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Page 06 • ~llllbv Glimn-;JadiuJ

Pomeroy • Middle-port • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant,

'Homes: Questions and answers
By POPULAR MECHANICS
'For AP Special Features
Q: We arc planning on remodeling
our kitchen. I know there are tons of
books on the subject. hut do ybu have
any recommendations to simpltfy
thc"planning ;~rocess?
A: Remodeling a kttchcn is a complex project, but pan of the process
has just be' ""'e easier: getting precise appliance dimensions :tnd specjfications using a fax mac hine. The
free service is called Dirnens·ion
Express, and it :. fundcd by m"anu fac lurc rs. All you pay for is the normaltoll charge to access it in lnclmc

Village. Nev.
Dimen sion Express provides
appliance dimensions and specdicalions in the form of easy - lo- u~e data
sheets. The sheets contain information that is often unavailable or hard
to dcctphcr when presented in manufacturer catalogs. For example. the
sheets provide front. top and side
views of an appliance. dimensions for
door swin gs. clearances to c om ~
bustiblc surfaces, cutout dimensions.
trim kit information. co lor~. and
in stall ation guidelines. To en sure
acc uracy. the infonnation is cbn~ tantly re vi sed 10 -reflect changes m

product development. And manufacturers are required to approve information before it is released on the
system .
To access the service using a fax
machine, di al (702)833-3600 and
press the number 2 when prompted.
Listen to the entirc,recorded message
and then press the start buuon to
recei ve ft vc pages of introductory
infornlallon. f?on't hang up the handset. however, until the machine starts
receiving the pages. At thi s writin g.
the system contain ed infornlation
from 21 manufacturers, all of whi ch
is available l4 hours a day.

SUNDAY PUZZLER
ACROSS
·1 Ctga rette residue

6 Chide
11 Incline
16 Group ol eight
21 Deceilful fellow
22 Playing card
23 Jewish taw
24 Sao -, Braz1l
25 Scarcer
26 Ce remon~al acts
27 Movtng about
28 Citified
29 Mtne's yield
30 Makes haste
31 Term in golf
33 Unkempt ones
35 Sch. subf.
36 "20.000 Leagues"
caplatn

38 Swtlch postlton
39 Ktd
40 - soda
41 Paved ways: abbr.
42 Church part
44 DISapproving cry
48 Gifts from Santa
51 Collin
54 Rodents
55 Fly up and around
57 Habit
61 Tape measure's
cousin

62 Penal or area
63 Howled
65 Landlord's oftenng
66 Golf club
67 Rules
70 Challenges
72 Insect egg
73 Doily
74 Declare posiltvely
75 Always. to poets
77 Midday meal
79 Golf ball stand
80 Shade trees
82 Last feller. Briltsh
style
83 Dormant
85 Sportscaster Cosell
87 Boring tool
89 Satfor

· 90
91
92
94
96
97
100

Wages
Gem
Airplane's climb
Oplimtsltc
Scollish cap
Fragments
Cheer from the
bleachers
101 Say
104 Time penods: abbr.
105 Rounded roof
106 Energy
107 Kimono sash
108 Soil
110 Dressed
112 Operatic heroine
113 Patches up
116 Heaps
118 "Dam it!"
119 Of the moon
120 Hippodromes
122 Welshman or
Irishman

123 Certain children
124 Mix
125 OT book
127 Glitter
129 Mil. rank
130 Legendary bird
133 Pea soup
135 Lubricate
136 - Luis Obbpo
137 Begone!
141 Triumphant cry
142 Motionless
144 Certain par1y
member: abbr.
145 Greatanger
146 Thai gtrl
147 Craze
149 Actress Dern
151 Be worthy or
153 River in France
155 Fork part
156 Inched
157 Make happy
156 Ford or Kovacs
159 Looks lor
160 Things done
161 Had a meal
162 Steals

OOWN
1 Ctly in Ohio
2 Kind of drum

3 Zenana
4 First woman
5 Preacher's talk:
abbr.
6 D1scord
7 Most important
8 Table scraps
9 Sheltered side
10 NOIWtlhSlanding
11 The sun is one
12- Angeles
13 Liberal 14 Brads
15 Gullet
16 Musical work
17 Roadster
18 Edible root
19 African antelope
20 Grasping tool
30 Party-giver
32 Rudiments
34 Group of nations
37 or a cettain wood
39 Marathon runner
43 - diem
44 Fruity drink
45 Priest's vesfmenl
46 Burden
47 Fatlhtufness
49 Actor Brynner
50 Opp of NNW
51 Illegal act
52 or hearing
53 One-armed bandit:
2wds.
54 Relocated
56 Where Lima is
58 EntiCing
59 Willow rod
60 Distributed (with
"out")
62 Lid
64 Lair
67 Newspaper
68 Close al hand
69 Collection of things
71 Plotted
76 Food and drink
78 In what way?

81 Take legal action
83 Wash against
ll4 - King Cole
86 Delicate trap
88 Wildebeest
69 Tortoises
91 - Earl Carter
92 Smell
93 Sword
95 Notable lime
96 Civil wrongs
98 Kind of waite
99 Extra
102 Hit lightly
103 Mr. Sevareid
105 Keaton of films
109 Assist
111 Folklore creature
112 Female ielalives
114 Letters in ~enetics
115 Uncle 117 Depot: abbr.
119 Back talk
121 Quiet
123 Read quickly .
124 Lois of
126 Made dirty
128 Caviar
129 Hauled
130 Inclined ways
131 Chicago's airport
132 Kayak
134 Clearing
136 Retinue
138 Opening
139 Nest on a height
140 WOOtfy plants
142 Hangs down
143 Sled
144 Pops
145 Tarkenton of
football
148 Writing fluid
150 Crimson
152 Mr. Wallach
153 Permit
154 " ... man - · mouse?"

wv

Sunday, February 1, 1998

;
!

Marauders
lose 84·57 to
River Valley

-The House of the·W e e k - - - " - - - - - - - - - - By BRUCE A. NATifAN
AP Newsfeatures
1\ig on style, plan G-87, by
llqme$tyles Desil!ners Network,
i~ a m&lt;ldest-si7.ed home featuring
u qnairlt exterior and an open
inll•rior. The noor plan provides
I,(;UI) SljUare feel or living space.
The rnvered front porch leads to
a Iwo-story foyer which is nan ked
by the formal living and· dining
rnnms . A coat closet, a display
niche and a powder room all are
centrally located, as Is the stairwell to the upper noor.
The formal dining room is ideal
for intimate dinners as well as
rnmily galherinl!•· lis clo:~e proximity to the kitchen means less
time serving meals and more
lime enjoying them.
The kitchen, breakfast nook and
family room now nicely into one
another. An angled sink counter
separates the kitchen from the
breakfast nook, which features a
bay window. A utility closet is
hidden nearby.
The Iorge family room includes
a fireplace and a French door that
leads to the backyard.
The upper noor has a master
suite thai features an eight-andone-half-foot-high tray ceiling in
the sleeping area and an 11-foothigh vaulted ceiling In the spa
bath . A dual-sink vanity, a separate tub and shower, a private toilet and a spacious walk-In closet
make the master bath a special
space.
Two more bedrooms and a balcony hall complete this stylish
plan.

(For a more lhlailed, sctJied plan
qf this home, includins guides to
estimatins cons and Jinancins.
send U to Home qf lhe Week, P. 0.
Box t 562, New York, N.Y. tOll d·
tJdZ. Be sun lo include the plan

number).

en tine
SHU'M'ERED WINDOWS, a railed front porch and a gabled extension accent the quaint Colonial exterior ofthlnwo-story home.

