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                  <text>Sentinel

0-The
.

.

.

Raspberry nominations announced
By~CHAELFLEEMAN

Associated Press Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Vanilla Ice's " Cool As Ice" scooped up
seven Golden Raspberry Awards
nominations Monday and Sean
Young j!Ot two bids for playing
twins bailly as Hollywood prepared
to saute the worst of 1991 .
Bruce Willis' "Hudson Hawk"
and Dan Aykroyd's " Nothing But
Trouble" both picked up six nominations for the Oscar-spoofing
Razzie trophy, a golf ball-sized
gold-painted raspberry with an estimated street value of$1.79.
The Razzie nominations come
just two days before Wednesday's
announcement of the Academy
Award contenders.
The 12th Annual Golden Raspberry Awards, determined by more
than 350 voters from 26 states and
five countries, will be meted out
March 29 at a " Press Conference
Cum Performance Piece, " the
Golden Raspberry Award Founda-

lion said in a statemenL
Geuing the biggest raspberry
reception for 1991 was " Cool As
lee," nominated for worst pictare,
worst actor (lee), worst director
(David Kellogg), worst screenplay
(David Stenri), two worst new star
nominations (including one for Ice)
and worst original song.
, Other worst picture nominees
were " Dice Rules ," "Hudson
Hawk," "Nothing But Trouble, "
and "Return to the Blue Lagoon."
In an unprecedented double
nomination for the same film, Miss
Young was nominated as worst
actress in "Kiss Before Dying" as
the twin who survives and for
wor.&gt;t supporting actress as the twin
who's kiUed in the first reel.
Razzie officials cited Mi ss
Young for her "pathetically puppet-like portrayal of two twins
stalked by a psychopath in the risible murder mystery."
John Candy was nominated for
worst supporting actress for

CHH discuss retreat
Virginia Wyatt hosted the recent
meeting of the Circle of Helping
Hands.
Peggy Boles presided at the
meeting and members responded to
roll call with a Bible verse using
the word "hearL"
Marge Purtell had devotions on
the functions of the hean, and the
bean members have for the Lord.
A discuss ion about Women' s
Retreat and the decorations to be
made which will be Sept. 17 and
18.
The mother-daughter banquet
was di scussed and will be held
May 8.
Ladies Day at K.C.C: on March
26 was noted as wa s County

Women's Fellowship at Dexter on
Feb. 27.
A program was presented on
stenciling sacks and fitting with
cookies, candy and Valentines for
the Meigs County Infirmary.
The next meeting will be held at
th e Zion Church of Christ and
hostesses will be Ida Murphy with
the Bible word "wind" and the program will be stenciling bags for
favors for Women's Retreat.
Aucnding were Peggy Bole ,
Kathryn Johnson, Ida Murphy ,
Dorothy Reeves, Hazel Stanley,
Virginia Wyatt, Evelyn Thoma ,
Marge PurteU and Suzanne Warner.

Willing Workers meet
The Willing Workers of Sl Paul

United Methodist Church met
recently for an ail-day session.
Lap robes were sewn and quilted for nursing home patients associated with the church.
A Valentine lun cheon was
enjoyed at noon and secret sisters
were exchanged.
The meeting was conducted by
Glenna Sanders, president, who
read a proverbial instructive on
wisdom from the book of proverbs.
The prayer was given by Mae
Vineyard and reports were given
by Mildred Brooks and Patricia
Hall.
The group voted to make a
donation of $25 10 the Meigs County Jrumnary for the piano they are
buying.
A card was signed for Hazel
Barnhill, a member, who is now in
Florida. A new member, Beulah
Zumbach, joined the group.
The program, "Time for Love"
was read by Edn a Harmon and
Evelyn Spencer.
Twenty-two sick call s were

reponed by those presenL
Others attending were Bulah
Maxey, Mary Jamison and Joanna
Weaver and Rev. Sharon Hausman.
The March meeting will be an
all-day meeting on March 10 and
the group will learn how 10 piece a
Dresden Plate block.
The meeting clo sed with a
prayer circle ending with the
Lord's Prayer.

Michael Lynn Childs of Middleport received his master of arts
degree from Marshall University at
the completion of the fall semester.
Childs is a teacher at Meigs Junior
High SchooL

Champion named
Jennifer Morris, daughter of
William and Sandra Kay Morris, is
the spelling bee champion at the
Letart Falls Elementary SchooL
Runner-up to the champion in the
bee was Jennifer Roush , a sixth
~rader, and daughter of Roger and
~ --QI!SIL 'l1lc champion will
compete in the county- contest
w)lich is scheduled for Feb. 25.

ANN VANMATRE

Ann VanMatre
to be honored
Ann VanMatre is representing
the Ohio Eta Phi Chapter, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, as Valentine
Queen thi s year. She has been a
member of Beta Sigma Phi for four
years.
She resides on Pomeroy Pike
with her husband, Kevin, and son,
Ryan. She is a teacher at Pomeroy
Elementary.
The chapter will hold a Valentine pany in her honor on Saturday
at 8 p.m. at Holly Hill Inn in
Pomeroy.

by Lorrene Goggins, president. She
also distributed bulk mailing from
the department.
Tbe "Firing Line" pamphlet was
ordered and a round robin card was
sent to Mary Frances Baumgardner
in Columbus.
Margaret Bowles, Americanism
chairman, presented an article on
the history of the American flag.
She stressed the importance of the

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

PageS

a1
Yot. 42, No. 201
Copyrighted 1992

PREPARING BREAKFAST- Tbe sixth
grade cl~ss of Julie Randolph at Rutland Elementary was busy Friday morning as they prepared a Valentine breakrast for their pat·enlts.

CHAND10NSELLERS-Gwi~ITnMp

Class offered
MIDDLEPORT - The Middlepan Arts Council will offer beginning tap dancing classes beginning
Wednesday , March 4. The first
class will be held from 4:30-5:15
p.m. for ages five and six; seven
and eight year -olds should repon at
5:15 p.m. and those ages 9 and 10
should come from 6-6:45 p.m. For
information or 10 register caU 9923282 or 992-5696.
Barbara Lawrence is the instructor and the fee is $20 per month.

flag.
Lula Hampton stated the second
session of the I 02 Congress had
begun. The Legislative conference
was held Feb. 9-12. Many issues
concerning the Veterans will be
discussed.
Closing ceremonies were carried
out and the next meeting will be
hosted by Edith Ross, Pomt Pleasant.

JobUOil, ~=~ule Roberti ud Mellua Hoi·
mu, ud
Cudace Wtn'J'hStacey Brewer,
Krllltea Hill, Nu~ Marlow, Melallle Blevlas,
Jealea l!:nna, .aad Ashley Vau1b11. Glaaer
Danl wu aoC praeat'for the pk:ture. Laders
are Dtallle Hoi.,. ucl Pam Jl!'luoa.

I •

'

WASIDNGTON (AP) - Consumer prices rose just 0.1 percent
in January, the best inflation performance in six months, the government said today.
The Labor Department credited
falling energy costs and a drop in
food prices for the good showing in
its Consumer Price Index.
The January advance, whi ch
matched a similarly tiny 0.1 percent rise last July, followed a
revised December gain of 0.2 percent. The December gain had originally been reported as a 0.3 percent

increase.
If January's increase held steady
for 12 months, it would result in an
annualized rate of inflation of just
0.9 percent. While economists are
not forecasting that good a performance this year, th ey do expect
consumer prices wlll rise by only 3
percent to 3.5 percent for the whole
year.
That would mark little change
from last year's 3.1 percent
increase, when the recession and
falling oil prices combined to give
the country its best news on prices

since 1986.
" We believe that inflation has
stabilized and it is not ;~n immediate problem," said David Wyss, an
economist with DRI-McGraw Hill,
a consulting firm in Lexington,
Mass.
The Bush administration, worried about a sick economy in an
elec tion year, has continually
pointed 10 the ~!ood news on inflation 10 suppon 1ts argument that the
Federal Reserve has plenty of room
to cut interest rates further.
But Fed Chairman Alan told

Congress today that a reduction in scin's invasion of KuwaiL
business and household debt levels,
Home heating oil costs declined
coupled with interest rate cuts for a second consecutive month ,
already engineered by the Fed, dropping 5.5 percent in January.
should be enough to guarantee a They new stand 31.3 percent below
sustained recovery later this year.
their 1990 peak. Natural gas and
The small 0.1 percent January electricity costs also fell in January
rise in prices reflected the fact that by smaUer amounts.
energy costs fell for the first time
Food prices dropped by 0.4 persince last July, declining 1.5 per- cent, their first decline since last
cent.
August. The decline was led by a
That drop included a 1.9 percent sharp 7.I percent fall in the cost of
fall in gasoline costs, which left fresh fruits and vegetables and a
pump prices 18 .1 percent below 12.4 percent decrease in egg prices.
their peak level reached in Novem- Beef and pork prices feU as well by
ber 1990 following Saddam Hus- smaller amounts.

The price declines were enough
to offset increases for cereal and
dairy products.
Excluding the volatile food and
energy sectors, consumer prices
rose OJ percent in January following a modest 0.2 percent December
increase.
The various changes left the
Consumer ,Pri ce Index, before
adjusting for sbasonal variations, at
138.1, compared to 134.6 a year
ago. That meant that a market basket of goods costing $134 .60 in
January 1990 would hav e cost
$138.10 last month.

Bush gets grudging win;
Tsongas tops Democratic
field in pocketbook vote

VALENTINE BREAKFAST · Parents or
students in JuUe Randolph's sixth grade class at
Rutland Elementary were treated to a breakfast
on Valentine's Day (Friday). The students pre-

"'

.JI.

pared the breakfast with food provided by donations from lbe parents. Thirty-two parents were
served and aU seemed to enjoy the affair.

shower
Couple announces birth of son Card
Waid Spencer, Chester, is
Scott D. and Lori L. Kimes, nal grandparents are William and
Homestead Ai r Force Base, Fla., Nancy Kimes, Racine.
are announcing the birth of a son,
Materna! great grandfather is
Justin Ryan, on Nov. 27, 1991.
Ross Stewan Sr., Bradbury. MaterHe weighed nine pounds and ' nal grandparents are Rollie Stewseven ounces and was 22 and three- an, Pomeroy, and Linda Stewart,
quarter inches long.
Homestead, Fla.
Paternal great-grandmother is
The couple has a daughter, AshHelen Kimes, Mason, W.Va. Pater- leigh Meghan Kimes.

Long Bottom area happenings
Mrs. Mary Newlun is a grandmother again. Her daughter,
Christy and Kenny Riggs, had their
second child, a son, Devon Ray
Riggs, on Dec. 31 at a hospiral in
Fon Myers, Aa The couple resides
in Pon Charlotte, Fla.
Rev. and Mrs. Lawrence Gluesencamp, Portland, and Mrs. Jeannie
Theiss, Vinton, have called on the
Paul Hauber's recently.
Mrs. Dorothy Thurston is recuperating as is Ernie Griffin foUowmg triple bypass surgery.
Jack and Mary Carroll recently
received "WSAZ's Hometown
Hero" award for· their work promoting Christianity.
Mrs. Leota Ferrell, Medway. is
visiting with her sisters, Mae
McPeek and Ada Bissell.
Mrs. Debbie Young, Success
Road, is recuperating after an ili-

ness. She and her husband, Gene,
have operated the D and G Bait and
Tackle Concession at the Forked
Run State ParX for several years.
Mrs. Georgia Mount has visited
family in Lancaster recently.
Whitney Larkins, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs . Mike Larkins, Gallipolis, spent the weekend with
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Dorsel
Larkins. She also visited Brandon
Fitch.

undergoing tests at Grant Medical
Center in Columbus.
Cards may be sent to him at
Grant Medical Center, Room 845B,
Columbus, Ohio 43210.

Dance class offered
The Middleport Arts Council
will offer another beginner's class
in Texas style dance. Due to the
popularity of this dance the class
will begin Wednesday at 7:30 p.m.
and the cost is $7 per couple.
For furth er information call
Mary Wise at 992-2675 .

Literary club to meet
The Middleport Literary Club
will meet Wednesday at 2 p.m. at
the Meigs County Public Library in
Pomeroy. Mrs. Roben Fisher will
review "Onslaught." Roll call is
something famous built at great
COSL

You can write a
check to the IRS·•••
or to your IRA..
'

Harrisonville

community news

You have until April lS to open your Individual ·
Retirement Account and you may qualify for a 1990
ta x shelter.

Roger and ·samantha Cotterill
announce the birth a son, Krislopher Roger, on Jan. 5. The infant
weighed seven pounds and 10
ounces. Paternal grandparents are
Don and Faye Cotterill. Maternal
grandparents are Robert and Grace
Richmond.
·

1039 101t1 %,136 boul or Jllr!ICOIIt coaldes d•r1•1 tile 111. .1 olea ca•pall• earlier tlllr
•• 1111, tilt 11JPest or 117 troop. TIMIIOP Miler
·Ia tile eo..t:r wu lrldaet Jilll- wltll 600
lloatl, plchlred MCIIIId fNII left, front. Otllll-.
. or tile troop are, front, 'Brucly StewtU, Brldpl

The breakfast was complele with eggs, sausage,
toast, French toast, coffee, juice, milk and tea.
The breakfast was followed by a series or skits
and a
the students.

Spencer personal
LONG BOTTOM - Waid
Spencer has returned home from
Grant Medical Center in Columbus
following extensive testing.
He is now confined to home for
three month due to his iUness.
Cards may be sent to him at
Route I, Long Bonom, 45743.

Dance class offered
MIDDLEPORT· The Middlepan Arts Council will offer another
beginner's class in Texas style
dance. Due 10 the popularity of this
dance the class will begin Wednesday at 7:30p.m. and the cost is $7
per couple.
For further information call
Mary Wise at992-2675.

2 Stcllono, 12 Pagn 25 cenlt
A Mutlimtdla Inc. N-•p.oper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, February 19, 1992

Consumer Price Index up 0.1 % in January

Meigs announcements

Legion birthday
POMEROY - The Ame rican
Legion Drew Webster Post No. 39
and Ladies Auxiliary will celebrate
the post's birthday on March 17 at
6 p.m. at the Senior Citizens Center
in Pomeroy. All Legionnaires and
their wives are invited to attend.

Cloudy tonight. Low In nild·
30s. Thursday, high near SO.

•

The United Methodist Men of
the Racine Church will serve a pancake supper Thursday at the church
from 4 to Tp.m. Hoteakes, sausage,
scrambled eggs and coffee are on
the menu . While there is no set
price for the dinner, contributions
will be accepted.

Lewis-Manley makes contribution to HHI
A contribution wa s made to
Habitat for Humanity International
when the Lewis-Manley Unit No.
263 of the American Legion met at
Dale's in Gallipolis with Florence
Richards as hostess.
Blank report forms were distributed to the chairmen by Mrs.
Richards, secretary.
A bulletin from Eighth District
President Sharon Squires was read

Pick 3: 022
Pick 4: 0349
Cards:
6-H; Q-C; 10-D;
3-S

Pancake supper set

Meeting canceled
POMEROY - The February
meeting of the American Legion
Drew Webster Auxiliary Unit No.
39 has been canceled.

Receives degree

Meigs boys
post 74-57
TVC win

appearing in drag in "Nothing But
Trouble."
.
Last year's worst actor winner,
Andrew Dice Clay, was again nominated in the same category for
"Dice Rules." Another past winner, Sylvester Srallone, was nominated for the eighth consecutive
year, this time for "Oscar."
Competing with Miss Young for
the worst actress award are past
Razzie winner Madonna, for
"Truth or Dare," Kim Basinger for
"The Marrying Man," Sally Field
for "Not Without My Daughter,"
and Demi Moore for both ''The
Butcher's Wife" and " Nothing
But Trouble."

Prom dress exchange
TIJPPERS PLAINS - The Tuppers Plains VFW Post No. 905 3
and Ladies Auxiliary wiU sponsor a
"Prom Dress" Exchange on Saturday, Feb. 29 from 9 a.m. to II a.m.
at the VFW HaiL
Anyone having prom and formal
dresses who would like to sell them
is encoura&amp;ed to bring them to the
evenL A fee of $1 will be charged
for each dress. Unsold dresses or
money must be picked up by 6 p.m.
Tbe hall is located just off Route
7 north of Tuppers Plains. After
passing the last gas station in Tuppers Plains, tum on the first road to
the left - Vanderhoof Road. Drive
up the hill 10 the left and the VFW
building is on the right
For further information contact
Terri Hayr1an at843-51 37 or Rose
Carr at 98J-4161.

'

Ohio Lottery

Call the IRA Experts at Peoples Bank today! We're making IRA's simpl e to understand and easy to open. In fact,
we'll take yo ur applica~ion by phOne and have the
paperwork ready for your sign ature at the Peoples Bank
offi ce most convchicnt to you. .

NeUie Lowe has returned frllm
'
California where she ~isitcd her
brother, Arlie, and attended the
wedding of a granddaughter, the
daughter of Corky Lowe. '
Alan and Kenda Annstrong, ML
Vernon, spent a weekend with her
patents, Mr. and Mrs. Raymoad'
Donohue.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Orville Phillips
visited l!er daughter, Marilyn Will
Marietta
Belpre,
Athens
Lowell
and fliRI~Y In Lancaster recently.
373-3155
593-7761
423-7516
896-2369
Duane anc1 Hazel St.lllley spent
a day visilin$ Ia s u .and llolhMiddleport Nelsonville The Plains
er-in-law, Bill and Lorene-&amp;cou,
992-6661
753-1955
Nellonvi!Je.
· 11
797-4547
Manha Clawly and IWO ~· ' l Fcdellll resulatton&amp; iequire Mtbttantltl tax and inu: rt~t penakica for' early wilhd,.wat1ol .l
ters have moved from Rio Grllldc
~ '.
·
rRA depoorw.
·
)
to Harrisonville.
I

!

.

