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•

Tuesday, March 23, 1993

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio

Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

..

Future husband continues
to taJk about his past wives
Dear Ann Laden: The man ·
whom I am now going with and who
has proposed marriage talks
constantly about his former wives.
. His fJist wife died 31 years ago,
and. he is still puddling up and
dabbing his eyes when he speaks of
her. He has told me, with incn:dible
venom, how his second wife~
on him, publicly ridiculed him and
· ran off and married IIIIOiher man !IDe hairpins, braces, surgical pins, metal
month before they were legally shoe lips, underwire bras, ell:. k is
divorced. He also let me know thai not reasonable after one's pocktu
she was a tariblc cook, a sloppy have been empdcd to ask people to
housekeepcl' and the world's wont disrobe or undo their hairstyles.
driver. I have heard ad nauseam
1 am an executive who travels
about this same woman's incompa- frequently, often overseas. All
rable.beaUty, her dancing ability and security Sllllions have hand !C81111Cn.
her size 34DD bras.
.
Too 'oflen, while traveling in the
I find it diff'ICult to compete with staleS; I have encountered IICCurity
a cinonized ghcst'and a."gorgeous guardS who are too lazy to use the
creat~· (his words). I've told him sc8nner s.&gt; they keep sending people
repeatedly that his commerus make back through the deleciors again and
me uncomfortable, but.he invariably again. Nowhere else in the world
retwns to the subject of these two docs this happen. The hand ·
women. Should I bail ollt now or• SC8IIIIClS are used routinely overseas, •
keep waiting · for him to start even in high security lirpons. ..
appreciating me? -- ONLY A 36C
Hand scanners solve the problem
IN MINNEAPOLIS
nicely. That's why they were
· DEAR 36C: A man who insisiS invented. Please deal with this in
on l his line of patter during your column... FORTUNE SOO
courtship will not change his EXECUTIVE IN ROCHESTER,
tune after marriage. Unless you are N.Y.
prepared to hear a.bout these
DEAR FORTUNE 500: Your
two women for the rest of your letter is sure to caleb the .eye of
natural life, my advice is to bail out airline executives l)lho are struggling
now.
in a highly competitive field. After
.Dear Ann Landers: You recently price, the major factors that
printed a .letter about airport metal influence ~sengers to choose one
deteclors. The wriw complained thal airline over another are food and
soine people, just to be service. You can be 'sure the
difficult, take oiT one metal item at employees who are too lazy to .use
a lime, whicb Rlquires them to go. the IIC8IIIICII will hear about this.
throu&amp;h the delcctors over and over, Thanks for writing.
boJdinl up odler pusengers.
It is amazing what will trigger
When pllllllling a wedding, wlto
these delcctors- rivets in blue jeans, pays for wlt(Jl? Who SfQIIds wltere?

Ann
Landers

.

II

.

LOTTERY WINNERS • Former railroadtrack maintenance worker living on disability,
James Russell, 52, is surrounded by ramily Mon·
· day afternoon in his Jobasto:wn, Pa., home. RusseU says be bas one ot three winning tickets tor

an $86 million Florida Lotto jackpot. Jlro!D left
to right Is wife, Bobbie, gral!ddaugbter, Julian·
JIB, 3, her brother, Bel!, l, daughter, Jamie Mer.
riman, James Rjlssell, and daughter-in-law,
.
Judy RusseU. (AI'"photo)

---'-'-Names in the news---"!"'""
NEW YORK (AP) - Ivan
Boeslr.y is now a dirorced man.
Whether the former mullimillioniire ':"ill win his fight for alimony
remams to be seen.
·
: . A judge granted the divorce
Monday to Sepma Bo~s"'y on ·
grounds of "cruel and mhuman ·
treatment," said a court source,
on condition of aoonymi-

rmg

A hearing on finances was
scheduled for Aprill6. Malrimonial cases are sealed from public disclosure in New York stale.
Mrs. Boesky, with a multimillion-doUar {ortune of her own, flied

for divorce in 1991. In 1992,
Boesky sued her, lieeting $20,000
a week in temporary support. He
·said he was barely geaing by while
his wife of 3Q years ~~ $42,000
a month.
" She is seeking nothing from
him fmancially," the source said.
"'The money she has is money she
inherited." .
The Boeskys . own a Park
Avenue penlhouse 11p111 tmeru and a
colonial mansion ouiSide the city.
They have three adult cbildrell.
The fonner Wall Street player
pleaded guilty to insider trading in
1986 and agreed to pay a $100 mil- ·

lion penalty. He served nearly two
years in prison.

-LOS ANGELES (AP)

~ "Back
to the FuiUie" sw Lea Thompson
lOQI!: a two-year bre!lk from making
movies to raise her daughter. And
now she's back with a role that
really tested her maternal instincts.
The 30-year-old acuess plays
the harried mom in the big-screen
version of "Dennis the Menace,"
directed by John Hughes. It is due
in tbealers this swnmer.
"I just couldn't take an ad out
in the trades &amp;nd say: 'I'm back!'"
she said.
·

Ohio Lottery.

.Probe
._boating
accident

Pick 3:
362
Pick 4:
9553
BuckeyeS:
1-3-8-36-37

Page 4

7he AM Landers Glli« for Bridu"
liDs all the fJII.fMiers. Sertd a t;t/f-od·
(insud,long, busbtul-lix llflltlope

altd a check or lfiDIWY order for
$3.65 (this i~~eludes postage artd
hlllldlillg) to: Brides, c/o AM Lalt· ·
ders, P.O. Box 11562, Cltkago, 111.
60611-0562 . (In Ci:utada, send
$4.45.)

During two five-week summer .
sessions, Ohio University offers a
wide variety·of undelgraduate and
graduate courses at lhe main cam·
pus in Athens and at the five
regional campuses in Chillicothe,
Ironton, Lancaster, Zanesville, and
Bel010nt County.
In addition, the.university offers
more !hlVI 100 workshops, special
programs arid seminars.
•. .
After the day's studies are' over,. .
the nearby slate parks in southeast·'
em Ohio provide many opportUni·
lies for recreation. On campus, the·
ater perfonnances, concerti, films,
lectures and intramural l)lOrtl programs highli$hl afternoon and
evening enterl!llllmenL
~ummer sessions bulletin ~d
schedule of classes is now avatl·
able, which include the listing of
summer class offerinfs at the
Athens campus as wei the five
regional campuses, along with tl\e ·
wor~hops, special programs, and
extmc'urricular everus to be offered
this summer.
For more information and lO· ·
receive a free copy ol the summer
sessions bulletin and schedule of
classes, call (614) S93-2583 in
Athens, toll-free in Ohio 1-800336-5699, or write to Office of
Summer Sessions, 310 Cutler Hall,
Athens; 45701.

Vol. 43, No. 229

Copyrighted 1993

.. ..... .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio Wednesday, March 24, 1993

PRESENTED PLAQUES • Recognized ror
serving 111 buglers ror l'unerals and patriotic services were Stephanie Price, rour years, center,
and Mltbelle Young, three years. They were

presenttd plaquq by Chaplain Jame~ GUmore
at Tueaday night's celebration by Drew Webster
Post 39 or tbe 74th birthday or the American
~on held at the Senior Citizens Center, '

Legion .
observes 74th
•
anniversary

'

•

I

LEGIONNAIRE OF TilE YEAR • Commander John Weeks,
tert, was named Leglonaalre ot the Year ai the 74th birthday
observance ot IU Amerlcaa Legion, Drew Webster Post 39, Tuesday aigbl. He waa presented a trophy by Joe Struble.

Senate rejects GOP effort
.
to kill Social Security tax
.

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Senate today rejected a Republican
efforno kill President Clinton's
proposed tax incre11se on many
Social Security recipients, as
Democrats rebuffed the stiffest
challenge yet to the president's
economic plan. •
·
The Senate voted 52-47, .mosUy
along party lines, to tum aside the
GOP amendment, which was
aimed at the most politically sensitive piece of Clinton's five -year
defictt-reduclion pa~;kage.
With Vice President AI Gore
sittin$ in the Senate president's
chair m case his tie-breaking vote
was needed, Democrats derided the
Republican ~sal as a shol that
was really Blmed at brealdng Clinton's economic recovery plans
apart.

I

"Our colleagues are now making an effort to derail President
Clinton's momentum," said Senate
Majority Leader Georgo Mitchell,
D-Maine. "Do we want to aivc
President Clinton a chance, or do
we want to torpe&lt;1o PreSident Clin-

,

STORE HOUR~ ....

,.
•

WE

)IBCQge. .

'

Now, individual Soeial Security
recipients pay tuea on up to half of
their Soeial Security benefiiS once
their income exceeds $25,000 for
an individUII or $32,000 for a couple. The president would raise, to
8S percent the portion of benefits
subJect to .the it¥:ome tax, the same
as for private pensions.

EMS responds to call for assistance

291 SECOND ST.
. POMEROY, OH.
R.HT TO LIMIT

"Let's not be fooled by this,"
the measure's sponsor, Sen. Trent
Lou, R-Miss., said of his opponents. "You are, voting for a Social
Security tax increase on the elderly
middle class and low-income
Social Security rccipieniS. That's
wrong...
Clinton's Social SecuritY. ta~
proposal would raise,$32 btllion
over five years, maldng it one of
the biggest revenue raisers in his

Chester Townabjp 'I'rulleca wiD hold alpCCial moetlna Friday at
9 a.m. at the Chesw Town Hall · .

IAM~lOPM

/

means.

Trustees to hold special meeting

·Monday tin ~1nday

One Triple Vendor Coupon Per Customer ·

rogram

ton. s
before it gelS under
way?'
. ·
But Republicans said they were
trying to kill a tax that is unfairly
aimed at people of only modest

-----Local briefs----

.

TRIPLE VENDOR• '
COUPON
Good Wednesday, March 24, 1993 Only

2 Sectlone, 12 Pa~• Z5 oenta
A loluiUmedla Ina. -paper

Meigs Local B·o ard
hires personnel; ,study
results are announced

PRICES GO.OD WEDNESDAY, MARCH· 24th, 1993 ONLY!

'

near 60.

Courses offered

.

POWEU'S SUPER VALU

Low tonight near 40. Partly
cloudy. Tbunday, cloudy, hlp

•

PO ELL'S MARCH . MADNESS SALE

WE WILL REDEEM UP
TO 5 VENDOR
COUPONS (Max. SOC
Value • No.Cigarette
Coupons) With The
TRIPLE VENDOR
COUPON AT RIGHT.
(You must bring the
Triple Vendor Coupon
Below•• One coupon
. · per family.)

I

.~

Unlll of the Melp County J!merpncy Mcdlcal Service responded "to Pomeroy Nuninl llld RcblbWjlllon Cearer Tueaday II 9:26
a.m. for Donna Morri10n who- DllliljXll1ed to V~ Memori81 Holpital.
•

'

!

certified and non-certified
teachers llflll other personnel were
. hited and April 9 (Good Friday)
was designaled as a makeup day .
for the district when .the Meigs
' Local Board of Education met in
' ~gular session Tuesday night at
tlie board office.
Hired as substitute teachers
~ere Theresa Lieving King, elementary teacher, and Mila ,Raymond, cosmetolog~ teacher. The
board also entered m a purchased
services agreement with Shirley
Van Meter to tutor a handicapped
student at $11.72 per hour not to
exceed five hours per week.
Kevin Musser was hired as
assistant junior high track coach for
this spring's program pending certificuion in CPR and sports
medicine, and Steven Cotterill was ·
employed a sobstitute mechanic
for the remainder or the school
year. The resi11nation of Diane
~wley as a substitqte cook was

as

accepted.

ir.lere accepted for next year at the higher education. Superintendant
high school . They are Danijela James Carpenter reported that the
Kmoija, and Wielllr.e Muhlhoff.
resolution comes foflowinJ a study
The board passed a resolution by Shawnee Slate of 20 districlll in
designating Feb. 16, 23 and 26 and I 0 counties ill Southeastern Ohio .
March 4 and IS as calamity days · where as many as 80 percent of the
and set Good Friday as a makeup students indicated they would like
day for one of the days missed but · to go on to higher education, but
not covered within the live aJ1otled
where Jess than 30 percent 11:tua11y
days.
do . .The resolutions are being
Approval was given for a Meigs secured so thai Shawnee State can
High student to D'lvel 10 San Anto- ~t ~m to officials for appronlo, Teus for competition in the . pnatt acuon.
·
Business Professionals of America
Several appropriation changes
Contest. It was reponed that the were made at the request of the
student won state competition qual- Treasurer Jane Fry. Prayer 10 &lt;!~Jen
ifying her for the national contest.
the meeting was given by the Rev.
School board meeting dates for · Glen McClung, Pomeroy Nazarene
April were cbanged. The next Church.
·
.
meeting will be held on April 6 at
In executive session, the board
Harrisonville, and a meeting on - upheld a Salisbury student suspenApri) 20 wm be beld in the Central sion. A seoond executive session
office.
was held to discuss personnel and
The board adopted a resolution to meet with another ji!ODP to disindicating thai appropriate actions cuss school propeny d•sposilion .
and propn.s bo tabn by the disAttending were Lany Rupe,
trict to mcrease the p~on ol president, Randy Humphreys,
district studen~ participating in Roger Abbou, John Hood, and
Robett Barton.

Two foreign e~change studeniS
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Stall'
John Weeks, com m11nder of
Drew Webster Post 39, Amerij:an
Legion ~_received the Legionnaire •,
of th~Y·ear il')'atd at lh• post's
observance of the 74th (!irthday of
the American Legion Tuesday
night.
Long-time legionnaire Joe Stru·
ble made the surprise presentation
to Weeks who has served as the
post commander for the past three
years before more than a hundred
legionnaires and their guests
attending the dinner at the Senior
· Citizens Center.
Struble commended Wee~ for
his leadership and enthusiasm, for
his dedicallon and inspiration '
which has led to increased mem·
bership and participation in jJost
activities.
Weeks, a native Meigs County
returned to Pomeroy following his
· retirement and immediately
became active in the local Pomeroy
post A World Warn veteran, he
has been a member of the Ainerican Legion siQ!:C I 948.
Meiga County Virtues
'
The vinuea of Meigs County as
DEMONSTRATING CALLS- Meigs aod
uraed novice aad se111oned turkey bunters to
a retirement centez weze dilcussed
attend a l'ree seminar to be lleld Saturday after.
Gallia County Game Prote~fors Keith Wood
by the Rev. Roland WUdman, pasand Jim Splete, from trout to rear respeetively,
noon at the Forked Run Sportsma's Club. For ·
tor of Trinity Church, speaker.
demonstrated 1 variety of turkey calls at The
more lnrormatioa, see related story. (Sentinel
"The potential is here for a
DaUy Seotloel omce Monday afternQOa. Wood
pboto by Jim Freeman)
reti(ement mecca and what we
need to do is catch the vision," said
Wildman. He described Meigs
County as the "prime site east of
the Mississippi" and prec!icted an
influx of. retirees bec•nse"we have
everything here that they want".
"We have the fmest, friendliest
people here of anywhere." Wildman said. He suggested getting rid
of abandoned property, mentioning
the improvement at the old MOM
Farm City site, and the need for
By JIM FREEMAN
ceming turlcey hURling.
. by actually mimicking one of the
more shops and restaurants.
Sentinel News .Stall'
Huntini hours are 1/2 hour birds through the use of a turkey
He talked about the proposed
In abOut a month, the hills of before sunnse to noon, Wood said. call. Unfortunately; the huntez may
revitalization of Pomeroy and Mid· southeastern Ohio will be alive, not Hunters are allo~ to use a shot· . htre anothr; hunter at the same
dleport, and imJXOvemeniS in liaht- with the sound ·or music, but with gun, a muzzleloadmg shotgun, a . time.
ing which are to be made in the 101111d of putts, p11111 and clucks crossbow or a longbow. Rilles may
Wood said 99 percent of all
Pomeroy this year. He also said as hunten take to the fteld, anni:d not be ~.
.
turkey hunting accidents involve
that plans are being made for · with shotguns, calls and camouHunten are permtu.ed to kiU one victims being mistaken for game
assisted living facilities, mention· flaRe, in search of wild turkeys.
- beanJ:ed turltey J?ef season. Howev- generally by other hunters noi
ing om: which he said is to be
J:rom 1966, when 321 hunters er~ wtth possesst?D of a bonus per· obeying game laws.
located in or near Syracuse and participating in Ohio's flist turltey mtt1 a seco~d btrd may be taken
The key thing to remember,
another at Overbrook in Middle- season killed 12 binls,lhe sport has dunng lh_e third week of the season, Wood cautioned, is that hunters can
port.
grown in popularity while the Wood said.
only shoot a bearded turkey A
He also reponed thai a market· tlllkey population continues to rise,
Like deer, turkeys must be hunter should flrSl identify his iar.
ina study is underw1y now on 1 which is music to many hunters tagg~ .where they fall :With a tag get as a turkey, see that it h\s a
multi-million doUar assisted livina ears.
contammathe dale and tune killed, beard and consider what is behind
facility in Meigs County.
In 1992, turkey hunting was tbe bunter's name and address. the wget before shooting, WOOd
While the markets are not close allowed in 38 of Ohio's 88 counties Dead turkeys muat be taken to said.
by, while ainsponation is IICt ade· and 5,678 birds wero klllod. Baum's LUmber in Cbollar, Meigs
Keep your eyes and ears open
quate, while there are limited Hunter• in Meigs County killed Conntfa IUIJr;ey cbec:ldna alation, for other hunters, WOOCI said, and
resoUn:ea. while the labor supply il 283 turkeys matins tho county f&lt;!r inspeelion by 2 p.m. on the clay identify yourself if you see another
mostly unskilled and while good founh in the state behind Vinton, · ldUed, W~ 1114
·,
huntez.
t1al building liiOI are hard to lind, Hocking llld Oallll countiea while
In addiJion, Wood1~ It Ia illeWood labeled calling, moveWildman said thoao need not deter Atherui County. 10 lbo nonh, came gal to slloot alllrltey 11111 ola 1ree or ment and contrasting color as tho
the area from growina . Ho aid in fifth.
to hunt over I ballail-.
three elements ~ommon in most
similar communities have devel·
For hunlcrl suffilinJ withdraw· ·
s.ret,
turltey huntina accidents.
oped local ikllb coneenli'IIID&amp; on al after the fall bununs season , . ~lth~&amp;b IUrkay
Wood ursed hunters to •void .
one thinl! and have exocri~nced Ohio's spring tudtey lle8SOil offers hunlill&amp; m
Ia
waaring red, white, blue or blilclt
great prosperity.
·
an enjoyable divenion, If a few safe. ~
- colors associated with wild
"We have a quiet locatloll, It's hunlina laws all.d l&amp;fety rules are ctlltiOD,- ::' 1II
turkeys.
avoid small patches
sate to walk the streets at nlsht. obeervcd.
calla
of
llld.
.
you 'can feel safe in your honle, a
Han11D1 Jaws .
tbrough the
fine climate, sood medical care,
Meiaa Couaty. Oame Protector
and a low coat of llvingt Wildman Keltli Wood outlined some of clad fully
Continued on paae 3
Ohio's role and reaulations con· lure a turkey

Talking /Jlrkey•••

Meigs hunters prepare
for wild turkey action

�Wednesday, March 24,1993

. . Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
.

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

DEVOTED TO THE INTERE81'8 Of THE IIEIG8-1111180N AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETI
Publisher
PAT WIDTEHEAD
Assistabt Publisber/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

LETI'ERS OF OPINION life welcome. They should be less than 300
words. All !etten are subject 10 editing and must be signed with name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned lenen wilt be published. Leaen
should be in good wte, addressing issues, nol personalities.

-

.

.