Vol. 48, NO. 202
I

Program stresses timely immunizations in Meigs
Locally, the Meigs County Health Department is a supporting agency,
'
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
according IO T.C. Ervin, assistant nursing director. She said that nurses from
Sentinel News Staff
Meigs County is one of eight counties in southeastern Ohio benefiting from the OU-COM program come into Meigs County to visit new mothers and
the Ohio University College of Osteopathic Medicine's (OU-COM) Post· as a patt of their parent education, give information on the importance of
partum Home Visitation Program through an increasing number of infant immunizations.
That process of contacting new mothers in their homes has resulted in sigimmunizations.
.
The parent education program, which emphasizes timely immunizations, nificant increases in the number of infants receiving immunizations, said Lynn
has just completed .its second year. In thalli me, infant immunizations have Smith, R.N .. nurse coordinator, who conducts most of the program's home
nearly doubled in the eight-county area, according 10 Carol Kline, coordi- visits here.
'The primary goal of the postpartum program is to increase immuniza·
nator of OU-COM's community service programs.
Funding for the program is through an Immunization Action Plan Gmnl lion rates and timeliness in the zero to 2-year-old age group, through earlifrom the Ohio Department of Health. Application has been made for funds er contact with infants and their mothers," said Smith.
"Our effotts to distribute educational materials through the poslpattum proto continue the program for another year.
The Poslpattum Home Visitation Program targets residents of Meigs, Vin- - gram appear to be successful because an increasing number of families are
bringing their children in this age range into the Childhood Immunization
ton, Athens, Washington, Morgan, Scioto, Pike and Perry counties.

By JIM FREEMAN .
Sentinel News Staff
Along with a new police chief
comes a new look for the Pomeroy
Police Department.
Officers of the department
recently began sporting distinctive ,
black campaign-style hats, of the
type associated with military drill
sergeants and highway patrol
troopers.
Police Chief Jeff Miller said the
officers preferred that style of hal
- sturdy, with kind of a drill
sergeant effect
"It's amazing the difference the
hats have made, the officers are
looking beuer. We've gotten a lot of
comments ... the officers look better and more professional. It's more
of a unifonn-lype of thing," he
.sai.d, adding that even bar patrons
are complimenting the early mom·
ing foot patrol officers.
Before now, head gear for
Pomeroy police officers usually
consisted of a black baseball cap
-if anything.
Everybody. it seems, wears ball.
caps but. as anyone who has been
through Army or Marine basic
training can attest, the wide. flatbrimmed hal simply demands
· attention and respect for the wearer, projecting a "don't-mess-withme" altitude.
Miller said the officers like
wearing the n&lt;:w hats and like the
responses they get from the public.
Pomeroy Village Council also
favored the idea and approved the
purchase of the hats for the police

ARE YOU IN FINANCIAL TROUBLE? HOW TO BUY A HOME
AT REDUCED CLOSING COSTS! REDUCE YOUR MORTGAGE
RATE WITHOUT REFINANCING! CORRECT YOUR FINANCIAL
TROUBLES WITHOUT BANKRUPTCY! HOW TO GET
MORTGAGE RATES LOWER THAN ADVERTISED! LEARN
WHAT THE BANKS AND MORTGAGES CO'S WILL NOT TELL
YOU! _LEARN HOW TO REESTABLISH YOUR CREDIT
YOURSELF! LEARN HOW TO CLEAR UP YOUR CREDIT
YOURSELF! LEARN HOW TO REDUCE YOUR CHARGE
CARD'S RATES!
BEFORE YOU CALL YOUR BANK, FINANCE CO., MORTGAGE
BROKER OR REAL ESTATE AGENT

Once you had to go
all over town to put
together a·well-balanced
investment portfolio.
Not anymore.

1\VESTME\T

OPPORTL\lTlES
FOR OL'H
Cl'S'fOMEHS

V Tax-Deferred Annuities

Now, through Northwest Territory Life.Insurance
Agency, Inc., a licensed insurance agency, and
Marketing One Securities, Inc,, an unaffiliated
registered broker-dealer, you have one place io
come to find a team of professionals to help you
to save for things like your children's co~e
education or your own retirement.
·

tl Stocks and /or Bond
Mutual Funds

Come in today and visit with Dianna Lawson,
Investment Specialist with Marketing One
Securities, Inc. or simply call for an appOintment.

Stale Rep. Edward F. Kasputis, ROimsted Township, will be the featured speaker al the Meigs County
Republican Lincoln Dinner Salurd_ay.
Feb. 7 at 6 p.m. at the Metgs Htgh
School cafeteria near Pomeroy.
Kasputis is expected 10 be a candidate for slate office this fall .
He was born in 1961 and reared in
Ashtabula by his parents, Edward and
Vivian Kaspulis. His father wa~ an
attorney and businessman, while his
mother was a registered·nurse.
He graduated from Case Western
Reserve University with a bachelor's
degree in political science and a
minor in accounting. He also parttc·
ipated in the Washington Se~esl~r
Program at American Umverstty m
Washington. D.C.. and served as an
intern for a political action commtl·
tee on Capitol Hill.

tl Tax-Free Mutual funds
tl Variable Annuities
•

n.~Heating &amp; Cooling Systems

tl U.S. Treasury Bills &amp; Notes
NORI'HWEST TERRITORY UFE
INSURANCE AGENCY, INC.

tl Stocks

MARKETING ONE SEUJRITIES, INC.
registered broker-dealer, member NASD and SIPC

tl Taxable and Tax-Free Bonds
liil Gall Furnaces
liil 011 Furnaces
liil Boilers
liil Heat

located at PEOPLFS BANK
Coon &amp; Second Street • Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Ask for Dianna Lawson,

Registered Representative
Marketmg One Securities, Inc.

" Northwest Territory Insurance Agency, Inc., is a subsidiary ofTbe First National Bank ofSoutheastern Ohio, a
Peoples Bancorp, Inc., affiliate. Insurance products are offered by Northwest Territory Lifo Insurance AgenLy,
Inc. Securities are offered by Marketing One Securities, Inc., an unaffiliated registered broker-dealer, member
NASD ~ SIPC. THESI! PRODUCTS ARE NOT IDIC INSURED, ARE NOT DEPOSITS, OBUGATIONS OF, OR GUARANTEED BY TilE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF SOU111HASI'ERN OHIO, TilE PEOPLES BANKING &amp; TRUSI COMPANY OR ANY
OTHER BANK; AND INVOLVE INVESTMENT RISKS INCLUDING~ POSSffiLE LOS'I OF PRINCIPAL AMOUNT INVESTI!D.

I'

count."

_,, .... .

.Y;~{~ '"·"

~ -~" '&lt;pP-.~
- .

.

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

..

..tt

•:or:ftERo~ ~•m
',
-~•tJk...

NEW HATS- Members of the Pomeroy Pollee Department are starting off the new year with
a new look, highlighted by the c:ampaign-atyle hat worn here by pollee Capt. Joe Kirby.

department.
Miller said one of his priorities
is to increase the department's
esprir de corps. The new hats are
part of the strategy and new shoul-

der patches, unique to Pomeroy,
are forthcoming - instead of the
generic-looking patches now spotted by officers.
Just because we're a small

police depanmenl, doesn't mean
we have to look like a small police
department, Miller explained.
"It's just a good morale builder."

Two·area men dead
in separate crashes

Rep. Edward F. kasputis

In order to finance his remaining
college years after hi&gt; mother's death,
he started an ice cream company, running it through the summers of gmd·
uate school and law school before
selling it after graduation.
After working as an associate for
two years with the Cleveland law
(Continued on. Page 3)

Two area men were victims of
fatal automobile accidents in West
Virgini~ over the weekend. authorities reponed.
A Middleport man was killed Sat·
urday afternoon in a fatal motor·vehicle accident on U.S. 35 near Pliny in
Putnam County.
William Cuttis Daney. 56. died as
the result of a head-on collision on
the two-lane highway. according to a
West Virgitiia State Police
spokesman. He said the accident
remains under investigation.
PI iny is located near the Mason
and Putnam county line al ong the
Kanawha River.
'
Dartey was pronounced dead at
the scerle of the accident by Putnam
County paramedics.
McCoy-Moore Funeral Home
Wetherholl Chapel in Gallipoli s is
charge ·of funeral arrangements.
A Gallipolis man was killed in a
single-vehicle accident early Sunday
on Stale Route 2, according to a