DRAGGING OPERATING DISCONTINUED - Middleport firemen discontinued dragging operations for a possible drowning ~ictim
after puttln1in another four hours on the Ohio
River Tuesday. The search jltsl below lbe Middleport levee began abou"l midnight Monday

when an unidentified woman reported to pollee
thallbey bad beard a person screaming and saw
someone struggUng in lbe water. Police have had
no report or a missing person. Tuesday's rescue
team· Consisted of Skip Johnson; Shawn Baker,
and Kenny Byer, I to r in lbe boat, assisted by
Jay Buskirk on shore."
·

One remap plan due for House
vote, another returns to court
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
vote on the Democrat-sponsored
biU in the House creating new congressional districts in Ohio sets the
stage for negotiation s with the
GOP-controUed Senate.
But the fate of a separate proposal that realigns the state's 33
Ohio Senate and 99 House districts
remained in the hands of a threejudge federal panel that ordered
changes made.
Reali$nment of legislative and
congressiOnal districts are required
because of population shifts noted
in the 1990 Census and constitutional requirements for all districts
to remain virtually equal in population.
The state Apportionment Board,
at a meeting late Tuesday, adopted
some of the changes and said the
plan will be sent back to the coun
for further consideration.
The House Stale Government
Commiuee on Tuesday recom mended passage of the Democratic
version of a Senate-passed bill
red!Jcing Ohio's congressional districts from 21 to 19. A floor vote

