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                  <text>Thursday, February 6, 1992

, Pomeroy.....Middleport, Ohio

Page-12-The Dally Sentinel ·

Ohio Lottery

Meigs
girls defeat .
Spartans

Pick 3:304
Pick 4: 9894
Cards:

10-H; K-C; 9-D;
9-S

Low tonight In 20s.
Saturday cloudy. High in upper

20s.

Page4

•
Vol. 42, No. 1113

2 SecUono, 14 Page• 25 cent•
A Multimedia Inc. Newopaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, February 7, 1992

Copyrtghtod.1992

Meigs County freshmen do poorly on state test
By stafT and wire reports
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Ninth-grade students who took
state proficiency tests in November
turned in better overall scores from
the previous year, results released
today showed.
However, ninth ·graders attend·
ing Meigs County's three high
school! showed poor test scores.
The Ohio Department of Educa·
tion said 40 percent of ninth ·
graders who took exams in reading,
writing, mathematics and citizen·
ship passed all four tests on their
first attempt.

THE FABRIC SHOP

7tfi tfiru 14 tfi

PROM DRESS

By JULIE E. DILLON
Sentinel News StafT
Students in the first and fourth
grades in the Eastern Local School
District are learning the importance
of positive living skills through a
program known as "BABES"
which is sponsored by Health
Recovery Services of Atliens.
Beginning Alcohol and Addie·
tions and Basic Education Studies
(BABES) is a primary prevention
program designed to give children
a lifetime of protection from substance abuse.
BABES accomplishes this by
·assisting you~g people. develop

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.

STUDENT lNTERACTION ·Steven Weeks, Amanda Wheel·
er and Crystal Bennett, all fourth grade students or John Perine at
Tuppers Plains Elementary, are actil'&amp; out a skit as part of a lesson
In the BABES program. The program, Beginning Alcohol and
. Addictions and Basic Education Studies, assists young people in
. developing positive living skiDs. The program is now underway in
the Eastern Local School District.

Prices Good Feb. 6 thru Feb. 14

SHOES
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Sal•

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too special tor a paper \kllenflne,
gel her the f?rever kind. Choote from dozens of
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or the beautiful rhodolite garnets. Brqwse. Ask us
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flnd her Just the right 'Valentlne7
•
•'

•

&lt;OMPLETE ST()(J(

Kuhn arrested, jailed on charges

40%oFF
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·IN VAlENTINE HEm
2tz. Reg. 9Sc._, 69C
16 Oz. 56"-'5.39

Eac• Pair Soft Spots

~ she~

•

(OMPLOE STOO

Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby repons that 21 year old
George W. Kuhn, Jr., Dexter, was arrested on Thursday on a war·
rant of receiving and possessing stolen property from Meigs Coun·
ty. Taht warrant stems from a fugitive from justice warrant charging
him with grand theft in Mason County, W.Va.
Kuhn is accused in the West Virginia warrant with stealing two
Labrador Retriever.s from Dr. Danny Westmoreland in January.
. · Kuhn is to ap~ in Meigs County Coun for an extradition bearing.
; · He is lodged m the Meig~ Counly Jail.

WOMEN'S

COLOGNES&amp;
PERFUMES

20%0FF

J~welry theft reported

.MEN'S COLOGNES
&amp;
SHAVES ·

Am.
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Get a.:FREE Valenl.ine Flower (llld Box
of candy With Each Purchue.

. Nancy Campbell of Tanners Run Road in Racine rcpor'ted to the
Meigs County Sheriff's Deparlrnent that sometime within the last ·
week, a pair of diamond stud earrings were taken from her resi·
dence. She also iepOrted that IWO or three months ago, a gold chain
. also ,had di,.Ppearcd.
'

•'

'JM~af®.
212 ,E. ~In,

:- · Drought relief available · ·

·

BOb Brer, pirector or Meigs County Emergency Ser~i~es,

~y attended a meetlllg in Norwalk, hosied by the Nonh Cen·

ll'al Ofilo D1011ght Disaster Committee (including Huron County
; . E~lii:Y Mafta&amp;ernent Director, Bill~' Amq thole pre·
ICI'It were Fred Dailey, Dim:tor of the Ohio~~ of A&amp;ricul·
ture; Lany Adams, Assistant Director or the OhiO ~~ of
' · Agricullw:e: U.S. Congressman.Paul Gilmer, Swe Repmentalives
Dv,oight Wise and lUchanl Rench and Sydney Walktl of the State
.'
'
.
.
Coatln~ on pqe 3

Ptfntroy

•

'

y

' 'k

'

.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
Franklin County Common Pleas
judge has · rejected Columbus
Southern Power Co.'s attempt to
impose a 28.4 percent rate increase
without regulatory approval.
Judge Richard Sheward declared
unconstitutional a state law that
allows utilities to impose rate
increases if the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio fails to act on
increase requests w!thin ~75 days.
The POCO, Which sull is hold·
ing public h.earings on the rate
Increase, has ll&amp;id it will rule some'
time in the-spring.
·
• ,Consumers' Counsel William
Spratley and Columbus City AUOr·
ney Ronald O'Brien flied a lawsuit
· against tire $202.5 million increase,
calling it unconstitutional. The
increase would add $16.21 to an
average residential customer's
monthly bill.
Sheward ruled that the. rat~
increase would cause irrcpatable
harm to IIIQ,cily of Columbus.
Columbus Southern spokesman
Thomas Holliday 18id he, was not
· aware of the decision and had no
. COOIIIICIIL

Columbus Southem can appeal
the decision.
·
•
Spratley !'raised the ruling,
whicb prohlbats Columbus South.ern from imposing the rate

.

..
; ,

Judge rules rate
increase attempt
unconstitutional

- - -. Local briefs---.

WATCHES

20%SAVINGS

ability to better unde'Stand how to
protect themselves from alcohol
and chemical dependency situa·
tions among their peers and within
a family structure.
Ttu;ough the drug education program the students are presented
seven lessons. Each lesson is presented in story fonm and each one
has a !Wo-line title. Those lessons '
include Self-Image and Feelings
(I'm Looking Good and Feeling
Fine); Decision Making and Peer
Pressure (She Made Me Do It ...
Didn't She?); Coping Skills
(Accepting The Things I Cannot
Change and Changing The Things I
Can); Alcohol and Other Drug
Information .(Lei's Play Party); ·
- Oenidg"H~if''(Retr):at is NoHlcfeat
11!ld Failure is Not Final); Review
and Cenification (Wrapping Up);
and Helping Children from Chcmi·
cally Dependent Homes (When
You Don't Know What To Do.)
The lessons are presented by
certified trainers and certified pre·
senters. These trainers and prcseo·
ters are authorized by BABES
World Home Executive Staff to
perpetuate this program. At Health
Recovery Scmces there arc four
certified presenters: Rebecka Flan·
ders, Belinda Fleming, Kim Mas·
trangclo and Dawn Fitch.
The presented conduct the
lessons through the usc of, seven
colorful puppets. These puppets
were created by working with chil·
dren in elementary through high
school groups and include flash
cards and worksheets. Characters
include "Buttons and Bows McKit·
ty," "Myth Mary," "Early Bird,"
"Donovan Dignity," "Recovering
Reggie," and "Rhonda Rabbit."
For further information about
the BABES program, contact
Health Recovery Services, Inc.,
P.O. Box 724, Athens, Ohio 45701.

POMEROY.

VALENTINE SPECIALS

~W!!tlm

positive' living skills and by provid·
ing them with accurate non-judgmental information about the use
and abuse of alcohol and other
drugs.
Workers with Health Recovery
Services feel by being sensitive to
and approaching children at specif·
ic developmental levels, BABES
presents complex concepts in a
simple, factual and non-threatening
manner.
This important information is
presented in a manner designed to
gain the atten~on of children and to
cause them to develop a desire for
healthful living and give them the

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., FEB. 13th
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••II ••lr• yo11r 11ledio•!
THE FABRIC SHOP

Sfop by

11 0 WEST MAIN

In 1990, 33 percent of the ninth·
grade class was able to pass all the
tests on the first try.
"Although passing the tests is
. only one of many measures of sucCess, the proficiency teSIS dO reprc·
sent a significant pan of our effort
to move to a performance-based
educational system," Sanders said
in a news release.
Ninth-graders showed improve·
mcnt in passing the mathematics
and citizenship tests on their first
auempL
Fifty percent passed mathcmat·
ics last November. compared with
43 percent in November 1990. The

citizenship passage rate last
November was 62 percent, com·
pared with 55 percent the previous
year.
The percenta~es of students
pass10g the read10g and writing
exams on the first attempt were
about the same last November as in
1990, with rates of 79 percent for
reading and 76 percent for writing.
Native American , African
American and Hispanic students
continued to score lower than
Whites or Asian Americans. However, the depanmem said there was
an indication that the gaps in pass-

The department said more than
ingrate had staned to close.
The department said the latest 93 percent of the state's tenth
results continue to show significant graders now have passed the read·
gender differences. More females 10g test, while 90 percent passed
passed the reading and writing the writing test. About 77 percent
tests, and more males passed the have passed citizenship. and 63
percent passed mathemaucs.
mathematics test.
In March, all nimh-grade and
Percentages of females passing
tcnth·grade
students who have not
the citizenship test and passing aU
four exams were about the same as yet passed all four proficiency t"&lt;Sts
will retake the exams they failed.
the passing rates for males.
Students
may retake the tests each
. About 125,000 nimh graders
November
and March through their
'took the proficiency tests. In addi·
senior
year,
giving them at least
tion, more than 59,000 tenth-grade
eight
chances
to pass each of the
students took one or more of the
exams.
exams.

Program designed to protect
children from substance abuse

Has Alarge Variety of Fabri's
For Your
•13 Colors of Sequins •Taffetas l Satins • Lace l
Metallics • Glitter Appliques
• Rhinestones l Pearls ·

Sponsored by the Pomeroy
Merchants Association

Only 18 percent of ninth-graders
tes ted at Eastern High School
passed all four tests.
Southern High School ninth·
graders did a little better with 25
percent passing all four tests.
Meigs High School's ninth ·
graders recorded the best test
scores with only 28 percent passing
all four tests.
State law requires any student
who receives a diploma after July
I, 1993, to have passed all four
proficiency tesiS.
State School Superintendent
Ted Sanders said he was extremely
pleased with progress being made.

"'

lnaease.

DEl~ A1'E

ENSUES • The Issue of whether a
statement from the current Leading Creek Con·
·servancy District board could be read into the
court record was a major issue at Thursday's
sentencing of Jack W. Crisp. Crisp, a former
president of the board, received an 18-month

sentence on mismanagement charges. l;lere,
Crisp's attorney, William Eachus discusses his
side of the issue. Pictured from front are special
prosecutor K. Robert Toy, Eacbus, co-defense
counsel William G: McLane and Crisp. Ultl·
mately, the staletilenl was not read.

Crisp free on bond; attorneys
file for appeal Thursday
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News StafT ·
Jack W. Crisp is free on bail
after being sentenced on charges of
misma~agement on Thursday
morning, and his attorneys have
filed an appeal in the case.
Crisp, a fonmer president of the
Leading Creek Conservan9 District, was sentenced by Judge
Roger Jones on five counts of
receiving or soliciting improper
compensation while serving on the
LCCD board. Specifically, Crisp is
accused of voting in favor of and
receiving $5,000 wonh of Christ·
mas bonuses, in violation of state
law.
· Jones was assigned to the case
because Common Pleas Court
Judge Fred W. Crow III was Meigs
County Prosecutor at the time of
the investigation of Crisp's activi·
tics.
Crisp and Special Prosecu10r K.
Robert Toy entered into a pi~ bar·
gain agreement in November. That
plea bargain called for a suspended
one-year jail sentence and a oneyear period of unsupervised proba·

occurring that ' (defense counsel)
has failed to cover is the proteCtion
of the public from this cnme recur·
ring."
"In fact," Jones said, ''proteeling
the public is the primary and over·
riding factor in sentencing this
defendanL"
Crisp was also fined $5,000 and
was ordered to pay restitution,
which was paid in November when
the plea bargain was accepted. That
restitution, totaling 59,075, was
forfeited to the General Fund of
Meigs County. Crisp also agreed to
waive his rights to $120,000 in
retirement funds owned by the
Leading Creek Watershed Associa:
tion and held by .Midland lnsurance

Company.
Among the other conditions of
the plea bargain agreement was the
stipulation t.hat seven felony mis·
management counts against Crisp
would be dismissed.
Extensive discussion was held at
yesterday's sentencing hearing ·as
to whether a 20-page victim impact
statement, prepared by Athens
Attorney Thomas Hodson, could be
read into the record on behalf of
the new LCCD board. After a confcrcnce between Judge Jones and
counsel, that request was denied.
Theswtement was, however, filed
in the coun folc, which will be sent
to the Fourth Di strict Court of
Appeals.

Meigs board, OAPSE
contract extended 3 years

The contract be!Ween the Meigs
Local Board of Education and the
Meigs Chapter, Ohio Association
of Public School Employees, has
bee'n extended for three years,
lion. ,
~
None.theless, Jones sentenced Supt. James Carpent~r reported
Crisp to six months in jail on each today.
He said that the only issue
of the misdemeanor charges. The which
can be opened during, that
sentences on the firSt three counts
are to be served consecutively, or . period is the matter of insurance,
one after other, while the other lwo ·that being contingent upon a
are to be served concurrcntly,•or at change in the overall insurance
the same time, as the other three. program offered by the disuict.
Meanwhile, plans arc moving
That makes for an acnaal sentenee
forward
for the district to go into
of 18 months. Following his com·
pletion of the jail sentence, Crisp is the state loan program.
10 be placed on three years proha· · While a scllool dis1ri~ Is in Ji!e
loan ~m, the .state sets certain ·
tiqn.
~
constramts
which include no
Jones stated that there were cir·
increases
from
local tax dollan in
cumstancea not covered by either
salaries
nor
increase·
in staff size,
party in the case that g(,vemed his
thereby
giving
the
lotal
district the
decision 10 sen~¢ Crisp to a jail
opporlllnity !0 make ~hanges which
team.
"There are many factors that will reduce the overall opcratin&amp;.
need to be consldcnid by the ~ expenses.
Teachers will, however, rcc:cive
in any sentencing matter." Jones
salary
increases if the SI:IIC mini·
said;"but one factor that keeps

mum for beginnin'g leachers is
increased. When the state mini·
mum is increased, teachers at most
levels receive similar increases,
Monday Supt. Carjlcnter will be
in Columbus to secure approval for
a state guaranteed loan of $560,000
for the current fiscal year which
ends on June 30, 1992.
The district' was earlier
approved for ·a·S.I mijlion loan,.fol- •
lowing an audit by the personnel
from the orrICC of the slate auditor.
That was certified 10 the Ohio Swe
Depanment of Education and is
now going before the Controlling
Board of the Ohio Legislalure.
The district ilready llaJ in place
the' Rquired expenditure reduction
plan whi'ch calls for SJVin~s of
$100,000 in insurlmcc ·promaums
by ~sing a reserve fund, and
includes elimihalion of two teach·
ing positions either ihrou&amp;Ja auri- ·
tiQn or reduction in forte (RU') u
.well seine red~tion iq aides.

�Commentary
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTZRitST8 OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

.'

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBERof The Associated Press, Inland DailyPress Association and
the American Newspaper Publisber Association .

LEITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be te ss than 300
words long. All letters uo subject to editing and must be signed with name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters wiUbe published. Letters
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

Former governor works
for U.S.-Japanese bond

. WASHINGTON - Bankruptcy
•s the new Never-Never Land
whe!e debtors never, never have to
grow up. Nearly I million people
opred out of some of their debts last
year by filing for protection under.
bankruptcy law. In New Hampshire, bankruptcy filings are outpacing new housing SlartS.
Admittedly, time.s are tough in
New Hampshire, but there and
elsewhere, the burgeoning numbers
are not simply a byproduct of the
recession. Bankruptcy has been
booming since the 1980s, a decade
when profiteering begat greed
which begat high living. As long as
personal debt as a percentage of
mcome continues to rise, bankruptcy numbers will follow.
What used to be a stigma is now
just one more sound fmancial strategy, made easier by laws that allow
debtors to hang on to some assets
while telling the bill collectors that
the kiuy is empty.
Former Cincinnati Reds pitcher
Bruce Berenyi filed for bankruptcy
last year, but he kept his pricey
condo in North Miami Beach. As a
pitcher, when Berenyi found himself in a tight spot, he was spelled

By ROBERT E. MILLER
Assodated Press Writer
COLUMB US - Former Gov. Richard Celeste says he blam es
Japanese criticism of American workers on Japanese politics.
" You would never find an oflicial of Honda, or any other Japanese .
company that has invested in the United States, who would say that
American workers are lazy. They might say that they are different. There
are profound cultural differences," Celeste said.
He was asked to comment because of his involvement in a consulting
business that helps Japanese and U.S. businesses understand cultural differences that can hamper trade.
Celeste frequently dealt with Japanese businesses while he was governor - both on trade missions 10 Japan and in Ohio, where he prodded
them to e ~pand their auto and nioton:ycle manufacturing operations.
He was asked about comments from Japanese politicians that American worke~ are lazy and the United States has losttts. " work ethic."
Yoshio Sakurauchi, speaker of the lower house of the Japanese Parliamcn~ also referred to America as "Japan's subcontractor."
" I view that as politics for Japanese consumption," Celeste said.
He suggested that the comments appeal tO many Japanese the same
way thai Japan-bashing is a JlOilular activity among many U.S. politicians.
The Japanese comments have stirred resenunent in the Untied States,
producing calls for .boycons of Japanese products and "Buy American "
campaigns, particularly in the automobile marl&lt;eL
Celeste after leaving office a year ago founded the Columbus-based
Institute for Training Inten:ultural Management. He said it has conll11Cred
with several U.S. companies. including IBM, and Japanese companies.
He said executives of both nations understand that the differences are
cultural and tend to treat them as superficial.
" But politicillns don't have any patience with those differences," he
said.
Asked to explain the differences, Celeste said Americans are individualistic "and think of the process in terms of 'me.' If we fail, we feel guilty
because we have let ourselves down."
·
The Japanese, on the other hand, "tend to be more collective in
natlji'C," he said.
·'They think of success as a shared accomplishment and failure produces feelings of shame - not guilt," he said.
He said Americans are better entrepreneurs, forming mostly small
bu~inesses, while the Japanese "rely very considerably on corporate staSome say he offered too little;
bility.''
say he promised too much.
''As a society, we tend to be impatient. The Japanese tend to be orient- others
Some say it was politics as usual;
ed to the long term," he said.
say he said what he had to
He said a Japanese business leader refmed at a meeting in Washing- others
say.
ton, D.C., to hts firm 's "50-year plan" and chuckles could be heard
Whatever your perspective, it's
around the room.
safe
10 say there were some things
"That was perfectly narural to him. But we can't think in terms of a
you liked about the President 's
50-year plan," Celeste said.
State of the Union Address and
some things you didn' L
Personally, I felt the President's
inner cirtle did him a disservice by
hyping the speech as if it were to
be the sermon on the mount. By
building great expectations on the
pan of J)le viewing audience, the
Presidents people needlessly set
him up for a fall . Not that he f ell
mind you, but they did leave him
open to criticism that could have
been avoided had they not been so
glowing with their pre-speech
buildup.
As state of the union speeches
go, and I've been pany to a number, this year' s went about as
expected. Falling in the polls and
racked by charges of indifference
to domestic concerns, the President

by relief pitchers. Now he spells came."
His fmances are being sorted out
relief, F-L-0 -R-1-D-A, the state
with the law that allowed him 10 by Miami federal bankruptcy Judge
keep his condo and unload many of A. Jay Cristol. The judge told us he
has seen a long list of debto~ file
his debts.
through
his courtroom, but few
Bereny i injured his heavily
insured arm while playing for the have been as fonunate as Berenyi.
Reds, and retired from baseball Bankruptcy law in its current form
with a $202,000 disability payment is not uniformly kind to debtors.
from Lloyd's of London. At the
Judge Cristo! recalled looking
time he was building up debts that into the face of a man who was so
would eventually reach $316,000, desperate that even the bank conbqt he spent a chunk of the insur- uolling his mortgage tried to help
ance money on the condo in Aori- him keep the house. The man had
da. The state was a smart choice. spent22 years as an airline superviAorida allows bankruptcy mers to sor before he developed diabetes.
keep all the equity they bave in a His vision was so impaired that his
home, and Berenyi paid cash , so duties had to be downgraded. Medhis home was safe.
ical bills forced him into bankrupt· Fourteen months after buying cy, and then his wife developed
the condo, Berenyi threw a curve cancer. Soon after that, the man
ball to his lende~ by declaring per- needed open heart surgery. The
sonal bankruptcy. The banks lost bank allowed him to skip mongage
their money and the pitcher kept payments, but eventually had no
hi s condo . Berenyi praised the choice but to foreclose on hi s
Florida law that allowed him to house. Unlike Berenyi, he had not
keep his home. and he told our paid cash for the house, and he
reporter Joe Territo that buying a didn 't have enough equity in it to
condo in Aorida was not a premed- hang on.
itated dodge. "I had planned on
"Each couple of weeks, the felmoving down there before this low would be bac k with another

A state of disunion?

Berry's World

was obligated to show that he has a
program, that he has a plan to get
our nation's sputterinj! economy
back in high gear. He likewise had
an obligation to tell it like it is, to
bare the warts as well as speak to
the achievements.
People wanted to see a leader
who was in charge, they wanred to
see a President auune to the problems beseuing our country and
committed to correcting those ills
that exist. They wanted to see a
decisive President, a determined
President, a President receptive to
new ideas and new policy proposals.
To varying degrees, what they
got was all of the above. The President's demeanor was extremely
presidential. He clearly appeared to
be a man in command, confident
that he could get his ship of state
back on course. While many of his
proposals were warmed-over offermgs of the past, many were new
and imaginative initiatives aimed at
hastening the economic recovery.
Such proposals as the call for a

CoDIIDUfd from page 1

ASCS off~ce.
According to information presented at the meeting, The U.S.
C~gress has passed legislation providing $995 mUlion in disaslcr
relief 10 farmers nationwide, including lj)ose in Ohio who suffered :
drought-related losses. If that amount is not sufficient to fund
approved applications, the president may request an additional
emergency allocation of $755 million.
·
Fanners can make application for assistance for either 1990 or
1.991 (but 1101 for bolh years) at their local ASCS off1ce. ApplicatiOns' are llliw being taken. Information 10 be filed includes ASCS
578, Report of Planted acreage; ASCS 574, Application for disas~cr
credit; ASCS 658, Record of crop Production. .
Those needing more informaaon can call Byer at992-6618.

Jack Anderson,
Michael Binstein
problem," said Cristo!. " That's a
sad, sad case.''
The judge says that most of the
debtors who come to his court are
hard-working people in dire straits.
Some lose everything, and some
come out almost unscathed. Those
are the two faces of bankruptcy.
The court procedure that replaced
debtors' prisons in the 19th century
is financial respite for some and
financial ruin for others.
.The patchwork of state and federal laws is at the heart of the
inequity. The federal bankruptcy
code allows people to keep up to
57,500 in equity on a residence,
$1,200 on a car and $500 wonh of
jewelry. It also protects a limited
value of household furnishings,
appliances, books and other items.
The point is to liquidate most of
what the debtor has and parcel that
out among creditors without leaving the debtor completely destitute.
But the code allows states to
come up with their own cafeteria of
option s. State legi slatures can
accept the federal standards or
write their own. About I0 states
allow debtors to choose whether
they file under state or federal laws.
In Florida , the law allowing
people to keep the equity in their
homes is a huge loophole that robs
creditors. The Florida law says a
bankrupt person can hang on to the
equity in either a half-acre of city
property or 100 rural acres, no matter how much that real estate is
worth. A bankrupt millionaire can
continue to live in his mansion that
is paid off, while telling his creditors that he has no money to pay
them. And, he can stan getting
credit again, som etimes within a
few months. If the cycle repeats
itself, he can file for bankruptcy
protection every seven years.
The Senate is considering legislation tO reform the bankruptcy
process. One of the major bills
would create a commission to study
the code and recommend changes.
But the proposal fails to simplify
the myriad of state and federal
loophol es that have created an
unfair system.
Copyri gh~ 1992, United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.

EMS units answer 10 calls
Meigs County Emergency Services units answered 10 calls for
assistance on Thursday and early on Friday morning.
On Thursday at9:12 a.m., Racine squad went 10 Swe Roua: 124.
Dorothy Thurston was transported 10 Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At I 1:31 Lm., Pomeroy squad was sent 10 Locust Street for James
Ward, who was taken to Veterans.
At 12:32 p.m., Racine unit lllUisponed Michael Dailey to Veterans from the stadon. AI 3:46 p.m., Rutland unit went to State Route
124 and transported Kim Ricnerbeck 10 Holler Medical Center. At
5:02 p.m., Salem Township unit went to State Route 124 for a grass
fme at the Games property. At 11 :17 p.m., Middleport squad went
to Mill Street. Charles Boyles was taken to Holzer. At 11:46 p.m.,
Rutland squad wentiO State Route 143. Dessie Graham was transported to O'Bieness Memorial Hospital.
At 4:30 Lm. on Friday, Rutland squad was sent to Beech Grove
Road. Cornelius Phillips was taken to Pleasant VaHey Ho~ital. At
5: II Lm., Middlepon squad was sent to Mill StreeL Theo Rtley was
transported from there 10 Holzer. At 5: II a.m., Pomeroy unit to
Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilitation Center for Ola Smith, who was
taken to Holzer.

Otis Burris

of a series of our country's major
nuclear delivery systems. Additionally, he promised yet further reductions based on the willingness of
Boris Yeltsin and the former Soviet
Republics to do likewise. No sooner were the words out of the Presi-·
dent's mouth than an "anything you
can do I can do better" response
was forthcoming for Mr.(Yeltsin.
Not enough can be said on this
development of and by itself. The
cause of world peace took a giant
leap forward as a result of the President's dramatic nuclear arms declaration.
Overall, I felt the President put
forth a responsible agenda. By his
words and actions he made it clear
to the American public that he is
aware of their concerns and intends
to do something about them
Congress permitting. We must not
lose sight of that latter reference,
"Congress permiuing ." For the
President can pr0pose until he is ·
blue in th e face, but until the
Congress acts on the proposals he
sends to the Hill, linle can happen.

the pedestal.
wate~ jusi off the coast of GreenA hu' is probably what he land.
needs. His family could give him
The heroes of that fatal sea voythat but he ·isn't home often age in which 673 men lost their
enough . He works 10 or more lives were four unknOwn chaplains
hours a day.
,
who since that night, whenever
What he really needs is a bit of their story has been told , have
appreciation from his cong~egation. · ired pride 10
· the h
f
Maybe churches should have an msp
· earts 0 clerannual Clergy Appreci-.ion Day. ,
gy and awakened in souls everyThe idea of a day of apprecia- where an appreciation for the high
ti ~ the 1
of
calling of the ministry.
on or
c ergy grew out one
The four chaplains have left us
of the great sagas of World W11 II an indelible picture of selnessness
- the sin~ing of !he troop ship , and saairlce. We see them now, as
Don:hester m the thwk A • .-...._ of !
. ~ . -"""'":' .
some of the 230 survivors of the
a Febru11y mommg m the fngtd • disasttr saw them that ghastly night
- standing on the declc of the
-:."------------....,;,..i.-~- doomed
Dorchester
was to go
down - just
aimsbefore
linked,it

Divorces 10111b1
Divorce actions have been flied
in Meigs County Common Pleas
Coun by Norma Mills, Pomeroy
agaiast Alan P. Mills, ltudand; and
by Belinda G. ~onnolly, Pomeroy,
against Richard L. Connolly, also
of Pomeroy.
Fored01ure sou1hl
A foreclosure action has been
filed in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Bank One of
Pomeroy against John R. HUIIIICII,
Pomeroy, and others, alleging
default on a loan in the amount of
$43,856.64.

" ... I care! I CARE/I care/ ... "

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· , ;!roday is Friday, Feb. , the 38th day of 1992. Thcte ~n 328 days left
m:jhe year
·
: :J'oday'~ Highliahtin'Histay: .
;On Feb. 7, 1964, thousands ci ICialllinJ welcomed the Bellies
uP.0n tbeiurriVII at New Yo$'s Jam F. Kennedy Intemalionil .. :....._as
.~!.. ""-~ Four" ............
;. fi-·
~......
• • riiU
_ . , • ..,. ...
~
:On this dale: . .
·
•In 1812, IUIIIorChlrlel Didrw was born in PonlatQIIII, EIPncL .
:jn 11104, a Jn lie.- illlllhl!ltonJ lhll ntpd ror ..,_,. 30 11011n llld
dtiltl fJC" H..ot....p •
.
.
.,.,.,
• 93J,.W. Nit til~•r'..Spubl"$erOearpP.P qti in

r...

u.s.---

Ntltt*. ec-

·
.1!~. 1936, Pnlldnt Ptutlln D. ltoolevek IUiborized a fttc ror .._
Olf!"C' at tile vice 11 ·tire
•jn 1944, c1tma World w.n. the Germans~ a COIIIIIlot'fCIIsite•~ lilly.

.

•II 1948; Gen. Dwilht D. Eilenllower resiJlled as Arrlty chief of 11atr

IIJi!wasiiiCCeededby&lt;len.OnwBIIdley. .

.

.

the"""

In 1971 , wanen m
. 5w....
···-'··A
,..... won
·-q-·tto VOlt.
In 1974, the island nation ofOfcnada woo mdependellce from Brilain.
In 1983, Eli•aberJI H. Dole was sworn in 11 tlie f111t female secreury of
IJIIIII)OI1IIio by·lke fUll woman to sit on the U.S. Supreme Court, Jllllice
Slncb Day O'Conaor.
·
In 1984., ltpice lltlllllc lllrpnluts Bruce McCindless the Second and
It~
1. ... w • • 'll'elllon the ,_,
....._.
-·~
"""''
'""'unte""""'s~w..._
In 1984, a 12-yeai-old boy publicly idenufied only as David, born
witbout immunity 10 «nm, touched hiJ JIIOIM'
fimtintoafler ItO
was tomoved from a pnil·free "bubble" at T - Cbikkea'1 Holtpltai in

s·-

for-

HolllloiL

•

iD 1916, Hald'l ~DI·for·Life, Jean-Claude DtiYalier .fled Ills
COIIiliiJ 11Jdia121 ~at hll blly'a nde. .
Iii
Jllj lcMet Uniall'a ColliDunlat Piny I&amp;NediD lel·t Tlliw
polilkll ,.._ IIDIIIpeie ror 11011aol of the autl!)', tballby Jlvq llP ill
11t0110Jally on power.
.
· .
Tea,_.. qo: Adminlllrllion oftlciala clefe11cled Plelidellt lelaln'•
fiiCal 1983 spendina plan, despite its' projected defiCit!!JIWI!inc $90 bil·
lion.
, . •

t'fi:

l'f~edsel·
"""" vaesga. inst the rail to steady
"I think they must have been
· r. the sali 0 r the
..

:f'.!r th:r thOse
!~ maile ~i~to·
l'f boal8 "Th had

one 0 e 1• e
•
,ey
. done.
everythmg
they
could.
the bow came up higher andThen
she
slid under and I never saw them
apin;''
It was just bef01e 1 o'clock in
....
""'
tllll'llina on Feb. 3, I943, that
IWO Oermlll torJ)elloeS struck the

f::

Doitbostor IIILkllhiDI. The r1

wenJ out, piuitJinl~e Mip
10111 dlttneu. The ll)al groped in
.taior •lh!IY.fOUJhtlheir way top-

aide.

George R. Plagenz
them. fhe four chapliuns, who had
come to the deck to try to quiet the
fears of the desperately scared men,
distributed spare jackets from a
chest on the deck.
When the last four men came,
there were no more jackets.
As survivm recounted the grim
episode,. the chaplains took off their
own life jackets and fon:ed ihem
over the heads of the four servicemen.
One boy said , "I don' t want
your jacket, sir." The chaplain
showed his rank. "Get into it," he
ordered, "and get into it fasL"
The four c!laplains who went
down with their ship represented
the three major fai,hs: George L.
Fox, 43, a Methodist; Clark V."Poling, 33, of the Reformed Chuith in
America; John P. WashingtOn, 35,
a Roman Catholic. priest, and
Alexander D. Goode, 'a11bbi.
'
In the months that followed the
Dorthester's sinking, communities
throughout the counuy bcld Clergy
Appreciation. Days, nolc::,Z!:
honor the memory of the
·
.but to express cralitu4e to die
unsung rnlillslers everywheN 'Mio
give tlleir lives WIIClliMiy to tile
cause of others.
It may be lime for MIOiber Qer..

gy ~illion DIY.

·.

Otis G. "Tiny" Burris, 77, of
Grove City, OH and formerly of
Point Pleasant, died Thursday,
February 6, 1992, at the Riverside
Methodist Hospital in Columbus.
He owned Tiny's Country
Kitchen in Columbus and had formerly owned and operaled Tiny's
Supermarl&lt;et in Kanauga, OH and
the Tiny's Drive-In in Point
Pleasant He was a member of the
First Church of the Nazarene in
Point Pleasant and attended the
Grove City Church of the
Nazarene.
Born May 8, 1914 in Hogsett,
WV, he was a son of the late Stanley Burris and Grace (Lanier) Burris Glover. He was also preceded in
death by two sisters.
He is survived by his wife,
Josephine (Mayes) Burris, whom
he married May 8, 1940; three
daughters, Mrs. Andrew (Betty)
DeCoy of Point Pleasant, Mrs.
Gary (Carolyn) Northup of Cincinnati, OH and Mrs. Danny (Cindy)
Burns of Grove City, OH; two sisters, Mrs. James (Wanda) Hollingshead and ~. Oliver (Opal)
Stover, both of Gallipolis; two
brothers, Evereue Burris of Point
Pleasant and Burdell Burris of
Mansfield, OH; six grandchildren
and six great-grandchildren.
Funeral service will be conducted at 2 p.m. Sunday, February 9, at
the First Church of the Nazarene, at
25th and Mt. Vernon Ave., Point
Pleasant with Rev. Earl McKni~hl
and Rev. William Groves offictating. Burial will follow in Suncres1
Cemetery, Point PleasanL
Visiting hours will be held at the
Crow-Hussell Funeral Home in
Point Pleasant from 7-9 p.m. Saturday, February 8. Visiting hours
were also held at the SchoedingerNorris Funeral Home in Grove City
Friday.