Her comments came following Ohio (;louse passage of the conferencecommittee's repcin on House Bi11650 by a 75-22 vote .
The bill contains a new school funding formula that funnels another 6 per·
, cent statewide to schools in each of the next four years. Earlier in the evening,
the Senate agreed along party lines to pass the compromise version of the
bill, which also contains a $5.24 billion appropriation for primary and secondary schools in 1999, by a vole of21-12 .
With about 24 conservative House Republicans solidly opposed to the .&lt;ales
tax proposal. avidson has been forced to negotiate with minority pany Democrat&lt; for the voles needed for approval.
Because 60 votes are needed to place an issue on the ballot. she needs a Democratic vote 10 cancel out every member of he~ 60-person caucus which votes
against the proposed half·cenl sales lax ~it.e. II appeared last night that the
needed bipartisan support may not arrive . .
Asked what the implications are of passing the new funding formula. but
not gelling the sales tali hike on the ballot that funds it, Davidson said lawmakers would be forced lo " look at regular growth in the budget and reduclio~s in other areas."
the resolution is scheduled for a vole in the Ohio House at 10:30 a.m.
today. If the House approves it, the Senate is expected to act quickly to
approve the resolution . The ballot issue would also enact property tax relief
and bonding proposals.
Legislative leaders are racing to meet a midnight Wednesday deadline for
submining the constitutional amendment on the sales tax and bonding prov-isions for this spring's ballot.
During a floor speech Saturday, Sen. Robert Cupp, R-Lima, one of the
chief architects of the formula rewrite. said House Bill 650 establishes a
•·rational methodology " as ordered by an Ohio Supreme Court decision last
March which tossed oulthe stale's current school funding formula .

Mason.County Sheriff' s Depattment
spokseman.
David W. Putney Jr., 30, was pronounced dead on arrival al Pleasant
Valley Hospital after the 2: II a.m.
wreck.
The sheriff's spokesman said Putney was traveling south when he
apparently lost control of his 1984
. Buick.
The vehicle skidded approximately 163 feet into the northbound
lane. then traveled off the roadway's
· left edge. where it struck an embankment. The Buick re-entered the northbound lane. still. traveling south.
ovenurned and slid appru~imately 80
feel before coming to rest on its lop.
The vehicle was a total loss.
Putney. a 1985 Point Pleasant
High School graduate, was employed
by the Point Pleasant Housing
Authority. Arrangements are by the
Wilcoxen Funeral Home, Point Pleasant.
The accident remains under investigation.

Iraqi legislators delay action in hopes of compromise

740-992-2133
800-374-6160

tl Self-Directed IRAs

Sales tax increase
facing opposition
within legislature
By AARON MARSHALL
Sentinel Columbus Bureau
COLUMBUS- As a revamped formula for funneling stale aid to Ohio's ·
public schools' crawled lhrough the General Assembly Sunday, ihe proposed
half-cent sales wx hike that funds it appears to be dying.
"If it's not dead, it's on life suppott," said Senate Minority Leader Ben
Espy. D-Columbus, referring to Ohio House efforts to pass House Joint Resolution 22. which would ask voters to approve a proposed half-cent sales tax
hike this May.
.
P
"I can'ttell what the fate of (House Joint Resolution) 22 is," said House
Speaker JoAnn Davidson, R·Reynoldsburg. "We're still running a hard vote

Kasputis
addressing
Meigs GOP
Saturday

\'

SEARS

PrOgram (CHIP) to be immunized.
'The CHIP program immunized 899 newborns in the postpartum program's first year (1996) and 862 newborns through Dec. I, 1997. a marked
increase over the 493 children who were immunized in 1995, the year before
a formal postpartum program was created."
"In the past two years, the program has increased the educational opportunities available to southeastern Ohio families regarding immunizations,
child care and parenting - and this added public educational has in turn
meant an increased awareness of the importance of immunizations," Kline
said.
During the home visit, a nursing assessment of the newborn and mother is completed, educational materials are provided, and the impottance of
immunizations in preventing diseases is discussed.
Kline said her office conducted a survey in 1996 of all mothers visited in
·
jContlnued on Page 3)
·

Pomeroy Police don new head

DON'T
THROW
SSSSS AWAY!

(/ XCITI\(;

Kenmore

1 sec11on, 1o Pages, 35 cents
A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, February 2, 1998

C1998, Ohio Wiley Publishing Company

lC

Emer!Jt•ncy lns1allateon A\.to.uldblc

Mostly cloudy tonight,
lows In the lower 30s.
Tuesday, mostly cloudy.
Highs near 50.

•

CALL FOR DETAILS!
1-614-833-927·7

Crossword Puzzle Answer on Page C-4

Super Lotto:
1-7-22·30-43-46
Kicker:
4-6-4·7-4•7
Pick 3:
7·1-2 Pick 4:
7-9·5-2

Sports on Page 5

D

esign G-87 has a living
room, dining room, family
room, kitchen, breakfast
nook, three bedrooms, two and
one half baths and a utility closet,
totaling 1,600 square feel of living
space. This plan offers a dayllsht
basement, crawlspace or slab
foundation, and 2x4 exterior wall
framing . The auached two-car
garage adds 473 square feel of
space.

Ohio Lot~ery ·

.;

BAGHDAD, ,Imq (AP) -Iraq's
National Assembly held ·an emergency session today to discuss U.S.
threats of a military attack but postponed action until at least Thursday
10 give international medtators a
chance 10 find a compromtse.
Sand Qa.•sem Hammoudi, head of
the parliament's international COfl!miltec, told ~porters Iraq _":~uld
support "any diplomatic or pohttcal
mediation because we go not want
confrontation with any pany." '
The session had been called to

deal with American threats of military action 10 force l111q to comply
with U.N. resolutions that followed
Baghdad's 1990 invasion of Kuwait.
· U.N. Secretary-General Kofi,
Annan recommended today thai the
Security Council double - 10 $5.2
billion ~ the amount of oil iraq can
sell every six months.
Iraq has been barred from unrestricted oil sales since Saddam Hussein's forces invaded Kuwait in 1990.
After a U.S.-Ied coaliliQn drove Imqi
forces from the emirate in the 1991

Persian·GulfWar, the council decid· Yellsin designed "to find appropriate
ed to m;iintain the sanctions until Iraq political solutions to the crisis fabridestroyed its weapsons of mass cated by the U.S. administration," the
agency saidl. ll did not give further
destruction.
Mediation effotts continued in details on Posuyalyuk 's second trip to
hopes of averting a military auack by Baghdad in a week.
Arab officials said the Arab
!he United States over the inspec·
lions.
League's secretary-geneml, Esma1
Snddam today mel with the envoy
Abdei-Meguid, would leave for
dispatched by Russian President . Baghdad today 10 try to resolve the
Boris Yeltsin, the offi~ial Iraqi News
crisis. Turkey also was sending a
Agency .reported.
diplomat, Foreign Minister Ismail
The envoy, Viktor Posuvalyuk,
Cern, for consultation with lr.tqi
delivered another message from
leaders, and France has said it is
I sending an envoy.
·~

'This truly and fundamentally changes the way the General Assemhly will
do budgeting from now into the future," he said. "Primary and secondary
education funding will (now) drive all other elements of the budget and not
the other way around. "
"Residual budgeting no longer exists ... the new funding stmcture addresses the deliciencies found by the court in the present system." he added.
One of the most outspoken opponents of the bi II, Stale Sen. Michad Shoemaker. D-Boumeville, said the proposal is not even close to meeting th~
coutt 's order.
"I don 'tthink this does what the court says we have 10 do," he said. "I f
you start with a bad recipe, you ar~ going to gel a bad cake ... we wanted
angel food and we got pineapple upside-down cake."
Meigs County's four school districts would receive an average hike of II
percent under the plan when compared to 1998 ai&lt;llevels. The bigge st wtnners: Eastern Local which receives a 14.6 percent boost and Meigs Local
which would gel a boost of 13.7 percent.