MANCHESTER, N.H. (AP) New Hampshire gave President
Bush a victory and a stern warning,
but also gave spark to Patrick
Buchanan's conservative uprising.
Tbe pocketbook-driven presidential
primary crowned neighbor Paul
Tsongas the Democratic front-runner.
Bush won Tuesday's GOP balloting by 58 percent to 40 percent,
a victory with a surprisingly narrow margin that left the White
House uncomfortable.
The GOP candidates said they
would focus on ·the South and the
Demo·cn1ts headed to Maine for
~~~s~ca~u~cuses and South

was expected today.
]oint commiuee has been appointed
Chairman WiU.iam Healy , D- to work out House-Senate differCanton, stressed tfiat while the pro- cnces.
posal is likely to pass the House, a
Continued on page 3

Howard seeks commission
seat on Democrat ticket

Janet L Howard has filed her employed at Kroger since Novempetition with the Meigs County ber, 1982. She is a member of
Board of Elections, making her a United Food and Commercial
Democratic candidate for Meigs Workers Union Local 347.
County Commissioner.
Howard is a member of the
Howard has been a resident of Meigs County Democratic Party' s
Meigs County since 19n, and cur- Central Committee, representing
rently lives at 37850 State Route the East Rutland voting precinct,
143 in Pomeroy with her husband, and has served in that capacity for
Ray Tackett, and their son, Kevin. six years. She is also a member of
She is the daughter of Gtispie and Meigs County's Ohio Young
Edith C. Howard, also of State Democrats of America club.
Route 143.
Howard also ran for a seat on
She is a 1974 graduate of Meigs the board of county commissioners
High School, and has over-si x in 1990, but was unsuccessfuL
years of management experience.
"!enjoy working with the public
She is employed by the Kroger and look forward to helping the
Company in Pomeroy, where she people of Meigs County whenever
works both in the dairy department possible," Howard said.
and as a cashier. She has bee n
"! feel that the county government needs to work on obtaining
federal monies that are available to
assist the county in attracting new
business here," she continued. "We
have all of the natural resources
needed to attract businesses."
Richard "Rick" Hysell , 38, Middleport, was arrested Tuesday
"There's no reason that Meigs
morning and charged with falsification and vandalism as a result of
County can't grow as rapidly as
ran incident at a Route 7 residence on Tuesday morning. A house
surroundin~ counties, like Gallia
window was broken and tires were slashed on a vehicle.
County, whtch is growing by leaps
According to Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby, Hysell
!llld bounds. Meigs Countr should
alJI)C8ted in Meigs Coanty Court on Tuesday and pled guilty 10 falbe right there with them." ':
sii'lcation. He was fmed $100 and eosts and sentenced 10 six months
in jail, which was suspended. The vandalism_charge was reduced to
criminal damaging. Hysell also pleaded gutlty to that charge and
was fmed $100 and costs and received a 90 day suspended sentence.
Hysell was plac¢ on two years probation and a restraining order
wasissued.
·

--Local briefs---.
Hysell a"ested, charged

Soulsby explains policy
Meip County Sheriff James M. Soulsby said Wednesday mom·
ing that it is·his policy to report breaking and entering incidents and
tltCfts 10 the news medi~ for three reasons.
'
.
Firstly, they are released to make the iesideniS aware that criminal activity is taking place. Secondly, once resillents are aware, they
lJ
~MiN meuura to pr(llfiCt their propcny, m:ord serial
'num anti bO more alen to suspicious activities, persons aild
vehic:lel.
.
·
Finally, the information is released in the hopes that· someone
migbt repon seeinJ the stolen items.
·
·."We aecd the tUe of c~es and ears of our residents 10 obtain
·-lnl'ormallon to help c~l the rash of breaking and entcrlngs,"
. Saullby said. "'ur ~~just does not have !be manpower 10
be everywhere in the C!llllll)'. W.e niust depend on residents for their
·
Condailed oil a 3
·

I:'

JANET HOWARD

PIDLIP M. ROBERTS

Roberts files
for post in
Gallia County
Philip M. Robeits , Patriot,
announced Tuesday his plans to
run in the May 5 primary election
for the Republican Pany nomination to the office of Gallia County
Engineer.
Roberts served as a project engineer for the Ohio Department of
Transportation for 13 years. Hi s
major projects included the Gal lipolis bypass, the approach interchange at the Silver Memorial
Bridge, the Pomeroy bypass and
many bridges in Gallia and Meigs
counties.
Robens, who has served for 12
years as Meigs County Engineer,
has operated a private engineering
and surveying practice in Gallipolis
for 20 years.
In 1988, Robens was appointed
for one term as a srnall government
commissioner for Issue This
seven-member commission decides
which small government projects
are funded throughout Ohio.
He is a member of the County
Engineers Association of Ohio
where he serves on the Salary and
Technology Transfer committees.
He is also a member of the Ohio
Township, Trustees ~nd Clerks
Association;
Roberts bas been a licensed ham.
radio operator (I(.SUNV) since
1960. '
An active member of the First
Baptist Church of O'allipolis, he
SClVC$ on the Ohio Valley Christian
School Bcllrd. .
He lives in Pllrlot with his.wife,
the former Karen Dailey, and his
son, Stephen.

Dakota before a March 3 regional
smorgasbord.
" America , here we come, "
Tsongas, a former Massachusetts
senator, pledged, promising to
break free from expectations of a
regional candidacy.
Arkansas Gov . Bill Clinton
dubbed himself the "comeback
kid" after polling a strong second
despite weeks of controversy over
character issues. Clinton enters the
next round with more _money and
organization than Tsongas, who is
counting on New Hampshire ' s

boost 10 fill out his war chest.
Nearly complete returns show\)(!
Tsongas with 35 percent to Clinton's 26 percent.
Behind them was a muddled
second tier.
·
NeblliSka Sen. Bob Kerrey took
third place with 12 percent of the
vote. Close behind was Iowa Sen.
Tom Harkin with 10 percent, and
former California Gov. Jerry
Brown trailed with 9 percent of the
vote, but. enough to claim moral
victory after being hugely outspenL
Continued on page 3

Lavender eyes commission
post on Republican ticket
Larry W. Lavender, 2481 Lee May with a bachelor's degree in
Circle, Syracuse, has announced accounting and a minor in computhis candidacy for the Republican er scicnqJ.
nomination for the Jan. 2 term of
The candidate said that his goal
Meigs County Commissioner in the if elected will be 10 "help develop
May 5 primary.
~owth in Meigs County by seekLavender filed his petition of mg industry to establish here which
candidacy Tuesday with the Meigs will create a larger job market and
give our children the opportunity to
County Board of Elections.
In announcing his candidacy, remain in Meigs Courity."
Lavender said that he has always
had a strong interest in the welfare
of Meigs County and is willing 10
make the commissioner's position
a full-time job 10 better serve the
residents of Meigs County if he is
elected.
Lavender has been a resident of
Meigs County since 1952. He
served in the U. S. Army from
1960 to 1963 and belongs to the
Drew Webster Post 39, American
Legion, Pomeroy. He is affiliated
with the Syracu se Nazarene
Church . He has been an active
member with the Syracuse Volunteer Fire and Emergency Departments having served as president
and chief of hoth departments.
He is married to Chri sy J.
Lavender and has three step-daughters, Raberta, Keri , and Cynth ia
CaldwelL
Lavender attends the University
of Rio Grande and will gradllilt.: in

z.

RECOGNIZED FOR SERVICE • Pomeroy postmuler Tom
Reuter! left, was reeoanlled for 35 yean service wltb tile U. S.
P01111i service. Lou Jilrdu, IIIIOCiate olllce coortllutor, ZU..tlle
olllce, presealed Realer *1111 • 35 year pill. Rellter's ntlre career
1w been Ia the Pomeroy olllee wbere be started 11 a tempora11
clll'rier aod advanced to postmaster ftve yettn ago.

�Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

.MULTIMEDIA, INC.
ROBERT L. WINGEIT
Publbher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Daily Press Association and
the American Newspaper Publisher Association.

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They sbould be less than 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned Jette" will be published. Letters
sbould be in good taste, addresslng issues, not personalities.

Letters to the editor
A misunderstanding
Dear Editor:
In regard to the article printed
protesting Judge Crow' s actions
which was in this paper on 1-2392.
I would like to clear up a misunderstanding. Although I am the
Commander of Post 467, I am not
permitted, nor do I wish to speak

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, February 19, 1992

revamishecJ:" And she denied that
there was any aberration on the
general's upper lip. "Why are you
interested anyway'?" she huffed.
A private art technician told us
the varnishing excuse didn't add up
because it takes weeks, not two
days, for the varnish to dry. So we
called McPeak's office, where the
incident had not been labeled a
national security secret, as it was in
the lower ranks. An aide to the gen·
eral told our associate Melinda
Maas that the paintin~ had indeed
been defaced and reprured.
It is now hanging once again in
the "A" ring of the fourth floor of
the Pentagon - a heavily trafficked area where some anonymous
malcontent must have thought the
mustilche was a good way to dress
up the general.
McPeak, who is clean-shaven,
has his own ideas about how an Air
Force officer should look. His drive
to create a spiffy new Air Force
uniform has brought some criticism
his way, McPeak, a tough fighter

!='ollR €.¥TR'l YeaRS!
Mi614T GiVe ME.

for my fellow offtcers and members. It was made clear to the others present I could only speak and
sign for myself.
Post 467 should not be held
responsible, nor believed to be represented by my own personal opinions.
Mark A. Tillis

same family c.nly $1 per day and
only pay up to eight hours per day.
This price range was set years
ago when the county could not
afford to pay any more than that,
but now this is the 90s and I sure
wish some one would open their
eyes and give us hard working day
care providers of Meigs County a
raise. Athens County can pay $2.25
per hour per child. That's a big difference.
Now don't get me wrong. I love
my job in caring for children.
Connie Rankin
Tuppers Plains, Ohio 45783

Favors prison site in Meigs
Dear Editor:
First off I am in favor of a
prison being located here in Meigs
County. Some of the recent letters
against the prison concern escapes
and dope.
. .
1 lived for several years withm
one mile of the Boys Industrial
School at Lancaster with no problems.
Before you say but those were
kids let me assure you that there
was some very big individuals
from Cleveland there. When an
escape occurred and there were
many as there was no fence around
the grounds, officers stopped at
every house and told us . The
escapes never bothered any local
people as they wanted to get out of
the area as quickly as possible with
no confrontations.
As for the increase in uat'fic let
the problems begin . We need
bumper to bumper traffic so we can
demand new and better roads.
Times have changed and this corner of the state wants better things
but none of the problems that go
with them.
On a recent trip to Parkersburg I
counted 13 cars with Meigs County
stickers on the license plates. For
the most part I would say these

people are going to the shopping
centers to buy. I like to look at old
buildings too, but have you ever
saw any shopping centers made out
of old buildings.
As for the drugs that might get
sold in the prison you can't stop
that.
We have a sheriff who is actual·
ly trying to stop the now. We also
have a prosecuting attorney and a
judge who are taking care of that
problem when it is presented to
them.
Face it Meigs County, a prison
could bring gas stations, motels,
new homes, jobs, supplies and
equipment bought here, better
roads, and increase the tax base.
As I understand it they will be
raising there own food. That will
mean more propeny sales, and buy·
ing of farm related equipment. It
would be nice to have a farm
equipment dealer in Meigs County
again.
Be assured our taxes will build
and maintain it, so lets bave it here
instead of some other county so the
people of Meigs County can reap
the benefits of what the future will
bring.
Jim Lucas
Pomeroy,OH

Berrls World

" Like, if I, like, REALLY like, like, LIKE
som8thlng, I REAL~ Y, /Ike, like it. "

pilot. modeled the prototype himself last October. Some critics at
the unveiling said ttiat with garish
stripes on the wrists, the uniform
looked like a knockoff of an airline
pilot's duds.
McPeak also believes that good
appearances should extend to the
office. We reported in December
on the $5 million renovations to the
Air Force's Pacific headquarters in
Hawaii when McPeak had that
command. In a time of austerity,
McPeak's underlings tried 10
renumber the wings of the head·
quarters building as. 14 separate
buildings so the gold-plated remodcling project would look like a
series of small maintenance jobs.
It was the sacking of his predecessor for a Persian Gulf War
indiscretion that opened the top job
for McPeak in September 1990.
Then-Chief of Staff Gen . Michael
Dugan was fired for loose-tips with
h
t e press about the Pentagon's
plans to demoralize Iraq by bornbarding Baghdad.
·

iT WaN'T CllRe YoU, BUT iT

Responds to article
Dear Editor:
I am writing in regards to a article in The Sunday Times-Sentinel,
Where Child Care funding of
$50,000 was available to Meigs
County residents.
I .am a day care provider for
Meigs and Athens County that
requires to be county approved for
licensing. I sure cannot understand
why us hard-working day care
providers are so underpaid.
As for Meigs County, we as day
care providers only make $1 per
hour for only the frrst child in the
family, and the second child in the

OHIO

Accu-Weathere forecast for

•

IToledo I 4o• l
e

accident rate than drivers in their
middle years ; according to the
National Safety Council.
To assist the older driver remain
a sharp and safe driver, the Ohio
General Assembly is considering
legislation that would provide a
financial incentive for older drivers
to take a driving accident prevention course. Under House Bill 629,
sponsored by Representative Mike
Stinziano of Columbus, insurance
companies would be required to
offer reduced auto rates for drivers
60 and older who successfully
complete and pass a State
Highway Patrol approved driving

driving skills resulting from the
aging process, become more aware
of chan$es which arc occurring in
the drivmg environment, and learn
how to avoid difficult and crash·
prone situations.
Supporters of House Bill 629,
including the AARP, point to several studies that have demonstrated
the effectiveness of DOC's. In a
1989 study involving the California
Mature Driver Imrrovement Pro·
gram, the program s 40,399 gradu·
ates had 16% fewer .crashes and
15.7% fewer convictions in the six
months following course comple·
tion than 75,064 drivers in a concourse.
trol sample with whom they were
Probably the best known post· COffill3Ted.
licensure driver uainin~ program is
Smce 1974, 31 states and the
the Defensive Drivmg Course District of Columbia have enacted
(DOC), developed by the National legislation requiring insurance
Safety Council. The DOC is an companies to reward drivers comeight-hour curriculum, usually pleting CDC's with insurance mte
spread over four sessions, that reductions. Perhaps even more
emphasizes specific actions drivers telling is the fact that several insurcan take to reduce the chance of a ance companies already offer such
crash. DOC participants learn how premium discounts.
to compensate for changes in their
With few exceptions, elderly

IND.

•I Columbus I 44•1

to raise the capital I!&gt; purchase the
teams. The shareholders could then
elect boards of directors to manage
the finances. Lest you think this
fanciful, consider the fact that the
Green Bay Packers football team
has been run this way since 1922.
To guarantee the Packers stayed in
Green Bay, the fans bought the
franchise. Twice through the years,
the team has encountered fmancial
difficulties and both times it has
been rescued by sales of additional
"stock" that cannot be traded.
2. "Municipalize" the teams.

W . VA.

S f - . T-•torms Rain

Sunset tonight will be at 6: II
p.m. Sunrise on Thursday will be at
7:19a.m.
Around the world
Rain fell in Portland, Maine,
early today and drizzle and fog
hung over much of the East Coast.
Snow fell over pans of Nonh
Dakota and Iowa, and it rained in
Chicago. Rain also fell over much
of the Nonhwest
A spring-like storm that rumbled through Ohio on Tuesday
destroyed one house, damaged at
least four others and overturned
cars near Van Wen, in northwest

Cloudy

By The Associated Press
The second spring-like stonn. in
a week rumbled through Ohio,
destroying one house, damaging at
least four others and overturning
cars. Six people suffered minor
injuries.
A tornado was reported about
6:25 p.m. Tuesday near the intersection of Ohio 81 and U.S. 127,
said Trooper Joe Lockery of the
State Highway Patrol's Van Wen
post. The intersection is about 10
miles south of Van Wert.
Van Wert is about 60 miles
south of Toledo.
" We had high wind, rain and all
kinds of stuff at once,'' said Trooper Darryl Edge.

Some houses nearby were ·
moved off their foundations, one
house ttailer was damaged and several cars were overturned, he said.
The National Weather Service
could not confirm that the storm
was a tornado, but winds of more
than 55 mph were reponed, said
Jesse Dean of the service's Dayton
station.
Six people were treated for cuts
and bruises, then released from
Van Wert Community Hospital,
House Supervisor Mary Coplin
said early today.
"You don't e~pecttornadoes in
February," she said. "They're very
shook up."
"Everything came crashing
down and us with''·" said Deloid

,---Local briefs-_____, --Area deaths-Continued from page 1
assistance by providing us with the information."
Soulsby also reponed that there are a number of B&amp;E incidents
in neighborin~ counties, but that information is being withheld from
the news media.

Deer accident probed
Meigs County Sheriffs deputies investigated a deer accident on
evening.
· Jackali'n·F. 'frost, New Hope Road, was southbound on State
Route 7 near Chester in a 1988 GMC van when she struck a deer
that ran into her path. The deer damaged the right front and the right
passenger door of the van. Heavy damage was listed to the vehicle.
T~sday

Racine man cited by patrol
A Racine man was cited following a two-car accident at the
intersection of state Route 124 and Welshtown Hill Road in Salisbury Township Tuesday morning.
,
According to a repon from the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
Highway Pauol, Roben E. Klein, 29, of Pomeroy, was making a left
turn onto Welshtown Hill Road when another car driven by Lyle D.
Nichols, 47, of Racine, failed to stop and ran into the rear of his car.
No injuries were reponed.
·
Damage to Klein's 1981 Plymouth Horizon and Nichols' 1984
Plymouth Reliant was listed as light.
Nichols was cited for failure to maintain assured clear distance.

Will explain program
The Post Secondary Options Program will be explained at a
meeting of students and parents to be held at Southern High School
at 7 p.m. Thursday.
·
The frogram allows students entering their ju~i&lt;;~r and senior
years o high school next fall to take classes at ehgtble post secondary institutions.
.
. . .
Jim Adams, ~rincipal, satd that post secondary mstttutions
include commumty colleges, post secondary vocauonal techmcal
institutions, state universities, and many private college and universities.
The purpose of offering Post Secondary Options is to promote
rigorous academic purs~its and to provide a wider variety of oppor·
tunties to high school students.
Students and parents will be given information at the meeting to
help them make suitable decisions about advanced training opportu·
nities.

Skin testing clinic scheduled
Connie Karschnik, R.N., will conduct a skin testing clinic at the
Columbia Township Fire Department on Tuesday from 5-7 p.m.
All area residents, including boosters clubs, PTO' s, church
groups and other residents who are in food servtce are urged to take
advantage of this free service.
. .
.
For the convenience of working parents thtS ts. an op}!Orrune ume
for a child entering kinderganen next year to recetve thetr skin test.
The funds for the these clinics are provided through the tuberculosis levy and there is no charge for any of the services.
Further information may be obtained by caUing the Meigs County Tuberculosis Oflice at992-3722.

0 ne••,

Continued from page 1
scats.
Republican U.S. Re~s. Willis
Gmdison Jr. of Cincinnau and John
Boehner of West Chester would be
placed in a realigned 2nd District
of southwest Ohio, under Ms.
Sheerer's bilL
She said Democrats would lose
a district by apponioning off the
existing 11th District of Rep. Dennis Eckan of Mentor, who is not
see!ting re-eleetion, to surrounding
areas of northea.1t Ohio.

"This is not by any means a
final bill," Healy said.
Healy's committee OK'd the
Democratic bjll as a substitute for a
·proposal that passed the Republican Senate two weeks ago.
Sponsoring Rep. Judy Sheerer,
D-Shaker Heights, said it requires
each party to sacrifice one dtStrict
to accommodate Ohio's loss of two

•

Stocks

By The Associated Press
Today is Wednesday; Feb. 19, the 50th day of 1992. There are 316
days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
. .
Fifty years ago, on Feb. 19, 1'942, President Franklin D. Roosevelt .
signed Executive Order 9066, giving the U.S. military the power to relo-.· .
cate and intern "any and all persons." The order was used to detain some :
110,000 Japanese-Americans, most of them U.S.-bom citizens.
On this date:
In 1473, the astronomer Copernicus was born in Torun, Poland.
In 1803, Congress. voted to accept Ohio's borders and constitution.
(However, Congress did not formally ratify Ohio statehood until1953.) . :.
: In 1807, former Vice President Aaron Burr. was arrested in Alabama... ·
· (He was subsequenUy tried for treason and acquitted.)
In 1&amp;46, the Texi$ sJate government was formally installed in Austin.
In 1878, Thomas Edison received a patent for his phonograpb,
. • :·
In 1881, Kansas became the · fir:~t state to prohibit all alcoholic bever· ·: ··
ages. ·
·
. ..
·
· ·
· .
,.
In 1945, during World War II, U.S. Marines landed on the Japanese- ·
held island of lwo Jima in the Western PacifiC.
In 1963, the Soviet Union informed President Kennedy that it would
withdraw "several thousand" of an estimated 17,000 Soviet troOps in·
Cuba
·
. ·
·
;.
In 1983, 13 people were found shot to death at a gambling cluJ! in : '
Seattle's Chinatown district. (Two Cl)inei!C immigrants were l!lter coh\lict- '
ed of the killings.)
·-'--1

Bush
...
Continued from page 1

Am Ele Power .. ................ .31 1!8
Ashland Oil ...................... .32 3!8
~T&amp;T................................ .38 3/8
Bank One.......................... .47 3!8
Bob Evans .........................26 3/4
Charming Shop ...................28 1/2
City Holding ..................... .18 3/4
Pederal Mogul .................... l5 1/~
000dyearT&amp;R ..................621/2
Key Centurion ................... 15 3!8
Lands' End ........................34
Limited Inc....................... 30
Multimedia Inc.................. 26 3/4
Ra~ Restaumnt .................. ! 3!8
Robbins&amp;Myers ................ 18 1/2
Shoney's Inc ...................... 26 1/4
•Star Bank ...........................26 1/2
Wendy lnt'1........................ 12 3/4
'Wonhington Ind ................25 112
Stoek reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Blunt,
Ellllatld Loewl ol Gall!polls.

t(

,, "'-'-"''" -

Pt. Cloudy

Friday through Sunday:
Fair on Friday and Sunday .
Chance of rain or snow Saturday.
Highs in 40s to mid-50s Friday and
upper 30s or tlie 40s Saturday and
Sunday. Lows in upper 20s or the
30s.

South-Central Ohio
Toni~ht, cloudy with a chance
of flurnes. Low in the mid-30s.
Chance of snow is 40 percent.
Thursday, partly cloudy and
warmer. High near 50.
Extended forecast:

Float bond issues and buy them.
Again, this is not a lunatic notion.
New York Governor Mario Cuomo
suggested in .1990 that the state or
New York City buy the Yankees.
"I suspect that it is eminently,
financeable," he said. Can you
imagine the pride the citizens or a
city would have in their own team?
ll would foster public spirit, pull
communities together, maybe even
deter racism.
It is an idea whose time came
some time ago.

'

Sunny

------,;.,_--Weather-----

drivers have been good driver:~ for
many years. Most have driven
thousands of miles with no crashes
or citations. At most, some have
experienced only one of two minor
traffic incidents during their lifetime. They are justifiably proud of
their driving record! Unfonunately,
and through no fault of their own,
many older drivers are at greater
risk to be involved in a car acci·
dent
The Oh io Legislature is
responding to this challenge with a
pro-active measure that can help
the older driver learn important
new skills at no extra cost to tax·
payers or insurance consumers.
As always, please feel free to
call or write me, State Senator Jan
Michael Long, if you have any
questions or comments about these
or any other issues. My number is
(614 )466-8156, and my address is
the Statehouse, Columbus Ohio,
43215.

'

Ice

Flurries

C1992 Accu·Weather, Inc

Sen. Jan M. Long •

Today in·history

By The Associated Press
More seasonable weather is
returning to Ohio with temperatures in the 30s arid snow or snow
flurries likely tonight
The National Weather Service
said skies will remain cloudy but
the snow should end on Thursday
without any significant accumulations. The mercury probably won't
climb out of the 30s most places.
The record high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 70 degrees in !939. The
record low was 6 below zero in
1936.

Ohio. Six people suffered minor
injuries. Winds gusted up to 55
mph and nickel-size hail was
reponed in the area.
Nearly an inch of rain fell Tuesday afternoon at Alachicola, Fla.,
on the nonhem Gulf.
Thunderstorms were expected
today in central Florida, with more
than an inch of rain in store for ·
some areas.
Forecasters called for snow in
the Great Lakes region, with accumulations of more than 2 inches
likely in some seetions from southeastern Wisconsin to eastern

Michigan.
,
More rain was forecast for the
Nonhwest, with higher elevations
expected to get more than 2 inches
of snow by Thursday morning, Dry
weather was forecast for southern
California
Temperatures in the Nonheast
were expected to be more than 10
degrees above normal.
·
Tuesday's high of 78 degrees in
Galveston, Texas, broke a 76-ye~t·
old record for the date of 74
degrees, set in 1916.
The nation's high Tuesday was
86 degrees at Homestead, Fla.

.
·
:
,
•
:
·
·
·
·

Tornado reported in Van Wert County; six injured

The fans are ,baseball's best hope JosephSpear
I bave an old but new idea that to decide whether the Seattle
could save the game of baseball Mariners, now owned by an
from the purgatory into which it is investor from Indianapolis, ought
rapidly plunging. It is old because I to be sold to a Seattle group that
ftrst suggested it three years ago; it would receive 60 percent of its
is new because I am still waiting backing from Hiroshi Yamauchi,
for some take-charge person to per- president of the Nintendo company
ofJapan.
ceive the wisdom of it
The first reaction, that of Base· Before I explain the idea, you
ban
·commissioner Fay Vincent,
need to know this: Baseball is a
was
negative. "The baseball rules
divinely inspired game and a cultural asset and is thus too precious on ownership require local owner·
to be ·entrusted to the buffoons, ship, and it would be very hard to
bean counter:~, unbalanced person- envision those rules with foreign
alities, Wall Street moguls, singing ownership," he said. "I think it is
cowboys, pizza makers and car unlikely baseball would respond
dealers who own professional favorably."
Never mind that the Pacific
teams.
·
You also need to know this: Nonhwest has a lon11 and happy
These descendanJs of robber barons trading relationship wtth Japan; or
have taken what was a healthy that Nintendo of America employs
institution a few years ago and I ,400 people in Washington state;
driven it to the brink of bankruptcy. or that Yamauchi's interests would
To be sure, they've had plenty of be managed by his son-in-law
help from greedy players who have . Minoru Arakawa, an MIT grilduate
demanded multimillion-doUar fees and 12-year resident of Seallle; or .
for their performances. The aver- that "local oWhership" is a joke
age salary is now $8S1,000 a year. anyway because numerous owners
There are scores of players in the . don'tlive iq the cities where they
$3 million-a-year club, and a few conuollelntJ.
make SS milliQII or more.
The simple fact is thai die ownAnd know•this: Television has ers want American bascbalrto
paid the freight until now, but those remain almost purely American (a
days are over. Advertising rev- bit of~ is app~m~dy OK).
enues are down and broadeasting And that, with ~ vamlslt stripped
contraciS will soon reflect it. Thiu off it, 8tiiOtUIIS IIi~. Ancf ihat
means baseball fans will be called is just one more reason wby the
upon for direct subsidy of their fans themselves ilccd 10 ielzc con•
favorite pastinie. A day at the ball- trol ct bm"eel
park wifi cost the equivalent of a
And that'• lilY idea: Baseball
car payment, and games will be aftelonadol in every mljor-league
broadcast on pay-per-view.
city lboukl orpnlzc and buy their
That gets me back to my idea. bueball teams. 'lliere are at least
What brings itiO mind apin is the twO ways lhll could tic done:
latest brouhaha slirred up by the · 1. Fonn "coope~atives" or nonowners. They are currently trying' profit corporations and sen shares

PA.

IMansfield I 44•l•

During McPeak's tenure, he has
focused more on form, to the dis· may of some in the Air Force who
are more interested in substance.
Last fall, a "Brown Paper" spoofing the macho mentality of Air
Force fighter pilots circulated
around the Pentagon. The paper,
like the mustache, was the work of
an anonymous creator. It chronicled the emergence of the "manly
man" in the Air Force , someone
who can "put fire and steel on a
target. ..
The "Brown Paper" pokes fun
at Air Force weight standards that .
judge a man based on the ratio of
his neck size to his waist size
(" The higher the neck-to-waist .
ratio, the better the genius for lead.
ership. ") And it says that something the Air Force "needs to
develop for a manly image is a dis·
tinctively Air Force uniform. It
needs to be as streamlined as the
latest flightsuit to reflect the aero·
. . . . . . . I' dynamic image of the manly man."
.,
WAR ON DUNG - The U.S.
Customs Service, which usually
keeps itself busy scouting for drug
drops along the Mexican border,
has a problem with droppings closer to home. Construction on the
Customs headquarters parking lot
in WashingiOn has forced the agen·
cy's top brass to park their cars in
front of the building , under the
roost of a flock of prolific pigeons.
When the drips hit the sedans, Cus·
toms launched a counter-offensive.
Guards were recently spotted in
front of the building beating
together two-by-fours and playing
a tape of shrill bird-in-distres s
calls, hoping to spook the pigeons.
"We've tried everything," a Customs spokesman acknowledged.
But just like the drug lords , the
birds are winning the war.
The ruckus caused by all the
pounding and screeching apparently drew some strange looks from
tourists who no doubt returned to
the heanland and told their neighbors that everything they had heard
LC.
about Washington was uue.
Copyrigh~ 1992, United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.
.

House Bill 629: Assistance for elderly drivers:
The elderly are an increasing
proportion of both the total and
driving population. Census figures
show that persons 65 and older are
the fastest growing segment of the
population. Looking ahead, the
"baby boomer" generation is
expected to nearly double this portion of the population from 12% to
a projected 20% of the total population.
At first look, statistics collected
from nationwide crash repons seem
to minimize any concern that older
drivers are actually at any greater
risk to cause or be involved in an
automobile accident.
Motor vehicle crashes arc not a
major ca'use of death for older persons, when compared to other causes. The rate of motor vehicle crash
involvements per unit population is
highest for 18 year olds and
declines steadily with increasing
age. However, further examination
unveils a more concerning picture.
When fewer number of miles driv·
en are taken into account, drivers
age 55 and older have a higher

conditions and

MICH .

Jack Ande•son
' '
'
Michael Binstein

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

Cooler temper~tures returning tonight

Weatl rt; l

Thursday, Feb. 20

Air Force chief a victim of creative license
WASHINGTON - A stealthy
graffiti artist who drew a mustache
on the official Pentagon ponrait of
Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. Merrill "Tony" McPeak remains at
large, probably congratulating himself on geaing away with smudging
the man who places a premium on
appearances . McPeak recently
spent $1.5 million redesigning the
Air Force uniform because he fig·
ured his people should like the way
they look.
The hit-and-run artist apparently
attacked.the oil painting with a felttip pen on the night of Jan. 6. The
portrait with the Dapper Dan mustache hung on the wall of the Penta~on for a full day for the entertainment of passersby before any·
one took it down. It reappeared two
days later, sans mustache.
Pentagon security police investigated, but the culprit left no clues.
When we asked the Air Force an
museum branch about the incident,
a spokeswoman denied that it had
happened. She said the painting
was simply "taken down to be

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, .February 19,.1992

u.---.. . . •--11111
.

.

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'

Orris Harris
Orris E. Harris, 95, of Min ersville, Ohio died Monday, Feb.
17, 1992, at the Veterans Administration Hospital in Huntington.
!lorn June 26, 1896, in Hartford,
he was a son of the late Warren W.
and Ella M. (Keams) Harris. He
was also preceded in death by his
wife, Anna Florence Harris, who
died Feb. 17, 1976, three sisters,
Jennie, Mary and. Katie, and two
brothers, Lewis and Carl.
A guard at the U.S. Navy Depot
Yard in Point Pleasant, he was a
member of the Drew-Webster
American Legion ·Post of Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Surviving arc two daughters and
sons-in-law, Virginia A. and Mason
Fisher of Minersville, Ohio, Sara E.
and Milton Roush of Syracuse,
Ohio; two sons and daughters-inlaw, Ernest E. and Roxann Harris
of Syracuse, Ohio, and Paul E. and
Minnie Harris of Minersville, Ohio:
one sister, Irene Dint.aman, Smithville, Ohio: 20 grandchildren, 12
great-grandchildren, and one greatgreat-grandchild.
The fun eral will be Friday, I :30
p.m., at the Foglesong Funeral
Home with Tim Vaughan and John
Elrod offtciating. Burial will be in
Graham Cemetery.
Friends can call at the funeral
home Thursday, 2 to 4 and 7 10 9
p.m.
Georgia Watson
Georgia F. Watson, 84, of 204
Lasley Sueet, Pomeroy, died Tues-

.

-'

~

Local service clubs
observe Ladies night

A combined Valentine' s Day
party and ladies' night was
observed by the MiddleportPomeroy Rotary Club and the
Pomeroy Lions Club Monday night
24
at Gilmore's Restaurant
Welcomes were extended by
Units of the Meigs County
Jeff
Warner, president of Lions,
Emergency Medical Service
and
Richard
Vaughan, president of
responded to five calls for assis·
Rotary.
The
25th
weddmg annivertance on Tuesday afternoon and
sary of Mr. and Mrs. Jim Hill was
Wednesday morning.
On Tuesday at 1:14 p.m . the noted and a special welcome was
Rutland unit responded to a call on given to Betty Fultz who underHysell Run Road for Cora Wood- went surgery several weeks ago.
Entertainment before and after
. yard who was transported to Pleas·
the
dinner was provided by Denver
ant Valley Hospital.
Rice
on his guitar. He was accomAt 1:29 p.m. the Middleport unit
panied
to the dinner by his ·wife,
went to Nonh Fourth for Clarence
Nora.
Smith who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital and at 3:06p.m.
the Middlepon unit went to Over- Choir lo practice
brook for Helen Jenkins who was
Choir practice at Trinity Church
uansponed to Pleasant Valley.
will be held at 6:30 Thursday
This morning (Wednesday) at evening at the chureh, At 7:30p.m.
12:35 a.m. the Pomeroy unit was the community choir will rehearse,
called to Second Street for John Lois Bun, director, announced.
DeMoss who was taken to Veter •
ans.
The Daily Sentinel
The Pomeroy Fire Department,
&lt;USPS 2tS·960)
at 9:10a.m., responded to a call on
Long Hollow Road ~here a gas
Publiahcd every ar\ern oon, Monday
through Friday, lU Court St., Pomeroy,
line had ruptured.
Ohio by the Oh1o Valley Publi ahing

SquadS respond to 5
calls past hours

Hospital news
Veterans,.Memorial
TUESDAY ADMISSIONS _ Mary Bentz, Pomeroy:
James Smith, Middlepon; Clarence
Smith, Middleport; Randy Manin,
Racine. ·
TUESDAY DISCHARGES ·
Herben Shields, Charles Kiser, and
Emma Chapman.

Tsongas and Clinton split tJie 18
Democratic national convention
delegates, nine apiece, leaving
none for the second·tiCI' candidates.
Bush pi!Cied 14 of the Republican national convention delegates
to Buehanan's nine.
·
Buchanan's suong showing
contrasted ShlllJliY with the campaign-saving wm New Hampshire Middleport Court news
gave Bush four years ago- before
Five were fined Tuesday night
a punlshing reeasion took hold.
when they appeared in the coun of
New Hampshi(e's polls were Middlepon'Mayor Fred Hoffman.
barely closed when Bush acknowl·
Fined $10,and costs each on
edJed he was aeulnJ .the m~e charges of running stop signs were
of voters'=
economic dis- Charles Lemley, Pomeroy, Charles
trcas and
ty eager 10 venJ W. Jacks, Pameroy, and Loleua L.
their frullration on tho president.
Barley, Dextu. Otbers fined were
"I think the oppaecniS on both Stacey L. Bums, C!eshire, $17 and
sides Jelp8d tho 1llrvelt of dilcpn· costs, speodina, and Charles J.
terll with tho JIICO' of New HaJitp- · Thomas, .Middleport, Sl 0 and
shire's economy," Bush said
costs, failure to yield.
'I,
•
J ~'
' .'~ l ~ ..· tlf 1\,•'"
N
I
'

day, Feb. 18, 1992, at the Over·
brook Center, Middleport after an
extended illness.
Born on Jan. 9, 1908 at
Sharples, W. Va., she was the
daughter of the late Giles and Rosa
Friley Whitlock. She was a homemaker.
She was a member of the First
Baptist Church, Pomeroy, and
active in the One-Won-One Class
there. She also belonged to the
Magnolia Club, and Pomeroy
Chapter, Order of the Eastern Star.
She is survived by one daughter,
Patricia J. Buck, Springfield; four
grandchildren, Randy Buck, Carolyn Buck, Barbara Lebaroff and
Kyle Buck; and five great-grand·
children, Angella Lebaroff, James
Lebaroff, Andrey Harenberg,
Chelsea Moss, and Shelby Buck;
and many nieces and nephews.
Besides her parents she was preceded in death by her husband,
William E. Watson, three sisters,
Faye Davis, Dixie Montique, and
Adrian Hubbard, and a brother,
Oscar Whitlock.
Services will be held at I 'p.m.
Friday at the Ewing Funeral Home.
Burial will be in Beech Grove
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
p.m. Thursday.

Rickard, 57, one of the six people
treated at;he hospital.
Rickard was watching television
at home \\'hen the storm hit, blowing his van on top or his bam. A
grandson's car parked outside was
turned around.
Ralph Eversole, chief deputy of
the Van Wert County Sheriff's
Depanment, said the storm moved
about three miles from the highway
intersection toward Jonestown.
Officials knew of storms in the
area, but had no advance warning a

-Meigs announcementsAMVETS to meet
AMVETS will meet on Sunday
at Smitty 's on Main Street in
Pomeroy at 2 p.m. The group will
receive its state charter at this
meeting.
YDC to meet
The Meigs County group of
Ohio Young Democrats of America
will meet at 6:30p.m. on Thursday
at Carpenters Hall . All Democrats
aged 18-36 arc invited to attend.
Officer:~ will be elected.
UMW meeting set
The Racine United Methodist
Women will meet on Monday at
7:30p.m. at the church . In addition
to the meeting, a skit will be presented. All women are invited.
Rutland Garden Club to meet
Rutland Garden Club will hold
their regular meeting on Monday at
1:30 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Margaret Belle Weber, wilh Marcia
Dennison and Margaret Parsons,
hostesses.
Library rilms announced
The movies "Charlie Chaplin,
the Cure" and "Bearskin" will be
·
.
shown at the Pomeroy Library on
Saturday and Sunday at 2 p.m. and at the Middleport Library on Monday at4:30. ,
Library bnard to meet
The regular meeting of the
Meigs County Public Library
Board of Trustees will be held on
Thursday, February 27 at I p.m. at
the Pomeroy library.
FFA to host show
A lawn and garden show will be
held on Friday from 9 a.m . until
3:30p.m. at Southern High School.
Morris Equipment, Baum Lumber,
O'Dell Lumber, R&amp;G Feed and
Supply and Valley Lumber will be
among the local dealers represented. The show is sponsored by
Southern Future Farmers of America in observance of FFA Week
(February 16-22).

Advertising RcprcsenLativ c, Branham

Ncwapapcr Salea.l 733 Thi rd Avonuc,
New YOrk, N'ewYurk 10017.

Round and square dance
There will be a round and
square dance on Friday from 8II :30 p.m. at Hockingport at
Kenny anr;l Millie Reynolds. Music .
will be provided by "Don, Buddy
and the Smokey Mountain ·
Drifters." John Russell will be the
caller.
Country bluegrass and gospel
music is played there every Manday at 7 p.m. and the public is
invited to attend.
Country music night
Country Music Night at the Lottridge Community Center will be
held Saturday from 6 p.m. to midnight. Refreshmeqts will be avail·
able and all bands are welcome.
The public is invited.
Group to meet
The Area Ostomey Association •
will meet Sunday at 2:30p.m. at ·
Pleasant Valley Hospital in the
downstairs conference room. The
public is welcome.
Youth to meet
y
hL
'II
Pomeroy out eague Wt
meet at 6:30 p.m. on Thursday at
Rock Springs United Methodist
Ch h
urc ·
#!!!!!!!~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I

SPRING VALLEY CINfMA
446 4524

. . ; '

Alumni plans underway
There will be a meeting Tuesday
at 7 p.m. at Pleaser's Restaurant in
Pomeroy for alll952 P.H.S. gradu·
ates. Plans will be made for the
40th alumni reunion . All class
members in the area are urged to
attend.

CINE
We're getting
read, for ,ou!
949·Z64Z

Company!Multimedlt lne., Pomeroy,
Ohio .:i769, Ph. 992·2166. Second clau
po~tage paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.

Member: The A11ociat.ed Pret1, Inland
Daily Prca Auociation and the Ohio
Ncwapaper Anoeiation, National

tornado might hit, he said. Authorities were still assessing damage
early today, the sheriff's office
said.
At about 12:25 a.m. today, the
Licking County Sheriffs office in
central Ohio reported a possible
funnel cloud just south of Newark.
No confirmation or damage was
reported.
The Putnam County sherirf's
office reponed nickel-sized hail in
Miller City. Dime-sized hail was
reported in Leipsic.