· The housing see-saw
. By JOHN CUNNIFF
. , AP Buslaess Allalyst
.
NEW YORK - A,nyonc ~g the purchase of a home over
the next few montha should be aware of the see-saw effect, in which low
: 91' declining rna~ rates are usually accompanied by rising prices.
· . The explanation os readily understood by most people, but that doesn't
· stop thousands of would-be buyers from waiting for even lower rates. For
· :them, interest ratlier than price is the determinanL
· If interest rates are low oc falling, they reason, then interest rates could
fall some more, especially if the president and the head of the Federal
Reserve seem incliDed to make that hope come true.
. . ~canwhile, of course, prices climb, at least partially offsetting any
: · poss1ble benefits from the lower rates.
. It is happening now. The national median price for existing single-fam·ily homes during last year's fourth quarter was $103,400, about4.3 per•· cent ~gher than in the founh quarter of I 99 I, and the gain for the year
··was 3.3 pm:enL
Somehow, these rising prices seem to altnlet a lot less attention than
interest rates. In fact, your own infonnal.survey is likely to show that
many people believe hOusing prices are stable oc even falling.
The point of this is to alert those COU!lies waiting foe still lower rates
that tbosc rates might not come, and housing prices have already taken off
.in some areas.
, The biggest increases, according to the National Association of Real, tors, seem to be in lower-price categories, with 18 metropolitan areas
. ):eporting increases ill the double-digits.
.: . Leading the gains was the area of Richland-Kennedwick-Pasco coon; ties of Washin$ton stale, where prices in the founh quarter or 1992 were
16.1 percent h1gher than a year earlier. The increase there brought the
· median price to $94,700.
· " Oklahoma City, at $67,200, had the second-biggest increase, with
· prices rising 18.3 percent. Spokllle, Wash., with ·a price of $80,400,
• ranked third with an increase of 18.1 pereenL
.
·· On a regional basis, the Midwest, with the largest concentration of
l!lfordable homes, was the strongest real estate market of all, with fourth~ (tuarta prices rising 5.5 pen:ent from one year earlier.
· Several areas in what the realtors call the "southwestern portion of the
·• South" showed big increases. Corpus Christi and Houstoo reported dou·
, ble-digit increases, for example. Poc;kets of strength were found even in
· lhe Nonheast.
.
· In spite of this, that popular notion thpt housin&amp;.::.,in the doldrums
seems 10 persist, one cxplanalion being that the co
of multifamily
construCtion, and the resulting publicity, has skewed impressions.
• ·. At the same time, 111 equally widespread notion continues to exist : ~ interest rates will continue to fall. The·combination could provide a
·painful experience for those couples waiting for il to happen.
:: : Housing markets have proved to be volatile in the past two decades. In
.;:the 1970s and early 1980s, many couples missed their buying OPP.Prtunity
:When rising prices made their painfully. saved down payments too minis; cule foe the market.
·
; :·. Some couples resolved not to be caught again, and statistics suggest
•·many of them made good on their resolutions.
.
~ First-time homebuyers, according to the realtors, have been ,the
~strength of the market everywhere, and those buyers have been especially
jlctive in the lower-priced categories.

Berry•s World

•

•

Paga-2-The Dally Senllnel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, March 24, 1993

rebelling. Their !elf-preservation is such a reform.
''If you benefit from the system,
paramoun·t to political reform .
land):
you're
not an&gt;&lt;ious to fundamentalto
President
Clinton
promised
Eastland continued: "You all
ly
change
it,' ~ Wellstone added.
make ~Y more speeches like you . make campaign finance reform, a
"Qu1te
often,
people who have the
cornerstone of his candidacy. a
power
don't
want
the change, and
high-priority issue in the White
jx:ople
who
want
the
change don't
House. So far, it seems like busihave the power. So it's hard for
ness as usual.
·
, The only Senate proposal thus people to vote for a different sysfar is basically a carbon cq~y of a tem other than the one that's
weak "reform" bill that President worked pretty well for them ...
The average winner of a Senate
Bush vetoed last y~. II calls for
did here today, son·, you all are oaniaJ public funding and moderate seat spends about $4 million these
going to be the youngest one-term limits on Public Action Commit- days getting elected. .For an incumseruitor in the history of the United tees and soft money contributions bent senator to win re-election, that
States Senate."
- the backdoor lhat SDCCial inter- means raising an average of
Laler that day, a dejected Biden ests have 10 contribute to Congre&amp;· $12,000 a week for every week of
his six-year term.
tried to explain himself to another sional campaigns.
Wellstone and Biden believe
veteran in the cloak room. "You
"Moderate reform is like mod·
just don't understand," the veteran crate· chastity- ain't no such that if campaigns were publicly
said. "I have worked 28 years to thing," says Biden, paraphrasing financed, politicians could get out
get in the position where some an old .English saying. Sen. Paul of the fund-raising business and
young whipper-snapper just can 'I Wellstone. D-Minn., is the "whip- start legislating more. They also
come up and run against me. If you per-snapper" Joe Biden was 20 would no· longer be dependent
do (public financing), it means years ago- except Wells tone isn't upon PACs and individual contributors to bankroll their campaigns.
whoevet runs against me is going takiDg no foe an·answer.
"Part of the appeal of Ross
to have as much money as I have.
"I want to make sure that what
What have I worked 28 years for?''
we Pass and call a 'major reform' Perot was that he could credibly
Not much has changed.
is, indeed, a major reform," Well- say, 'no one owns me beclluse no
COilgress is again debating pub- stone told our associate Ed Henry. PAC 0.. individual has contributed
lic funding of congressional ~­ "It's not inconceivable that we · to my campaign,"' said Rep.
paigns, and many members are still could pass a 'reform' bill that isn't Robert Andrews, D-N J. "Under
public fmancing, every member of
Congress would be a 'Ross Perot.'
We could say, 'I haven't taken a
dime from any special interests. I
don't owe anyone but the American public. You'll be my bOss."'
Critics of public fmancing, like
Sen. Don Nickles, R-Oida., call it a
"taxpayer-funded· entitlement program fQr politicians." But Wellstone is angered QVCC the way special interests dictate the public
agenda. Consider Wellstone's
health-care proposal. It ~uts ·the
insurance industry out of the picture - a point that hasn't been lost
on panhandling pols.
''I've been in many, many
meetings where I've heard (my collea,ues) say, 'Your health-care
biU s a aood piece of legislation,
but the groups won't accept it,'"
Wellstone told us. "Well, who are
the 'groups'? The insurance indus~
try! Look at the amount of money ·
that the industry contributes."
Jack Anderson aad M!cbael
Biasteln are writers tor United
Feature Syndkate, Inc.

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein

ARE

TWJSE
TIC KEn;-?

Dear Socks: time to·· take ·command
. You probably doo't remember Humane Society of America,
me. I am Samantha, a fenlale tabby which wanted to know if you've
and native Washingtonian who been spayed (really now, would
lives witlj the character who writes they tell us if they ))ad j)een
this column. I wrote to you during
the transition to urge you 10 sign up
for assertiveness training so you
would know how to handle the
photographers who were invading neutered?). You've been maligned
your privacy. I said you should by the Cat Fanciers Association for
.
team how to give 'em a claws- alackofpedigrec.
extended, left hook across the nose.
There is an upside, of course.
Draw a little 0-positive.
There was the Socks float in the
You probably still don't remern- Inaugural parade, llld the •"Socks
ber me. I read that you are buried Hop" line danee somebody inventin fan mail and mash notes from ed in your honor, and the Socks
female felines. They're even send- cookies.they're selling in Washinging you gifts, 1 hear. I have to ton. Take it from a feline who gets
admit you are kind of cute, but I'm a catnip mouse at Christmas and in
not into mushy letters, and my Lit- return is expected to purr loudly.
ter Changer doesn't pay me enough roll over in rapture 111d otherwise
to afford gifts for friends. Sorry;·
wax ecstatic, you are doing very
Speaking of your·privac.r, I well.
.
.
gather it is a rapidly· diminishing . But let me get to the po1nr of
resource. You've been dragged this letter. My research .in~cates
against your will before the televi- ' you are the 12th cat to live m the
sion cameras, been psychoanalyzed Wbite t{ouse, 3nC! none of them has
by the National Enquirer and Peo- done our spectes proud. Who
pte magazine, been featured on the remembers Gerald Ford's cat,
cover of Cats Magazine and been Shan? Or the ~oc Siamese : ~ho
interviewed by Media Week. was saddled w1th the name Misty
You've been investigated by the Malarky Ying Yang by. Amy

Joseph Spear '

Network execs ponder new jamming theaters to see newsreels
news ethics in ihe aftermath of that fed America's war fervor.
NBC's vidcouocities. Critics opine
that TV has sunk to new news
lows. But we must remember this:
---------Our thirst foe news-that-wiggles
Vitagraph's newsreels of !898
has long been unquenchable. And
were
all the rage. The moat harrowour news makers have long been
ing moments for Vitagraph's camtoo eager to obUge.
.Way before we eycwitnessed eramen occurred after retumina to
NBC's exploding truck trick and New York from Cuba. Their
phonf dead fish story. way before footage of Teddy Roosevelt's slow
ABC s actors re-created news of a slog up San Juan Hill was true, but
spy passing secrets, Americans too tame compared to the dashing
thrilled to breathtaking footage of charge 1R's pet newspaper correthe Battle of Santiago Bay. in the .spondents had cabled, creatively,
epic newsreel of the Spanish- back home.
American War.
Vitagraph vowed to quench
America's
news thirst with similar
Cannons blasting ... smoke billowing ... American warships bash- creativity. It had no remote-coning the Spanish neet. Our glorious trolled fore igniters, nor electronic
victory at sea was ·there for all to fish-stunners. Just American ingesee.
nui\Y·
Even in pre-Nielsen days, sucHere's how the Battle of Santiacess in the visual news blz was go Bay was captured, belatedly, by
measured by numbers - people Vitagraph's cami::lamen, Albert E.

Martin Schram

new stress reduction program."

Today in history
By The Associated Press
0
TOday is Wednesday, March 24, the 83rd day of 1993. There arc 282
days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On March 24, 1882, German scientist Robert Koch announced in
Berlin that he had discovered the bacillus responsible for tuberculosis.
On this date:
·
In 1765, Britain enacted the Quartering Act, requiring American
colonists to provide temporary housing to British soldiers.
In 1883, long-distance telephone service was inaugurated between
Chicago and New York.
In !934, President Franklin D. Rooseveh signed a bill granting future
independence to the Philippines.
.
In 1944, in occupied Rome, the Nazis excculed more than 300 civilians
in reprisal for an attacli: by Italian partisans the day before that killed 32
German soldiers.
·
In 1955, the Tennessee Williams play " Cat on a·Hot Tin Roof"
opened on Broad':"ii,Y.
.
.
In 1958. rock n roll smger Elv1s Presley was mducted into the Army
in Memphis, Tenn.
In 1976, the president of Argentina, Isabel Peron, was deposed by her
coun1ry's miUtary.
.
.
.

"

In 1980, one of El Salvador's most respected Roman Catholic Church
leaders, Archbishop Oscar Ainu! fa Romero, was shot to death by gunmen
as he celebrated Mass in Sun Salvador.
·
In 1986, U.S. and Libyan forces clashed in the Gulf of Sidra in the
Mediterranean. Libya fired missiles that missed U.S. aircraft; the U.S. ·
retaliated, hitting two Libyan palrol boats and a missile battery.
In 19.89, the nation's worst oil spill occurred as the supertanker
"Exxon Valdez" ran aground on a reef in Alaska's Prince William Sound
and began leaking II opillion gallons of crude.
·
Ten years ago: Doctors at the University of Utah Medical Center said
the death the day before of attificial heart recipient Barney Clark was
caused by massive circulatOry collapse "resultmg from a multitude of

causes.''

,)

Continued from page 1
concluded as he again called for
Meigs Countians to catch the
vision.
Carleton Drummer, a 1992 dele·
gate 10 Buckeye Boys State under
sponsorship of the post, gave a
repa1 on his experiences there.
Recognized for Servic:e
Plaques were presented by
James Gilmore, post chaplain, to
Stephanie Price and Michelle
Young, who have played taps for
funeral 111d other services for the
legion for several years.
Mary Martin on behalf of the
·Auxiliary presented a $100 cheek
to the post.
Mickey Williams, Eighth District ofrlcial, announced a dinnerdance 10 be held at the Athens Post
on May 8. Money from that will ~o
to the Koreans Veterans Memorial
Fund. Special music at the observance was provided by Lois Ann
Burt, vocalist

Accu-Weather• forecast for daytime conditions and

. says hc "didn't dare corR~Ct" East·

•.
Carter?. The point is, yo11 bave'a
chance to ~ake history, Socks.
Seize the day. Get involved in a
cause. Presidents have causes. F'lfSI
ladies have cw1a. Why can't flfSI
cats have cat1ael'l
I th!nk you sh?uld, organize a
cainpatgn for Cat s R1ghts, and I
think your qenda should include:
- A cruaade to build shelters
for homeless cats. Oh, all rig~t.
include ~. toO. The silly beasts
do have theif devotees and they'll
attract support and funds. You
should also campaign in favor of
crimil!al punishment for those who
... how 10 say this ... put to sleep
our unwanted brothers and sisters.
Fifteen million to 20 million cats
and dogs perished in the pounds
last year. Socks. We must put an
end to Ibis carnage.
-An effort to throttle the idiotic notion, now in vogue in city
halls and state legislatures around
the country, that cats ought to be
leashed when outside. Have you
evet heard of anyl)oing dumber than
that? Leash the descendants or.the
noble creatures adored by the
ancient Egyptians (and loathed by
the likes of Napoleon and Hitler)?

You may be asSured of two things:
AnleC:C who suggests cats should
be
hed 1) never lived with one,
and 2) is a prima facie fool.
- An Immediate ban on the
Importation of those hideous plastic
fake cats they make in 1apan "Mews," I think they call .themfor people who are "too busy" to
care roc real cats.
- A clampdown on federal
funds for moronic academic
"research.'~ Did you hear about
that scientist at the University of
Tennessee who says cat brains 8fC
shrinking? My Litter Changer is a
college professor and he says there
are a lot of chowderheads in ::1e
universities who have been
divorced from the real world so
long that they have gotten a little
balmy.
. . Gotta run, Socks. I'm having a
. birthday party soon (it's my fofth, if
you must know) and you're invited.
And why don't you leave the
Secret Service at home, big guf? .
Best of luck, from your fnend,
Samantha. ·
Josepb Spear is a syadlcated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.

Even in 1898, news film was faked

· our employees nave REALLY taken to the

Thursday, March 25
MICH.

IWWMVCH

·-----·

Legion...

OHIO Weather

Campaign reform has·a long, unpopular history
WASHINGTON- For Sen.
Joseph Biden, D-Del., the raging
debate over campaign finance
· reform has come full circle.
Twenty years ago, a 30-year-old
Biden proudly introduced his forst
bill: public funding for congressional campaigns. When Bi.den
joined 63 of his fellow Democrats
for a strategy-ploijing caucus, he
received his first primer in hardball politics.
Though freshmen senators never
spoke up in these sessions, Biden
delivered a spirited five-minute
speech to press his case of removing the influence of special-interest
money from elections. A party
elder responded to Biden's blasph~y with icy silence and a disbelievong stare.
Biden recalls what happened
when the late cigar-chomping senator from Mississippi, James Eastland, fonally responded:
"He didn't even stand up all the
way, (he) just hunched over the
table and looked down. He said,
'Joe, son, they tell me you're the
youngest m111 (ever elected to) the
United States Senate."' (Biden was
actually not the youngest, but he

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Smith and J. SIUart Blackton. Years
later, Smith's first-hand a~count
was published in Raymond. Fielding's book. "The American News· reel":
" ....Street vendors in New York
were selling large sturdy photographs of ships of the American
and Spanish fleets. We bought a set
of eacb and we cut out the battleships. On a lablc, topside down, we
pllll;ed one of Blackton's large canvas-covered frames and filled it
wiih water an inch deep. In order to
!~!and the cutou1a of the'ships in the
water, we nailed them 10 lengths of
wood about an inch square. ln this
way a little 'shelf' was provided
behind each ship,lnd on this shelf
we placad pinches of gunpowder
- three pinchea for each Shipnot too many, we Celt for a major
sea engagement of this sort.
"Foe 1 ba~:kground, Blackton
daube4 a tew white c1ouda on a
blue-tiDied cardboard. To each of
the ships, now sitting placidly in
·our shallow 'bay,' we attached a
rone thread to enable us 10 pull the
ships pill the camera 11 the proper
l)lomeDllndin thccm'ectorder. ·
"We needed 10meone to blow
smoke onto the scene, but we
couldn't 10 100 far outsiclo our circlc If the secret was to ~ kept.
Mrs. 'lackton ... volunteered, in
this day of nonsmoking woman•
hood, to smote a ciaarette. A
friendly ·office boy said he would
try a cigar. Thil WIJ fine, as we
needed the volume.
.'

•

"A piece of cotton was dipped
in alcohol and ~ttached to a wire
slender enough to esc~ the eye of
the camera. Blackton, concealed
behind. the side of the table fanhetmost ,from the camera, touched off
the mounds of gunpowder .with his
wire taper - and the battle was on.
Mrs .. Black.ton, smoking and
coughong, deliveied a fine haze....
, "(~he ne~sreel) play.cd to
capacity audtences for several
weeks. Jim and I felt Jess and less
remorse of conscience when we
saw how much excitement and
enthusiasm were aroused by 'The
Battle of Santiago Bay.'"
So went the picture news business. Indeed·, four decades later
when Mo~tone News unveiled i~
first footage of D-Day, the Nor;
mandy invasion during World War
1!, It .!elt compelled to add to its
Utle: Every Scene Authentic."
Vitagraph 's epic left a legacy of
lessons. Mainly: We get what we
demand.
·
But sadly, the big Jesson learned
. by the General Electric execs who
own Nne, the Capilal Cities execa
who own ABC, and ·me Tisches
who own CBS will probably be
thcirlllllionofgdodnews: , '
Without expensive satellite
uplinks or pricey on-air talent,
Vilagnlph won pat acclaim
111
heroic wanime film . And It COSt the
comp111y just $1.98.
Marlbl Scbram II a l}'lldlcalid
wrller tor Ntwlplper tnterprlle
AIIOCJatioD.
.

ror

,,

IND.

•I ColumbusI54• I

W. VA.

V10 A..o&lt;iellld

Pr••

""'

Divorces and
dissolutions
Dlssolutioa lfiiDled

sunny Pl. Cloudy Cloudy

A dissolution of marriage was
granted Tuesday to. Connie Jean
Maddox and Gerold Ray Maddox.
Connie Jean Maddox' name was
restored to Connie Jean Milliron
Divorces graated
High around 60. Chance of rain is
Divorces
were granted Tuesday
20pen:cnl
to
Misty
Ann
Parsons from James
Extended forecast:
D.
Parsons
Sr.
and to Tami G. ParFriday tbrougll SuDday:
sons
from
Mark
Alan Parsons.
Fair through the period. Lows
Parsons'
· nllme was
Tami
G.
35-45. Highs in 60s.
restored to Tami G. Hunnell.
Cl993 Accu-Woolhor, Inc.

Grap/icrl&lt;l«

------Weather----Soutb-Ceatral Obio
Tonight, cloudy with a slight
chance of rain or drizzle. Dense fog
possible late. Low around 40.
Chance of precipitation is 30 percent. Thursday, mostly cloudy.