P.unxsutawney Phil predicts
another six weeks of winter
PUNXSUTAWNEY, Pa. rAP) - Brrrrr! The world's most fam ous
groundhog saw his shadow at dawn this morning. If you 're a believer in
an~ienl folklore or just like to party, the message is the same: six more
weeks of ice and snow ..
The prediction prompted boos from the crowd of at lea.sl 15,000 that
had been whooping it up for much of the night in a patch of central Penn sylvania woods.
"As El Nino approaches our western shore and changes the weather
panerns.·l see my shadow. There will be six more weeks of winter." said
Bill Cooper, president ~f the Inner Circle of Punxsutawney's Groundhog
Club, spea~ing for the pudgy woodchuck after pulling him from his artificial tree ~lump.
.
Hours before Punxsutawney Phil made his I 12th forecast. the crowd
- including many students with the day off from Punxsutawney Hi gh
School- whooped, holl~red. danced IO disco music and huddled around
bonfires at Gobbler's K~ob, a wooded hill allhe south end of town.
Thomas' Jobe, 20, .was one of the early arrivers with IWG friend s. 17year-old Amanda WaL.:IIe and 15-year-old Dawn Williams. Jobe said the
three Punxsutawney residents come every year, because '-'it's the only thing
that happens here ."
_
.
Legend has it that winter will last six more weeks if the groundhog
sees his shadow. If not, spring is right around .the corner. ·
· With today 's prediction, Phil has seen hi s shadow 100 times in 11 2
years.
i

�_Man_day, Eebr.uary 2,cl998'~~---

Commentary

eomeroy-----Middlepol't, Ohio

The Baily-5entrnel • Page 3

OHIO Weather

Page2

'J\!esday, Feb. 3

Monday, February ~- 1998

!·

Accu\Vealher• forecast for dayllme conditions and

••

The Daily Sentinel
'f.st46(isfuti in 1948

111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
&amp;14-992-2156 • Fax 992-2157

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L WINGElT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

bn&gt;od-

1JN StnUotl - - l t l l n 10 the odltor from ""1
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I»- "lllero't • , . , . , _ 10 1 ptOvloulllftlcle
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Specify • 01 ,.,, IIIII lo: L - . 10 lilt Edllor, TIN Seni/M/, 111 eo..t Sl. PoiNroy, 011/o
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or. FAX 10111....:1-21117

Public comment
sought on feasibility of
commuter rail service

Clinton ought to be innocent until prov'en guilty
By OeWAYNE WICKHAM
Gannett News Service
WASHINGTON - My barber
says lhe more he hears about the
While House sex scandal, the more
he likes B1ll Clinton.
HIS opm10n w1 II no dou bl be con·
sJdcred n":uve by those who have
turned JUStice on 1ts head by treaung
the prcsJdent as if he 1s gUJlty until
proved mnocent But Leroy Gedd1s
1s anythmg but nmve
He's heard all lhe salac•ous lalk
about the affau Momca Lewinsky
clmms to have had w1th Clmton
He 's read a lot of whal has l&gt;een
wnllen and watched a good deal of
the tefev 1s1on coverage of this con-

pers
includes
USA TODAY,
The Washington
Post, The New
York Times and
TShe i!altJmor~)
un . edmore de
sees an. rea s
about Cllmon Iat·
est problem, the
more
Gedd1s
says he believes
thmgs are spm·
nmg out of control

Wickham

·
.
By her own admiSSIOn, Lewmsky
IS a har In fact, accordmg to a tran·
scnpl of ~ne of her mfa~ous tap(JCd
conversation, ~~e says 1 have lied
my entue life G1ven. that, Gedd1s
troversy and 1ts strange cast of char- doesn't undersrand why reporters
acrers
aren 't pressmg her for evidence that
HI S barber shop IS a way station she had a sexual relauonsh1p wilh
for news . The telev JSJon set IS the presJdent. ralher lhan urgJno
"
always on and usually tuned to Clinton to disprove l~e charge.
CNN H1 s da1l y offenng of newspa-

"It's all a nless," he s~id. "I don't
gel 11."
He's not alone.
Polls taken ln lhe hours after
Clinton's State of the Union address
Tuesday night show his job approval
ra11ng rose to almost 75 percent,
even as close to 50 percent of Americans say lhey· believe he had an
affair with Lewinsky.
.
L1ke Ged~1s, most people lhink
the pres1dent s personal hfe - and
what he does with a consenting adult
- is none of their business. As titillaung as the charges sw1rhng around
the pres1dent are, lhe frenzy !hey
have produced is relegated largely to
the111ed1a and official Washington.
.
The mornmg after the Sta.te of the
u
1
G dd
b
mon , peop e 111 e IS arber
sho~ wer~ f~r more Interested 10 the
s proposal to fix Soc1al
spresident
h
d
. ecunty than t e . WI ~-rangmg
mvesugatlon of Lewmsky s accusa-

TUAls OVAL OFFIC1. .

...OVAL.f.

By LISA CORNWELL
Associated Press Writer
CLEVELAND -Arc commuters wlllmg to park thw cars and chmb
aboard trams1 Planners m northeast Oh10 hope to get the answer.
Dnvcn by conce rns over traffic congestion and a1r pollutiOn, authontles
want to measure the public's mterest m a commuter ra1lroad that could hnk
c1t1es from Ashtabula to Elyna. sa1d Steve Jones. commute r rml prOJect man·
ager for the Northeast Oh1o Arcaw1de Coord1naung Agency.
The system would mclude Cuyahoga, Stark. Summ1l, Ponage, Lake,
Med1na, Geauga. Lormn and Ashtabula count1es
Jones satd planners tdenul!cd at least 38 poss1blc routes, most of wh1ch
would hnk suburban c1t1es to Cleveland and' Akron, although there are some
suburb-to-suburb routes
1
Pubhc mectmgs arc bemg held through the next few weeks to sec what
potenual nders thmk.
·'Right now, we are JUSltrymg to find out whether there IS mterest in a
ra1l system and whether 11 could be cost-effectiVe," he sa1d "There IS
extreme mterest throughout the coun1ry 111 commu1er ra1l transponarion ."
An adv1sory commlltce rcprescntmg the mne counucs will rev1ew the
pubhc comments and recommend. by the end of February, wh1ch routes
should be stud1ed funher
Planners should know by the m1ddle of the summer whether commuter
ra1l service is feastblc, Jones sa1d. Butll would be several years before a system would be m place.
•
Jones sa1d most of the people attendmg the mceungs so far appeared to
support ra1l serv1ce. The l!rsl meetmg was M~nday m Akron.
Ho\ilever. Nonnan Krumholz, a professor of urban planmng at Cleveland
State Univers1ty and a member of the adviSory committee, has reserva11ons
about such a system
·
"G1vcn the reahty of the low and scattered densllies of populatiOn and
JObs m the area to be served, I don 't think 11 could be cost effecuve,"
Krumholz sa1d. "I thmk most of these systems overestimate ridership and
underestnnale the cost of mamtenance and construction "
Portage County CommJS!IOner Christopher SmcJies, another member of
the comm1llee. sa1d h1s county JS very mterested 111 raJ I serv1cc.
"Ours IS one of 1he fastest growmg cou nt1cs 1n the area, and by the t1me
such a syste m could be ach1eved, W.§ ~ehevc we would have the necessary
rldcrsh1p." he said
·
U S Rep Ralph Regula, R-Oh10, whose d1stnct mcludcs Stark County.
swd he thmks transponauon planners should contmuc thc1r cxplorauons.
"There " no quesuon thatmterstates and olher rmds lcadmg mlo Cleveland from Canton and Akron are gelling more crowded. and addmg lanes
ducsn t always prove cffccuve." sa1d Regula, who IS v1cc chmrman of the
House TransportatiOn Appropnat10ns Com mlltcc that handles mass transit
4pnd mg
• However. he acknowledged the serv1cc can he cx pcnSJVC
: ·'It ISn't cheap, and m most areas 111s not cconmmcally Vlahle without
siJbSldJcs. hut I thmk as the populatum continues to grow and roads get more
cyowdcd. commuter rail scrv1ce w1ll become even more Important "