Court news

It's time for Clergy App~eciation Day
They smile when they shake
your hand after the Sunday mommg service and they put on a happy
face when they are out in public.
But when they don't have to be
concerned with what is expecred of
them and can be themselves,
today's clergymen can be seen for
what they often are - lonely people who cet lillie joy or satisfaction
, out of their work.
A memberofwhatwasonce the
world's most respected calling, the
minister of the 1990s is aware that
the standing of his pro·fession has
faUen far and that he is himself off

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3:

By Tile Associated Press
Wintry weather wiD eoillin~ in
OhiP Salllnlay. Snow and possibly
some squalls are on tap for the
northeast counties. The rest of the
state should be ntoSdy cloudy and
have scattered flurries. Saturday
will be chilly with highs in the 208.
The record high on this date in
Columbus was 61 in 1925. The
record low was minus 2 in 1977.
Sunset tonight will be at 5:57
p.m. Sunrise Saturday will be at
7:33 Lm.
Arouad lilt aallon
Rain fell over California and
southern Arizona this morning. It
SIIOwed in Maine.
Fog aild drizzle hung over the
Great
region al)d Ohio Valley early today, and winds raked
west Aorida. Clouds covered much
of the NortheaSt and Midwest.
A .storm that swept across
Southern California on Thursday
was blamed for two traffic fatalities
on slick freeways in the Los Angeles area.
Two people were slightly
injured in a roof collapse in Rosemead after rain lllltled dust on the
roof of a building to heavy mud,
said Los Angeles County fire dispatcher Virginia Rodriguez.
More than 3 inches of rain fell
in some parts of the Ventwa County mountains.
Rain was expected to continue

in the region through the weekend.
Forecasters called fpr cool
winds and choppy seas off the )Vest
coast of Florida. Snow. W!JS likely
across the Great Lakes and pans of
New Yorlc staa:.
. .
Temperatures were. expected to

be in tlie teens in nonhero Maine
and M!nnesota; the. 20s in the
northern Plains and Great Lakes
regio~; the 30s in the Midwest and
WashingtQn state; the 40s in Oregon, the Midwest·and the Oh·io
Valley; the S0s in d!e. mid·Atlantic

states, lite Southeas~ the Southwest •.
and Northern Californiai and the ·
60s in Southern Califomil, Florida
andTe~as.

The. high temperature for the
nation Thti'Sday was 77 &lt;legrees at.
~i.Aa,
.
.

Lakes

--Area deaths-- Hospital news

By Cong. Clarence Miller' .
$5,000 tax credit for first time
homebuyers, the diversion of
defense dollars to domestic priorities, the increase in the child
exemption, the deduction of interest paid on student loans and the
elimination of the penalty for those
using IRA accounts to pay for
home and education purchases, all
made eminently good sense. His
short-term effort to put $25 billion
of taxpayer's dollars which would
otherwise be held in escrow by the
U.S. Treasury baclc into the economy by lowering the weekly withholding, would also serve as a signilicant stimulant tO get our economy back in gear.
With aU the focus on the domestic agenda, and the anticipated ,
remedies that were to be recommended, I ' m afraid a lot of the
viewing public failed to appreciate
the significance of the President's
proposal with respect to nuclear
weapons.
Unilaterally , the President
offered sweeping reductions in the
production and future deploym ~nt

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

r---Local briefs...---. Northern Ohio may get some snow S~turday {

Page-2- The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday, February 7, 1992

Debtors now see bankruptcy as an easy option

The -Daily Sentinel

c

Friday, F~bruary 7, 1992

ISIIIIJolfl llaiiD IJtihne

•

cuanata.MDI

~' ~IIW

i...,

anom-. MondaJ.•
lhro•1h Friday, 125 Third Aye., '
OaiiiDOII•, Ohio. by U.e Ol!lo Vaney
Publfthlnr Compoii)'/Mulllmodla loe.
Second ct.. poatnso pold al OoiHpallo,

Louie Christian
Louie Millard Christian, 76, of
H11risonville, died on Thursday,
February 6, 1992 at Holzer Medical
Center.
He was born in Wellston, the
son or the late Alexander and Sarah
Sounders Christian.
He is Slln'ived by his wife, Exa
Mae; four daughters: Lois Christian, Mrs. James (Linda) Harmon;
Mrs. Michael (Millie) Grueser,
Mrs. Roben (Rosalee) Snowden; a
brother Ralph; six grandchildren,
five step-great grandchildren and
II step - ~reat- grandchildren; and
several rueces and nephews.
Funeral services will be
announced by Rogers Funeral
Home in Wellston.

Approximately $500 was taken
during an armed robbery early
Friday morning at Layton's Garage,
2611 Jackson, according to a
spokesman for the Point Pleasant
Police Depanment
The 5:47 a.m. incident was
reported by Don Layton. Apparently Layton was gelling out of
his vehicle behind the garage when
he was jumped by two white males
in ski masks: One of the men grabbed the bank money bag Layton
had while the other one stood back
and held a small caliber revolver.
According to the police spokesman, the duo ran down the alley
behind Johnsoas MarkeL Lay10n
told police he heard a vehicle start
and tires squeal.
. S~L J.L. f!i$$inbotham is invesugaung the metdent
Coins and three firearms were
taken from a GalliPolis Ferry
residc:nce sometime between Monday, Feb. 3 and Thursday, Feb. 6,
according 10 SgL Gordon Clarl&lt; of
the Point Pleasant Detachment of
the West Virginia State Police.
The value of the items, stolen

Weather
Soutli·Central Oblo
Tonigh~ mostly clouclr. A slight
chance of Rurries. Low 10 the low
20s. Chance of snow 30 percent.
Saturday, considerable cloudiness
with widely scattered fluniel. High
in the upper 20s. Chance of snow
30 percent.
Extended rorecast:
Sua day throug• Tuesday:
Fair on Sunday. Chanco of rain
or snow· Monday and Tuesday.
Morning lows 5-IS Sunday, 10-20
Monday and in the 20s Tuesday.
Highs in mid-teens to mid-20s Sun. day, 30s to low 40s Monday and in
the40s Tuesday.

.'

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JIOIITMABI'IR: 8eod- ....... lo

The OatHooll1 Dolly Tdbwoe, 1128 Third
Avo., OatKpollo, Oloto 4M3t.
IVMCaiPTION IIATU
IJ CorriOr ar ILIOI&lt;Ir ...... •

0n1 wee~~.........................:.............r at.eo
One lol•llt.....," .. ······...................;..,..te.llll
One Yur...........c ...... ,,..................ll3.20
IINGUCOrr
PIICE
ott.I)'...........................................--Zlli c.nw

""'11Mi!1.. 10 ptl1uN10coniThi
~::Ia Dalll' 'l'l1bono • • 3.1 ar tl

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Ntl

In die pan~. 111811y·bad fOfiOIIal
{C)l~92
NEWSI'APER · ,
to bring their life jackets up wltll·. Ef.trERJIRISE ASSN.
.:

Meigs
announcements
OAPSE to meet
The OAPSE Local No. 17 will
hold a ratification meeting on
Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the Meigs
Junior High School cafeteria.
. Merchants to meet
The Pomeroy Meithants Association will meet Wednesday at
8:30 a.m. in the confcn:nce room at
Bank One lin Pomeroy. All members J!iC urged 10 llterld.
Trustees 1o meet
The Bedfml Township Trustees
will meet Monday at 7 p.m. at the
town hall. ·

Lottery numbers
CLEVELAND (AP) - Here 1R
Thursday night's Ohio Lottery
selections:
. Pick 3 Numbers
3-0-4
(three, zero, four)
Pick 4 Numbers
9-8-9-4
(nine, eight, nine, four)
Cards
10 {ten) ofHeans
K (kin~ of Clubs
9 (nine of Diamonds
9 (nine of Spadet

Meigs County Court Judge
Patrick H. O'Brien lined 36 defendants this week.
Find were: Linda L. Acree, Middleport, speed, $30 and costs;
Clyde S. Randolph, Coolville,
speed, $20 and costs; Earl T. Goddin, Nelsonville, speed, $22 and
costs; James R. Bowen, Vinton,
insecure load, $15 and costs; James
E. Russell, Columbus, speed, $21
and costs; James E. Russell ,
Columbus, speed, $21 and costs;
Lisa G. Pannell, The Plains, speed,
$24 and costs; Gloria D. Stalnaker,
Parkersburg, W.Va., $24 and costs:
Thomas W. Gibbs, Cheshire, scat
belt violation, costs only; Alex. R.
Wallen, Gallipolis, excess of 50%
tint on rear and side windows, $20
and costs.
Tammy
May
Gardner,
Marysville, Mich., speed, $21 and
costs; Tammy Johnson, Middlepen, seat belt violation, costs only;
Gene Jones, Reedsville, domesuc
violence, 10 days in jail suspended
to time served, costs, one year prollation, restraining order issued;
Cathy A. Hammer, Bidwell, seat
belt violation, costs only; Nancy
M. Barrell, Pomeroy, no muffler,
$5 and costs; Dean lt ..Smith,
Mononghalia, Pa., seat belt violation, $20 and .costs: William T.

Law, St. Louisville, no log ~.
$55 and costs; Roben E. McDaniel,
Johnstown, failure to maintain a
record or duty staws, failure 10 possess medical examiner's certificate,
and'two of six brakes out of adjustment on truck, $55 and costs; Jack
Lewis, Pomeroy, speed, $21 and
costs; Debra Evans, Pomeroy,
speed, $22 and costs.
Roberta K. Gibbs, Cheshire,
safety belt violation, costs only;
James R. Gilliam II, Gallipolis,
speed, $22 and costs; Timothy J.
Plank, Miamisburg, speed. $22 and
costs; Paul J. Dasher, Albany,
speed, $21 and costs; Dallas A.
Hill, Jr., Racine,. speed, $21 and
costs; Benny R. Wolfe, Shade,
speed, $21 ad costs; Roben Roush,
Middlepon, reckless operation,
$100 and costs; Angela R. Fields,
Pomeroy, two counts passing bad
checks, $25, costs and restitution
on each charge; Roben Rathburn,
Rutland, no operator's license,
$100 and costs, 30 days in jail sus- .
pended to ft~e days, upon proof or
a valid ~tor's license within 90
days, aU Jail will be suspended.
Bradley B. Dudley, Proctorville,
•!'ted, $21 and costs; safety belt
vtolation, $20 and costs; James D.
Jones, Pomeroy, seat belt violation,
costs; Crystal Sellers Portland,

Stocks

passing bad checks, 525, ~osts and
restitution; Brenda Osborne, .
Pomeroy, passin~ bad checks, $23,
costs and restituuon; Vera M. John- · .
son, Mason, W.Va., speeding, $23·. ·
line of which $15 was suspended,
costs; Shirley Loeber, Athens , · ·
speed, $23 and costs; Tracy F. ·
Hysell, Lancaster, DUl, $350 and
costs , three days in jail, upon ··
enrollment and completion of RTP
school, $150 of fine and jail time · ·
will be suspended, operator's
license suspended for 90 days ~ ·
Sheldon Capehan, Coolville, DUl,-· ..
$450 and costs, 10 days in jail, one
year operator's license suspension;· ·
no operator's license, 10 days in
jail concurrent with DUI ch11ge, 575 and costs.

COLONY THEATRE

FRI. THRU THURS.
Dan

f,lln ic Lee

A' kroyd

&lt;

unis

0111 MltiiG IIIOW 7:31
ADMlS$1011 $1.50
446-Gt23

MASON FAMILY

Am Ele Power ..................311/8
Ashland Oil ......................33
AT&amp;T.. ............................ .37 1/8
Bank One .......................... 50 3/8
RI'. 33, MASON, WV
NEXT' TO FJS'f 4 U"'"' MASON MOTEL
Bob Evans ........................ 25 1/4
OPEN SUNDAY THROUGH
10
Charming Shop..................28 7/8
City Holding ......................I7 3/4
Federal Mogul.. .... ..:........... l6 3!~
Goodyear T&amp;R ..................62 1/2
Key Centurion ...................15
Lands' End ........................32
Limired Inc....................... 31 314
Multimedia tnc ..................26 114
Rax Restaurant ............. :.... !3(!6
Robbins&amp;Myers ................ 17 1/2
Shoncy's Inc......................23 314
Slar Bank ...........................25 1/2 OPEN SUNDAY, 10 All TV
CARRY OUT ORDERSAVAIWLE (304) 773-5321
Wendy Int'l... ..................... l21/8
_:::~~==.:=:
WorthingtOn Ind ................ 24 118 111

t,..

Ill___

Stock reports are thr JO:JO 11.111.
quotu provilltd by Blunt, E/1/i
and Lotwi of GalllpDUs.

';P Rir.Jf, VAll fY

WI~MA

Hb 1)/4

-.
SEAN
CONNllT
t.OUAINl
IIMCCO

N•*•P'•r,ar · A.,oelaUon. Nathmal

- · c:n.lt will be ....,. oorrllr
_...._

,\
"
•
'.
·,'

from the residence of Clifford Cullens of Gallipolis Ferry, was estimated at $700, Clark said. The
person(s) broke a window 10 enter
the residence.
·
The incident is still under inveatigation.
Four gu~s aild 9 knives were
taken from the residence of Worthy
G. Siders, Jr. during the night of
Wednesday, Feb. 5, according to a
spokesman for the Mason County
Sheriff's DepartmenL

O'Brien fines 36 in county court

Ad"erti• 11 Rcpruentactve, Braftham
N-per, 733 Thlr&lt;l A•e•••· New
YOrk. Now Yodl 10017.

' II' ..., ......, . . . . . . . . " ' " "

i

A representative from Congressman Clarence Miller's office will
conduct an open door session from
I I a.m. to I p.m. in the Courthouse
at Pomeroy on Wednesday. Anyone with questions concerning the
Federal Government is invited to
stop by to discuss them with the
representative.

iilellme or protecllon rrom substanee abuse • .
Here they are lnlroduclng the seven puppets ·.
whlcb are used In the presentalioa or seven
lessons. The proeram Is underway In tile Easl·
em Local School District where it Is being pre- .
senled to the rii'St and fourth graders.

CERTIFIED PRESENTERS • Kim Mastrangelo, len, and Rebecka Flanders are cerllfied presenters or the BABES rroarant. BABES
stands lor Be&amp;innlng Alcoho and Addlcllons
and Bask: Education Studies whkb Is a primary
prevention program designed 1o give children a

6 .5 !

Member: The Aaooclol&lt;td Pnu, lolond
Dolly l't&lt;ol ""-laijon and tho Ohio

''

Rep. to visit

Funds reported stolen

Ollio

...

Veterans Memorial Hospital
THURSDAY ADMISSIONS •
Doreua Brown, Reedsville; Ruby
Miller, Tuppers Plains; Naomi
Hoschar, Middleport; and Dorothy
Thurston, Long Bottom . .
THURSDAY DISCHARGES Darrell Krautter, Paul Sellers and
Chester Van Meter.

2 rfrltau lly ¥1

,.........., i•

Let Mt.AC help your family with nia~ of the out-of·the
expenses that may not be covered by Medicare.
• tic)sp.ital Confinement co~nts • Part Bcopayme~ts
• Accidental Death Benefit OPtional Benefits • Part A&amp; B
deductible; skilled n11slng facilitY ~fits • In-hospital nursing

seFVices • Excess charges, and more!
AND· ONLY.YOU CAN CANCEL YOUR POUCY

· ·

No. cancellation
due to amolllt of claims or changes in health
.
,'

...... a.... ~

II Waob.............................. ..........lti.14
II Waob. ..... ,.......................... ,....... ia.tl
Ill Weelul.............,............................tl4o'78
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~

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.......... .................-.._...__ _..,....____ _-:-_·_ ... - - - - --..--.,.,.......,.,...

�\

Friday, February i, 19~

The Daily Sentinel

·sports

By The Assocla~ Press

No.4 UCLA 74
Wasbiog!Qri 61
Arizona needed just five secTracy Murray scored 18 of his
onds to turn an apparent loss into 22 points in the second half as the
its sixth straight victory.
·
Bruins overcame a season-low
The seventh-ranked Wildcats seven points by leading scorer Don
appeared headed for a loss Thurs- MacLean to beat visiting Washingday night at Stanford when Adam ton in a Pac-10 game.
Keefe, an 83 percent foul shooter,
Mitchell Butler .added 12 points
went to the line with five seconds for the Bruins (16·1, 7-1). The
remaining and the score tied at 70.
Huskies (9-9, 3-5) were led by
.;eserve
Chandler Nairn's 18 points.
But Keefe missed the fll'$t shot
Iowa
77,
No.ll Michigan St. 63
- and never got a chance to take
Chris
Street
scored 14 points
the second due to a lane violation.
and
teamed
with
reserve James
Khalid Reeves then took the
in
a
second-half
charge
Winters
inbounds pass, drove the length of
that
carried
Iowa
to
its
fourth
the court and hit a layup as time
straight
Big
Ten
victory.
expired to give Arizona a 72-70
The Hawkeyes (13-5, 5-3) broke
victory.
a
40-40
tie with a 19-2 run.
"I knew when I got the ball
Val
Barnes
led Iowa with IS
something good was going to happoints,
while
freshman
Shawn Respen," said Reeves, who had 13 of
pert
led
visiting
Michigan
State
his 19 points in the second half.
(14-4, 4-4) with 25.
In other games involving top 25 ·
teams, it was No . 4 UCLA 74,
No. 14 Tulane 7S, S. lllorida 70
Washington 61; Iowa 77, No. 11
Anthony Reed had six of his IS
Michigan State 63; No. 14 Tulane points in overtime as Tulane won at
7S, South Florida 70 in overtime; South Florida to take over first
No. 16 Southern Cal 75, Washing- place in the Metro Conference.
ton SL 62; No. 17 UNl V 80, UC
Tulane blew a 68-60 lead by
Santa Barbara 76; Louisville 73, going scoreless in the final 3:40 of
No. 20 North Carolina Charlotte regulation. But the Green Wave
63; and No. 25 Texas-El Paso 78, (17-2, 5-0) forced three turnovers
Colorado State 50.
by South Aorida (12-7, 1-4) in the
Arizona (16-3, 6-2) beat Stan· overtime and scored four straight
ford (12-S, 4-4), which has lost field goals.
four of its last five after an 11-1
Reserve Kim Lewis led Tulane
stan, for the eighth sttaighi time.
with 21 points.
The Wildcats overcame 29
No. 16 Southern Cal 75
points and 16 rebounds by Keefe.
Washington St. 62
Sean Rooks also scored 19 for AriHarold Miner scored 23 points
tona and Chris Mills added 17.
and became Southern Cal's all-time

:Detroit cashes in on misses by Cleveland to notch 112-95 win
ugliest quaners-in the game's history," Price said.
Detroit's three All-Stars- Isiah
Thomas, Joe Dumars and Dennis
Rodman - played that way.
Thomas scored 38 points, Dumars
had 27 and .Rodman added 26
rebound~ in the Pistons' fourth
straight voctory.
In other games, Charlotte beat
Golden State 132-113, Portland
downed Dallas 103-9S, New York
defeated Houston 102-8S, Atlanta
topped Orlando 123-112, Milwaukee beat Denver 106-97, Indiana
sLOpped San Antonio 117-106 and
Washington beat New Jersey 124108.

The Cavaliers led 29-21 after
the ftrst quarter, but ttailed S0-37 at
halftime.
Daugherty led the Cavaliers
with 24 points and 11 rebounds.
Hornets 132, Warriors 113
Kendall Gill, who collapsed
from a migraine headache at a
shootaround earlier in the day,
scored 27 points in Charlotte' s
highest-scoring game ever.
Gill was taken by stretcher 111 a
hospital and was not released until
two hours before tip..aff. He made
a remarkable recovery, hitting his
first six shots.
Charlotte led 24-14 after 7 1/2

B FRED GOODALL
YAPS rts Writer
ORL~ Aa (AP) _ After
· 30
· h' NBA
1
andyearsh 1 ~eN lso as fi~~yer
the ~~Sw sam:_ H~ ~W:·t ~~

of a beucr time to make his debut.
Not only are two of Nelson's
players in Sunday's game, but the
Golden State Warriors coach also
will get a long-awaited opportunity
10 work with Magic Johnson, a

staner for the Western Conference.
"It's a dream come true for me,
personally," said Nelson, a member of five NBA championship
teams and one of the most success-

-l\1elson fiznally
•
d
makes All• Star ebut
L \'I
.

~~~~~c~~~~ ~e:e":~i~~~;~~~~;~

coach the guy . It'll be _a special
weekend because of Mag~c.''
Johnson, who retired from the

~~r~~J~~\;,~~~ei~o~~~e~i~~

......
,,
•

' MULLEN FIRES - Meigs Marauder Reva Mullen (right) !ires
away in front of Alexander's Amber Davis (32) for two or her 13
points during Thursday night's TVC' contest on the Marauders'
court, wblch the basts won 51-31.

:Meigs downs Alexander 51-31

that causes AIDS, received more
votes in fan balloting than any
Western Conference· guard except
Clyde Drexler.
Some people luive been critical
of his decision to play Sunday, but
not Nelson, whose Tim Hardaway
has been the best point guard in the
West this season but won't start
because Johnson was voted in by
the fans.
. "For anyone to say Magic
should not play in the All-Star
game is disturbing," said Nelson,
who promises that Johnson, who
has said he also intends to play in
the Barcelona Olympics, will not
be limited to a cameo appearance.
To ensure Hardaway received
his due for an outstanding first half
of the season, NBA commissioner
David Stern created an extra roster
spot for the third-year pro - the
youngest player in the game for the
second consecutive year.
Like Nelson, Hardaway and
Warriors teammate Chris Mullin
support the decision 10 allow Johnson to play.
"Why not? It's Ma~ic John son," Hardaway sa1d. "He
des~es a great farewell .... I think
they should let him play next year,
too, if the fans vote him in.' •
"Who knows what the future
holds," said Mullin, a four-time
All-Star looking forward to his first
start. " Any opportunitr to be
around him is special. Playong with
him again will be a great feeling.
He's a special kind of guy.''

By DAVE HARRIS
0-0=2, Shawna Wolfe 1-0-0=2 .
Sentinel Correspondent
Totals- 12-1-2=31
Meigs jumped out to an 11-4
lirst-period lead and rolled to a 51 31 win over Alexander in girls Tri·
Valley Conference basketball
;,
action Thursday night at Larry R.
P. 0. BOX 152
P. 0. BOX427
'
Morrison Gymnasium.
162 THIRD AVENUE 157 WALNUT STREET
The win ~ives the Marauders a
13-1 record on the TVC and a 16-2
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
: mark overall. Meigs holds a one
45760
45631
· half game lead over Federal Hocking who owns a 12-1 (15-2 overall)
mark after defeating Belpre 47-38
Thursday evening at Belpre.
Reva Mullen led a balanced
. Marauder scoring attack with 13
• .points, and teammate Verna Comp. sLOn added 12. Teather South and
• }amic Rolston scored eight points
We Are Proud-To Sponsor
: ·:eaeh ror the Spartans.
Meigs High School Competition in
•;•, The Marauders played their
:•: psual hustling defense, allowing
Auto Mechanics.
·
:;:the Lady Spanans 10 hit double fig·:-ures
in only one quarter while fore••: •IDS
. numerous
'
wrnovers.
~.·: If there was a downfall for the
The Public is invited to attend the Skills
.:: Marauders, it was that they only
Competition on February 13, from 6:00
~·:P.Janaged 10 hit 9 of 27 shots from
;i:ihe line for 33%. No other shooting
to 10:00 p.m.
•: •.tatistics were available on the

THE MOTOR PARTS COMPANY

'

.

~Jackson had a ~r-high
19 ass1~ts and Gerald Wolkins had
19 _poonts for. New Y~rk . The
Knocks broke II open with a 9-0
spurt modw~y through the fourth
quaner, maldng ot 85-72.
Ous Thorpe and V~rn~n
pom~forthevosoungW~Maxwell, each scored 21 pomts on
Traol Blazers 103, Maveroc~ 98 Houston s fofth straight !"Wd loss.
_Ciy~e Drexler got II of hos 32
Hawks 123, Magoc 112 .
pomts on the last~ mmutes..
Kevon WoUos had a season-hogh
. R~ey McCray s three-pomtcr 32 poonts and added 21 rebounds as
woth e~ght seconds left got the Atlanta led the whole way.
.
Mavencks wothon 101-98, ~ut
Duane Ferrell scored 23 pomts
Drexler made two .C~l shots woth and Stacey Augmon 20 for Atlanta.
two seconds_remaomng. ~ortland
. Rookoe Stanley Roberts and
led by 21 pomts m the tlurd quar· Nock Anderson each scored 24 for
ter.
the Magoc.
Rolando Blackman had 26
Pacers 117, Spurs 106
points for Dallas.
Reggie Miller scored 28 points
Knicks 102_,Rockets 85
and Chuck Pcrs~n had 24 as IndiPatnck ~wong shut down ana slll!'Jled Dav1d Robmson.
Hakeem Olajuwon and New York
Robmson, the stanong center for
never '!3'led.
.
the West on the All-Star game, was
Ewong had 24 poonts and 13 held 10 a season-low 13 pomts.
rebounds. Olajuwon 'Yas held to 14
The visiting Pacers went on a
pomts se ven belolw hos average. TVI7
-9cspree toBstan the fourthFquar-

.
199 92
k b (( T

ter for a 101-921ead with 6:32lefL
Bullets 124, Nets 108
_
Harvey Grant sc~red 22 points
and Washmgton enjoyed ots most
lopsode~ wm ~f the season.
.
Perv1s Elloson added 17 po~nts
and Michael_ Adams had 16 pomts
and 10 assosts for the Bullets.
Was~mgton led by IS poonts at
halfume and the Nets never got
closer tJ:lan that.
Demck Coleman had 18 points
for New Jersey.
Bucks ~06, Nuggets !17
D~le Elhs and Larry Krystkowoak led a fourth-quarter spree
. that sent Milwaukee past visiting ·
Denver.
The Bucks, trailing by two
points after three jJeriodS, began the
fo~rth quarter ":ith a 1~-6 ~urge.
Elhs got 12 of hos 25 pomts m the
final p~riod and Krystkowiak had
10 o~ hos 14.
Dokcmbe Mutombo had 27
points, 14 rebounds and six
blockhedshots for the Nuggets.

oys res man
p ••
as et a .ournament airings
•

B

•

Vmton County
Game 11
February 8th

February lOth
6:00pm

Nelsonville-York

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Game 12
February 8th

!1 :30 am

Gam e i'8
February 15th

Federal

1:00pm

-

...................
:::;: Meigs pulled in 26 rebounds,

• f&gt; # ~:l..t._ ..... _

•: ~ith Baer grabbing six 10 lead the
~-~way. Meigs turned the ball over 15
:::iimcs and . had II steals, with
•:•Mullen getung four and Compston
:••getting three. The Lady Marauders
:(:chalked u1,1 eight assists, with
·.: •Mullenfcetllng five and Compston
' • tin11 our.
.•,get
;:, In the reserve contest, Vanessa
.: ~ompston scored 16 points and
:··~ed an exccllenl game on the
.• • ds, and Jeammate Joy 0' Brien
: added I~ 10 lead Meigs to a 46-34
: victory. Lovsey led Alexander with

·TO

Tri Valley Conference
Freshman Champions

-

_,............ 11 15 IS 10• 51
(51) -Rm Mullea 6-0-

a.JJi
t'GinJ1110116-0-0-I:Z,
Tllclllltlt
Klin Hallllnj

s.o.w.

2.0.3-7, Mluy Sisson I.0.0.2,

OIJ.tler Jlltldley C)-0.2-2, ~ Crt;-

.... :J.0-1-', Dlnlollo Sc:ou 1-0.
Oor2. TGCik- 21.f.MI
Aleuadtr (31) - ·Teather
Soudl :J.0-2-8. J1111ie Workman I·
; J-0-$, Kril Gilkey J..()..()o6, Jamie
' · Jtola.on -4-0-0-8, Amber !;&gt;avis 1-

Wellston

New York ..............30 16
801tm ....................28 18

.6S2
.609

2

Ploilld~phia .......... ,2J

24
Miami ....................23 2S

.489

7.5

.479

I

NowJeney ............ l9 28

.404

11.5

Wuhinglon ............16 30

.141

14

0.1Aodo ................. .l2 J6

.210

19

Chitago.................. 39 9
Clenl.nd.---..31 14
DctroiL. .................. 28 20

.813
.689
.SIJ

Atlant.t ...................24
Milwaukco ............. 22
lndiana ................... 19
Clwloue ............... .l4

23

.511

24

.478

29
JJ

.396
.298

February lOth
1:30pm

Belpre
Game j4
February Bth
2:30pm

SanAniOOio...........27 19
Hoos1.0n .............. ... 25 22

.587
.532

Dcnver ...... ............ .l7 29
OaUu .....................IJ l4
Minnclou ................8 38

.370
.IT1
.174

Miller

SOUihem 48

E. Tenncacc Sl. 72, N. Carolina St.
66
fiMda A&amp;M 96, Mcqan St. 78

SW LouiJiana Tl, Cmt. F1orida 72
SWTCAu St."· McNocac S1. 59
Tulane 78, Swlh Florida 70, 0T
Va . Commonwealth 12, Southern
Min. 74

24.5

Midwest
Indiana S1. 66, S. DllMil 47
Iowa 71. Michillll St. 63
Wii.·Milwallkoc 78, E. IUinoia: 60

GB

15
S
llS
17

Southwest

Ark .- linlo Rock 74, Te.us -Pan
Amcricm 64

Nonh Tau 83, Sam HoustOn SL 44
Tcua·AdinJton 7S, SLcphcn F.Aua:tin

2\.S

59

Teus·El Pa10 78, Colondo SL SO

I
1
4
9
10.5
J6.S

Far West
AN""' 72, Swtlood10
Brigham Young 19, San Diego SL S9
Cal Sc·FWI01011III, UW. S&lt;. 99. OT
CaW'amia 68, Anmn1 St 61

0oowao 69. SL Muy'o, Cal. 65. OT
tdoho g6. ~- Arizona 14
,
Lona Beach S1. 9.2, New MWco S1.

New Yolk 102. flou.Uil I!
Walhin&amp;t.on ll4, New Jcttey 108
Charlotte 132, Ooldcn State 113
Atlan~ 123, Orlando 112
Detrollll~ Cltvdllld !!
Milwaukee 106, Dtnvu 97
Ponland I03, O.U.. 91
Indiana 117, San Ant.onio 106

Locker Room (A)
Locker Room (B )

Home Team · Top of bracket (white uniform)
Visiting Team - Bottom of bracket (dark uniform)
T Qumam~o1 Sit~

Nelsonville-York High School
Tom Gumpf, Athletic Director
753-4441

76

Monuna 14, Idaho St. "
Nevada 71, Bci~e S1. 74

New Mu.ico 79, Wyoming 6S
Portland 112, Sin Fnncisco IM
SOillhem Cal7S, W•shinJIOn St. 62
UC Irvine 16, Frsno St. &amp;a
UCLA 74, WuhinJion 61
UNL V SO, 1JC Santi Barbin 76 '
Utth 76,1{1waii 66
Weber St. I~. Montana St. 11, OT

No games tonlj:hl
or Saturday
Sunday's game

'/

Ohio high school
girls basketball scores

AU Star same •~ Orltndo, 3:30p.m.

'

In the NUL ...

AI:IOII Buch&lt;e!lO, Akroo Gufi~d 47
Akron Cmt.·Howcr 54, Akron E. 20
Akron Hoban 41, Aktm St. V-St. M

WALES CONFERENCE
43

Palrkk Ohi.tlon
I'll. CFCA
72 210171
64 211180

Ttt•
WL T
N.Y. R..,.... ..... lS 17 2
Wuloinpol ........ 30 t9 4
New1..,.~ ........ 2618 7
PitllbwJh .......... 26 21 6
N.Y. loillndon .... 21 24 7
Philldelpltil ....... 18 25 10

DO IA'E
CHEVROLET·OLDSMOBILE·CADILLAC·GEO

32 20
26 20
21 :U
IS 26
12 34

4
8
10
9
6

AI:IOII N. 57, Altroft Fllot 54
Amolio 61 , CU.. Tafl36
Andrews40, Willo-Hilll.5
Athens ~. Jacbon 43
Barbetton 411, Kent ROOICVclt 40
Bunenill.e ,7, Shldpidc ~I
B..U.:villc ,3, Frontier SO

59195160
51 232 204
49 200210
46 157180

Adama:DI~

MOOIIIOII ............
BOII&lt;IO ................
Buffalo ...............
Hollford .............
Q.ocbcc ...............

Ak1Cft Kmm.(n 41, Akron Filatone
4{)

,
68 t15 Ill
60 115111
52 t92 189
39156 180
lO 1!8 217

8t~~umont85 , St.

Nll"rk Dlrldon

Toom
lleomiL ...............

WL
29 16
24 21
23 :U
22 2.1

T
8
10
9

I'll. GFGA
66 21811l
51 111 166

33

Polo GNtn.

Your •ltl••••
Plr...ll.lu•ury ctrl

V-i engine. Automatic.

Red.

MUST SEE!

p.m.

28
Tl

r1

•

at~ :05pJ'ft.
"~ &lt;15 p.m.
T.-, I &lt;IS,..._
Chi"P .So. Louio. 1:35 p.m.

.

·
•SundaJ'Ipmll
SU JOH ll W'±·-- 12:0! p.m.
PiaiiMah at aa.oa\tb p.m.
alluof&lt;ft, IllS p.m.
Now - , .. a.-. 2:01j.m.

'

1
I

I

IM~IIhlrol0.1&lt;15p.m.

'

1919·111(1

1990 IUICI QNTURY

SKYlARK

1 OWIW· Sllwr.

1,,000 mU..: Hu"'! thl1'
OM IWIIII, Wlftl
19499

·1 Owner. ~J. oi'ulle,
auto., 31,uuu mllea.

'6999

'

.

,

~aJot col:~.~

.APY , .

Auto.,llr, 7_pa1Hnger.
FIC_lory Wlrrllnty•

' .·• $12,999

TAl AID nru Fill 101 IICLuRD

,

'
,\

•'tfW~
,L,
?t

,

~

Cin. Marian&lt;~~\ 46, l..oYcland 43
CU.. MoAuloy 53. lluNitM Bodin 52
cu.. M""~ 54, an. s•.u... ~ 28
CU.. Norlh- 56, Clo. Walttot Hillo

,.....,.:14

'Ckltc~~-MIIU-4~ WafniMDe 35

CaL 8 n:ltl oft II, CGL C..mal
21
:·

~·

.,_. '

~ I

'

34

Om-We 56, Mulillon WuhinJt.On 31
Ott.aw• HillJ 34, Danbuey L&amp;k01idc
33
39

..... 61, ~ - . .

· ·

,• ~:,l!loaollcwllldo70, Wcx14111r·

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c..tiM56,..._47
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so:,_., 25

P.,. Oodolloo~ OoUI'IIllo :10

' JloJ• .,._~.Do,.-..

19

'

Pe!T)"'hwl 54, Sylvania Swdaviow

frm•btnina Vall. 49, Xinlond !I

Ra~

,3, Slow.f1

.

Richmond Hu. 38,110d~ool7

Sud~ Vall. 40. Tusunwu Vall. 34
Sud.init Eutem Brown 60, Ripley
l6,0T
Sidney 40, Piqua 21.
Sou""'!l••f56,_ Mapl.-..od 44
SpaN ~ 41, Rivor Vall. 45
Sprit1Jbwo70, Biondo- 56
s, Chinville 5 2 , - - 4!
Sc Mat,~ 70, y., WMl6
StrubwJ 43, O.taW~)' 41.,201'
s.......,.ru.61,B..,55
Sylvania Nor\hvitw oM, Oaqon Clay
41
TMys Vall. 46, Cin:lmUe 44
T - 7 3, Sprin&amp;. Sha...,..lS
Tol CltriJ1ien 42. Emonud Bop&lt;iot 35
Tri.Yi11Aae67,An:uom16

BASEY DRIVES- West Virginia's Marsalis
Basey (15) drives downcourt while Rbode
Island's Carlos Easterling gives chase during

Hannan Trace's girls basketball
team, surviving a second-half
rebellion by Eastern in which the
visiting .Eagles did major surgery
on the Wildcats' 16-poont halftime
lead, beat the Eagles S2-7S Thursday nighL
The win kept the Wildcats (144, Il-l) in first place in the SVAC
and pushed-the Eagles (11-6, 9-3)
into a third-place tie with North
Gallia- a ~7-41 loser in its game
against Symmes Valley - in the
conference.
Junior point guard Lucy Mul ·
lens earned yet another marksmanship irophy by pacing the Wildcats
with 37 pomts. Senior center
Tammy Thomas chipped in with 19
points - that total included a 7for-S effort at the charity stripe and IS rebounds.
Seniors Shelly Metzger and
Tabby Phillips led the Eagles with
21 -point pertormances, and Phillips
was 4 for 4 at the foul line.
In other SVAC action, Oak Hill
beat Southern 53-19. The Kyger
Creek-Southwestern game was not
reported.
Monday's agenda will have
Hannan Trace hosting Symmes
Valley ·and Eastern hosting North
Gallia.
Quarter totals
· Eastern ................ IO 2S 24 19 = 78
Hannan Trace ..... 29 22 16 15 = S2
Hannan Trace (82) - Mullens
16-0-5=37; Thomas 6-0-7=19;
Ours 4-0-1=9; Triplett 0-3 -0=9;
Rossiter 0-2-0=6; Stephanie Srapleton 1-0-0=2. Totals- 27-S-13=82
Field goals- 32-64 (SOW&gt;)
Three-pointers- 5-9
Free throws- 13-22 (59.1%)
Rebounds- 42 (Thomas 15)
Assists.- 21 (Mullens II)
Steals - 6 (Mullens 4)
Turnovers - 22
Eastern (78) - Metzger 6-0·
9=21; Phillips 4-3-4=21; Gardner
S-0-2=12; Gillilan 3-1 -1=10;
Roush 2-0-4=S; Wilson 2-0-0=4;
Burke 0-0-2=2. Totals - 22·4·
22=78
Free throws- 22-30 (73.3%)
S-Valley 47, N. Gallia 41
At Vinton, junior center Kathy
. Krausz racked up a game-high 23
points and II rebounds to post a
six-point win over North Gallia.
Senior center Jennifer Owens,
who is closing in on the I ,000point mark in her four-year career.
scored 10 points and pulled down
10 rebounds in helping the Vikings
(10-7, 10-2) 10 take sole possession
of second plac_e in the SVAC.
Sophomore guard Dama Twyman
· led the Pirates (12-4, 9-3), who are
tied with Eastern for third in the
.conference, with II points.

V.UCl,r-

m"":M

VermWiao .fl, N. RW&amp;..Wc 29

· WnolllAI$.4, .Ml!lolo-lloion32 ·
W. Union Olil, W- Lolhom 56
Wtlnul lidle 61, Col. Marion·
Fraaklin 30 t

'CALL!

JolT '!Varner lnouranoe
us 'IV, 2nd '
.
Ptlfll~ror, .Ohio
614-992-5479 .. ... _
.._............c...., •