-~-----Area

Cootinued from page 1

not mistaken for a turkey; Wood
said.
After you kill a turkey, don't
carry it out of the woods.bolding it
over your sboulder, another hunter
could see the bird but not see you,
Wood said. lnslead, carty the bird
·in a bag.
GeltiDJ started
Many of Oh10's deer hunters
already possess most turkey hunting essentials - a shotgun ~nd
hunting clothes. About the only
thing aspirin~ turkey hunters need
to purchase IS a turkey call - a
simple box call costs around $20.
To learn about turkey hunting.
Wood recommends that novice
turkey hunters aucnd an afu:moon
lurkey hunting seminar. In addilion, video and audio tapes are
available to help new turkey
hunters masu:r the usc of turkey
calls.
Wood said most turkey hunters
usc 12-gauge pump or autoloading
shotguns with 3-inch magnum
shells loaded with number 4,.5 or 6
shot.
.
. Hunters need to shoot their shotguns to dcu:rm.ine where the shot
paucm is most dense, Wood said.
Hunters have a variety of calls
to choose from.
Wood said for beginners, the
box call is the best because it is the
· easiest to use . Novice hunlers
should concentrate on practicing
using a box call to mimic a hen
turkey, Wood said.
Many experienced hunters use a
mouth call, Wood said. Use of a
mouth call allows the hunter to
have both hands free while a turkey ·

deaths--_.;._ _ __
Racine; twO great-granddaughters,
JOdi and Sberi Oimmins, Racine; a
sister, Fr111ces ~earns, Hartford,
W.Va.; a special niece, Frances
Kearns, Letart, W.Va.; and several
other nieces and nephews.
Besides her parents, Mrs. Phelps
was preceded in death by her husband, Henry Phelps in 1974, and
several brothers and sisters.
services will be Saturday at II .
a.m. at the Letart Falls Cemetery
Chapel. Burial will be in Letart
Falls Cemetery. .
Friends mar call at Fisher
Funeral Home m Middleport on
· Friday from 1-9 p.m.

Anna Shoemaker
Private funeral services for
Anna Jo Shoemaker, 24, of
·· Cheshire who died Sunday, March
2 I, 1993 at the Holzer Medical
Center, were held today a1 the Fisher Funeral Home in Middleport.
The Rev. Alfred Holley and the
Rev. Jack Marcum ·officiated and
burial was ill Riverview Cemetery,
Middleport.

. Roger Klein

Roger "Rabbit" Thomas Klein,
43, of Greeley, Colo., died Sunday,
Gerald Johnson, Jr.,
March 21, I 993, a1 Nonh Col&lt;ndo
ANNA SHOEMAKElt
Duane Johnson Jr., 36,
Medical Centt.r in Greeley follow- - - - - - - - - - - - SanGerald
Francisco, Calif.,' died Sunday,
ing a short illness.
March 21, 1993 at Laguna Honda
He was born Dec. 8, 1949, in
Hospital ill San Francisco.
Margaret
Nichols
Pomero~~n ,of Grover C.
Born Sept. 15, 1956 at Mason;
Graveside services for Margaret W.Va .. he was the son or Gerald
Klein of
and the late lrene
Ellen Nichols, 77, Pomeroy, who Duane aNI Lucy E. Northup JohnFaulk Klein.
.
,
He was an Army vetentl of the died Sunday, March 21, 1993 at son, Mason, W.Va. He was a perVietnam War where he received Veterans Memorial Hospital son~ insuuctor foe Pcrsonel Diagtwo Purple Hearts and the Vietnam Extended Care Unit, will be Thurs- nostics. He was a 1974 graduate of,
Distinguished Medal of Valor. He d!tY at 11 Lm. at the Rock Springs Wahama High School. He was a
was a member of the Feeney-Ben- Cemetery, Pomeroy. The Rev. graduate of the University of Kennett Post 128 of the American William Middleswarth will offiCi- tucky and he received a master's
Legion and the POW/MIA Motor- ale.
degree from West Virginia Univercycle Club. He and his wife
Born in Windber, Pa., on April
worked as team truck drivers for i 1, 191S, site was the daughter of sity.Besides his parents, he is surMonfort Transponation in Greeley. the late John and Esther Holsopple vived by one brother and sister-inHe is $Urvived by his wife, Hunter. She was a homemaker and law, Larry L. and Teresa Johnson,
Rhonda Klein whom he married on
member of the· Meigs County West Columbia, W.Va.; maternal
May 13, 1991; four sons, Roger Senior Citizens.
grandmother, Debbi.e Nort~up.
She is survived by ber husband Clifton, W.Va.; one noece, Krisun
(Klein) Bowes of Middleport,
Roger Eugene Klein of Point Pleas- of S9 years, George Nichols of L. Johnson, West Columbia,
ant, W.Va., Donald R. Klein and Pomeroy, two daughters and sons- W.Va.; one nephew, Cody A. JohnEvereu Klein of A~ two step- in-law, Nancy 111d Francis Tomes son, West Columbia, W.Va.; and
son, Jeremy and Joshua Markin of of Marietta and Esthe.r and Ralph several aunts and uncles.
Cheshire; two. grandchildren and Prather of Vincent: a son and
Services will be Friday at I p.m .
daughter-in-law, John and Brenda at Foglesong Funeral ·Home in
several nieces and nephews.
Also surviving are three broth- Nichols of Vincent; three brothers, Mason, W.Va., with Rev. George
en and sisters-in-law, John and Ralph Hunter of Spencer, Ind., .Hoschar
officiatirlg. Burial will be
Caroline of Tuppers Plains, Wayne David Hunter of Windber, Pa., and Kirkland Memorial Gardens.
and Tammy Klein of Nonh Caroli- Jamea Hunter of Wakarusa, Inc..:
Friends may call at tlie funeral
na and Keith and Peggy Klein of and three siSterS, Marion. Ward of home on Thursday from 6-9 P:m.
Racine; sistt.r Cindy Kleon at home; Spencer, lnd.; DoriJ Zellers of Miltwo sisters and brothers-in-law, lville, N.J., and Mary Kathryn Janet Blank
Barbara Klein and Harty G~s of Sweigert of Hummelstown, Pa.;
Word has' been received or the
Pomeroy and Betty and John · seven arandchildren, and six great- death of Janet Louise Blank, Boulgranck:Tlildren.
Roush of Middleport.
der, Colo., fonnerly c:l Middleport,
Besides her parents, she was Tuesday, March 2, 1993, al Boul· Services will be held 2 p.m. Friday at Stoddard Funeral Home in preceded in death by an infant der Community Hospital. ·
Greeley with the Rev. Jack daughter, tlucc brodoen and a sisShe was born Feb. 23, 1927 in
"Ghostrider" Larkin officiating. ter.
Middleport, the daughter of Leo
There will be no calling hours. Russell and Minnie Werner RusBurial will follow in Sunset MemoArrangements are beihg handled by sell. She graduated ®m Middle-·
rial Garden in Greeley.
A private family memor!al ser- Fisher Funeral Home in Middle- port Hil!h School in 1945. She marvice will be held 4 p.m. Friday at port. Memorial contributions may ried William Blank on May 17,
tbe Grover Klein residence in be made to tlie Senior Citizens 1959 ill Denver, Colo. Mrs. Blank
Cenier.
Pomeroy.
moved .to Boulder in 1961 from
Pennsylvania.
Vivian Phelps · .
She graduated from Holzer HosVivian Phelps, 78, formerly of pital School of Nursillll in GalUpoTI1e Daily Seutiuel
Letart Falls, died Wednesday, lis. She worked as a regfstered
March 24, 1993,11 Hockilig Valley nurse at St. Lute's Hospital of
(USPS 213·9601
H
. tal in Logan.
Publi~ed llvr.ry Ah.r.monn . ~ondRy
Denver and the Boulder Communiwas born in Lewt, W.Va., ty Hospital speciali,zing in pedithroufilh ~'rid~y. Ill Court St .. l'omtlroy.
Ohio by the Ohio Vnllcy PubliKhing
on July 16, 1914, a daughter. of ,the atrics.
Company!MullirnodiA Inc., Pomeroy.
late Millard and Bertha L1evtng . Mrs. Blank was a member of the
Otlio 4576fl. l'h . 992-2156. Second cliUIS
pot~tA~If'· pAid at Pomllroy, Ohio.
Roush. She was a homemaker.
Mesa Memorill Baptist Church in
She is survived by a daughter Boulder.
Mernlx1r : The .MsodatM Prest~. and t.h0
Ohio NawapapM" AHtoeiAlion, N~ttional
and son-in-law, Opal and George
She is survived by ber husbllld;
AdverUKing Represe ntAtive, Urnnham
Cummins, Rae~; twO grandsons, her parents,· a son, Robert Blank,
NcwspHptr S..lr.t~, 733 Third Avenue,
Robert Lee Cummins. Athens, and sacramento. Calif.; and a daiJihtt.r,
· New York. New York 10017.
Georae Edwards ·Cummins, Rebecca Blank, ~wood. .,
PO~ MASTER: Send .&amp;reu chnngoe lo

a

'1t!,

Thn Daily Sentinel.

Meigs..

The Dally Sentlnei-Pag&amp;-3

1t 1 Court. SL.,

. Ponw.roy. OHio 4&amp;169.
BUBSCIUPTION RATE&amp;

Memorial contributions may be
sent to the Mesa Memorial Baptist
Church, 805 Yale .Road, Boulder,
Colo .. 80303.

Edythe L. Jay
· Edythe L. Jay, 83, Columbus.
died Monday, March 22, 1993, at
Veterans Memorial Hospital folv
lowing a brief illness. .
Born Dec. 13, 1909, in Bradbury, she was the daughter of the
hite Alpheus and Edith Winkler.
Russell. She was a homemaker and
a member of !he. Indianola Church
of Christ in Columbus.
She is survived by: her husband,
Robert K. Jay of Columbus; four
sisters, Clyda Allensworth of Middleport, Susan Rawlings of
Delaware, Ohio, Jessa Mae Bran- .
nan of Middleport and Flora Dell
Orueser of Middleport. ·
.
Also surviving are: three nieces,
Una Faye Abramo,vicz of Holly
Hill, Fla., Debbie Gerlach of Mid·
dleport and Dor~lhy Roaclt of
Pomeroy; two nephews, Don
Grueser of Steamboat Springs,
Colo., and Robert Rawhngs of
Mason, W.Va.
.
She was preceded in death by
three sisters, Bernice Fox, Gladys
Russell and Gertrude Miller.
Services will be held 2 p.m.
Thursday at Fisher Funeral Home
in Middleport with AI Hanson officiatinJ. Burial will follow in
Rivervoew Cemetery in Middleport.
Friends may call from 2-4 and
7-9 p.m. today a1 the funeral home.

License issued

A marriage license was issued in
Mei&amp;s County PrObate Court Monday to Donald Ray Cheadle, 42,
AJbaoiy, and Pamela Jean Jones, 41,
Pomeroy.

is approaching.
Other types of calls include
slate/friction calls. push-button
calls and combination calls.
One type of call, the gobble call,
can be used for locating gobblers,
but is potential)y dangerous in that
another hunter can mistake the
caller for a 80bbler.
Accordmg to Wood, owl or
crow calls can sometimes be used
for locating turkeys.
·
In Ohio, hunters are allowed to
use turkey decoys, but should only
do so with caution.
Hunting seminar slated
According to the Ohio Department of Natural Resource's Division or Wildlife, wild turkeys originally thrived in forested Ohio but
were eliminated from the state in
1904 when the last native wild
turkey was shot in Adams County.
Extensive habitat destruction also
played a major factor in the demise
or the native wild turlcey according
toODNR.
In 1956. ODNR began successfully trantedsplantin!l wildthturkeys
i Ito [orcs
areas on sou eastern
Ohio.

--Meigs announcementsVSC to meet
The Meigs County Veterans
Service Commission will meet
Monday at 7:30 p.m. in the Veterans Service Office ill Pomeroy.
Seminar lobe presented
. Gregory Lynnhart will JRSCnt a
seminar on "New Age" on Sunday
at 7 p.m. at the Fellowship Church
of the NaZarene. Rev. John Douglas invites the public.
Group lo perform
!'roclaim, a drama and ·singing
group from Cincinnati Bible College, will present a program at the
Pomeroy Church of Christ on Sund3y a1 7 p.m. The concert is free to
the public.
Benent dinner planned
There will be a benefit soup
supper for Joe Hill at the Racine
United Methodist Chutth on Tuesday at 3 p.m. Soup, sandwiches,
dessert and drinks will be available.
All proceeds will go to the family.
Public welcome.
Sorority to meet
The Preceptor Beta Beta ChaP.:
ter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, wtll
go to Sebastians on Thursday ai
noon for the group's spring outing.
'

DIIDCe lesaoas oll'ered .
· · Country-western line dancing
classes will be otfered at Pomeroy
Viilage Hall Auditorium on Sunday
from 2-4 p.m. Donation is $2.50.
Call 992-7853 or 949-2455 for
information.

1

C&gt;na Ycnr......... .. ....... ............,....... - ....18!1 .20
&amp;INGLBCOPV
PIUCE
llflily..... .... ._., ......... ... ....... .......... ~.~-25 Cenl.ll

J3 Wecka...................... ............ .... ....

fJ

.

•1.49

E:g

:Ill Waoko...................... ...- ..... .... .., ,.

liZ w................. ,............................

40

PM•tf2•2116

.

)

'
'

,.

.

Meigs County Auditor NaJ\cy
Parker Campbell announced that
following the Ohio Tax Commissioner's hearing last month on 'oil
and gas valuation for the tax yw
1993, the values for oil have
increased seven percent, tram
$1,730 per barrel to $1,8.50. das
valuation decreased by two percent, going from $255 per thousa!od
cubic feet to $250 per thousand
cubic feeL
· ,
Campbell said there are smaDer
values for wells that produCe less
than one barrel of oil and less than
8,000 cubic feet of gas.
·
The filina deadline for oil and
gas producers was extended to May
28 by the tax commissioner.
._

exceeding 7.5% of )'QUr
adjusted gross income can
be.deducted on )'QUr
return. But )'QU may be
able 10 e&gt;&lt;eeed that cap
easily If you know what
qualifies: most health
Insurance premiums. •rTf trMI related 10 medical are, home
improvements (like wheelchair ramps) recommended by a doctor, the cost of nursing homes or special schools, visits 10 a
chiropraciOr or even an acupuncturist. In short, anything
medically necessary anrj not covered by health insurance.
5. Job hunting expense&lt; may be deductible. A1 long as you're
looking for a new position in the same line of v.ork you're already In, you may be able to write off travel expenses, emplafment agency fees. printing and mailing resumes, phone calls
connected with the search, even the cost of running aclassified
ad. But remember, job hunting expenses fall into the brooder
acegory of miscellaneous deductions (only the portion ex·
ceeding 2% of your adjusted gross income is deductible).
One more tip. Thousands of private citizens, maiTf with
backgrounds in ux preparation and all trained in the latest tax
laws, uke part in our \IJiunteer Tax Preparation Program. 'b _
uke advanuge of the free services they offer, or to talk 10 us ·
directly. here's our hotline number. 1-IKJ().TAX-100.
'bu might want to do MI!VI!f'l}~t&gt;olil\eie
~ Internal Revenue Service a ftvor and pass it along 10 that refi;.
ped
Answers. Assistance. At lbur Service. tive expert who he I you lase year.

FOOTLONG
HOTDOG

J_.clo Mol• Ca•nb'
13 Weoko........ ,.. ....... ............ ......... .. $21.114
:111 w..ko....... .. .. ,....................... ...... .~3.16
113 w..u................... :......................$84.7&amp;
· O.totde Melp Couty

Values for oil up 7 %

A marriage license was issued in
Meigs County PrObate Court Monday to Donald Ray Cheadle, 42,
Albany, and Pamela Jean Jones, 41,
Pomeroy.
In addition, a license was issued
Tuesday to Robert Lawrence Imboden, 45, and Dianna Lee Gray, 41,
both of Rutland.

DIIRY VILLIY

'KubacrilM'.l'N ML di,Hirins 1-o pR)' the &lt;l(llrri·
rr may rnmiL in aclvRncfl dimcl to Tha
DnUy Snntln~ on R throo . lfix or _12
rnon'h lM11iM. C1-rutit will \KI (fivttn cwmaT
MCh wt.cll:.
No Mobfl:c:riptionA by mAil_ pcrmit~d in
•~" wh~re home MmCT IN'Vlett ill
11 vailablc.
M•ll Subllertptlo..
·

Country musk: aiabl
Counlry music night at the LotUidge Community Center will be
Saturday from 7 p.m. to midnighL
All bands welcome. Refreshments
will be available. Everyone welcome.

Licenses issued

By Carrier or Motor a... ta

()nc Wcck ............ ., ... .... .................... .. IJ .60
()n~ Month ...... ... ,,,,,, ...... ,............ ....... f6.95

the Bashan Firehouse. The menu
consists of two kinds of meat,
mashed polatoes and gravy, homemade noodles, green beans, slaw,
dressing, deslerts and drinb. Costs
are $4.50 fOI" adults and $2 for children under 12.

Smorpsbord planned
The Bashan Ladies Auxiliary
will have a smorgasbord dinner
Sunday from II a.m. to 2 p.m. at

Everybody knows somebody who "knows" uxes.
There's only o]le
prqblem with free advice
from, sa~ your brother-inlaw; He probably got his
information from, say, his
brother-in·law
Wouldn't you feel more comfortable with taX tips that
came straight from the source!
~s. the IRS.
Contrary to popular belief. we want you to take every
allowable deduction. Here are a few tips 10 get you started.
1. If you're widowed, diYOrced or legally separated and you
claim someone living with you as a dependent. it may be to
your advantage to file as a Head Of Household. Say you .have
$28.000of taxable income. Asa Head Of Household, you II pay
$8551ess than If you filed as a Single uxpayer.
1. Porhaps you've heard the term "G ift rax:· l;'s probably not
what )'QU think. AITf gift given out of true generosity and up to
$10,000 is generally no1 uxed. The :~ift Tax." usually only .•P"
plies 10 amounts over $10,000 and 1t s the g1ver who pays It,
3. There's one deduction you can cla1m on your taX return even
1f y&lt;iu don't ltem)ze deduwom. It's alimo")' just be sure to
include your ex-spouse's full name and soc•al security number
on your re urn. ·
4. 'bu may know that only that
portion.of your med Ica I expenses

As the turkey population
increases, so does the turkey hunter .
population, Wood said.
By 1995, an estimated 40,000
hunters will particiJ!ate in the
turkey season, Wood saod.
:
Wood wges beginning and seasoned hunters to attend a turkey
hunting seminar which will be held
Saturday from noon to S p.m. at the
Forked Run Sportsman's Club on
Curtis Hollow Road.
Those attending the free seminar
will receive call demonstrations
and a free 182-page. book "Wild
Turkey Hunting," Wood said. :
Wood said anyone interested in
anending should contact him at
985-4400 to register.
Also, Wood said it is not too
late to apply for a permit for the
April 26-May IS turkey season .
Applications must be mailed by .
Saturday, Wood said. Permit appli- ·
cations are available from Wood at
9854400.
'1'herewill be a lot of birds har·
vested this year," Wood said. "Go
with somebodr and see what
(turkey hunting) 1s all about."

.