~~~

POSTMA8I'ER: Send addrees chanp I.e
The Dally SenUncl, Ill Court St .,
Pomeroy, OHio 46769 .

Special of the Week!

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13 Wteke. ........................................ hl.M

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62 Wllila...
ll4.78

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WITH FRIES •••••11.49
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ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY
"If ,..

illllef ... , _ ,

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The Daily Sentinel

Sports

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

Wednesday, February 19, 1992

Meigs posts 74-57 win over N~lsonville-York

Wednesday, February 19, 1992
Page-4

North Gallia hands Eastern 84-69loss

McGUIRE SCORES - Eastern forward Terry McGuire (with
ball) takes the inside shot and sends it to the hoop in front or North
Gallia's Kevin Hunt (bottom) during Tuesday night's SVAC contest
at Vinton, which the Pirates won 84-69. McGuire scored 10 poiDts
in the contest. (OVP photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

Schubert hits 31 in
121-98 Redmen win
There was no question about it:
the second half of the University of
Rio Grande-Walsh College
matchup at Lyne Center Tuesday
saw the Redmen be all they wanted
to be as a basketball team.
The result was a 121-98 victory
over the Cavaliers before an O'Dell
Lumber Night audience that
marked the final home game of the
regular season for John Lawhorn's
club.
The win avenged Rio Grande's
three-point loss to Walsh in Canton
earlier in the season, the first of
three defeats endured by the Red-

men in Mid-Ohio Conference
action to date. But for senior cocaptains Brad Schubert and Mark
Erslan,last night's win had iiS own
significance.
"There was some great ball
management in the second half,
and it was a great way for two
seniors who have been a class act
all the way to end the season at
home," Lawhorn commented.
Schubert finished with 31
poiniS, the majority of them from
eight three-pomters, while Erslan
added nine points and lent his cus(See RIO on PageS)

Scoreboard
In theNBA ...

Tuesday's scores

AtlanUc DhVIon
Twn

W L

Pet.

New Yodt .............. 33 11

.647

Bottat.......

Philoddphii ......... .. 2S 27
MionU ................... 24 2S

.S69

4

.481
.462

8.5
95

NewJmey ............ 2t 30

.412

12

Wuhinglon ........... .17 34
Orlando .................. l3 39

.333
.250

16

........ 29 22

WuhinJt.on 4, San J..e 2

GB

Toolgbl's games
Monll'Ulat Hartford, 7:35 p.m.
Sl.. Low. II Winnipea. 8t35 p.m.
Ba~too 1t c.t 111)', 9JS p.m.
Lor Anatb at Edrnmton, 9:35p.m..
Buffalo 11 Vanc:ouvcr,10:3S p.m.

20.5

Thursday's games

Centul Dl•lslon

~f:~·d :::::Ji ~ ~ :~:

DdroiL ................... 30 22
AUan\1 ................... 26 25
MiJwal.lbc ............. lS 26
lndiana ................... 23 30

Clwlouo ................ l6 35

. ~71

Toronto at Dctrtat, 7:35p.m.
N.Y. Ranp at N.Y. t.landm:, 7:35

a

p.m.

.510
.490
.414

12
15.5
16.5
19.5

.314

2l.5

Major college
basketball scores

Quobco: "PiiUbmJ),, 7,35 p.m.

New Jcney at Chicaao. 8:3S p.m.

East

WESTERN CONFERENCE

L&amp;byc:tte 75, Columbia (:R
Manhattan 14, lma 69

Mkfw•t Dl•lalon

Team
W
U\lh ...................... .JS
San Antonio ........... 29
Hnuum ................. 26
Ocnver ................... \9

L
18

PtL
.660

CD

2l

.5fi9

5
8.5
14.5

26

.500

31
Oallu ..................... 15 36
Minnelcu .............. I0 40

.380
.294
.200

MU&amp;Ichuiew II, RLille:zl 67
Ni•a•n. 84, CaniJiUl7t
ProVidalcc 74, BOilOn Collece 61
Rhode bl1nd II, Wal Vlralnla "
Villanova 74, Mi1m.i SO

19

2ll

Soutb

Paclnc Dlwtalon
Ponland .................36 ll .706
Golden Stlt.c .......... 33 1.5

.688

1.5

20

.623

4

2l

.569

7

25
2l

.519
.510

9.5
10

PIH&gt;cni.&lt; .................. 33
L.A . LU.m ............ 29
Saalc .................... 27
L.A. Q;ppon ......... 26

Sacnmcnllt.. ......... .17 l4

.:m

ClcmKII 68, Florida SL 67
Georf;i.a 87, Ad:U\IU 78
LouiJville 89, Va. Commooweahh 71
South Allbtma 15, New Orleans 63
South flc.-HII II, Mmhall19
VMI76. Willilm &amp; Muy 68

19

Midwest
Evwville 71, lndian1 St. 44
low• 92, Ohio St..l6
Notre Dame 60, t.la..r®ette 53
Xavier, Ohio 91, Butfc:r 75

Tuesday's scores
New Yad 110, SacrtmmiD 97
lleuoi1117,0rlondo95
Milwaukee 121, Cleftland 116
Philodetptil94. 0&amp;11u 90
Portt.m!l29,- 116

Southwest
lloost.on 86, Rice 13

Tonlgbt's games
Detroit at New Jcney, 7:30p.m.
Chic&amp;~ 11 Orlando, 7:]() P:m.

WuhlnP. It Atlanta. 7:30p.m.
Sammmio at Indiana, 7:30p.m
Denver al Owtoae, I p.m.
8MM .. OoldCR Sll\e,. p.m.
Minnetcu It Sail Anll:llio, 1:30 p.m.
0&amp;11u "Ullh. 9,30 p.m.
LA. Wen at L.A. Clippera, 10:30
p.m.

Far West
CS Northridae 102, Loyola Mary-

mo~W~t95

S. Ullh I~ N. ......,,63
Sacnmc:rtto SLil, UC Davia 71
UCU I~ Califomi.o 76

Ohio high school
girls basketball scores
ToYmameotO&lt;tloo

Tbuntdoy'a camea

Dhloloo I
Cin. Aik"'l3, Cin. Oak Hilla !0
Cin. McAuloy !4, Cin 1hniouo l2

cte..a.d ., Jlftw york, 7:Jt p.Jn.
Miami It ~-·'*ce.l :30p,m.

Phila:::r:

LA.

1\ lbaon.l:30p.m.

.. S..111o. 10 p.m.

IMwWMD
Claym001 41, E4ioon U4, OT
Golhcn 36, New JUchmCIId 2S
N.,..ood !S,Lo¥dand Sl

In theNHL ...
WALES CONFERENCE

Ptolrldt Dl ...koo
. TW L T I'll. GPGA
; N.Y. ....... ..... 37 19 4 11236193
' w............... 34 20 ! 73 250 19'1
- - , ....... 32117 71220174
~ '""'"" 77 24 7 61 250223
N. Y. ~ .... l4 U 7 SS 21!229
l'llllldolfhlo ....... ll ~ II S3 117194
AU.-

:: -.at .......... 3S 21 !
.. .,..................... 77 23 I
" 8\lft'olo.............. 23 u 10
' _ .............. 16 29 10
~

............. 13

pj,&gt;-ty

S. Owleo1oo Sou- 10, New·

7l 20H!'l

--

•s. MiuiaiiUWI

Replar-.on odlon

42

~- 61, Twin V.U.y S, 34
CoL B - 66, CoL w.......

w,..,

c.t.w4f,c.t.
c.t. w-...l9. w-s. 31
Dolo._SS,ML V-37

DuWio 56, n.c.... ,........, 25

, CAMPBELLCONFERENCE

m;a S3, x... .u

..' T 'If L
" _ ___ ......... 11111
.. Dtio~P-;, ......... :IS 2t
:: 11.~ -·-·"" )6)1
)6
X' ........ :IS ;II

CW......6f.~ 4 t23

T ,._ GIGA
' . 7.1 2541116
t2 62 Ill 174
' fl2011~
' " 111:1111
s lf7 1e1 m

'
. v -...•·JIM-...
•202m
:JOJf 9

IM.&gt;\aellll ....... l4

22t3 61212211

~ .......... :II :1111

e1

" 1&amp;1171
......... Zl 21 1 "' 220 Z2f

ea.. ............ 2221

'

n mm

S•i)oio ............ IHl 4 lO 1S2 269

R.-. ... v.. w..

43

·

.

lliUiard 117, W.......,...IW_

34

M&lt;mwillo76,-1111.&gt;19
N. U...66,,._61
_,2,c.t. ....... lldr:JO
. . .56,
. A11nto
"· Wltllob.u
· a..-.
Iorin' 3S2

a 41, Widdnl Memorial
'
lld.... 43, eota.t
Ca- G
Jt.srnaU ·

39

u Milto1on60,!2,O.O..Clty32
CIWilicodl1t ·~
r-w.~~~.

,,

PF
1229
1278
1240
1184
989
983
1058
1041

PA
1038
1134
1255
1240
1092
1089
1155
1349

(Conference)
Southern ........... .! 0 2 91 0
Oak Hill ............ ! 0 2 8()5
Hannan Trace ......9 4 875
Eastern ................7 5 813
North Gallia ........7 5 807
Symmes Valley ...3 9 701
Kyger Creek ....... .3 9 646
Southwestem .......O 13 700
TOTALS ,_...... 49 49 6317

698
699
808
804
797
769
759
983
6317

(Reserves- SVAC only)
Team
W L PF PA
Southem ............ l2 0 693 412
Eastern .............. 10 2 568 468
Symmes Valley ...7 5 533 547
Oak Hill ..............6 6 515 522
Kyger Creek ....... .3 8 422 485
Hannan Trace ..... .3 9 501 593
North Gallia ....... .3 9 432 545
Southwestem ...... J 10 470 562
TOTALS ..........48 48 4134 4134
Tuesday's scores
(varsity)
Southern 80, Kyger Creek 59
Oak Hill 98, Southwestern 49
Hannan Trace 56, Symmes Valley
53
North Gallia 84, Eastemo69
(reserves)
Southern 64, Kyger Creek 42
Eastern 51, North Ga!Ha 30
~~mmes Valley 55, Hannan Trace

.

DI•IN•M

,..14
Tlpp Cit, Bethel
V.U.42

(Overall)
Team
W L
Oak Hill ........... .13 5
Southern ............ ll 7
Eastern .............. 11 7
Hannan Trace .. .. IO 9
North Gallia ........7 9
Kyger Creek ........7 II
Symmes VaUey ...5 13
Southwestem.......2 17

Oak Hill 59, Southwestern 51

Cin. WJ'Cftlin&amp;67, Cin. CAP1! 33
Folicily 19, 0..,.00... 11
IUp1ey oM, Cin.lodion Hill u

Q 191200

S6 2t3220.
42 1711~
ll 7 33 171233

r -....- ... - 21 3!

SVAC cage standings

Now l"")' 4, PIUI..ddphil3, 0T
Pituburgb. 7, Toronto I
Quobco: 4, Minnooou 0

EASTERN CONFERENCE

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
OVP Starr Writer
A 37-point clinic in the paint by
junior center Kevin Hunt, productive shooting from three-point
range and control or the boards in
critical situations were just what
North Gallia needed to IK'st an 8469 victory over the visiting Eastern
Eagles Tuesday night.
The Pirates (7-9, 7-5), who
played their final varsity game on
their home floor before a crowd
that ftlled two-third to three-fourths
of the bleacher area. They closed
the home portion of their schedule
with a 5-3 record that included
wins in their last four home appearances.
North began the scoring when
junior shooting guard Charles Peck
got three of his 16 pdints when he
took the ball on the opening tip-off
and sank a shot from beyond the
arc five seconds into the comest.
But the Eagles got back-to-hack
baskets in the paint from freshman
center Charlie Bissell in the minute
that followed Ill take a 4-3 lead.
,Arter bolh teams exchanged
leads on baskets by junior forward
Rob Canady (layup, 6: 10) and senior forward Terry McGuire {lane
jumper, 5:58), the Eagles began to
control the tempo with their aggressive defensiv~J play and knack
forpicking off errant passes.
But the Eagles, ahead 10-5 with
4:20 left in the ftrst quarter on the
streQgth of buckets by senior guard
Tim Bissell and McGuire, watched
their lead melt away in 50 seconds.
The responsible parties were senior
Darin Smith, who scored on a
layup (3:41), and Hun~ who sank a
pair of free throws at the 3: 14 mark
after senior forward Jeff Durst
fouled him immediately after Peck
got a pass to the 6-foot-4 Hunt in
the patnt.
After a short series of turnovers
by both sides, McGuire erased the
Pirates' 11·10 lead when he turned
his rebound of a Tim Bissell
missed shot into a four-foot
turnaround jumper in the lane to
give Eastern a 12-lllead with 2:38
left.
That lead, the Eagles' las~ survived for 43 seconds, primarily because North wasn't getting the defensive position necessary to deny
the Eagles second chances at the
basket at that point. But Hunt,
fouled by McGuire with 1:55 left,
sank a pair of free throws to give

'

Weeke11d action
'Frldiy- Kyger Creek at Oak
Hill; Southwestern at Southern:
North Gallia at Hannan Trace;
Eastern at Symmes Valley
Saturday - Souihcm at Basiern; North Oallia at Oak Hill;
Symmes Valley at Kyger Creelc (all
makeups)

GOOD USED

11JSHERS,DIYE~1 ·

BFIIIIUIOIS, ns,
'l iS I EUC. UIIES

COUNTY
APPLIANCES

6273~-.,~·

Pl. 446-IIH ·
HOURI1 I A.M.-6 P.M.
,.. i

the hosts a 13-12 lead.
The sailors began to establish
some domination of the boards
from then on, and it showed up
somewhat in the frustration which
undoubtedly was part of the cause
behind Durst's and junior guard
Chad Savoy's getting three fouls
each by halftime.
It also didn't help the Eagles'
cause that the 5-foot-11 Durst, who
entered the game averaging 16.6
points per outing, had yet to score.
He finished the night with two
points, which came on a layup in
the third quarter, ending a string of
13 straight games in which he has
scored in double figures.
"We didn't rebound well," said
Eastern head coach Greg Ullman,
who was slapped for two technieals
in the game. ''When it's a physical
game with four guards and a freshman forward (Charlie Bissell) and
it's let go NBA style, our 5-10 and
5-11 guys can't compete."
Tim Bissell carried the Eagles
with eight of their 17 points in the
second quarter. But Smith, who
was playing point guard for the
first time (junior Ryan McCarley,
the regular point guard, is out with
an injured knee) chalked up nine in
act two in helping the Pirates, who
ncar the halfway point in the quarter led by nine, keep a lead no
smaller than the one they brought
inlll the frame.