tion. That's an opinion a lot of others
seem to share. ·
TWelve thousand people gaye
Climon a thunderous receptiOn
when he spoke at lhe UnivefSity of
lllin01s on Wednesday Thousands
more turned out to cheer him later
that day in La Crosse, W1s While all
this was going on, members of lhe ·
Washmgton press corps tra~eling
w1th the president were filmg
reports laced with talk of the sex
scandal lhal those who showed up
for lhe president's speeches put on
the back burner.
None of this is offered as a
defense of Clinlon. It IS, however,
meant IO say thai those JOurnalists
chasing afler this story ought to
pause long enough to take the pulse
of the Amencan public on th1s matler If the respon~e Clinton got at hJS
W
.
stops 111 Illinois and 1sconsm IS an
mdJcauon. a lot of people thmk the
burden IS on Kenneth Starr. the mdcpcndent prosecutor, to prove the
charges agamst Clinton. Few people
outs1de Washmgton thmk the onus
should he on the presJdcntlo explam
them away.
Mayl&gt;e most Amencans are JUS!
bemg selfish.
Unemployment and mfla11on
rates are lower than they have been
in decades. The stock market IS soarmg and most Americans arc better
off than they have been 'm a long
time. By year's end. the federal budget w1ll l&gt;e m balance for the first
t1me smcc the Vietnam War
For most people. these arc the
best of times - and It has come
about on Clinton 's watch. It's not
that Clinton should get spec~al trcalmcnt, GeddiS says He JUSt doesn'l
lhink the president should he judged
by a standard we wouldn't want
applied to us.
"How many people want !heir
JOb to depend on the thmgs lhey do
m their personal life?" GeddiS
asked. "How many people really
want that! If that's not a slandard we
want to h~e by, why should we lay 1t
on Chnton?"
Why mdced?

A town out of a Stephen King novel
By Nat Hentoff

the
affiliate
issued a hst of
gUJdehncs
for
Ch1ld Protective
Scrv~ccs . the leg·
ISiature and others m authonty ·"When
Ch1ld
Protection InvestigatiOns Harm
Ch1ldren. The
Hentoff
Wenatchee Sexual
of ~.:onvu~ llons have been reversed Abuse Cases .. I w1ll wnte about
wuh, of course, no apologies from those guidelines m a later column
the authoruics.
because they ought to he taken scnOf all these mockcncs of JUStice. ously by prosecutors and JOurnaliSts
the most homlymg have 1aken place around 1hc country.
m the tow n of Wenalchcc . Wash . As
But even now. when a number of
M1ke Barhcr repons 10 the Seaule appeals of these grotesque
Post-Imclllgcnccr. "Nearly 50 peo- Wcnalchce conv1Cl1ons arc in lhc
ple were arrested and more than 50 courts, one ol the ovcrhurdcncd
ch1ldrcn were taken from 1hw defense lawyers tell s me that the
homes' over a two-yc:1r penod By stale ACLU sllll has not prov1dcd
and large. !hose of the accu,cd wllh legal help.
money lo rctam thcu own lawyers
Throughout thiS national epidemJjy The Associated Press
·: Today IS Monday, Feb 2. the 33rd day ol 1998 There arc 332 days left have hecn acq ullt cd hut others. IC of wdch hunts. ACLU alfihatcs
dependent on court-appomrcd ati1lf· around the country have remamcd
:in the year.
neys, have been 1mpnsoncd
;. Today's H1ghhght 111 HIStory:
silent. " Well. we can't take every
: One hundred and fifty years ago, on Feb 2, I 848, the Treaty of
The state has a stmng Amcncan case," sa~d one.
The atmosphere m these courtGuadalupe H1dalgo, endmg the Mextcan War, was srgned. 111e trealy Ov11 Liberties Un1on alflliatc. hul 11
turned over to the Umt~d States a hug!! port1on of the present-day Somh- d1d nol get mvolved m the cases rooms and m the 1owns themselves
When I asked Ihem why back then, I recall what J us11ce LouiS BrandeiS
'west, including Texas, New Mextco and Californ1a
was lold the ACLU affiliate was warned agamsl m Whitney vs Callstudymg the matter.
forma ( 1927). Wnung ol " the
At last, to II &gt; credll . last O~tohcr bondage of mat10nal fears," BranI have reponed on a number of
cases of adults charged w11h ch1ld
scK abuse m day-care centers and
w1th their own ch1ldren . In most of
these prosecuuons, rampant VIOlaliOns of due process have mcludcd
man1pulauon of child Witnesses by
therapi sts and offic ial mterrogators
Finally. after much suffenng hy
the defendants , mcluding pcnods of
tmpnsonmcnt an tncrcasmg number
1

Today in history

deis reminded us of the t1mcs when
"men feared witches and burned

entry to the org1cs was conditumcd
on swappmg a child or paying
women ."
admisSion at the door "
The Nonh Carolina "Lillie RasThe prepared lestimony of chilcals" day-care cases; the Kelly dren sent townspeople to pnson.
M1chaels ·case m New Jersey: the Now -· as some conv1c1wns arc
1mpnsonment for f1vc hfe terms(!) heing reversed and new tnals may
of Harold Grant Snowden 1n Florida he held -- some olthcsc fantaSies arc
arc not JUst ordmary cases to he heing diSpelled. An appellate court
1gnorcd by the ACLU of all mstltu- has strongly cntJcJzcd a Ch1ld Protwns
tective Services surcrvJS&lt;Ir who was
A new hook , avaJiahle 111 Febru- present when Del. Boh Perez .. the
ary, 1llummatcd m stark deta1l what chief orchestrator of the charges and
can happen to a town when 11 fears . arrests -- mtcrv1ewed children·
witches and impnsons human
"The conduct mclutlcd telling
beings wh1lc takmg their children 1hcm the other children had already
away from them . Kathryn Lyon. a disclosed ahuse hy the parents. and
lawyer who has followed these 1dcnhfymg the parents as under sus·
h1zarrc events closely, has wnllen [llCion. mstead of askmg open-mind" Wllch Hunt A True Story of Social ed ques11ons ahout ahusc'"
Hystcna a~d Ahuscd Jusllcc " (Avon
To .1sk for opcn-mmdcd qucs·
Books).
t10ns m Wenatchee might have ere.
"Dozens of men and women atcd susp1c1on that the questioner
have hccn charged," she wrllcs, had engaged m ch1ld ahusc. Fnr only
"wllh swapping children for sex the mnoccnt had true fallh m the
With an ever cxpandmg group of rel- need to purge the town of the predaatives and friends and neighhors and tory agents of lhc dev1l who had
st~angcrs." Some, accordmg ln the
mvadcd the ch1ldrcn. Wenatchee
accusauons, would sland m hne to was enveloped m the smistcr miSts
have sex w11h ch1ldren at a church of a Stephen Kmg novel.
where the pastor "raped ch1ldren at
Nat Hentoff is a nationally
the altar during services and then renowned authority on the First
cncd out 'Hallelujah, !here goes Ihe Amendment and the rest or the
dcvJI'' A woman (who, like most Bill or Rights.
wuncsscs, later recanted) said that

Letters to the editor Investment tips from one who knows
'

'Slick Willie' better than 'Ozone AI'