\

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;-Spor.ts

The Daily Sentinel .
Wednesday, March 24,1993

---=~------~------~----------------~--------~----------~======~p
~
Cambridge's Ford Division II's top player

·· Meigs1 Harrison all-Ohio special-menti~n pick
··
By RUSTY MILLER.
Ford averaged 35.9 poims, 4.5
Ford, who led his team to the
. COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- r~jlounds and
abssists ~ ga;::e : ' : ~~~~~ ln~~gi~~~
Cambridge's Geno Ford, the 5- ~= w ~e ecommg .e alto11111811lent this year was sel(Ct·
f~-9 ~who s,Wlds tall among the • ng ys scon:r ever 10 ed based 00 the rec~mendations
Pluo's all-ttmc SCQrers, was chosen
#!teObio Universit recruit to- of a stale media panel
p,layer of the Ye:lf ~the 1993 ~.
.Y ,' .
The coaches of the year were:
sociared l'ress Dmsaon IT all-Oiuo tal~ 2,680 pomts for hiS career, Ton Bisulli of Columbus DeSales
high school basketball team an- f'~jfgNew~on~l3~~GleM
s oelrJe Burich of Youngstow~
0
•
·
nounced Wednesday.
ay urson, w
,
•

::r

the attraction
D
.
:behind Friday's uc~ Virginia bout
e.l~ense VS • de~ense
II

By WILUAM K.-\TES
AP Sporll Writer ·
. ,•The v~ Cavaliers have two
days to gel ready for the unfiaBging
pressure of Cincinnati's defense::.
The queslion is, can they?
How do you prepare for the
madness and maybem the Bearcats
cause on the court with their non,
~trapping and pm!Sing7
.. .. ' I think it's difficult. We're
doin1 things a lillie bit differently
tban everybody else does." Cincinnati coach Bob Huggins said.
"ntere' s teally not a lot of rhyme
Qr reason to what we do.
• "We play it off of each other.
We don't have set tol,alions or set
drops likea)Qtofpeopledo. We're
more kind of go-oo-the41y." .
·. ,Overpowering defenses will be
sllowcased Friday at the NCAA
East Regional It tbe Meadowlands
in East Rutherford, NJ.
In one semiflllal, Cincinnati (26~). plays Virginia (21-9), which
. uSed a stilling man-to-man defense
to:defeat Muaachusetts 71-56 and
gain its fint appearance in the final
Hi since 1989.
.
Top-seeded North Carolina (304) faces Arkansas (22-8) in the ·
other game. Arkansas limited St.
John's to a single raeld goal over
~ filial 11:57 10 reach the regional
scmirlnals for the lhird time in four
years. The Tar Heels are in the
round of 16 for the 131h consecutiVe season after walloping Rhode
·~!and 112-67.

After a nat fust-round victory
over Copllin Stale, ~OI!d;-see,ded
Cincinnall was awe-mspmng m a
92-55 rout of New Mexico Stale,
riding roughshod over the Aggies'
.talenled point Juard, Sam Crawford, the nation's assist leader.
The .AJ!gies shot 36.7 percent.
and cormrulled 26 turnovers (10 by
Crawford) as Cincinnati swarmed
them all over the court. The
Bean:ats finished the season third
nationally in scoring defense and
were eighth in raeld-goal defense.
" We're good at getting to the
ball, and we're good at covering
people where they want to pass the
ball,~' said Huggins, who guided
Cincinnati to the Final Four last
season. "It makes it difficult
because you can't say, 'They're
goin1 to come from here and be
here, and lhis is where we need 10
put the ball,' because we're not
always in the same place."
.
"We complement each other's
game. Most teams don't underslalld
what we're doing," said senior
guard Tarrance Gibson, who had a
career-high 25 points replacing
starter Allen Jackson, who is dayUHiay with a knee injury.

Ex-Herd gridders,

Huntington celebs
to play benefit game
A charity basketball game
;between lhe newest retirees of lhe
NCAA Division I·AA national
'champion Marshall football team
:aoo celebrities from lhe Hunti.ngiOD
)area will be played Friday at 7:30
ll:J;m. at Parkersburg Catholic High
;School.
' . Among lhe players expecred to
:play are lhe Dtvision 1-AA player
pf.the year Michael Payton, along
with Marshall's three other All
:Americans Phil Ratliff, Troy
illrown and Mik~ Bartrum (Meigs
87). Other players expected to
\liY are Andy Bowen, PJ. Woods,
;Byron Litton, Orlando Harcheu and
Keenan Rhodes among olhers.
: : An autograph session will be
)leld getting underway at 7 p.m.

"( think we can jJreSs any team
in the' country. It's just a matter of
having the heart to dll it," added
senior guard Nick V.an Exel, who
scored a total of just 10 points in
the Bearcats' two wins despite
averaging 19.1 during the season.
The player oo the spot for sixth·
seeded Virginia is sophomore
guard Cory Alexander, who was
the Cavalien' offensive star in the
opening rounds. At 6-~oo~-1 ,
Alexander may have an eas1er umc
getting passes over lhe top of the
Bearcats' defense than did the S-8
Crawford.
But Virginia, the ACC leader in
field-goal defense, figures it can
apply almost as much preysure as
Cincinnati. The Cavaliers shut
down Mas8achuseus' two leading
scorers, big men Harper Williams
and Lou Roe, holding them to a
combined nine points.
''We have an opportunity to
make a name for ourselves,"
Alexander said.
Virginia started the season 11-0
and now appears back on track
after an 8-9 season-ending slide.
With a defensive strategy simi(See MAT.CHllP OD Page 5)

TAX TIP OF THE WEEK
THE IRS SENT ME THE SHORT
FORM. THE I 040A.
SHOULD I USE IT?

Not nece...rlly. Even though
the IRS aenda you • certain
form, It lo your ,..ponolblllly to
HIICI 1Mid UM the form that lo
beat for your own ollllllllon.
ltlllllY be to your ldv•llgll to
file the long form, the 1040, H
you are eligible for cer.taln
deductlono .,dlor credlto that
be claimed only on the long
form.
In oome ca . .• the law
requlno thai you UM tho long
form.
IWII.ICEBLER, u
Becauae .your altuatlon may
change from yeor to year,
alwoya check Jo be sure that you ore uolng the torrn that moat .
clearly oulta your current tax situation.
WhBMVar you have queotlona about how the tax 1-• affect
your return, call your local H&amp;R Block office. Better yet, otop by the
01111 ....... t you.
hereto help you.

en

w.-••

South, Dave Zellet;~~ ::'2ra·
~ofntn~=n the fuslteim
was Whitehall-Yearling's 6-9 junior center Sarnaki Walker, ~orig
wilh 6-2 sen~ Darnell ~osld!" of
Dayton Chammade-Juhenne, 6-6
senior Mark Hunte of Twinsburl
Chamberlin, 6-8 seruor Brjan Hocevar of Cleveland Villa Angela·
SL Joseph, 6-S senior Ryan Glad·
ieux of Rossford and 6-ll senior
Chad Allen of Leavittsburg

tin ~f=vil~~~m a 6-!

4
mark to 16-4 t~is year with the
only losses commg to much ~ger
schools;
Burich
gu1ded
YoungSIOWII South to a 17-~ ~.
the best ever at the ~hoot, m his
first year at St. Paras Graham,
Zeller went 17-3 and won_ the
school's rust Southwestern Jbvers
Conferen~e title in two decad~s;
and Burget had !l
With
a young squad m hts lOth year at

~record

-

"TREVOR HARRISON

bounds, 2.6 me
usists and
5-~ blocked
1 ed
th
Nool. l.aMn-M'""'"' Pony Morrio, Do- ~Mo.
10 go With 18 _1 basketball team, se eel on e llor:
Shots a ga
recommendations of a state )lillie!
'Ronnie Andcnon, HuntinJ Valley Univ.
points. He shot 62 percent fill!n ~e of sOOdS writerS and broadcasterS:
'School; Cbad Smith, Lonin Brookaid~ ; Rc.b
field and 73 percent at the line m
a11n1 ....,
N'ICbollaa. CI.ave. IWiedicl.int; lADdon Flo\Cher,
leading Whitehall to lhe state tour· S..Uor, 3U .oolall pw pmo; S....ti Walker, a.... v..,.s .. Jaoopll; 1enr NoU.IIool;r Riwr:
WbiW.•ll·Y',..rllaa. ~9. Jr., 23.6; Damell
M•U Walbur., Jackson; Jamie 1bomptoo,
nament.
Hookll&gt;l Do,... CNmiudo-J- 6-2, Sr.•
Hilllbor« Dart~eli Uutb; P~lhj Ridi.ic
The Rams (23-1) meet St. :u. 3 ·~a-T~Ch0111borU..6-6. H;Jhley GreOllliold MI:C!Un; CHAD BARNES,
Marys Memorial (21-5) in Thurs- sr.• b:Uiiaa-.0.... VA·SI.I':.t·'" GALLI,POUS GALLIA ACADEMY; Jaaon
with Gi- 1• Sr.. :10.2; llru Qladioua, ._,...._ 6- ·Sr., Kina. W•IL CH Miami. Trace; RIIMIJ WS....an,
day 's 11 a.m. ••m1'final,
:!OJ; Quod ADoo, 1aW11buJa UB-. 6-11, Sr..
WJYtriJi
rard (20-6) meeting Kettering Aller :13.6.
~· .£.
. !Car}'
~ Cloimillc; Mo• Spnng.
Mill•ralM!rJ W•t ~Olmca; Brent Bouacher,
·--"
half
f
lhe
i!ICS
.....
T...U
·
Wull.
~
·
(19-6) in the ......,.,..
0
• mi y,_ 5-I, Sr.• Ill; .......U.IlonWo. Colum~dp VaU9: _CoM Adair. Now
sion. The winners meet Saturday at ~ouaDo&amp;~o~,6-3.Sr..21A;SolbT....._Ilo_,. Ont"-hlllleft
Caaoanl Jclm ~ Jooh Olriomon, Cambridp;
11
. s..u ...t. 5-11. Jr., 23.1 ; . ,•• Do,ualtll,
a.m.
h' d
II ~c.-. 6-4. Sr., :M.O; Edt._ IUcb Wcbor, DiM~. ;
Hoskins, a t ar -team a • ..,_Do,... c.n.u. 6-2. s..• 21.5; looh - Ohioan -last year, averaaed 22.3 WiiiB. 6&lt;1, 1r.,U.t
~-•·
- · JooiAirll,lr..roo, ,..., s.-.
points, 6 assists~ S ~......,.~game
n.sn1~
1Ch,. a..._ W•-· 6-3, Jr. 13.11; J,...
and has signed wath W1SCOIISIIIN¥Jor. 6-7, s., 11.7; o.....tloha. Hunte hit for 22.9 pOints a ..... o.,.•• o••~ ... 6-4. Sr.. 21.1; Lomonl
Callwbua - · 6-4. h .• IU;
BI1Dgame, while HoCevar- Who Will -~~onsp;...,.w-Triway,5-ll,lr.,21
.6;Dovo
' UNLV -· aver- WUU""'
()no.......... lndion V.U.y, 6-3, Sr..
play next year •or
15.4· ...; _ p......,, c.... BonO&lt;!....._ 6-0,
aged 20.2 points and 1·2.4 rebounds lr.. iu~ llaDorr Norrm. PoinoMUe Huver. 6-2.
this year after playing on state lr.. ~joraflho,.anOonol'urd.Combridp.
championship teams the last two
c-.., ... ,.nr,..,a;...._CoJ.o.saw· O.Orp Bu.ricll, You•J•town Scau1h;
years.
Dno bnu. S1. Pads G~;,ham; X.an Bu.rpi,
GladiCilX scaed 20.1 points and w.......
had 8.1 rebounds a game while
Special meatlon
Brioa p.n,_ wm;.._ WOorroll; J"""
Shooting 52 nPn""nl from the rteld,
r--·
d Han. Debwuw Ol•unar. Dave Butkeu. C..
48.3 percent on three-pointers an field; Briu Klmlm&gt;, Y -piOn S..lh; Bob
72 percent at the line. Allen, a Mia· Bold,.., Lwiorillo; lim Fo•, Srnlhm; luoo
Cllaooo; T .... Woodle, Nopoleoll;
mi of Ohio signee, averag ed 23 ·6 Knul"'-Dod+* "a:....au.a-~
Andy Plum. Mo·
points, 16 rebounds and 7 rebounds ...., ,,,.... s;,.. -~ ~o.... J•~­
Com=···
am.~. a-tin YuUna; ~
a game.
a...,
llocltr liver; llorridt Dol......._ c...,..
Listed on the second team were F•U• ltonllon; Tlli!VOR HAilRIS.ON,
TerreU Baker of WaShington Coun POMIIIOY MEIGS; Trovio RoboNon, wu~.
House Miami Trace, Antonlo ~ ~:!:;:!:i:.':.'~~d~
Daniels of Columbus DeSales, Seth 1111~ JirrJ
Soolli Polol; o.. Dillmor.
.
Truman of Ravenna Southeast, =2;:~&amp;"'-!.=~~~rille:
Ryan Douglass of Uhrichsville
uooorable mention
Claymont, Dayton· Carroll's Erik
c.rt.. o.v~o, ""''""'""a.-. J......,
MuyoviU.; Daua_lloal_
,. Col.mboo s•.
Ramsey and Willard's Josh Floo'Owrln; Chad MutiD, Cin:lrriUe; J..on Sitek,
Sanders.
!he third team included: J~e c.r
Vlll-.S..~r""....!!'::::'=~
Lellh of Irooton, Dayton Dunbar s Jloy~"i.:':.;na•. I.oui.Mll" Mike Lowor.
Demond Johnson Lamont Barnes · c..o1
ICavia .........,_ c.n....
•
B
d
C.L CIIIL;"""" v,..... c-lolllh:
Eas
of Columbus
tm~r, ran on
J.T.IIwll. Luinalcn; Shown Mo•...U, Elld•;
Sprang of Wooster Tnway, Dave a....u aobin.... , FO.uorio; a., Ylnslins· s••
Wiii~ms of Gl!lldenhuuen_ Il!d~ ~;-c::..._~=-:·:.:;:•o;...., 1 •
Valley, Cleveland Benedacune s ........, • ...,, Eric Ha- IWlafoolllnoB"'· ·
304·773·5513"
Eugene Freeman, and Emery ·Mar· ]ualo . _ , llr• ._ _ _ ~:Do Me·

a--,._. ., ,_,. . ,,

MoK-.

s.u.-.

_LK.....,..
oy-

.

Fulton--

Spring
Planting Is
Right
Around The
Corner.
See -Us For
Garden
Seed.
PICKENS'
HARDWARE
MASON, WY.

InvestigatQrs prob-e allegations of alcohol abuse in, boat crash
__I_IHARRY ATKINS
WINl1iR HAVEN, Fla. (AP)Uniled ill picf, 1be Ciel'drl Jndj:
- - - die loa fA two Jellll.
m•lrl, while lutborilies iiied to
deeenlliDc if ckintiag c:oalribulcd to
the fatal oo.ing c:ruh oo a ~­
ciiiid JaR.
·IiJ••z liptrn IIY it will be scv.eral days befme IIIey can rule wbal
tole almhol may have played in the
Moilday aight accident that left
pilcJien Steve Olin llld Tua Crews
deld aad pitdaer Bob Ojeda seriously injuled.
cvaal Florida leJevi.
sioa stations reported Tuesday
night that one UDidcatirled player
bad 1 blood-akobol level of .17,
above the .JO considered legally
drunk ia Fbida for IDOklrisss aad
bollas.
T1Je Anocialed Press could not
indepoldmtly coafam die rqiOIIS..
"We haven't released any of

' Sltouse said Olin's autopsy was
performed Tuesday, with Crews'

By RUSTY MILLER
Wait. It already has:
COLU1dBUS, Ohio (AP) "Hoosiers."
Hollywood could make a movie
The difference is that no one
lbout whll ' - ..., • d with the · would believe that the Coldwater
cOidwa.er Ca¥Uas.
SUJry - ever buled oo fact.

Scoreboar·d
NO....,;.,'·,._ .., 3

IntheNBA•••

--

_y____.,

l'iaoblaF 1, s..- 2
T-5,Wimlfol4

EASTERN CONJIUKNCE

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PlliWolpllio" N.Y.Ilul""• 7:441·

......SL t..o;. •ColoaY.- p.m.
Loo"""'"' .. \'..._,_, 10:40
'

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nanc~ay'sRames
•
-·-7:.0p.m.
••
y_,. .,. aa..... 7:-40p.m.
_ , . Plao_ _ 7.00p.m.
w.......... 11 N.Y . l•lllldero, 7:40

4
II

12

p.m.,_ ..... "'!le+Jph'•, 7:40p..tn.

115 •
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. 11,I;JOp.~n.
BoiWo 11 Chicop.I:4CI p.m.

Iii the NIT•••

---

WESTEilN CONFEUNCE
T-

WLI'd.

GB

- -_
----4 1 11
D .as
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Simply Oip This Coupon (Photo Copies Not Accepted),
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Iar to Cmcannau, fourth-seeded
Arkansas wiD _be !'ding to djsri~Pl
North Carohna s offense. The
· Razorbacks forced SL John's mto
19 twnovers.
.
"I would hate to play ~U~cansas
if I was 1 team that had a chance to
win the national championship,"
Razorbacks coach Nolan Richardson said.
The Tar Heels reached the 30win plateau for the rust time since
1987, wben they went32-4. It's lhe
third time one of Dean Smith's
teams has won at least 30 games.
The ·1982 team thst won the nationa! c~pioo5l!ip was 32-2.
.
• Sm1_th saad North _Carohna
turned m a strong.defensiVe performance agalnat Rhode Island, but he
:~ays an ever better game is within
his team's reach.
.
'·~·s the best we:ve play~:
but_obva_ously we can 1mprove,
Smath Slid.
.
A discom'forting th&lt;?ug~t for
Arkansas. North Carohna a 45point vielO!Y wp the most lopsided

New Session 111lnning
•rch29
•Mon.·Wed. 10·11 Ul at

I

Milllleport Arts Cnndl
•Tues.-n.s. 6:00-7:00 at
Mefts Co. se• c.t., ,...,.,
Call 992-6893

. •I

'*
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•

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ftne ........., •••, ....
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,,

(Continued from Page 4)

For Regl•tr.Uon or Info.

.May do • Co-ed cr....
Cllllf lntnlled.

•

Jelnnle Owen
Certlflecllnatructor

..

breaks, we might get thCm apin in
the district finals. We knew we
could beat them."
So, following the s~ripl, the
teams mel again in the districts and
Coldwater won apin.
·
There has been a hero eveiy
night. In the regional rma1, Stammen - one of the starters and i!latS.
-didn't scme in a 56-54 regional, ·
final victory Saturday over last
year's state runner-up, Patrick
Henry. But sophomore Mitcli
Lefeld scored 20 points.
. ..
Six-fOOI-3 center Andy KnatJb:
averaged 4 points during the fri
20 games, but has been ia double
figures the last six. Jim Mueller has
maintained ·his IS-points-a-game
work and Mark Thompson has had '
hi~ moments while averaging· ?
pomts a game.
·· ·
·, •
"We've just got a whole buricli
of guys thai, when everybody doea
their best, we can be awesome:' ·
said Niekamp. "But we woar\t
scare anybody with our five guys."
Maybe they should. Somelhini
has bimed the Cavaliers from aJao,
rans to all-stars. Niekamp can't
quite put his fmger on what it D.
but inagic is pan of il
.,
"This has just been like a magiC
carpet ride,'' be said.

that they' didn ' t let the kid be
human," his father said. "He was
undefeated for tvio ~~ in junior
high and two )!ears tn h1gh school.
But when he lost it tauJht him
somelhing.
..
LfGAI.IOTit:E
"You don'ljudge a man by how
hard he falls, but instead how high ·The Public Utilities Commission of OhiO
he bounces after he hiu bouom." · hassetforpublichearingCase No. 93- ·.
· For Tim, that bounce lOOk him
02-EL-EFC, to review the fuei ;
all !he way back to the top.
procurement practicas and policies o1
"It was a tremendous Struf,gle · Columbus Soulhern l'llwerCompany,
last year,'' his father said. ' We
the operation of its Electric Fuel
cried together at the time and then
Componen~ and r!llated matters.This
the next day we ~focused on !his
hearing it scheduled ID begin at lhe
season.''
Commission offices al10:00 a.m. on ·
Eight weeks after last year's
March
30, 199~.
state tournament, a refocuSed Tim
made lhe World Tesm ~ represented the United States in a meet
All interesjed parties will be given an
held in South America.
opportunity to be heard. Furth&amp;f.
Followinjt that, Tim began his
information may be obtained by"
assault on thiS year's competition, a
c:ontactingtheComrnissionat 180East
run thst saw him post a 41-0 record
Broad StreeL Columbus, Ohio 43266on his way 10 the championship.
0573.

UC-Virginia matchup ...

FIT TOGETHER AEROBICS
.

- 949-2926.

