MAINTAINED THIS
PlACE lSI - Irs 10 years old but just like new! Nice
carpeting alsoaddsto this 4 bedroom home with z 1&gt;a1ns tao
essential lor all t.amilies lodayl. Well landscaped yard with a
· blacktop dri~eway, 2 car garage and many more great
leatures. Located on SR 7. The price has been reduced '.rom
$80,000 to a bargain price ot. $69,900.
SR 331 - SMALL HOUSE AT ASMAll PRICE! II that's what
you are looking t.or here rt is! This place needs work but it
would make a nice littte home or agreat huntini cabinlor the
deerhunter! Another added t.eature is the nver ~ iew Would make a nice placet.or the avid t.isherman, too! ONLY .
$5,900.
NaY LISTING - Located on Landaker Rd .. thisproperty has
it all! 49 acres ot. ground w~h a 198714'x80 ' mobile home.
Here are just a t.ew ol the added t.ellures to thi: property:
dishwas h~. retrig., range, t.ireplace; air conditioning, all
t.urniture includin4 TV, VCR. You can have IMMEDIATE
POSSESSION of th1s eMtri·Ordinary place! So call for your
sho&gt;iling TODAY! ASKING $54,900.
.f
BUSINESS IS SO GOOD . .. WE'RE RUNNING OUT OF
STOCK! WE liEED USTI NGS. Uyou want to sell, call us right
now .. Our Ids attr~ct ltlention. Our 11les staff is experienced.
For best results call 992-2259!
INTEREST UTE AS LOW AS &amp;.175% Vllilbltand 1.625%
llxad - Wt CIR 1111 your ptopllty end wt hive biiY'I'I·

HENRY E. CLELAND ... ....... .... 992-8191
JEAN TRUSSELL ................. ;. 949-2ISISO
JO HILL .... ... .. ........... .. ........... 986-C4ISIS ·
OFFICE ..... .... ....... ........... ..... .. 992·22&amp;9

r-..;. __
'

.

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At

l~t~sonoble

Prien"

PH. 949·2101
or les. 949·2160
·

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CAllS

IIIDDLEI'On, OHIO 45760
Offko 614-992-2116
HOME 614-992·5692
DOTTIE t TURNER, IROKEI
HOUSES•LO'TUFARMS
COMMERCIAL
We Need Llotlnpl
11-5· '0.""

MICIOWAYE
OVEN IEPlll

J&amp;L

INSULAnON

Iring H In Or We
Pick Up.

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SEIVIa
992-5335 or
915-3561

Aaou fro• POif Offici
117 •• Sococtel St.
POIIIIOY, ONtO

3/5190/lln

USED APPUAIIIIaS
9GDAYWAIUNn

wa111ns- sroo., ·

•VInyl Siding
•Reploctm.,t
Windows

,DIYIS- $69 up
llfiiGIIAYOIS- $100 op

•Roofing
•lnoulotlan ·

.(10 0¥111$-$79 .,

JAMES DESEE
992·2772 or
7C2-2251
1139 Bryon Ploct

Middleport, Ohio
11-14-ttn

R. L MASH
CARPENTRY

•Oarego1
•Room Addition•

• Kitchen• • Bath1
•Vinyl Siding

•Reator1tlon
•Repair Work

992-5526
PO.IOY, OliO

1-'GIS-o.-u.c.-$1 U

Call 9•9·2126
For Appt.
FOREVEI IRONIE
IASHAN ID., UCINE
3-4-'91·1 mo.
•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDINO
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

AlL IUDS

4-16·16·11•

10 SESSIONS- $10

BISSELL
SIDING CO~
Now N-lullt
" Free Eatlmotea"

PH. 949·210 1
or lies. 9•9-2160
NO SUNDAY CAlLS

FBWIS-$125 .,

PICK·
A·PAIR
SAME
LOCATION
u.. Court StrNt
Entrance
POMIIOY ~. OHIO

21271'9111 ••.

10-19-1

010.

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK
992-2269
~SED

RAILROAD TIES .
1-12-80-tfn

NEW- UPAII

1-800-141-0070

SIMON'S

614·992·2321
Wo Soy Whot Wo Do.
W. Do Whol Wo loy .

CulfoM Fr-• l~lr
NEW • USEO PA TS
FOR ALL MAKES • .
MODELS

AcrOB frlltl Past OHko
POMEROY, OHO

101301'19 ""

Hond Tufting
Dropea
36" Yean Experlen ee

Cuatom

Howard L WrlteHI

992-7013
or 992·5553

915-3561

213·1o. s.c.u
Middle pert

WHAlEY'S
AUTO PARTS

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE

992-5335 •

UPHOLSTERY

3-ll·lln

$ptelollllnl In

up

ol Mllil•'"'

o• TOU FlEE

DAIWII, OHIO

ROOFING
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2161
~· tt-l

3/ 1 / '11 / 1 mo.

THE ·

GROOM
ROOM
Complete Grooming
for All lrtetls
EMILEE MERINAR
Owner &amp; Operotor

614-992-6820

r-oy,
Ohio
. . t-11-11·111

... , • .

BISSELL &amp; IIIII
coNnlucnoN

._

. . . . .0 ....

.,....,.........
•Ga......

Stop I Co111para
Fraeltthllatn

915-4473
667·6179
5-3 1-'10 tfn

.'

�--:

. .

,•

Page-12-The Dally Sentinel

LAFF- A ~ DAY

........ ,_...

~·-

21

. -·---

~ •

:.~~~-rr7,'":.7.

~-

,..,

-. -

'-~~

.....~:;-

Own your own ._...or iohot
llaro,
·fraon:
Jttn/SpootLad,_ Mon'o,
loflniiP-n. ' ~
- - . &amp;!In,
Polite or Mlllfnb
, a...

Blot•'•

ngorlo,
or • •
1
':':. ' :
count or fomiiY ohoo 11011.
121,800 to 133.1100: ln-'O&lt;Y
trolnlng. fllliiiiH, olrflrw, gm.:l
Of&gt;OIIIng, otc. c""~"""' 15 ~oyo.
llr. Loughlin (112)8Ao4221.
.;;;.;,=.:;;;;=.;::;:;:;;.;;::;;;__
22 Money to Loan
LOANS BY IIAJL
Up to $8,000 In 72 houro. Wo
0111 llolp you got I -uro
LAlli av 11a11. 1-.2..._10

Boalt

Giveaway
7
2 noolo port lllnlotun Collll.
- · --.114-1112·212Z
I'

9

I=========
Yard Sale

wanted to Buy

l'llnted to buy: Junfl Cllll with
or wllfooul noo1cn a ..,1111 mot·

Gallipolis
&amp; VICinity

Dtol*'lto glvoowoy- cot,
11.1114-3ll.zl2t.
~!'""·-mull
bl
kopl
-::'-:-::'~~~~~=
1
·-114-441'1711.
1c
l'llroed To Buy: Junk Autoo
ALL Yon! Sllee MUll lo Pold In . .h 01 without motoro. Clll
- R.. woltar hoi~ Adwonoo. DEADLINE: 2:01! p.no. . Leroy Uvoly.IM Ill 1301.
CMw to good llomo only. 114- tht Jor boforo tht oct lo to oun.
112•71520.
SuncloJ edMICOI • 2:00 p.no. l'llnted To Buy: Uttd mobllt
F-~ ............. ectltlon
2·00 homea, cal11141 ue orr&amp;.
o - . y: • wk old
.1111 - - ·
• .
.....,...to--· 1 mole 1 1:p;c.m
.:..·_:c.:..'~
* Y·=-;:--:--:1erili!IO, hllfCoiiiO, hoi! SIINorlon Aumnoogo Solo Mooch L
Huoky.l14-882·71112 _ , IIPM.
8:3!1o.m.'3p.m. llroco UnMod Employment Setvtces
Mtthodlll Church. Ellzlblllo
To (1_0011 ~ntry hoorio, a ,_ Clrclo.
old 1u11 bi-d moll B•'*•.l ~=:.....---.....-Colllo. 304-182-2203.
.
Public Sale
11 Help wanted
8
&amp; Auction
AVON • All O'"".!t. Coli Morllyn
WMvor30Wa·-5.
Rick POiroon Auo:llon c-pony
Lost &amp; Found
now booking ouctlono. IX• 3 Soourlty Ouord po..lono: a
LOST whlta nalo forroll wbh rod porionco 11111kil 1111 -1101. -Okoijllng, 2 inolntantne~
~h ond lllln St, Pl. Pn. Llcontod Ohio, KontuckJ, Wtll po.Hiono · Rotlrwcl poroono
_ _73_08_
. ----...II..VI-•g;.lnla....:,,_304-_77W7B
__
s._ _ _ .. •aiC:DIM to place ~
C:,.lont.l342t - - R d .