~~~-·

.-..~

,_CW.OM-..... I'WI. c.M&amp;Ott41nl
......... ~Willi .......

........... .._c.....,.

W........W.47,0~1CoMocl~31

Wulolai""'OI59,1Illlobooo21

• w-so,An:W~C~W42

w-11rown 63, wUllomol&gt;ura 24
v - . B..-76, v-..

o......'&lt;

Quarter totals
SymmesValley .. lS 7 7 lS=47
North Gallia .......... 7 14 5 13 = 39
Symmes Valley (47)- Krausz
10-0-3=23; Owens 4-0-2= 10;
Schneider 2-0-3= 7; Wiseman 2-01.,5; S. Wilson 0-0-2=2. Totals18-0-11=47
.
Field goals- N/A
Free throws -11-16 (68.75%)
Rebounds- 26 (Krausz II)
Assists-8
Steals- S (Schncidcr4)

TH~

Turnovers - 20
North Gallla (41) - Tw.ym411
5-0-1=11; Salisbury 4-0-1•9;
Meadows 4-0-0=8; Meade 3-01=7; McCormick t-0-3=5; Myers
0-0-1=1. Totals-17-0·7=41 .
Field goals -17-76 (22.4%) :
Free tbrows -7-IS (46.7%) ·
Rebounds- 37 (Meade 8) ·
Assists- 9 (Myers 3)
Steals -7 (Myers 4)
Turnovers- 7

CARD BOX :

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•1992 FIHI BIMblll Clnlt.....~ ................ VS.O poc1l
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Mutcll Cart • 'Hitl sell tAd MID RICt Clrdt
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Football and Baskethall Beckims

OPEN MONDAY·SATURDAY IO 'UI.·6 P.M.
CALL 667·6092 FOR SPECIAL APPOINTMENT.

•

. Come ~o S~oney's for our Bite-Size Shrimp Din_ner- a
hearty helping of shrimp fried in IOOlt vegetanle oil, served
with cocktail sauce, dinner bread, your choice of baked
potato', rice or fries, and Stioney's All-You-Care-To-Eat
Soup, Salad and Fruit Bar. It's a big meal at a small price!

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

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' '.

_Pom..ov, OH.

CLOIED IIONDAY
OPEN 'I'UEIDAY THIIU FRIDAY
• AM-I I'll

.• .,
BTHE .

,.

•

•

'

'

. '

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES I SERVICE

..

..,.,..,..J

rJ

r..,4s,'t.......&amp;·Modioao41

Tuanw• Calh. 41, RW•wood 37

T""'w 5 I, M.on-.r 34
UniM Loca141, Wuooatille J9
Umka 56, Badley 4!
Uollina 76, Kenom lllolr.c 42
S4, ~lcllhawn11 31
Van
8\lll• 60, Cl1J1011 Not\h•

Thursday night's game In Morgantown,W.Va:,
which the Mountaineers won 90·78. (AP)
·

Hannan Trace girls hand Eastern 82-78 loss

z...r...56,MiomiT""'34

CoL kdoiA,.. 7Q, Col. B-!0
MU1IIo &lt;16, Col. IJOdaof-~

111 ~ NlonbtoM", Col 11u1s2

30

U..:M

Col.,· - - l 3 , Col.'Oc1.

oeo.t,91.C.Con· '

....,..,,._,._"

cu.. Madoin 49. cu..Doer Pule 41

Qo.VASI

.__...,.,a..wr · h,

t&lt;U.-Iul
_.._.,

...

Jltiit ~!-"

c;,. F'~ 35, Cin. lodiaoo Hill

w:;J·

•
;
·
,. ,

D•IUI It Y . _ , 1:3.l J'-M"
'
-,
' ~

Carlillo 56, B....mlle 54, OT ,
Olippew144, W•ynodalc 3'
42. cu..oo.. Eooo 37
CU.. Cai"'Y Ott. 49, Cin. S......Ut 34
cu.. Cowtuy D•~ so, Cin. Landmm

Cin.Oakllilk69,Cin. WttNow43
Cio. RNdinlll, Cln. CAP£ 21
Cin. Stton n , Cin. Mou•n Noue
Duno'1
CU.. SL Beawd 52. CloL Cuio1ien 2l
Cin.S)CIIIICR52.PaiofloldJ9
. Oa. Unuline 55. CU.. MoNloholu 48
Cln. w- Hillo 51, Cin. Cotonin
42 ,
' .
Cin. Winton Woodl70, On . HllahOJ
II
Cin. Wocdwu.t 49, Cin.1\upln43
a..
71, Cin. r.~lo! 32
Qo.SL
61,-66 •

• Satu_rdtJ'UtmK
• ~ ~ ol 801'- 1 3'
' l"e:w .-.y
-·· : J{;,m.

'

N:'!:r.

34

a..""""'"'

"Bulfllo, 7:35p.m.
TOIOIIlO 11 Detroit. 7:35 p.m.
N.Y. Ran&amp;enll Wuhinator~o 7:35
pm.
C.._,.aaWiluipe&amp;,l:35p.m.N.'f..faltndm llll!cimonlon, 9:3!

PICKUP 4X4

NcWCCII'!Xftlown 45, Malvern 42
Nordonia 74, Oarllold lila. 46
61, Ltoou
N
Bap&amp;il&amp; '7, Cin. SL Rill SO
Oak HiD 53, Raoioo Sooolhom 19

RivorVlew 46, W. Hobft0135

B•oker• Vall. 54, £Iaio 51
Cadi&amp; 47, Edil&lt;r1 N. 4ll
ClnLOn Timkcn 48, UniontoWn Lake

Tonilht'• p!bos

1992 CADILLAC
·ELDORADO

Ridr

Rock Hill?-(, c-.,.k11 35
S. Owkoton SE 10. Yellow Sprinp

BMh42, Will"""'by S. 4t
But.ieycT..U U , Caldwell41

Sin]the Dlvbloo
Vuaoouvc:r ......... 3015 .1 ~ 1901.54
Wimjpq ....-..... 22 :U t1 55 169165
l.ooAnpteo ....... 202112 · 52 117200
-CalprJ .......... ,... 22 24 7 51 199190
'""'-"" .......... 22 26 7 51 191207
Sit! I'* ............. 13 ~ 4 30 140235

614·992·6614

o-.r

Brookfield 50, Badacr 't1
Brooklyoo 40. Colwnbia 32
Bnwwiek 57, Oovcdcal44

Chico ................
SL Lotoi&lt; ............
SS 186115
Minoocooto '"'"'"
4 48 1156179
TOtOntO .............. 1731 s l9 144194

POMEROY, OHIO

FairbatW ll, Mlzymlle39
Fairlea 53, AiJal Ccwmuy 43
F1)'UlMlle 67, Flill'ield 30
Fcdcnll!ookin.&lt; 47,•8d,.. 31
Fort Lonmie 13. Sidnoy Foirll'"' 30
Fort Recovery 45, Muien LocaJ 37
FrW.lin-MOfti'Otl79, NcW~n 23
F._ LakoiiNI 66, lowm·St:io 56
Fremont St. Jouph 60, Fottoria SL
w""'oiin45
0onoa 48, oueao30
Giblonbura 51, Northwood o46
Graham 74, Tipp City 66
Gnod Vall. 48, CaniWI40
Grandview 46. JOMiban AldrR- 3S
Orutville 46. Fiolt" Calh. 40
Orovo Cit~ 63, Col. W"' 55
Hamilton Twp. 57, Amanda·
Clcameolt31
"""' 93, ~ 32
tlanlodt-Milloo j7, won..... 33
"""'""
60.1- c.... 31
Hud1on Wu1em Re~ervc: Sl, Clc.
Oilmour26
X..... Lakota44, Euowoad 43
Kinp 35, ModiM Fint Bopliet34
LIWcl. 39, Hathtway Bron l1
l.emcQ.Momoe 49, Olf'&lt;Wd Tala.wanda 44
Ubaly Union 69, Bame Union 38
Uckina Vall. 50,
4:1
Looklutd 41, CloL N. ~HiD 22
Lopto Elm 54, Faidiold t10ioot 52
Loo1d001 67,Jolwtown 44
Loflin Kin 56, Lonin $aulh&gt;iew 51
Lothono \l1. 48, A=m 22
Madilon Plaini 41, W. Jcffcncm 36.
OT
Mannalht Chr Sl, Ttet cllifo47
Muien Calh. 20, CoL Academy 17
Marioo Ploatam fl6, Mount QUc.d 44
Muoo4S,Rou2S
MtWNIC SS, An&amp;hcmy Wtyna 33
McCoin SS, Wilmilopn 29
M•D&lt;mlol42.31
Mechanielbwa It, Triad 4
Modina 53, N."'Royaltan 31
Moip 51, A&amp;.."""' 31
M"'~4B. Bedfool 31
Mlamiabw) 31, Lci&gt;ul&lt;rO 29
Middletown Qu-. 43, Cin.. Seven Hilla
J6
MidNw 55, Lonin 23
Miltonl 65, Lakooo 5t
Milloo 37. w.u- 33
Miolller 53, sc !!au) 46
N. Uni1111 61, CadinJ""' 42
Napotoon !51, Fnmont Rou40
NelamviJ.16.YOik 34, VinLon Cauuy
30
New AlbUiy 43, LieU! a H~a. 38
New l'loiladalploia 54, Mauilbo J&gt;ary
32
Nowbwy 48, Ud&amp;OIIIOIII 42

's

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE

EdioootS. 59.E. Li...,..t40
Elida 61 , Celina 47
Flyria 44, Sutdttak~ 42
Enon Greenan 60. Spin1- NodhWCII·

em 50
&amp;oud 42. Mayf'ocld 38

Auptine 24

Bctver Eutem 84. Fn nklin Fumacc
0....39
Bellaire St. John's 66, Toronto 46
Bellbrook 71 , Dilic
Bene!ontainc SO, Sprina. Northeast·
&lt;m45
B..tobin 47, Pmy 32
Bia Walnut 70, Lakewood 47
Bloom-Clrroll l4, Canal Winches~.cr
22
•
B...Uvillo 49, Midpult 33

Thurs'Jai:;!"ores

e t'a
till

l...ouiavillc 7l, N.C. Cbarloue 63
Nicholls S1. 77, Tcua-San Antonio

65

Ploiladelpl)il 5, I
SL Lauli j, Newlene) I
'
llonlord !, 1.oo Anoeleo S,lie
N.Y. bl01din 5, y-.......,.4, OT

Surprise ... 3oi.lt of 4 who
file ataX retvm get a ,
refund! ChanCes are that
means you. So the sooner
you file the soc;ner you
get money back! ,

Howard U. 101, Bcthunc-Cookman

65

Thursday's scores

ALL NEW F01'9.2

TillS P\.cJIIciiiOII &amp;

Campbcll82, Mowv. Olive 70
Contal Cuolina ,0, Charlc110n

U
11
14.5
16
20

Paclfk DlvUion
l'ortllnd .................32 14 .696
A&gt;........................32 16 .667
Golden S\.110 .......... 29 I! ' .6S9
L.A. Lokm ............ 28 18 .609
Sc.aulc ....................~ 24 .SOO
L.A. Oippen ......... 22 2.1 .468
Sacramento ............ J6 31 .340

or

South

O.O,P. Southom 13, Somford 62

Mldw11:111 Dlvlalon
W L
PeL
uw. .......................31 18 .633

Game 16

AWIIIIIIIc. .W .
conditioned; tilt, cruiM,
qlllll4.

'""'""""'~ ~
llWI

GB

Tt~m

ACHIEVA
SPORT COUPE

'

PeL

WESTERN CONFERENCE

-IT

[2.

Meigs will travel to Wellston
(2-10, 2-12) Monday evening
bef~n coming home next Thursday
eveniDJ to boll the Lady Lancers in
wllll could be for all the marbles in
the TVC. Federal Hocking will
11oet Trimble (1· 13, 2-IS) on Mon'day ~eniJII. The Lancers defeated
Mei&amp;,1 49-47 on Jan. 9.
., Otlll'tft' totall
Alcunder .............4 8 10 9 • 31

W L

Cenlr1l Dlvlll01

1991-92

Meigs

73

1lo!i.- 50, ltentM 30
a x... 44,
Clot. 41
Eutlili 61, Maple Ilia. 26
El10n 57, -Middletown Madi1on 53,

w""""'.,...

ToMOn SL 80, Hollin 70
Wapcr 14. Moun1 SL Mary'1, Md.
Wat Vlr&amp;lnla H 1 Rhode Island ?I

Atlulk Dhillon

Team

Game t113
February 8th
1:00pm

_ Tomple 92, R•-78

In the NBA ...

Gam e 1 5

Alexander

leading scorer.
Miner, a junior, raised his career
total to 1,743 points, surpassing
Ronnie Coleman, who finished his
career last season with 1,727.
No. 17 UNLV 80
UC·Santa Barbara 76
J.R. Rider's tiebreaking jump
shot with 43 seconds left led
UNLV 111 its 16th straight victory
as the Runnin' Rebels won at Sanra
Barbara in a Big West Conference
game.
Rider, who had been cleared to
play on Wednesday after having
his eligibility restored by the
NCAA, got the last two of his 25
points on an IS-foot jumper that
broke a 76-76 tie.
Louisville 73
No, 20 N.C. Charlotte 63
Reserve Iilmes Brewer scored .
19 points as Louisville handed visiting North Carolina Charlotte its
forst Metro Conference loss.
The 49ers (IS-4, 4-1) were
unable to overcome a sloppy first
half in which they hit onlr 9 of 19
shots and turned the bal over 14
times in falling behind 35-21.
Brewer hit a pair of key threepointer.&gt; 10 keep the Cardinals comfortably in fronl
.
No. 25 Texas-EI Paso 78
Colorado State 50
Eddie Rivera had 17 of his 23
points in the lirst half and UTEP
limited Colorado State to seven
lield goals in each half.
UTEP (17-3, 7-2) took a 39-24
lead at halftime as Rivera bombed
away from outside, hitting three
three-pointers.

Scoreboard

'

10:00 am

GOOD LUCK, STUDENTS!!
'

..

mi~utes ~nd Golden State ne~er
agam got1ts defictt mto smgle dog·
ots. The Hornets led 74-53 after the
most producuve half m team history.
.
.
J.R . Re1d ~ad 1~ pomts for
Charlotte. Chris _Mulhn sc_ored 25

The Dally Seotlnei-Page-5

No. 7 Arizona ed-ges Stanford 72-70 for sixth strai

Friday, February 7, 1992
Page-4

;.
By The Associated Press
. - Some NBA teams have no players in Sunday's All-Star game. The
Cleveland Cavaliers have two, not
Jhat anyone would know after
.·watching their last game before the
-break.
·
. _ MarkPrice,BradDaughertyand
:the rest of the Cavaliers combined
"to miss their first IS shots in the
:second quarter Thursday night and
lost 111 the Detroit Pistons 112-95 .
Price made Cleveland ' s only
basket in the period, a 20-footer
·with 32.5 seconds left. The Cavaliers shot 1-for-20 in the quarter
:and were outscored 29-8.
&lt; "That was probably one of the

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

)'I•

�,.
FridaY, February 7, 1992

Friday, February 7, 1992

Page-6

•

Beat of the Bend...

I
I

l\
I

The Dally Sentlnei--Page-7

/'

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

-

P9ineroy~lddleport, Ohio

Friendly gardeners to begin project

heat in hoc weather.
ordering by March 1.
Members will begin a sunshine
The Christmas lighting contest
by Bob Hoeflich
was discussed and it was decided to basket project to help shut-ins
write some guidelines for next know that others are thinking of
year's judging and to include some them. One member each month in
was a
you
diffClellt categories.
alphabetical order, beginning with
ly. Dr.
the
the
you'd like 10 lwvv..'!
Carrie Norris has had the Jan- Margaret Edwards; will take an
If so, ihe Women's Auxiliary at ralher large family lived in a home
uary display in the Rutland Post item of her choice to the.club memVeterans Memorial Hospital has near the where the .,omeroy
Office featuring natural dried mate- bers choice of shut-in.
begun a·"good egg" project which Library building is located on Secrials in wreaths and arrangements.
The traveling prize, brought be
ond St. He also had a small buildmight inteleSI you.
Suzy Carpenter will have the Kim Willford, was won by Shirley
For the Easter season, the Auxil- ing nearby where he saw patients.
February window witb a Valentine Van Meter. Suzy Carpenter dis. will place " ood egg" trees in
Incidentally, Florence Smith,
theme, highlighted with a silk played a dried arrangement in a
hospual lobty, cafeteria and also of Pomeroy, who has done
design of red and white carnations basket featuring a blue bird.
C)ltended care unit. Replicas of research on the Roush family
in a teddy·bear and heart container.
· The Feb. 26 meeting will be
· Easter eggs-about six inches in reports that the building was swept
Garden therapy plans were dis- hosted by Marjorie Davis with
siz&amp;-will be placed on the trees away in the 1913 flood. At any
cussed and will be finalized at a members naming a landscape proband oo each egg will be inscribed rate , Dr. Davis reports that the
later meeting.
lem. A home extension agent is to
with the name of a "good egg". pharmacy which was aperated by a
The Ohio Association of Garden speak on landscaping with Shirley
You can have the name of your son of Dr. and Mrs. Roush, Fred
Clubs Bulb Book was shared for VanMeter to give information on
"good egg" placed on the tree of Roush, was located on W. Second
grotmd covers.
your choice by sending $5 and the St., near the later location of Guth
Suzy Carpenter was honored by
name of your honoree to the Auxil- and Whitlock. Dr. Davis recalls
her
secret pal with a New Year's
The Pomeroy Nursing and student on that night, are asked to
iary in care of Veterans Memorial that Dr. Roush died and was buried
Hospital, liS E. Memorial Drive, here. The family moved away and Rehabilitation Center will be host- contact Jamie Gillispie, activity remembrance.
Pomeroy.
later Mrs. Roush was returned for ing 16 Japanese exchange students director at Pomeroy Nursing and
Rehabilitation Center, 992-6606.
The Auxiliary is presendy tak- burial in the Beech Grove Cell)e- from Ohio University on Feb. 29.
ing the names and money for the tery.
The studen~ will !'e spending
the afternoon wtth restdents of the
fund-raiser. The trees with the
inscribed e~s will be ready to be
Glada M. Davis, formerly of facility and then will remain
NEW YORK (AP)- Wai-Man
put into posuion oo Marth 19 and Dexter, will be observing her 94th overnight with local residents.
founder Sam Walton, who built the
The program is part of the nation's largest retailer from one
wiD remain in their respective loca- birthday on Feb. 12 and, of course,
observance
of International Friend- store. will reveal the secrets of his
tions until afler Easler, Aprill9.
would enjoy getting cards.
ship
Week,
Feb. 23-29. The success, ~\is publisher says.
If you have a preference on
Her address these days is 209 S.
emphasis
wUI
be
on giving Meigs
which rn:c you'd like your honoree 4th St., Middleport. Ohio 45760.
Doubleday announced Thursday
Countians
the
opportunity
to host a that it had acquired world book
or honorees placed, be sure to indiMrs. Davis is still preuy lively.
cate that in your communication to In fact. her daughter, Mary Kathryn student from another country and publishing rights to Walton's autothe Auxiliary. If you prefer you Holter, took her to a dance at the culture.
biography, to be written with ForThose residents who are inter- tune magazine senior editor John
can srop in the hospital lobby and Middlepon American Legion Hall
arrange in eerson to honor your on New Year's Eve. Mrs. Davis es!U in hosting a Japanese college H
"good egg .. with an Auxiliary did a schottische and she and Mary
member. Do act on it soon, how- Kathryn stayed until the dance was
ever, so the Auxiliary will have over at I a.m. Now at 93, that's
time to get the esgs all ready to go. lively.
Proceeds will go to the Auxiliary which carries out numerous
And we did get a bit of a
helpful ~jects at the hospital.
reprieve on paying our real estate
taxes from County Treasurer
Dr. Hugh Davis of Pomeroy Howard Frank didn't we? The
enlightens us a bit more about the extension is to Feb. 10. I noticed
Roush Pharmacy,.-this started my taxes at home were eight cents
when Linda Hudson found a "shot" lower than they were the last time I
glass issued by the pharmacy many paid them. It's a bit frustrating. I
years ago among the belon~ings of mean, I don't know whether to buy
her late mother-in-law and mq~ired a CD or go into the stock market.
Do keep smiling.
about the phannacy's existence.
Dr. Davis recalls as a child, he

:i'

Kimberly Willford· presided at
the January meeting of the Rutland
Friendly Gllldners.
Margaret Edwanls,l!ostess, read
devotions on the theme, "Make
Your Day Bright" IJld "Take Nothing For Granted." Members named
a bird they had seen at their feeder
for the roll call.
Marjorie Davis gave a hand out
oo making Bluebird houses which
should be placed as near natural
nesting conditions as possible .
Placing the houses on metal posts
rather than in trees can discourage
raccoons and cats from disturbing
the birds. Birds prefer unpainted
houses .but an exception to this is
the purple martin house which
shouljl be painted white to reflect

Exchange students to make visit

Legion Post 39
finalizes plans
-ptans were finalized for the
annual birthday celebration of the
American Legion at the recent
meeting of tile Drew Webster Post
No. 39. The event will be held Tuesday,
March 17, at the Senior Citizens
Center in Pomeroy with dinner to
be served at 7 p.m.
Bernard Fultz, life member and
Pomeroy attorney, will be the
speaker for the celebration and
Lois Bun will perform "God Bless
America."
All members of Post 39 and the
Ladies Auxiliary Unit arid their
guests are expected to ailend.

Apo stolic
Church or Jesus Christ Apostolic Fallh
New Uma Rd., next to Ft. Meigs Park
Putor: Robert W. Richwls
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.
Churdo of Jesus Christ AJIO'tollc
VanZandt and Waro Rd.
Pastor: James Miller
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.

Evening - 7:30p.m.·
Wednesday Sem&lt;es ·7:30p.m.

Trustees to meet

Assembly of God

The Bedford Township Trustees
will meet Monday at 6 p.m. at the
town hall.

Liberty Assembly or God
Dudding Lane, Mason, W.Va.
Pa1tor: Dan S. Eaton
Sunday Wonhip - 10:30 p.m.
thu,.day Services - 7 p.m.

WE NOW CARRY
SPRING JACKETS

Book due out

Baptist
Free Will Baptist Church
Ash Street, Middleport
Pastor: Mark Morrow
Saturday Service-7:30p.m.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.,
Wednesday Service·7:30 p.m.

BUTTONS and BOWS
100 E. MAIN ST.

992·5177

Rolland First Baptist Church

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m.
Poincroy Flrst Bapllst
East Main S1.
Pastor: Steve Fuller
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.
Flrst Southern BapUst
41812 Pomeroy Pike
Pastor: E. Lamar O'Bryant
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Servlces ·1:30 p.m.
Middleport flr&gt;t Bapll&gt;t
Comer Sixth &amp; Palmer
Paslor: Rev. ]ames A. Seddon
Sunday School · 9:15a.m.
Won hip ·1 0:15 a.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.
Racine First Baptist
Pastor: Ste'We Dea'Wer
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship -10 :40a.m.,7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.

POMEROY

Now Under Construction:

D of A district meeting set
The Chester Council No. 323,
Daughters of America met ruesday evening ai the hall.'
-"•' Thelma White assisted as coun:~1ft! the pledges to the Christi1n and American flags were given
as well as the Lord's Prayer. A
reading from the book of Psalms
was also given and the ftrst stanza
of the Star Spangled Banner was
sun .
~he minutes of the previous
meeting were read and approved
and it was noted that Betty Roush
Is home from the hospital as is Mil4fed Caldwell and Susie Cleland.
G'oldie Krackemburger is in the
'1Jk!lpital as is Bob Harden ofGuid;:JngSwCouncil No. 124.
The outside sentinel office has
llCen filled by Ethel Orr.
Cards were read by Esther
Smith from Betty Roush and Car·
olyn Wise.
The Past Councilors Club will
' ri\eet at the home of Marcia Keller.

The silver collectio~ taken the
first of every month wtll go to the
National Convention Fund for Disb'tctl3.
The District meeting will be
held Saturday at I p.m. at the
Chester H_all.
A mouon was made to eat after
the meebngs rather tllaJl&gt; before on
potluck and refresh~ents mghts.
"A New Begtnmng" was read
by Enna Cleland.
.
The meeung closed tn regular
fonn.
Attending were E!izabeth
Hayes, Alta Ballard, Man:ta Keller,
Ada Bissell, Ethel Orr, Mae
McPeek, Doris Grueser, Bulah
Maxey, Virginia Lee, Charlotte
Grant, Betty Young, Leota Ferrell,
Jean Fredrick, Mary Holter, E~a
Cleland, Helen Wolf, Esther Smtih,
Opal Hoilon, Lora Damewood,
Mary Barringer, Jean Welch, Thel·
ma White, JoAnn Baum, Laura
Nice.

:Lydia Council seeks recipes
A repor1 on the mother-daughter

The church cookbooks are being

the recent meeting o~ the B~ford
Church of Christ Lydia Counctl.
The mother-daughter banquet
wlU be held Friday, May 8 at 6:30
~·"'· a1 'the church. The theme is
'Roses for Mother." A speaker fa'
.., evening will be announced.
t:t.Inicc Fetty presided at the
meeting durin~ Which prayer
~ue1ts were gtven an Carolyn
Nicholson gave a prayer.
OffiCCJS repons were given ll!ld
~ group voted to support~ mts·
sionary of Martina Artez until her
plualion in the

etables, jams, jellies and canning
are needed. Contact Karlita Stump
on this maucr.
The sunshine basket for February is to be given to Sylvia Blake
and communion for February wiU
be Brenda Bolin.
Lydia Council will be having a
COUpOn basket for all tO USe. If
members have any they are to lxing
them to the February meeting.
Charlotte Hanning had devotions and Karlita Stump had the
closing prayer.

.~.-

ur
nual
alentine's Day.
reetin s ection!

Schedule For CoMpletion On February 14, 1992
Don't miss your chance to thrill someone
HJlCelal wiLh yam very own meooage of love.

~ was given by Jackie Reed at prepared but more recipes for veg-

Outfits
For Your 'Little One'
SIZES: Preemies thru
.
24 Months ·

Order fr• our C~alog through
. february 29
Shop Fridays •n.I&amp;:OO P.M • .
.
. .

VIctory Baptist
525 N. 2nd SL, Middleport
Pastor: ]ames E. Keesee
Wonhip • 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Semce1 • 7 p.m.
Faith Baplllt Church
Railroad St, Ma•on
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip - ll a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service• • 7 p.m.
Fortst Run Baptist
PasiOr: Arius Hun
Sunday School - lO a.m.
Wonhip - II a.m.
MI. Moriah Bapllsl
Founh &amp; Main St. Middlepon
P111011 Ri:v. G~ben Cflia, Jr.
Sunday Sdlool - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:45 a.m.
Anllqully Bapllll
Pu1or: Kenneth Smidl
Sunday School • 9:30 a.,...
Wonhip • 10:45 a.m.
Thunday ServictJ ·7:30p.m.
RuUaod Fm Wll Bapllll
Salem St.
' Pastor: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday School· )0 a.m.
Evening · 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Alii Slrtel Fmwlll Baplllt
Middlepon
·
Sunday SchoOl - 10 a.m.
Wonhip ·ll'a.m.
Wednelday S..Vi&lt;e ·7:30p.m.
Saauday Servioe -7:30p.m.

Here'• !he lluta &amp; Boltia:
• Your Message Only Costs 20( Per Wnrd
•Bring in or Mail your typed or neatly
handwritten message to Valentine Greetings,
care uf this newspaper.
• Your greeting must be received
by Wed., Feb. 12, 1992
• All greetings will be publish~d ~n
a special section on Valentine
Day, February 14.