Eastern remained pesky
throughout the contest, and it
showed when Tim Bissell got what
amounted to be his only points of
the third quarter on a layup 46 seconds into that frame. But in a quarter that Pirate skipper Pat Stout described as "our best quarter," Hunt,
who bad 11 points in the fiTS! half,
sco~ one point more than that in
that eight-minute period.
As a result of that, solid rebounding primarily by him (12
grabs) and lhe 6-foot-3 Canady
(10) and a nearly silent Tim Bissell
(two points in the frame), North
was able to take a 62-50 lead into
the fourth quarter.
· The Eagles, who entered. the
contest averaging four three-pointers per game, sank two of their
three in the fmal quarter, which is
usually a testament to desparate
times. But their bold drives in the
paint, usually with Tim Bissell at
the controls, helped them cut
North's lead to five in the Iast3:30.
But the Bucs cashed in on the Eagles' fouling in the 2:12 with a 6for-9 effort at the line that, combined with Peck's steals and layups
helped them permamently restore
their lead to double-digit territory.
Weekend action - North Gallia will play Hannan Trace at Mercerville Friday night before heading west to Oak Hill to take on
Doug Hale's Oaks Saturday night.

Eastern (11-7, 7-5) will play
Symmes Valley at Aid Friday night
before returning home Saturday
night to entertain archrival South-

ern.

Quarter totals
Eastem ................ 14 17 19 19 = 69
North Gallia .......20 17 25 22 = 84
NORTH GALLIA (84) Hunt 15-0-7=37; Peck 2-3-3=16;
Smith 5-1-3=16; Canady 4-0-0=8;
McClure 2-1-0=7 . TOTALS28·5-13=84
Field goals- 33-64 (51.6%)
Three-pointers- 5-10 (50%)
Free throws- 13-22 (59.1 %)
Rebounds- 30 (Hunt 12)
Assists - 23 (Peck 8)
Steals - 5 (Peck 4)
Turnovers - 16
EASTERN !'9)- T. Bisse1182-3=25; C. Bissell 6-0-0=12;
McGuiie 5-0-0=10; Buckley 3-02=8; P. Newland 2-1-0=7; Savoy
2-0-1=5; Durst 1-0-0=2. TOTALS
- 27·3·'='9
Field goals- 30-85 (35.3%)
Three-pointers- 3-20 (15%)
Free throws- 6-11 (54.5%)
Rebounds- 42 (T. Bissell 12)
Assists -10
Steals-14
Turnovers- 13
RESERVE GAME- Eastern
51, North Gallia 30
Leading scorers - Jeremy
Cline (Eastern)- 17; Jason Stout
(North Gallia) - 11

Southern, Oak Hill still on top
in SVAC after Tuesday victories
Southern's Tornadoes put 10
players in the scoring column and
survived a game-high 21-point attack from Kyger Creek forward
Paul Covey to post an 80-59 victory against the host Bobcats Tuesday nighL
The victory helped the Tornadoes (11-7, 10-2) stay even with
SV AC co-leader Oak Hill - a 9849 victor over Southwestern with two games remaining for both
squads.
Senior center/forward Roy Lee
Bailey paced Southern with 18
points, and fellow senior Jeremy
Roush and junior guard/forward
Michael Evans chipped in with 12
points each.
Southern will host Southwestern
Friday night before heading to
Tuppers Plains Saturday night to
face archrival Eastern in the season
finale for both teams. Kyger Creek
will play at Oak Hill Friday night
and will return home Saturday
night to host Symmes Valley in the
season coda for both clubs.
Quarter totals
Southem ............. 19 20 20 21 = 80
KygerCreek ....... ll 9 22 17= 59
SOUTHERN (80) - Bailey 80-2=18; Evans 5-0-2=12; Roush 12-4= 12; Russell 4-0-0=8; Codner
2-0-3=7; Lisle 2-0-4=8; Davis 1-04=6; Singleton 2-0.1=5; Allen 1-00=2; R. Williams 1-0-0=2. TO·
T ALS - 26·2-22=80
Field goals- 28-53 (52.8%)
Three-pointers - 2· 7
Freethrows-22-31 (71%)
Rebounds - 40 (Bailey I0)
Assists - 14 (Roush 5)
Steals- 5
Turnovers- 12
KYGER CREEK (59)- Covey 3-4-3=21; Bmdbury 0-5-2=17;
Crace 1-3-4=15; Kingery 0-0-6=6.
TOTALS-4·12·15=59
Field goals- 16-69 (23.2%)
Three-pointers 12-39
(30.8%)
.
Free !brows- 15-19 (78.9%)
Rebounds- 30
Assists -11
Steals- 8
Turnovers - 14
RESERVE GAME - Southem 64, Kyger Creek 42
Leading scorers - Tucker
Williams (Southern) - 12; Brian
Davidson (KC) - 14
Oak HIU 98, Southwestern 49
At Oak Hill, Gene Hall, Benji
Lewis and Mike Turner paced Oak
Kill's offense with 20-point efforts
that helped sink Southwestern.
Hall's20-point effort was the
second time this season the 6-foot1 junior forward has scored in double figures and is a varsity career
high for him, as it was for Turner, a
5-foot-11 senior forward.
Junior center Chris Mandeville

SPRING CLEAN-UP
•LADDERS
•DROP CLOTHS
•PAINT
BRUSHES
•PAINT

PICKENS
HARDWARE
IUION, wv~

paced the Highlanders (2-!7, 0-13)
with 15 points.
Quarter totals
Southwestern .. ......6 12 10 21 = 49
Oak Hill .... :.........25 29 34 14 = 9g
OAK HILL (98) - Hall 10-00=20; Lewis 8-1-1=20; Turner 4-40=20; Simpson 9-0-0=18; Potter 40-0=8; Hale 3-0-1=7; R. Morgan 10-1=3; B. Morgan 1-0-0=2. TOTALS - 40-5·3=98
Field goals -45-92 (48.9%)
Three-pointers 5-13
(38.5%)
Free throws - 3-6
Rebounds- 61 (Simpson 12)
Turnovers -14
SOUTHWESTERN (49)Mandeville 4-1-4= 15; Simpson 22-1=9; Apple 3-0.0=6; Massie 1-10=5; Morse 1-1-0=5; K. Ashworth
0-1-0=3; T. Ashworth 1-0-0=2;
Neal 1-0-0=2. TOTALS - 13-65=49
Field goals - N/A
Freethrows-5-11 (45.5%)
Rebounds- 21 (Morse 6)
Turnovers- 29
RESERVE GAME- Oak Hill
59, Southwestern 51
Leading scorers - Josh Don ley (OH) - 16; Trevor Ashworth
(SW)- 30
Hannan Trace 56
Symmes Valley 53
At Mercerville, senior Jimmy
Brace continued his exhibition
from beyond the arc to the wne or a
team-h1gh 18 points that helped
Hannan Trace ward off a late
Symmes Valley charge and win by
three.
· The WildeaiS needed the outside
attack, because the shots in the
paint feU far fewer than head coach
Mike Jenkins would have liked.
''Though we had lots of misses inside. we won it on pride," he said
of the victory.
Trace got its usual solid game
from senior forward Chad Swain,
who had 15 points, but for the first

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent
Meigs jumped out to a 44-24
halftime lead and rolled to a 74-57
victory over the Nelsonville-york
Buckeyes in Tri-Valley Conference
basketball action Tuesday evening
at Nelsonville.
With the win the Marauders end
the regular season with a 12-8 mark
and 10-6 in the Tri-Valley Conference. Nelsonville drops ·to 3-15
overall and 2-12 in the TVC the
Buckeyes have to play Miller at
home on Friday evening and will
host Alexander on Satu;day. The
Marauders will be idle until Friday,
Feb. 28 when they open tournament play at the University of Rio
Gmnde against Jackson.
Meigs came out of the blocks
fast and opened up a 10-3 lead at
the 5:06 mark of the flfst period on
a bucket by Trevor Harrison. But
Nelsonville-York
cameto storming
back
and cut the lead
14-13 at

The Buckeyes came out in the Bobby Johnson and Jay Cremeans 15, Brad Anderson added 10.
second half and 'started to chip added five each. Meigs bad 12 asIn other action 3f!)und the Triaway at the Marauders' lead. Twice sists led by Bent,ley with five, the Valley Conference, Belpre clinched
early in .the fourth period the Buck- .Marauders stole the ball nine times . the outright championship with a
eyes were able to cut the Meigs with Blake leading the way wi11J 64-63 win over Alexander. Vinton
lead to II, with the last coming at four.
County defealed Miller 59-47 and
the 6:20 mark of the fourth period
Mall Eck_l.es led the Buckeyes Trimble defealed Wellston 61-52.
on a basket by Adams to make it a with 23 points, and Adams added Quarter totals
58-47 game. But Meigs quickly re- 15. Nelsonville hit 24 of 70 from Meigs ..................21 23 14 16 = 74
grouped and scored 10 of the·next the floorfor 34% and hit five of 15 Nelsonville-York 13 II 19 14 = 59
12 points and coasted the rest of from the line for a cool 33%.
MEIGS (74)- L.J. Mitch J-0the way,.
,
Adams pulled in eight of the Buck- 2=4, Shaw~ Hawley 8-0-0= 16,
Harrison led a tnoof.Matauders eyes26rebounds.
•
Trevor Harr1son 12-0-2=26, John
ln double figures with 26 poin~.
The Little ~ucks upset the Ma- Bentley 2-1-2=9, Phil Hovatter !Shawn Hawley had a good game 10 muders 51-4610 the reserve contest 0-0•2, Jay Cremeans 1-0-0=2,
the paint with 16 points and Frank and knock the Marauders out of Frank Blake 6-0-1=13, Carlton
Blake had played_ a great gw_ne for sole possession of ftTst place. The Drummer J-0-0=2. TOTALS the Marauders With 13. Me1gs hll loss ended the Marauders 17 game 32·1·7=74
33. of~ f!om the floor for 52% de- winning streak and Meigs will
NELSONVILLE-YORK (59)
sp1te h1~11ng only on~ of 10 fro~ close the season with a 17-3 record. - Mall Eckles 7-3-0=23, Glen
three-pomt range. Me1~s cashed m Meigs has already ·wrapped up a Flores 0-0-2=2, Brian Adams 6-0on? out of 8 from the Une for 88%. co-championship. War1x led the 3= 15, Brice Fick 1-1-0=5, Kyle
Me1gs h~ 26rebounds led by Har- Bucks with 23, Imman added 10. Wilson 2-0-0=4, Brian Warren 3-0- .
nson With e1ght, and teammates Aaron Drummer led Meigs with 0=6. TOTALS-20-4·5=59
(ContinuedfromPage4)
.
• • • _ _...;.
_ _ _ _ _.:__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

the 2:43 mark of the period on a
bucket by Brian Adams. John Bentley drilled a three-pointer to give
Meigs a 17-14lead with 1:44 left
in the period and buckeiS by Harrison and Shawn Hawley gave Meigs
a 21-13 advantage after the first
eight minutes.
The Marauders continued the
pace and opened up a 29-13 lead
when Frank Blake drove the lane
and hit a short jumper with 5:58
left in the half. Meigs increased the
lead to 39-19 when Harrison scored
with 2:22 left in the half. Blake hit
the ftrst of two free throws with 28
seconds left and the Marauders had
built up a 44-22 lead. Brian Warren
hit a jumper from the wing with
two second lef~ and the Marauders
held the 20-pointlead at the half.

tomary slien$th to the defense. It
took their ab1lity, plus a balanced
team effort in all areas, to give the
Rcdmen the boost it needed to
shake off a strong Walsh oiTenSI: in
the game's latter half.
Walsh,
ranked third in the MOC entering
the game, kept pace with the
fourth-place Redmen and snatched
the lead three times in the ftrst half,
but only on the thinnest of margins.
Todd Brown's jornper for the Cavaliers put them ahead 32-31 at
6:59, but a pair of baslcets by Lyndell Snyder lifted Rio Grande out
of danger.
Kevin Krai'.s jumper at 3:35
brought Walsh to within two of the
hosiS (4I-39), but Rio Grande raJlied on some foul shooting and
timely scoring by Schubert Jeff
Brown and Matt Powell to net a
seven-point advantage entering the
second period.
The Cavaliers, under the direction of their second-season menlllr
Ron Frederes, made the most of
forward Greg Geig, who had 24
points and 10 of Walsh's 25
rebounds for the game, to threaten
the Redmen early in the half. Rio
Grande's defense held and the
hosts found themselves ahead by
16 (75-59) at 15:54 for their
biggest lead of the game.
That is, until scoring by Schubert, Erslan, Brown and Troy Donaldson allowed the Redmen to lead
by 20 (102-82) with 5:51 remain·
ing. The scoring effl)rts of Geig,
Krai and Corry Appline kept the ·
Cavaliers in the game, but they
were unable to cut the hosts' lead
any closer.
For Rio Grande. it oroved to be
another case of taking care of the
smaller details: the Redmen con·
trolled the boards with a
rebclUmls, with Donaldson brin1ging
down
and Brown : ' '

TVC cage standings
•

Conr. Overall
Team
W L W L
*Belpre .................. 13 2 17 2
Alexander ..... ......... 10 5 13 6

time in two weeks, senior guard
Brian Unroe scored in double figures. In addition to his 13 points,
he had 12 rebounds.
The Vikings were led sophomore guard Jerome Fuller, who tied
Brace for scoring honors with 18,
(See SVAC on Page 5)

Meigs ..................... 10

Trimble .................. lO
Wellston ................... ?
Federal Hocking ...... 6
Miller ....................... 5
Vintlln County ......... 5
Nelsonville-York.. ... 2
*:conference champion

The'
Menagerie

6 12

8

6 11 8
8 7 12
10 7 13
9 6 12
11 5 15
12 3 15

.
Tuesday's scores
Meigs 74, NelsonvUie-York 59
Belpre 64, Alexander 63
. \'inllln County 59, Miller 47
Trimble 61, Wellston 52
Weekend action
Friday -Miller at Nelsonville·
York; Belpre at Trimble
Saturday - Alexander at Nelsonville-York; Wellston at Miller

Rz·o wz·ns

.

seven. Brown also had one of his
better defensive nights of the season by recording 12 assists, while
the team held its turnovers to 13
and inflicled 18 upon the Cavaliers.
The Redmen connecled on 46 of
67 attempts from the floor for 68.7
percent, which included 13 of 24
tries from the three for 54.2 percent. At the line, Rio Grande hit 16
of 24 uies for 66.7 percent.
Walsh was 55.8 percent on
shooting (43-77, ftve of 12 from
the three for 41.7 percent) and
ended with 10 attempts at the line,
on which seven hit for 70 percent.
Pleased with the team's effort as
Rio Grande prepares for its last
three games of the campaign - aU
on the road and each in the conference - Lawhorn praised O'Dell
Lumber Co. of Gallipolis and
Pomeroy for its continued support
of the program.
'
"O'Dell has been with us for 12
years and that's a heck of a com-

SVAC action ...

mitment," the coach said. "We
really appreciate their loyalty."
Now 21-7 and 8-3 in the MOC,
the Redmen travel Ill Portsmouth
Saturday-for a 3 p.m. meeting with
Shawnee State. Walsh (15-12, 7-5)
will be hosled by Shawnee Thursday.
Box score:
RIO GRANDE (121) - Lyndell Snyder, 2-2-6; Mark Erslan, 21-2-9; Walter Stephens, 1-0-2;
Brad Schubert, 3-8-1-31; Mall
Powell, 6-2-0.18; Brett Coreno, 11-4-9; Jason Curtis, 1-0-2; Jeff
Brown, 8-1-5-24; Troy Donaldson,
9-2-20. TOTALS 33-13-16-121.
WALSH (98) - Michael
Soyars, 6-2-14; Michael Smoot, 01-0-3; Kevin Krai, 3-4-0-18; Carl
Rogers, 6-1-13; Todd Brown, 3-0.
6; Corry Appline, 8-2-18; Derrick
Williams, 1-0-2; Greg Geig, 11-224. TOTALS 38·5·7·98 . .
Halftime score: Rio Grande
52, Walsh 45.

IT'S L.AYUP TIME for Meigs Marauder guard Frank Blake (3),
who goes Ull against NelsonvUle-York's Brian Warren (~0) aDd one
of Warren's teammates during Tuesday night's TVC game at Nel·
sonviUe, which the Marauders woo74-57. (Photo by Dave Harris)

Iowa beats No. 6 OSU 92-86
ByCHUCKSCHOFFNER
AP Sports Writer
lOW A CITY, Iowa (AP) James Moses likes to think he plays
his best against the best. ·
While that may not always happen, the Iowa senior cenainly was
in peak form against No. 6 Ohio
State and Jim Jackson on Tuesday
night.
Moses scored 21 points and his
tenacious defense was insllllmental
in keeping Jackson in check as
Iowa won 92-86 to knock the
Buckeyes out of sole possession of
firSt place in the Big Ten.
"Ohio State has a lot of great
players, but we have some guys on
this team that can be big-time players, too," Moses said. "I think we
showed thatlllnight."
Moses and Co. defmitely played
big-time defense against Jackson,
an AU-American as a sophomore
last year and the Big Ten's leading
scorer this season with a 23.8 average.
In other games involving ranked
teams, it was No. 2 UCLA 82, California 76; Clemson 68, No. 16.
Florida State 67; and Georgia 87,
No. 10 Arkansas 78.
Jackson made only two of 10

(Continued from Page4)

of which 10 of those came in the 7=56
game's last four minutes. TeamField goals- 20.49 (40.8%)
Three-pointers- 9-15 (60%)
mates Andy Lester and Chris Blake
had 15 and 12, respectively.
Free throws -7-14 (50%)
Hannan Trace will host North
Rebounds- 39 (Poling 15)
Ga!Ua Friday in the regular-season
Assists-13
ftnale and the fmal yarsity game to
Steals-6
Turnovers- 12
be played on the Wildcats' hard·
SYMMES VALLEY (53)wood. Symmes Valley will enter·
tain Eastern on Friday before ftn. Fuller 6-2-0=18; Lester 6-0-3=15;
ishing the 'regular season Saturday Blake 6-0-0=12; Pierce 1-2-0=8.
night against Kyger Creek at TOTALS -19-4-3=53
Field goals- 23-55 (41.8%)
Cheshire.
Quarrer totals
Free throws- 3-5
Symmes Valley .. l5 10 11 17 =53
Rebounds-33(Blake 10)
RESERVE GAME- Symmes
Hannan Trace ..... 13 14 15 14 = 56
Valley 55, Hannan Trace 49
HANNAN TRACE (5') Brace 0.6-0=18; Swain 6-1-0=15;
Leading scorers - Todd
Unroe 5-0·3=13; Cox 0-2·1=7; Robinson (S V) - 24: Heath
Poling 0.0-3=3. TOTALS -11·9· Hutchinson (HT)- 21
=- ~~~

shots and scored a career-low
seven points. Iowa (15-7, 7-5)
played mostly man-to-man against :
the muscular 6-foot-6, 220-pounder, and the slender 6-4 Mosesguarded him most of the time.
"I shot well in warmups and I
shot well in the shoot-around yesterday," said J~¥=kson. a 53 percent
shooter for the season. "For some
reason, I just couldn't put it in
tonighL"
·
Ohio State (17-4, 9-2) needs
Jackson to bounce back quickly. .
The Buckeyes are now tied for ftTst with Indiana, which visits Ohio ·
State on Sunday.