·~:rn-.

t\4.ii51M.

.

Real Estate

•Dhll Wltdl &lt;OntNot~~
Equ~pm_.

.............

eSeeHoWf,. -And...,_ • .,.
OlltMI k. .....

cloyo.

11188 Cloy!.., MFG. Hornl, 14170

txatiiMt oondttion, Inquire at
Homo Nllllonll Bonk, 3rd ot.

Aiel no Oil 45771, 114-1140.2210.
314 IR home, 211.,Y. buoment,
a-hln.._011. Exo. concL Work:
1104oi32&lt;1117V or Homo 1104-832·
6MO.
8y Owner: 3br Ronclt, CaUoodrll
c:elllngo. 1 INolh, genga, potlo,

-Room Allalllluna

•Siding

-EDIATE • luo
Opontor: o pollllon,
$8.15 por h..,r, Ctnt- bolo
only. Prof• _ _ . In tht Rio
Orondo, VInton o-. Mull . . . approprta.. echool but
¥01tlclo llctnH or willing to obtain. For mare lnfonnaflon call
lt4-3B7o7:1l'l or w~ll to tht Ool·
llo County Boord ol MIIIDD, P.O.
Box14, Choohlrw, OH 415620.
INTELLIOENCE
JOBS. All
bnlnchtt. US CUIIomo, DEA,
ole. Now Hiring. Coli (1) aoa.
IIB2-IOOO Ext. K-101811.
Looking lor Borbor, IIY!IIIo. 114-Me-1803, 614o441.a:IM.
LPN • Port•tlmo, "!II 1(11 oonlocl
Sarah Marcum, ~aven ol

-Guttwworll

•Painting

- 1!1ecftric81 ind Plumbing
- con..,.wvrll

NO JOB TOO SMALL
FREE lSTIIIATES

-Rooting
- lnterkH' •

CEDAR
CONSTRUCDON

ExteriDr

Peintlng

(FREE ESTIMATES)

V. C. YOUNG Ill

992·66.. or

992-6215

698-6164

P-oy, Ohio

12-31-10-lfn

II-14!90 tin

BEAT THE RUSH!

Til-COUNTY
IECYCLING

Gtl your lawn and garden tquipmtnl !urad up
and bladn sharptntd
for tht coming Hasanl

OPEN7 DAYS
A WEEK

9 A.M. 'TIL 7 P.M .
HJou clean up your
yar on wHbnds .... wt
bui_ on wttktnds.

Point Pluunr, 3044f1.3001.
Need aom.one to car• tor •
dorly Plf'On In -.y poroon'o
homo In Mlddlei&gt;Orl •-· Prolllr
norHmOker. 1~15131.
OPPORTUNJ'!1 KNOCKS!
CAST . lniiR11111ontl · hot 1;,.
medllto oponlnp lor: • . Ex·
pooteneod D~.- A...,l DrivIng
Schoal
Orod•
TrolnMICRST, 1111 ""'""''" INdo
lng long houl corrlor, olin lop
poy ond bonsfllo whllo""' dri"

DURING FEBRUARY
-

Frn

pickup and

delivery in Pomeroy

Til-COUNTY
R£CYCUNG

and Middlepart city

loatM Off tht lrpass On

llmitL

n..c..... .,

WE ALSO SERVICE
CHAIN SAWS

lt. 7 &amp; "'· 143

,_,,,Ohio

P..,tng cuh for aluminum.
copper, brllu. IUinlu eteel.

, . . ,.... m. radfetors. atert... ll•utort end .n nonf..-ou• mMIIL

CAll FOI PIKES

.14-"2-5114

.

0Mi roH In llate or the art •

DAVE'S SMALL
ENGINE REPAIR

qul-nt.TALK WITH OUR
RECRUITER
oncl httr how CRST con U.
your carwr on the move. Vleh

253 Wast llaln St.
Pomtroy, Oh.

450PIIctoGaiiii&gt;OIIo, OH
THURSDAY 3/ll'tt
10A.II., 2P.M. I 4P.M.

uul: HOLIIAVINN

PH. 992·3922

9 All·7 Pll-71hm a Wttll

CAST

2-4-11

.

Equal Opportunity Employor
MIF

Now In
$tooU/ .

READ lOOKS FOR PAY! 1100 a
Tltlo. No Exporlenco. Coli 1·847·7878 ($O.Himlnl or Wrllo:
PASE ·33M , 111 S. llncolnway,

IAolll£ HOME FURNA(ES - HEAT PUMPS
AU FURNA(E PARTS

sOitt • Ntod monoy lui?
$2,000. por - : : :• .&amp;':ronltod.
No oaoorloneo
Buying

N. Aurara, IL 10542

ce.Md hama at Governmenl .
-ion 011 our boholl. 1 e55.Z041.

BENNm'S MOilLE HOME
HEAftNG &amp; COOLING
1'1414U-941. or 1·100·172-StU
·-

'1'111 ''"Y •.,....
WI I ill. . . ftll...,.l,.

..

·-·7883.

--lol-.
.
oUtn,..._..-....,. .
-~··1-11&lt;11-lwoocl

...... ~ .. 30-ilclllollg-

WalliN:

-inoidth&gt;u&lt;e.

u.-.. 317 Ill 4110 Ext.•.

·- -- a·----.. -.

aat

liN

Dyftltftlc

Hlahty lloi!Y"IIed I I - for
Oilll- Wolahl ConlnlfCIInlc.
-~lint. Fuft.41111o Ex·
..tonco P11r..oed. 1onc1
A.... to: ld Poullno, Ill
HJth
Plq,., OH

ollaybo- 10-1110 loot 1om ... l'o....
LOAD EVERY 12 HOURS

CALL

"" 1111 2111 Garflold
An, mid 20'e, 304-175-1311 after

4:00PM.
·
NEW HOME BUYER PLAN Wt
Wll
Your ·Mobllo Homo
Toword Down Poyonont on
Building A Now Hona. Our
Prlcao &amp; Quolh{ Cllnnol Bo

AA:-

~'r!1 ~;:~c~!..~~a::,'o.i: ·

R

11-.

55

.

118 lu-• AddM""', 2 bod-

room, ltvl.na ~. bath, baM-

mont. Rlllf nzs 111.. ~·
tncl 2 I-Cou'*Y
- · Conllct
ERA
Town
ANI Ellllo,

ln:tktr, ......,....., .

48 Space for Rant

badrOGIIIIa. Part~

,

• ......,

=-~cal
1\IIHiory
- bock 011pnf,
~ ,_
oldlng, oform wlndoin, iflchtn
rtaenlly IWII d..ld, 304-17111111 or 17W7111.
·

5I

HousehOld

Good

:-=-:-..;.::;:.=,::.;:8~· -="'"'

County Appllonco Inc. Clood
.--''-T.Y.Iolo.Ot&gt;on
1 o.m. to 'J.·m· llon ..Sot. 81444e·1"!1. 7 3rd, Avo. Oal·
llpollt, Ul1 ·
0000 USED APPUANCES
w.""'"', doym, refrlgorotcirl,
,.,._, luggo Applllncoa,
U--Alvor
Ra.1114-4441-7:1118.
lttldo Slono
C..ol
1. Clll

Dnlgunwtnd c.n.., ~.
~ ond Hlmoloyon ldtt-.
114 4M 3144 afl•7 p.m.
Flett Tank, MD IICtiOft AYI.

Point _ , . , ·• IOWl&amp;-21113,

full lint Tooploll

-•II ~niiMIII ond •

2 b I ~room trailer, $221. manlh

m . .......,,
_ , , . 1111·
5:00 oncii:OOwenlngo.

-

Ave. $2111/mo.
2 IR an Chllhom
~ a ......
I
~"'Ill- ~· Clll
_lpno.l11 11
I.
2111' ·no
hlghwoy'~.. iii6M North of
.... ~~~... m~~

Hoopi\11,

:rr"·
114-441.aln
5• '
••
"

.