See Our Spedal Order
Catalog of

Easter

Silver R•n Bapllsl
Pastor: Bill LilLie
Sundiy School · 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.
MI. Union Bapllsl
Pastor: Joe N. Sayre
Sunday School - 9:45 a.m.
E'Wening · 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Servi~s - 6:30p.m.
Bethlehem Bapus!.
Past.or: Rev. Ea rl Shuler
Sunday S&lt;:hool - 10:30 a.m.
Won hip - 9:30 a.m.
Thunday Servi&lt;es ·7:30p.m.
Old Bethe Free Will Bapllsl Church
2860 I St Rt. 7, Middleport
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening - 7:30p.m.
Thunday Services · 7:30p.m.
Hlll&lt;lde Bapllsl C~urch
St RL 143 just off Rt. 7
Pa1tor: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonlaip • llo .m., 6 p.m .
Wednesday Service• ·1 p.m.
Hope Bapllst Chapel
570 Grant St., Middlepon
Pastor: David Bryan, Sr.
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wonhip · II a.m.. 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 1 p.m.

• Ask about our Speciiil
On Messa~es with pictures!

For all the heartwarming details, call

992•2'156
1r----------------------------------~----------------------1
Write your •essa' · below:
·
Brflg II or Mall yo.r Message alii
·
•
TftaiAIIOt•t to:
THE DAILY SENTINEL
Ill Colrt
Street, Pomeroy, 0.1145769
.
..; .
.
'

Vulllll: ............,.............. ~···::................................................................... ~ .................

.
t•w:. ;_........ . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ~. . .
.

Cathol'c

•-~a C ~tee~
...... a - ·-•w•
161 Mulberty A.... 1'6meroy, 992-5898
Pa•1011Rev. Walter E. Heinz
Sal Con. 4:45 -5:15j.m.; Mau . 5:30p.m.
45 9 l'

~~- : 9~-·

'

PRE$CIIPTION

."2·""
s.c-..
,.,.,
IItie .

i ... : .................................... .

Pomeroy Westside Chur&lt;h of Christ
33226 Otildren's Home Rd.
992-3847
. Sundar School- II a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services . 7 p.m.
Mllkllepott C~urch ol Christ
5th and Main
Pas1or: AI Hanson
Sunday Sdloot · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip . 8:15, 10:30a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.
Keno Church or Christ
Worshil"9:30 a.m.
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.
Bearwallow Ridge Church ol Christ
Pauor: Jack Colegrove
Swtday School ; 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
W!!!dne ~day Services - 6:30p.m.
Zioo Church ol Christ
Pomeroy, Harrisooville Rd. (Rt. 143)
Pas101: Rober E. Pundl
S101day School - 9:30 a.m.
Woohip - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Bndbury Churdl of Christ
PuLOr: Torn Runyoo
SWlday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10,30 a.m.
Tuppers Plains Church of Christ
Pastor: Robert Foster

Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship - 9:45a.m., 6:30p.m.
Dexter Church of Christ
Pastor: Chris Stewan
Swtday School · 9:30a.m.
Wor~hip - 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Rutland Church of Christ
Pastor: Eugene E. Underwood
SIUlday S&lt;:hool· 9:30a.m . .
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Mason Church of Chrlsl
Miller St., Mason, W.Va.
Sunday Sch.ool · tO a.m.
Worshtp · II a.m., 1 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.
Bradford Church of Christ
St. RL 124 &amp; Co. Rd. S
Pastor: Derek Stump
Sunday S&lt;:hool· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service• - 7:30p.m.
Succ:... Road Church of Christ
Pastor. Jos~ B. Hoskin•
Sunday O.:hool - 9 a.m.
Wor~hip - 10 a.m.,7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Liberty ChrlsUan Church
Dexter
PliiOr: Woody CaU
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servioe · 7 p.m.
Lan1rvtlle Christian Church
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedne1day Serviee 7:30p.m.
Hemlock Grove Church
Putor: Charles Domigan
Sunday sc:ho81 · I 0:30 a.m.
Worship - 9:30a.m. 7 p.m .

Christian Union
Hob1011 Church Gf Christ In Christian
U•lon
Paator: Theron Durham
SWiday School · 9:30a.m.
Evening · 1 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.
Hartlonl Church of Chrlslin Christian
Union
Hanlord, W.Va .
Pastor. Rev. David McManis
Sunday School - II a.m.
Worship· 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedne1day Services - 7:30p.m.

Church of God
MI. Moriah Church of God
RAcine
Pas10r. Rev. James SaucrfieJd
Sunday'S&lt;:hool - 9:45 i .m.
Evening • 7 p.m.
Wednesday services · 7 p.m.
Rutland Church of God
PaJIQr: John F. Corcoran
Sunday School - I 0 a.m.
Wonhip • ll a.m.,7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.
Symu10 Church Gf God
Apple and Secood SIO.
Pastor: Rev. David Rus..U
Sunday Sdoool and WonhiP' 9:30a.m.
Evening Services· 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servic:e• - 7 p.m.
Clourdlar'C....rPropllt.:y
OJ.' WhileRd.offSLRLl60
PuiOr: Pal Hen•on
Sunday School · ! Oa.m.
Wonhip - II a. m.

Htalh (Mlddloport)
Pallor. Fnnlc Smilil
SWlday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip . 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services • 6 p.m.

Pomeroy Church ot the Nuareoe
Puler. Rev. Thomas McCIUD&amp;
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Mlnt:nvllle
PastOr: Wesley Thalcher
Suoday School · 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.

Ch,..er Clwrth of llle Naurene
Pa1tor: Rev. Herbert Grate
Sunday School . 9:30a .m.
Wonhip - ll Lm., 6 p.m.
· Wednesday -c:es - 7 p.m.

Episcopal
Grue Episcopal Church
326 E. Main St., Pomeroy
Pastor: Rev. Dr. Roy C. 'Myen
Sunday school and worship · 11:30 a.m.

Pearl Chapel
Putor: Florence Smilh
Suoday School- 9 a.m.
Worship · 10 a.m.

.

.

"

Holiness

POmeroy
Panor: Eunhae (Grace) Kee
SWiday School· 9:15a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m.,6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:30p.m.

Pine Grove Bible Holiness Church
l/2 mile off Rt. 325
Pastor: Re'W. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Won hip . 10:30 a.m.. 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Semce - 7:30p.m.

Rodt Springs
Pastor:Keilh Rader
Sunday School- 9:t5 a.m.
Worship · 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services · 6 p.m.

Wesleyan Bible Hollne5S Church
75 Peul St., Middlepon.
Pastor: Rev. Roy McCan)'
Sunday school · 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.,1:30 p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m .

Rutl1nd Church or lhe Naurene
Panor: Samud Buye
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 6'30 p.m.
Wedn.,day Se.vic:es · 7 p.m.
Portland First Ch.urch of lhe Nazarene
Pastor: William Jus tis
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wor&gt;hip - 10:40 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servlces -7 p.m.
New Haven Church of the Nazarene

Paslor: Glendon Stroud
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Rutland
Pastor: Arthur Crabl~e
Sunday S&lt;:hool - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m.
Thunday Services • 7 p.m.

Hy sell Run Holiness Church
Pa~tOt! Roben Manley
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Service · 7:30p.m.

Salem Ctnler

Pastor: Ron Fierce
Sunday School - 9:1S a.m.
Wonhip ·t0:l5 a.m.
Snowville
Pastor: Florence Smith
Sun.day School · to a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.

Harrisonville Holiness Chapter
Pastor; Rev . Joh.n Neville
Sunday SchoollO am.
Worship· ll a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.

Southern Cluster
Apple Grove
PaSlor: Carl Hicks
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Wonhip · 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
ThursdayScrviccs- 7 p.m.

Latter-Day Saints
Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ in
LaUer Day Saints
Portland-Racine Rd.
Pastor: William Roush
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Woohip - 10:30 a.m.
Wednesdav Services - 7:30p.m.

Other Churches
Trlnlly Coogrqallonal Church
PaSior: Rev. Roland Wildman
Chulclt · 9:15a.m.
Wonhi.p - 10:30 a.m.
The Salvallon Army
11 5 Buucmut Ave., Pomeroy .

Sunday School - 10:30 a. m.
Wonhip - 10:00 o.m., 7:30p.m.
~ldclleport

Community Church
575 Pea~ St., Middlepon
Pastor: Sam Anderson
Sunday S&lt;:hooliO a.m.
Evening - 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Servic:e · 7:30 p.m.

Bethany
Paslor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Wonhip · 9 a.m.
Wednesday Services • 10 a.m.
Carmel
Pastor: Kennelh Baker
Sun.day School - 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:4la .m. (2nd &amp; 4ih Sun)

Lutheran
SL John Lullleran Church
Pine Grove
Pastor: Laura A. Leach Shreffler
Wonhip - 9:30 Lm.
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.

Morning Star
Pas'tor: Kennel.h Baker
Sunday School - 9:45a.m .
wo... hip -10:30 a.m.
Thu ':5day Services-7:30p.m.

Our Savtour Lutheran Church
WalnuLand Heruy Sts., Ravenswood, .
W.Va.
Pastor: Rev. George C. Weirick
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship · lla.m.

Sulton
Paslor: Kennelh Baker
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • !0:45a.m. (hi &amp; 3rd Sun)
EaJILetart
PasLOr: Roger Grace
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip · 9 a.m.

St Paul Lulllenn Church
Comer Sy&lt;:amono &amp; Seoond·SL, Pomeroy
Pastor: Laun. A. Leach Shreffler
Sunday School - 9:45 a.m.
l
Wonhip • 11 a.m.

Faith Tabernade Churth

Bailey Run Road
Pastor: Rev. Emmell Rawson
Suoday School · 10:00 a.m.
E'Wening 7 p.m. ·
Thursday Service ·. 7 p.m.
Syracuse Mission
1411 Bridgeman SL, Syracuse
Pastor: Roy (Mike) Thompson
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening - 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.
Hazel Community Church
orr Rt t24
Pas101: Edsel Hart
Sunday Scltool - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
D¥esville Communlly Church
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Burlington Community Church

Racine
Pastor: Roger Grace
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.

Umted Methodi st
Graham Unlled Melbodlll
Worship - 9:30 a.m. (lst.l: 2nd S101), 7:30
p.m. (Jrd &amp; 4th Sun)
Wednesday Service · 7;30 p.m.

Burlingham
Puler. RAy l.audcnnilt
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Wonhip . 7 p.m.
Wedne1day Scrvic:e- 7 p.m.

Laurel Cliff Free Methodist Church

PaslOr: William Williams
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

MI. Olive United Methodist
Off t24 behind Wilkesville
Pastof: Charles Jones
SWiday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhi:r,
· • lOJO a.m., 7 p.m.
Thull ay Service' · 7 p.m.

RuUand Bible Methodist
Pastor: Rev. lvan Myers
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
E'Wenina • 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Meigs Cooperative Parish
Northeast Cluster
Alfred
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School-9:30a.m. ·
Worship - II a.m., 6:30p.m.

Coolville United Methodist Parish
Pastor: Harold E. AUoway·Priddy
Coolville Churcb
Main &amp; F'dlil St.
Sunday School · tO a.m.
Worship· 9 a.m.
Tuesday ServiCes • 7 p.m.

Chesler
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Worship · 9a.m.
SIUlday S&lt;:hool · 10 a.m.
Thursday Services · 7 p.m.

Bethel Church
Townlhip Rd., 468C
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Wonhip - IOa.m.
Wednelday Servic:es - 10 a.m.

Joppa
Pastor: Bn:nda Weber
Woilhip - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School· 10:30 a.m.
Wedne1day Service• · 7:30 p.m.

Hocklnaporl Church
GnndStrul
Smday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip • ll a.m.
Wednesday SeiVicea - 8 pm.

Long Bottom
PaslOr: Cbarles Eaton
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.
Wedne1day Service• - 7:30p.m.

Christian FellowshiJI Center
Salem SL, Rulland
PuLer. Raben E. Musse'r
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wollhip- 11:15 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thunday Service - 7 p.m.
Morse Chapel Churdl
Supt. ; Mike Matson
Sunday school - 10 a.m. ·
,Worship · II a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.
Faith Gospel Church
t.ooaBouom
Sunday Scltool - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - l0:4l a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedn&lt;Jday 7:30p.m.
MI. Olive Community Church
Paslor: Lawrence Bush
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Evenina·7p.m.
Wedncday Service . 7 p.m.
United Fallh Church
Rl. 7 on Pomeroy By-Pau
Pastor: Rev. Raben E. Smilh, Sr.
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · l0'30a.m.,7 p.m.
Wedn...tay Semoe ·7 pm .
Ecc:lesia Feltowlltlp

Reedsville ;
Pastor: Rt:V. Charles Eaton
Wollhip ·9:30a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Service• • 7:30p.m.

Racine Flnt Ourch of the Nuartile
Pa110r. Thomu t.. Gates, U
S101day School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30,a.m. , 6 p.m.
Wednesday Sel\'ic:es - 7 p.m.

Tuppers Plains Sl. Paul
Pas10r: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Wonhip - lO a.m.
Tuesday Sem ces · 7:30p.m.

Middleport Churcb or lllo Nuartne
Puaor: Rev. Uoyd D. Grimm, Jr..
Somday School-9:30a.m.
Wor1hip - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m .
Wednesday Serviceo -.7 p.m.

Ceillnl Cluller
Asbury (Syrac-)
Pastor: Wesley Thatcher
SIUlday School · 9:45a.m.
Worstlip · lla.m.
Wedne1day Servioe1 ·7:30p.m.

128 Mill St. Middleport
Pu1or: O!uck McPherson
s...day School - l 0 a.m.
llvenina· 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servic:e · 7 p.m.
Full Gospel Lllhllloose
33045 Hilaod Road, Pomeroy
Putor. Roy Hunter
Sunday School- to a.m.
Evenina 7:30p.m.
Tllesday &amp; Thurnlay - 7:30p.m.

Syranue Church ot the Nuarone
Pa110r: RC'f'. Glenn McMillan
Sunday Sdtool - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Se.vic:es - 7 p.m.

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~
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MEIGS TIRE
CENTER. INC.

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Nationwide

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; SERVICES

212 E. Main Strttt
992·3785. Po111tror

... ·
.

~,

White's Chapel Wesleyan ' '
Coolwle Road
Pastor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour ;.
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m .
"
WeOOesday Service· 7 p.m . · 1

I

-

Falnlcw Bible Chun:h
·, ,
!..&lt;tart, W.Va. Rt.
Pastor: James Lewis
Sunday School - ll a.m.
.\'
Wo~&gt;hip . 9:30a.m .. 7:30p.m. 'l.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m. ' ..
Calvary Bible Church
•·
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pastor: Rev. Blackwood
Swtday-School -9:30a.m. 1 ':'
Worship IOJO a.m.. HO p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m. '•
Spiritual Faith Church
Slate 338. Anliquity
Pa11.0r: A. S~.ewan
Sunday School - 10 a.m .
Evening-7:30p.m.
Thur1day Sel\'i&lt;:e - 7:30pm.

I•

"

Calvary Pilgrim Chapel
Harrisonville Road
Pastor: Re'W . Victor Rouih
:·
Sunday School9:30 a.m.
Wollhi:f. · II a.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wednes ay Service · 7:30p.m. &gt;
Stiversvllle Word ciFaltb
Pastor: David Dailey
Sunday School9:30 a.m.
E'Wening - 7 p.m.
Thursday Service -7:30p.m.

,,

Rejoicing Life Church
lOON. 2nd Ave., Middlepon
Pastor: Rev. Mic:hael Panaio
Sunday School - tO Lm.
''
Wednesday Servi&lt;es • 7 p.m. :•

Pentecostal
' I'

.,.

PeniK&lt;ISIIl AJSembly
St. Rl. 124, Racine
,.,
Pastor: William Hoback
s...day School . 10 o.m.
Evening· 7 p.m.
Wednesday Se.Mces - 7 p.m.
Middleport PenlccOSIIl
Third Ave.
Pu101: Rev. Oa.t Baker
SWlday School · lOLm.
_
Evening • 6 p.m.
,1
Wednesday Services· 7:30 p.~:

Presbyterian
Harrisonville Presbyterian Church
. Wonhip · 9a.m.
·.. '
Sunday School · 9:45a.m.
Middleport Presbyt~rlan
...
Sunday School · 9 Lm.
Wonhip · 10 a.m., 4 p.m. (2nd &amp; 4111 Swt.)

·,,·

Syracuse flrst United Presbyt ...tq~
Stu~day School - 10 a.m.
\
Wollhip · II a.m., 4 p.m. (hlol 3rd Su~.)

Seventh-Day Adventis t
Seven Ill· Day AdvenllJI
Mulbeny Hu . Rd., Pomeroy
·
PallO!: Bob Snyder
Saau~y Semoet:
Sabbllh School - 2 p.m.
Worship • 3 p.m.

.
...

..'•..'

United Brethren
c•
ML Hermon United Brothrtnin Chifa
Church
·'
Texa1 C&lt;mmunity off CR 82 ' "
Pastor: Roben Sanden ·
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
.• :
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m. ' •··
Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m. ~_~

POMEROY, OHI0-992BtLL QU lCKEL

Ml
--·-- V f
·, -=
'-.../,Me- . e' erons
I
R10fl0

'

nor•ila.l

IAWUIIOS..C:OA1S

-FISHER
fUNERAl HOlt
992.5 1•1

GRAVELY TRAC'rOR SALES ·

RACINE PLANING Mill
l•·r..t \~ 1;;_ !'•
Mill Wotk
Cabinet Mak in~ ib:f:·'· .•.. I

S•racuse

204 C011dor St.

..

. ..

~
~"

..

172

h

992-2975 ;

North Saclllll

An.

Milldloparl, Ohio

EWING FUNERAl HOME
"Di,;nit~· ond S..rl'ir•

Alo-.y•"

Established 1913

,_,.,, 011 • .

~~ L-~':9~t:·s:4:n:.:_.~·_ _L·~~~·4~s.ut~h~~~·~..-"~~:!...L_. !99~z,::J9~78~Ji!:"'::l~ir~m!:··~IJJ
I

S~IES &amp; SERVI(E
992-7075

214 £. M1i~
992·5130 romeroy

OHIO

•w'"l

,'

Freedom Gospel Minton
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31
PaslOr: Re'W . Roger Willford
Swtday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip- 10:45 a.m.,7 p.m.
Wednesday Service ·1 p.m.

_

•

. ,· ,

Carleton Interdenominational Chur1h
Ki"i•bury Rood
·
Pastor: Clyde W. Hendersoo · ~
SWJday School • 9:30 Lm. 'l
Evming ·1 p.m.
.,
Wednesday Service· 7 p.m. ·-'

£&amp;or.1

93 MHl StrHI
Middleport. Ohio 4&amp;760
1&amp;141992·&amp;1&amp;7 - (9BB ·OOKSI
SUPPLIES • BIBLES

flatwoods
Pa1tor. Keith Rader
s...darSchool·lOa.m.
Wonhip - lla.m., 6p.m.
ThurnlayServicet · 7 p.m.

'

South Bethel New Testament • ,
su . . er Ridge
.
Pastor: Duane Sydm1tricker •· 1
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Wonhip • JO a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Ser'Wice • 7 p.m. • I

Eden Unlled Brethren In ChriJI ·":
Swtday School - 10 a.m.
•
Worship - 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:30p.m.

Reedlvllle Fellowthlp
Church olllle Nuartne
Pu101: John W. Dougl11
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip -' 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.

Eoterprlse
Pa1tor. Keuh RAder
Sunday S&lt;:hool·IO a.m.
Wonhip - 9 a.m., 6 p.m .
Tuelday Servioet - 7 p.m.

N._SitllemoniChurc:lo
Sunday Wonhip - 2:30p.m.;
Thunday SCIVlCCI • 7:30p.m.

1
' 2 '':.ci..;.o,.•---11-1
~~y-=-7;:m:·--~-~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~:Po:m::•r:•·
:y·--~-~~~91;1;l;~~P;•;~;•:ro:p_~~·~,~+~II~S~!~.~·=m~~~~~.
~--'T"----:~
_K&amp;c· JEWELERS
Brogan-Warner
n::~u:!::n

•.•.

t

ON TilE ~·IN IIDDLEPOIIT

The IDaily Sentinel

212 W. Main SL
Pastor: Andrew Miles
Swtday School · 9:30 a.m.
wo ..hip - 10:30 a.m .• 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m .

New Life Church of God
Chester
Pastor: Gary Hines
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship - 6 p.m.
Wednesday Sel\'i«:l · 7 p.m.

s .... Mau
:..., a.m.
Daily
Mau -- 8:30a.m.

•I

. . . ...._, ..,+-............................. ,. .................... ,.............1''"'""-"' ""... ;.._,,.,, ......... .

Church of Christ
Pomeroy Churc' ot Christ

•

•

HM121

106MIAtny An,

.SWISHER &amp;LOHSE
1PHARKY
we Foil Oo&lt;ton·
,,.,11Prtunphon\
.

�'i :
I '

:

11

Announcements

• ·T he Area's Number I
Marketplace

Moot SIJ!91os: Guya • Glrto. Call
Today. !lito Tonight. 1·-..071004, $2.95/mln. Muot So Over
lB.
Roduco Solo And Foot Wllh
GoBuo Cspltlo And E-Vap
Diuretic At Fruth P~rmocy.

4

Days

15
15
15
15
15

1

3
6
10

an ad
Call992-2156
MON.

COPY DEADLINE
Monday Paper
Tuesday Paper
Wednesday Paper
ThUI9day Paper
Fnday Paper
Sunday Paper

thru FRI. 8A.M.-5P.M.- SAT.B-12
CLOSED SVNDAY

POLICIES
• Ada ou\lide Gallta, Muon or Me~ cou nltet

mull

be prepaid

• Receive dilcounl for ad1 paid in ad11ance.
• Free Ad. r Gaveaway and Found ad. under 15 worda wall he
run 3 day• at no charsc.
• Price of ad for all ca pttallelten 11 double prtce of ad coa l
• 7 peint hne type only 111ed
• Tribune il not rea ponl tble for errora after firat day (check
lor error~ fiut day ad runt in paper). Call before 2:00p.m.
day after puhltcalton to make correction
• Ada thai maul be paid in advance are:
Card of Thanlu
Happy Ad.t
In Memortam
Yard Sala
• A cluaaf.ed ad Yerli.tement placed in the Callipolas Da1ly
Tribune (exc:epl Cla111ft!!d Ddplay, Bu.ine~a Card or Legal
Nolicea) w•ll abo appear in the Potnl Pleuant Reguter and
the Datly Sentinel, reachu'l@: oYer 18,000 home.

CONSIGNMENT AUCTION
EVERY FRIDAY EVENING
7:00P.M.
202 NORTH SECOND ST.
(Old Rrestone Store)

Middleport

FRIDAY NIGHT DANCE
RUTLAND AMERICAN
LEGION HALL
8:00·12:00 P.M.
WHITES-HILL BAND
ADM. $3.00; Couples $5 00
Under12: $1 .00

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Sealed propoulo will be
received by tho Village ol
Middleport, Mtlgt County,
Dhlo In the OHice ol the
Mayor, Village Hall, Mlddl•
port, Ohio until 4 p.m. Feb .
24, 111112, and then publicly
opened and read aloud lor
VILLAGE OF MIDDLEPORT
PUBLIC BOAT RAMP
IMPROVEMENT
The propoltd work In·
eludes stream bank protec-

tion, uphalt pavement,
gu.,drall, stairs and e public

boat launching ramp.
Copies ol Drawings and
Contract document&amp; may be

obttlned or examined at the
Office ol the Mayor, Village
Hall, Middleport, Ohio. A
$6.00 lee will be required lor
etch "' ol Drtwlngt and
Contract documents taken

lrom the above olllctt.
Checks shall be made payable to tho Village ol Mlddl•
port, Ohio.
Propotalt must be submitted on the Propotal Forms
contained In the Contract
documents.
The succeaa.ful bidder

mull be an Equal Employ·
mont Opportunity Employer
which prohibits dlocrlmlna·
tlon beceu1e ol r~ce, creed,

color, natJonel origin, •ex,

tge, handicap, polllfcelaHIII·
alton or btlltla. Tht VIllage
of Middleport Ia an Equal Employment Opportunity Employer.
The Owner reserves the
right to reject any or til propo.. ls ond to wolve i ny In·
lormolltlet or lrregulorltletln
the propo..ll received.
VILLAGE OF MIDDLEPORT
Fred HoHman
Mayor
(2) 7 &amp; 14, 1892 (2TCI

In Memory

2

IN MEMORY.OF

CHARLES HENRY
WOLFE
ON ta BIRTHDAY

FEB. 7,1828
DIED DEC. 21,1180

T~we~oven
,._ truly gone;
Tilly IIYe In tNMIII'Id
me~noriM In 1M hMrl
of thoelt " ' - nv.
IM(wii!UChed IIIII
•lle~MIIong tllltny.

Lovwcllnd lldly

miiiiCIIIV WW.. Hlfln

A.; c

,,..,, Uldllllld

Liirr,lon, .,._IIIII
Jopce; g~MdDIIIIIhn
gM111111111111DIIIIchit

Public Notice
NOTICE OF BID
Notice is hereby given thai
bids will be received until
March 1, 1992 lor prices ol
tlmutoneolvarlous sizes lor
the period January 1, 1992
thru December 31, 1992.
.Bids are to be mailed to

Columbia Township Trus·
tees, Rt. 3, Box 82, Albany,
Ohio 45710
The Board ol Truslees of

Columbia Township reserves
tho right to accept or reJect
any or all bids.
By order of Board ol Trus·
toes ol Columbia Twp.
Gloria Hutton, Clerk
(2) 7, tTC

Public Notice
RNANCIAL REPORT OF
TOWNSHIPS
For Roell Y• Enclng
Doctmbar 31, 111111
RUTLAND TOWNSHIP
County olllllgo
"This Ia ., unouciWd
Rnonclll Report"
SUMMARY OF CASH
BALANCES, RECEIPTS
AND EXPENDITURES
GOVERNMENTAL FUNDS
RECEIPTS:
Taxu.................... $37,305.43
lnltrgovemmenlll
Rocelpia .....,_.... s7,51t.17
lnt...t ..............."''"''S51.20
All Olher
Rovenue............21,422.11
TOTAL
RECEIPTS .......124,103.4t
DISBURSEMENTS:
Oenaral Govem-

mlllt......................a,tee.ot

Public Slfely........ l5,110.15
Publlo Worb. .... - .U,028.t1

$4 .00
$6.00
$9.00
$13.00
$1.30/day

1' 1\ \\( .J \I.

$ .20

21- Buaineu Opportunity
22- Money to Loan
23-- Proleuiou.l Service~

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

u \ u. ~T \

P.J!!.,.

.,-::=-----___.j 36- Hal E1tate Wanled

lll.\1 \I.:'

GET RESULTS • FAST!

992-M;ddleport/

675-Pt. Ple .. anl

3- Announcemen~M

36 7-Cheohire
388-Vinton
245-Rio Grande

Pomeroy

458-l.eon

985-Cheller
843-Portland

576-Apple GroYC
773-Muon

256-Guyan Dial,

247-l.etarl Fall•

643-An.bia Di.t.
379- W•Inul

949-Racine
742- Rutland

4-- Gaveaway
5- Happy Ada
6-- Loat and Found
7- Loat and Found
8- Public Sale &amp;

882-New linen
895-Letart

9l7 -BuiTolo

Auct1on.
9- Wanted 10 Buy

667 -Coolv!Ue

Fund C..h Bllanct
J.,.l, 1H1 ...... _..6,678.68
Fund Cllh Bllance
Doc. 31,1H1 .. ..... 7,124.14
TOTALS &amp; FUND
BALANCES
RECEIPTS:
Taxeo......... - ......... 37,305.43
lnl8rgovornmontal
Rocaipla .............S7,519.17
lnl8rool ......................666.58
Glllll ............................. 334.08
All Other
Rovonue.............32, 122.61
TOTAL
RECEIPTS ........ 12t,ll47.95
DISBURSEMENTS:
Generol
Govarnmenl ...... 36,188.01
Public Solety.......... l$,610.15
Public Worko ......... 6t,028.11
Hoa1111 .....................2,252.20
Capilli Oudoy..........3,617.15
TOTAL DISBURSE·
MENTS .............. 126,686.42
Tolll Rocllpta Over/
(Under) Dlob ......... 1,251.53
Other Sourcae/
Rocalpta ............. -.....787.50
Tolll Olhar FlnMclng
Sour- (U..o)., ••. 787.SO
Tolllol Roc. I Olh•
Sour- Over (Under)
Dlob. and Olhar
u...........-..........2,039.02
Fund Cath Bllance
I, I 11111 ........40,506.62
Fund C..h Balance
Doc. 31, 111111 ••• .42,545.65
Dtposllory
Balanoe....... - ....43,547 .41
lnftltmtnlt............ -2t 700.00
Toll! Tr-ury
lllllnoe....... - ....46,247.11
leN Outatandlng
Chlcki ..................3,7D1.71
TOTAL
BALANCE.......... 42,545.15
BUMMARYOF
INDEBTEDNESS
Oullllnclng
J.,, 1, 111111 ......sa,ooo.oo
Redrtd....... 5,100.00
Out. tanding

Doc. 31, 111111 ....52,200.00
I certify lhlo report to be
correct and true, 1o tho beol
or my knowledge.
Opal L Dyer, Clork
1131192
P. O. Box326
Rutland, Ohio 4sns
Ph. 742·2805
(2) 7, 1tc

COUNTRY MOIIU HOME
3 Nlct Molllle Hotaos far Ront
.llsl Nor .. ol Po•aroy
Stilting at '225 ,arlto.
Call614-992-5521
or 315-8227

2/3/fZ

Public Notice
PUBUC NOTICE
On Saturday, February 8,
1992, at 10:00 A.M., the
Home National Bank,
Racine, Ohio will oiler lor
oale at public aucti9n on the
Bank parking lot the
following:
1988 Hyundal Excel GS
KMHLD31 JU220006
1988 Ford Aeroatar Van
IFMCA11U3JZA23105
1983 Pondac Firebird SE
1G2AXB7H1 DN222B31
1978 Tauruo Camper
50E29357S4567
The Terms of aale are

cash.
Tho Home National Bank
reserve&amp; the right to bid at
the ule or to remove any
time.
(t)26, 29,31 ; (2)2, 5, 7 6tc

Public Notice
RNANCIAL REPORT OF
TOWNSHIPS
For Roell Y- Enclng
Doctmbar 31, 111111
COLUMBIA TOWNSHIP
County of Mllgo
"Thlo Ia ., unoudlllld
Financlll Report"
SUMMARY OF CASH
BALANCES, RECEIPTS
AHD EXPENDIT\JRES
GOVERNMENTAL FUNDS
RECEIPTS:
Tueo.................... $42,069.15
lntargovorMtontal
Rocelpto .............39,614.21
lntoraot ...................1,718.31
All Olhor
Revenue.............24,820.44
TOTAL
RECEIPTS ........ I08,302.~
DISBURSEMENTS:
GMtral GovornmenL .................. .21,967.56
Public Salaty......... 10,319.75
Public Worko .........S8,511.35

Read the Qest Seller.

l•o.

F&amp;A TREE TRIMMING &amp;
REMOVAL
Pruning and Landscarlng

51- Houaebold Good.
52- Spor ting Good.
53- Anltque•
S4- M11c. Merchandase
SS- Building Suppliea

Now In
Stock
AIR CONDinONERS ·HEAT PUMPS and
FURNACES FOR MOBILE &amp; DOUBLEWIDE HOMES

HOME
BENNETT' MOBILE
HEATING &amp;

Located H Sallord Sdtool Rd. ofl Rl. 141
(614) 446·9416 or 1·800·872·5967
4·26·91

Fr• Estlmaln-25 Yrs. kp.
Call oher 6 p.m. -992·2928

(1)3,1 ......

Public Notice
Heollh ...................... 5,546.09
Capilli OuUay.......... a,tat.29
Debt Sarvlco
Noto Principal
Payrnenl ...........4,500.00
lntereol and Flacal
Chargeo.............. 161.72
TOTAL DISBURSE·
MENTS .............. 110,003.76
Tolol Rocllpta Over/
(Under) Dlob.. - .. (1,700.77)
Totol ol Roc. &amp; Olhar
Sourcee Over (Under)
Olob. I Oilier
uooe ....,............. (1,700.77J
Fund C..h Bllanoe
Jan. 1, 1H1 ...... 43,216.24
Fund C•h Balance
DeDoc. 31,1HI ...... 41 ,595.47

. . . . . . . so,osa.

fal::.~

72

Totol TrNoury
Balance............... 50,058.72
Len Outallndlng
Checko ..................8,463.25
TOTAL
BALANCE ...........41,515.47
SUMMARY OF

MICROWAVES
VHS CAMERAS
AUTO RADIOS
REPAIRED

H.E.C.

Outatandlng
JM. 1, 1H1 ......... .4,500.00
RtUrod ...................... 4,500.00
Outotandlng •
Doc. 31,111111...............-01certify lhlo report 1o be
correct and lrua, to 1M bill
of my knowledge.
Gloria ltunon, Clerk

11o

214112
Rl. 3, Box 82
Albany, Ohio 45710
Ph. 614-618-4i204

614·992·6461

Hyaoll Run Roed·ll a k1tchan With lots of cabinets II what
you need this homo Is lor you II has 3 bedrooms , a large
kkchen. and a large iving room. Comes wi!h'314 of an oaa
and a patio.
$21,900

5-31-'Qfl-tf,,l

1·7·92, 1 mo

1/2/tln

FOREVER
BRONZE
RACINE

81- Home lmporvemenll
82- Plumbing &amp; H~ting
83- ExcaY&amp;ting
84- Elect11cal &amp; Ref•cig.,cali&lt;l ~
85- General Hauhn~
86- Mob1le Home Reptm
87- Uph.ol&amp;tl!ry

BISSELL &amp; BURKE

CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

985·4473
667·6179

14 TANNING
SESSIONS - 51400

Offer Good Thru
Feb. 14

MARCUM
CONTRACTING
-New ·Homes
-Remodeling
-Garages &amp; Room
Additions
985·4141
11-27-92·1

f•clorr Choke
·
12 Gauge Shelgun OniJ

SlrlciiJ Enforced

· 9·13·'91 -tfn

MEIGS
GOLF COURSE
MEMBERSHIP FEES

·····-"···-·'
2751d.
Won,el""""""'225 ea.