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

INSURANCE
111 Secona St., Pomeroy
YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1868

rr'I-IANKS
For Your Years of Service and Dedication to Quality
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BIND ..... ~ •••

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Wednesday, February 19, 1992

1992

OhiO

·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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Family Pleue With Additional
Pun:ho.. (excluding u•
prohibited by Iowl
Valid
Sun . Feb. 2 ' 1992

vg~~~~

nru

reezer ueen:

24 t'o 28

oz. Box

'
L--•-------------------------------~

FREE

21 oz. Can

•WATER •OIL

•J.e

CAKE MIX

TUN·A

2 CANS$1
FOODLAND FROZEN

18 oz.
BOX

99

4
Sun Light

SPARKLE

ORANGE JUICE

PAPER TOWELS

12

2aoL! 1

.99c oz.

Limit 2 Per Family

Pleooe With Addlllonal
Pu"'haae (excluding

Food Club Cherry

DUNCAN HINES

BUMBLE BEE

I
I
.n. I
coorn
I

Limit I

Great With Mega French Fries

69CBOX

llemo prohibited by l•w)

•1 ID
•

Big Bear Premium

Green, Tender
Top Fresh California

Ice Cream
Your
Choice Of
Flavon ·

!12 Gal.
Ctn.

22 oz.

·Our Finest Quality

Cozies

Diapers

Turkey Breast
Sl~ed The

WI'J You
Ulre It·
From
Our Dell

26, 30 or
40Ct.

.

'

'

· MoDday 1 a.m. thna
Saturday MldDite
Sunday '1 a.m.
'IillO p.m.
'

Prices Good 4 Days
February 1992
Wednesday, Febniary 19
· Saturday, February 22, 1992

lb.'

.

Bear.
Minimum
Prices
Items and Prices Effective only at:
GALLIPOUS BIG BEAR STORE

. I

.

' j.( ~)

.
'

...,

••

'

,. . . . . . .

.

'~
..

. . . .

I

t' -

.

.

.~

_J. ••

.

.

' •·

) I
..,l

• .

.

�{

•

I

Wednesday, February 19, 1992

The Dally Sentinel

TAMPICO
CITRUS
PUNCH

STORE HOURS'

Wednesday, Febr~ary 19, 1992

The Daily Sentlnei-Page-9 ·

Recycling contest gets un erway :;
•

...

~

""\

·'·"'"'

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
. Sentinel News Slllr
Middleport's recycling contest
"Create a Poster" got off the
ground Tuesday with Jean TrusseU,
village grants specialist, giving the
challenge 10 "come up with a slogan, sketch a design, draw a mas·
cot" 10 lhe fourth gt1!de at Middle·
port Elementary and the fifth and
Sixth graders at the Bradbury
School..
Trussell's visit to the schools
was the kickoff for the recycling
program for Middleport village
which has been funded with a
$11,910 grant from the Ohio
Department of Natural Resources,
Division of Lilter Prevention and
Recycling.
The studeniS were asked to use
poster board, 8 1/2 by 11 inches, on
which 10 create their designs. Any
media - pencil, markers, paint - will
be acceptable Trussell said. The
posters will be picked up at the two
schools on March 6, and judged on

~· --- '

u

~

1f2 GALLON

MondaY thru Sunday

(

SAM-10 PM
298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES.

MUFFIN
MIX

PRICES EFFECTIVE FEB. 16 THRU FEB. 22, 1992

8.5 OZ. BOX

s

$4 99

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

Ribeye Steak••••••. .

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

$ 19

NE
DOG
FOOD

2
$ 49 s 99
Bacon•••••••••••••••••,a. 1
SLICED
frankies ......... 99
SlAB
Rump Roast ••••••••,b.

at the Middleport Elementary School Tuesday
anernoon. Prius will be awarded in three places
ror the most creative design. Firth and sixth
graders at Bradbury are also involved in the
poster contest.

$119

FRESH PORK BUTT

Steaks /Roasts •••

L••

VEA~ BEEF, CHICKEN or CHUCKWAGON

Mr. Fritter Patties 12oz.

99(

10 LB. PKG.

s

Bologna•••••••••••••,a.
MOUNTAINEER BRAND 10 OZ. LINKS or 89(
oil Sausage•••~~.

STAR KIST
TUNA
6.5 OZ. CAN

ROlL

Onions•••••••••••

(
69

3 LB. BAG.

BR~UGHTON•

2Yo Mdk••••••••••••Gal.

Mar·gar1ne•••••••

$·179

3 LB. TUB

.
.
99(
5
st
Burritos
••••••••
s
oz.
Crackers•••••••.•••• aox
L••

Wesson Od••••••••3aoz. .
MORTON SALT
260Z.)

101

0(

MO~TON .FROZE~ ·

Fr1ed Ch1cken••

ULTRA ·TIDE .

ro: s4'' .

r

JUMIO

IOU

2

.

ARMOUR

Call992-2156
MoN. thru FRI. 8A.M.-5P.M.- SAT.S-12
CLOSED SUNDAY

POLICIES
• Ad. out~Mie Gallia, Muon or Meigl eountie1 mutl be prepaid
• Receive diKount lor ad• paid in advance.
• Free Ad.: Civuway and Found ad. under 15 words will be

run 3 day• al no chuge.
• Prie. of ad for ill capilalletl.en i• double prM:e of ad coel
• 7 point Une type only u1ed
• Trihue ia nol retpon•ible for erron after fir1t day (check
for erron l'ir1t day ad run• in P-per). CaU before 2:00p.m.
day alt.er publication Lo make correction
• Ad. that mUll he pt.M:IIn adnnce are:
Cord ol Thonko
Hoppy Ado
Jn M.,...ori•m ·
Yard Sale.
• A cl. .ified adnrli~ement placed l.a the Callipolil Daily
Trlhuoe (exetipt Cla ..irtoed Dilpl•y, Buineu Card or Legal
Nolic:u) will1bo appeu in the Point Plu.t•nt. Retyler and
the Daily Sentinel, rct.chi~ over )8,000 home.

Public Notice

1811 FoRD TEMP

Gallia Counly

Meill' Cowny

4~oiUpoUo

992-Middlepo•tl

367-Cheohl ••
388-Vinlon
245-Rio Gnnde
256-Guyon Dlot.

Pomeroy
985-Che•ler
843-Porlland
247-Lelart Falla

643-Arabia Dill.
379-Walnut

742-Rutlond

----------

675-Pt. Ple~~tanl
458-Leon
576-Apple Growe
773-Muon
882-New linen
895-Lelart
937- BufTolo

667-Coolvme

7-

and round
P- Publtc Sale &amp;
Auction
9- Wanted IG Buy
Loll

2

•FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK
992 •2269

FEB.24-BtglnnetAcryllc
PlinUng a...

For More hdo Call
614·992•2549

USED RAILROAD TIES

Open llon.-sat.IO.,..I pm

Starting Sept 28

faclory Chok;
12 Gaua• Sltotaun Only
llrlclly Enlorctd

Fl\\\11\1

$ .20
$ .30
$ .42
$ .60
$.05/day

21- Butineu Opportunity
22- Money to Loan
23-- Profeulonal Senlcet

11- Help Wanted
12- Situation.a Wanted
I~ ln1uranc.e
14- Bwineu Training
15- Schcola &amp; lnatruct io n
1&amp;- Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair
17- MU!cellaneou•
18- Wanted To Do

VHS CAMERAS
AUTO RADIOS
REPAIRED.

H• E•c•

391 WEST MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO
614-992-3524

57- Mwteal ln•trumen\1
F.. ito &amp; Vesetobleo
S!)- For Sale or Trade.

I 11:\1 'l 1'1'111,
,\ I I\ I :- l i lt 1,
q p
Wanted to Buy

3l- Fum• for Sale
34-- Bwineaa Buildinp
35- Lot. &amp; Acre.~p

Livu~k

Hay &amp; Grain

Seed &amp; Fertillz"

3&amp;- Reo! E.tote Wonted

1;1·.\1 \1

~

41- Houtu for Rent
42- Mobile Homet for Rent
43- Fa riM fer Rent
44- Ap.rtmenl (or RMt
4&amp;- Fumiahed Room•
46-- Space for Rent
47- Wanted to Rent
48.- Equipment for Rent

Auto. for Sale
TrUck• for Sale
7~

Val'll &amp; 4 WD'a

74- Motorcycle.
7S- Beat. &amp; Mokln for Sale
76-- Auto Partl &amp; Acceuorieol

Auto Repair
C.rwpiq EquiptHIIt

4!1-Fod.....

po

\IIJi( II\ \111:'11·.
51- Houtehold Good.
52- Spo.Ung Goodo
53-- Antiquu
54- Mite. Merch1ndUe
ss- Building Supplia

PARTS

Specializing In Custom
Frame Repair
NEW &amp; US!D PARTS

10~ ~~~~:Es

992·7013 or
992-5553
OR TOll FREE
1·800·848·0070
DAIWIK, OliO

_ ..

Plum bini &amp; Heatins
Elluntins

Ele&lt; tricol &amp; Re l•~!&lt;nUo~
85-- c~neral Haulins
86-- Mobile Home Repair
87- Upholltery
-

MARCUM
CONTRACTING
-New Homes
Remodeling

~arages &amp; Room
dd

A ltfons
985·4141
11·22·92-ltlll.

~--~--~,~-~~pm--~ L:::::::::::~~:::::::9:·t:3·:~:1·~«n ~~==~;;1;·22=·'=92=·1=m~•· ~~~~7~~;";91=/lf~n ~:::::::::::
'"

;::==R=e=alE=st: : at=G=en=er=ai===J
e
,c:'.":l•::r.r! BISSELL BUILDERS, INC. INSULATION
.hrst lid of P-iy

Stra..,n.mrs~

Public Notice
205 North Slcond Ave.
Middleport, OH
Rulland-St. Rt 12• ·A beoUiiful brick rartelt 3 bedroom 1
1/2 both home. With tun baaemenl and anadled 2 car

IJII8g8.

ASTEAL AT JUST S3e,eoo

New Ho•es t Viayl Sldlnt
New Garaget • Replace•eat Wiadows
Roo• lddltloas • !looflas
COMMERCIAL and RESmENTIAL
f'REIIES'DMADS

· 614•949•2801 or 949·2860
(llo Sunday Callsl

BISSElL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION
•New
•G•r•r.•
•Co•p tit
. le•oclellns
Sto" &amp; Co:m:re

Ho•••

2-1·92-tfn

~ 21112

SUN'S UP
TANNING

...u.......
In lett•

CALL 742·2778

15 Stslloo'---'-'25.00
12 S..iloiL
'20.00
• Sttlloo
'12.00

IS..IIoo --'150
fill SESSIOII WI1H MIT
REIIWAL
.

StMrll .... •fl•lloo•
SCA WOlfE IEDS
11

•Vinyl Siding
•R:J:Iacement

•Ro~~~w

"'Ja~U"mm
992-2772 or
742·2097
~~!t'~~(~h';:

EXCAVATING

BULU&gt;OZER,BACKHOE
1nd T!IACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES and
TRAILER SITES,
LAND CLEARING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
UMESTONE-TRUCKING

FREE ESTI~IATES

992-3838

POLE BUILDING

lmpr:rE:~~ral
Cut To Leagtlr

•

I WEEK DEUYEIY

c..!:l ~=~•
Antsstrits

GUN SHOOT

1:00 P.M.

R&amp;C EXCAVATING

Bu~g~~ING

SEPTIC SYSTEMS
CLEARING
&amp;

BlUM

LUMBER CO.
CHESTER

21141'112/t mo.

KING'S HOME
IMPROVEMENTS
New Homes,
AddHiona, Skiing,
Pole Barns, Painting,
Garages, Porches

FRIE ESIIMATIS

614·742·3090 or
304·773-9545
NO SUNDAY CALLS
21141'9211 mo.

RACINE GUN
'CLUB

a.~.

'

$4.00
$6.00
$9.00
$13.00
$1.30/day

3- Announcemenll
4- Giveaway
5- Happy Ado
6.- Loa1 and FGund

12~Factory

•

Over 15 Words

GET RESULTS • FAST!

SUNDAYS
Starting ~t. 22

PKG.

Rate

----1

Bash an Building
EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

.

4ROLL

or Carolvn McCoy
614 1992·5082

charged for each day as separate ads.

LIGHT HAULING

•

667·6179

BEEF

8ft. X10ft-$15
16 ft. X20 ft. -$25
lnteras1ed displayers conlact
Kathy Cumings (614) 992·
5117 or (614).g92.:J722

Ra tes are for consecutive runs, broken up days will be

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

'9 ~l!~47;s

GROUND

15
15
15
15
15

TRIM and
REMOVAL

1

24oi..

In .Jacksonvlna. Fla.