·

2br funlllhtd, 2 11111n olit~
Chtptf - · 1250/noo• .,
1010, 1114.z11.1408
·•
,

;;.;,;====·:.....-"'~...;···

43
Farml! for Rent ·
ForR-:31-Ltvol Ln1,4

= ., -

~~l:;":hh~~·.P~•':.

tfiO Porkvlow lrlllor, MXIO on No poto. I14-448-402I.
• 114 ocrtt lind. 2 bocl100111o,
both ond 112. All , _ aorpoe, NiW 1br a rwfriJIIIroloo
comont clr!IOll longlh oltrollor. fumllhod. Eoonomllllll Jllll furExtro-wind
roof pr1.....
bu.IH naco, olr oonciM"""""
. . lw11k
~.... ond
Rotd
- - • 1235/mo.
011
"''~~-'"".·
''
•
1114-441o3N7.
·
, . _ 814...5-:11175.
Nlao 1br •••_ . ••401
IIIII ~odnan M_, ""bllo
-··-"• "
mo.
Homo 1 14x7V, :IIH, 2 fuU INoth.
~ 1~

:=:.

=
--mobile-·
,.:.l:d.

~~:'~:.':.'"~'!:.:

.....

~. Mx151,, -2bodolrlc
'"'!'!It Dwu" . . .1r, ...
112....... S04-77WIIIt.

114 ... URI

, _ Cloylon Noothtltdgo mobllt

North lnl. - ·
2 b1hmll,

. tl4,1100. 114-317-11113.

•-- ~ 31100 ·~~··o

·~·~ ·

·-·... •• •

1- Noroto Mobllo Homo, 1142Uo8011t, 304-675-1840.
• lA
..., 2 •·th
- •· CA on 2 oortt
1001111,.0, Nlco building a
gt~Wgo. Excallonl -lon. 1143.
"'-: lhlngll Roof a VInyl

Ani

Schun HarM.

~&lt;£.,"1•nhF"'Cit' .. ~~o'Fbr11b
'

' ronc
'
· · -..340.
=:.,~::
Or
MoblloOn- Uttd· All
You Ply 1o Tor And Tltto Ftto.
Utt Your
Tu Rofuncl.
-·
EJ•
But EJHomo No
c.ntor,
,.

:'.:."1"""'

·~3112.

33 Farms for Sale

·

-.

KKohln Clrpet $8 yud. carpM:
.. 110 _ ... Cllnd• Slrl.... , •• ..,
•
~

7:01 (I) Happy ~
7:30~!..!'C:,:tapcrdyl

Nlcoty
-

1
,_,b:.,•~Maaklng
~ ~'- - ·
• Raf.
OH,

ovolilngo ·&amp;wtoUndl. '

72. Trucks for Sale

::
••
·,•••
- OMC PU• u.a
•· • I ut 0, I Ir, . ,'
good concl, 12.110. 114 4M .1053. :,
,,
1183 a- holt ,.., 4a4, 301i-va, ••

ahort ~ bid, auto, llr, Ult, ••

!;:~J!,"i:,lf.110w;r !,'r.; :._~~!:; 7:'m~u:-"~.':1

a:•

,., r-•· .,.......
.... , _

ll:=t:.'; ;,..

:".::.'"'.::,:o=~e:.o~.:,::

==. Ro~;,.::!IJ' 't:::

(OMftiT£ MMJIIIjrlll&amp;.r,l•l RU JO IUYI
.

iMIHIR.

.

=

·~··

ero.. • ..::0":'=

.44.

.. ;

"""'"*"·

...... ':a\';J: =r·

no-

~.

flng. ·

llolll rolobll pon with s .....
,..,..... 120.00 114-883.aiOI.
NIIurll a., kllchon '"l'r; JG
- : Antique drop _, nlnv

Do

'-

.

:::"-~ =.:.~~"1.:

• ·Ireal anlllll

. VeiY

'G41L

......
-

... - ,....,..~
lltonln&amp; ....

"Do people who are Immortal ever

have a mld,llle crlttls?"

64

Hay &amp; Grain
,.,...,......,...,.....,.
..;,.:,.:...
. Clo~-.-.;.,.,;.,TI,...__,...hy.
AoOind lolae In "'" - · 114-

..... IJ.huritlclfllr, bnnd :MWI9I
.-. lii4i7-'JIIOI onytl""· Ltoat Round loltt. t10 por
HGM llortt, ~lit Now. lolo. WIP loool. 814 44NOIO.
·'
S o - for - · 1114711-2721.
T1 a nspo 11.11 1011
P!ftlfH!'llh W.ll ,~~!"' llltl
point S12.40 gel. S
I ••••
wlllpopor, 30 to · 'llo oil loooll
pr1a0. Point Pu, JGU75o4CI84.
71 Autos for Sale
A c Hlllonod
Ouorontoed ·prornpt ..,..leO for
~eor-.
holp.
........ - . n . - h o r VI, outo, aoo mllae. E l l · 1100. IM US 1315.
lloyor ' " - · 514-441.Ztl44.
1m
$81100
a 11111 SNOO CorSNroiKtnmoro
Btockoblo
WMhtr a drpr. Appro•. 1 ,..,
.....
old. UIO. 1-11117.
. .,,
WIITIR WITcH WELL DRILLIIIO 1m
MoNiou ·
WIITIA OUAAAHrUD. ,,.._ - - · Cltoop. aoo. .,..
441 11113.

wu,.,., a.,...

tel.

WII.._.,.Rin 11!1- - e d
:..~ ., .. CitY Umllo. -

.t. 35, Galllpols

-

*·

82

Plumbing &amp;
, Heating

--c:.,~,:::..:::.,;:Piurnbl:;.;.;:;...ng~ond Hllllna
, _ ond Plito
. Oolllpotll, Ohio
,,, 441 3888

84

· •:
~

Elf.Cif'!cal &amp;
Retrlgeratlc)n

Raalllantial

or ' GC11M1e111'-1

!!llfnl, ,_ ..... Or -''""
Moltir u - -naloon.
-

1715.

EIIGI-, 304-171·
•

-1fT--------,,,..•'·

-:.~~~~~..,, - •• ..,._ "';;~U;.:pho(;;i;~lati;.ry;;;-;;;'"
~.. Upt l&amp;h . . . . . ..
Cho"!ngtrt_,e,-•=n- ··

"'"·

•-I

-Col 111WJ1.4154
.. - - .,.-ma
tor "'" ;• ...
· ,•

.......

'

I ~--1

·r:

...·

(I

•

·'

l"lPt;t,IIIIIIWIMNanwna

0 MOYII: Sailor llowaro

(2:001

1:01~ U.O.Ida AN
(PO) (2:301

t;J

lantali- about life with a
TV family.
t:00 {l)e aJ Night COur1 Dan't
lnoomnll CIU- prolllellll
before hll II Clue 10 give •

IPNCh. s -.

t;J

f3UT 11-1£ &lt;:RGAtJrzro

. ••. inCl.
.(Ris-.c

••pldcM•IIIIclde

1 - up
(raised .

Stereo. D
II) llltOY1I: Ttt4l 10 Millon

one's
voice)

llolllr llllaWaf (2:~

•" *..

.

(I) •

~

II

Anf1hlnQiut Lave

HIMih and Marty tantelizo
1bout their future 'lie In

'THE CNL.Y T1-IINEi I E.VER
· I&lt;IOT1CEO ABClJr HE&lt;R ef&amp;6 16

t;J
UniOn w1et0r111
lhll
. lllctlon to LinColn. t;J
0 Calagl lllltllll!el

Chlcaao. Slllr.a.
CIVIl Wll Nlek-ot·tirnl

.511; ~TWOOFTHiiM.I

(!)

tilt

10:00 (JJ • Ill au.tuan Leap
Sam leapt Into the life of an
unwed. pregnan1 girl. Stereo.

i .....
&lt;11e1. . . .• atlu

(I)
EU(IIIII UIIOO'III'I Information

about miiOOIIduct In S.Cf'l'l

pe1t.·s - . c
Ill 0 . WIOl.l NNI It

BARNEY
l':SEEN MAW COME
IN'tlERE WITH HER
BliTTER~ AN'·EGG

WHAil
DID SHE
HIDE IT?