KIDS CRAfT CLASSES

Rabbllo, Spool Dolls,
PotpoYrl Hoo~ Socks and
Valanllno Plno

FO. 9- VolettMno 0... Hou1t
fOI

"m FIOMIIIIIUR1

Fll.ll-.\oltrh loslttl O.siiS '
6:30 Jl!l
,..... "'' c.l614-992-2549
SPECIAL VALENTINE HOURS.
Feb. 7·14 Open Tille p.m.
Opan Man.-Sat. 10 am-5 pm ·
Sunday 1·5 p.m.

SHRUB &amp;TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

Couple.............'....1450

•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

Stutle11ts...........".'l 00

Bllt SLACK
992·2269

Falllly............'SSO (4)
B•slleu".---'650 (4)

· College••,.............'150
.

1/31/92/lM.pL

USED RAILROAD TIE~
6-12·110·tfn

"

...ERYLWALTERI,CheaWF•............................317.o421 '

bone

Loat

qog:

WhHt

Samoyec:l,

Employment Services

Shoestring Ridge. Rowardl 614·
441-0819.
LOST malo rabbit BHtlt, red 11
wfWhltt spots on chest, Meson·

Help Wanted

Harttortlaroa, 304-882o32H.

$350.00/Diy Procualng Phono
Ortlorsl People Colt You. No Ex·
toST· black Schnauzer wiWhits parlonco Ntcuury. Htao-255throat, friendly, Curtis Hollow 0242.
Rdf Forked Run area, lost Jan .
AVON • All orus, Coli Marilyn
26th, 614·985-4432
Wuvtr 304-882·2645.
Lost: 2 llmale bMglts, tan,
bl,ck, &amp; whitt, ona Is wearing a
red collar, Pratte Fork 1rea,
reward, 614-696-1316
Lost : Ftmtlt cal, 7th &amp; Mtln ot

Will Do In Home Nursing Clre.
Have Rete,.ncn. 614-446'"-4441.

sllll hu brown collar &amp; chain,
614·992·3366 anytlma

Lost: White Blrtl Dog With Black C.rtltlld medical uslttant tor
Spoto, Reward OHaredl VIcinity: local physlclens' office, Plrt·
Gtorges Crak Road, Gallipolis, Umt only, Hnd rnumea lo Patient S.rvlc:t Assistant, ap.
Dally Sentinel, PO Box mM, proxlmataly 2Q.25hra, par walt,
614-446-2445, A&amp;k For Paul.
must bt energetic and able to
Pomeroy, OH.

Yard Sale

ALL Yard Sales Mutt Be Paid In
Advonca. DEADLINE: 2;00 p.m.
the day btlortthl ad Ia to run.
Su•day edhlon • 2:00 P m.
Friday. Monday edition • 2:00
s t dJ
p.m. 1 ur y.

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Rick P11non Auc:tlon Company,
fu ll time auctionHr, complttl
auction Slt'Vict. Licensed Ohio,
WtSI Virginia, 304-m-5785.

9

Wanted to Buy

UAd Mobile Homat, Call 614·

446.0175.

Pro)lct To $22 Hr.
Labortrs1 Palnlen, , ·&amp;4111- 1.
551
Maao,. ofllnd Halpa~rs. ,.
..01_6_3·------- - - - - •Construction
Wonted, now project, 10 $22hr.,
carpenters, laborers, pal,.art,
drywall mllonli and helper•, 1·
800-551-0163

work lllxlblt tchtdult Including
day. evening end Saturday
hours. Wadlcal oHict azperienca helpful, will train ma·
lure, rasponalblt person who Is

10ntltlvo to blnh control and
reproductive huhh nMdt of
clients. Muot b1 well organlzld1
accurots with 1'-•n ana
'll""

rHOrd kll~ng, hive superior
,_unlcollori okllla, muat be

able to worll under guldlllManaaln;ICoamatologlot w"h minimal suparvfalon. RoNllldod. lfooth Rental. lfppar ~'; rotlable tranaportatlon,
Culo ~:~~~ Solon, Stole Routa
to worll In Mtlgt, Clalllo,
150, 6
.em, Alk For Darla Law- Counllol lnd Olhtr
Or Kolly. 114-446-0055 (DI~&amp;I , sliM H - 1lmo and out of
614-882-7'189 (Kollyl.
county lrevol paid. Sto~ SUa.
Sind rooumo and two llltfiiOI'·
mont . - e o to Ptortnld
Porenthood of SouthNII Ohio,
311 Richland Avtrn•, Athln•,
OH. 451111 by Ftbruary 18, 11192,
EOE/ESP

Want to:

PIN down EXTlU.

CA6tl?H
'

1'um. your duller- into t:uslr,
Sell it tire easy wuy... by phofte,

rro rreefllo lefll'e ymu· lwme.

l'lace yuitr· clfJssilied ad tmlay!
15 wtml~ m· les~, 3 days;
3 paJJe~·s;$6.00

2, _ _ _ _ __

w.------1

1.1.--- - J2.'---.,.--..,.,--...,.-

_ __

7•._ _ _~-.,,,__:,_

2 Hdroom all alae, bhlon
Upland Rd, Hu4 occapled, 304-

llollmeid. 1111-'-$22,500. &amp;Hor
5:00 PM, 304-810-5752 or 304- 675-40H.
8B2-3237.
2 Sadroams, large Yard, CHy
For Sill by OWnor; 2 city lots, 3 School District, Ksnaugo, 614bedroom home, lara- out blag, 446-7473.
convenltlnt North Point E~men­
lory and Cll}' Racreatlon Com· 2br Mobil• Home, Cl011 In, No
plox. Prlco reducad. 304-875- Peta, $200 Par Month Including
Wotor, $100 Dopooh. 614-446'
3218 lor appolnlmant.
3617.
3 BR Home lor salt. Low 20's.
Now khchon, wiring, hNtlng, 3 nice mobile homn lor rent
chy· Point Plaau.nl, WV. 304· )uat south of Athens, ltartlng 11
$225/mo.. call 6W.1192-5528 or
171-H39.
614-385-1227
In town two ltary, thru bHrooma, luu bl11ment, 1·112 bath, L1te model mobile home, bath
attached 1o112 ear garage. ond halt, Sind Hilt Road, 304·
Central heat and air. Evenings 675-3834.
Colt 814-441-8707.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
Tax And Title Down. Proowned
Mobile Homea, U11 Your TalC

Rotund. 50 Homos To Ch0011.

44

Apartment
for Rent

2 BR Apt 322 Thlrtl Avo Gal·
llpolls, Botore UPM 814-446-3748
614-256·1!103
2 bdrm. apt. In Mlddlopon,

utllltlet tumlshed, $2751 mo.,

1172 Valiant offtcllrtlltr, 12x55,

zut

muM bl moved, $1250, 814-812·

1'121
1981 Naahua 14x70 3br, QQOd

Condition, Aak $10,500. 814-446nM.

304·576-2119 aHor 8:00
. ,..__ 1.4x85, 2br, 2
Lot, 814-441·

21rolllrl Mx70 I 12xQ, U,ooo.

klr bol~ Wlll'llot _
5111-2!04.

.... -

15~--~--------

1980 GMC 4x4, 61,000 MIIH, Ex· •
cellanl Condition, $2,800. &amp;14- •
441.0131.
'
1gae Ford F150 4x4 XLT Lariat, !
loaded, olllndtd cab, $11,000, ~

Slltl. 1 112 Mill Out At 141,

,..
,..

Polnl Pt..unt, 304.f75-20f53,

..,., good

ltrll Mno Tropical fish, lrlrtl&amp;,
Mtall.nlmalland euppll•.
Rotlotorod black/ whftl molt
CoCker Spaniol puppy, gmt
1200, no chacks, 614'!1!12·

1:,'7

AKC roglll- 8 wks old Mininature Toy whHo malo poodle
$125. 304-612·3877.

:

-

IM-112·7M3

Wtyno Shoemaker. 814-441osn.
Fllh Tank. 2413 Jtcklon Ava.

:

•

Motorcycles

•

...,..,.,...,..-'"""".,:.....,~...,... '

1983 Suaukl cso 4,500 mllaa :
contlll1
on. $100 614- •

.•

~·~

For Solo: 11188 Hondo 300 Utility •

.
1

4 Wheeler, Excellent Condition, ..

114-387-7927. .
Will pay cash tor uNci motor • .
cyle pa~s. Col! 114-411l·7055
·

75 Boats &amp; Motors

tor Sale

Musical
Instruments
Ludwla drum&amp; , 3 pc. with high
hat, Zlldliln aymbols, $4~0.
Price negotlablt. 614-245-5948.

Silman

Bundy

II

Afto

Saxaphonl, tentaatlc cond, only

$385. 304-875-2182 snytlmo tor
Information.

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

76

~,...-~,;,;,.~,;,;,.~--~ ·

&amp;udall Trenarntulono Ullld ' "
NbulH, sla~lng II $ft; Auto .'
Parts. 8t4-245-56n, 814-379- ' '
2283.

Worll boole. 8M-«1-3159.
61 Fann Equipment
Ullld Kenrnon double ovon 4020 JO Trector, Loador, $5jlt50;
range or ro~-or lot HIII2S Lata Model 4000 JD, $ ,150:
Cllblc ft.l. call1114-m-7847, $50 Long 410 Dl-1 Tractor, Bush
aach
Hog, S4,450. Ownor Will
Wolntl cheat, tripll dr-r Finance. 614-ZH-8522.
~11!'!'1 nlahllll&amp;nd, $150, IIC Jim's Farm Equipment, SA. 35,
•OJUot.e71-3214.
Waal Ooll!ooli&amp;, 814-441-9777:
Wldt Hlec:tlon new &amp; ulld farm
53
Antiques
tractOf'l &amp; lmplamantl. luy,
=--=-=~~=-- Mil, trada, 1:00.5:00 wHttdays,
Buy or 1111. Rlvarlno Anllquas, Sit. 1111 Noon.
1124 E. Main Slreot, Pomaroy.
Hours: II.T.W. 10:00 o.m. to 1:00 Now Holllnd 457 hay bind 7 ft.
Holland Super Tl7 lorsgo
p.rn, SUnday 1:00 to 1;00 p.m. hariaal«. Othl 15 grlndir
IW.912·211211.
mlxor. Ollvar 10 ft trenapoot
LOST; Rtwlrtl To The Paroon dlac. All good cond. -273Who Pvrchaaed AnllqUB Soby 4215.
B&amp;ptlam Gown From Golllpo!ls
Ou1rMCh Cantor, Oolllpolll. W1nltd: Uttd farm equlr.ont,
11191 Clown W11 Donated By •nvthi"SS you w1nt to 111. Clll
lllstoko, Family Holrtoom, WILL 111-251-1301, 251-1040 lfltr 8
BUY BACK I PlaSH C.llll4-446- p.m.
ol447.

ofMr rtluHCI,I1+V12•M2
Antiquo plano tor Nlo, 114-M.

holds 3 atllcn I bolhAIOm,

Btautllul Chocotato Labrador
Fema.. Puppy, 1-10 Wllk"
Sholo And Wormed, AKC Rotllt - . $300.1114-«l-tlln.
Dog HouMa For Slit: Ssvorll

~~

_

••

tumlhn, haalm, WMitm I

614-Mi-2217
Apt. klr rtnl, $1711/mo., $175
dapolh, 116 112 E. M&amp;ln St., 6149!12-7511
54 Miscellaneous
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
Merchandise
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 538 Jackson Pike
Ford
LTD and 1978 Ford
from $192/mo, Will&lt; to shoo I 1177
movlol. Coii814-«&lt;-25M. EOH . V.n. both 351 motors l outo,
both run good, no reaacnabla

.

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

SWAIN
AUCTlON l FURNITURE. 82
Oliva 51., Clalllpolll. - • Uold

EIMI Home Center, 1-800-SSg.

5110.

"

19110 GMC V-1 5 Spaid Foctory ~
AC, PSIPB, cC, PW, POi.; 13,800 j
IIIIH, $9,500. 114-441-7357.
~
1991 Forti Ranga_r,_t9,000 Mllol,•
c_$5,;;,500_.s_M_!;,.41...;,.~;m;,.._ _ _ •,

flmllt,
Pornaranlan, 1 mo old, had flrlt
lhole 1 wonnld, $20o. 30ol-882·

Houothold .fumlshlng. 112 mi.
Jarricho Rd. Pl. PINNnt, WV,
Clll304-875-1450.

Auto llaytog wo-. 111: ....,.
beautiful ncrell Clothn O.,.r, S50i
blr, 304- Elaclrlc Hoi Walor HNIII, $25.
lt4o-1139.
Furnished 3 Roomt And Both Broyhill twin, whho ca._ bod
U.,_tll'l, a..n, No Pita, with so~. box aprl~orid mal·
"OO ... ......,
Rol8renca And Dtpool1 R•
traao, ••. •8 ~-·
qulred. ·-1519.
Flrwwood For Salt: Bla Loldt,
Furnished Apartmanl, 11rr nail $45, Slacked And llo!lvared,
lo Ubr&amp;ry, parl&lt;lng, canlrti heat, Also Cln H1ul Llmntont, I'M·
1lr,
814 411 0331,
441-11321.
Batora7p.m.
Flrowood lor 111t: Dlk~uh, I
hlcltory. Dill•- local $40 1
load., 3 klr $100. 114-311 7013.
For Slit: Mull Sal II 111Ft. Sltiii!Ho Dish, Two Box Syotam,
U5!li 1:r Chrlln Sow, $50. 814·

,...,encM.

"'

.•

14-•._ _ _ __

675-1333
992c.2156 .

1

4 room• new roof, double lot

'J.1 •. _ _ _ __

___,..,...___;;,

' 4.46-2342

Pomeroy, Ohio '

Ntw/Uaod

~h,

EXCAVATING

e92·ft121

I

pump. •lumn aiding, 12120 front

9,_ _ _ _ __

992-6215

2br Home, Near Galllpolla And

Sign&amp;: Portable lighted algn 1988 Nl ...n Pulur, L.oadld,
wn111ara $299. (Payment Plan}. 1985 Olds Dll1o H Broughman,
FrM ltllon/dlllvary. Pl&amp;otlc Itt· Both In Elcollant cordllon,
tore M7.50 box. 1-800o533-3453 114-446-1810,814-441-4838.
anytime.
tgn Buick Contury V-8, 4 Dr.,
SIH 11 Wedding Oms And VA" 49,000 mi., pow1r door locka,
lir, CUI. deck, CNIII, tltt
In Vary Good Condition, 614· $6,300. 614·245-5946 after 5 p.m.
448-8278 After Sp.m.
Walk baltlnd 8ph Gravoty Tree- 19811 Oodgo Dlytono ES~ AIIIFM
tor mower with dull wheel Ctultte, AC, PS, PI, \.Our. Tin.
$1250, 6W.MD-2112
$5,1100. 614-379·2922.
19110 Cltov Covsllor Z·24; lrlk •
55
Building
IIIV'!t 32,000 mllll, 3.1 t, 1~0,
46 Space for Rent
PS, ~B. PW, POL, lift, crulao.
Supplies
eunroot, prM~Iurn eound, call
lndlvlduol to shrlra 5 bod....,.
behta..., 5;00 I 5:30 Mon thN
hama, will accept children, will
Black, brl&lt;!k, olpao, Win· Sit o304-87S41113.
haVI use of entire houll.z lonG dOWI,
Int., etc. Ciaude Winor ahor1 term. 304-8'75·123v.
tors, Rio Grande, ott c.n 81472 TNCkl for Salt
245-812t
1177 Chevy Bonanza. 11111'
56 Pets for Sale
Chevy ScOIIIdlll. 8oth 111M
For
Lease
49
lookl aood. 304-875-4lt:l ...,
:-:--~-,:---,:--- Groom and Supply Shop-Pol
876-1247.
•
5 bay automotive repair garage, Grooming. All brMdl, ltyllt.
~~------------·
compressor, holst , llCC tocaUon, lams Pit Food O..ler. Julie 1179 4x4 Chevy luv 1ruck. runt "'
304~75-1035.
Wlbb. Call 6t!-44&amp;-o23t.
good, 4x4 works, low milage, :
4sp.... ruot on bodr, HOD, 814· ,

Apt tor rent by month or we~ll,
304-882·2586.
Roome tar rent • wa1k or month.
S1ar1ii'IQ 11 $120/ma. GaiUa Hot1l.
114-4411'11580.
Slllplng room• with cooking.
Alto tl'llllr apac•. All hook-ups.
Call aftsr 2:00 p.m., 304·7735651, Mason WV.

Gallipolis City Schools. 814-441·
1617.
Merchandise
• - with people you know and 3
bedroom
hoUiie,
NOT to slild money through tho
mall until you hav• lnvmfg1ttd Meadowbrook Addn, 1405 Cadlr
Sl , 304-875-3753.
Household
the offering.
3br
2
Batha,
FP,
DW,
CA,
Goods
VENDING ROUTE; Got Rich
Dlposll Required, IW.
Oulck? No Way! But Ws Have A $475/mo.
Good, s...dy, Affordablt, Susl- 446-4222, or Evenings : 814-4411- Big Savings On All Carpal In
Stock. Cash And Cony, Mol·
nns. Won't Last. 1-800.284· 2174
4 bdrm. haute In Racine, $250J lohan C.rpat&amp;, 114-446-~.
!~~~i~~~= mo. phil depoalt, you pay Frost FrM Refrigerator, Capper·
22
to Loan
alactrrc and gas, rat. required, tone, Was $1!0, Cut To $15;
614·94i-2217
Refrigerator Harvtst Gold, Ukl
BEWARE OF RIP-OFFSI
Got Tho Trvth About Phona A~ House for rent In Pomeroy, 614· Now,l195: Upright Frotzor $125:
Whlrtpoot WatMr Harvt .. Gold,
.,.
r.:alt, 800 NumMrs, ~ 992-6265 avenlngl
$95; Kenmore WashiM' $75;
- · For REAL Loans Call
Houus tar ule « rent on land Whirlpool W&amp;shtr 2 YNre Old,
203-1541. lid Credh OK.
contract, down payment II n• Llkt - · $195: Whirlpool
1::;:..;;;.:.;:..;;:.:..:;:.::;;,.::;;;____ gollablo, 814·912-3027
Wahlr Haavay Duty Waa SUIO,
23 Professional
Cut To $125: Kanmore Dryor
Poin1 PltaNnl Area : 3br House, $95. Skloaa Applllncao, SW.
S
r ---=e:..:rv..:.k::;e;,:s:____ Cerpel•d, Newly Radlcorattd, 441·7398, t:i 1-800-4DI-34DD.
r·
Nlct Ntlghborhood And CioN
To School&amp;, $400/mo. Rtloren- GOOD USED APPLIANCES
c&amp;s Rsqutrad. 814-446-3537 Wlahlf'l, dryere, rtfrlgl!flton,
rongu. Skoa;s Aoitii'I!'C8•·
Evenings.
Uppar Rlvar Aa. B11lde Stone
Small houN, 2 bedroom 1 1813 Crtot Motel. Cotl814-446-7398.
Jetferaon Blvd. 2 bedroom apt,
LAYNE'S FURNITUR!i
2101 112 Jotloroon Blvd. 304-875·
Real Estate
Complltt home tum~\~.
1365.
Hours: lion-Sat, i-5. 6
0322, 3 mllal out Bulavllla Ad.
42 Mobile Homes
FrH O.llvery.
31 Homes tor Sale
for Rent
Maytag Clotho Oryw, Elcollanl
3 Unh Renttl, Sltuttlld On 112 14X70 With Expando 1 112 Condition, $75. 114-4411-8452.
Acrw Lot, l..lnttnlnc41 FrM, Ex· Baths, At. 141, 2 Milia From GllPICKENS FURNITURE
colllnl Shapa, 114 446 85118.
llpolls, 614-446-4824.

1987 Plnocrook 14~70. 2 bod·
room, 1 blth, total ll.c, haat

1..__ ______

INSULATION

!NOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
racommenda that you do bual·

houao, utllhy rm. all&amp;ched
garage . 1.8 sera, otorar build·
fng $28,500 114·9a9·27'1 .

HOWARD

992·3838

$350. Por month Dip. + 2
Rafaranc.. rtqul,.d 614-4467604

Tupper Plains, 1-atory 2-bdrm

6· --~----'---

d•ratt

Business
OpportunHy

m5 or 175-t812 (BObl.

·'··...!..--------

2 bedroom unfurnlahld house,
nice location,
required,
Wllklrn;ll.

pool, ullllita, central air,
woodbumer, S54 800. 304-675-

r:

Well

'"'"ad

more Information Cal 1'14-44&amp;2342, Alk lor PouL
1m Oodgo Shrllbf Shrldow
CSX, 2.2 Turl&gt;o, lnlor-ld,Jspaod, AMIFM cas&amp;., fol;, ""J
PB. Slrlouo lnqulriaa only
Evonlngo IM-992-8125.

41 Houses for Rant

Financial

Reduced To Soli: $49,900,
Cheahlro_,_2hlo. 904·1132-8959,
1104-1132·101V,III4-317-01149.
Throo milia out CNb Crook,

:1 •.- - - - - - - - -

82,000ml

1987 Chsvorolll Cill;':• ·ttlll
Hondo Robot, 8W.D4
!P ·
1987 Chevy Nova: high mlllago,
nlldl rtpalr. Qood tranaporlatlon car. Reduced: $1,000. For

2 BR 2 full Balhlllrtplace, dick

992·2158 or 614-992-1313
Lost : Ftmale Siberian Hwky,
blut ey11, 5 Pta. arN, pon\bty

7

oplona.

maintained Locally
$5,1100 or blot oHor 814-441-71104

Rentals

304-875·7'138, M· 9:00.3:00 or
675-7373 aftar 3:00 and

Middleport, whtt.. I yellow, 614·

2-3-'92-1 mo

FREE ESTIAIATES

all

PM aak for Ann1 or Jim, 304·

875-3984.
Will caro tor lnvllld In my homo,
Raclrw • •· reuonable, gooa
location and cart, 814·Mi-2393

1---------

SSOO for l1formallon
leading to the orrest and
convkllon Ill tilt person
or "'sons Involved 11 lhe
breaklna and enterl•g ol
the Raclnt Gun Club and
the theft of smrol
Rrtlcles lr~JII lhe tstabllsh~~~tnt. All Information
wll be kept confidential
Call 614·949·2671

.

MNDY IUTCti£R,,,.,,,,,,.,,.. IONoOONOOOOOo ooooo oHooooooo o i i N 3 7 1

Red

REWARD

Need o Small Buelneoo Building? Wanlto start your own
bU.innslnLingsville?lrurtlcebuildlngon approx. 1 acre
lot. Has wal8r, oawega, and reslloom. Built to state regtJ.
lations.
·
Wae $30,000
NOW $21,000 ·
DOmE TUIIHE.!z..lrobr...............................t112-1112
BRDDA JIFF'~................ :..............~ ......,.....tl24011
DAAUNEITEWART-,.......................................112-1311

Fo~o~nd:

Portland, 614·843-5161

9-6-tfrt

se,sao

RT. 7·Approll. 18 acres of land with an 8 room 4 bedroom
larm house. crinod wall. and TPC wel8r. looated -the
Eastern Higlt School.
$30,000

Colr111, Qokl Aln,a, Siver Colna,

Gold Colna. II. .S. Coin Shop,
hound, 151 Stcond Avanua, Gallipollo.

12 Gauge Factory
Choke Only

BULLDOZER,BACKHOE
and TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
. HOME SITES and
TRAILER SITES
, LANDCLEARING
DRIVEWAYS INSTALleD
UMESTONE-TRUCKING

19H Lincoln Town Cor l.tltdld

Bargoln1 Flva Acm Salol
WoOdoa And Pon Opan
Propony, Nice Building Or
lloblla Homo Sho 1 ElactriC, Now
Partntrahlp Dance Ins truction. Surv•Y.· Nur Atnsns. $U50.
$850,
Monthly
Prollulonal young couple Oopoall:
leaching Country Western, Paymata: $92. Own1r Financing.
Ballroom, l.ltln and Modem 1-800.921·21'11.
partnanhip dancing. Slnglos,
CoupiH and groups ,w.JcOme. lola far aale, trallars accapFor Into pluM call aft~r 7:00 lablt. 304·675-2722.

Top Prlcaa Pold: All Old U.S.

-~·

LANGSVILLE.CO Rd 10.Approx. 2 acret ot beaulilul bot·
tom land. War and electric available. A graet home or
mObie home lita.
'

304-875-3!103 oftor 3:00PM.

12·5·tfn

GUN SHOOT
1:00 P.M.
SUNDAYS
Starling Sept. 22

TROLLEY STATION
CRAFTS
FEB. I and 1-10:00 a.m.

TrH to give away lar llr.wood, Larry Llvaly. 814-388-9303.

Uconsed and Bonded

Frame Repair
NEW &amp;'USED PARTS
FOR ALL MAKES
&amp; MODELS
992·7013 or
992·5553
OR TOLL FREE
DARWIN, OHIO
7131f91/lfn

hault, IM.M2·'7231,1'VIIIInp

r-::=::=::=::=::=::=:r:~:=::==.===="111188 Coorlca Clullc, V-8, 4
54 Miscellaneous
door, orr, entiaa, ,.., dot,
Furnished
45
ruotprootld..t. eac cond, H,SOO.
Rooms
Merchandise
304.S76-25zr.

Po~ Blue Haalor/ po~ Cottle, 4
months old, call 814-M2-7884
Wonted To Buy: Junk Auto&amp;
With Or Wllhout Motors. Cell

PH. 614·992-5591

RACINE GUN
CLUB

1·800·848·0070

truck, 304-871-33tl
•
tg84 C..IHs Clore, Good
Shri(IOI, 711,000 llltta: 11114 Porto
tile Floro, SE, Excalllnl Shapa,
114o256-8149 Anytime, Or IW.
2!1·1771 After !lp.rn.
1g84 tlodge Aries, 4 door, black,
AIWM, catalltte, 4 cyl, new ••·

For Appt. 114-441·1158, 114-4463292, 6W.256-126l
48 A. 8 Room Brick Ranch, Lr •
Dr/Fp, Dlnlfp, Kc, Brk. Room, 3
Br, 1 112 Bath, Full Finished
hHment, Fuel OU FumaceJ AI·

2-1·92-lln

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS

. Spedallzlng In Custom

.Swtteffle•rl Speel•l

.ng, I U'IO,
I
$3000, 01'
tredo lot S-10 , SIIUr ar 8-10

on rented lot.ll4-446-1847.
Reduced ; Skyllno Socllonol
2tx52, 3br, 2 Baths, Country
Kitchen, 10x26 Attached Porth,
Spaclll Low Prlca, Excoltsnl
Fln•ncln11 AVIIIablel French
Clly Mobllt Homn, Inc. 814-446·
9340 Or 1-800.231-4417.

Bau, City Schools, Rural Water,
Ready To Mova Into. $79,900,

Til 1\'I'OHT \TIO\

'

Bashan Building
EVERY
SAt NIGHT
6:3o ·P.M.
Starting Sept. 28

MOBILE HOME ONLY·A 14X70 Nashua mobife home
with 3 bedrooms. 1 1/2 baths, a newer metal outl:luilding,
front porch , deck. underpinmng, and a w1ndow air ooncitioner.
DNL Y $7,100

Stop &amp; Compare
Free Estimates

Cheshire, OH.

RACINE .
FIRE DEPT.

POMEROY·SI Rt33-Atlhe edge of town is a blocl\ home
with 3 beO'ooms and a nice size lot. Has a privated fenced
patio and a cellar building . Could be made cule.
•
JUST $17,000

Remodeling

1984 Cama"lo~d~d T~opo, 350

full batha, pirtlal y turn'ad. Now

Road, Rural Water, Cheshire

6
qu P
62- Wanl~ to Buy
63- Lavutock
64- Hay &amp; Grain
65- Seed &amp; Fertihzer

Autos for Sale

1177Cadlllac, $100, SW.H2·1'121
1987 Clayton Ridr.wood. 3BR, 2

Township, WIN Consld&amp;r Land
Coiltroct. 814-3117·7927.
120 Acre Farm On Burnt Run
Road, 2 Milos Off Rt.7, Good 9
Rooms, Bath. Farm Haua, AU
Eltclrlc, Good F1rm Bulldera
Ovar 3200 Poundagt Tobbaco

F\J{\1 :-- ll'l'l.ll :-.
,'\ I 1\ 1-.~ · 1 01 .I\

,~JAYMAR R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING
low Grade Oak
Quality
PONDS
Saw logs
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
Stone Co.
LAND CLEARING
$150 per 1,00 SIZED LIMESTONE
WATER&amp;
SEWER LINES
Delivered To
FOR SALE
BASEMENTS &amp;
OHIO PALLET CO C-all614-997·6637
HOME SITES
HAULING: Limestone,
Pomeroy, Ohio
St. Rl. 7
Dirt, Gravel and Coal

GUN SHOOf

PdMEROY·Mulberry Ave.-Look at this Historical home
This home has cheny cabinels in lhe kitchen. a beau~lul
wooden archway, and large woodan pocl\et doors &amp;eper·
a~ng the living room the dimng area. Also has an open
stairway. 3 bedrooms. and a garage
$~,900
' WAS $32,900

Homes

71

35 Lots &amp;Acreage

58-- Frutl.l &amp; Vegetable~
59- For Sale or Trade

WANTED

OPEN 9 AM-9 PM
1-6-1 mo. d.

205 North Second Ave.
Middleport, OH

I•New

1·22·'92·1 mo.

949·2826

OFFICE 982·2886

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCfiON

985·4473
667·6179

391 WEST MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO
614-992-3524

INDEBTEDNESS

Real Estate General

J.,.

\~IJJSJ ·:

· Giveaway

57- Muaicallnatrumen.U

71- Autol for Sale
12- Truckl for Sale
42- Mobile Ho me~ for Rent 13- Van~ &amp; 4 WD'a
74- Motortyclea
43-- Farm• for Rent
75- Boall &amp; Molorl ((II" Sale
44- Apartment for Rent
16- Auto Paro. &amp; Aec•eotori••l
4S- Fumilhr..d Rooms
77- Auto Repatr
46-- Space for Rent
78- Cam pang Equapm~nt
47- Wanted to Rent
48- Equipment for Rent
SJ·: J!\ IU.S
49-ForLcaae

\II.IWII

Business
Training

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

32 Mobile Homes
lor Sale

to Acr• 01 Land For Sail, New

Business Services

Public Notice

item from the aala at any

11- Help Wanted
12- Satualio n• Wanted
1 ~ lru:urance
14- Bu1ine11 T raming
15- Schools &amp; Instruction
16- Radto, TV &amp; CB Repur
17- Milcellaneoua
18- Want~ To Do

14

se- Peu for Sale

41- Houae. for Rent

2- In Memory

446-GoiUpoUo

Heallll."'""" """"""'2,252.20
Capitol Ouday............l17.15
TOTAL DISBURSE·
MENT8 ............. 123,886.42
Total Roctlpta Over/
(Under) Diob.,""'""'807.07
Oilier Sourcae/
Recelpla ... ".............787.50
TOTAL OTHER FINANCING
RESOURCES
(USES).....................787.SO
Total of Roc. &amp; Olhar
Sourceo Over (Under)
Diob. &amp; Other
u........................l,sll4.s7
Fund C11h Bolance
Jan. 1, 1H1 .. - ... 33,826.94
Fund c;..h Bllonco
Doc. 31, 1H1 ......35,421.51
NON-EXPENDABLE
TRUST FUNDS
RECEIPTS:
ln18re&amp;L ....................... 110.38
Glllll .............................334.08
All Other
Revenue ... -.......... 2,700.00
TOTAL
RECEIPTS ......" ....3,144.46
DISBVRSEMENTS:
Capital Ouday.........2, 700.00
TOTAL DISBURSE·
MENTS.-..............2,7110.00
I Total Roctlpta Over/
(Under) Dlob............ 444.46
Total of Roc. &amp; Olhar
Sour- Over (Under)
Disb.MdOihar

JJ·:

32- Mobile Home• fo r Sale
33-- Farmalor Sale
34- Buaincea Bu1ldmga
a:&gt;- I.oo. &amp; Ac re~ge

Gallia County Meigo County Mason Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

u...........................444.46

Public Notice

Over 15 Words

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

Classifold pages cover the
following telephone exchanges ...

Public Notice

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

Monthly

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
10 00 p m. Saturday
1 00 p.m. Monday
1.00 p m. Tuesday
1 00 p.m. Wednesday
100 p.m. Thursday
1 00 p m. Friday

Rate

Words

lielp Wanted

AHo alngor notdtd lor
·
-2 to Rt.
BoxTrio".
314-8,PlooM
Llllatt,retiiY
WV
211253.

3 Announcements .

. RATES

The Dally

Ohio

1992 .

OhiO

or-

U....,oom no.
Extrolll blttt (M mllitl 110.
104-171o4111.

Livestock

63

••

81

Home
Improvements

Alfordabto Protuolortol Homo :
lltpolr. Elaclrlcal, Plt~nblng,
Raoflng, No 1o1&gt; 1oo ...11, friO "
lltlmaf•, pleeu caH 1tt.r 7:00' ,,
PM or lolvo - - . 304-1753984.