B

23

$199

•
•
•

SPOTS AVAILABLE FOR
DISPLAYS

Maoon Co., WV

94,-Radne

~~CAP~l~:t~~7oa:lew ::~~~~~~~tt~,tn ~~~~~::: FE~.;~t~BP~:•t

3 OZ. CANS

(

Sponso,.d by SOUII\em High

SChool Cheel1eaders . Proceeds
go to I"' to Nallonat C0fTI)OI!Ion

~~~~~==;r;~~:;;:~~~~~~====:r.======:::
SHRUB &amp; TREE
GUN SHOOT
MICROWAVES WHALEY'S AUTO

POTTED
MEAT

46 OZ. CAN

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL
SR 124, Racine
MARCH 1, 1992
11 :00 AM-8:00PM

Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 3 04

oroy, Ohio, rtltrvoo 1111
rlglttwithdraw
to bid 11111lo
ond r
lo
thoulo,
abovol
collaloral prior to ult.
TROLLEY STATION
Furlhor, Tho Fwmora Bonk
CRAFTS
ond Sovlnga Company
reoorvto lht right to rejoct
Fe •• I 0 t•ru 14
anyorallbldnubmlllld.
S'peclal Valentine
Further, lht lbovt
col~teral will btlold In 111o
Hours -10 to 8

YORKERSE4DR
WtrrantiMglvon.
For moro lntormotlon
51 tC3XC41RSLD7370e7
, Tho Formora Bank and contact Scott Shank at H2· Saving• Company, Pom· ~ f:;, 20, 21 , 31tl

DEL MONTE
TOMATO
JUICE

6
10
Monthly

Classified pages cover the
foUou;ing telephone exchanges ...

Public Notice

PUBUC NOTICE
NOTICE
lo hereby
given
that
on S.turday
February
• 22, Ut2, 11 10:00 a.m., 1 ·
public ••I• will be hold II
. 105
Union Avtnut
• Pomoroy, Ohio, to ooll to;
cuh tho • following

oollaterll·

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
I :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

COPY DEADLINE
Monday Paper ·
Tuesday Paper
Wednesday Paper
Thursday Paper
Friday Paper
SWlday Paper

wUS-1227 ·

\

BR.

. $119

3

OFFICE e82·2888

$119

BLUE BONNET • .

•

90

Words

I

,2oLPKG.

$129

ECKRICH

Days

(

BACON

..

•The Area's Number 1·
Marketplace

20 LB. BAG

.

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLIN.E
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

RACINE - A lawn and garden
show wiU be held on Friday from 9
a.m. until3:30 p.m. at Southern
High Schcol. Morris Equipment,
Baum Lumber, O'Dell Lumber,
R&amp;G Feed and Supply and Valley
Lumber will be among the local
dealers represented. The show is
sponsored by Southern Future
Farmers of America in. observance
ofFFA Week.

SWIFT PREMIUM

SUPERIOR

BULLETIN BOARD

Lawn and Garden Show

CREATE A POSTER • Details or a poster
contest to promote the volunteer recycling program wbicb is slated to get underway in Middle·
port on April I were given by Jean Trussell,
. development specialist, to these rourtb graders

eotn·:

lruc~ will move through the
munny 10 emp1y the recyclable.~ 10.
!he. bins and pick up n.cwspapcr~:
whtch have been tied 10 bundl7s-.
and placed al the curb. These wd~
be laken 10 the recycle center.
•
Any fu~ds produced from ~Y-.cled matt:Nis, and on!y alummum:
cans are bemg purcha'secr, ~til go :
IOward the .purchase of addtuona~:
coUecn~n bms.
.
;
.Res1den1s of M1d~leport arc
betng .asked to participate 10 the .
rec¥ch~g pro~am on a voll!"teer :
b~IS. S1gn up IS bemg done m the:
MiddleportWatt:r()fftce.
•

March 9 bY. Mayor Fred Hoffman
and Council members.
Prizes will be awarded, $25 for
firS!, $15 for second, and $5 for
third. All of the posters will be dis·
played in businesses around 10wn
10 encourage resideniS 10 volunteer
10 recycle.
Five hundred households are
e_xpec~ ~get involved in the ini·
tia1 recycl10g program slaled 10 get
underway on April 1. Three bright·
ly colored bins will be provided for
each p~cipating household, one
for plasbcs, O!JC for clear glass, and
one for alummum cans. A v11lage

Air Conditionen
&amp; Heat Pumpe
•100%.2 year palls &amp; labor warranty

•1 0 yr. heat pu~ co,..,reuer warrlllly
. ofi'HIItimatll
Home He1•Cin;g ~ CooUng

Quality
Stone Co.

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE
Call 614·992-6637

St. Rt. 7
Cheshire, OH.

�P,ge--1 o--The Dally Sentinel
SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

Announcements

21

3 Announcements

Business
Opportunity
INCITICEI

•

"Free Single Bulltlln,
"d•. Bol 1841 Ml.ulllon,
44648." ~
last Chlnce 5 mo old puppy,

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent·

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Lury Wright

2 bedroom mobht home com·

19~8

Hfill,

with pooplo ~ou · k-1 ond
NOT lo lind -llvot~gn lhl Mobae Homte For AMI:
lnlll uneu you hlv•lnvtet~glltd Rof.,._ And Dopoolt R•
thlolflrlng.
qulrod. Coli Aftor 1~41-G527
-

lng dog, 304-675-5203.
Moot Slnglll: Qup • Glrll. 1·

MEDICAL CLAIMS PROCESS.

lNG
'
Ston Full Or Plllt-nmo. A Fow
Hoi&gt;l'l Por W11k Con Provldo Up
To $51000 Ex11'11ncomollonlhly.

900-407·1004 $2.15/mln. Mull
It Ovtr 18, Fonpilalrvlnt CA.
Unlttachlld? MMI Aru Slngln
Through ·Our Sing IN NIWIIII·
ter. Wrht: Singles. P.O. Box
1043, Gllllpolll, OhiO 45831.

Wo Al'l A Nlllonol c:ompony
Doing Blllng For ~hpk&gt;lono
And Ol:htr Rtalthcart ProD
alonal1. Thla Ia A Sound BuiJI·

,..... Opponunltr And A~Pollr•
A Softwa111 P~.rchaM Of M,t85.
No Exptt1tnc1 NtCHUry AI
We Train You. SPANGLER

Giveaway

40 round balu of hay.614-446·
1142.

AUTOMATED MEDICAL SER·
VICES, INC. For Into CoN
1-410CJ.722·SAMS (24 Hrs1.

About 40 round balles of hay.
call 446·1142Firt Wood·rlldy to
go 614-446-1142

P"DO 'tOO EU P.£N&gt;

~\\\\~

attar 2 p.m.

19t1 Ford Ranger, 4 Cylinder, '
SPHCI, 19,000 Milts, A...ing
$&amp;,500. 614-441-4731.

44

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

Apanmant
for Rent

Rlnoalcll,
tranamlaslon, PB, A, tilt
1171

1-bdrm opt ln. lllddlopon,
uiiHtlll fum, dip rwq, no poll,

0

614-1112·2218

EIICinc, · DopooH And
Aefertnce, 111!1mo. S~
7130.

1~'-"TAAIT

.......---~,~ • 14ir!;=:;;;;;

•

1167 Yl Yomoho 125, 81,200.
304-6111·2611.

=·

(I)

Tour

b.k, mall
bright·gran ·collar,

lost : In Long Bottom ar1a,
black
labrador
puppy, red col- 1j;!~~~~~~~~~~~
lar, family
pet, 614·985-4340
Point PINunt now ac·
c1t, got oul of '4thiclt on Stltm 1Cll&gt;llng appllcttlons ·tor part·
St., Rutland, 614-9S2-62n
Recreation
0\r.c:tor.

Situation
Wanted

12

l ost : orangt, male, ahort haired

1!:Julolllll•od

Yard Sale

7

All Yard Saln Must Bt Paid In
Advance. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
the day belort the ad Is to run.

S\Jnday tdlllon · 2:00 p.m.
Friday. Monday edition • 2:00
p.m. Saturday.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

8

to Mayors ottk:e, 400 VIand St,
Pt. Pit, WV 25550 no lattr tMn

Friday Feb. 28, 1992, betw"n
hours 8:30AM &amp; 4:30 PM, Mon·

e

Wlld Ameilca D

Sq\11,. One TYStereo.

Wanted to Buy

Wanted To Buy: Junk Autos
With Or Without Motors. Call
Larry Ll~tly. 614-388-9303.
Wanted To Buy : Large Round
Salts 01 Hay, $5 A Bala. 614446·1052.
T~ Priea Ptld: All Old U.S.
Coins, Gold Alng1, Sllv•r Coins,
Gold Colna. M.T.S. Coin Stlop,
151 Second Avtnut, Galllpollt.

Employment Services

AVON • All areas, Call Marilyn
Weaver 304-882·2645.

Will haul gr'IVtl &amp; do odd }obs,
call 614-949-2286 evenings

14
Retrain

Nowii!Southulttm

Buolnm Colllgo, Spring Volloy

Cosmolo~lsl

18

$170

Noodod: Gouran·

Par

WHk,

Paid

DRIVERS WANTED
Eam To $620 Wkly. Small Pack·
Dellvary, All Slllh1 Pt..ft. 1·
_.52-8881.
DRIVERS WANTED, um 10
$620. w11kly. Small packlaa
dollna'li All ohiHo, Pl..fT. 1-lllib452-8 •
Orl't'tl'l Wanted
urn to 1620 wklr., small pack·
aga dtllvlf")', all shifts, ptrt·
lima, full-time, 1-800~52-6881

:g:

Euy Work! EKctlltnt Payl As·
sambla Products At Home. Call
Toll Frta, 1-800-467-5566, Ext.

313.
Posslbla $400. w..k Stuffing
En~IIOptl AI Homt,Gtt CI'Hit
Carda, Loans Ev.n With Bad
Credit Or No Crtdlt. Ruth $1.00
Stlf·Addrtlltd Stsml)ld En·
vtlopn i'10 To: D&amp;A Suppllu,
Box1443, Fairbom,OH 45324.

Stylist Wanted For High Trafllc

Salon. Clltn1ele Helpful, But Not
Necessary. Wa Can Halp Build
Your Future, For Appolntmant
AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU
Eacellsnt
Pty,
Benefits, Call Carol K1ng,614-446-8i22.
Tranapor1atlon,
407~92·47117,
Wantsd: Doctor's atslatant.
E.:t. 571. 91.m.·10p.m. Ton Must Ilks working with peopla,
Rafundtd.
bt tfflel.nt &amp; t'tavt Insurance
AVON I All Aru.a I Shirley txptrltnct. Exctll.nt wortdng
condlllana, good alary &amp; tringe
Sp11rs, 304-4175-14~.
benefits. Outlttndlng carHr
AVON get In on ttla ground floor opportunity. Send rtsume to:
ol Allons naw .aming atriJCiurt. Doctor's Assistant, P.O. Box
282, Mlddlaporl, OH 45760
1-800-992-6356.

Call614·245·5887.

3 bdrm. hOUH lor Nil, 5 ICrtl,

rM-742·2326

Mlsa Paula's Day Cart Clnler.
S.fl, alfordablt, chllde&amp;l'l. M·F
6 a.m. • 5::10 p.m. Ages 2~10.
Btfort, afltr achoot D~ns
weicome. 61~224. Ntw In·
lant Toddler Ca111, 61~-446--6227.
Want to do housecleaning &amp;
offiea cleaning. Havt rtftrtn·
CIS. 304-«175-5.fl:l.

Will ciNn and paint garage,
basement, attic, haul away
trash. 304-815-3644 or 895-3062.

ln townlutwo story, lhrtl bed·
rooms. II bne!l'llnl, 1-1/2 bath,

allact'ted 1·112 car garagt.
C.ntr1l hill tnd air. Evenings
Call 614-446-1701'.

Slttplng rooms wlttl cooking.
Also lrllltr space. All hook-ups.
Call attar 2:00 p.m., 304·7735651, Muon WV.

32 Mobile Homes

46 Space for Rent

10x5D mobllt tloma liveable but
nttds work on out1ldt or would
makt DOOd ltoragt bldg, mo.
304-119!-3!101.

11178 Sunnybrook 141170 mobile
home, made bv Hollypark, 2
Hdraoins, 1 bat'h w1garden tub
&amp; show•, liraplactl all electric,
outal••. dtck Inc udtd, v1ry

Fmancial
21

Business
Opponunlty

good~. 3114-Q5.3471.

VENDING ROUTE: Gil Rich

1il1 14x:80 Sunstllnt Mobile

Will build ptltlo covara, dec;ka,
scr11ntd rDOmS, put up vlnfl
siding or tralltr aklrtlng. 614·

4 poster 11.1pw single water bed,
~1277

txc cond,
16417.

CA8H?H

4! Acrtl, Naw Homa, Garage,
Bern, Tntctor, Tobaeco Ball,
Cllll14·256-11lC15.

Business
. Buildings

34

•

'Jiu·n your duller into cush,
Sell it llr.e etJsy!,W(ry ••• by 11hone,
rw need to leiu'e yortr lwme.
l'lace your· cltJssiOed ad tOtlay!
15 wor·tls m· less, 3 days,
3 pa,Jers,$6.00

a

f), _ _ _ _ __

I()..___;_

_

84

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

Lots for taltJ..J.~alitrt acceptable. :104-675-il!rn.

_

_

Maplt round/oval dining room
table, hutch, • chalra 1425;
. woodtn IPICI HYII crib
$15.00. Clll 1·304-1175-1121 or
304-4175-21154.
PICKE~

2 bdrm. houM ln PorMray,
dtpoah I rtfll'lf'ICH reqWred,

614-IMI2-7816

--Buy ·-or stil. ··Alvtrlna. Antiquea.
..

1124 E. Main Strati, Pomtror.
Hourt: M.T.W. 10:00 un. to 1:00
p.m,.~undoy 1:00 lo 1:00 p.m.
114·-2521.

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Mowrty's Upholattring aervic
ing trl co..,ly aru 26 yura. Tht
blat In furniture uphollttrlng,
Call 304-675·4154 tor fr11 n·
tlmatta.

Jlm'o Form Equl...,,., SR. 35,
Wool Gl-lo. 114-446-1777;

Wldo -lon -IUiod firm
&amp; lmplemtntt. luy,

t~on

Sot. ~II Noon.
MF 215 Tnoclor, Shlrpl

~850,;

1130 IIF TriCtor, $1150; » II•

·=

Troctor, 12,11111. OWnor Will
Finance. tM-2114!22.

-

Holllnd Hoy Rlklo, And
SqUIIO lilllra, 2 And 4

-

eom·Plonl..,, Cut-·
Mlran IP.FIIdtN\1~~ F'iikJ
...~ .
., Fann

1r11,

CUIIIYatcn. Whlll DIRt

lllolllno/1, ,......, Cillo.

I~

-0 '"" .

211-6144.
W.niN: Uttd farm awlprMnt,
onythlng J0U Wlnl -to IIIU. Coli
614-251-1301,

3 Ring Wielding Sol 14K, Whn.63
-..,...,...L=I..,ve:-lt--::OC-:k-~::2br HoUN lath, $300/mo. Plut Gold, Engogomo'" hlng, 12 pt. :·
2
DIDolh, i7utt Hava Rafii'II'ICII. Dlomond, mo Or hit o110r.
Horoo Trllllr0,:-· $11!1;
1111
AaHA
ll!i1 Youth
&amp;*'*1141.
114-251-1434.
Haow Of Till Y•r, 2 Bll'llr
3 ladroam 1 112 Bttha Farm 4 pllco bodroorn Ill; dlnlna Aoyol .._., Brood
. . . .. 1M . . . .
· On 2 Aero With Born, _ , llbll a chi~L2
Alo Ono. ., $400. Alii Fe&gt;t Amy. malchlng chllrt I
, -'i
eu ue ueo.
pluo 1110111, 114-IMI:t-2141
·
64 Hay Grain

a

·ABargain...

Reap The Rewards...
When You Tum To
The Classfleds,
Ml The Bouncy Is Yours!

a

BARNEY

!rom Ooody11r Pll,., Aol&gt;ll

the ClmiRedsl
An•, you ean put that extra
ash to pod use by chetklll!l
the Clusllleds fer.IICII pt~Ke
pies, Ilea 111tkets and buplns

......

SIGN ON
TH'OOOR

ASTRO-GRAPH
BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

675-133.3
992-2156.

ora-

eMily-II) YOCII

com-

today will be predk:alod •upon the
ttrenglh of your mo11vation. II litera Is
something you truly want, your probebillllel for r,cqulslllon are exc:elllnl.
Lilli A(llpl. 23-0cL Zl) Somellmlll, II
II r&gt;ec I''Y 10 locut on lite ltlfYince.
mort I of Mlf·lnlereotulllte excfuslon of
all other lnlluenceo. Thlo can be dane
todaY without rulfllng · onyane'o
felllterl.

.

ICOIII'I9
(Oct. - · 21) Your noblti'·lnilinC11
tt. .illlly orOUIId 1odl)',
lltd you'ie likely 10 makt with no PQIIIblt cttn;e o1 peroonal
gllln - on btltaH of IOYICf "'*· A
pltUiniiCII'Pfile loin lite offing.

IAGITTAIIIUI

{Not. IMM

._..,for

..

' ,.

•

111

You'telni'NtY~tlelltlfngiOCillqde.

PII•(PIIIt.•• altiiJIMJLuok · "*»C411r•••llll •you1 _
(.IM.
:{llllltr.,. on,..,. tadiiY lltd ...... ' .., w1111 you 11111 - : y o u 1110ug1t reu may -

' '

'. .

q."

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

~

~ ~

--... ·-·.. ......... . ··· r-""·

.,.

·~·· ·

- ~:~ ·-

A game bonus
for both pairs

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

2•

Soutb

West

INT

In a team event, each team has a
pair sitting North-South at one table
and a pair silting East-West at the olh·
er. If, on the same hand, the two pairs
on one team bid and make a game, it is
called a double game swing. This happens inlrequently, and today's exam·
pie, from Australia, is even more
unusual.
At the first table, South passed,
West opened one club and North overcalled three diamonds. Now East bid a
non-forcing three spades. (With a
strong hand, he would have had to
make a negative double.) West raised
to four spades, and declarer won II
tricks after a diamond lead, establish·
ing dummy's fifth club.

Nord&gt;
3NT

East
Allpass

+

Opening lead: A

heart nine and promptly returned the
suit. West won with lhe heart ace,
though he would ·have done · better to
duck. Now, in order to defeat the
game, he had to cash the club king. B~L
he led a spade immediately. East won
with the king and then did well by returning his last heart. With no hand en·
try remaining, declarer played th&amp;
spade queen. East won and was end:
played. He switched to the diamond
two, but declarer wasn't to be denied:
He put up his diamond nine, cashed t~e
spade jack and ran dull)my's dia·

In our auction, one no-trump was

weak: 11-14 poinls. West's two clubs
was conventional, showing hearls and
another suit.
As you can see, the defenders have monds for his contract.
It is rare that a double game swing
five top tricks, but they didn't know it.
West led the club ace and switched to includes three no-trump as one of
games.
the heart two, hoping his partner bad a those
@1111...,_ANIIINIUU MAUll.
heart honor. Declarer won with the

~

•· · ~ d.II'I(;.~L·..... . - · .~·..- ~,

~

•t-

The World Almanac::® Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
1 Spoc:lftod
1mounlt

7 Sllrllko
obltct
13 Hot moving
(2 wdtl.)
14- down
15 Llboror
18 GroYII lldgll
17 Golllll, • ., .
18 Ultrary
mltctlllny
20 Conland
21 Sllattng
tranl
23 Clrtalnl1
24 Sllllllul
25 Cuollrd

27=~ -

Ans. . lo PrtrkMis PilUle

34 FlaHtntd
37 Enlorlllntr
-McEntire
40 Bltulng
41 Lind of AlltY
Oop
43 Spill
45 Suoan HIY"
w~rd movie

48 Conlllntl
47 Htw Zealand
parrot

48 HltfOW band .
on 1 building
51 ..... lrlnl·
P0rt1tlon

54 tolll
55 Rtddloltrollow
56 Stopped
working

tXItnll¥1
2D Perform
31 Ctnltr of
hurrtcone
32 Cool product
33 Saito •oenl

57 Croftltl

4- Aviv
51bHn

DOWN

~h1r1etor

6 W1ndlr

· I Aslin country
2 ldtll plact
3- Exprtll

7 Mort

equtlmlsh

8- and

Host: Juliet Prowse. (1 :30)
Stereo.
(!) Eyenlng II Popo Ster10.

GraphMatctunskerc:onhlllpyouund«·
eland what to do to make the nllatlonlll&gt;lp work. Mill $2 pllll 1 long, self·
oddreuod, ttarnpod onvofape to
Molcltmlker, c/o Ihit -~, P.0. .
Box D1428. Clewllnd, OH 44101-3428.
AlliE I (Minlt 11-Apoll 11) If H hal
been o bll. dlequlollng - l l y - e
your. ~ lltd expectlllonl are. con· .
· cerned, ilemtOIIY ,end
are now
likely 10 dominating forcet .
, Smoolft
11-.
TAUIIIII
....., •1 Focus yout
·
on conolructlva llidtev·
IICComplllfv11inll l(t
Ill lllde your
111t11t
_ , . . . . _ ..

••Iii•••·

tJ4,6-234~2

.... , ,

SOUTH
• QJ4