forcld to curb hll hllrd
~~~~~.ed!le. s -. Q
~TN11: TliO Next

YOU DADBliRN
FEMALES AI.WAYS
STICK TOGETHER!!

.•

CHill~ Newt

sion

(I) (I).

Ill 0 .
'

i!pJ?.
Stereo. t;J
~
VIols-.
manee?
Astro-Graph Matchmakei
can help you underttend what to do to
malce lhll relatlonlhlp wart&lt;. Moll $2 to
Matchmalcor, c/o thll nnspapor, P.O.
Box 91428, Cllivllland, OH 44101-3428.
BERNICE
.U.I (lllilch 21·Aprll11) H'o beet not
BEDE OSOL
·t o Interfere In devo!Op,_ll that do .not
directly coo-n you today. Your lnpu1
could cauM problema for you end
othera.
T AUIIUS (April...., 2111 If you till to
prudenlly . . . . , . your II
thltllnte. you might .xl*llnce. tllorl•
01 '*111/ltY fundi In ""' 1101-toodlalanl future - lUst when you need
'"""' tor -hlng tpedlll.
01!111111 (.-., 21..,_, 8} Being overly
ln8111n upon having ~ done
your woy could prove to be Mlf-cleleal·
lng. Oon't be -1111 to mike c:oncttlllrclt 7, 1111
liont for the generll good.
Your earning t.-.odl wtll 11101111ln an up- CANCIR (.ltlne11-.lulrll18ee lhlngt
ward directiOn thrOUghout thll year for what !hey oro, not tor what you
aheed. ~IlliG numorout lnt•estlng would Ike thllm to be toelay. "you milPOIIibltltlel. It'll be up to you, hOOI-, calculate and bUe · your Judil"*'''
upon e r r - • perceptlono, problema
caplttllzl on lhllm.
.
(FejL. " 11118} Doing whit . . patllbfe. t
UIO (.ltt!J :D-Aug. Ill COmmorclllln·
II
I 111SJ notnocu . IIY be the wtlllllke you loolc voe-11 could be a trllle dllllcul1 to
lhtng .. doing good In front 01 ot~ todoy. Ptey lor manage lllec11vely today. eepecially If
you 111ft to dell With lndlvldulll wno
yGia' Inner audienCe. not ""' extomll
one. Trying to pitCh up a brOken rOo expect more than they're worth.

a "

==

'·'

• GOIIIPinlllllltlnll IJvo l'aolil
T - Thll oountry 111uoic
sln(llr: poolut m•
01 n1s
hill from Tucson, Ariz. (RI

YIRQO (AIItl. 23-lept. Zl} Mattera of
priority for you today might not be of
equlll lig~llk:ance to your ~n~~te. More
time may be - ' ' arguing With one othor than r8101v1ng . _,
LIIIRA (lept. 23-0ct. 21) Oon't malce
"getting the jOb done quickly" mora lmportllltlhlll the qulllty ol your pwtormance today. n your work II tlloddy,
you 'll only have 10 redo It tater.
ICORI'IO (Oot. :Mollov.ll)lf you dOn't
hllve anything niCe to tar abOUI yow
friends today,W•- to.., nothing 11
Ill. Ev.ythlng you riiVOII to one pal will
only be repelled In detail to thll target
ot your crtllclsm.
IACIITTAIIIUIINO¥. :ZZ Deli. 21) In order to ac:commodall companlont, you
might heve to malce OOIM edJull"*'"
In your program todoy. If lhll occurs,
don't (Ill emotlonli.
CAPIIICOIIIIIDeo. 2Nan. 18) People
with whom you'll be lnvoMd today
might come lo lhll conclutkln that
'ou'retoodlftiCuH to~: tttay'llllbeequently give up trying . Wortc IO avoid
lhll ptobeblllty.
AQUAMII 1,_211 FN. 'Ill W111n out
thopplng today, don'l let diii!W tor 111-

ttsnt , gratification

dominate

m.tnr

(1:001

(J) lllldl

a~•liMa~,NIIrtl' World of

1

'1.:=El-.t;J
=~onlllltt

lpOIII Tonlgltt
11 :31 (I) Chi ta

1a Clle •

t;J

. . Nlllltl stereo.

~me,...,....,..

12:GI (I) lllgll• •

t;J

·

•·

34Giant
groat
38Z•us's
wHa
378attary

•nd·

38Gallloe
ruler
38 Deadly
Sine, by
number ·

DAILY CRYPfOQUO'Jt.S- Here's how to work It:

~

d'

318

AXYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this :11mple A Is ustd
for the three L's, X for the .two .O's, etc. Slilgl~(letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are
all hints. l!ich day the code letters are dlfrerent.

:J-6

CRYPTOQUOTE

E BJ 0 Z

JIXXLJ

EXJJXTYXQ

A k

MJ

EX

ZMQQkOTY

RFM R

OJ

M

T U R

WUQ EX . - YXUQYX XSOUR
Yesterday's Cryploquote: KNOWLEDGE OF ONE'S
SELF IS WEALTH - THE ONLY REAL AND I.ASTING
WEAI.TH IN THIS UNIVERSE. - HAROLD SHERMAN

(
/

a.-·

"JI&lt;Obytlll C.rd
(orrll,., ..U.Iobl•""'
u, Onrlld Jl&lt;ftbr} .... - · - .;

1M

DOWN

EXJJMVX

0 Clllll YDIIjiJtill UCLA

cpondlng. Proper menagement 01 your
retOUrcea could be a CtltiCII eraa.

nine tricks and a worthwhile two-trick
sacrifice against the opponetila' certain heart game.
J-JI&lt;flbr)- 'J_,_ ~·­

Visits

Night
II)Ttt4llquallnr

•rtdua (2:00f

-•

42- -alr

M

..........

your

41

Ill Puptu

~;,a.

· Opening lead: • A
" ,.

Willi

oe ~.....,. cu Late

., IIIOYII:

AU pua

4• . •
P. .

(slyli of

811DMrtinl
81aartcOOW end Mrl. King

11:30(J)e Ol Tonlgltt llloW
Stereo.
.

&amp;•

33Struggle

(1 :001

GJNowt

Dill.

ehepo .
3ZSoma

• CroOk lncl Chill

11:00 (J).

Put
4•
Dbl.

2•
Put

28 Rainbow

Wilt Audrey Hepllum A
ultctlon 01 formal gardlm
II pre• lied lnd lhll beauty
of the rota II celllbrlted.

10:• Ill MOYII: You 0ntr LIYo
TWial (PO) (2:301

3•
Put
Pus

l!u1

Nortlo

I NT

expres-

IIDP,Irtlan
111'.30 a1 Oanlltw 01 110 World

MONEY

-

~Wofflad

.

u I'CIO Clull Willi 1'11

S.tlo

1 Die out
Z Most of
tlie keys
VaU.y
3 Skunk
Y81larday'• Anawar
setting
4 - out
12 Parts lor
(squeezes
pract~
28 Gather
by)
actors
15 Born
together
13 Old Nick ·' 5-Molnes 17 Manaco 30 Tannie '
14 Infuriates II March
ZO Olsen·
star
15 Old cash.
tlmt
cumber
Richards
raglalar
7 Fleet21 Poet
31 Garlic
reading
related
McKuan
unll
111'- translt 8 San·
24 Daydream 35 Pastoral
gloria .. .•
tlago's
25 Caphal of
poetry
17 ~ Avlv
nallon
Kenya · 36 · - hath
18 Con·
8 Sank the 27 HIH
no fury ...
gollball
dueled
dweller
38 Ona's
11 Pagan
11 Cry D1
28 Enlar data
luck ·
approval
22Commotlon
23 Shredded

.• Larrr tatteNow
Utral
about lhll baby hill
having. Stereo. D

tQJOU
.QJJ0642
Vulnerable: Neillaer
Dealer: West

painting)

II Rular
division
10 Draw forth
11 Sun

s-Q

Matlhllw hila hurt loellngl

•Ku

40 Excuse

ACROSS

l t'ttll lbntliWIIMI MqCalw lnVfttiaml
the
ol
Derek'l lorl(llfll£ frll/ncl .

1:30 {I) • aJ Dear .loltn .

SOUTH

by THOMAS JOSEPH

member conwe 10 the

CRIIJ\E. La38Y IS
FIGHTIOO rT

bidding.
.
Even Iaack In the a50t DO ODe WU
IOiJJtl to be 10 timid u to pt11 with the
North cants. When Eut doubled two
spades, Soulb believed b1m and 10
moved a level blper Into btl own slicard club suit. Tbll wullllled around

•· ..

CROSSWORD

e Daagle llaa-, II.D.
Doogllllt turprllld when a

(I)

...

.10711
tAJ72

ICOre the beart kiJJt1 and ruff a bearl, ---•ropeb!l • ,,,...,__
@._.., . . . ..,...wucu 11....._
make the A-K' of spadeli and then win