'j

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
•l
Uncondlllona! lllo41mo guoran. ·;

l11." l.ac* ref.,.ncll fum&amp;.had. ·,
Froo ootlmataa. c.n cottact 1· '

114-237-04M; day or niQht.l o
Rogers: Ba•nwnt Wattrproo..l 1
ling.
.:
Sot.Upa,' .)
RIPI!rwi ComiMrfcal, R.........~ ~
1111 lmpoov-o. - n g:•u

Complot•--

Pl~~lcol. lnsuronce

plld. IM--1111 •n

3 Panlaa For Sols, 814·256-8752. Clolrns

64

Hay &amp; Grain

•

Services

Curtla

Home

lmPf'OYtiMntt: ~~

Years Exporlanca On 01c1ar , , ,
Homto.W""'
R- -R...
-~
. •
Hay $2. par bolt, 304-456-1151. Fo-tlon
Khc- And &amp;;ti;., FrH'"E't ,..
tlmaiMl Reference~. No Job To 11 1
Blfl Or SmaAIII4-4~HI225 .
F,..,..n·· Plumbing And ..... ,. '•I
lng, 114·251-1111. •
·
.'
71 Autos for Sale
A ' TV S. 101
1ro 1 1 •a
~ ~~~
•_.~~hztng
1HI All_.., Amarlcan, IJCC lnonZons....
r.u 10 rftli
motl , ,
ccnd lnokla l out, runs good, othtr , IIIIo '"
$1,200.304-882-3471.
~ ...
11111 Ja·-"-....._, Nnl .......
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&amp;11-891-N41
Divis
SOW.'lac
Sotvlcs,

;..:.=....;..;.-;--:-;:-::-::;::-::::-- -

:r.:...=al:Ia=··!f.':

1878 Chryalor Cordobo, Good
Condhlon, Na Rult, 114-3'79:22tl.
1978 Chryotor Cordobo, now
oelnt, ,_ UrN, $1000, 304-875::
h5
:::..:..
5a::.cnc:.•...:5,::.
11'.:..
!.1 - - - - - 1978 Ford F-150, cx4, 381 Motor
And llody, Exctltlnt CondHion.
114-4411-1»1.
1911 Chevy cnotlo~5 motor,
no ruat, 1550. S
• olfara
only, 304-875-1821.
1ee2 PI~ Rollonl Stotlon
WIIJOfl,, 2.1 Flk . Condlllon,
Would M&amp;ka Nlco Worlt·Gor. IW.
387.Q594.
1112 Pontiac T·1000, 54,000111,
AO, 4dr., 1ut0 •• $'1571, 814-1112·

Oaa~ C..a Rd. Putt, , ... ,''
pllal, pickup, and dill_.,. 114- -~
441-0214.
')\
Will build polio co..., dack::i!a .fl

- - room&amp;, put up vi "
akllno oor 1rolltr skirting. 6
2

2~
82 Plumbing &amp;
'Heating
---:Co~~-""·""·_,..;.bl,ng
......._

..

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Fowlh snd Pint
-~Ohio

1114-44 Ill
--------- 1
S4 Electrical &amp;

!

Refrigeration
-a-;;jd•da~'-d'~~;;;;;;j;
21St .
llooo .,._ or 0011111••i!ll
:=;-'-;;:::::;::--;;:=;--;::;::;.1wlrlnt,
1113 Honda Accord,

11,1131111, oltvar llllrlor,

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304-871-

-Milvolirrouya,
- .oi+MH844
$1500,
-"1'111=.- - - - - - auot~ntt

:

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87 UptiOIIttry
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Pag&amp;-1 o-The Dally Sentlnei
'

U.S. hits lowest infant mortality
rate ever, but still trails many
I

By ROBERT BYRD
Associated Press Writer
ATLANTA (AP)- The United
States recorded its lowest infant
mortality rate ever, but black
babies still die at more than twice
the rate of whites, and the nation
trails much of the developed world,
federal researchers said Thursday.
The rate for 1989, the most
recent year for which statistics are
available, was 9.8 deaths by age I
for every 1,000 live births, tile U.S.
Centers for Disease Control said.
That surpasses the record of 10.0
set the previous year.
Japan has the world's lowest
infant mortality rate, 5.0 for 1987,
the latest year for which complete
international statistics have been
compiled. Sweden was second at
5.7. The United States that year
was 24th at 10.1 , just behind New
Zealand and just ahead of Israel.
"Our international ranking has
slipped," said Dr. Marian F. MacDorman of the CDC 's National
Center for Health Statistics. "In
1980, we were ranked 20th in the
world, and now we're 24th."
The CDC said increased use of

. TRAVIS HYSELL

Celebrates birthday
Travis Anthony Hysell, son of
Terri and Bruce Hysell, recently
celebrated his first binhday with a
party at his hoe in Poca, W.Va.
A birthday cake decoratcd with
a train and ice cream and soft
drinks were served to Travis and
his patcmal grandparents, Patty and
Norman Hysell , Pomeroy; his
maternal grandparents, Ann and
David Zirkle, Racine; his cousins,
Tabitha Snyder, Pomeroy , and
Amber Maynard , Racine; and
Kelly, Tricia and Nathaniel Easter,
Poca, W.Va.
Sending gifts were his paternal
great-grandmother, Dora Hysell ,
Long Bouom; maternal greatgrandmother, Roberta Swi sher,
New Haven, W.Va.; and Debbie,
Cecil and Jesse Maynard, Racine.

prenalal care would have tile greatest impact on infant deaths from
every cause other than birth
defects.
The U.S . infant mortality rate
has dropped significantly throughout the 20th century, although the
decline ha s slowed in the las t
d~ade . . .
" The simple reason infant mortality rates have gone down is that
medical technology has gotten better and bener," said Joseph Liu, a
senior health associate with the
Children's Defense Fund, a nonprofit children's advocacy group.
"We have done absolutely nothing 10 make sure pregnant women
can get prenatal care," he said.
"We are relying on the miracle of
modern technology to save very
sick babies, while failing to provide
up·front preventive care to make
sure more babies are born
healthy."
For 1989, the black infant mortality rate in the United States was
18.6, compared witll 8.1 for whites.
The leading cause of death for
white infants was binh defects; for

black infants, it was prematurity or
low binhweight
And the disparity is increasing,
the CDC said. The white infant
mortality rate dropped 4 percent
from 1988 to 1989, from 8.5to 8.1,
while the black rate actually
increased slightly, from 17.6 to
17.7.
The federal government has set
goals of a white infant mortality
rate of 7 and a black rate of II by
the year 2000. Whites are on track
to make it; "however, for the black
population, the year 2000 objective .
for infant mortality is unlikely to be
met if current trends continue," tile
Atlanta-based CDC said.
A White House task force, Liu
noted, has said tile infant-mortality
gap between the United States and
Japan costs this country $7 billion a
year in health spendmg and lost
productivity the children could
have contributed when grown.
' 'For a fraction of tlla~ we could
provide guaranteed insurance coverage for every pregnant woman
and infant in this country," said
Liu.

Teen lifts reattached arms;
doctor calls limbs ~keepers'
By ED STYCH
Associated Press Writer
ROBBINSDALE, Minn. (AP)
- A teen-ager whose arms were
reattached after being severed in a
farm accident showed how remarkable his recovery has been when he
raised his bandaged arms at a news
conference.
" It hurts a little bit, but not
much, " John Thompson sa id
Thursday to applause, as he lifted
his left arm several inches and gingerly swung it back and forth.
The 18-year-old later lifted his
right arm a few inches but said it
was painful.
" I was all excited, especially
when he raised his arm. Boy, did
they cheer then," said his uncle,
Lynn Thompson, one of about 100
friends and relatives who watched
on television at a community center
in Thompson's ·hometown of
Hurdsfield, N.D.
"My goal for John is that he can
pinch, that he can pull and grasp
something, and that someday he
can feel with his fingers," said Dr.
Allen Van Beck of North Memorial
Medical Center. " I believe his
hands are ... keepers. His arms are
keepers.''
Thomp son will need two or
three years of therapy and surgery
before knowing how much use
he'll have of his hands, Van Beek

said.
The high school senior told how
he staggered 400 feet to his house
after his arms were ripped off Jan.
11 by a piece of farm machinery.
He twi sted doorknobs with hi s
mouth , clenched a pencil in his
teeth to telephone for help and
reminded ambulance workers to
pack his severed arms in ice.
Thousands of people worldwide
have sent him letters and contributed about $3':8,000 to help pay his
medical bills.
"I think they really have blown
it out of proportion, " Thompson
said of those who have praised his
courage. "I think everyone would
have done the same thing .... It's
just my will to live, or something."
Van Beek said Thompson will
have one more operation before
leaving the suburban Minneapolis
hospital in about two weeks. He'll
have a tutor to help him catch up in
school, but needs a voice-activated
computer to do schoolwork, the
doctor said.
·
Sitting in a wheelchair with his
arms resting on pillows, Thompson
said he worries about his future.
"It's scary, not knowing how
much use I'm going to llave of my
arms. and the things I won' 1 be able
to do now, and the big changes I'II
have to make in my life," he said.

Alfred community news
Ho church services were beld at
Alfred United Methodist Church on
Sunday due to a furnace malfunction. Those from tile church attending the services at Tuppers Plains
UMC included Kevin Brooks, Hallie and Aaron, Eloise and Russell
Archer, Aorence, Richard and Tim
Spencer.
Nanna Jean and Gerald Swartz,
Reno, and · Alma Swartz,
Williamstown, W.Va., visited Nina
Robinson and Clara Follrod.
Hobart Swartz is at Marietta

Convalescent Center, 117 Bartlett
Street, Maricna, Ohio 45750.
Martha and Joe Poole visited
Wilma and Howard Parker on
Route 7.
Virginia Burke is at Pomeroy
Nursing and Rehabilitation Center.
Tim Dorst of Zanesville and
Charles Stearns of Rutland visited
Marguerite and Delben Stearns.
Recent guests of Imogene and
Lcste~ Keaton were Mary, Jim and
Julie Halle and Glenna Buchanan,
all of Barlow.

WEEKLY
\

REPAIRS UNDERWAY - Richie Blankenship an·d Keith Hunt, students in the senior
welding class at Meigs High School, worked
Thursday afternoon to repair the iron renee
around the mini-park in Pomeroy, as George

· Sending gifls were ~aternal
lrandfather, Carl Roach, Charlie,
Stoeny and Andy Kitehen, Mel and
Hope Dllko, Peny IIlli Sylvil Cart,ls; Doq and Carolyn IIU..U. AI
4nd Sao Pooler, E'd, lalec and
Alllllllla Y0111o and Ra)'tnond and

FRIDAY
POMEROY - Revival at Old
Bethel Free Will Baptist Church on
Route .? and Story' s Run Road will
be held through Saturday at 7:30
p.m. nightly. Rev. Nonnan Taylor
is the evangelist. Pastor Ralph
Butcher invites the public.

Wright, an assistant instructor ror the class,
looks on. The repair or the fence is a joint project between the Pomeroy Merchants Association and the welding class.

RIPLEY - The Liberty Mountaineers will perfonn at Skateland
in Ripley, W.Va. on Friday.
TUPPERS PLAINS - There will
be a round and square dance sponsored by the Tuppers Plains VFW
Post No. 9053 and Ladies Auxiliary on Friday from 8 to II p.m. at
the post home. Music will be provided by CJ. and the Country Gentlemen. The public is in vited.
LONG BOTTOM - The Faith
Full Gospel Church in Long Bottom will have prea ching and
singing on Friday at 7 p.m. with
Pastor Steve Reed and local
singers. The public is invited and
fellowship will follow .
HOCKINGPORT -There will
be a round and square dance at
Hockingport on Route 124 at tile
home of Kenny and Millie
Reynolds on Friday from 8 to
11 :30 p.m. Music will be provided
by "Don, Buddy and the Smokey
Mountain Drifters." Jim Brown
will be the caller.

ANTIQUITY - There will be a
song fest on Friday at 7 p.m. for the
re-opening of the Faith Fellowship
Crusade for Christ Church. Featured singers include Homeward
Bound Singers, Jackson; Glory
Land Singers. Delaware; Highway
Gospel Singers, Columbus ; and
others . Rev . Franklin Dickens
invites the public.
SATURDAY
MEIGS - The Meigs Counly
Grange Youth Group will meet
Saturday at 6:30 p.m. at Ponderosa
in Gallipolis, followed by a meeting at 8 p.m. at the home of Patty
Dyer. All grange youth in Meigs
County are invited to attend.

PlmltoldL

nm

11...,..-ortl2..170

Pyle

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1111 AQ Day
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BURLINGHAM - The Burlin¥.ham Modem Woodmen Camp will
sponsor a potluck on Saturday at
6:30p.m. at the Woodmen Hall.

a

POMEROY - "Invisible Boy"
and "Wee Gillis" will be shown at
the Meigs County Public Library in
Pomeroy on Saturday and Sunday
at 2 p.m . and at the Middleport
Library on Monday at4:30 p.m.
RUTLAND - There will be a
round and square dance at the Rutland Americari Legion Hall on Saturday from 8 p.m. to midnight with
music by County Kin Band. Ray
Fitch wiD be the caller. The public
is invited to attend.

LOTTRIDGE - Country Music
ATHENS - The Southeastern
Ohio Traditional Dance Society Night at the Lottridge Community
will hold an old time square/contra Center will be held Saturday from
dance on Saturday from 8 to II 6 p.m. to midnight. Refreshments
p.m. at the Dance Factory in will be available and the public is
Athens. Cost is $4 per person and invited to attend. All bands are
Kathy Anderson is the caller.
welcome.
SUNDAY
FAIRPLAIN - The Liberty
POMEROY - A 12-step AA
Mountaineers will perform at the meeting will begin Sunday at 7
Jackson County Jamboree in Fair· p.m. at the JTP A office, 117 West
plain, W.Va. on Saturday.
Second Street in Pomeroy.
MONDAY
COOLVILLE - The Coolville
POMEROY - The Disabled
VFW Post No. 3478 will have a American Veterans (DAV) will
chili dinner at the Coolville Lions meet Monday at 7 p.m. at the hall
Club building on Saturday from 4- at 124 Butternut Avenue in
7p.m.
Pomeroy.

Motion
1111 Today With Marilyn
8:05 (I) l La.. Lucy
8:15(1) NIWI
8:30 Ill D 1111 Ntwt
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Appearing Saturday
Feb. 8th
9:30. 1:30'

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11 :05 (I) (FR) Lillie HouH on lilt
Prllrle
11:30 CZl S.aame Smt
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AFTERNOON
12:001llD Ill (I)D llll IIZII
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1!J (MO,TH,FR) The Judge
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Dog Show
Cookln' USA
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12:15 1121e XVI Olympic Winter
Qa""•
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Must be 21 years old

MIZWAY TAVERN
Corner of St. Rt. 143
and St. Rt. 7
Pomeroy, Ohio

1:0&amp; IJl (MO) MOYIE: Rio Lobo
(I) (TU) MOYIE: Hondo and

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(IIOJ c:.ndld'Cimerl
(1V,WI,TH,I'II) ..........

g,.:.

700 1M-,.

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vision company that chopped MTV
for a pay-per-view inuslc video
channel is ·teaming to its chapin
that MTV, l~ rock 'a' roll, is hele
to stay.
.
· Dallas-based Sammons Communications Inc., with about SO
· cable systems in 19, stites and
920,000 aubscHben overall, on
Jan. 1 tlntDDod MTV from ill systems semni Jolmaan City, Tenn.;

II

Mouritalllllr M§lzlne

iiJ My Slaltr 8tm 1;;1
rll Qolng Our Way

5:00 0 MOYIE: Clllrllt Chlln at
IMWuM-(t :30)
D S.Citlt Dl 8petrl
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lllllhowlll Today
5:20 II)) NIC Nlflllllldt
5:30 IJl Fllhlng Willi ROIIInd

D SporteCanter

!Ill Colltg1 llaktiiiH

P..vttw
IIIII Not Juat 11111 Ntwa

AFTERNOON
12:00 l2l D II)) NBA Stay In
School Jem Well-known
athletes and actors
encourage kids to stay In

a

(MO,TU,WE,FR) on

Staga

Ill (TH) Go1pel Jublltt

2:50 (I) (TU,FR) Ton al Fun
3:00 (2) G II)) llnta llrba,.
(!)The Hont,_..
(I) (J) • Cltntral Hoepll.al
ll) (MOl leal of Joy of
Painting
CZl (TU) Jenkin•' Art
Wortclhop
CZl (WI!) Art of William
Altunder and Shllron
Ptrtclna
CZl (TH) LancliCipet by
Norma
(l) (FR) Joy of Country

Palntlna

(!) (MO,TU) QED

(!) (WE) Newton'• Apple
CIJ (TH) Economtca O$A
Cil (FR) Advontwea In Scelt ·
Modallng
1!11 a= e Quilling Light
illlll Chip 'n' Dalt'e Reaclll

Range,.

0 (MO,TU,TH,FRI

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• (TH) Bilek Colltgt
Sparta Today
lllllnltmallonal Hour
~ Father Knowt 1111
3:05 (I) Tom lind Jerry'a
· Funhouat
3:30 (J) S.vtrl by the Ball
CZl Miller Ragen'
Ntlghbortlood
CIJ {MO) Landacapea by

5:35 (2) e Home Shopping
1:00 (!) Ill 1111 Patel Program
IJl Flahln' With OrlandD
Wllaon
illlll 0. Jamea Kennedy
1121·-

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Ill Ufe Cholotl
liZ. utili Mtnnald
ill Allllott and Colltllo
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ColreapondtntlfNiwt
1111 Mldweat Angler Fishing
lor small mouth bess on
Lake Michigan, Ind.
8:35 (2). MOVIE: NIQinlfde
(0:25)
7:00 (2) • Saturdty Rapori/TIIla
Wttk In Plrlllment
(!) Larry Janel
(J)
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Toad Wan
t!Zeln
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of Wlnnlt Ilia
Pooh
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(!) Advtnlu,.l In Scelt

1:30(2)~, YOOII Q

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BulllliiU Report

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!Ill Ntwameker
Stturday,INtWI
1111 Wagon T,.tn
1:45111 1121. Calltglllllcttbell
~ke at Louisiana State (L)

0.:!: lAd
ClooH
·

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a Newi/Tht 111g Story
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• lackylrll Alnlrlca
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!Ill Ntwa/HHitiiWtak

charges up to $2.50 per viewer

~ wu a Vfil'/ Bid Idel, even

a

1111 fllullliHII Kkll
8:05 (I) wcw -Hour

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D Colltgl ltllcttbell
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DFIIhiii'Holt

!Ill Ntwa/Mioror,.,.y,.wraHalok
1111 New Arcloltt
10:00 (2) • II)) WlahKid Starring
Macaulay Culltln Q
(!) ltbe WJnldemin'a Good

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~m
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Rill Olioatllultan Q

CIJ Wtltllltllar Clod ·
1111 ODl-agt Mutant
Nif11 TurtiH C
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rll AIIIM'I er.tll

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5:051J) Happy Dayt
5:30 IJ). Chttra
(!) flllolltOMI
CZl Cil Where In the World Ia

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2:00 Ill. Colltgl lllktlball
Tennessee at Alabama (L)
CZl Sowing Willi Nancy
(J) e World Cup Skiing (T)
(!) Travel• C
l!lle MOYtl: Highlander (A)
'(2:30)
II)) NIIC SportaWorlcl
Sudafed Skating and
Gymnastics Spectacular trom
Vail, Colo. (T)
1!J MOVIE: Dllth Hunt !AI
(2:00) Stereo.
Chllmplonliilp Rodeo

9:00 (2) D 0 Caplaln N lnd the
Ntwa- Marlo World Q
(!) Wttkand Mornlug NeWt

lltHng

Wttk
1111 POpaya
10:01 (J) Natlonll Ollognlphlc

Exptonor

ill hi·

10:30 (2). ill Clllp • P!flltr'•
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(!) LOlli Rlnglr

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Kentucky 11 Alabllma (L)
CZl Marcia Adllma: HHrtllnd
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C!J Where In 1M WGfld It
~ S.Odltga? Sttreo.

a

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Klallllli

Angling

Advlntina tee flshlng In
canada. Stereo.

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--

In ~11 Journalltm The
annual presentation of
awards tor the best in radiO
and Tv broadcastjoumallsm.
Host: Ptltr Jennings. (1 :00)
Ill Remadltlng and
Dtcoratlna Todar
Ill Ntwa/On 1M Menu

llllllig Yallty
3:05 (I) MOYIE: Deadly Qame
(1 :55)
3:30(!) W~h Shop
Stereo.

!Ill Ntonflhawllll '11111

Willi 1111

WAllrtrll. Dupont' Award•

(L)

Journal

• Newt

2:30 CZl 1111 of Joy of Painting
!Ill Newlfllylt With EIH
Kltnlch
3:00 (!) IIIOYIE: Fltah Qordon
(2:00)
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Payne
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State at Wisconsin

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America

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loll
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D. (WI!) Up Clott
8llowiiiJ Today
1111 POPIYI
'
5:35 (l) ·. ltffenonl

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112111 Hlgh-0
Qraal Amertc:on Outdoora
Stereo.
!Ill Even• and Novak
8 D Paid ,.,..m
1:00 (2) • 8tbe Wlnkltmtn'a
Good Fllhlng Utah's Green
River Is the setting fOf some
good bass ltshlng.
(!) MOYIE: American Q,.llltl
iPG) (2:00)
(l) Grill Amartcan Oultt
Stereo.
(I) • Dwight Freeman
Marshall basketball.
CIJ Hometlme
1!11 112111 CBS Sportl
Special Busch Clash from
Daytona Beach, Fla. (L)
ill l'tld l'lognom
rll Exciting World of Speed
and llHuty Stereo.
Outtlde the Llntl
Sterlods: Whatever It Takes
!Ill NtWIDiy
11 COllege lllketbel
Purdue at Ohio State (L)
1:05 (I) MOYIE: Salvage (2:00)
1:30 Ill. SportaCenllf

a

0 Holtwood
Ill Joy of Qanlanlng

OMyTwoDidt

WThil
Old HOUle 2
llbe Winkleman 1 Qood

1111

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Rldtn tn ... Sky Q
• ~lPN OUtdoon

illlD Tlny T09111

Cllllllll S.OIIi~D?
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Ill (MO,TU,WE,TH) Newt
1111 (FRI HHrt of Ollla
l!lle
Bllvtda,.

IJl•

IIIII Hammerman Q
~ Cltrberl Stereo.
7:05 (I) Qunarnollt
7:30 Ill• Mr. Cartoon
(J) World Tomorrow
(J) • II)) Capttln Pllnll
and the Plane-. Q
Ill Agrl Country
llll• Toxic CruHdtrl

Ill Jtop mtrt

~~~"fwomen•• Pro Snow

Again
~ Tht VIrginian
12:051Jl Lillie House on lila
Pralrlt
12-.30 CZl Victory Gtrll111 C
ABC Wttktnd' Special

!Ill Dayllrllk

(J) • Wllo • Ilia Boll?

(I)' Fllllfnll Willi

Roland

Mllrtln

CZl Thta Old Hou.. C
(!) ~841 Ftrl"wty
~ttreo.
· illlD
w..atllng

a

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8 Country Blat Stereo.

!Ill EarlyPrlme

8 • P10 loxtng IBF

Middleweight Championship:
James Toney (2IHI-2, 20
KOs) vs. oave Tiberi (22-2-3,
7 KOe). 12 rounds. from
Atlantic City, N.J. (T) ·
lllllonanu
5:30 (I) Flahln' With Orlanda
Wllaon
~ New Yankee WOIIlliiop

WWind In the WHIOwt

I!J Gonzo Gamet
!Ill Ntw-kw
Saturdty/Ntwt

8 0 Bob Yllt'l Home

ID SportiCtnler

Grimm

Df

!Ill NtWIDiy

II)) K·TV

(!)

James Toney (2IHI-2. 20.
KOs) vs. oave Tiberi (22-2-3.
7 KOa), 12 rounda, from
Atlantic City, N.J. (LL
~ ~"Ill" TV 1;;1
~ t:~'1an Dl U1 Q
Ill Elalllng WGfld lpMd
andlltuly The
McKewen/Ciarll r~ng team;
the making. of Ilia Hot Rod
calendar. Stereo.
!Ill Ntwt/Futn Watcll
5:00(!) s-Jutllet

N.Y. (T)

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a

1121. Otrlldo
II)) Donllhlll
I!J Juat 1M Tan of Ua
IIIYldtoPM
D (MO,TUJ Moniter Truck

Flahlng Uteh's Green River
·is tile selling for some good
bass fishing.
till. MOVIE: Sword of tht
'llllint (PG) (2:00)
1121D Kld1 Mag
1!J MOYIE: Child of
Darllnett, Child of Ught
(2:00) Stereo. Q
ill Ramodetlng arod
·
Dtcorlting Today
ID World Cup Skiing
Freestyle from Lake Placid,

(I) Bltwaan 1M Untl

Ra,..,.

(!) s...me StrHI
l!lle BIIUtluic•
1121e 221
I!J Prlaa Your LUck
lnliclt Polltlca '12
1111 Captain N
4:35 (I) Brady Bunch
5:00 (2). Colby Show
(!) ~,WE) utili Mermaid
(!)
,TH) Kldd Yldto
(!) FR) Ponr Team
(I) ~ Povlcli
CZl !!.,~ Rainllaw

l!llllaba Wlnkl-n 1 Good

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Show
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(!) VIctory Glrdtn 5!_
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Thoroughbred Dlgall

Norma
CIJ (TU) Craall'le LMng With

Sheryl llardtn
Cil (WE) WelCome 10 My
Studio ''.
(!) (TH) Bridge Clan
CIJ (FR) Home Front
illle Talt Spin
I!J Sc..llblt
rll Top Carll
1D (MO) NCAA Worntn't
Final Four Hlflhllghta
1D (TU) ,NCAA Final Four
Highllflhla
(TH) Thoroughlnd
Dlglll
1111 Fllhtr Knowa Blat
4:00 lllD 1111 iiJ Oprah Winny
(J) OuckTalta
(I)Gtnldo
(l)Stume
(JJ
Jenny Janet
(!) Body l!ltCirlc
illlD Dlrtcwtna Duck
1121D Cloldln Otrta
I!J 125,000 Pyramid
Ill Club Dance
, D (MO,TU,WE) Global
Suptrclrll Wrtatllng
D (TH,FR) PGA Clall
!Ill EartyP!Imt
1111- an Hot Wlilllt
4:05 (I) FIIQtatonn
4:30 (!) Chip 'n' Oalt'a RtiClll

schoOl. (1 :00)

(!) Soul T,.tn
til The Oantll Doctar.
Vtltrlnery Mtrllelne

r

r.tty
though It ma~e business sense.
Gl
Clllld
and
c.
...,
. Instead of paying MTV for its aer. vice, illY· about 20 cents per sub·
I••IICik·IMI'ulln
scribe~. the cable system would
I!.,NWA PIO Wmltog
IICIUII!y receive a shale of ihe julteboxeamlnp.
·
Ct;wlUoa
Orua-roots groups aprang up .
Neai,llt wand
overnisht, aponsoring call-in
~. PA.:i and VI~ NJ. · proteall, ralljca, petition drives
Tho CUI lltettiltl about 109,000 cable office pickctinl tihd othct
households. At the aame time, polltlcat
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a spona LlteNIQhl

1ukebox Nelworl\:, a Miami-based
By SCOTI MLUAMS
music video service which uses a
AP Televlsloa Writer
900-number
c•ll-in system and
NEW YORK - The cable tele-

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MORNING

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I!J Mqllt Oorlllt tnd

AMI X

. ON THE "T" IN MIDDLEPORT

I

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Amtricl

SHOP FRIDAY.
EVENINGS TIL 8 P~M.

POMIIOY

Dlrll River
(I) (TH) MOYIE: Summer of
'42
(I) (FR) Little llouH on Ilia
Prllrta
10:30 (2) e One on One Willi John
Ttah
Ill (MOl Night Court
i1J 11 Family Feud
11:00(2)8 Maury Pavich
(!)JoanRivln
(I) J.., Springer
· &lt;llDHome
Ill iiJ Prlct II Right
illlll 8ucctu-N-Ufe
II)) One on One With John
Telh
I!J Dlvorca Court

8:45 (I) Ntwa
7:00(2). @Today
(!) SuCCIII·N·Uia
(I) (J) D Good Morning

Save Up To

·'

(I) (TUI MOYIE: lllll(ed
(I) (WE) MOVIE: lncldtnt 11

FunhouH

potluck supper at6:30 p.m.
There were 41 members, visitors
and juniors present for the meeting.

fo •·

•

CZl Uvlng Willi·Anlmlla
Frugal BDunnet Stereo.

Martin

a

Law
CIJ (TH) Bu1int11 of
Manogement
CIJ (FR) Growing Yaa,.
liD II Mllodlla
1121e CBS Morning NtWI
1!J (MO) Paid Program
ID (TU,WE,TH,FR)
Sport1Center
8 llulintll Morning
1111 Jamea Roblaon
8:35 (I) Tom and Jtrrr'•

Shenefields presented certificates

IRS goofs

.

ESPN
CNN

=·

WVAH

•

SAT.. FEB. 8

Ill AD Wttklnd Report
1D NCAA Today

About Amelia

5:00 (!) (MO) Lo.. Boat
(I) Morning Agrtcullu,.
Report
II)) (TU,WE,TH,FR) NBC
Nlghtaldt
I!J (TU) Ptld Prog,.m
I!J (WE,TH,FR) My Sllhlr
S.m
!Ill (MOl SDort1 LlteNight
!Ill (TU,WE,TH,FR) ShowBiz
Today
5:05(2). (TU,WE,TH,FR) Home
Shopping
(I) (MO) Hog~n'a H-t
(I) (TU,WE,TH,FR) Gomer

Community calendar

America's Tax Team -

der;

=
Ill

011

WPIY
WINS

.

· MORNING

WINTER
CLEARANCE

inlncl.

USA

WCHS

WEEKDAYS

Thinking Day slated Feb. 29

give you peace

0
0

=
-·

IIlii
ID

IIIII

Reed hosts Reedsville club

STARTING FEB. 11.,.:00 PM
AT CARLToN SCHOOL
IN SYRACUSE, OHIO.
lllltnletOrlft lllck Howell
~
Jlnldne .
. ·FOr 111M lnfonnltlon C1ll

WOUI

•

Rex and Catherine Shenefield county quilt was discussed.
Eldon Barrows, lecturer, pre ,
were presented with Golden Sheaf
sented
a program on New Beginmembership certificates at the
nings.
A
reading, "A Funny Thin~
recent meeting of Star Grange.
Happened
on My Honeymoon'
The meeting was conducted by
was
given
by
Virginia Carson; a
Master Pauy Dyer.
by
Pauline
Rife; and a matchstory
Five applications for membership were read and the fourth ing game by all women present
degree was perfonned in full form . with Vicki Smith the winner. All
Eldon Barrows, legislative men present drew Valentines. Dan
Evans of Huntington Grange was
agen~ discussed several mancrs.
Opal Dyer, youth chairman, the winner. A closing readin~ of
An
educational
mov
ie
on
The January meeting of the
announced a county youth meeting "Beauty of the Forest" was g1ven
"Birds"
was
presented
by
Janet
Riverview Garden Club was held at
for Saturday at 6:30 p.m. at Pon- by Eldon Barrows.
The next meeting will be held
· · tile home of Frances Reed. Assis- Connolly and Dolores Frank. The derosa in Gallipolis, followed by a
Feb. 15 at 6:30 p.m. at tile grange
tant hostesses were Grace Weber movie showed birds frOm all over meeting at Patty Dyer's house.
the world and included the habitats
and Gladys Thomas.
The fundraisinR project with the hall and will be fun night with
"New Ycar" was the devotion and identification of the birds. The
topic read by Mrs. Weber. This was importance cif feeding and giving
prepared by Opal Harris. Members , birds warm water 10 provide a din· .
answered roll call by naming their ing and bedroom by having bird
The Big Bend Girl Scout Lead- the Racine United Methodi st
feeders and shrubbery in the yard
favorite song bird.
.
ers
held their regular monthly Church from l-4 p.m.
Following a discussion a letter for protection was stressed.
The
next
meeting
will
be
held
meeting
recently
during
which
lime
Games were directed by Nola
directed to Secretary of State Bob
r Thinking Day was announced for Feb. 27 at the Trinity Church in
Taft, was si~ned by members of the Young and Margaret G.rossnic~le Feb. 29 at Eastern High School.
Pomeroy.
club followmg his decision to sup· with everyone receiving a prize.
Set
up
time
is
3
p.m.
and
the
pan the Board of Elections action The door prize went to Marilyn program will be from 4-6 p.m. The
JACOBRQACH
on elimination of the Reedsville Hannum.
Refreshments were served by Middleport Seriior Troop is in
the hostesses to the above named charge of the program.
voting ~incl.·
Summer Day camp directors for
and Pauline Myers, Mary Alice
Bise, Betty Boggs, Phyllis Larkins, 1991 are Brenda Neutzling and
: Jacob Roach, son of Darin and
Marlene Putman, Nancy Wachter, Terrie Houser. Junior event chair()anna Roach, Pomeroy, celebrated
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) Maxine Whitehead and Ruth Ann man is Brenda Neutzling and
his first birthdily recently at the The IRS says it mistakenly told
Brownie event chainnen are Teresa
Balderson.
home of his maternal grandparents, more than 36,000 taxpayers filing
Wilson
and Carin Taylor.
The February meeting will be
Paul and Shelia Cunis.
electronic returns across the nation
There
will be a
and
· A "Disney Babies" theme was that they were gelling about $40 held at the home of 1an ice Young.
for leaders
¢arried out with a cake, ice cream million in refunds.
fnd'punch served 10 the guests.
Many of tllose people may have.
. Attending were Darin and already borrowed money against
Donna Roach, Paul and Shelia Cur- the refunds, and banks now stand
(is, paternal grandmother, Dorothy . to lose millions of dollars.
Janice Lawrence, a spokeswomRoach, Gary Curtis, Alban and
fdiChelle Curtis, Tammy and an with an Internal Revenue SerMcgan ~dams, Hopey Dec.ker, vice office for Kansas, in Wichita,
Cathy ani! Katlyn Sauvage, Becky said the error was caused.by anow~ewell, Stacy, Megan and Amber corrected computer glitch.
Tripp, Ernie, Shirley, Erin and
Brandon Smith, AJ. Thomas, Amy
MEIGS COUNTY KARATE
Smith aJid BJ1dley Shrivers, Olarla
· Roach, Lori and Jamie Bailey,
CLUB
We guarantee your satisfaction. And our experience
Trudy, Kasey, and Jordan
WJI:.L HAVE BEGINNING
Williams, Jo.e Anthony, Jenny
In preparing
and accurate tax returns will
KARATE CLASS
-' .
':t'll;tieltUi ~~d Kim Sny-

:First birthday

TIS

SATURDAY

CD XVI Olympic
Winter Oamea HOCkey;
lllplntllcllng. men's downhill
praotlee ~s;~ljumplng

'from
acttcePalm terSprtnga,
~
So'::'
Game
Calli. (I,L
lC4IIItr 1;;1
I, _ MudandracingTnootDr
from
·
Wlleamllllok.
Truallt

Franklin, Ga. SltiiQ,
D ~ Qolf Plllr·Mor II

lnVIrfiiY, 2nd round from
Laudllrhlll, Fll. (1:.)

elllwt/IPOIII etaaa-Up

IJCIINRooht
... ~ l'nlgii'Oountitl Sino.

If e .... iolllng IBF

MlddliWIIght ~~lp!

..

EVENING
I:OOC2lD We llll Oe
Newt
(!) Uftetytea of the lllch a
Famoua
(I) Qat! United Airlines
Hawaiian Open, 3rd round
from HonolUlu (L)
~ Ntwton't Apple Stereo.

WWild Amtrlcl Stereo. Q

liD • Onoclge Mllcli
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1111 D. XVI Olympic

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11:35 a • Roggln'a H-.

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Junior Ftalhtrwtlght
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Ill Thll Week In lhe NBA
illl Mtdtllnt Stereo. I;J

8 Pilei Progtlm

~

From Honolulu (T)
Ill EtrlyPrlmt
5:05 (I) WCW Main Evant
5:30 (!) Tony Brown'• Joumol
0 My Two Dodo
a Truck• ond Troctor
Po- Mud racing from
Franklin, Ga. S11reo.
Ill Thlo Wltk In lhe NBA

[fl Lllf

Ill Jimmy HauiiOnlluldoon
Ill_,,._,_
1:011 ()). TV Clolpel

,.

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4:30D NASCAIIIIMilll 1'1111
qullllylng from Daytona, Fla •
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'

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lor lnldnnoutli buill
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i

informant needs protection
when her cover is blown.
Stereo. [J

(!) Ara

til On Slolrl Stereo.
18 8portl Tonight
ID ~· Stereo. I;J
11:30(11 K=s!.
II) E
n Journal

~\=\"~

illl Block Sltfllon Stereo. I;J
9:00 ~ D OJ MOYIE: 'In lilt
Lint of Duty: Sltgt II
Marton' NBC Mondey Nlghl
pj.lflt MOVIII (2:00) Stereo.

~=.,:reo.

0 =r.-Ont Mora Train

to Rob iPGI (2:00)
11:35aJe i1J1 Tonlghl Show
Stanlng Johnny Caroon
Slereo. ·
CllChttrai;J
12:00 (J) D Dannlo Miller
®l Arllrllo Hall
liD. LoYI Conntcllon '
c e 'Swilling-..·
Crime nmo Aflll' Primt
nmo Stereo. Q .
I!) Tht Equalillf
a Nolhvllll Now Stereo.
1D Colltat BatktlbiH Utah
State at New Mexico Slate

Now

c

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0 Scooby Doc
Ill Up CioN
0 z"'"' Stereo. 1;J ·

6:35 (I) Andy Orlflttlo
7:00
iiJI wtoltt of Footunt

IJl•

11i Tht Jtlllflon~
(l)tnelde Edlllon ~;~·
(J) • ca

a Etionl~"..... Tonlghl

IIIIMBA OTP Roctng 24
Hours 11 Daytona (T)
IIIWOIId10:30 (l) ONot PlrlormoncM Two
graet 111tn11 perfonn
baroque musiC by Scl~alll"
Handel end Bach. Star&amp; .,
~~~~~~~b*og
Foret 1iJ
I!)
lltlllly
Ill Ttlll ColoiiCIIooo Stereo.
11:011(]). (J). Gill
IIJ

a•

Ill lportiConter

D Colltgt Stlk-11 Illinois
at Purdue (L)
18 Crooeflra
7:35 (J) Stnford and Son
1:00 (]) e i!JIIn the Hul oflhe
Nlghl A black woman·e right
to raglilar 1o vola Is
disru~ted. Stereo. C
(II MOVIE: Milk 1~131
(2:30)
Ill (I) e Full Hou11 Joey Is
mesmerized by Danny's
sister until her pel chimp
dls'IJ':'""'· Stereo. C
I OIJr sense OfSmell
(l)