,;., .... Jl.

ing n:cords have ever made it to the :
fmal four.
·
The Cavaliers meet Belpre (24I) in the semirlllals Friday at 9 p.m.
McNicholas takes on Campbell
Memorial (19-6) three hours earlier. You can expect a capacity
crowd 10 be firmly be~ind the two
underdogs.
. Everybody likes a fairy tale endmg. don't they?
But nobody, it ends up, likes
one more than the Cavaliers.
But what happened to tum an
otherwise dreadful year into one
made of dreams?
Niekamp said his team lost a lot
of close games on a rugged sched.ule during lhe IM;IISOn. Among the
four .wins was a victory over Haviland Wayne Trace, a 1990 state
champion and considered one of
lhe best teams in Division lll in the
NOrthwest DistricL
~·
·
"We beat Wa)'ne Trace on their
floor," Niekamp said. "We figured
if we played hard and got some

THE
PUBLIC
, UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF OHIO By: Gary E;
V190rilo, Secretary.
.

secood·round game in NCAA lOur·
nament history.

•

Our low-aN discount brokenge semce is ideal fur inYeslors who do :
not require the benEfit !i restMdt or reconuitendario, but who SliD ·~
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•Lowcollll1lis&lt;lions

• Prompt. effident smtce
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The Daily Sentinel
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and Pil:rre Ga•lhier, auinaat pnoral ·

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The Gallipolis Daily TribiUl~,
The Daily Stlllilltl, the l'oi111
l'letJSIJJil R~gister and the SlllldayTimes..S~IIIiMI value the conlribu·
tiona their readers malce to the
sports S(Ciions of these papers, and
these contributions will continue to
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However certain deadlines for
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Likewise the deadline for submissions oC Ioeal baseball- and
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These deadline~ have been instilUted to give .readers plenty of time
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MAIL TO:

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11:15 A.M.· 1:45 P.M.

7 Days AW•k
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Sports deadlines posted

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Clean Out Your Closet,
·Basement, Or Garage ...
And Tum Your Unused Or
U:Q.wanted Articles Into CASH With A

Gallipolis, OH.
446-9545
.

_Beginning April 1 We Will Feature A

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7:]0p.a.

~

The CavalieJS, all of 4-16 when piooship for "all the lillie schools"
tournament play started three that never made it to the finals.
weeks ago, ~ledge that only
Now Coldwater is on that kind
Hollywood' could have scripted of a mission.
their improbable 6-0 run through
The 10-16 Cavaliers, with the
the tournamcnl ·
worst =ord ever in lhe 71 years of
"At the end of the season, our the state tourney field, will be right
scorekeeper told the kids that if there with the best ~ams in the
they did somclhing like malce 10 state.
free throws in a row, be would buy
"This Is my fust losing season
them a pizza,' : head coach Jim in 13 years here," Niekamp said.
Niekamp said. "So be had the team "Heck, we've been doing it wrong
over for p~ and he put a video- here. I guess you've got to lose
tape of 'Hoosiers' in hil VCR.
games to get to the state touma' 'The kids liked it and they saw . menl''
it before our rlfSt tournament game.
Incomplete records and imperNow lhe kids have watched that . f(Ct memories can't come up with
before every game. I guess when another high school team to ever
you do something superstitious like lose that many - or to win as few
that, ... Jason Stammen started as 10 games- to ever make it to
wearing black socks before the flfSt, the elite four teams in the state.
tOurnament ~ame and now he'd
Coldwater isn't even the only
never S1QP domg iL
team with a losing record in Divi"They've identified wilh that sion Ill, IcC ilone lhe 111a1e touma·
movie preUy well."
. ment. Tlu'ow in Cincinriati McNi•
In ''Hoosiers," tiny. Hickory cholas (11-14) and you have the
High wins lhe Indiana state cham- fust lime thst two teams wilh los-

FAIRBORN, Ohio (AP)- Tim titles and a 555-30 high school
Dernlan wrote the final chapter of record have been claimed over the
the family legacy .on March 13 last decade by the four brothers.
wh_en. l!e. won his third state Their 10 state titles trail oncy
wresthnl! ulle.
Columbus' DiSabato family. which
For the' Dernlan family, state has 11.
.
wrestling championships have ·
Jeff got things going first by
become as commori in mid-March . taking two state titles, and Steve
as St. Palrick's Day celebrations.
· followed wilh a pair of his own.
Ten times a Dcrn1an has stroUed Man then recorded three lilies and
to the top of the awards stand, and was 131"0 over liis final three seawhen Tim made the walk Sllll1rday, sons, before Tim wrapped things ·
it was lhe last for !his generstion of up with his three titles.
lhe family.
. Together, Matt and Tim helped
"I probably can't put into words lead West Liberty-Salem to a state
lhe feeling I felt at the time," said titlc in 1991. But for Tim, the presTim's father, the Rev. David Dem- sure of being last in a long line of
tan. The falher is an assistant coach champions began to mount last sea- ·
and placed the llledal around his son.
son's neck.
Afler winning the state tille in
"It's been a wonderful ex~ri- both his freshman and sophomore
ence with all of the boys,' the seasons, the 112-pounder suddenly
elder Demlan said.
feU on hard times in the state meet
Sixteen sectional cham pi- and rmished a disappointing fourth.
onships, 16 district lilies, Ill state
"Everyone expected so much

oa.fam,

I

,

and yellow flashlight had rolled dedicating the season to Olin and
under the steering wheel llld small Crews, of 'black armbands. of
•
pi(Ces of wood. apparently from . plaques in the bullpen.
the dock. had fllllen on the passen- ·
"We have to be strong for each
ger seat. The speedometer had other, •• Bac:rp. said.
' siO!llied at 39 mph.
"
Hargrove Said practice will ease
· '!be accideitt happened on Little
..
Lake Nellie, 27 miles north of · the players' grid'.
"There are going to be enougfi
Winter Haven, at'lhe end of a day
the players spent piCnicking with reminders that Steve lind Tim aie
their families on the team's only no longer with us," be said. "We
break during spring traininJ.
don 'I need to be reminded of that.
. "Whatever hsppens, God has a So, wilh that in mind, we are going
"
purpose," said Carlos Baerga, the to start
., to wori: oul
'
on Iy player willing to talk to
reporters. "We just have 10 believe
Olin is survived by his wife,
that."
. Paui, llld lhree children. Aleu, 3,
The Indians called off exhibition and twins Garrett and Kaylee, -6
games scheduled for Tuesday and moolhs.
·
today, but they will practice today
Crews is survived by his wife,
at Chain O'Lakes Park.
Laurie, and three children, Tricia,
Han and Indians manap Mike 9, Shawil, 4, and Travis, 2.
Hargrove met with the grieving
"We have rp close hands wilh
players in the clubhouse early the families llld let than knciw wo
'Tuesday. The players talked of are there with them,'' Baerp said. .

Youngest Dernlan's third ,wrestling
title lOth for family in this generation

(l~ll'f!- eou..,

1\ooo''

215

s..c;;~•---..21 4t .m .

i I a '11, t ....-EJ Puo44

Qaarterflalls

1.5

17
%1

Tuaday'• KDrt

- - I l l , LA. Cli(lpe UM

....

another.~·

It was lhe farst time two : : league baseball players were ·
in the same accidenL
"I s~e with Tim's father,"
Hart saul "He said Tim .had very
strict rules about his boil!. He was
very familiar with lhc lake."
· Ojeda, 35, suffered cuu on his
head and was in serious condition
after surgery. He is' expected to
malceafuUrecovery.
· The Skeeter bass boat had a
!50-horsepower niotor and a top.
speed of 60 mph. Viewed by an AP
reponer at the. Lake County sher·iff's garage in Eustis, the JriY and
silver boat appeared to have suslaincd just scrapes and scratches.
. But there was a significant
amount of blood on the carpeting
and seats, especially oo the passenger side. Blood was splatteled over
lhe left side of the boat, covering
part of lhe gas cap.
A yellow plastic drinking cup

Coldwater's final four appearance ,resembles Hollywood's 'Hoosiers'

--- -

618 EAST MAIN • 992·6674 • POMEROY, OH.

the team· s strength and conditioning coach. Fontes was with the
pliJyen llld families befme the boat
ride.
· "Life is a series of risb," Hart
said. "I think all of us have put
ourselves in jeopanly at one time or

scheduled for IOday. She did not
A memorial service for players
know when blood-alcohol levels and families was scheduled for
for both players or Ojeda would be !OOighL Andre Thornton, a former
released
Indian~ ptaxer who is .an ordained
· Lt. Bruce Cooper of the com. minister, will lead the services.
mission said investigators "fouaid
···we're still trying to sort
fuU beer cans ia 111 ice cltesl llld a llirough this," Hart said. "I think
liter of vodta almost fuU" aboard it's safe to say !hey will be rememthe power boat that aashed into i bered.''
lake pier. One empty beer can alsO
Olin, 27; the Indians' top relievwas found on die IUoot fiberglass er, was killecl inStantly. He struck
craft.
the pier when the boat, ncar MI
Indians general .manager John throttle, ra~d under the dock
Hart said be had "absolutely n.o. before hitting a post.
idea" whether· the players were
Crews, 31, the boat driver, died
drunt. But be said be Waf assw:cd a few h!lurs later after being hospithey weren't by Fernando Montes, ialized wilh head and lung injuries.

-1ZI.-IG7

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59 Court St.

3 Starclles, Slldl aS:
Potatoes, Rke, Mac.oll

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that information at this lime,"
~I S110u1e, duty offx:er for the
Flonda Game and Fresh Water
Fin Commission, said Tuesday
niJht. "If it did get out, it was pre.

TIIMdaJ'•-183,-19

- --

The Dally Sentlnei-Pag...;.s

.

-•--7:ltp.a.

)

2Home~So.ps

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

As Indians grieve for dead teammates,

Howe-.

:::'i:~~~~~~r~e~~~~ =~v~~0~9fli.~-~~:o~

4

Wednesday, March 24, 1~

SHS
Over $5·$20

1·100

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Trip tr--.ctlont O'l'tll' t5 end O'MI' 500 ........ Mid $.05 and I .OZS Pfl'
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NYSI. N~ . DIICOUM ....,.hnllartnotFOICtn.ured.nct . . natan
Bonk.

.-c.

.. . . . . .

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.

You'll Notice-·
The·Savings.

W *ulfay.llarch24, 1993

..

ommunity
calendar

'

Pomeroy-folllddlepart, Ohlo

The Dally Sentlnei-Pap.,....7

Commuaity Caleadar llems
two da,a berore au eveat
4he day ~ that evcat. Items
be received weD In advaace
assure publlc:ttloo In tbe cal-

'·
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT • Intermediate
clauea in Texas style dance will
begi[\ Wednesday at 7:30 p.m.
Advanced class will be held 8: 3()..
9:30 p.m. Classes are at the Middlepon Arts Council building. The
cos• is $7 per couple, per lesson. .

.FRESH FROM THE FUM

BOB EVANS

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31 Chester Elememary. Regisllation
is SIS per player. Anyo~ who did
not partici~ last year will need a
CqJy of their birth certificate.

POMEROY • The Pomeroy
Oroap of-AA will meet Thursday at
1 p.m. at Sacred Heart Catholic
Church. Call 992-5763 for information.

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PICniC ,
Pork ~rc~·ast
I

-...

'2 . $1
.

ROLLS -

I

R~TE

99

' CASE

2 uTER aomE

California
Large 72 Size

EASTMAN'S

700 w. Main llrMC •

DIET RITE

Pomeroy, Ohio

$29~

1112-21111

12 PACU

DLA

Bathroom Tissue

.r

Navel . Sealtest
.
Oran es ·Ice Cre

Soft 'n: Gentle
. . .ic ... 99C:

.

41oll Pk
Regular

Clorox Bleac:h
,Half
Gal.

•

.

.
/

Food Club

Cream Cheese

.

. 2 .$1

Re!Jrlac adight
\..

. oz. Box

POR

'-,1 '

""'

Mega

Food Club From Concentrate

BuHer

Orange Juice

....

Gol.
Plastic

Quarters

..J

Regular or Buft~milk ·

New Special Selection Entrees

Donyflake WaHle•

Budget, G'o. . . .

H-sgies Diapen

7~

19 oz.
Your Choice of Variety
" 10 to 11.5 oz. Box

•

.•

',,

'
'

'

•

.

'

1'"

2.4-40 Count

P·•·

•

We Renne the Flight lo Unoll Owlnti... • Prl- Eflectlye Thnl 811., M.-. 21.11a • USDA Food lllllllpe
WIC Coup a • ........ • Hoi Aeeponelllle lor l'ypogrllphk* or PlotorW, Errorl.

J

Chic en
DrU11stiCks

Your Choice of Flavors
Yogurt or

J

•'

RACINE - A group of 40 junior
and senior high students from the
Toledo area will present a program
on drugs at Southern High SchoOl
on Friday filxn 1:15-2:15 p.m. The
program is open to the public.
,
RIPLEY, W.VA.- The Libeny
Mountaineers will pcrfqnn Friday
31 Skateland in Ripley, W.Va.
REEDSVILLE • The Eastern
Athletic Boosters will meet Friday
at 7 p.m. in lhe high school cafeteria.MIDDLEPORT • 1'henl will bC
a dance Friday from 7-11 p.m. at
the American ·Legion Annex in
Middleport with music by George
HaiL
..
. .
POMEROY • Rev1val at Cal·
vary Pilgrim Chapel on Route 143
will be F_ri
ride!&amp;)' through April 4 at
7:30p.m. nighdy ~th Rov. ~
Tillis and Rev. Bill and Naom1
Tillis, evanplill aad Bingen. Rev.
Victor Roullh, putor, lnvitel the
public.
'
SATURDAY
POMEROY • Darron Smith,
with aueat; Cr,alal Powell, will
p~e~C~~t a IIIJIPd oonccn on Saturday at 1
at tile Laurel Cliff
Free Metbodlat Cburc:b near
POmeroy. CaU P~ P,ce T~m.• blay ll992-S326for lnform8don.

RC

BIG BEND FOODLAND

·Head ·

•

I

and .

RC Cola .

I

Holly Farms

For

TIJPPERS PLAINS' - The Tuppers Plains VPW Post No. 90S3
Ladies Auxiliary will sponsor a
round and square dance on Friday
from 8-11:30 p.m. with music' by
CJ and the Country Gentlemen.
Red CWT rod Melvin Cross will~
callers. Everyone welcome.

J

Soft Drinks

.Family Pack Grade A

Iceberg

Shoulder Arm

MIDDLEPORT • Judy Dixon
will insttuct a ceramic yard rabbit
class in three session beginning
Thursday at 6:30 p.m; at the Middleport Arts Council Building on
North Second Stteel. The cost is
$18. Cali992-S948 or~-7733.

ASST. 24 PACK
12
. OZ. CANS GLENDALE
.
DIET

Crispy F~esh

Fresh ,

..

.Paper Towels

.

· ·~

FRIDAY
LONG BOTTOM • Faith Full
Gospel Church i~ Long B.ou!lm
will have preachmg and smgang
Friday 8l 1 p.m. Pastor Steve Reed
and local smgers. Public invited.
Fellowship will follow. "

GALA

.

i

\'...·.
I

RUTI.AND -The Meigs County
Women's Fellowship will hold its
monthly meeting ThllfS(Iay at 7:30
p.m. at the Rutland Church of
Christ. Bring a book for the book
exchange. Marge Punell will be
guest speaker. Everyone invited.

fOR

Eggs

'

\ '·.

POMERO\' • The regular meeting of the Meigs County Library
Board will be Thursday at 1 p.m. at
the library in Pomeroy.

8 oz.
. CTN.

Yogurt

~--r·

rudS31wmyfiDm10am.ton~

. nJPPERS PLAINS - The Tup·
pers Plains VFW Post No. 90S3
will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m.
Members ~ urged to attend.

oz.

bi

CHESTER • Chester Baseball
Association will hold sign-ups for
the 1993 baseball and softball seasons on Thursday from 6-8 p.m.

REEDSVILLE • The Riverview
Garden Club wiU meet Thursday at
7:30 p.m. at the Reedsville Church
of Christ. Easter favors will be
· made for residents of the ArCadia
Nursing Center. Marilyn Hannum
and Nola Yourig are hostesses.

c '$1''

_S12A!;U&gt;I'OPN,&amp;.

.

,
.
9

POMEROY ·· The Community
Lenten Service for the Meigs Ministerial Association will be at SL
Paul Lutheran C!lurch in Pomeroy
on 'Thursday at 7:30p.m. Rev.
Walter Heinz of Sacred Heart
Catholic Church will be preaching.

RACINE - Racine American
Legion Auxiliary will meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the legion hall.

...,

Jif
Peanut Butter

-

.

POMEROY • Free clothing day
will be held at The Salvation fUmY
on Thursday fiUm 10 a.m. to noon.
All area Jesidents in need of clothing are welcome.

'
SPECIAL COUPON

...

•

.

bil)h certificate.

FRESH
SEALTEST

FREE TURKEY

-

THURSDAY
POMEROY • The Pomeroy
Youth Baseball League will hold
sign-ups on Monday and Thursday
from S:30-8 p.m. 31 Pomeroy Elementary. Prices are $12 per child,
not to exceed $2S per family. First
time players will need to bring a

..