five tricks in the club suit. That was

1:30(1)• Ckow~111 Pllna Ben

Tne

' II' '

'

8

, IlSSY:, BOSSIE II

EAST,

.Q 10tl4

to East, wbo made tbe tine bid of four
clubs. That cot btl side to four bearts,
but North qalcl!ly saved at nve cluba.
This wu doubled, but 110111ebow tbe
biddlnl bad tbrowa Wert Into a state
of confuslott, 10 btl openinl lead wu
the .ce of bearts. West DOW knew to
play ace and a club, but declarer bad a
Utile room to play. He wu able to

• Otal(llltrllt LIYo from
TUCMn Thll countrr mucic
linger performs meny ol hle
hill from Tucson, Ariz. (R)
(1:00)

. - - _1. .

Utility lulling IPL: IO'x40'1f'
Ellvo.
Olldlna
- · W'
.... _1·11'd'
, $8,215
~ed Iron
- l u i - . . 1144HoVlllll.

t;J

·=··~s-.
~Munier, lite w.... ~

:r.-

........,atd, ••c
......1 llooloar8uncl, lnfontl
••l:aame.SI4a4110. ·

ZENIX VIDEO
I 'fl . . W.tf Holler ilolpltal -

u

·•

lbo, gontlll with chlldron, noo.
~
304ol7"~··
··olhlr bnlncfo. ..... -wv
Uttd Sadclo. US: Slmoo • - 104-.atll Ohio 114-41..24114
Stddlo'a with ollv•, IIIIo ,_,
S205. •lg lilly Royol, · StddiO, tilth - ollilver, 1575,

1

The poalblllty
of a Union victory dl!"•·

u,_,_

lenfPlauurt. l~'t121.

or~

0

=i.

Kevin llarM hll and hll dad
have trouble communicating.

,.,_

Clmpera &amp;
.,
~·. ~ Hpllc llnkl, -and Uood Fonn Equl-1: 79
Motor Homes
"·
Ron lvont Entoraritto, Jtck· Ovor 10 uooc1 T-ooo to
OH ,_..,._.sa
ctooooo
From. Now~~~~guoon, Fonf.Now
Holl
tnc1 ~jj'ji;;;;;;ti;;~f;r;;;:;:
1110 _ , Cllllllllna ~. ; •J
lllCII
~
Dol8r,
0-4,
Clllorpllllr
Oldor,
Buoh ~Eq~
rio, ....... llllr,- cionftlon. .u;.
1-~n
fu
~
- · ,1,1100. 0ooc1 condhlon, =lllbloii
ldng 1400.114 318
Un mlohod 2 -room lfll1. 114 441 1031.
eon, OH 14--Ut 1411.
-ed - · Cflnlo
01 For Mlo. 10 ou. ft. uprlg~ Ktn·
Woof
~
month.
Sr1 v1crs
114 4~ or
71.
::.;,:::;~· uu nN. 1200. 62 wanted to Buy
Upolllro
ar, With
Good motor for 1171 Pinto, 4 - - - - - - - - ' For-ion
- · Two
I' IICII0118, ono
81
Home
-:
ow"'-'or a· aooltno. 24'
....I ownlngo. SZOO. cyl ......, ... us aeo.
Col_..,..,
....
3:00pm.
l'llnt
to
buy
otondlng
tJnobo&lt;.
Improvements
Tnolo ... ld. · -~-=·------- Far ltll: Putll'lgurod, Ptuo Size
loti
IAIEIIEHT
·
•
31311 poy
45
Furnished
or n&amp;.
WATERPROOPINQ •• . :
n
g
·
(Appntx
Slzo:
24-21) -pllon, Ylet-n
111111111o iluo+ . .:
Rooms
81-. tncl ~ Ltnglh
I
Itt.
LoOII ,.,_no• lurilllhod: . ,
.,.....,......,........,..,..,.;..,,...,,........., TrUo, VNook Uno, With LtOI &amp; 63
Lly.stock
AportMOflt
lor 2 or 3 l1qu 1nee, A.Wnt Price: $250 ~=~~~~:._,.-- j FOM 11111111111. Coli oolloo;l 1•• •.
AQHA
Rtglll-llloro,
5 ,..,. 114-337.o418, Joy or nlilht"'·
_ntol.... JCI4- 1114-441-7140.
21111.
old, ohown 4-H ond Ot&gt;on w... A - •-naro W l l - --'·

Will .....,.. In '"' .........,.

FEBIIIiA""~~:ECIAl

(I). Ttt4l Woncllt YIIN

'•·

.... •

I!De CDII(II .........

al WonU..-111 s -.

Ron'w TV Sorvttt
Holl pony htll ..._ Mo.., 800 In
olio • -~~~::.. · ."

Wanted to

a

(I)

'

... b

Will do
:r:=~ In 1nJ lociliie. (RIIIMntt',
Roforonao

100 ohon.

I .

- ·WHAL.f

''i:TI. o;:; 76

*•- ...... In
Polaor,-

two, -

,.,.lottlonol lJPIII.

ne t. I • tile ,_oliV!'
•• It hllppent - 24
houro. litO IYtlliii In·
........ d.........
CALL TODAY

1

~

u

•. Wben I started to play (ID lift), I
wu fortiiiUite to have my fatiler'5 25Y!!Ir ·esperlence .to draw I rom. In
llloee days, opening wllll a stron&amp; 110o
trump always illtlmldated opponents.
Peop~e abliorred tbe lbotlpt ollllfferlng a larp penalty. Aa a reaull, IIIey
last u untold litimber of points by defendiDI wben they liaould have been

COf'IVPIIon. !RI Stereo. D
(J) 1'1!0¥11: t1ie Halted , _
(RJ (2:001

cfop.Nq11oed,I04ta ...•

Os orgoo POIIoble -~~~~don~
hlul to lht m II IIIII
0111 I04-fll-111r.r.

•1.895

...

·6Pot1b

//

:~::, " ~..!'~~:

114--211 'n?.

..

S(.~food

,,....._.;11, .·,·

Pllont (3041 1114211 tiler 5 p.m.

tOiilitmsrn
...
..... ....... ....
-•lloo -r.
. . . . . .,, :.. ,.,,_

&gt;idr

II

..

THI$ YfA~'f
srtc,~At.~

a.c-.

VICKER'S WOOD HEATING

18

..

1-1-11

•un

ec-nro

if•

~':

Manta'• ........,

7:31CI)Ianlord- Son
1:00 (J) e Ol .UIIIOIYecl
M,IIIMI A New York man
Is murdered tor hla'· knOwlldQI otloeal

O'jllo-.

=-.. -= . .
Mldol-'........,+,.,.
•

..

.H

Notn'H

.AK7132

A scrappy
sacrifice '

CD Col1g1 llllltelbll

I) • • • ..., II(A ' ""

I

BRIDGE

lmeiii'A'I•H

1187 Tolllrd Turbo CoupoL~,ooo· ::
mlltl, fr.OOO. 3D4-171-M34. : .:. •
vtlolaf •
1roon 1100. Corvotltt, ~Porochoo other conflocoied ~
pi'OIIIOIIn. For bu.- ~ ' ,
(11110)772•0212 oJI. 5170.
n :,

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS
IN THESE SQUARES

t;J

wai~
Tonlllltt s -. t;J

PIS, I'll. •lkllnt ..., - · •·
fttHII- ....-, dUll ,.,.._ •'
PICKENS FURNITURE
- · Orum I i •: filii,... AIIIFII, ,_ tno. tlhollll onc1 0:
NlwNHd
tor:- WIIUo. - : 114-446- - ·
~- , _ , •,
Houshotd furnloling. 112 ml 1tN. lloglmor a lnlonntdlllo.
........-ng foonl ond wfno ; .
Rd. Pl. _ , . , WV,
dai!!L oloof - - tool boll, •'
olll304-171-1410.
.
~.-. 304-171-1731.
••
RENT 2 owN
1tt1 F·10 4
5 opel; 114-,~
114-441-3158 .
314-4435
•••
Bola ond Choir, n.ts por -11.
•
I Polco WoodgroUfl, S14.01 per
73 Vans &amp; 4 WD'S ''1 • " ;
L.Shopild Bunk Bado,
;.,'· •
B~ng ond Chilli ol Droworo 61 Fann E
. qulpment .
1014 Font - · full •'-· 414;' ; •
lnalud~ 113.14 por -k.
3SI·VI, 4 opoocf ohlft, :
Bwlvol """""· f4.44 ~r -11. AC 180 Dt- T-or, 1700 Hoo 41,000 onlltt, 11ep· bUmpor, - • , :
1
1
:d:"ot:",:
Jlqo!Ot• l r - Bod, 112.20 per eilll C.•'DivW ilniiiiio'ir-or -~ wlcoo lOll, U,Q5. 304-~·
~ 4.. DriOawar toiiChiiiRI. ol With Loodor.._U,IIO. OWnor Will 175-1'131.
•. :-,.
--~
.... porw • M1, FI-114-DMI22- ' •
, ••• ~~ F·110 4a4, , ••• ..::G~
4 Mllooi Q!f "A!· 7 lh Conlln.-y.
- ~
~HOURS: ~ tlvu Soturdoy, F- flo . .h ,_ 4435.
; ·.: ~
tlt.m..ap.m.: S~y, 12 Noon· choln purchiMd, we - ..... 1m Bronco U. XLT. l14-246.}!'.
lp.m.
'•
Amorlcln modo ctoaln In · 1010, »M75o1-.
,
Still On All Corpot In BloCk. Oot llook. Sldoro laul_, Co, 1. - ~~ 1, _ I, I•~•, ....., ?.
our Prfcl lolclio You Buy. 'You Honcloroon, ~11111.
-· ~
......,.. .
Co ld S
fuol lnjeollon, IUI-Ic wfl~ 1
u
avo 81• 9 uc lctof ' Mol'·· Jlm'o Finll EqulpoM8 ' SA Sl, ooa
.. 1... 4 - -L.~U' ~
~!1-Eorpoto, n North 114- 'Will Galllpolll, IM::.i4Mnr: Poolllp, 11,000.1 - 1.... •,.