• KQ9
• 9 76
... QJ14

winners of other cateoortes.

to- ' S.vll:al,,.opll whO ltiw met you"':"
01hl(l will Clltlly - • to gel to know you beller.
find olllniiiW. You'U Willi 10 wlli, but You might liNt from of lhem
you'l do • with . - .
- lodl)'.
.
Hopt!lancl~buittonptltlll~ ~IICIII(oltllld1.....,81WIIIIWOUICI , . CAINCONt (DM. INall. 11) Pollical fOulocllltGIIt good a111n • ot . you be· tocll)', ~ In - or
lifting your ambltl a •
.. . IIIII dIn the yeitr IIIIIICI. ()per· lUCkY In materlll gllln? FortuMiol)', In ~ auo~llnt IOdly, beoPW you
ate In touoh""" -~~and dllllglrd. your ....... IIII!IM .loc*lnl good • •.the ptlot. ,ll'l,1lnta '!OW
wllal~ IlL
.
In 110111-. ..... ~ llaltlhil.
ooupotll.

, ~.;.

+s

1111700 Club Willi Ptl
Robttllon

I

.. ,,•··· .

,876
• 10 52

Ditnclna

•'DD NDT
DISTUIII"

pet..
deY. but 1101111 the -

-

ALDER

i!D·Hu-1:1
1111 WOI,kl Ntwi

675-1333
992-2156

Brown Ep For Solo: 123
Mount OIM Rood, Blrfwolll~

.... -......, . ..

EAST
HK 10862

Douglas, Luke Perry, Nolan
Ryan , EIJln Levin. (1 :00)
Stereo. Iii
IJ)Newo

"·------'--

.'

WEST

. , 75
.AJ42
t8

10:00 &lt;2Je 0 Flnl Ptnon Willi
Marlll S11r1vor Michael

~

15....._____________

PHILLIP

1:30 (I) C1tatttpl0ntllip a.1112 Finals of tho
irrtematlonal rnoder11 and
Letln compellllons as well &amp;S

THAR WAS A

UH••NOT YET,
ELVINEY

Now that the weather hu c:otlell
down, why aot heat thln1s up a bit
by dearlns yeur closets, attic er ·
buemewt itf those unwanted lte11s
and lldmtlslnsthem fer sale 11

446~2342
'
... ...• .

Grovo, 304-1171-1172 Iller 1:00

···-----------------------6.
_ _ _ __ _ _ 14.._ _ _ __

• 10 53
t AKQJ43
... 7 3 2

Stereo. I;J

DID YOU TELL SNUFFY
WE WAS GOIN' TO
TH' MOVIN'
PITCHERS?

Tt put the Clustnecls It nrk ror yeu,
all ter H·TIHn, Mtndttl·frlday 11

TrJI1S pOll .it 1011
PM.

7._ _ _ _ __

9:00 (I) IJ) 8 MOVIE: 'Rambo Ill'
ABC Mavte Specill (AI (2:00)
Stereo. D
(!) Ft0mlilt llackporch Roe
Ellen McKee, 1991 's Teacher
ollhe Year speaks belore
the Leaders ol Leaming
Conference about oducation,
community Involvement and
change. (0:301
11J MOVIE: Bllndmln'l 811111
(2:00) Stereo. D
Nu11vlllt NOw Stereo.
D Callgl Ballcltbal North
Cerollna at Virginlo (L)
1111 LIIIJ King Llval
1111 Folltt!.Dowllng Myo-

In your netk of the woods.
Nlcl 2 bedroom hou11 acrou

r:

S

TD- MO I Wll bllcll,
l:l'.&amp;r'
corrclklon, $4100, 114·

p.m.

,!1.----------- - - 11 ...,.....,.- - - ---~----------

I:D5 (I) MOVIE: Mllltfl ol the
ITnlvarM (PGI (2:15)
1:30 (I) IJ) Doogle How-.
M.O. Doogle discovers his
new glrHriend has been
keepl~hr son a secret.
Stereo.
(I) E
11 Popl Stereo.
(!) Are You llolng Setvecl?
Montie Monolotl Stereo.

e

SWAIN
AUCTION I FURNITURE. G IIF-150, d';!j
IOCIInlor·
011.. Sl., Oolllpollo. Now I Ulld notlonll d
,
· IIF dllc,
lumlturt. htlltn, Wlllwn &amp;: 12&amp;0; 5ft. bulh hog, .450; ·~
Work boolo.l14-446-3151.
1115-3313

53_ _A_n_tlq.:..u..:.es.;...____

41 Houses for Rent

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

Farm Suppl1es
&amp; L1vestock

"''· trade, l:oo;.$:00 weekdlya,

FURNITURE

Trelltr lot tor rant. Watart ttnr
111d 11nlllllon lncludoa. 1110 '-:::::---:----------monllt. 304-1171-1101 « 671-11037. 1~ .

Renta ls

s

(1 :001 Stereo.
8 Plltn1N1w1l;l
Big lltotlter Jake Stereo.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

Complttt homt fumlahlngs.
Hourt: Mon-Sal, 9-1. IM-4410322, 3 mlln out Bullville Rd.
FrH Delivery.

l-lt·tl

members' private farms.

Gaa Drvtr, 2 Yeart K..,rnon1
$1!0; Round Olk T1bll, · 4
Cholro, $100; Hlcllowoy Bod,
614·245-9172.
..

For Salt: Commercial Building .
NtwNncl
And Lot In Eurtkl. Contacl HouHt'told tumlahing. 112 mi.
Owntr: 614·256-1243, After 6 P.M. Jtrricho Ad. Pt .. PINHnl , WY,
ell! 304-875·1450.

2 bdrm. hou11, no lnaldl pets,
cllpooH rwqulrld, 614.fl2o3090

12.

EE-KAND MEEK

or 175·

Big Saving• On All Carptt: In
Stock. Catt't And Ctny, Mollohan Carpets, l14i4f-JI44.

Oltor....cou AHor 1:00

P.M. 614-2!lCI-112&gt;r.

tey

245-9152.

Household
Goods

Euy As 1, 2, 3. Fila Vou'ra Taus
Here And Buy Htl'l. Kl11 You're Glbton frttztr, 16 cu. ft.,
landlord GoodbYt! El111 Home uprighl, $175. 114-446-4181.
C•nter, 1-800.50-5710.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
For Solo Only: 1972 121160, 21&gt;&lt;1 Waahert, dryera, rtfrlgttaton,
Fully Carptttd, Gat Haat Ano rong11. Sklggo APIIIII9COI,
Stovt, Refrigerator And Dlth· Upper Rl~tr Ad, Bnldl Slona
waahtr Vtfl/ Good Condition, Crest Mottl. Cllll14-441-7318.

An

e

56

Merchandise
51

oxplorod.
sweo.
CD MOVI : leviiUton (RI
(2:00)
Ill IJ) Dlnouurt War
breaks out over the flow ol
nuts and Robble~oins up . (P1
1 of 2) Stereo.
(I) Ml"' RuiHI Comedy
Sptclll (0:30/ Stereo.
01 1121e XY Olympic
Wlntlf Cllmto Figure
skallng, ladles short
program; alpin&amp; skiing,
women's giant slalom (T);
highlights of
uart rflnals .
MOYIE:
Cltell,o
(PGI (2:00)
11J Murdot, Slt1 Wt0te 1:1
Ctllblltlet OHollgeXIII
Avis~ to Alabama group

YOUR. SECTOR., COIU'OR.t.l.?

1187 Chivy Nova: tllgh mlltaga,
nleda rtpalr. Good lransporta·
lion Clr. Rtductd: S1,000. For
rncHW lnlormatlon Call 614-4462342, AU kH' Paul.

Someont lo 1ha,.. my houu
with, Gllllpolll Ftrry, 304.a75-

1239, 9:00AM 111111:00 PM.

lortunos~re

EVERYTHING OKAY IN

Homo 3br 2~ 8llho1._Poy OK Color T.V., SmaM FI'IIUI', S.t·
Oulck? No Way! But Wt Havt A Atma1nlng 1L.Dift, 114"'f4Do83~.
t1ry Chargar, Poww Toole, 8111
Good, Sltady, Attordablt, BusiVCR, SN111 rtlrtatrator, Cloth11
ness. Won't Laat. 1-8Q0.284· Short nrne On Job? Put Credit Drytr, 614-251-1218.
VEND.
Hlllory .l Problom? lhr&gt;y

Mollo

My•-•
casas and unclaimed

614-446-15110.

Reduc.d To Stll: 149,900,
Chtlhlrt, Ohio. 904-932-6958,
904-i32-7&amp;70, 614-367.Q849.

tor Sale

CIIIWI!tel ol Fortune Q
1121• Flll'lllly Feud
Be a Sllr Storeo.
1111 Ct011llre
7:35 (I) Sanford end Son
I:OO&lt;DG II» Unoolvad
Real·llle lelony

2-19

.3

NORTH

By Phillip Alder

MacNol&amp;ehrer

a

......

rr

-Houri;~_

TIMflI

=·=--------------...

·- =·;;.;:
·

.AK1096

m

AT THf,SAMt

Aooma for rent • Wltk or month.
Starting at $120/mo. Gallla Holt!.

.· -

BRIDGE

Ster~,.li'
111•
llamoci...Wltlt Children

coMp/..fX, fOTH

5710.

614-448-2152.

PIN down EXTRA

4-, _ _ _ _ __

SAl&gt; CASt ... A
SPLIT pf,SDNALI'f'Y
AN~ AN INFf~IO~ITY

••

Tax And TIUt Down. Preowntd
Mobllt Homu, Utt Your Tax
Will Da Bobylll11ng In My Homo, Rtfund. SO Hom11 To Ct't0011.
Anytime. Anponslbll Adult. Eiaaa Homt Clnltr, 1-800-589-

Want to:

2.-----------------

vtn

A

And Air Conditioning, Back
Dock• Foncod Yord, Nowly Ad·
dtd r-ronl Pon::h And Aool On
Ll~• I.DI, In J~ekton Ohio.
$45,000, 814-286 ... 311, Ahtr 5
P.M. During Tha Wtak.

RtpoautHd Mobllt Homu To
Chooat From. Small Down
Paymant . Ci.II1.SOO.S89·5711.

I..__ _ _ ____

I

deck, gtrtge, truh trMs, garden

E &amp; R TREE sERVICE. Topping,
Trimming, TrM "-moVII, Hedge
Trimming. FrM Estlmat11l 8f4367-'195'1."
G.org• Portable Sawmill, don't
haul your logs to tM mill Just
call304-875·1l57.

~

1D College llllkttblll
Syracuse al St. Jolin"s (l)
1111-yllne
1111 Tht Woltonl
7:05 (I) Addtlmo Fomily
7:30 &lt;D G 11» Jeopordyl D
CD Now II Con Be 'roiiJ
(I) Enle!l!!lnnttnt Tonight

FRANK AND ERNEST

I

1.- 18
SCIIAMot.ET$ ANSWERS
Overdo - Piano - Draft - Deceit -AVOID at ONCE
We were especially busy at work when I heard one
employee say to another, "I can do only one thing at a
lime, but there are many things I can AVOID at ONCE!"

De ~:l'l'nmtn1 Tonight
stereo.
11J ....0
Stereo. 1;J

/

·3br Fram11 Komt, Llrgs Khchln
=~~-::-:--::~:---:= Wllh Appllon&lt;ll, Coi&gt;lrol Hill

Ctrii!Jed Darcare Pravldar In
Plantz Subdlvlsion, GllllpoiiL
AcctpUng lnfanls • Chlfd,.n.
Call Sutla At: 614446~415.

PRI NT NUMBERED LETTERS 1
IN THES E SQUARES

Cll1ltn!
ill Llgllilllva Ui3!!!te
Clll Currtnt Allllt ~
~TAl': Tlfe Next

31 Homes for Sale
opo1,

8

IJ) •

Wanted to Do

Will Babysit In My Home. Rod·
nay Ar1a. Retartnctt Available.

®Tht
Jtlltoroon1..C
lnllde Edition t;;r

(I)
(I)

Services

FL 34207. 813·751-33110, Or

__._l__._l_L_Ls__.;.!

Mla:NIII
NtwiHour

Real Estale

Business
Training

Plaza. C.ll Todliy, 814-446-438711
Reglsteralion t9Q.OS.1274B.

Stnlor Clllzen N11da Ping Pong
Praetlet Partner. Call 614-3792651, And Ltava Messagt.

Help Wanted

lo~

7:001ij• 11J Whetlot Fortune

813-751-3200.

F•~

. , UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS TO
GET ANSWER

8:35 (I) Andy Clrtfllal

15 tl t,.vtl trail.,., lurnaee, lin~
range, 2 bHs, $!00. firm. 304·
615'2808:

velopt, No Monty To: W.T.P:
5852 14th Sti'Mt, W11t Brtdtn~

day thru Friday.

Vacallons, Call614-446-7267.

Usad bathroom lnalory sink or
used ~an l ty. Musl bt in good
cond, 304-675·1224.

11

ohould

have up~~rltnet In supervision
&amp; management Saltry l hol.l"'
ara negotiable. Submit rtaumll

lead

Rick Pearson Auction Companr,
lull tlmt tueUonNr, compl-'t
aoctlon ll~lct. Llctnsed Ohio,
West Virginia, 304-173-5785.

9

oppllconto

OET A MAJOR CREDIT CARD
THAT CHARGES 8 1~ INTER·
EST.
Sind A Soli AddfOIIod En·

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IIMITIIID I1UI POI.IC'I-Each of these advertised item• il required to be readily

avlillbll t01NIIIn aac:h Kroger Store, e•copt II apec~lclil'/ nolld in this ad. If we
do run out ot on tdvertiled item, we will offer you your choice of a comparable
Item w11en avolllble, reflecting the 11rne 11vingo or 1 raincheck which wit entitle

Beat of the Bend...

you io purchell the ldvortiltd item at tho advonilod price within 30 days. Only
ona vendor coupon wil be accepted par item purchllld.

COPYRIGHT 1992 - THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND PRICES GOOD SUNDAY,
FEB. 16, THROUGH SATURDAY, FEB . 22, 1992, INPomaroy
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. NONE SOLD TO
DEALERS.

by Bob Hoeflich
Men of the Racine United
MethOdist Church invite you to
attend their pancake supper to be
held from 4 to 7 p.m. Thursday at
the church.
The men will be serving hotcakes, sausage, scrambled eggs and
coffee. There is no set cliarge but
the group will welcome any contribution you might wish 10 make.
Observing her 80th birthday this
Sunday will be Mrs. Virginia Will.
Mrs. Will is the widow of the late
Jed Will and has rwo children who
are Susie Soulsby of Pomeroy and
Jed, Jr., of Flonda. Her address
these days is 1524 Nye Ave.,
Pomeroy.
And, incidentally, Mary K.
Roush-you'U remember her from
Elberfeld' s-will also observe her
80th binhday on Sunday. Her children, grandchildren and greatgrandchildren will be hosting an
open house in her honor at the
Meigs Senior Citizens Cenier in
Pomeroy. Mary K. asks that you
omit gifiS.
Congratulations to Raben Landers of Pomeroy who pulled
through with the top prize of
$200,000 on the Ohio Lottery's
television show Saturday night. ·
His victory just proves that you
can't keep ALL Meigs Countians
down ALL of the time.
Sandy Ianerrelli, president of the
Meigs Division of the American
Heart Association, reports that
there are a number of the large
heans from the Christmas holiday
season memorial tree that have not
been picked up. Those paying for
having the heans placed on the tree

which was located at the Courthouse may pick them up as
mementos at Sandy's Chateau
Beauty Shop on E. Second St., in
Pomeroy.
Have you noticed that the
Pomeroy Post Office now has free
parking in front of the post office
for customers? When all is said
and done there will be three free
spots in front of the establishment
to be used exclusively by post
office patrons. Postmaster Tom
Reuter IS pleased that the parking is
being established.
Sen. Jan Long phoned constituents Tuesday to advise them
that he is aware that the gasoline
price situation does exist and is
asking for help with the problem
from several state agencies.
Sen. Long-a native son who
does a good job for us in various
directions-reports that he has
turned over some of the complainiS
to the Public Utilities Commission
of Ohio because he feels that they,
too, should be advised of the problem even though gasoline prices do
not fall directly within the scope of
the commission. Sen. Long also
stated Tuesday that he is going to
discuss the problem in person with
Ohio Attorney General Lee Fisher.
In the meanume, we are getting a
little relief on prices at the pumpbut we can't help but wonder, for
how long?
Good thing I'm not in charge or
the Olympics. I'm afraid I'd have
to give everyone who skied down
thai mountain a medal. Wow! That
looks tough. Do keep smiling.

Community calendar
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - The Middleport
Literary Club will meet Wednesday
at 2 p.m. at the Meigs County Public Library in Pomeroy. Mrs.
Robert Fisher will review
"Onslaught." Roll call is "something famous built at great cost"

6:30 p.m. at the Carpenters HaU in
Pomeroy. Officers will be elected.
All DemocraiS between the ages of
18-36 are invited to attend.

ROCK SPRINGS - The Middleport Child Conservation League
will meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
Rock Springs United Methodist
MIDDLEPORT - The Middle- Church. Tammy Tibbits, O.B.
port Ans Council will otTer another Nurse, will discuss programs for
beginner's class in Texas style needy mothers.
dance beginning Wednesday at
7:30 p.m . Cost is $7 per couple.
POMEROY - The Episcopal
Call Mary Wise at 992-2675 for Church Women will meet Thursinformation.
day at 12:30 p.n\ . at the Parish
House. Bring a sack lunch.
SYRACUSE - The Third
Wednesday Homemakers Club will
meet Wednesday at 10 a.m. at the
usual place. For the doll, bring a
two-inch Styrofoam ball, small
dowel, two packages of black or
brown rug yarn. For the towels
bring a kitchen terry-cloth towel,
lace and material.
· RUTI.AND - The Rutland Fire
Depanment Ladies Auxiliary will
meet Wednesday at 7:30p.m. at the
ftrC station. All members are urged
to attend.

Now through
saturday,
February 29111

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KROGER

U.S. GRADE A KROGER (4-7-LB. AVG.J

Fresh Turkey Breast Grade A Large Eggs .

RACINE - The United
Methodist Men of the Racine
Church will serve a pancake supper
Thursday at the church from 4-7
p.m. Hotcakes, sausage, scrambled
eggs and coffee will be served.
Contributions will be accepted
POMEROY - The Meigs County group of Ohio Young Democrats
of America will meet Thursday at

Wheelbarrow
Features rolled edge
seamless tray. 13' x 4"
pneumatic tire. Steel
wheel and self-lubricating
bearings. Hardwood
handles. FAIJ/1126447

'•

THURSDAY
RACINE - The Racine American Legion Post No. 602 will meet
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the post
home.

. POMEROY - The Meigs County Democratic Executive Committee will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m.
tit the Carpenters Hall in Pomeroy.

SEIMSTM®
4-Cu. Ft.

Siliconen
Window&amp;

Door Sealant
LEAP YEAR BIRTHDAY • Betty Lou Kern of
41210 State Route 33, Route 1,
Shade, Ohio, 45776 will
observe her 17th (rtaUy 68th!)
birthday anniversary on Feb.
29. Born Betty Lou Givens on
Feb. 29, 1924 at Bellaire, she
enjoys the recognition which
goes witb having a "real"
birthday anniversary only
once every four years.

LORDY.
LORDY.

FAI-i ,51H16007,7419 15000,10

SOLD IN PKGS. OF IG-10.5-LBS.

.,
1/V THE DELl-PASTRY SHOPPE

Deli style ·

Chopped Ham
· Pound

country Club:

teeYz·Callon
cream

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~egutarty

ID. $2.69

....

DICK
'
WfiR"ER
STORE MfiHfiGER OF
KROGER'S IH •
POMEROY IS

FtJr
NON/lETURNABLE BTL.;~ SPRITE.'
. .CAFFEINE FREE DIE 1 COKE, •
0/ET.COKE OR
.~

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Happy BlrthckiJ From Yoar

Employe•s·
.,

10'x20'x1'
14' x20' x 1'
t4'x25'x 1'
15'x20'x1'
16'x20'x1'
16"x25'x1"

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w~alherproofs and insulates
With 50-yr. durability. Use
mdoors or our. Clear or white.

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coca cola :
Classic
2-uter

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seedless Grapes
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20" x20' x 1"
20" l25"' 1"
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FAIS-13/12/lPS

3~200

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