•

�'

~~~~~Ma=r~c;h~24f,~1;99~3~=====r-======~~~~P~om~er~o!:y~Middleport, Ohio

'

•

-.:~·';:•::::ra:•iiiliiii:rhliiiiDIIiiiilyiiPS:e:nt:lne=l=======:::;liiiiiiiiiiiPioimierioiiiy-Mlddleport,~O~h~lo=~~~=~====~~~~~W-ed....,.ne..,sda......;y:.;.,_Ma_r-:c::h:":24~,..,1..,99~3

PUblic Notice
CASH BASI$ COMBINED
ANNUAL FINANCIAL
REPORT
For lhe Fioclll Y- Ended
Decomber 31, 1H2
Sy1ocuaiVill•ge
U.igo
unty, Ohio.
GOVERNMENTAL
FUND TYPES
REVENUE RECEIPTS
RECEIPTS:
Local Tu• ............... 18,515
i!'lergovornmenlal
AevMue.................... 54,624
Chorgu for
SerVic...................... 17,314
Flnea, LicMaea,
I Permlta ..... ,-.......... 8,813
Mlaoellanao"" ............ 23,095
TOTAL .
.
AECEIPTS............... 122,541
EXPENDITURE
DISBURSEMENTS
DISBURSEMENTS:
CurrMt:
SecurityoiPer•on
I Pro)&gt;lrly ...............22,680
Leioure Time . ·
ActivitiM ..................... 3,063
Tronaport.ation ............. 4,1105
Genorlll Govern·
mont .......................... 33,441
.Capital .
OuUay ....................... 34,314
·Debt Servlco......,........ 15,567
TOTAL DISBURSE·
.

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

Family

C
.
o

Medicine
•

John C. Wolf, D.O.

Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

My family and I just

care has c:oatinued _, decline. This

hu RJul~ in a critical primary
: .wealenl Ohio. One of the first care shonlge, puticula'ly in rural
: '!hiiP 11oM"" into was the avail- and inner-city an:u, as you've
• abil[ty t:1. health care ser.vices and ~ discovercd.
; what physician ID choose as our
Q.leauoa: Is an~ina being
done
10 llddress the
of family
: family doc:tor. I was amazed 10 find
• OUt tbat the nearest family doctor is doclllrl in I!Uilike oun?
Anwer: Yes, there is a
: 20 miles away! Where have all the
renewed commilmcat nalionally, 10
• family doctors gone? . .
•
Answer: ,your quesuon 1s very reverse the dcc:line in the number
' Jimely and, unfortWIIItly,'becom- of primary care physicians. A
: jng a common conecrn - in Ohio repM just released by the Council
· and across the country. The flmily ()n Graduate Medical Education, a
: physician shortage is panicularly federal advisory panel, says the
· : serious in many rural areu and U.S. needs to make it a aoal to
· inner-cites, and reforming the situ- once again have half of all our doc·
: ation is high on the .national aaen- tors in prim~ care. The repon
da. Even the folks in Washinaton suggests establishing more incen; know that you can't improve . lives 10 encouraac medical school
·: access to heallh care or control graduales 10 pursue primary tare
: healllt care costs without ill(:re8Sing medicine, especially in rural areas
: die number of family dociDrS.
like yours and in America's inner·
· Current figures put the ratio of cities.
· family physicians ID sub$pccialists
rnr ·proud to report that the
in lhe U.S. at 1:7- the reverse of os1e0pathic medical profession is
the situation in Canada. In fa:t, the being looked upon as a model for
:-:u.s. bas the lowest fiaurc of any how 10 accomplish this goal. Most
:: jeveloped nation. In Ohio, the Fed- colleges of osleOpalhic medicine,
.: era! Register of the U.S. Depart· like ours hcle at Ohio University,
' · .ment of Health and Human place major emphuis on family
:::Resources lists 44 - or half - of ·medicine •. Our curric.ulurri is
·;-the stale's counties as experiencing designed 10 expose medical stu: «:Kne degree of primary care short· dents to the many positive
: -)ge. Unfortunalely, it looks like . aUribuleS of family practice and ID
::jour county is among the half wilh encouraae diem ID work in medi.• .a shortage.
cally ~ed areas.
;: ;: There arc many factors which
We have heCn very successful at
: .flave played a role in lhe declining this. More dian half of our gradu. · .number of famUy doclllrl. Over the ates practice family medicine, and
;: ;Past 50 yean, a .hi&amp;h pen:efiiBF of more than 25 percent are taking
·;-medical achool graduaJes have cho- care of the medical needs of rural
:·:len to enter sub-specialties like IOwns' like yours. D.O.s make up
:: )nestbcsio)ogy, SIII'Jiery or onoolo· only 5 pen:ent of lhe nation's IOta!
·: -gy rather than become family number of physicians, yet IIIey supphysicians. Graduates choose to ply 15 percent of the country's
specialize in non-primary care family physicians and prOVIde
'fields for many reasons, including about 15 percent of the care to
areater rm..cial dpPOflllllities and communities with populations of
· a desire 10 p-actice 1n a metropoli- fewer than 10,000 residents.
•• tan area.
As a family physician. I have
. . The trend toward specializati'lll found my work bolh challengin&amp;
wu not always die case, of course. and rewardinJ. I hope that more
: Jmmedialely following World War and more medical school af8dua!CS
II, ow health-care sysltm was.com- will share my enthusiasm for !amiposed mainly of primary care (fam· If pnlctice in the future, and rami:
• ily medicine, ink:mal medicine and hes like yours will have proper
: pediattic) physic~s. Nearl&gt;: two· access ID quality niedical care.
• thirds of the nation's phySicians
"Family Medicine" is a weekly
: 'feU into Ibis cMegory. In 1961, the column. To sullntil questions, wrile
. • iatio .of family physicians 10 sub- 10 John C. Wolf, 0.0.,-0hio Uni; specialisJs was still S0-50. .
v~rsit)' College of Osteopathic
:·
Despite a doublin~ in the num- Medicme, Grosvenor Hall, Athens,
.: bet of physicians in the past lhree Ohio 4.5701.
;' decades, the pen:enlalle in primary
10 a rural town in North-

~: Emergency HEAP end~ April 2 .

'

I

I

• The 1992-93 application period
: for Emergenc)' liEAP ends April 2.
: Emergency HEAP provides heating
:- assistance to income eligible
· households with heal-related utili: · ties that arc disconnected or lhreat:: ~ned with diacooncct or wilh a bulk
- fuel supply of 10 days or less.
.• Assistance from this program is
limited 10 once between Oct. 26
· 1992 and April2. 1993. Therefore:
~ those assisted since OcL 26 are not
: eligible to apply again until the
· next application period.
:
March 26 is die last day or Gov.
. George Voinovicb •s extension of
: the Regular HEAP program. Those
; needing assistance with their winter
; heliting bills have one week left 10
; apply.

., ·s.

be, Acpta lllld Ollw
OU... I Jo-"'let.................;3
Fund c.MIW.,..
...... 1,1112.-................ 71
Fund Call IW.,ce
Doc. 31 ,1112................... 12
Tr_.,ry
a.i-...................-42, 183
ln--Js................30,000
Tolll Tr-ury
11111 ......................... 72,113
Oullt.ancllng ..................(102)
TOTAL BAL... ,.......... 72,011
SUMMARY OF
INDEBTEDNESS
G.O, BONDS:
Oullb!ndlng
J... 1, 11112 ................ 20,000
AeUrM, 11112 ................5,000
Oulob!ndlng
Doc. 31, 1803..... ...... 15,000
OTHER BONDS 6 NOTES:
Oulot.anding
Jan. 1,1H2 .............. t0,850
New IliUM, 1112 ....... 22,000
AelirM, 11112 .............. 12,~
Oulo~ndlng . ·
Doc. 31,1H2 ............ 20,218
TOTAL:
Oullllsncllng
Jon. 1, 1112 ......,....... 30,850

Ftnonolol~

SUMMARY OF' CASH

lb.
U.S. INSPECTED WAMPLER/LONGACRE .
.Boneless Chicken Breast

GOLDEN RIPE

Dole Bananas

•

The amount of benefits for Regular HEAP is determined.by. the
stale HEAP off!C~ and applications
are processed enurely by lhe state
office.
Applications may be made at
the Cheshire Community Action
Agency, the Gallia County Outreac~ O~fice, 220 Jac_kson Pike,
Galhpohs, or the Me1gs County
Outreach Office. 39350 Union

The. 78th annual Pomeroy High
School Alumni banquet and dance
will be held on Saturday, May 29111
at 6:30p.m. at Meigs High School
Cafetena, Judy Werry, president,
: and April Smith, !ecretary·treasur• er, announced.
: Plans call for the recognition of
: ~!uses from 1918 through 1968
:including 1923. 1928, 1933, 1938,
-1943, 1948, 1953, 1958, 1963, and
1968. Several of the. reunion clasSes are planning afternoon part!es
with one class reportedly du; cussing plans ID reserve the P.A.
Denny.
· Again this year several scholarships will be awarded. Two Bob
Roberts Memorial Scholarships
will be awanled to a chUd or grandchild of a Pomeroy High S'chool
graduate. Those ~eholanhips are
• awarded on academic excellence
; only and requ~ a UIIIIC:riJ!t, shon
: 1esume, photn, and must1nclude
· colleae plalll.
·
The Charles S. Gibbs acholarship will be iwanled ID a Pomeroy
: student who will be attending
' either Rio Grande or Ohio Univer; sity and majoriDI in education.
: The acholanhip Ia also baled on
' IICIIdemicl aa weD aa need.
:
Reminder !etten to former
: c,I wmatea arc being ~nt ~t by

; some elui JOjliOIIDIIUVCS

!i:.l:

UIClud·

, ina Eleanor Smith, 1928; Pr~d
• Crow IJid
and comnut·
tee, 1933;
IJid Manila Hamm,
• 1943• Mary
and Oeo~
: Mo,.;ia, t 931; Mar._ne W1l. Jon 1953· Marcia Arnold. 19S8;
· Judy we'rr,, 1963: and Jim and

•

DANCE

Marcli 26, 1993, 7 lo 11
Legion Annex
Middleport, Oh.

Music by George Hall

e.

Estate General

YOUNG'S
OFFICE 992·2886

Quality ·
Ston• Co.

SIZED LIMESTONE
fOR SAiE.

Call614·992·
Middleport, OH
POMEROY '- Eb..,u• Str•1 ~ Feels like homa with 3
bedrooms, ono bath, beautiful kitchen cabinets, newer
roof and lorcod 01r natural gas furnace..
S11,500

.,::::i

6637

, .....i..., 01.

"-oy,Ohlo

•

2
::;)

fti

~
2·Ltr.

64·0Z.

•
' "IN THE DAIRY CASE': REGULA~ HOMESTYLE
OR WITH CALCIUM, CHILLED

,. Kt'Dier orange Juice

·
ofitE
;,;r
;;,;;teo;;·
I
OF

'

'

60
'

-~-------The Golden Stille

Spanish settlers named the Illite of
California after the imaginary land
Califerne, which was mentioned In
Ordoney de Montaldo's 1510 romance,
"La• Sergaa Eaplandlan." Thil . - ,
in tum, wu taken from "ChaniOD de
Roland," the lith-century French eple
poem. Loa Angeles 11 an abbreviated
form of the original name of the clly,
which in 1781 wu called El Pueblo de
Nue1tra Senora Ia Relnl1e 101 Angelea de Porciuncula.

,.,

J.LTJN. MIN CCNII'OIII

110.00 ADOI7'HIIW ~
LIMIT ONE COUPON PER CUSTOMER

-·······
1 COUPON 0000

SUN. MARCH 21·SAT. MARCH 21, 1993

WELCHTOWN ROAD- Neod a lnlilar lot or a homesila?
This 3.38 acre parcel has alllclric, older ooptic, and

I

,.
I

Monclay-FridaJ:!:oo-s:oo
Cotr!&gt;vterize&lt; Estim!!IM,
Work, Ins. Wofl&lt;
Welcome, Ft&gt;er Gloss WOlle. Coft1)illt RepUin&lt;) &amp;
RetinishW\g. Frame Stroighlonilfl. Cus!om
Sand&gt;lasting,,Matlin s.nour Mixing S~tm

/ ........,
Nftd111

I
ApPfOit. !Trilel NofU'I of G•Mipoli•
1nd .C mile• South of Chnhlra to
Addison. Turn oft Sl. Rt. 7 onlo
Addl1on Pike. Body 1hop IPPfO)I. 2
miln on right.

Cllll u s!
Wew il
tome to

Y'""
..........

w(n • .
pia« ! by

....,,

.•PP'·

AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE .and.·
ACCIDENT INSUUNCE
COMPANY.
.
Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health •
Accidenf •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

.

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent
Box 189

Middleport, Olaio 45760
(614) 143·5264

992-5335or
915·3561

spnng water. Public water available. Just move your
$1,000.

trailer in.

• ............. Offlco

he•• St.

RUTLAND - S•lem Slro•l - Something for MOM: A
split lovel hom41 with an open 1aiood hallway that hot
beautiful oak rat11ngs. Half ol a cathadrol caling giveo this

217 L
JIOIIIIOY,

HAULING .
LIMESTONE,
GRAVEL &amp; COAL

have a 2 bedroom apartment downstairs and a on•

Reasonable
Rates

bodroom apartment up, aloo has aluminum siding and a
one car garage. Presenlly both apartments ara ranlod.
.
0wnor·w.,1a .., oller $18,000.

JOE N. SAYRE
SAYRE TRUCKING

DOmE TURNER, Broker .............................-1112-5692
BA~NDA JEFFEAS ..........................................H:Z-3056
DARUNE STEWART....................- ..........~ ......1112..SANOY BUTCHER ........................................... 1112-5371
JERRY SPAADUNG ...............................(304) 812-34118

614·742~2138
34-93-1 mo.

OFFICE .....- ............................... ·················-···· ..112-2-

Hawn L Wtltesel

ROOFI.NG

NEW-REPAIR
Guttars
Downspouts
Gutter Cle•ning
Painting

~

FREE ESTIMATES
9~9·2168

Snodgrass Upholstery
"Helping You To Recover Your Investment" .

3-16-93-lln

Chureh, Home, Truck, Boat, Auto
and Office Seating
·

. ·UCIIE, OHIO
61

KEVIN'S LAWN
MAINTENANCE

Glngcnbrtad Hoase

949·2391 or
1·100·137·1460

614·949·2202

AIIOUICISIIIe Ope1l11 of tlleir

U..n-lng,
Fertilizing. W-ng, Md
-lng.
Shrub and Trw Trimming
I A.rnovel

· lnfaat/Toddler Proaram

RAEWOOO FOR SALE

PRESCHOOLJCHILDCARE

1419 Stlte Rl 1

614·446·0736

FIREWOOD
FOR ·sALE

MIDDI.EI?ORT· 1 floor frame &amp; vinyl home w~h 5
rooms, 2'bedrooms. bath, on two lois, some new
wiring &amp; plumbing. Close 10 shopping and
pharmacy. ASKING $18,000 owner may accep1
reasonable offer.

Ill HARDWOOD .
Seasoned
$40.00 a Load ·
Delivered• .

PAGEVILLE· 24.93 acrea In the countiY wllh
.electric and water well on she .lncll!daa large steel
building with c:.ment floor &amp; foundation. Immediate
possnslonl Asking $31,900 OWner wants 10 s!ill
no reasonable offer relussedl

frM Eltirnat"

(614) 992·5449

BULLDOZER, BACKHOE
ond TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE. .
SEPTIC SYSTEMS, ·
HOME SITES and
TRAILER SITES,
LANDCLEAAING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
LIMESTONE-TRUCKING
FREE ESTIMATES

992·3838

11/81'112/1

HOWEll'S
BOOKKEEPING
&amp; TAX. SERVICE
Quarterly and
Year-end Reports .
REASONABLE
RATES
. I

PHONE 99
Jeanie Howell, EA
NOTARY
3/111 mo.
•DOZERS
•BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING ·

D•.A. BOSTON
EXCIVAnNG
(614)
667·6628

Guaranteed Scholarship Money
for all college bound students.
'regardless of inc&lt;;~me
•regardless of grades
•plus $20k guaranteed loan ·
• regardless of cred~
To collect your scholarship money
c:all 614-985-3556
..
Open Mon.-Fri. 10-7 or Sat. 10-4
.
VIII I M..ler Card
3o'!21U

Shade Riv~r Saddle Shop·
CUSTOM SADDLES,
LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR
36358 SA 7

&amp; TREE

•LIGHT HAUUNG
•RREWOOD

BILL SlACK ·
992-2269
USED RAilROAD TIES

Galllpolla

WICK'S HAULING
·\ SERVIa
36970 Bal R11 Road
.PDmeroy, Olllo

IUY • SIU I TUDE
317 I. 2111111.
Mltl41eport, Olllo
IIOII.·frl. I OIOO.StOO

·SIZED UMESTONE

New Homes • VInyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
·

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

RACINE

614·992·7643
Clio S.ntlay Calla_)

10100..100

OPEN TO PUBLIC
12 GAUGE ONLY
FACTORY CHOKE
ENFORCED · .

2 Freat Struts • la..r
• 4 . . . .1AliJ••ttt
Pricea St•rhttl .t

'129.95 +Tax

I&amp;C EICIYATINI
BULLDOZING

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER
UNES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOME SITES
HAUUNG: UrMStone,
0111, Gravel and Coal
LICENSED and BOIIDED

PH. 614-992•5591
1

KELLER'S CUSTOM
BENDING

47269 St. Rt. 241 • 1Y. Mill OH lt.
Tllru c•ester o• lt. 241

JeHWkk•sllatn

3-11-93

7

· PH. 614·985·3949
NOW OFFERING......
OIL IIID LUIE SERVICE
TIRE REPAIR AIID lotAnlll

OWNER:

t92·3577

2112192/tfn

GUN SHOOTS
. . ·SUNDAYS
1:00 P.M.

992·3470

....CloHtl Sllllli•r

Chester, Oh. 45720
985·3406

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

CLUB

lOOK
lAIN

n~.,

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

Rwld1ntlll ' ColnfMJ'Cial

RODGERS E-1 RIDE

"·

:1/24/U/1•

12/31182Mn

POMEROY· SDriltO Ave.· 1 flOor frame homa 2
bedrooms, N.G.F:A: lull baMment wilh ut111y and
garage. Appii111C81, c;able hook-up. anic space.
$19,900
• .'
.

BINGO
EVERY THURSDAY

EAGLES

CLUB
IN POMEROY ·
11:41 p.m. .
8peclal Early Bird
ltOO Pllyoff

HENRY 1!. CLILAHD~~-~~---~---•M111
TRACY llllftAQIR.....;.... _ .....,..•• _ 141-1431

Th~for1

unt. •
Lie. No. 0011-32
11

·KA1HY Cl II AHD...- _...._ .. ___ ......,11

. QIIIIICL.... - -.. - · ...·---..··------1251

II

'

SEIVICE

Sprfn1Time
5peellll

NEW USTlNG- Grant SL· Middleport: 2 story
frame home w~h 3 bedrooms, new bath, new
k~chen, naw wiring, new ellldric heal pump with
central air, fireplace, attic space. cable hook·up,
approx. 1 acre ~5.000
.

WE NEED LJ811NQ81 QIVE US A CALL TODAY
IF YOU ARIINTIRISTED ll"'lliiQI

'

367·7444 • 446·6644
1·100·926·2022 co•ie O•ly)

lllck U..

Auto-RentG&amp;

POMEROY· Oebome St.- 1 floor frame home with
3 btdrooma, balh, lull flniahed *•r~ent. on lot of
100 x 150. ASKING S10,000

....

011. •••~ ·

KEI'S -APPliANCE

514 Holth s-Mt A......
. lllddltpa!t, Ohla 45710 '

NEW USTlNQ. Sumnll' Rd.~ Po!Mroy:
Brick/frame spl~ Ioyer home 4 bedrooms, 2 baths,
new carpet &amp; vinyl flooring, new heat pump ·and
central air, 2 decks, fireplace, cellar, storage
building, oec::urily lighla, 2 car garage, very nic;a
landacaping. 1.485 acre $89,500

8

a,. ....._ .....o.u,...&amp;,

AlLMAIU

TRIM and
REMOVAL

••

11-1

lARRY'S BODY SHOP

lrl.. It 111 Or We

We wlii .NOW serve children
6 months to 12 years of age •.
Call us for mol'll information
(614) 992·7328
311011 mo.

.,

992-6215

NOW OnN!

MICROWAVE OVEN
· aatl VCI IEPIII

LANGSVILLE -You'll love to come home to !8lax in lhe ·
C?Untry in lhia 2 bedroom mnch with equipped kitchen all
•H1ng on 13 acres. If you enjoy hunting this is tha place
for you. Was $42,500:
NOW 139,500

Real Estate General

I
I

blerior
Paintlll!l
(FREE ESllMATES)

V. C. YOUNG IJI

St.lt. 7

2115•Nor1h Second Ave.

u...,.... . . .

Becky AndersOn, 1968. Address

cbanges are needed on some classmates and anyone wilh lhat information should contact one of the
offiCers or a class representative.
Other volunteen are needed ID
help contact alumni.
Music will be provided by Gary
Stewart. Cost for atlendin-' the
dance and not the bllnQuet wtll be
S5. Several prizes will be aiven
away durina the dance including a
color/remote television.
Again this year class photDgraphs will be taken by Bob Hoeflich, The Pholo Place.
Mercluwlls in Pomeroy are bcina
encouraged to help to paint the
town "purple and while" the last of
May.
Tickets will go on sale the mid·
die of April at McCullough and
Riffle Pharmacy and Francis
Florist. The price is $12 per ticket
· which includes the dinner and
dance.

,

" ...,.sUPERIOR FUELS AND
LUBRICANTS THAT WORK
HARD FOR YOU.
•BP Diesel Supreme...Try it, there is a
difference.
•Minimum 50 Cetane
•Low ash and sulfur
•Will not gel in winter time.
1993 SPRING LUBE SALE
MAACH 15TH thtu MAY 31ST
Special farm Ierma wl1h payment 4 Ifmea a year
and NO INTEREST or FINANCE CHARGE.
Larry Miller
614 446 1157

MIDDLEPORT- Fr0111 Street ·If ranlal p10perty is whal
you've baM look1ng far we've got it. In this houoo you

TOTAL
RECEIPT$ .......... 134,783.47
EXPENDITURE
DISBURSEMENTS:
Generlll
Govornmen1 ......... 28,1194.GO
Public lllllety ......... 16,165.88
Public
Worko .................. 45,026.86
Heoilh ..............- .... 10,184.81
Capilli
ouu.y..................... $,667.11
TOTAL DISB0ASE·
MENTS .......:..... S1.07;0311.34
Toloi Aecoipla Ovef/
(Undor') Dlob........ 27,744.13
Fund Caoh Bal.,ce
J.,n. 1, 11112 ....:.....58,065.61
Fund C..h Bal.,ce
Dec. 31,1112 ....... 85,801.71
Depooitory
Balonce ................ l2,355.71
lnveotm""la ............,5,500.00
ToloiTr-ury
a.l.,ce ................ 17,155.71
L- Oulslondlng . . ·
Check.........-....- ..6,546.00
TOTAL
BALANCE ............ 11,308.71
.......................... 11
l certify thio report to be
TOTAL ACPTS. .................. 11
•nd · to the beat ·
Tolll Rec.lpla ovor/under
Dlaburo..,.-..............,. 11
NON-OPEAAnNG
11, 1!1113
, REYEI«JEI (EXPENSES)
~'1i".t.~
32785
' Tr.,oler8-0ut...................(l)
Racine, Ohio 45771.
~~":A AN.
1tc
614-Mt-2114
USES ......,.;...... _ ............. (1) ll•l.i!4,

In Meigs county, call 992-6629
or 992-5605.
. 1)le IOU-~ number for obl&amp;inmg mformauoo on Regular HEAP
vouchers. is ~-800:282-0!180 or for
the hean!lg ~mpm~ wtth a telcconlmumcauon dev1ce (TDD) 1800-686-1557.

'

&amp;OlD IIIVICIIS
IDIOOIL

large bath, ulilil)l 10om, and a kilchan loaded with
cabinets. So""' thing for DAD: Adolac~od 2:.\ car garage
With workshop, concrala dnveway, and maintenance lreo
siding. 'Buy 1.8 acres and homo for $45,000 or buy ·:.~
acre and home.
For $42,000

Serviceo..........:......... 22,049
,Contractual
' Servic ...................... 2&amp;,768
SUppHo11nd
M.olerial0 ................... 21 ,394
Capilli Oudoy .............. 510V7
TOTAL DISBURSE·
MENTS:.....................75,308
Tollll Aecoiplo Oveii\Jnder
• Dlaburoemonls ..............ll21
NON-OPERATING
JIEYENUES/(EXPENSES)
MiacelloMOUt .............. 2,&amp;42
Trllllafora-ln..................... 1,81
Trlll)olero-OuL .........:.. j2,470)
Debt Service .............. 6.421)
Olh• UalliNonop. Ex. pendlturoo................(1,632)
TOTAL OTHER FIN.
,( SOURCES/ •.• •
(USES) ...................... (7,700)
Exc. Acpls Md Olh•
Ftn.,clng Sourc• Ov•!
(Under) Explllld. Dlab. I
Olhor
(&amp;,771)
Fund Caoh Blllwe
·
Jon. 1, 111911 .............. 42,246
Fund Caoh llolonce •
Dec. 31, ,1112 ............ 35,475
Rao. lor Encumbr.
Dec. 31, 1H2 ................ 177
AGENCY FUNDS
AECEtPS: .

Ave,.-~roy.

.::

home a~ atmosphere of roomine~Ss .' Has 3 bedrooms a

:78th annual PHS Alumni
~banquet, dance slated
•
:
.,
'
~

DEADLINE
4:30 P. M. DIY IEFORE
PUILICITION