- ~. .
- ootoctlon oww I uttd finn
. '
SWAIN .
~~- I lmpllnotnlt. luy, c.-llld 71 Ford Von. ,_.• .
AUCTION I FURNITURE. 62 oofl, trodl, 8:00-$:00 -lal1y4 ::.,:"".:..":oo~'"=~:.."; -:
011.. Sl., OoiiJ1911o. Now a Uttd Sit. Ull Noon.
-·"" I9 ._lnl ., •••
fumMon, hootoro, Wtttom a . JIVIDEN'S FARM IOUIPMINT -?iii~
,.. ' ••-·
~~ : .
- booto. 114.441-3111t.
t.ona, Zol0&lt; a klotl Tnoataro, !.;;;;;;.,_ _ _ _ _ ___
S3
Antlq
Looiltr1,
Ao~ary 75 Boats &amp; Motors
'
=.:;_....:,;;,;;~u:.;:e.:•.,.....,,......- Tllltro, • K - Hoy £. ·
.•'
oall. Rlvorlno Antlquao, qulprnont, A c-plolo Uno of
for Sale
..
E. M 1 81
p
Bolo lllndllng I l'eod!ng A&lt;- 1-..,......,-...,;.;..:.~,....,-1
• " l'etlt, om~~ roy. ceaeorlea, Aaund Ball Fn darav 14 ft. aluminum SEA Ntanypa 1
Hou•: M.T.W. 10:00 o.m. to S:CIO Food tlunlcto, CIIH Croapo, flolllng boll lncludlo 7112 • ·
II;.'J',_!uncfoY. 1:00 to 1:00 p.m. Aulomlllc U-ock Wll--, -or. 114-ae.10M.
·, .
11.-_.2!21,
Ootoo, Com! Ptnllo, S q s•~
u_.._.,
Coli -1ft. 1-untor
- · 221
LB. - ·:
Oulll
~••
-.,..II,
T....lng llloCor,
Swl,.,
P• 1MO· good condition. Hutchtt_. TIWI-. Trua-. Stllo Exc- Condit.... ' .
Stnd phot.. ona dncriptlon to Cron &amp; · - S~Pio. i11 411 1311•
· '·
.
··
1 P81tan, Alh..,•~,.Ohio 45101 or tic Tanka, Sud are, DIIC, PIOWI, .-v·
call 11141102•11111 or 61415112• Su-loro, Pollio P~Eluth
'
'·
a4e1.
Auto Parts &amp; -.. •
Drivoro', ,::" AUJIIIro,' Wood
Accessorlel • ~ ;:
54 Miscellaneous
!ilpllltn,
Runnlrig
a..ro, 4 P I - • - Tlrwo.: ·.
Me h dl
POwora
-ho!W,
FJnllh 11205171A14. 112 -h. Holt ' .
rc an se
Mown, To"' Whttl NorH Trttd
Rtrnolnlng.
· · . -...
•-•
4ft. ~. 27•. round abov1 Ltwn &amp; -h·rdtn E:,'j~
Una~··
o
111 I Bot- lud!lll Tronomlooforoo, Utod a ; ::
goo .;;;"'
oil pool wfth 30112411 . d tck, o Complolo
vi-lUI~
rolllllft, otolllna 11 $88: 114-246-' , ·
oil trooled luonbo&lt;. Pure..
a.--1no. lllld 2112 monthl. Troatooo. . Round
Dllc a 11877, 114-37Nlle3.
m n t ooncllfon. 11 yooor Orum
Mo,.orw,
lcklo ..r
~· rocllllon a ro&lt;:orod.
2IYt oft ut new radlatot price. ,
oil llnd1 mUll 111. t3,000. In- ~. Com Pllntlf, c - At. 3 11 llurroy -d. 1-11. · •
..
lllllod, •-.0311, ... 114-f46. Plckor, Orovlty Wogo/!1, Orln*r 1141111170. .
-lnlllllod. .
MPibltr CuHivo10f1 CUIIOtokor, Topper for 8 ft. pick. . bod, olld- : ;
owe, WhMI I1CHH Ganteri
ctoony CotfM Toblo. Ottk with TriCior, Tlllor, Hoy Condlllonor, Ina aiiOO wlncfQwa, 1175. 304- o • ,
.. . .
!.f~~~~- lllcto. CIU 114- M11~or Condftloioor. · - lft..05S.
Instruments

'::.Jill,:: i:z"'

~-

:!li.blnll,

foi SIIIO: AKC C - C- ~liP'
And Young Adulla, IIIIM
l
Ftm~ltt,
Vlotouo coloro,
42 Mobile Homes
fomiiY oocllflZ811, uctllont polo.
114-317.QII7.
tor Rent
-•
lol
.
tl
ollolrfc
a~
both
Yorllohlrw Ttrrii~W, All rnolo. Coli
_,
•
_,
1
•
14
1 milo -h - . No Polo.
114-1112-3111.
114-21111010.
Moll9hon ~ Rl. tn North,
•-11144. g1112 Room 110: 'S1
Musical

J:r

r,'r'

8caNclow and Mro. King

(I).

-~~:;-~;:~. tho

SCIAM i.ITS" ANSWIU
•· r
• Wreath - Yquth- Pound- Savior- YOUR WAIST
Overheard at diet counseling center: "Which Ia the
Iasser Dl two evils? Food that Ia being wasted. or good
food going to YOUR WAIST?"

8
·===-

Pets for Sale
Country MobiiO H- Park, Groom ond tlupt&gt;ly . Shop.PII
Aoull 33, North of Pomoroy. Grooming. All broedo. All ot~IOI.
~--·lo. porto, ...... Coli limo Pot Food Doallr. Julio
- b. Coli 814-"o.G231.
111711.
•
AKC roglottrwcl Bolton Ttrrlorl,
1 milo~ 3 fonaloo, $200. 304-"
r.1erchandise

I

.... UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS TO
V GET ANSWER
•

IS::~t;J

m.u21.

nilhecf.

A
V

!!!=t="t;J

56

11

; hucklo quotat
by lilling In tho miMing -d•
L-.L-..l.L-..1.-..L.- " ·--'· you dovolop
from lllp No. 3 below.

ll&amp;,~t;J

roo•

1/ipiiO. wl..
SIOoplng
wflh - n g. lloolo. brick, .
AIM llwllor -·All '-k·upll' - · Initio, Ito. Claitde WI,..
Clll ohtr 2:00 p.m., 304·773- ~••JIIo Orondo, OH CIU 11424..,•21.
.
•
· 114- ~IUI; MIIDB WV.

--3027.

ry( 1p'

.;.IJ....:E;,..I.....
N""17-l
. ,;

7:00-~o.laJ WMel of
Cl&gt; 1
01 lnnstla

Building
Supplies

Rooms

qulrod,~~4miM

6358.
~ ..~ • StU 2 St 3br Mil• from Haopllll l14-3l8o
- - ••
:
O&lt;Y
1141
•
Com•r Lot In Clttthl'!c .Ohio.
•
Excolllnl condition. ....m.
Apartmint
44
111150, 804-832·li7V.
REPOSSESSED HOMES
for Rant
Ho.,_ a Acr-. UOO down,
fiiWI pooyment Ju111 of 1Hf. tel% lbr, tumlohod opioot,_, wat.r
APR
E"uv crodh Joh loll
poid;Jolof -rfc• 1!2 milo Elll
~0
'
n
fl'/, ofPoot•..,I54.114-388-HI3.
1
1110.
2 BA IJIIItllltnl In C-~ City.
32 Mobile Hom111
114-2115 1017 or 814~tl5.
for Sale ·
BEAUTIFUL APAATIIENT8 tcr·
·BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
12lll0, 2br, portly fumlohod, ESTATE!',. 1St olac- Pllcto
condition, CA, 14,800. 814- from 11-. Wolk to oholl a
-10311.
1110VIae. Col It~ 411 :zue.EOH.
12llll :11oo Moblll Homo, with
oapondo, CA: 11133 111'1110 =Eiflclono' . : : " :..
321&lt;34 11~ bulldlna -on · 1
-• ••Htot iii•ioa 14-di-MO
Cl
• ~,...
illl1. ' . I
I, Oroclouo Uv'-. 1 onc1 2 bod141
...
1417V 2 fuU INolho, 2br, ful"' fur· ~- oporltncl- IIA VI•-•·•
lvoroiCio
n
- , Wn"h
Mlng and Aport- In M,;:rr
,_
porch. 15,1100. 814
12711.
ti•. Coii11Mfl2·
EOH.
1.,, 14XII 2 bdrm mubUtllome ~ u,....,. apartment, 231
for 0011. $7800.00 114-11112-3121 Flnil Kllc'-o wHh llo"

Slclng On

Sloy HomO And Millo UOOiwk.
Componlae
Hood
-orlloro. Coli A -

o~~o-..---

(1) 110142-8000 IEKI. QH.

I

Sol...Tnln•. 100 r.oor old
com=n
. Financial Mrvlcn
and
1. 811rtl~ MillY up
to
,000. plut1. 2 yoor top
-· reeume
bclllonl
Submtt
. tobonofho.
aru
rMnaaer, 2413 JIICikaon Ave,
Potnt PI-nt. wv 2ssao.
Someone to nrt tDr tldll'ly
lilly du~ng tho dey. Trontpo/11·
tlan ond Rotaowncoo Roqulrod.

· LecaW.On SaHanl SciiHIId. oH lt. 141

-

1805 foi currtnt ..,. Ill.

Furnished ·

~~orne, 11uo1 IP'
r.

~~'-·

--

CARPENTER SERVICE

•Roofing

•=•
rwfwwla••· ._,.

aprD'Nd,
b

3 or 4 bdrm " - .., rtnl In

31 Homes for Sale

Hno Room for -.y rnon or
- n In my homo, GOVERNMENT HOMES from 11
-ed.,...... 1u
-~a··~..ton.. Your
ru
potplllnt,
614...Ufl3.
property,

YOUNG'S

•Remodeling and
Home Repairs

45

13

~. . .,:.;IK. . :u;.,.I'.;. T

. . . (I) """' Gislltltll

41 . HOUSII for Rent

2bt , . .•.. In :III-H71

.,.._1021. .

IOOU &amp; IIIIIIMINI

f\ent.lls

111~r1

r

aJ IIIC Nillfltlr Newt