(PG13){2:00)
a Ojlry lllaQIIgt Sltreo.
llllttDriiCI .....
18 _,....... Tonlgli!
0 lloldtrloan SloraO. I;J
11:311 (])
0 Satu11111 Nlilht
Llvt Su~~n Dty. s-.
Ill MDVII: Anllllnd lhe
llrlltllii (2:00)
(J)
Alnlrta1n GS-.SIIIololnra
XVI 01y1nt11o
Wlnltr a-i In lftd I,!2Und
lhe W Wlnlll' oomn. 1iJ
• Grind Ole Ojlry Llvt

e

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Sllfeo.

OlngfNtWI

11:31 • • Clilarii;J
12:00(1)11110¥1E: ...... 111111 (II)
(2:00)
!.:'=~ w lind

=

c..ta... Llvt Dint
Paul~~· '
'Ill'

OII1Q .. . . . . , (L)

datacts mysterious aromas

and hidden mossag8s. I;J
®l
XVI Olympic
Wlnler Olmtl Figure
skating, pairs long program
(medals awarded); alpine
skWng, men's slalom .
combined; luge; hOckey, USA
vs. German~
1111e MOYIE:" l'loiDttr

ae

mc

i

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• Amtricin- 8loop

Q"

IIINtwi~-=•Guidt
OPIId
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Cunni Afllfr C Naill

1:30 l1l TWIIIglll zlllle T1ll1 Fniili lhe
Dlrllalde
Ill TtUI Cofoil~C~looo Sllfeo.
18 Ntwt/l'li1I1ICI
2:011 (]) e Homo It applng
(!)

Tife

·

sw.o.

f\.":::11

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IIIPrimt-IQ
llll That'o My Doil Stereo.
1:30 aJ. i1J1 Dlll~~enl WOIId A
HIIIman alumnus pays spacial
;antion to WMiey. Stereo.
lora You lltlng ..,_,od?
IIJII8
Otis is
happy Drerlll'e
about hisCllll
ax-wile's
r,lslon to remarry . Stereo.
American Mulllc Sloop
Stereo.
0 You Aakad for II, Again
Stereo.
1:00 al. iiJI Clillra Rebecca
~Its lo prove she Is able to
run lhe !lJr by herself.
Stereo. !OJ
II) (!) MylllfYI Polrol
discovers the pollllcal
stabillltl his country is at
slake.
IIJII8
trly Hill, 110210
Mal proposes to Jackie;
Brenda and Dylan plln a
S!"!&lt;ialavonlng. Stereo. !;I
0 MOYIE: Amazing Storlio:
Tht Movlt tv (2:00)
Ill Nalhvlfle Now Stereo.
Ill
IClng Llvel
llll Fllflt!.DowHng Myaltrfeo
Stereo. liJ
.
t.30 (]) e iiJ Winge CIMiars
regulars FraSier and Lllilh
Cre:llo film a video.
Sllfeo.
.
Ill
Stlkllbal
Temple 11 Memphis Slate (L)

Llny

10:00 (]). Ill L.A. LIW
Markowitz errangaa a movie
star's taxeo; Kelsay datal .
lhe baby oilier. Slereo. I;J
(I)MOYIE Pol'
Ill PG
(I)
: .-gt I I
.(~211f
:::~·!:"~
, ••••~ w~
(!)Uncltrf'lre
1111•
8 WOIId
""700 Club With~
fablrtiOfl
•••
10:30 (!) WIINIIglon R~
111 Crook tnc1
lt:OO""e Ill (J)e 8 c e
.

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... .,.
CZl Nliwtwolulo
Arallllo Hoi Stereo.
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.

Olllt8tlt sr~reo.
Qllporta ,......,
ID flodtrtown'SIOo:-o. I;J

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a-.a .

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I

of Robin

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GC44111r11Ftllal'
Ftorldi l!llalo 11 Ylrgk\ll (L)

18 Cr"'DIIF........ ,
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1:00(1)
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7:30 (2).
Cgo

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18 lilllrn1M a1111

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ID Tilt Wlflonl

on Elln .._.. (II) (f:OO)

. Klllr.

Tonight

0
18

MonMirt

lllleii)VIE: A

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Ill

(I) , _ TIIICkt:
Chlihtlrl

a. Cas Ntwii;J

700~.

Qlrll'

Stareo.

·-·
........

Ws

e~onc~y Orllllllo
I!) lcaabl Doc
Ill Up CioN
0 Zcirio Sllfeo. I;J
1:35 (I) Andy Orlflllll
~--• 01F-·
iiJI ,....,
:
..wne

IIJ. MOVIE: Dr8cula'1
-Love (2:00) .
Dormlloiy (2:00)

EVENING

1:30(]) • .i!JI NIC Ntwl ~
11)11vad bJ lhe Ill
(I) e AIFC
Wild Allllllcl · ·
SquaraOM .stereo.

0 . MOI!Itll'l

0 MDVII:

•

THU.. FEB.13

I :OO(])e Ill (J). Gill IIJ.
iiJI Ntwe
l1l V- Powlf
-~Square OM TV Stereo.
IINdiNng~AIInb@ r:;l '
ohl urlliJ
IIII'=
I!)
O .lnlfdt
Senior POA
Tour
18 World Todlly
1D 111n nn nn K I Cop
SIOreo ,.. ' •
• • I :OS Cllfl~.:1; Hlllblllll

12:30(1) • . . , ..........
CttiNIIlfl
18E-ttnciO Zolll Llvlll
1:00(]). lynn Allin
Glllllt.oob-

-~10:30 (I)
Nt.WI
Crool&lt; ond Chou
11:00())0 Ill (J)D ~ IIJII
OJ NIWI
II) Ntwewotch
On Sllge Slereo.
Ill Sporta Tonighl
llll-~own S11reo. Q
11:30 (I) Kollk C
II) Adlm Sftoltto
(J) D Nighlflnt Q
1111 C XVI Ol)implc
Wlnllf Olmta In and around
lhe '92 Winter ~amas. I;J
0 MocOyvor liJ
Church StrHI StiUon
IIISDottiCintlf
Ill Montyllnt

e

1:05 (I) MOYIE: Tht Shtdow
Rldtra(2:00)
1:3011) (J)D Wondlr Ytlrt
Kevin lrles 10 Impress a girl
wilhoullook~bad to the
QI.IYS- Stereo.
(!) lora You
ng Strvod?
Manioc M-lon Sloreo.

illlic.lll::C.
111. &amp;q.,... Ont""'
iV'stereo.

8

if
a e CBS Ntwt I;J
lllle Andy Orllfltfo

8:00 (I) (J) e Dooglt Howur,
M.D. Ooogle Is rurious over a

0 8coobr Doo .

television star's arrQnt

ID~anltr

maniputallon. Stereo. I;J
&lt;I&gt; Eclat Stereo. C
(!) Scllntlftc Amtilcon
Frontllfl Tho theoretical
slandard ol artificial
inlefligei Is examined.
Stereo.
11J Sttn
A former
baseball piayar vies for
Elaine's attention. Stereo. Q
Itt MOYIE: Burltd Allvo
(2:00) Stereo. C
Ill Nolhvlll Now Stereo.
0 Collage Baakotbefl Duke
at Georgoa Tach (L)
Ill Llny King Llvtl
ill! FtlfltLDowllng Mylltritl
Stereo. Q
.
1:30 (I) (J) D Anything But Love
Mike unexpectedly likes a

llll Zorro Stereo. I;J
6:35 (I) Andy Orlllhh
7:00
i1J1 Whttl of fortune

IJl•
iii
Tht JtHoraon~
Ill lnalde Eclftloil ....

aIll •Worran
Pereonot•
MUitr'l StiiOt of

CZl MocNtlt~
~WIHOUr
(J)DCond C11ntra
(!) Llgflllliveiii&gt;!!!IO
a Currarot Affair C
1111e
Ntxt
Oentrallon
@II En
nmtnl Tonlghl
Stereo.
I!)MocO
C
Ill Colltgl Bailitlbllt
Providence at Miami (L)
Ill Montyint
0 Tht Wlllonl
7:05 (I) Addamo Family
7:30 aJ. iiJI Jtoperdyl
11) Now h Con Ba ToliJ
(I) Enltrlllnmtnt Tonight
stereo. I;J
lf.ID Moirlld... Willi Chllclran

Compellllon

Ill ShowBiz Today
1:06 (I) - II Con Ba Told
1:30(J)DII'a 1 Uvlng
IIIIHIWI
@ e Nlgllt Oamtl
II! MOYIE!: Tht Sword and
lhe 80ICirar IRI (2:00)
Crook and ChiN
1D Amtrica'o Cup '92
Setting sail lor San Diego.
8 NtwoNighl UpdaiO
llll Paid Program
1:35 ()) D i1J1 LalOr WHh Bob
Collal
(I) Enl'!ll!lnmtn1 Tonlgllt
stereo. liJ
2:011 (J) D W~d Ntwo Now

s11ri1!·nre

a

romantic interest in Robin.

Slereo. I;J
10:00 ~ D i1J Nlghl Cou~
Christine meets her
ppponent; Dan moonlights as

c

stereo.

1111 CNN tWI
llllll MOYIE: Tht Privott
Lilt of Sherlock HoknttiPGi
(2:~0) '
Gil
II Can Ba Told
a Club Danca Sloreo.
iD NBA Todlly
Ill W9fldwldt Updale
llll 700 Club Willi Pot

lmponence of education.
(1 :00)
II) That Dallcalt Balance II:
Our BMI of Rl$tai;J
(!) FronUint
IDle Hunllf
Ill WOIId Ntw
.
llll 700 Club With Pol

·

D lnalde
POA Tour
18 WOIId Todlly
0 Rln 1Jn nn, K·8 Cop
Stereo. liJ
1:05 (J) Bav«&lt;y H-Ill
8:30 aJ 8 iiJ NBC Ntwe ~
(II livid br 11oe 1111

011 Rawhldt

a sexual surrogate. Stereo.

~Naw1

00
M.ocNtl~thrar
NtweHour

aWIIIII

F~nti;J

a Ba a Stir Stereo.

7:35 (J) IInford ond Son
1:00 ~. Colltat Btaktlbafl
Alabama st Kentucky (l)
(I) MOYIE: Daad of Nighl
(2:00)
II) (J)
Dlnou&lt;n Elhyl

Robtrtaon

e

Roba~aon

suprlses the Sinclairs when

10:05 (J) MQVIE: Sloalako(PGJ
(2:15)
10:301:111 Crook aild ClltN
11:00(])8 Ill (J)D ®l Gil
11J Ntwl
l1l Night Cilu~ I;J
&lt;I&gt; NtwiWIIch
~ 18 Araenlo Hell Stereo.

she has a near-dtalh
experlenoe. Stereo. C
CZl Scltntiflc Amtrlcin
Frontllfl The thoorallcsl
standard of artificial

intelligence is examined.

IS

Stereo. C

aWlntlf
iiJ .XVI Olympic
Olmta Spaid

3:00 Ill Up CioN
Ill Cro11flra
llll Pilei Program
3:30 (I) Plfd Program
0 MOVIE: Africa Scrumt

.

•:a-eo-...
SllriO.

.

~

...~.~. ~c::
llllllng

SllniO..

•.

...

.

(J) D Civil Wara The
ownership ot a show dog is
disputed; a judge decides a
boy's fa11. Stereo. 1;J
&lt;I&gt; Great Po~nnoncee
Dance choreographer Bill T.
Jones P&lt;!rforms. §!!&gt;reo. 1;J
(!) Edge Star~ Q
lllll8 Runtar
18 WOIId Now
0 700 Club Wllh Pot.

Ill Croltflrt

2:05 aJ D Homt Shopping
(I) Newt
iiJ NIIC Nlghltldt
2:10 ())MOYIE: A Minute 10 Pray,
I Stcond lo Dll IRJ (I :55)
2:30 (I) Dannfa MIDtr
all Nlghlwllch
Ill SporiiConler
Ill Sporll LlleNighl
2:40 World Newa Now Stereo.

III~Contlf

11:30(1)K:~
ID A
'aDa,_
Monitor
(J). Nlgloltint Q
II§ i1J. XVI QIYrnplc
Winter Oomea In and around
the '92 Winter Games. 1;J
Ill Montyllne .
0 MOYIE: Oregon Plutgt
(1:30)
11 :35 aJ e iiJI Tonlght Show
Slorrlng Johnny Clraon
Stereo.
(I)Chttrii;J
12:00 (J) • Dlnnlo Miller
all Arat11lo Hell Stereo. I;J
lllllll Lovt Connaction
De 'Sctna oflhe eMil'
Crimt nma Afltr Ptlmt
nmo S11reo. C
0 Tht Equtllllf
Nolhvllll
Stereo.
Ill Colltgt Volllyboll
Stanford at UCLA (T)
Ill Ntw1Nigh1
12:05 (I) NlghUinti;J
12:20 ()) MOVIE: Tht Burning HHII
(2:00)
12:30 (I) MOYIE: lralllltrl lmktrl
IPGI (2:00)
lllll8 WKRP In Clnclnnotl
Qllnalde Pollllca '92
12:3512). 11J 1.111 Night Willi
Dlvld Lt111rmtn
(I) Love Connactlon
1:00 (J) D Growing Ptlne C
Moilltd ...With Chlc&amp;an

ill
ti$ 18 Atwhlde

GI8Pifl0nllt
OMOVIE:Stcrel
ErtcUifoMrl (2:00)
a Sloowll• Todllr
llll Pold ~ram •
1:05 (I) Now 11 Con St Told
1:30 (J) 11'1 t Uvlng
1111 NIWI
IIJ • Night Olmoo
11!1 Crook and ChiN

e

Ill NCAA Flnll foow

Highlight. 1985: VIllano••·
Georgetown, St. John's and
~phis Stale.
Ill NtwoNighl UpdiiO
1:35. aJ e iiJ Llllf Wllfl Bob
Coltll
I
(I) EniOmlnmonl Tonight
Storeo. I;J
2:011 (J) • Wartd Now
Stereo. C
®l
CNN
""'" lllllloro DoHif
l!lle
MOVIE:
lfrloln (2:00)
C e Now H Con Ba Told
Ill Club OIIICI Sllfeo.
ID lnalde lhe POlo Tour
Ill WOIIdwlde Updott
0 700 Cllm With Pot

Robt2:05 (]) • Homo """"'ng
Ill Ntw1
iiJNBCNighiOide
2:20 (I) MOVIE: Tht Ovor-lfii.HII
Gong (1 :30)

0a MacOyvor
C
Barbara Mlftclrel and

skating, women 's 1500m;
alpine skiing, women 's
downhill combined; freestyle
f/'11~. mog~ts ;wonnen·s luge

Now

a

(I)

IIJ Ill Fomlly Feud

Now

Florida man is wanted for a

Ill Sporto Tonight
llll Bordtrtown Stereo. I;J

a

(1) Video POWif
\Zjllquare OM TV Stereo.

SloiOn' Ylf111Unt Sloow
Larry Gatlin and lho GoUin
Brothers. Robert Gillaume.

THURSDAY

•

.........

Clllllt'lekMi

Bill Cosby, Howie Mandel
end Burt Reynolds visH

of Foflunei;J
Ia eWhttl
Ftmly FIUd
St 1 Star Stereo.

3:00 Ill Up CloM
18 Croullrt
0 Paid PrPriioogonra&lt;nm
3:3011)11ob0 Colltgt lllktCotorldo II Iowa State (A)
18 Ntwt Ovemlglot
3:4518 Ntworoono Q
4:00 11) MOVIE: Maydloy II 40,000
FMU 12:00) ·
91 CNil HoNtitoe••nntll 1111e MOYIE: Thundtr lnd
Llghbolng (2:00)
18 Llny King Llvtl
4:05 (I) All In lot FMilly
4:35 (I) Hogon'o-

Tom Arnold,

various high schools relaying
anecdotes and the

'B WOIId NIWI Now Stereo.

d,.

Roseanne a"d

00
MlcNtiiL!..tlnr
NtweHourl;;!

Ill SpotiiCtntar
Ill ~ LlleHight

A• ,_ Hal Sllfeo.
/if MOYIE: ' " " - lclioof

10:00 ()) D i1J RMIOftlblt
Doubll Dicky lights for his
badge and freedom. (Pt 2 ot
2) S11reo. C
(I) CIJO Cflou Clownl

stereo. 191

WI
1111• MOVIE: Tht
Scalpto..,llfl (2:00)
a21 • Now 11 can Ba Told
0 Paid ~ram
a Club Danct S11reo.
ID Bioi of Amorican Muocll
Mlgeztne
Ill WOIIdwlcll Updott
llll TOO Club Willi Pol
Robt2:05 aJ • Homo Sloopplng
(I) MOVIE: Johnny Btllndl
(2:00)
ill Ntwa
iiJI NIIC NlghiOide
2:30 l1l Dannlo ®l Nlglilwotcll

Stlfeo.

Georgia at Louisiana State
(L)

111• Moilltd...Willi Chlldrwn

a

Ill Tht II
"Jill
" ' Pint
" ' -lptciall
(!)Lon

I;J

IIIMontyllnt
OThtWaMont
7:05 (I) Add11111 Family
7:30 ()). i1J1 JtaplrdYI C
(I) NOW h Ctn Ba ToliJ
Ill EniO!IIInmtnl Tonlgh1

tiJIIIRewhldt
Poraonalt
I!) Hollywood ··-r
lliJ ShowBiz Todoy
1:05 Ill Now 11 Can Ba Told
1:30 (J) e 11'1 1 Uvlng
®l Ntwl
@ • Nlglll Gtmtl
I!) Dog HOUM
Crook end ChiN
Ill NtwoNighl Update

~lttr

shows up with his girlfriend

at a party lor Kelli's
grandpa. Stereo.
Ill Colltgl Balko oil

OJ-

12:35(]). i1J1 Llle Nlghl Willi
Oavldlllltmlln
(I) Lovt ConnectiOn
1:00 (J) • Orowlna Peine C
~ Moilltd...Willi ChHGran

(1:00) Stereo.

deadlyland-run a&lt;:eident.
Stereo.
Itt Mu , Slot W~ C
Barbo.. Mlndrall ari!
Sflllfl' Yoltnllnt Sloow
Llrry Gatitn and lhe Gillin
Brolhers, RobeM Glllaume.
(1 :00) Stereo.
Ill PrlmtNtWI 1;1
Big llrollotr Jilko Stereo.

1:00 ~. Ill (J). 91 IIJ.

00 Atodf.:lfn!IQ!!I;J
B::J!
tQ

liD 18 MOYIE: Ov.-rd IPGI
(2:00)
i1J1 Unoolvad Mysllflla A

EVENING

Mountain, Colo. {T)
Qlln- Politico '12

Ill Llny King Llvtl

llll Folller Dowling Mylllrfel
Stereo. I;J
9:30 (I) (J) • Coach Stuart

M WED .. FEB. 12 M

Now

a

and hidden messages. C

Comtra

If

llll MOYIE: Tht Lilt Nard
Men IRI (2:00)
11:35()). iiJ Tonighl Show
Slorrtng Jolonny Coraon
Sterao.
(I)Chttrii;J
12:00 (J) • Dtmlo Mlllf
®l Araanlo HaH Stereo. I;J
1111e Love Connaction
OJ II 'U""'n Angel' Crlmt
nmo A~ Primo nmo
Stereo.
Nalh lit
Stereo.
Ill NlwiNiglil
12:05 (I) MOYIE: Clllow (PGi (2:05)
(I) Nlghtflne I;J
12:30 (I) MOYIE: Tht Deer Huntlf
(PI2 of 2) IRJ (2:00)
111111 WKAP Iii Clncinnotl
0 Tht Equallzlf
CD Snowbaanlng OP
Nationals from Co_pper

a NalhviHt Now StereO:

~mAIIotrQ
Stir Tw: Tlit Ntlll

e
Stereo.
0 MacO

WEDNESDAY

detacts mystertous aromas

(I)Ltgllllllve~

ae

2:40

H..,llf (Pt 2 of 2) (R) (2:00)
0 llltto Wllliillnlllf
K111ntl Club Dog Show
BrHds ln lhe Sporting,
Hound, Toy end
1lesl-ln·Show will be
benched and judgod. (l)
a On Stage Stereo.
Ill PrlmtNtWI C
0 Rtn nn nn, K-1 Cop
Stereo. !;I
1:05 (I) MOVIE: Tht Sacktllt
(4:00)
· 1:30(1) (J)e Hlrilpn;.,._ Bob Villa and
Tim match w~s In a test of
toot knowledge. Slereo. C
(!) lora You Sting Sarvtil'l
a Church Straol Sllllon
aJ Wllnlll lo Survlvll I;J
1:00 ~ • iiJ Llw I Dnltr A
15·year-oid boys claims to
have accldenla!!i:_ shot his
friend . Slareo. liJ
Ill (J)e RONinnt
Roseanne has to dacide
whether 10 have
breast-reduction s~rgery.
Stereo. C
CZl FrontiTne C
(!) Novo Our 1ionse ol smell

IDMH~
Ntwlltour

ill

Ill
- · Mulic Sloop
Sloreo.

'v

e

all G CIS Ntw• Q
I!D.AndyOrlllhh

4!1 NtwtNighl
12:05 (I) Nallonlf Gtographlc
Explorer
Ill NlgloUtnai;J
12:3011) MOYIE: Tht Dttr Hunter
{PI 1 of 2) (R) (2:00)
1111• WKAP In ClnclnntU
Qllnalde Pollllca '12
12:35 (])0 iiJI LaiO Nlglil With
DevldLtlllfmon
Cll Love Connection
1:00 (J) D Orowlng Pllno C
Mtrriod ... With Ctottirran

g~==:,eon

..IIIIi I;J

. ill£·~,.

(L)

~--··

11)(1) MOYIE: Mix.....
Oi.tldriNIRI (2:00)
&lt;I&gt; Ntw Country VIdeo
Slareo.
(J) • • • Tht Commlall
Tony enHslllhe aid of a
•lslting Los Angtlta
de11C11va. Stenio.- C
Cll Autun City Llmlf8 Stereo.

12:01 • • -

I:OS (I)
Hlllllllltt
1:30~. OJ NBC - . ~
®lived "' lhe Ball

Stereo.

Proof {PI 2 of 2)' ABC
Monday Night Movlt (2:00)
Stereo. 1;1
&lt;I&gt; Ame!tn Elperlonce
Stareo.
(!) Travu Q
a Naehvllle Stereo.
Ill Llny King Uvel
0 Folher Dowling MylllriH
Stereo. I;J
9:30 Ill Colltgt Balktlblll
Colorado at Iowa Slate (L)
10:00 11) Ntwl
(l) Donclng Men: Peg Ltg
Botoa The lite ol84·year-otd
Clayton Peg Lag Betas Is
t~cec as he recounts some
of the triumphs he
experienced and obstacles
he encountered. (1 :00)
(f) Ametlcen Experltnct
Stereo. C
111118 Hunter
18 WOIId NtwT
illl 700 Club WHh Pll
R-n
10:05 (I) MOVIE: Bloodopo~ IRI
(2:00)
10:30 Crook end ChaM
11:00 ~· (I) (J)D 1111 a2l e
IIJ NtWI
11) Night Cou~ Q
&lt;I&gt; Nowowotch
liD 18 Aratnlo Hill
I!) Moc0yvlf Stareo. I;J

'

~:.,Q-

®)CNN

ifi (J) D 'The Burden of

lfL

POWif
Soiu11ra Ont TV Stereo.

Wlntar Olmtlln and oround
lhe '92 Wlnllr Gonnes.I;J

1:35 aJ 0 I!J LalOr Willi Bob
Coataa
(I) Enltrlllnmtfll Tonlglol
stereo. I;J
2:00 (J) D W~d Ntwl Now

YOu Sting Sorvad?

··-·

(J)D ®l G•

OPold~ram

a On Stlgt S11reo.

SATURDAY

TUESDAY

FRIDAY

Ill Chttra r:;l
12:00(J)e DIMII Mllltr
01 Aroanlo Hoi Stereo. I;J
111111 Love ColoiKIIon
IIJ e 'IIIII Stalklnae' Crtrnt
nma Alltr ~ ftmt
I!) Tht EquoHztr
a Ntlhvlllll Stereo.
111
WOIId Cup
Skiing
Woman's
slalom
from
Grindewald, Switzerland (A)
IIINtwiNigllt
12:05 m N'"........, ,..
w "'"""~Of'
12:30~VI!: ...,,.
,_., Ill:
OO Tht
lion IRI (2: l
()) MOVt!: Doughllfl of
Siolin (RI(2:00)
liD e WKAP In Clnclnnalf
llllnildt Politico '12
2:
aJ
1 35 • iiJ Lilt Nlglil WHh
Dlvld '--""""
(I) Love Connactlon
t:OO(J)DOrowlngPolnaC
Ma-... Willi ChltGrtn

Now

§

e Ptid Progrem
liZ• Plraontll
. 0 MOYIE: Ftor City IRI
(2:00)
ID Erpadlllon Eorlfl
Ill ShowBiz Todlly
1:05 (I) Now II Con St Told
1:30 (J). II'U Uvlng
all De Nlglol C!lmta
Crool&lt; ond Chou
lll-lglil Updott
llll Pilei - m
".,."
1:35
iiJ Llltr Willi Bob
Cotlal
~;eo:.?1nmanl Ton
_ lglol

•

~:R::~Ro~:111;Jreo.

!!!i•

D
-u w~
.,N Todlly
0 Rln nn nn, K-8 Cop
Sll
1;J
reo.
6:05 llllltvtrly HHibllllte

Wild , _ C
llquara Ont TYSiereo

a

Stereo. -~

&lt;I&gt; Olmaon Ktllor'o Lova For Valentine's Day,
Gerrison Kaillor relates
experiences ollovaand
tonging thet at most everyone
has encountered. (1 :00)
Slareo.
(!) Wtohlnglon Week In
Revltw Stereo. C
tiDe Flretoauuttost John
Walsh ShoWS lhe riQor and
danger ol fighting !li-es as
seen from lhe world's oldest
rescue company In
Manhattan, N.Y. (0:30)
Itt Bayond RNiily
a N t - Now Sltroo.
-""-altha'-·-,.
, ~. l'laura .......
lnlemallonal hamptonshlp,
artlsllc competition from

a:

Nt(J)wtlloure
Co

~--

a.
!
Stereo.

mtnl Tonight
,..

7

I!) -~

Ill -~

.,.

Ill Mont!fllnt

0 MOYI : Prlvlll Hlllory of
Cllllptlgn Thai Falltd

I

(2:00)

7:05 Cll Addlmt FomBy

' [flLIIft~ ...,.a5'

:~~R~Ing Uvtl

7 30

Ill Enlllebonlll! Tonight

0 FIIIIU.Dowllng Mytllflll

a::

s-11rao.

~· u.~ With Ctolldrtri
-"-... ..

·

·

Iller. .,., ·
llll Pold ......,1111
UliJ)IIoiiNa.-.

--~w~s~

...

!-::as=...,R)
...

111 .,.

..~-·
''"'*'PO)

18 CioMIIra
7:31 (J) llliford • 1on
I:OO(])e Ill TOCII!UI, lhe Cll
wtoo c;ou1c1
SaiUrdly Nlghl L!ve ragutora
Dono c...~ Ho-n,
v~J
~ild
~~~
ore
mora lhan . bj lhe
-~of lilt

_..C..'

ftflntl;,e;b';;, t[,.

f:oo;

,_, ..-..
tor.

·-:-

~'\.

nao.

IIRI

g ..

Cu,id·e IIIOWIIIngi'S..,

bul 1.1ur1 ol'am•
1111111'
8llrto

n..·L
.-·~r,

w.:.:.=
~:

stereo. 1iJ
C
C

' !1le~ Billy and Mary .

1 30

find thty hove diffarenlldaas
~raising children. Stereo.

Ntwlllaur
,..
lewtr'
...... ):"'"'
• fll~ij; SIOniO.

GlkiWorld

~~reo.

4:DI(I)AIIIItle .PIIIIIy

~~~~~~~a;:.'r~~~ ~~~ '

'

,.... ~.
(!) l:tgltllllve U~
h~ AHI~ C
~: Tire Ntll

liJ
3:0110 MOYFe: Raldtrloflhe
111111 (2:00) '
•LMntl
Up~...
,_

Klog Liv!"