\

By Dian Vujovlch

M1d -way
through January,
Dear Editor.
growth and mcome funds weren't
No doubt I am more than a lillie cymcal , due to vanous VIOlations of trust domg very WGII. But then agam,
that 1 had extended to numerous characlers down through 1hc years: accept what was'
I
the word of some mdlvldual s and try to depend on thCJr mtegnly, and then
Aft~r gcttmg used to years of plus
find such trust had been compromised.
signs before a fund category's weekWell a lol of clll zcns feel that way about the admmJstra110n now 10 place ly performance f1gures, 1998 1s
in WashmgiOn. I read and hear of such h1gh approval ratmgs for Mr. and · s1anmg out differently. Just IS (jays
Mrs. Prcs1dcnt. yet I seem to find very fe w people who are not totally dis- mto the year. L1pper AnalyiJcal Sergusted wllh the whole sorry mess 1n Wa&lt;hmgton'
VIces rcpons that only two of Its 30
• Oh. but there 1s good news on the honzon Hopefully, Sl1ck Wilhe w1ll as stock fund categories have shown
ui;ual w1ggle through 1he moral sewer that he has lived m, by all accounts, pos1l1ve results gold funds. up on
and come out smilmg with slop all over his face. It seems lObe a nO-WIO Sll· average I 41 percent, and uulity
ll)!tJOn . accordmg lo most 1mpart1al "expens" unless one were to exam me all -funds. "R 0 04 percent:
lhe sord id escapades la1d to hiS charge from day one. There ISJU,sl too much
But this story 1sn't about gold or
smoke down through the past SIX years lO not have a fire SOme place close ulll1ty funds It 's aboul growth and
y)!t to be d1scovered
mcome funds -- down on average
• Now the good news' The clown wa1ting m the wmgs, and hopmg for 0 69 percent 1his year .. and how a
• Sl1ck Will1e to wipe out1s, all cons1dered. fanhcr from realny than you can portfolio manager's mterv1ew not
imagme. Th1 • guy headed up a b1g fund rmser w1th a group of monks oulm onl y sheds hght on h1 s mvesung
&lt;;allfomm. and was nol aware that the 50,000 bucks was a political donation, style, bu1 also offers up some sound
11ut he d1dn't know what else 11 was for. This guy 1s farther out than Mr. mvesung ups everyone can use.
Spack, but thatJs only mm1 -d1splay of ignorance
Dan Cantor has been lhe ponfoho
' The real danger of a man hke th1s auaming the h1ghest and most power- manager of the Stein Roe Growth &amp;
f~l office m the world is h1s perfonnance at the meeti ng to save the world Income Fund for the past three
from extmcuon. We arc now gomg to l&gt;e in a position to nearly destroy our y~~rs . Before takmg thai a*SJgneconOmiCbase lO meet those Slandards eStabliShed by Olher politiCal entitleS ment, he was one of the managers of
First the farce of "fret;. trade " w1th GATI and NAFfA, both of wh1ch are the Stem Roe Young Investors Fund.
undcnnmmg our cconorft1c base, and now Ozone AI and h1s tree-hugging
"(Young In vestors) IS a growth
gang gomg to excess w1th their warped VISIOn of a world Wllhout the sun fu nd and (Growth and Income) is
And that's JUSt for starters .
really a more risk-adverse fund,"
No, you can believe the ego tnp that She~ Willie has been on may ·deflale says Cantor "The growth profile of
a tad, but we w1 ll not likely be burdened wilh the next worse thing.
many of the slacks m the fund are a
That IS moslly JUSt my opm10n
little less robust. But what I gel from
R.E. Weaver, thai is the ability lo sleep a little b1t
Racine l&gt;etter at mghl "

· "'

And therein l1e . - - - - - - - - - - - - able cash position
Tips I and 2.
Dan Cantor has been the could pull down
T1p 1· Get out portfolio manager of the your portfolio's
o~crall
perfor·
of any mvestments that don't Stein Roe Growth &amp; mance. In nat or
allow you to get a Income Fund for the past down markets,
restful
mght 's ' three years. Before tak- cash can be a b•g
sleep. After a •
h · plus to perforwhJie, • sleep- mg that assignment, e manee.
depn vcd people was one of the managers
Not all of
aren't hkely to of the Stein Roe Young the stocks in 1h1s
make w1sc fman- Investors Fund.
l· fund are large
c1al deciSions.
caps. Cantor 1s a
T1p 2. If takmg
botloms-up stock
b1g nsks 1sn 't your cup of tea, there's p1cker who likes to buy great comnothmg wrong wuh pulhng back a pamcs at good pnces no matler what
liltle, remcmbenng lhat less nsky their s11c So, along wuh names hke
mvestments can make money, 100
Warner Lambert and Philip Morris,
Cantor keeps l&gt;etween 50 and 60 you'll find lesser-known compan1cs
stocks m th1s no-load fund's portfo- hke Ecolab, a cleaning serv1ccs
llo. Last year, the fund 's total rerum company, and TJX. a retailer that
was 25 .71 percent. Thai 's slightly operates lhe w1dcly known TJ Max
under the perfonnance of the a~er- and Marshalls slore chams.
age growth and income fund .. 1t
Two more tips worth not1~g here
was up 27 14 percent -- but then are to d1versify (T1p 4) and to underagam, Cantor's cash posuion was stand why you made an investment
h1gh " I had on average aboul 13 111 the first place (lip 5).
percent cash dunng the year," he
Regarding dtversification, make
sa1d.
sure your fund's ass~ts arc divers~·
While most mutual funds keep fied and that the mveslmcnls thai
bel ween 5 and 10 percent of their make up your own personal ponfoassets invested in cash, a I 3 percent ho arc too. To learn about a fund's
posuion 111 that asset class can be a holdings first-hand, read . its annual
drag on performance, particularly m repon. To d•vers1fy your fund holda raging bull market
ings, don't own only one kind of
Which bnngs us to Tip 3: cash.
fund, such as all emerging funds. Or
When lhe market is soaring, a siz- for that matter, all growth and

'------------....J

mcome funds
Then, put some though! mto why
you' ve mvested in a particular stock
or mulual fund and JOI ll down and
f1le 11. You'll he surpnscd at . how
helpful notes like that can be. Espc
c•ally when you're thmking about
scllmg some fund shares or addmg
to your position.
Mormngstar has given Stem
Roc 's Growth and Income Fund a
four-star rating and considers the
fund to he "below average" 111 the
nsk depanment Along wuh that
below average risk have come some
consistent returns.
During the last three years, the
fund 's total returns were as follows:
up 25.71 percent in 1997, up 21.81
percent 111 1996, and up 30.1,5 percent 111 1995. In 1994, when the S&amp;P
500 was up a slim 1.32 percent, th1s
fund was down 0. 14 percent
Consistency 1s Tip 6. Old Money
knows that consistent returns arc
better than those that Zig-zag all over
the b~rd. Let 's hear 11 for Old
Money w1sdom .
Dian Vujovlch Is the author or
"Stnight Talk About Mutual
Funds" IUld "Straight'lillk About
lnvestina for Your Retlmnent,"
both of which are published by
McGnw Hill. Send questions tO
her in care of this newspaper, or
via e-mail at MisMutualaor.c~m.

•

William Curtis Dartey, 56, Middleport, died Sunday, Feb. I, I998 from
mjuries sustained in.an aulomobile accident near Pliny, W.Va.
Arrangements ,will be announced by the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home
Wetherholt Chapel, Gallipolis.
.
•

IMansfield l3ao I•
I

Orella Ph1llips Hyse ll. 84, Pomeroy. d1ed Saturday, Jan. 31, 1998 in the
Overbrook Nursmg Center. Middleport.
·
A relired sales clerk for Elberfeld's Department Store in Pomeroy. she was
born June 7, 1913 in Pomeroy. daughter of the late William J. and Dora Rapp
Phillips
She was a member of the Tnmty Church. Pomeroy.
She is survived by a son. Roger W. Hysell of Racine, a daughler. Shirley
H. Sopher of Middlepon; a son, Roger P. Hysell of Racine: siK grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren. and two brothers, Dayton ani) Auslin
PIJillips, both of Pomeroy.
She was also preceded 1n death by her husband, Cecil Hysell; a son, Neil
Hysell : and a sister, Helena Daniels
Semces will be I p.m. Tuesday 111 the Ewmg Funeral Home. Pomeroy.
with the Rev Lamar O'Bryant otlicJallng. Bunal will be in Ihe Beech Grove
Cemetery, Pomeroy. Friends may call at the funeral home from 7-9 tomght.

I

WVA

·.·..
Flumes

snoW

Ice

Sunny PI Cloudy Cloudy

Mildred Ingram
Mildred Ingram, 83. died Sunday. Feb. I, 1998 111 the Bristol Pmes Nurs111g Home m London. Ohio.
Arrangements w1ll l&gt;e announced by the Pomeroy Chapel of the Fisher
Funeral Home.