~~~t;J
Cilw-1~?;

,

I

I

SERYTY

A gas station attendant who
s .I 1 1
!: thought he WI$ an artist said, •
I
~.....,~.....,~...·
..,~-,-'-...J 0 Can't · say your window Is
,...._ _ __.__......, cleaner, but at least I changed

II) Allllo4l inCI COIIIU

fi'om town,

AVON
I 8111otoy
~S,::P•:::::;•;;:•3::;04:,::4~111-::_:140::211::,.,-:--:-::Elley Worlll Elcalltnl Pay! o\1. nioa . ror, location, Prloecf low
oomblo Produclo tt homo. Coli ..,.... olltra contldlrld. 114for lnformotlon. -1-t003
Ext. 313.
Experienced . llorill noeded.
Frtth cut ond oHk ornn·
_.io. Cllllll14-441o0110.
FEDERAL LAW ENFORCEMENT
No nporlonce _ _ ,. For
-lcdon lniD. olll 211-71f.
eill1, Ell. OHIH. Bo.M.-Ip.m. 7

llliJLHcNTAL

1:8;e

.

lottwn al tho

_.....A..-.H,;..·E;;...;:.E...:Y........lf·

I:GI(J) ........, 1•••,••

Shop

...

Bu8_-irie88".s·e:rv·I;C·-e····s·:.

'

111

Real Eltate ·
Wanted ·

lor ct,AY I. I'OIWI

ocra01blod -.It boo
low 10 form lour llmplo _.u.

~W:~Jt~
l&amp;~n'i·r
IIWwltiToclaJ
OOUrtto..lt;J

--·'--·
.~....
-______. .;. --., ~~;;~~;;~;;;;;r;;::::::::::~d =·
!'::.,0::.
4

harrang~~

.....

36

Hllo4

0 ,_

WO{I)e III Clle. Oe

Ill - · - lnCtulol•
only.
104·77WIII
IMII \looMing AIUII. lAw 11&gt;ltiNIJUiftl. Coiftpanr SUpport 1100 341 1144.

Sl-y 11-: Pvthlln
HoL WllkMUio OH. lloodo 14th
7PM Public lnvHed.

..

0

T.- Porte on "••· very n1oo,

Iunny Kuhl. 1~71137. .

.-

I

.

!!VINING

12. FOI 10019 In-lion 0111

..

'•. /,

M WID.. MARCH I •

Ko...,

l·ll.'tiJ -

I

aau.. -lng bUo'"""" ...
ttillohod 3CI yoa. Good - .

Quuted . . . . . hlrt C'-- March

•

Television
Viewing .·

:o ;;
'

....
'=~=-' s~"'~~-"~~s· .....

The Dilly Sentlnei-Pags 13

Pomeroy---Middleport, OhiO

,,..

Ado. lo• 114 l l o -, OH
44Mt.

~"*"

.••

6, 1981

tho-ng.

Clnlpblll. 45&amp;-ttMo.
F- Single lui!OIIn, Plrlonll

&lt;•noret•

March

·- .

..

~.

•_...-.~"'....
' /-~-~-J&lt;¢&gt;1&lt;&gt;1
¢&gt;4.~~~~-__

nrn.: 10o4. F•: ., . 1ft. table
~ your own llblo.
flllln Or thine. Anyone &amp;nte,..
led In ,......ng .. 8ft. ._..

-

...

Autoa for s.Je

T1

Buslnna
Buildings

NOT,_ Mild monorl,;;;.;,.iho
mo!l untM you loa" ln-Tgotod

104,,0oll pollo,OH415131.

-.ct:

34

11u•

Slngloo Silk Ouolly
Poop10
For
Slgnlllcont
Rolatlonlhlptl.
Conlldtntla).
Wrllt: HoortOMrCh, P.O. Boa

PI-

KIT 'N' CARLYLE®_by Larry Wrlabt

BUII11881
Opportunity

OHIO VALLI~ CO.
rea a SUIWnda tMI ~ t1o
-with potpie,. . tncl

3 Announcements

Wednesday,

roy---MiddlepOrt, Ohio

Pom

Announcements

.

• •r

. I J.'

�Ohio

Ohio Lottery

Southern
eliminated
by Wild~ats

Pick 3:322
Pick 4:3142
Cards : 2-H, Q-C;
6-I&gt;; 2-S

Low tonight in mid teens.

Super Lotto:

STORE HOURS
Monday lhru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM
.

Friday, mostly sunny.

. 16-25-32-35-37-47

Page3

Kicker:324468

•

'

· 298 SECOND ST.
POMfROY, OH.

GROUND

PRICES EFFECTIVE MAR. 3 THRU MAR. 9 1991
I

BEEF-

Vol. 41, N!&gt;. 223
CapyrtghMd 1891

. According to William S. White

. 10 LB. PKG.

2 Sectl~&gt;ne, 12 Pegee 25 cent• ·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, ll'lursday, March 7, 1991

A MuiUIMdll Inc. Newepeper .

'.~

.

.

KC plant to operate well into 21st century
By MELINDA POWERS
OVP News Sta~

•

A second power plant in Gallia
County may be facing major
changes in opemti~ns in ibe .c'?m. ing years; accordmg to offiCials
with the Ohio Valley Elecaic Corporation.

..

MIXED FRYER

Chicken Parts •••••••
LB.