·

e Cas Ntwai;J
• Andy OrtlfHFo
0 lcooby Doc
Ill Up CioN
0 Ntw Zorro Stereo. I;J
8:35 (J) Andy Orlllhh
7,oo ~ •. iiJI Wlilli of ForMI

ID

a. Now
a

a;
'Llny

~I;J

wo f1

[-'Now

1:411811uat

team competition m r:;l
lllll8 A - ' • Moll
Wonlad A privata
lnveatigoiOI' shoots lha
producer df a movie deal
gone bad. Stereo. C
II! Murder, Slot WiOie I;J
a On S1tgt Stereo.
D
Pro Snow SkHng
Championships
from Western
Heavenly Valleyi;iCalil ..(T)
18PrlmeNtwe
•
8:05 (J) MOVIE: Coaabllnco
(2·20)
' ..., MOVIE
1 30 ""D
: w
""'
:
'Kfndlfga~lft Cop' NBC
Movlt of lhe Week IPG131
(2:30) Stereo. C
Cll Clle SlOpliy Step J.T.
and Cody dress In drag to
replace members In an
all-gl~ band. Stereo. C
~' WeN Stratt Week ~ereo
·
·
Art You Baing Strvtd'l
a Texu Connactlon Stereo.
9:011,.., (J) 11 ..... T1 Ill M te
· ~
-•
egg

Tht JelllfiOni..C
(l)lnalde E - Q"

2:00(J)._!_W
_
S""..,
all CNN
I
lillie
MOYIE•
Mlii IPGI (2:0i))Tht Outlldt
ft Con Ill Told
Club Dance Slereo.
11
:=::.e=d'::'
ID 700 CUI Willi Pit
R0b1~-n
"
2:05ale ttome - n g
""'NIC Nigh Ide
..
2:10(1)2:30(J)Dtnnll(I) MOYIE: Tilt E;• of

,..

•

'

I:OO(])e Ill (J)e a i!JII
g Ntwo
11J Video Power

(2).

..Ill w.....

"

EVENING

a

...~--~(1 )
....., _ _ , :
Gill NlglilwiUI ·
. Ill lportaCI iblr
Lllt.t S
2:"" 18 IP!rtl
...::... -Now

FRI FEB 14

'

.·

lliltlng,

·. womonetOOOm;llicl)lmplng,

Wlh•-• ,~eo.
eHiddtnVidtoAman
lloms his support group has
prlmllivallndencles. SIOrto.
..,
-, - ""' Aa•' •
__
10:011 ~ - ·
(I)•

~~!!reo. I;J

lllci " - - ·
. ~ ~u~-~
E•pla ellooo
~ of

Ill WOIId Nawl

llll700 Club' WIIIo Pot
Aoblflaon
10:25 Ill MOYIE: 2010: Tht yWt Mokt ContocliPG) (2:30)
I0:300 Tilt Hltchlllktr

~ ~':!':;l1~~Doc
Fomoull Ont lloclng From
Eagle River, Wis. (T)
11:00WG (I) (J). ®l Ge
iiJ Ntwl
(I) Night Cou~"
II) "'"
u•wewlleh Of'
Arnnlo Holt Stereo.
MOYIE: Hoi MOYIIIRJ

§.

, )

a12 00On Sllgt Stereo.
ID Schlop Tolk

111 8portl Tonight
llll Bonltllown Slaroo. ,..

.,.
11:30 (1) KOjllkC
CZl Yta, Mllillllr
7x111Yirlll C
"" C
OlYmPic
Wlnttr Olmn In and around
lhe '92 Wlnllr Games. C
Ttrii.Cof.- S18reo.

!•
a

!.. =~
'

11:35 al. iiJI Tonlglltlloow
S11imng Johnny Ceraon

&amp;~tM.ra,..

.,.
12:00(1). Dannie Mlllf
®l Areanto HIM Stareo. I;J
llll. Love ColwiKIIon
'Dart Juatlct' Crlrnt

"I"'"" nmo

a.
nmo
S11reo.
"" u...
'"' ~·

·
No s~
• '~~ .
QINtwiNighl
llll YldeoiiiiCriiY Sweo.
12:05 m ..,hlflnt P'l
w ..,.
"'
12:30(1)
MOYIE: Tht
Self (2:00)
llll. WKRP In Clnclnrooll
Ill Superlloull1976: All vs.

t2: 35 ~~on:

·LIIO NighiWith
Dovld Lt111rmtn
m L
eor· tloi
w OVI . ~•11C4I
12:55()) MOYIE: lot ... Elllh'l
Cin'IPGI(2:00)
1:00(J)e 0m1na Pllnl C
WilliCiollohto
• R-

§Minltd..

IIJ.I'traonllo

0 MOYIE: Not 1p1at1o (2:00)
Ill 811ow11i1 Todlly
llll-'~
• ..,. Pro
~-"
t:OSCil Now" can 111 ·Told
1:30(J)e n•u Living

LoYI For Vlft(illtll'l Dly,
0arr1eon Klillor ra111n
oxptriiiiOiooftovund

:ru...:;=:,..~,~.~". .
~r£
0

04-.....

Mttr!OI'I C. '12
Saltlngolf!forSonDIIgq.

c• "·-·
-

Gill-

a

, _ Sucoeu ..,, "'P
e1r1tegtee of lhtl men en(j
women knOWn 11 bllck

~._:ureovliuaiOd.
Cll ~ ictlfooo.-

,..

0 llordttlown Slareo. .,.

111
•

::=::.."":
..

1,31
I

lnd ChiN

1111 Wofld

Vldeot

•

.

L':.~' ".Iii T1iilljJtil
•· liJ
2:011•1t1111'111n
.

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...

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llll

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..

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•

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· --------~~~.----~--~v~~------~----·----~----_. ~.~~-.--------~-· ------~.~~~--------~:--._~,------~
'•

'

.

�.

..

,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

BORN
~1)6~ ~ (,f;r., 05

[ WHIT "ro D15C.O~MU. 1\IE WR!llt«&gt;
~ '4J'VE llWI BRIIII&gt;II¥&gt; HeME

Television
Viewing

w...

THE FN'ER W~ NEEPFPH~
OFFK£! ---..._____

~~ ... 'IOU IIJ¥'11.&lt;

• (Il.

f«lW I n;a ,l3lJT

FRI., FEB. 7

~~

-.....,_

1:00

E;VENINQ

•

_____;;, ....
TIIAI hiLl

Clti'Q

PUULII p~

O Raorrongt · ltffaro

(iJ (IJ • IDl 1121.
Ill News ·
(J) Yldao Power
Squere One TV Stereo.

I

~~Q. __ tt stereo. Q

I ALWAI'S FORGET
ABOUT TEETH ..

~~I

A VVE L

II
.

Square oneWStereo.
1121e CBS Nawa Q

1

WHAT Y.()IJ(,DYOU 00 IF

NewaHC.

(!)

"

e

I. I_

.

_

Cemeno

Lltlllatlva U~te

CuJNntAHalr~
• StaieTk: Tile

TONIGHTJ
CLA)):

·-----·THf ANATOMy

T,.,f FUNNYIONf

..."':&gt;

ANI&gt; THF

,1.

4

,)OCU/..A~

OF COMff&gt;Y

~

•••

VfiN.

&lt;$----·

. ..

"'

HV/VIf~VS,

'
•
!''

'

ALLEYOOP
YOU'LL lfET ..0 5T..TIC I'IY WI5H 45

50 OUR ,.15SION'S TO FI"'D

ON THAT ~ A\E ...
IT'5 A POINT ON WHICH
I FULLY Ao;REE!

W....T FIJE &amp;fFEU. TU.,K,
TO SEE IF HE"!! DEAl&gt; 01\
STILl. FU~L OF l!PUNK?

~T

WE DO OUR 81T,

AND NOT WIND UP
IN A LEMI-"' PIT!

I'LL
SECOND

THAT!

Family
7:30 (IJG lUI Jtoptrdyl C
(J) Now HCan Be Toil
(I) En~nment Tonlgllt
Stereo.
~· Ma
... Witll Chldren
WMICNIIILI.ahror
NewaHour~
Wheel of Fortune Q
• Family Feud
Q!llle • Stir Stereo.

....

NORTH
tKQ13

PHILLIP
ALDER

7:05 (J) Addtma

r-'

Vol. 27, No. 1
Copyrighted t992

1-~11

106
Jta73

•n

tK 102

SOUTH

of being present

+vsu

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: Norlh

Cll 1111 wo~d

It is difficult to write
S..lil
Well Ntrlil Eul
you
aren't
lhe table,
tt
Pus
auction
in at
today's
hand w~~~ftfi.~~~:~~~
was
It
Pw 3+
Pua
especially once North didn't
3•
Pw 3 t
Pus
a forcing bid. However,
4t
Pua 5 •
Pua
Boulenger, North, and Henri
st
Pua e•
Pus
of France were clearly on the
7t
Pus Pus
Pass
wavelength, Szwarc realizing that
Opening lead: • K
partner wanted the spade ace and
mond queen for seven. Even so, ....1
contract was ambitious.
West led a top heart. Szwarc ruffed monds, declarer must take only five,
in the dummy, ~ashed the K·Q of discarding
clubs, before takln1
spades and led a diamond to his queen. the rulfinc three
club
finesse. U declarer
This was the critical point. U West had cashes all six diamonds,
East will
the club king, declarer had to finesse have throW. all hia hearll away
and
now. But declarer decided it was East will overruff when declarer attempts
who had the king. He continued with
enter dummy with a heart ruff.
two more rounds of diamonds, East to The
wrote that it wu
ruffing this trick. Szwarc overruffed, "F.'lP inreporter
actloo"
wben
decioled
played a club to the ace, finished the East had the club klnB- South
It
wasn't
that. ••
diamonds, discarding clubs from hand, at aU. East spent a 101111 time studylnc
and toot the rulfing club finesse all the spoil 011 the lint round of dla·
through East. A heart was ruffed In
the dummy and the club jack was monds. Szware felt sure he wouldn't
have doae that without a club honor.
cashed.
C&gt;-. . . .AMJMISJ IAIIIL
U East discards hearts on the dia·

iiiJ Cronflrt
7:35(1) SenfOid &amp; Son
8:00 !Ile lUI Super Bloopers
and Ntw PractiCal Joll11
Baseball player Mlcl&lt;ey
Mantle and Tempesn
Bledsoe are •lctlms of
practical jokes; Ruth Buzzi
p!f appears. (1:00) Stereo.

/Z MOYIE: Animal Houu (RJ

(2:00)

Jackson SuperAmerica stations (30
m*s away) was repmied at $.96
9/10 per gallon - a difference of
13 cents per gallon.
B.L. James of Gallipolis. recently of Colorado, wonders why Lhe
price of gasoline i~ so high along
the Ohio River Valley.
James, interviewed while buy\Jul\lll County motorists passing
ing gasoline at a local gas station,
here areOhio
highern9tice
than said it seems people are gelling a
"consistant gouging" from gas staareas.
of self· tions along ihe river.
Three men traveling from Indiserve
was advertised at
per gallon at the ana 10 Virginia, who declined ~iv·
Gallipolis area Super America sta- ing their names, said gasohne
tions Thursday, while the price at prices remained at about 95 cents

f~~~~~~iE~~~:~~~;;~

tA812
.,0 54
tQ:

By Pllllllp Alder

UnHed fli~lnes
Hawaiian Open, 2nd round
from Honolulu (l)
(I) (IJ e Family Mlttlra
Urkel has everyone rolling In
dough when his bread recipe
backfires. Stereo. C
(lJ WltllllngtOn WHk In
Review Stereo. C
111 a:~~e Raaculi 111 An
EMT responds to a call and
discovers her husband has
been shot. Stereo. C
I!) e Amtrlcl'a MOlt
Wanted John Wllsh travals
to Killeen, TeKas, the site ol
a tragedy. Stereo. C
o M'utdlr, She wiOta Q
18 On Staaa Stereo.
Women's slalom ·lrom
Grlndewald, SwitZerland (T)
iiiJ PrlmeNawa Q

1:30 (I) (IJ. Stap by Stap
Frank teaChal Mark to
defend himself against a
bullY. Stereo. c·
\Z! WaH StNet 'AtHie Stereo.

W

()ii.ILY HOROSCOPE RJR.
TODd.Y:

Are You llllng llerved'l
Q!l TtUI CorloliCIIOn Stereo.
t :OO!Ile 0 Malloclc Mallocl&lt; Is
return lrom .
retirement and sharpen his
skills. Stereo. C
(I) (J)
labf""'i'al&lt; Mickey
decides to switch places with
his exact double. Stereo. 1:;1
(lJ GNet Ptllonnlncea Two
grltlltllenlt perform
baroque music by Scarlanlr.
Handel and Bach. Stereo. .,..
forced to

'' Re.ME:Mes&lt;t A 61.-IP
OF THe l-IP CAN
61NK A5HIP! "

I WONc::teR IFTHE::Y
RECYCLe THE:eE TH1Na6.

e

(J) Walllingtllln WMic In

Review Stereo. C
G1 1D e Mlaa IliA Plgunt
Th• 41 at annual pageant
fealurei 51 women
competing lor the title of
Mlas USA 19921rom WiCMa,
Kan. Hoslt: Dick Clark, Terry

NO FROGS IN
MY DESK FER

THREE DAYS!!

CHEER UP II
I'M GOIN' OUT
lOOK IN'

TONIGHT!!

1------------'

•o .\ •

'

1.-H

The World Almanac~ Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

38

1 Pianist

Cliburn
4 Copper coin
8 Room In lail
12 Uncle
13 Sixty mlnut11
14 - Major
(conate~

botton)
15 Incite to
attack
16 X-ray picture
18 Lice
20 Sew lightly
21 Roman
bronze
22 Forma~y
24- bread
28 Dog In
Glrlllld
27 Calll.. alrllna
d11Hnat1on
30 FII~Ht~llclng
machine
32 Attack
34 Throat
future
35-

Anawarto ,...- Puule

Before

(poet.)

37 Actre11

GAS PRICES TOO HIGH?- Many Gallia County motorists
think so, They have noticed that gasoline prices in some neighboring
.counties are substantially lower than gasoUne prices here. Prices at
this station In Gallipolis are typical or those char~ed in the Gallipolis
area (as or Saturday morning). A motorist fueling up with regular
unleaded fuel at an identical stalion in Jackson (about 30 miles away)
would pay about 12 cenls less per gallon. According to an Ashland
Oll spokesman, gasoline prices are largely determined by studying
. local market conditions and competition.

Albright
39 Actra11
Hayworth
40Lolobrlglda
41 - Ungua
(airline)
42 Writer Ailaon
4S 01111 dlaplay
caH
41 Lite In pa,lng (2 wda.)
51 Slate-cutUng
tool
52 Sour
53 Buay aa

Political .maneuvering
in Ohio could be costly

UComtdlenPhlllpa
55 Clear•
58 Sub(aecratly)
57 Lllr

1 Suit pall

2 Frtlhwattr
n111
3 PtachHka
lrulf
4 - ·Evtrt
5 Pertaining to
dawn
6 Pulhtd

DOWN

n,

By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS- Efforts by both
parties to redraw l,egislalive. and
congressional districts favorable to
their candidates have muddled
Ohio's 1992 primary election and
could wind up costing taxpayers $6
million.
The election is scheduled May

~T~b~
U.S. marshals operate a

•-P

fl~
to arreat drug
delltr1, kidnapper&amp; and
aec:2urderors. I0:30)
Stereo.
IIJ
RNIIty
18 Naalwtlle Now Stereo.
QJ Tht Olympled Irena
Szewlnska, Pat McCormiCk,
Klsus Diblasi and Harrison
Dilil!rd's Olympic
performances escaped public

5.

One procedutal deadline has
been missed that apparently will
create vote-counting problems in
the presidential primaries .. Others
are drawing near that could cause
greater difficulties.
A Republican plan eslablishing
new districts for the Ohio House
and Senate is tied up in federal

. recognition.
D Leny King Uvel

P.:.O~Dowtlng M1Ml,,.ltallal~ittt:a

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Feb.1,1tll

maker Instantly reveals which signs are
romantically perl«:t for you. Mall $2
plus a lOng, self·addressed, slamped
envelOpe to Matchmaker, c/o this
newspll)er, P..O. Box 91428, Cleveland:
OH « 101-3-428.
PIIC£1 (Feb, ao:Marcll 20) A CIOH
:friend who Is wasteful when II comes to
pei"IOOII mourcet 'might look upon
yours as a backup today. Be careflll
your 1111 ~·t get to your piggy bank.
ARII!I (...,_ 21·Aprtl 11) The Sarah
Bernhardt within you might vie for expretllon today and incoUrlge you to
do a bit of play acflng, Pr..endlng 10 be
what you're nol won't win aUdltnca ap.
proval. Be youl"lltf.
TAUIIUI (April..., 20) Your lntultlvt bull,_ P4WCIIIt~ could be on
tatget today, but your lniiQilla relating
to human llthavtor In aoclal lltuallona
might be. WilY off bill. Don't rely on II
too htlvtty.
.
. ,
•
GIIMI (..., :11~ 20) Be Wlll')l of
making lmpulliw decialona today, especially H thay lnvoMI money and
f r - Condltlona tend to be mucl\
more compllcaltd than. you llrll
perceive.

CANCER (....... :11-.luly 22) Otvote ef·
Ioria w~~«e your career Is conclrned to
performing your Ullgnmentt well today. Avoid INOCiatH *"'&gt; aren't Inter- .
llltd In emulating your example.

1

1:30 (I) a-. D

.·

LEO (.luiJ 23-Aug. 221 YOII might spend I
(IJ • 1111J Billy haU plan to
more time and -DY rationalizing
stop oa;:om amol41ng.
producing today. Those you'll be
s
-. .
~ Wal
Wllll Stereo.
with may have· dl!ftculty
along with your reuonlng. ·
af e Hldcll4l VIdeo A couple
VIRGO (Aug. 23-hpt. 22) Betting on
Is CIUQhtlmOOchlng It I
what might happen could be fOlly today,
remote G:ong spot by
especially If the aucceaa of the endeavor
alltnl.
'
Is predicated upon Clrcumllancft y011
0 illy lrldiiiiiY'Tlleatlr
don't control.
UIRA (lepl, JS.0ct. D) Important
10:00 IJ) Newl
mauera y011 want your mate to attend to
lll u.a. OlriNIIo·Gold·Track
tor you today lhpuld be Co¥. eel with
• ' •&amp; Raid: SriCkan MlllroH
detailed lnllructiona. Don't merely ...
(I) (J) eiOI!IO 81no. c
·.,me your partner underllanda your
l1'J ar.t ,.lleiiiiiiADII 'rwo
lntentiona.
.
ICCIIIPIO (Oct ........ II) Your pouic:..we:::~
Handllllld
Sllfto,
bllltill tor 1*101111 gain look r-:,::; 1
able today. but they may not 1
your ~atlona. This~ be dua• to I
tha fact that you'll IIPr.-cl your •~·- •
JumDinCI Nltlarialllrom Lake.
too thin.
1
Pllcild, N,Y, (f)
·
IAGmARIUI (llool. D-01a.
tconomtc dlaclptine oauld be .
_loclay - "you 4lCI4M- -hlng
you atrootgly dlillre but -·• doni.
Don'tlorglllhat--you buy,_
10:10(!) 1• IN I iftild&amp;J
muat be Plldlor tater.
·
.rnlull",.;Hall Jefllry
Lyona ..... biMUIII '
CAJIIIICOIIII (DIL 2WM. 1t1 Your
111m .....,..lillclln
generoalty
ltlllmltlllont todiY ,..
gardlng lndMdUIII 101: wham you're ,..
. ~. Coi9red0·
aponllble. Howa111r, In ~ your
~ lhlill• '
own -.dl, you're ltpt to bel wry Hbar. OMII-'CIM
llpeo.tder.

:!':
l!..=i:~.s.

1!!:-"':.,..

'*

i

..

Sunny. High In mld·20s.

b

15 Sec dona, 16 Paget

.

AMultlmadloo Inc. Ntwapoper

per gallon until ihey reached Gal·
lipolis. One of the men commented
that ihe tank of fuel they purchased
in Gallipolis cost about $1.50 per
tank more than fuel purchased elsewhere.
A quick drive-by survey of eight
Gallipolis scr•ice stations Thursday morning showed self-serve
re~ular unleaded gasoline was
pnced al $1 .09 9/10 per gallon at
six stJJtions and at $1.10 9/10 per
gallon al two others.
A reporter for the Ironton Tribune said Thursday morning that
self-serve regular unleaded gasoli.ne was priced at $1.08 per gallon

in Lawrence County and at $.98 counties with those charged here in people from Columbus and Cincinper gallon in Scioto County . Fur- Gallia County. Efforts 10 conduct nati, interested in locating in Gallia
thermore, the reporter added Lhat the 'survey were somewhat ham· Counly, who say gasoline prices
self-serve regular unleaded gaso- pered because many service sta· here are too high.
line was priced at $.91 per gallon in tions do not quote prices or reveal
People that run trucks or heavy
equipment are discouraged by GalColumbus - 17 cents cheaper per- their suppliers over the phone.
gallon ihan Gallipolis prices.
Jack L. Fowler, executive vice lia County's higher gasoline (and
An infomlJII gasoline price sur- president of the Gallia County diesel fuel) prices, Fowler com vey conducted by the Community Community Improvement Corpora- mented. It's cheaper for these peoImprovement Corporation showed tion, is upset about Gallia County's ple to run their business out-ofthat gasoline prices in communities higher gasoline prices - and not counly.
along the Ohio River tend to be only for personal reasons.
When I go 10 Chillicothe, I fill
significantly higher than those
"The CIC is concerned about all up there where the price of gasoline
communities further away from the the faciOrs that detennine the quali· is under a dollar, Fowler added. ,.
river.
The gasoline price survey also
ty of life in Galiia County," Fowler
The survey was conducted to said. "Gasoline prices are a factor." revealed the possibility" that gaso.
Continued on A-4
·
compare gasoline prices in other
Fowler said he has spoken with ,

One year after disappearance,
Gallipolis boy still missing

Cll World Cup Siding

'HER£; IB '101...112 ~1-

Editorai .............................Al
Sports .............................Cl-fl
Weather........,..................A·5

Mlddleport-Pomeroy-Galllpollr-Polnt Pleasant, February 9,1992

By JIM FREEMAN
Times-Sentinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - Gasoline
in Gallia County are higher
in some surrounding
~:~;i~t~' and, judging from
m
comments, people are

I

(J) GoH

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

Deaths ................................AJ

Area residents fed up with high gasoline prices

tAKJi086
AQJ_,----.,_

1111 MOYIE: CharloHt'l Web
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Along the river ..............Bl-7
Business!Farm............... D1·8
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tmts,.

IIIIIIIII

BRIDGE

Cll SpottaCentar
illl Moneyllne

J..OCA'f'IOf'/

Inside

•

CompleJO the chuckle quoltd
bv filling In the missing words
you dovolop lrom lfep No. 3 below.

•

While stationed overseas, 1 asked anoth!lr soldier
whatlhe time difference was between where we were
and The States. Smiling he said, "'h, I'd say about ten
CENTURIES!"
.

Nell
aneretlon
1121e En nniant Tonight
Sl8reo.
OMIICG r Q

"THETtfE

factory and then ··-··-· to us.

SCRAM-Lm ANSWERS
'"'
Unstop • Frame • Racer· Gossip • CENTURIES

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(IJ

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(I) lnaldt Edition
(lJ MacN~Iahrer

WORK&amp;, e;DUCAfiOO, EJC.

Triedstone Church dedicated 40
years ago- James Sands· Page A-6

f9 PRINT
NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES

• Andy QrtlfHh
ScoobyDoo

ffi Tlla JtHtiWit_D

YOU HIf THI&gt; ..I'(;KPOH

PUI!LIC

MHS plans different 1992 class
reunion • Beat of the Bend · B-6

B-1

~~~~~~~~de. H~a:~~=:

0

Duke, OSU capture hardwood wins -c 1 ~

Treatment
•
serv1ces
expanded
Our local candy slonl owner
1ndy

0y L F E T

7:00 IJlG Ill Wheel of Fortune

CIVIC ~Tf~RMEt.rfi

r.

I 1 I

1111 Madeline Stereo. Q
6:35 (J) Andy Qrtfllth

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~,

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1111 Madeline Stereo. Q
6:05 (J) Beverly HlllbllfiH
8:30!Ile 111 NIIC Newa ~
(J) 8eved by the Bell

~

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75 renh

Sunday

WOII

four xrombled words below to form four simple wordt.

Rudf:3 ~bow C

HUMAN BEINGS ARE
6166ER AND
AND ~AVE MORE
MONEY SO GET
0 UT OF THE WA'&lt; ~

__

. .. . ............. ___________ _______,

. ...

GALLIPOLIS- One year after
his disappell!ance, law enforcement
officials m Gallia and Meigs counties continue their search for 13·
year-old Jeffrey Halley of Gallipo·
lis .
Jeffrey and his father, Jeffrey
Halley Sr.. disappeared a year ago
Saturday. The body of the boy's
father was found Sept. 25, 1991,
near Portland in Meigs County.
The boy disappeared on hi s
half-sister's birthday.
,... The· deputies·were:'ICting on a
tip received last March by lite Gal·
lia County Sheriff's Department
that 1he boy and his father were
killed and dumped in Meigs County.
Jeffrey Halley Sr., investigatOrs
said, had been shot in the head.
Judging from the condition of the
remains, it was detennined he was
killed shortly after the pair's disappearance.
According 10 an article in Saturday's Huntington Herald-Dispatch,
Jeffrey's case manager wilh the
Center for Missing and Exploited
Children says there is every chance
that the boy may still be alive,
His caseworker !Old ihe Herald·
Dispatch thai there are se•end pos·
sible scenarios for Jeffrey's where·
abouiS. He says ihe boy could have

been sold into pornography, taken Jeffrey, but it was ignorant 10 take
10 be raised by someone else, or him," she said and added softly: "If
been held captive and afraid 10 run that's what happened."
because he witnessed whal hap Meigs Counly Sheriff Jim
pened 10 his father,
Soulsby , who is handling the
"What gives us hope is the facl father's murder because the bndy
his body was not found with his was lound in Meigs County, told
father's remains," Bush said. "You the Herald-Dispatch that ihe man
would think if two people were was carrying a lot of money and his
killed together. they would be murder was probably drug-related.
buried together. This leads us to
Gallia Counly Chief Deputy
believe there's a chance ihis child Carlos Wood, handling !!!e-~
· vesliis still living."
gatlon into the missing
Ilia ·
.41-ccording 10 the Herald-Dis- Counry·boy; sai11 he agreed, but
patch's account from lhe boy's says the boy had no connection 10
mother, Carolyn Walker, Halley the apJll!fCnl drug deal.
picked up Jeffrey from her house.
"We think he was just a victim
She said that from what she has of circumstance," Wood said.
heard the two stopped to get a
The National Center for Missing
pizza ·and then drove to Halley's and Exploited Children featured
house, whe.~"e a group of people Jeffrey two weeks ago on its week·
was waiting for them.
ly missing children card mailed to
Someone suggested that Halley, 52 million homes across Lhe coun· a 37-year-old unemployed con- ly . As a result, 268 callers nationstrucuon worker, go with them 10 wide have reported seeing the boy.
buy some marijuana, she told the
Anyone with information aboui
Herald-Dispatch. They asked him the missing boy or his father's mut·
10 leave Lhe boy behind, but Halley der is encouraged 10 contact: Meigs
reportedly refused and said that his County Sheriff Jim Soulsby at
son could just lie down in Lhe back (6!4J 992·3371, John Perry with
seat.
the Bureau of Criminal Investiga"My anger comes and goes. I tion and Identification at (614)
like (Halley) and know he wouldn't 446-0018 or Gallia County Chief
do anything purposefully to hurt Deputy. at (614) 446-1221.

Utility·yet to decide on
appeal of rate case ruling

court as a resuli of a challenge by
DcmocraiS who claim it is illegaL
Majority Republicans in 1he
Seryate. passed a congression~l
redistr1cUng bill Thursday but it 1S
on a collision course with a DemoCOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) cratic House version. A coml'ro·
Columbus
Southern Power Co. did
mise does not appear poss1ble
not
immediately
decide whether 10
before Feb. 24.
appeal
a
court
decision
prohibiting
Secretary of State Bob Taft said
the
electric
utilily
from
tmposlng
a
unless he IS given a map of new
28.4
percent
rale
increase
without
districts by March 13, a separate
congressional primary w1ll be regulatory appro•al.
Columbus Southern SJl?kesman
needed later which will cost $6
Thomas
Holliday said Fnday's rulmillion.
ing
in
Franklin
Common
The filing deadline for legisla- Pleas Coun was aCounty
disappoinunent.
tive and congressional candidates iS
He said he did not know when a
Feb. 20 although it can be extend·
decision
would be made on an
ed, as it has in similar situations in
appeal.
Continued on A-4
Judge Richard Sheward declared
unconstitutional a state law that
allows utilities to raise rates if the
Public Utilities Commission of
Ohio fails to act on increa se

requesiS within 275 days.
Sheward said the law authorizes
utilities to take property wilhout
compensation or due process of
law.
Ohio Consumers' Counsel
William Spratley praised the decision, noting it was the fll'St time Lhe
law had been tested in court.
"We're c~rtainly pleased as
consumer advocates that we pro·
tected consumers in 1he short
tenn,'' Spratley said.
Sheward granted a request for a
pennanent injunction that bars the
company from imposin~ the $202.5
million rate increase w1thout regulatory approval.
The PUCO, which still is hold·

ing public hearings on. the increase
request, said it will decide the case
this spring.
Spratley and Columbus City
Auorney Ronald O'llrien in January sued 10 slOp imposition of the
increase, calling it unconstitutional.
Sheward on Jan. 10 issued a
temporary order that prohibited the
company from imposing the
increase.
Columbus Southern's increase
request would add $11.94 to the
bill of an average residential customer who uses 500 kilowaus a
month, the PUCO said . A subsidiary of American Electric
Power, Columbus Southern has
551,0()0 eusiOmers in 26 counties.

JEFFREY HALLEY JR.

Special hours
set for spring
registration at
Ri'o Grande
RIO GRANDE -In a move·to
accommodate the needs of current
students and those enrolling in
classes for the first lime, the University of Rio Grande has expanded iiS registration hours for spring
quarter.
The expanded hours will be
conducted in Allen Hall from 3-7
p.m. on Monday, Feb. 24 and Tuesday, Feb. 25 . Paymenl of fees at
those times is acceptable, but ihc
payment deadline for those
enrolling at those times will be at
noon Thursday, Feb. 27.
Rio Grande's .re~ularly-schcd­
uled open registraUJln for spring
quarter is Monday, March 2 from
3-7 p.m. in t!Je E.E. ~vis Technical Careers Center.
Changes in class schedules will
not be processed until the week of
March 3-9, university officials said.
The expanded registration hours
will be open to anyone. The university made the move for the convenience of current, non-traditional
and first-time students unable to
attend the regular operi registration.
Mark F. Abell, Rio Grande's
executive director of or admissions .
and enrollment services, said the
expanded hours were designed to
Continued on A-4

LCCD Board slams Crisp's acti.vities.
CELEBRITY CIPHER

Clllenty~cra;l ;aiw . . ...e.dlrolft.-ot ' *"~"'*--PtiMnt
EICihlltllrln . . ~ .... - - - . ,...., .... ,,........

• D W W

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.

POMEROY - Editor's Note:
The following statement was
entered Thursday in the Melzs
County Common Pleas Court file
, or Jack W. Crisp, the same day
Crisp·received a sentence of 18
mQaths In prison for recelvlna or
sollcltlnalmproper compensatloa
(I.e. Christmas boauses tolallna
$5,000 In tilt mld·aad·late 1980s)
while RrviDI u president of the
Lesdln&amp; Creek Co~rvttney Dis·
trlct's 8011rd of Directors.
.. As a part of tbe pia barallln
aareement resultlaaln Crisp's
senteace, cbaraea aaalttst Crisp'•
wlte Glen DB were dls•lssed.
Crisp's 100, James, also en-.red
lato
blrllla aareemeat on
unrelated LCCI&gt; cb11raea Ia late

the sentence and was reieased
after payment of$50,000 bond,
Designed to be read Into the
court record on Thursday, the
statement was filed by Athens
attorneys T.E. Eslocker and
Tbomu S. HOdson on behalf or
· the current Board or Dlrtctors or
LCCD. Retired Atbeni Co~mty
Com moD Pleas Jud1e Ro1er
Jones, slttlna by assignment,
rel'ustd .to permit Hodson to read
the 1t1tement l!lto the c·o urt
record. HoWever, later tile attor•
neys did add. the statement to
Crisp's file.
· For t)te sake of brevity; cer·
taln portloas have beea deleted·
' for publication Ia the Sunday
Tlmea.SentiDeL The bask alle&amp;li·
1990.1
1
tiona of the statement have not
Sian beln1 aeateaced last beea atrected. ·
It nads:
week, Jack. Crlsp bu appealed ·
''

I,...

"Through the years, ihere have
been a suecession of basically well·
intentioned men and women - one
woman, more precisely - who
have served as members of the
Leading Creek Conservancy Dis·
tricl Board of Directors . But
through the years, from its &lt;inception - and even before - unlil
1988, one person was on the board ·
continuously -Jack Crisp, until
he resigned from the board in
September 1988. II shOtild be noted
that Jack Crisp thereafter remained
as chief engineer for a period of
time, and was paid a per diem. Mr.
Crisp, by the way is not_an e~gi ·
neer; he holds no engmeenng
degJCC; it is sUnplya tide he gave
himself along wl!h evcrythiDJ else.
It should be noted that anyone who
opposed the way Jaok Crisp ran
Leading Creek had a short
•

tenureI'

"In ihe later years, appointees to
the board were either family .members or close friends and poliLical
cronies of Jack Crisp. In an effort
to maintain his influence for the
longest possible time, even after he
had 'reured' from the OOan!, Jack's
son, Glen Crisp, was appointed,
then resi~ed only to be ~~:-appoint­
ed wi1h10 days, to a different,
longer term on ihe board . .(lJen
Crisp resigned from lhe board on
the day his father, Jack, enlmd his
plea, ~rQXimately sill weeks ago,.
Glen Cnsp's resignation was predicated upon a guarantee from tlte ·
special prosecutor that he would
not be charged in connection with ·
anything that he ma[!d~~ done in
his association with
ling Creek.
This was never submitted to this
board for its approval or co.ncur. C011tlnHCI 011 A-4
·
\!'

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