Via Assoc~ated Press Oraph1csNet

Forecast calls for snow
showe~s by mid-week

Eliza C. Kimes

By The Associated Press
Eliza Carohne Salser K1mes. 84, M;Jrraysv1lle, W.Va. d1ed Friday, Jan.
Northwesterly winds produced by a cold from will send lemperatures dip30. 1998 a1 her reSidence.
ping into the 20s across Ohio tonight. A few snow flurries may be seen in
Born Sept. 21, 1913 111 Jackson County, W.Va., daughter of the late Wilbur
eastern Dh1o, the National Weather Service sa1d.
Sylvester
and Sarah Delong Salser. she was a homemaker and attended the
Tuesday will see panly 10 moslly cloudy skies wilh ill chance of' flurries
Coleman
Chapel
Church m MurraySVJIIe.
or sprmkJes 111 east-cenlral Ohio. Highs will be 35-45.
Surviving
an;
four
daughters. Irene Salser of Washington . W.Va., Sheila
An approaching high pressure system w1ll prov1de generally fair and dry
•.
Sams
of
Murraysv1lle,
Shirley Miller of Coolville. and Janet Boggs of Mur·
weather for lhe m1ddle of lhe week, forecaslers said.
raysv1lle:
two
sons.
Ira
"Jumor" K1mes ol Parkersburg, W Va .. and Ronald
The record·h1gh temperature for this dale at lhe CQIJJmbus weather slaKimes
of
Murraysville,
a
brother. Joe Salser of Akron; two sislers, Ellen Castlon was 64 degrees in 1903 while the record low was 13 below zero in 1951 .
to
of
Ripley,
W.Va.,
and
Gladys
Melrose of Washington; and 18 grandchilSunsel tomght will be at 5:52 p.m. and sunrise Tuesday al 7:)8 a.m.
dren, 25 great-grandchildren and one great-great-grandchild.
Weather forecast:
She was also preceded in death by her husband. Ira Kimes: a SJster. Dola
Tonight...Moslly cloudy. Lows in the lower 30s. Liflht east wind.
Milhoan;
four brothers, Howard, Gayle. Kenneth and Holly Salser: and one
Tuesday... Moslly cloudy with a 30 percent chance of rain. Highs near 50.
great-grandchild.
"!;~\ ','l':'•,l'iJI#~' I:J
•'' Jif
' .~
,. ,·.~;!:',,:.4~~ '···,
Services will be II a.m. Tuesday 1n lhe Roush Funeral Home 111
;,'';Ji • !,. ••• ~ •• •
, ,.
~
Ravenswood, with the Rev. D1d Tennant officiating. Bunal will be in
;..~. &lt;:;• l,:'''j'~, /'· ~ , r'
·'
RavenswOod Cemetery. Friends may call al the funeral home from 2-4 and
1
_,~, 1&gt;, l\ ~:,:, ~ • , • ' ~ ~
' d '
;' ·
~
I
""
•
•
7-9 p.m. today.
Oblluirr.. are pild an~ou~cemtnll ',arral)g.i d· ~
· !OCII funlrll
Otilluedl~ art Pll!l~ahlll u nq'uellld _to IICCOml11
lhoH dabtna more

ua·'l · ,

I'

''
•

l:lom••·

Info

·

lhari lfprovlch~Hn lht ac~nylna· D11

Notteea,

• ·

Grace Ann 'Nanny;·_Pratt
Grace Ann "Nanny" Prall. 91. of M1ddlepon. died Sunday. February I,
1998. at Holzer Medical Center 10 Galhpolls
She was born Augusr6, 1906. 1n Pomeroy, daughter of the late Charles
and Ella El&gt;ersbach.
S~e,was the owner of lhe former Home Restaural)l m Middlepon and the
Pomeroy W1ne Slore 111 Pomeroy. She was a member of lhe Middleport
Church of Christ. lhe Middleport Amateur Garden cmb. the Middlcpon BuSI·
ness and Professional Women, Drew Webster Amen can l-egion AuXIliary 39
and Jhe Galhpohs 8/40 Salon 61 2
She is survi~ed by a daughler and son-m-law. Ruth and Frank Powers of
Middleport; g..Jnddaug~ters and husbands, Debb1e and Mike Jones of
Pomer;oy, and Pam and Charlie Marshall of Reynoldsburg; a gmnd,on. Rol&gt;en
Powers and Da1sy KJSkadden: greal-grandOaughters. Mica Rees and husband
Dave. Briuany Powers and Ashley Marshall. a great-grandson. Troy Marshall; a speCial friend. June Peyton; sisters-in-taw. Rulh Ebersbach and ~mma11 lene PrJtt: and se~eral nieces. nephews and couSins
She was preceded in death by her husband. Robert Edgar Pmll. who d1ed
on September 2. 1958; and by a son, James Ke1th Pratt.
Graveside services w1ll be held at II a.m. on Wednesday. February 4. 1998
·m the R1verv1ew Cemetery. Middlepon. wllh AI Hanson offic1a1mg.
· Friends may call at the M1ddlepor1 Chapt;l of the F1sher Funeral Home
on Tuesday, February 3. 1998 from 2-4 anti 7-9 p.m.

Meigs aty:Jouncements
Meigs Local
The Me1gs Local Board of Edu,
ca11on meetmg scheduled for Feb. 10
has been ch,mged to Feb. 9. 1 p.m. at
the dislrict's 'cenlral office 111 the
Pomeroy Mun1cipal Building.

Tuesday. 7.30 p.m. at the Shade River Lodge in Chester Potluck at6 p.m
-!' II members urged to auend.

PERS/PERI
The PERS -,1'~R I will have a noon
luncheon althe Semor Cllizens Cen·
ter. Reservations are to be made by 9
Southern Local
am.
Thursday at 992-2 161.
Southern Local Board of Education will meel i~ special sess1on
tonight at 6· 30 111 Ihe h1gh s~hool C.H.O.I.C.E. to meet r )
The C.H 0 I.C E. Ho~&lt;chool
cafe ten a in Racine 10 vole on a conSupport
Group will meet at the
tract with OAPSE Local 453 and to
Me1gs
County
L1brary. Pomeroy. I to
approve a resolution authortzmg a
3
p.m.
Tuesday.
Group structure is to
school construclion bond issue for the
be diScussed. Theme for lhe chllqren
May 5 ballot
will be Valentine's Day. Refreshments
Pomeroy OES
will be served. .
Pomeroy OES 186 wi II meel
Committee to meet
The Eastern Local Technology
The
Sentinel Comrmtlee
w1ll meel Thursday. 8
!USPS lll-960)
p m. at Eastern High School. Anyone
interested in servmg on the comm1t·
Puhl1sh~:d ~:very a(lunoon, Mon4ay l~r(l ua;h
tee is asked 10 atlend.
Fnd~y Ill Cuurl S1, Pon1eroy, Oh10, by th~:

Daily

Oh1o Valley f"utlhshmg Co mpanyfGannell Co,
Pomeroy. Oh10 4C0 7M. Ph 992·215(1 Se~.:ond
class postage p1ud al Pomeroy Oh10

Mrmber; The Aslilx:lil lcd Press. 1nd Ihe Oh111
Newspaper A ssoc t~II O n
POSTI\IA~TER · &amp; nd addrt!&lt;s rorrec110ns lo
The 011ly Scn tmcl . Ill Court St . Pomc rov,
Ohlo4C07fiQ

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
lly Curler or Motor Roulr
One Week .. ............... .
One Momh ... ....................................
One Year

SINGLE COP.Y PRI CE
.JS C'ents
Subscrtbtrs not dcwmg to pay the cuner may
rem11 tn l'ldvance dtrect to The Oa~ly Srntmrl
(lfl a three , SIXor 12 m(lnth bam C'rcd11w1ll be
gtvrn u mer each wrck

in Meigs County nexr week.
•
.
"lmmumzations are a very imponant part of health ,are because these
m~asures ~an prevent 10 differenl d1seases w1th potentml long-1erm co mpllcatJons, Khne explained
"A maJor focus ofOU-COM's role IS to improve health care for all South·
eastern Ohio resJdenls, and lhe Postpanum Home Vis1lal10n Program 1s helplij,8 us lo ach1eve that goal," she concluded