(

10 LB. PKG.

. However, one of those changes facing possible fuel ch•iiges to
1s not a shut down at the Kyger meet the requirements of the 1990
Creek plant in Cheshire, as printed Clean Air Act.
in some recent news articles, the '-" The U.S. Department of Energy
officials stated..
• ·
recent! y asked OVEC to define the
The coal-fued Kyger Creek its options of providing "clean"
pla~t, along with the John ,M. power for the Gaseous Qiffusion
Gavm plant operated by Amencan Plant in Piketon after the tum of
Elecaic Power in Gallia County, is the century. The DOE ·Stated that

.-Frying Chicken. . !B•···
,. LON-GHORN . .
CHICKEN -LEG
Colby Chee.se ••• !B•·· $189, QUARTERS
-10 LB. PKG.
49
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
,
$ 9 c'hick~n livers .!:~~$2
'$ 90
1
Round Steak ..... ~~. 2·
Pork Roast •••..•• !~.$1
CUMBERLAND GAP

.,

69
Smoked Sausage.'!-~ 1
B~LLARD'S 1~LB ROLL or

JURKEY
DRUMSTICKS
10 LB. PKG~

$490
YELLOW

Onions •••••••••••••••••• 69&lt;
3 LB. BAG .

$ ' s9

FLAVORITE
I

2°/o Milk

GAL

$ .49

.P1e Crust ••••••• :::~...

1

•

6ft
(,
Snac·k Cakes ••••••••• '7
~to 12 PAl

BULK

SLICED
BACON
•

10 LB. PKG.

KEMP'S

Ice Cream

10 LB. PKG.

New Sun( hips·.:~.o~.
PURINA FIELD MASTER

FABRIC SOFTENER

DOG FOOD

oz.$149
1n.

20 LB.

64

lAG

f1eM Gilly AI ,.,...., Iuper Volu
...... J lin ... '· 1"'1
ll!llt I

.''

$299

Goad Only At Powel'• Supw Volu
Goad • · S thru Mar. 9, 1991

'

I

PORK
SHOULDER
STEAK

DORITOS or

FINAL TOUCH

Meigs Local Teachers Association;

Dr. James Conde; Ernie Sisson for
the Ohio Power Company; and·Dr.
James Witherell for Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Ceniricates of superior, excellent, good and satisfactory wiD be
presented by school ~nne!.
Also awarded w1ll be five spe·
cial Governor's Awards. They are
in the areas of agriculiiiRl and food
serviee research, litter prevention
and recycling, environmental sci,
ences research, energy research,
and water resources research.
Those students who receive
superior ratings on their projects
will be eligible to atiend the District Science Day to be held at Ohio
University on Apri16.

;::;:::;-;:~~--:-"'"'!~

·~··

GOLD MEDAL
HI.
lAG

FLOUR --

99&lt;

Goad Only At Powol's Iuper Volu .
Good Mar. I thru Mar. 9, 1991
1111111 1 Per C.t-

10 LB. PKG.

\

Kyger Creek Power Plant

Nancy Russell named successor .

Meigs County Commission
accepts Collins' resignation
By BRIAN j. REED
· Sentinel News Stall

'

PIL~SBURY ALL READY

-

that evening an open house will be
held beginning at 6 p.m. Parents
and students along with other interested individuals are invited to
attend the open house and see the
work of the students. Refreshments
wiU be served by the Meigs Juniqr.
High Academic Boosters Club
. from 6 to 7 p.m.
At 7 p.m. the awards ceremony
will take place. Bookman will be
presenting the John Mora Memorial Award to the student with the
best project
Other special awards will made
by Brian Conde for the Meigs ·
County Jaycees, Debbie Brennan
for the Meigs Junior High Academic Boosters; Carmen Manuel for the

$1590

Ltnk Sausage ·~·~:.o:. .. .

UnLE DEBBIE

megawatt range , or to possibly
build a. nuclear unit, the release
said.
If the company were to decide
on the nuclear option, site investigation studies "would have to commence soon in order to preserve the
option of placing a nuclear unit in
Continued on page 5

10 LB. PKG.

$l·49

·

· Meigs Junior High School will
have its annual Science Day Tuesday as a pan of the Ohio Academy
of Science statewide COin petition.
Eighth grade students of Rusty
Bookman, director of the science
event, and Jesse Vale will be participating in the activities which are
geared to stimulate interest in sci·
ence, to promote research, and the
pursuit of scientific knowledge. . .
Each project will be judged by a
team of professionals and educators
in the areas of originality and creativity, clarity of expression, use of
the· scientific method; and know!.edge achieved.
The judging will take place during school hours on Tuesday and

'ASSORTE.D
PORK·
CHOPS
'

3 -9

"may noi have ibe capacity·to meet
the fuU needs of DOE,'' according
to a com~ny news release.
The release said that OVEC
offered three options to ihe DOE:
to purchase power on a flflll or spot
basis from other utilities, to construct an additional coal-fired gen•
erating unit in the 500-600

Meigs Junior High· Science
Day event slated Tuesday

WHOLE . .

PORK BUn STEAKS or

the Piketon sill: may need as much
as 2,260 megawatts of power to.
· opera~~: in the year 2000.
Kyger Creek and its sister plant
Clifty Creek. in Indiana, presently
genemte 1,974 megawatts of electricity for the uranium enrichment
plant The two plants will be more
than 50 years old at that time and

The resignation of Meigs Coun-

ty Treasurer George Collins \'l~s
accepted at Wednesday's regular
meeung of lhe Meigs County Commissioners, and Nancy Russell was
appointed to act in ihe interim until
another county trea*er is named
by the CoUnty Reputilican Party.
Republican,
Collins , a
announced earlier this week that he
had been appointed to the position
of Administralive Assistant to Ohio

Department of Transportation Roush. said after the meeting. "I
Deputy Director John Dowler. wish George the best in his new
Collins will commute from his job. It is Meigs County's loss and
Tuppers Plains home 10 Marietta, the State of Ohio's gain , as
where ODOT's District 10 office is (Collins) has always h'ad Meigs
located.
'
. County at heart in his every
Collins' resignation, ~ccepted endeavor."
"with deepest regret" by the comThe Central Committee of the
missioners, will be effectiva Friday . Meigs County Republican Party
afternoon.
must appoint a new treasurer not
"It has been a great pleasure less than five days and not more
working with George for ib'e past than 15 days after Collins' resignaeight years that f have served tion becomes effective.
Meigs County as a commissioner,"
Russell currently serves as
Commission President Manning Collins" chief deputy in the treasurer's office, and hel' appoinunent as
Interim County Treasurer was
approved by the commissioners
upon Collins' recommendation.
Her appoinunent in thal capacity is
effecuve Monday.
The commissioners approved a
contmct between tile Ohio Departmoot of Transportation and several
local agencies involving a new
coopemtive transportation program
fo.r the Meigs ijoard of Mental
Retardation . .
The program, which was first
introduccil to the commissioners in
June, involves ihe MRDD Board;
Meigs Indusaies, Overbrook Cen·
tet, and Blue Streak Cab, snowing
the individual programs to "share
ridership" on the vehitles. belonging to other programs:
The program is a one-year pilot
program with a budget in the
. amount or $40,000.
Commission Clerk Mary Hob·
steuer reponed that no comments, .
either verbal or written, were
received concerning the tranSfer of
ll·liquor permit at Jaymar Golf
Course. The tranSfer was between
owners and involves on-premises
beer consumption. A repon to the
Ohio Depaibuent of Liquor Control
will now be mailed before the
CODtlnued on page 5

..
· PROJECT WORK • In preparation ror
Tuesday's Sdence Day judging, e1ghth graders
at MeigS Junior Hl&amp;h School are busy finishing
their projects. Shown worklna here are from the
left are Lisa Tattenon whose project Is entitled
Sweet Potatoes Grow Beller in Spring or

Tap Water?", Crystal Vaughan who is explorlna
the effect or temperature on the 11ctlon or yeast,
and Jerod Cook whose project topic Is "Electric·
ily Meets Moss.'' Rusty Bookman, Science Day
director, looks over the work or ibe students.

DISCUSSING STRATEGY· Soutbero hnd
cOich Howie CaldweU (center) dlsc1111et atratqy
with bls Tornadoes durlaa the nrst hair or
Wednesday nlabt's Division IV district tournament pme at OU a_p lut Hannan Trace. The

Tornailoet tied tbe pme at 57·57 ID the final 30
second&amp; or the contest, only to lose 59-57 on a
J,J. Bevan Jumper tbat went in at the buzzer.
See additional pictures and story on paaes 3-4.
(OVP photo by Scott Wolre)

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