~~~-~l=~tt_ll2~:·::·:--::--::· 22.000
17,562

Personal

I

\

--

FinMdna 'ou.- Ov•!
(Under) ("f •ld. Dlob. I

THIS t:AN:uiNiij~~~~~
DioburaomMio ...........8,501
FINANCIAL STATEMENT
. OTHER ·FINANCING ,
I certify IIIIo report to be
SOUACESI(USES) ·
correct 1111d """ ·1o lhe ba1
TrMolero-ln ................ 11,378 of my knowtedge.
' Tranolero-OuL.,..........(9,088)
Jonlta l..!nnon, 31111113
Olh• Uoea/Nonop.
Clerk/Tr..Ou!'8f'
ExpencllurM ........... (3,066)
1063 Cherry SL
TOTAL OTHER AN.
, Syri!OUoe, Oh. 45771
SOUACES/(USES) ......(775) (3) 24, 11c
.
Exc. Acpls and Olhor
RnMcing Sourceo Ov•/
(Under) Expend. Dlob.
PubliC Notice
' I Other UM&amp;/Nel .....:7,726
· Fund Cooh Balance
Jan. 1, 1192 .. ............ 28,778
. Fund Caoh Balance
FINANCIAL REPORT OF
Dec. 31, 1H2 ............ 36,504
TOWNSHIPS
.
Roo. lor Encumbr.
For FioC8l Y- Ending
' De!:- 31, 1H2 ..............:.. &amp;69 · December 31,11112
·PROPRIETARY FUNDS
SUTTON TOWNSHIP
:RECEIPTS:
COUNTY OF IEIGS
Chargeolor
"Thla ill on unaJcltod
-Miocellaneouo ............ IO,OOO
·TOTAL
.
• SERVICES.-..............76,237
DISBURSEMENTS:
CURRENT:

~-

Public Notice

T:.NJ!;;;ij;i;'ov;~;~~~o

' Servlc• ....................66,237

The Dally Sentinel Pege 9

} I

IISIILL &amp; IUBI
COIISIIUmON

of=

Ataocllltlon
looking tor cu~

s:··
le••••l•·
.,.

eddi'IIIDII

gl'lldultea tor
I
mallng tor Alumni
Dance on

;

._21,11183.

Mail eddl'll.... to
MelpAiumnl
Aaocllltlon, P. 0.
Box 26, Mlcldleport,
Ohlo46110

667.. 171

'

IMIIES
2 ....... ..,...1
a.IIIMIOH
Rt. 124
12 ........ $20

16 lellloll $25

992·2417
34~1

wi DO ROOFING.~
AND EVERYTIINI Ull. . . . .

TRO
20 Years Exp.

I

�I

.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

32 Mobile Homes

1993

torS...

_
_,
..........
-.
..
--.
.-.
.....,.__-,., ................ ..

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Fwnllhld

- . ..._ oso.

CUe~!
Cue!Cool
(No~ ~~ •

t"6f?oNA~~ .

c~Kt.~&amp;!

~

t• •IAAiriP.II.
:.=.~~

7

y.''

rctr 24. 1993

Ohio

•

.
..,___....
--=.::-..v.:.e=
=----

~

. PHILLIP
ALDER

' 11" eoo,iir ...... WI

~-71:-•
::::.:-aT
II

prrllol

-

, . _ QL, 4

-

*·

NORTH
I·U·fl
tQJ I09643
.109

EEKANDMEEK

$' "' ............

&amp;(11()5~

. . - OniJ.IM all 1117.

. .~ =..=00:

Ootlao ..

4 -.

~---....-.

_,_.,..Clsr!llle.
I .,_., .I...,.

M,

HE. t.IJAkiTED
ilW~

Cljsllioft,

~M.Ioo.t10,DGO, .,.._.

.

11

PUAHITUAE
'AI!C'FI
111 411.11• OA ...._.,.

=
ti:."H.....:

1

llll'.._lol•fl For lilt: Cnftnsan I L llloo, 1tH 14xl0 Rodr ~WMR . . - Oi .-.
..._ .... · • With Cluttw Kll
mv wilt I • ....,.,, InLllle ..... Onlr ... Col
dollrify, ....... ...,.
........... ,1 411..
Md okktlng, - -· CoH 114- C1t11n ~·

;~

7

115-24:14 aolltas Millo.
Sond till Rd. t acretond. Mobllo
'-&lt; whh odd-on, la~'!i'k.
Coli Somorvllto Roany.
753030 01 304-675ol431.

YardS...

ALL Yonl - · Muol Ia Pold In
Advonoo. IIUDIJHI: 2:GO p.11L
llotdarlltloNIMid IIID-.

Sundar - ...· • a:oo ....,..

_..._,

F'*r....... - . l:tO

.

Public Sale

8 .'

Business

14

Training

&amp; Auction
'

'

Land /Homo Oonto.-, E~
ooo Homo Coni• Will- You
Howl Your Now Slnato Or
Double~ won, - l c, Founda-

-

Ql . . _

Pike.

No .,..,_ On ...... I Ownj
Nolltlna &amp;- Pll o oltd.

18 Wlntld to Do

with 114 ft R1. 2 lrontogo lilt·

Buolnon ar

.-~a~

...... old 110m
lllo&lt;lgtl- • 0111 of ... WIY1
IMI , _ tw -~~~· li4211101t.
-Md--.llflho
.... -WID
or 114.
143
..2"

Wllnl .. ...,. aid -

·-Will.

'"""! =£1nloM,
no
...~
--cot-.
' ill,- Polnl
aniJ,
Go Mort,

.-.

Lionel AlliWiowi ..,.. or H.O.,

Wllnlld To lluy: J"'* AMI•
Wllh Or - - ~~a~.... Col
Larry L.Mir.I'M 1• 11 n.

Top l'olll: AI Ollf U.S.
Gold
Alnao.
- Co1no.
Ceil,..
Gold Colnt. M.U.·Coin
llllotl.
151 -

' - Golllpallo.

PI
rt, WY.
Polt·Tlmo CGnlrocl

,.....• ,.,_ .......,

E&amp;A Til£! IEAYICE. T~

.....,..... I

Trlmmlna. -

al7o7111'A. . 4p.oo.

ou,...Poul L1 ......L.._,,

logo lo ... mil 1&lt;111
Cloltcal ...... coli JCM.tli-1N7.
- - I 0.,. For Wool! In
Gallpalll· ComPu~•IIDeflelltce Milo - ' 8 Oor C.. c.nl• 1
._ w... 01 Hllc 01 .... - .
.Wllh
. _ ...
N
..,.
llftCI
I ·-.
·''A
- Plu M.f I A.ll. -6:30 P.M. I
~r And I'JIO'Io._ II Tho
To: lox
-~121~r
CLA
Third ,._.,.,
AFor Y- Clllld'8
o.Hklolla.
..,., Dlldllne: 11
llloroh Jl, .•liS.
.
C.O.
Coli
Uo
- · 1n11n1
IToddllra i14For
441A1227.
Prt.

-m

~--·~-

1224.
ol

ClAttlfiED
ADt
.
flU THE
.

Two AKC 11-gloWo:l Poltingooo

~l'fla--1115.00,
ltr

k

ca. ~..o;-r:::rll0l,f
""'""' W-41oL W- Good,
...............

Opponunlty
.

PIN do;;nEXTRA

CA8H?!!

pu"lll, ...... ~lwlblalo,
1d, Mor111btl. . . . teot1
080,114-14NII1

·WOitt

S7

==
.
.
~
-...

Producto

Aid Phanrslcy.

ol
TM

111.

'

allalcal

ln...
ruments
••

--p-

Plonoo • Roland
_ , . . . . llort[n I Glloton
Ou]to,. And Muah . . _ ·Muolc, Jlcklon, Hummtnolllnl
OH 114-:1811111.

f •''1'1 Supplr; ·,

,\

~rvestuck

4ayl..

luy

On

Donata u.. Of 1-3 Ao,.. To lJ»..
catlluzzloloocllng AI flo Club For
A Shoollng Aln111. Coil 114-24511515 Aftol l P.ll.
·

Rentals

hi

BARNEY

'

F.,_

HAVE YOU 60T

~ ..:-w.h ~:rr d.:

IF I KETCH
A FR.Dti IN
MY HOUSE-,
ZAP I!

A
IN WIRE
BACK POCKET ?

1NdoForMiniVM;
.
Anl4 ~'1r.l~:n1ow11c~=euao, 114-

-·PI,*• .... •t....M:=
PI, P l l , - - , -

72 Trucka for Salt
1m Clifty. C.IO l'loLJip, ,..,

11118, f i , G O I ; - .
1110 Ctauoollll C.IO tw - ,
IIIW7I-4a2.
· _ ......
_ , _ .....

PEANUTS

-.
-~~·---'-.
Nunllr
IIWJ..-.
. . . -Tal
..... I

-·

-

m.ao

-----·
_... - ....
-·---LAYN&amp;'8 FURNITURE

114-

-

I HATE TO 1A1A1&lt;E '(()IJ
UP. BUT WE !WE OOR
RKST
TOMY..

JOI.Il5.

f.lERE'S

EAT A 600D

ANOPON'f

'I'OW!l: CAP

6REAKFA5T..I'M
COlJHTtNE; ON 'IOU
TO PLA'r' HMD

608ACKiO
SLEEP!!

AND'I'OI!IR

6!.0\lE. ..

• 18lh, lllli.OO:

....

-....
••••a,

S200111o. lbln StrHt, erawn

--.--.· -- ...... ..-.-

Houoo lor Rlnl· 2 or :i.lotdroom,

""'
-

41 Houses for Rent
2 Bedroom Homo 1100 - ·

-~~~---.oonwn'' 'a,IOMJI-1U7.

~J.• Ohio 6MIIo1ttl, Altw 5

t:fssii!OIIIIo Chr Sclsaal
tllalrlct, 2 lllllo lrilow Rio
Orondo Unl . . .lly, 114-2455200.

ThrM bedroom, avallattt. In

~~~·· , pooolblo HUD,

... llluO;-

FRANK AND ERNEST

Coeur' 1• . _ ..............
Moura: ........ N. .........
~ lUI .................. llcl. ~-r.m. .-..

,. • • a DMII or

PICKENS PIIANftUM
II 1' •
Po1", .........
- llcl.fls!ltlo!*st.
112
nsl.
Pl. PI
.. WV,
"'t

. 8WAIII
AUCTION I I,II,NITURa. ·'81
Olho ••
UIOd
fumll- - - . W I n I
WDfllboo1o.I1W1WIII.

Galllpollo.-.

53

-···

~
==:-...!:'ID."Wi&amp;:

. . . ~......

.J.

llrtli Routo114 . . . 'Pa!l!ond,
114 143-1211.

· - ........ 1~~

~--U7P.

73 Vana&amp;4WD'a

,I

&lt;

..

'

"'

'

.."'

·&gt;

&lt;

\l

,,,

•
BORN LOSER

'i: R:Nt. nE

Antiques

a:~• u~n, T.W.. .......,.
llloni ..GO, 11Wb.11101.

- - - -7 00 '«XX·TltiNI'. ~

t:mT

I'Eit5QtW; HlDie

..mliiE

INOllCEI

c.ooc&gt;! WRIT£ 50fsi£TIIII¥&gt;
UP FOR If£, Wttl '1'00?

·'··-~-

IIII.Ml f10\
TIE lEI«!'.

OHIO VALLEY PUIUSHINQ CO.
,._mondo thai l"" do buo~

no. with pooop1o you 11.- ond
NOT lo oend -..y thro"'Jh tho
moll ullll rou hovo lnYIIIogatld

IM allwlng.

l..ocol Vondlna Routo' 14,000 A
Month Patonllal. Muot Sill. 1·
800411H313.

u~i:~~~~=~~~~ ' L.I::I:::!~~==~~~~ -

VENDING ROUTE: 011 Rich
Qwlck? No Wayl Bul Wo Hovo A
~.~dy,AH~, lu~

·MORTY MKKJCJ.KAND WINTHROP

....._ Won'! l..ISL 1-eGQ-214-VMd.

All real estate adVertising In
this newspaper is subjeclto
the Federal Fair Housing Act
ot 1968 wNCh makes l !legal

L-------~a~~~=

Sorv1c es

llm"atlon or dlscr1mlnltion

based on race, color, mltgkm,
sex tamlllal status or nauonat
origin, or any lniMion to
make any sucn prelerence,
llmHallon or disctlmlnallon.·
This newspaper wlfl not

knowingOyoccopt
adVertisements for reat estate
wtMch Is In v~ta.Uon or the
law. Our readers are hereby
lnlonned that all -lings
aO\IerliS&amp;d In INs newspaper

are avaMable on an .equal

1-------------------

7·----------""-----------8.
________________
9. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

opponunOy t&gt;aOIS.

Real Estate
AS1'aO-GaAPB
31 Homu for Ssle
15M Sq. Fl., :II ..,. lal, 211
wallo, 2 complolo bolhl, '"nlng
room, blna raom, 3.-rm., Wllk·
1n ......., lully .,.,......, a ,..
ohoo, _..., - · loC olovo,
lllr-or, Nol'r-.
- . wllld.,:t;.mo
011.
,.
2210.

~0~---------------ll._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
12----~-------------13
. _____________

14----------------15,_________________
Ga1llpolle DaUy Tribune

446·2342 .
Pomeroy DaUy Seotioel

992·2156

Pt. Pleauot Register
675-1333

2 •• llouo!..,..,
Wllh hln
u.t. Ouw' ....
Eureka.

Port.:I-OriiOIHonte.IUUIIDSI.

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

-_.............
.............._. .
,.-·-...,..
-.
.L
.
.
.
.
.
,..................
-........__.....
..,_

bn'ttlday 91ft. Send lor Ar.es· Astro -Graptl 'today . II you 're nol cBrel ul. th is person
ptedid!ons for tne year ahead by mailing m,gnt slrp off tne hook
$125 plus a tong, setH:Gdressed. stamped UBRA (Sepl. 23-0ct. 23) Be carelul tOday,
..,...:"""' 1o Astro-Graplt. C/o this newspa· or eJse you mrgnt be swayed .by the opinron
porr. P.O. Ber91428. Cleveland. OH 44101 · or someone who is nol as brrghtas you are.
~, 8e sure to state your zodiac sign.
but who 1S a more ghb ralker.
TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20) II could be a SCORPIO (Oct 24·Nov. 22) Be consistent
trifle dlfficul1 for you to keep secrets today. - tn your work procedures today if you hOpe
n..·s. a poss•bdity you might·prematurety to be producf1ve . The re 1S a possibi~ty yoUr
ratklllaut something you had promised you methods might gel sloppter as your difficul·
~t.
ues escalate.
C!J
1 C111y 21.JUIII 201 ¥anagement of ~GITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec. 21) Aelerve
resmurG:es.. eifher yours or those ot others, Your judgmen,t pertammg to people
net De your tong surtlodtty. ao De care· meet lor the l irsl lime loday. The
i
r.t., botf&gt; a&lt;tM. My mil..kol you make imprel8ion might be dazzlrng. but rl COLrld
c&lt;rUd 1saws a ripple lfllcl.
be' lust a lac:ade.
CANCER(,_ 21.-duly II) Try to keep CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jon. U) Domestic
ueryllsiosg out rn lilt ooon - y -re your tranquillity COUld sulfer tOday It JOU spring
H you CIOn'!. ltltre'a a unetcpOCIICI cnanges on your mate or lim:·
poasollihty you mrglll tqse the aupport 01 ly. Keep overyone poslad regarding your
nsamt1al alltes whO don't want to p1ay exact intentions.
OI'NS·
. AQUARIUS (Jin . 20,Ftb. It) Tatka or
LEO fo1u1r ~ II) II migltl bo ~menta lllat are u6UaUy eaay lOr you
~ to· roptlt tacli'cs that prtvlouoly could preaont unique complication&amp; lodtty.
, . - to bo unsuccooolul. This lime, 11toy To De on the ule s'rde, piJ11hoae which
cOIIIII carry ,... ho.Vior pen11!ioa lllan moy cause problema at !tit top ol your list.
·
• · PIICII (Fell. 20·Morch 201 II you are
WGC) CALLI- ~ Ill Somoono who prasenlly
rn a venture lhll
is~ ~ r*HIIII you might lot looking lor . .,. lnd lhirall lOr aGdi!lonal revenue , n
!D •r&lt;l !HmHII or htrHff ot lite obligollon lot wiH 1o otudy IIlia in dtplh to see ff •
llmelo boil out ..

rir"''

--,... ............. -...,....__
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lP 1 cted •••• ;p • •~* sa 111at JOd cen
N $ »lid...., ,.,.., .... J"' . . . . a

arg.
38 LoUor ol

olplsobet

org.
12 58, Ro:rtan
13 POt:ktt bread
14 Th'" (Sp,)
15 Evon {potl.)

II Chltchot
' (2 Wdl.)
18 Spritl
20 T1r!lr
21 Btlwotn VI.
1ndllt.
22 Co•••
23 Oalrich
27 Goar toolh
20 Fond du - ,
30 Dottgnor

.. AKQJ7S32
t K B5

31 18 oz.

Norlb

Eall

+

s+

Pass
Pass

Pass

Pass

Obi.

Pass

Pass

30 Lellfll4
40 Food lith
41 - Mln&amp;IUtO
roco
42 Block
44 SkltrJun
Clllldo :47 Enawo
51 C1uollc

........c.
P'tlnun

52

53 Aulllor ZMII
54 MICIW
55 Runla~ newa

,_,...,

•
.DOWN

5 Actor A*l.tlr

110:..1 ais
113fl

2 Pitt of the

8 Olltypt
ttylo
7 DtnMr

3 Elling

8Con..,kl»

C•Mn-

32 102, Rom1n
33 Domuro
34 IID'o
llllitllnl

..

111•ncy

58 Aowlnt toola
57 Log1l mottor

Wia.

Mention Chicago to someone and he
or she thinks of the freezing winters,
the El, the gangsters of old, the Bulls,
the Bears and the Blackhawks. Or, if
that person loves summer pastimes,
the Cubs and the White Sox. BuWbere
is also a stock exchange in Chicago
as in New York, many bridge ex,
trade there. One of the up-and·
coming brigade is Barry Goren. wbo is
no relation to Charles of tbat ilk.
He played today's deal while still in ,
his teens. Do you see how, i~ bis appar·
ently hopeless .six-heart contract, he
gave the defenders a chance to slip'
Goren's strong, artificial and fore·
ing two clubs isn't a textbook bid. Nor·
maiiy, tbe hand would cont.ain not only
offensive winners but also defensive
tricks.
When the dummy ca,me down,
Goren thought be had no chance of
winning 12 tricks. However. rather
than give up meekly, he set a small
trap lor West. At trick one, he called
for dummy's club four.
Obviously West should have
switched to the diamond queen (or a
spade), but without giving it much
ihougbt he exiled with a club. Goren
gave the defenders no second chance.
He discarded the spade king on dum·
my's club ace. cashed tbe heart .tO and
led tbe spade queen, rulfing out East's
ace. He ..went back to dummy with a
trump, and his diamond losers disappeared on dummy's spade wiMers.
When he saw tbe dummy, Goren
thought tbat he bad misjudged .in tbe
bidding. East was unlikely to find the
bea~t lead tbat can defeat five spades.
But when West misjudged in tbe play.
Goren was exonerated.

OUR LANGUAGE
A willingness to forgive or show
mercy is CLEMENCY ( "KLEM·Un·
see"l, as in "They offered the crimi·
nals clemency." For a name related
to thi• noun. try the darling CLEMEN·
TINE.

~~casion"'

They don't say "an

A. At one time. "an historic" was
considered the only correct usage.
~y TINS I'M WINNING
The rule staled that AN should be
"'*'l ARGUMENT, 'YOU 'W'WT
used before any word that begins with
1t&gt; BS REA'50NABL.Ed
.
H
and is stres~sed on the second syl·
•'
!able. According to that rule, "an his·
toric" and "a history" are correct.
Other speakers argue in favor of A,
never AN, before all words that begin
with a pronounced H. These rules,
, though, are not permanent and could
'\~ ....... _ ,, ..~ ~'-'·
change in as little as 'an.IIour."
1ll1&lt;

to actvenlse ~any preterenoo,

1 Cow'a
chowld food
4 lnformet!on
ILICr.
B Govt. firm

SOUTH
tK

Q. Why do TV commentators, who

L.E1'5ee
RE• !3 Cl!H"f!'l E.

2 . ______~----------3. _ _ _ _ _ ___,._ __
4, _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
5 . __________________
6 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___

+so

1sn,out~ know better. use AN in "an his·

NOW, CHD'i",

Turn your clutter into ca.h,
&amp;H it tM ea•y w6y... by ghone,
no need to leave your home.
Place ;your clauified ad today!
15 word. or leu, 3 days,
3 pqper1, 15.40 paid in advance.

N

ACS
CONPSm
COMPANY -

Ruaaocl loruoh hogo, rlaht llrico,

:::,;.:.~~"-~"'63
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on·the lake

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Opening lead: + K

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Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: East

Ai*!rsglt,ltiO, ....,._,

To Buy: - t l y
Aolocotod Cauplo 8_... Homo
Wllh · 2 Cor Oarago And
WDflloho!&gt; Space. GollpOIIa Or
-bY 1110 'f130K Ran111 P.O.
lox 811, Gol!lpollo, OH 411131.
~

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Wor:tld To

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Wanted

niOI*i,

Business

'IIINeiO.

Real Estate

New House, 2 ltdroome, Largt
l..ol · Rolt1aonttor &amp; Aonao Fu~

21

Aoalllorod~·

.
lotlllod plgo,

2 ocroo

RaciM lrtl, 614-192..J851.

Financ1al

Want to: ~

36

t14 -·Dill.

Col 111 441 I Ill
For • - .,.,_ u-d

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1M1 ....,.. In 11J Fen- public water. I aero loll with
ood In Play - . bporfv •
opprand oopelc oyotom Mor·
Re... Cit Anllablil. ....., -.:
Bollom lliobolllvlolon.
Clyd4 _ . . , Jr. 304-6711-:n:ll.
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1)1411-1081.
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Wllh !Jg\11111 Homn. t-614-m·

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DIG VIII

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PGIINZK.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "An actor shoold . - ·worl&lt; .-tilt aiu .: ';.
children, Q-n VIctoria - or dlnooaurs." - Sir lllcM&lt;d ,...___,, ~

MAWHRT '

I~ I 1 I
2

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ASSIO

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5 I6 I
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. . .

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I

A famous comic wn mom
to a couples fiftieth wedtli!!g
~ anniversary. He tola IItle
" . couple
"Bigamy was h
only crime where a .wmllQ lis
made up of,_ , ••, 1'

I I I

I

0

7
8
Complete the ckuckle qum.a
.
_
_
.
_
by filling in the mining IWOf:ds
L......L-1-..J.......J'-,L,..J yov develop from step No. :3 ..below.
•

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES

I'

'·
SCRAM.J.ITS ANSWIIS
'J "~
Eff011 • Prize • Width , Modest • WISH FOR
Granny to youngstt~r, "People are always wiatlitjgb
h t th h
't t • y ~ t
"Su!!l-.
w a ey aven go· ou
8f a granny,
... ...,
are. What .else can one WI H FOR?"

r~~~--~~------~----_;~~~~~~~--~--------------------.

�Page 12-The Dally Sentinel

Ohio Lottery

Wednesday, March 24, 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

NIT

'

R. C.

'

quarter
finals

PRODU

t-5-3

Page4

. 2 LITER BOnlE

STORE HOURS .
Monday-thru Sunday
8 AM·lO PM

Supa- Lolto:
13-14-31442-46
Kid.er:
1-2-3-1-5-6
Pidr.3:
Pidr.4:
4-0-2-3

Cloudy lolllgbt w1tb • lo" 4045. Lo&lt;aUy o1enso rog possible

•

'

. 298 SECOND ST.

POMEROY, OH~
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD SUN., M«R. 21 THRU MAR. 27, 1993

/

COCA·COLA
.PRODUCTS

. ·'
Vat 43, No. 228

'Edwin A .Lewis'

$289
. $239

Cubed Steak.......................LB.
SLICED 1f4

$ 169

.•

pork Loln............

u •••••••••••••••••

LB.-

OLE SOUTHERN
..
. . r $239
PATT1Es•••••••• 3ta. Box · ··

Sausage

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

Round Steak._~·-·-···--...18.

$ 49

2
$169
Chuck Roast. . . . . . . .La.
·
$ . 09
Sliced Bac0n............ oz. 1
$

(Editor's note: The following
story, 'ltbk:h was pubUsbed In
tbe March 1993 edition or AEP
Fuel Supply Department's
Coal Courier, bas been reprin·
ted with permission.) '

· ARGO
GREEN ·BEANS
16

oz.

4 $1
KRAFT GRAPE
JELLY or JAM
32 oz.
•

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF
BAL!ARD'S

.. .

·

STOKELY

12

ECKRICH

Betl

TOMATO

139

LB.

.· JUICE

.

460Z.

AMERICAN BEAUTY

. WHOLE
CERTIFIED KENNEBEC . . $,"JS9 · TOMATOES
16 oz.
Seed Potatoes. . so Las• .l . .
2~y BELL • ·. . . . . $ 89
%. Mdk... ._. . .-·-······GAL .
'

1C
C1trus Punch. . ,.-.. ot CJ9 ·
.
'
,,
69(
89c TV D•nners. . . . . oz.
SU~NY DELIGHl .

·

'

, MORTON
.

Mac. &amp; Cheese. . 7~ oz.

Do Food..~.....................
2o La.
rr::-- -

$299

1--------.1

BATHROOM TISSUE III'
$259 PKG.
l2ROLL II
II
'

Good Only At Powell'• Super Valu

on.r Qaod lllr. 21thru Mer. 27, 11113
LJml1 Per C:UeiOII'!III

.·

64

.,

'

·

'

·

~

'

9-1o

SUNSHINE
II

·

.

MOR!ON FRIED

Ch1cken. . . . . . . . . . . . .

PURINA

NOODLES
6 oz.

UNS

At Powtll'a Super Vatu
21 lhru rur. 27, 1813

aoz.

3 SJ

..·

GRANULATm 'SUGAR 1
.5) 29 , uas..
~ Powell'• Super Valu.
014fQoodU..I1 tiiNIIIM'.27,111113
Qaod Only

Llmll1 ,.,

'

GROUND

· BEEF
10 LB. PACKAGE

SJ59

GREAT

CAT · FOOD

5/Sl

. . .' '
~ 24 oz.

o.-.,

l
1
1

GROUND
CHUCK
10 LB. PACKAGE

By Steve Hiles
.

Ooaked in a veil of winlry
fog, John Coleman, George
Cooper, and Carl Little move
melhodically among the coalfilled barges lhat line lhe river's
edge, wiring lhem IOgelher for
the day's journey.
It's one o'clock in the morning and the mercury haS dropped
to 15 degrees. The misty out·
lines of the John E. Amos
Plant's cooling .towers looms
overhead as the three men
prepare 10 barges for the ttip
from AEP's Pumam Coal Ter·
minal on the Kanawha River 10
iiS Mountaineer and Sporn
planiS on the Ohio.
Slanding at the helm of the
Edwin A. Lewis, AEP River
Transportation Division pilot
Bob Shaw maneuvers the 5,60().
horsepower vessel, worting
wilh the deck crew to arrange
the barges iniO a tow that is five
~ long an? two barges
Assembling a tow is a I8Sk
that's repeal&lt;:d day afler day in
~ AEP River Division; The
u..i.J .andq,4 od!U river-going,
vessels ·in the division move
rrion: than 20 miUioo tons of
coal aruiually 10 AEP genenuing
Slalions, nearly half of the Systi:m 's IOtal bum.
"You get 'some of lhese dark
nights, or some of these fouY
nighiS, and you really appu:coate
your radar - I wouldn't want 10
IUD wilhout it," says Shaw, guid·
ing lhe ~Awis out into the chan·
nel of the Kanawha River. "But
it's jusl an aid 10 navigation. It's
no substitute for knowing lhe
river."
·
"With· a five-length 10w,
you've got 900 feet of coal out
in front of you so you"ve got 10
be lhitllring ahead all the lime.
You've got to know what places
in lhe river are wide .enough for
two bo&amp;IS to pass and what
places aren'L You've got to an·

$1690

'

--~AI!Pinw1\w;

--.c.wc-..

BEING A PILOT IS CHALLENGING ·Jerry Boas, a master
piloi (captain) for ~ AEP River Transportation I)iv!Sfon, 111!1S Ice
lind hlah water coodotions are two or the biggest challenges for a·
pilot.
ticipare what's going· 10 hlippen
· the number of lockages handled
each year, the Winfield Locks
all lhe time. Yoti can't jerk the
are lhe busiest in the nation's intoW around or· you could s~.a~t
breaking lhe wires that hold it
land warerways sysrem.
, The Lewis is still waiting iiS
10gether."
One thing that Shaw has ac·
twn at Winfield as lhe forward
curarely anticipated on Ibis par·
waiCh comes on duty at 6 a.m.
ticular q10111ing is a delay 81 the
AEP River Division crews work
Winfield Locks and Dam, where
schedules of 21 days on, fol·
sevC1111 tows are wailing !heir
lowed by 21 days off. Crew
tum 10 lock lhroush. Based on
Continued on page 3

Clinton thinks jobs bill approval
will follow passage of budget
lion spending bill, he said "in the
end we will pass"it" because uthe
public would juSt be outraged at doe
thOught that we have a chance here
10 create a half a million new jobs
.•• and that it would be slowed up."
OiniDII made his comments on
the CBS News program "48
Hours" as tho,SCnate worked late
. Democrall.
''We've plainly ~ot the votes to in10 the night in' iti effort 10 fmish
pass. it as is, or wtth very minor Clintm's budget by midday today.
modifications," Clinton said The jobs bill, {l8rt of what Ointon
Wednesday night in a television contends is an msepuable package,
was uptiexL
interview.
The new president's bud~et
Aldtough Republicans could use
Senate rules to block the $16.3 bil- would steer federal fi~ pohcy
By STEVEN KOMAROW
Allloclated Prtll Writer
WAS}{INGTON - ·With his
budget heading toward final
approval, President Clinton pre·
diets similar success for bis JObs
bill ~ile opposition from Senale
Republicans and some conservative

Area attorney bound over
to today's grand jury term
A Pomeroy attorney charged
with giving druJI to two Meigs
County youlbs wu bound over 10
today's 1em1 of lhe Meip County
Orand l!Jff Wedne.day br, Meip
County 11111ae Patrick H. 0 Brien.
D. ldic:llaol Mullen, 1663 Lincoin Heilhta. Pomeroy, ileccuaod
or auppfying Dluepam. (Trade
name: Valium) to two Pomeroy
glda, gel II and 12, 011 Mlrc:h 12
and 13.
treated jUII
after
MIR:h 14 It Vet«·

=Ia

were

waived a preliminary hearing. .
Corrupting another with drugs is
a second degree felony punilbable
by up to IS ye.:s coofinement and
a maximum 6ne of $7,500. Alia, a
three-year torm is mandatory on
CICb C:llarp and lllcut duec Of the
lalllll lllllll 1lo ICfVed COIIIOCildvely, IICCOI'dinJ 10 the Meigr County

proecc:ator'a offtce.

O'Brien .set bond at SSO,OOO
in aU CMCS with RICOII·
nizanee permitted and ordered
Mullen 10 nhin fnlm contact with
tho alieaed viedma dmin&amp; the JICD·

COIICUIIelll

~~~~Mondly • proceedfna, dency lillho IICiioo.
Mullen lofcamecl the court that
Mullen ackllowledald aervKo or
aummoaa aacl complalnta, bat he bu ..riled Hennu Clnoo of
walmti'CIIdlna doc c:hlrpland the Atbeaa County Bar Amclalioo
poulble penaltiea. Mullen also u hillltorlley.
1111

In

or

:

•

cento

A Muldmodio Inc. NewspaP!'r

A journey aboard the

12 P-AK 12 OZ.

PORK

2 SeclloM,.12 Pogoo 25

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, March 25, 1993

Copyrlghtocl1883

away from the supply-side influ·
ence__._,_,_,,ftft
of a dozen years of Re~li·
..
can IIIUIIWIYI.I__,.Io
~
It would raise taxes, cut Pen·
tagon spending and make select
increases in domestic programs
beginning in fiscal 1994, which
begins OcL 1. In both doe Senate
venion and the one passed by lhc
House lasr week, federal dcficiiS
would be reduced over the next
five years by a IOtal of about $500
billilm.
·

ByBRYANBRilMLEY
Allloclated Press Wrillr

•-al

MOSCOW Parliameat
speaker Ruslan Khasblllatow
backed away from confi:oawicMt
with Boris YeiiSin IOday,sayiaslle
opposed efforts by aome hanl-liaers to remove the presideul &amp;um
offoce.
"I'm not a supponer o f sort of impeachment. •• said Klllsbulatov, Yettsin's cbicr rival iDa
of two-lhirds.
pow17 snuggle that has g1ipped die - . .
.A
poa;..._•ial
aide
c•ll"'
the
.
The fierce arguments in
RUSS1811 govemmenL
c:Giio
•
''.oy
1
Ot&amp;L''
Moscow
reverberattd across RusThe comments by the speokr
1"11te...,WIJ~isatunp«&gt;sia.
Cossacks
pledged aUegiance to
indic~ that Yeltsin's ·"14"
M•
IK I* · • • llld Yeltsin and oftered 10 form a presi.
in the Congress of People's mise • 1tet
Deputies lacked the nccessuy the ~" said Miaistcr of dt.ruial guard. Siberian coal miners
voleS to remove lhc pr ·.,, • ils lafomali011 MiUail Fedotov. lbreatened a strilre in support of lhe
emergency session scheduled 10 "Nat jlllt doe arP'"t ud the presidenL
4 ' 0 IIIII tile I* -' Mand the
The power struggle between
open Friday.
"I think it is not the oaly 111111- ..... •"
(Coo'liaued on Page 3)

The budget emerged unscathed
Wednesday from its 10Ughest cbal·
. lenge, a RepubliciJI amendment
which Would have lllippcd away a
proposal to raise taxea on higher·
1ncome Social Security ra:ipleniS. ··
The Senate on Wednesday
defeated S2-4 7 the amendment
offered by Sen. Treat Loll, R·
Miss., 10 ~e~~~~~ve lhc Social SOc:urity incle8SC after Democratic lead·
~lie~ on sen,ators to rally
Oinlllll.
'
Vice President Al Gore Jlll!lldecl
over lhc Senaae for lhc cl011e Vo&amp;c,
to add JRIIUI" and Clll doc decid·
in&amp; ballot in the event of a tie.
"Thil is an effort 10 slow down
the -~~~~~~ dl8l'l 8llhtlrilll for
the prclidDIIt in tho COIIIIIy," ..W
Senate Majority Leader Ocorac
MIICbell, D-Malne.
Cumody, rctilwl IDUJt count
half of lholr Social Security bene·
fits as taUble income If they earn
more than $25,000 1 year, or
$32,000 I year for coupleL
Clinton hill P'IJI ~~Millikin&amp; 8S
percent 1ubject to tuatiO!I

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

lioL I dtilti;- Slilllttne a pussiBut no sign of a comprise
ltili7, of (futdiq)
solu- · appeared today. Lawmakers also
liml, ' die 'I I o aid Ill Jq:cttlleiS refused to d1scuss a message
• • .... MJ 1 8 - Qlilfoca:e Yeltsin sent to the legislature
diUiq a a •ii.• of doc Sapreme Wednesday night, warning dtat the
'Soria t 5 ,_. ' wor:.
confrontation could destabilize lhc
n. I
w said lie pad'erml counuy.
doe idea ol ead7.. siaaJI8iiCOus
Some hard-line lawmakers even
C
b;
I ..ctlloe: p- said tbey would try 10 invoke an
!i,·m He said mdla l*upo511. article of the constitution that
Utl•easim" e ol.,...llby would allow them to oust Yeltsin
die~._ did .q •!&amp;- 011 a simple majority vou: insJead

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