Orella Phillips Hysell

e Columbusl3ao

Showers T·storms Ram

As a part of the program, CHIP has a mobile umt wh1ch goes mto com-

~umlles of lhe eight counties several time~ a year to provide free immuliJzaiJons for all area children from b~rth through middle schoo l It wil l be

Grace A~n 'Nanny' Pratt

EMS units record 20 calls
Umts of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Semce recorded 20
calls for assistance Saturday and
Sunday. Unils responding mcluded:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
12:15 a.m. Saturday. Naylors
Run, Pomeroy, Mary Klem. treated at
the scene.
2:17 a.m. Saturday. Overbrook
Nursing Center, Middlepon. SuSie
Bnnker, Veterans Memonal Hospital,
Middleport squad aSSISied.
4.20 am. Saturday, Lmcoln
Heights, Pomeroy, Teresa Sm1th.
Ire ated at the scene.
6:50 a.m. Saturday, Counlry
Mobile Home Park. Darwin, Mary
Teaford, VMH;
8:05 a m. Saturday, South Second
Avenue. Middleport. Dorothy Roush.
refused trealment.
9:39am. Saturday, Soulh Founh
Avenue, Florence Polls. Pleasant Valley Hospital;
3·27 p m. Saturday, Stale Route 7.
Sherry Lynn Reedy, VMH:
8:52 p.m. Saturday, Pomeroy
Police Depanmenl, Barbara Salyers.
VMH:
1:32 a.m Sunday, Main Street,
Raeme, Wilhan Finkenbinder. VMH,
Racme squad assisled:
4:52 a.m. Sunday, Apple Grove·
Dorcas Road, Racine, Laura Crisp.
PVH:
7:07 a.m. Sunday. Village Manor
Aparlments. Middleporl. Dallas
Wetherholl. Holzer Medical Center:
10.32 a.m. Sunday. Rockspnngs

· Gmce Ann "Nanny · Pratt. 91, Middlepon. d1ed Sunday. Feb. I. 1998 1n
Holzer Med1cal Center.
Born Aug. 6. 1906111 Pomeroy. daughlerof the late Charles and Ella Ebersbach. she was the owner ot lhe lormer Home Resraurant 111 M1ddlepon and
the Pomeroy Wine Store in Pomeroy.
She was a member of the M1ddlep&lt;Jrl Church of Chnst. the Middlepon
Amateur Garden Club. the Middlepon Bus111ess and ProfesSional Women.
Drew Webster Amencan Legion Auxiliary 3~ and the Galli pol is 8/40 Salon
612.
She IS survived by a daughter and son-in-law. Rulh and Frank Powers of
Middleport: three grandchildren and fqur greal-grandchlldren: sJslers-in-law.
Ruth Ebersbach and Emmalene Prall, and several nieces, nephews and
cousins.
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Robert Edgar Pratt, on
Sept. 2. 1958: and by a son. James Keilh Prall.
Graveside semces will be II a.m. Wednesday 111 the R1verview Ceme·
tery, Middleport. With AI Hartson offic1at111g. Fnends may call at the Middleport Chapel of lhe Fisher Funeral Home from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Tuesday.

Doyle R. Wallace
Doyle Ray Wallace. 83, McConnelsville. d1ed Sunday, F~b. I. 1998 111 1he
Mark Rest Center, McConnelsville.
Born April 27. 1915 111 Stockporl. son of lhe late Leonard and Nannie Leasure Wallace. he was a construction worker and als9 worked in lhe 011 tields.
He w,1s an Army ve1eran of World War II
· He is survived by one brother and a sister-in-law, Clifford and Evelyn Wallace of Beverly; a Slster-m-law. Faye Wallace ot M1ddleporl: and several
meces and nephews.
He was preceded m death by SIX ~rothers, Dana, Dale, Pearl, Don. Delmer
and Dwoght Wallace
GraveSide serv1ces w1ll be II a.m Tuesday in the lhe Stockport Ceme·
tery. wnh EvangeliSt Zack Walle offici~tmg. Friends may call at the Math·
eney Funeral Home, McConnelsville, lrom 2-4 and 7-9 p m. today.

Today's livestock.report
COLUMBUS (AP) - lndmnaOhio duect hog prices at se lected
buymg po1111s Monday as proVI&lt;Ied
by the U.S Depanmenl of A£nculture Markel News:
Barrows and gilts: steady to 50
cents lower; deman\1 moderate w1th
moderale mo~ement.
U.S. 1-2, 230-260 lbs. country
points 36 00-37.00, few 35.50 and
37 50. plants 37 00-38.00. few 38 50
U.S. 2-3. 230-260 lbs. 32 0036.00: 210-230 lbs. 29.00-32 00
Sows: steady.
U.S. 1·3 300-400 lbs. 22.00-23.00.
few 24.00. 400-500 lbs. 23 00-24.00.
500-600 lbs. 24.00-27.00. few 28.00

Heard .about

RAPID·REFUND
el,ctronic filing?

Some over 600 lbs. 27 50-29 00,
tew 30.00.
' Boars· under 2751bs 19.00-20.00,
few 23.00: over 2751b. 16.!XI-17.00.
Estimated rece1pts: 34.000
Prices from Producers Livestock Association
Hog market trend for Monday
steady

Rehab11ilat10n Center, Pomeroy,
Edmund Smllh, VMH:
12· 55 p m Sunday, East Letan j
Road, Hazel Fox. HMC, Racine ;
squad asSISted;
I0·22 p m. Sunday. Country :
Mobile Home Park, Mary T~aford, :
HMC.
'
•
MIDDLEPORT
'
12:05 a.m. Saturday. South Sec- !
ond Avenue. Earl Glass, HMC:
.
RACINE
8.23 p m Saturday. volunteer fire ~
depanmenl and squad 10 Bucktowrf !
Road, fire on Frank DaviS propeny.
no InJUnes reported.
;.
RUTLAND
.•
3 48 p m. Saturday. Carpenter H1ll
Road. Ed MakSJmczak, HMC:
-~
2 16 p.m. Sunday, Depot Street. •
Mary Day. HMC.
SYRACUSE
·.
H.l l .o.m. 'sunday. Elm Street,'
Racme. B1lly Hill Sr . VMH. Racme
squad asSISted.
'
TUPPERS PLAINS
·• 3·39 p m. Saturday. SR 124,'
James Barber, VMH, Central D1sl
patch squad ass1sted

.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Saturday admissions - none.
Salurday diScharges- none . .
Sunday admissmns - none.
Sunday di scharges - Bobby
While, Dexter: Raymond Laml&gt;ert,
Rutland.

Patrol reports eight fatalities
By The Associated Press
Two-double fatality acc1dents
raised Ohio's weekend trallic death
toll to ~•ght, the State H1ghway
Patrol said today.
The palrol counled fatahu es from
6 p.m. Friday lhrough Sunday.
The dead:
SUNDAY
CARROLLTON
Robert
Shirley. 26, and his w1fe. Patricm. 25.
ot Robensville. when the1r car ran off

Kasputis
(Continued from Page 1)
linn of Frutig. Travis and Zapka. he
staned his own law practice in 1990
In 1990, at the age of 29, Kaspulis
was elected 10 lhe Oh10 House of
Representatives and currently represents the 16th House District m
Cuyahoga Counly The dJSirict
mcludes Bay V1llage, pan of Brook
Park, North Olmsted, Olmsted Township, Rocky R1ver and Westl ake.

a Carroll Coun1y road and hil a tre~.
LORDSTOWN - Michael B.
Quimby. 33 , of Lordstown, driver of
a p1ckup truck in a one-vehicle acc.dent on a Trumbull Counly road: .
JEFFERSON - Gary L. Waid.
29. of Ashtabula. in a one-car acCI·
dent in Ashtabula County.
.
CINCINNATI- An unidentilied
man k1lled in a one-car crash on a
Hamillon County road.
SATURDAY
SIDNEY - Michael W. Yealer.
31. of New Bremen . 111 a one-car
crash along a Shelby Counly road.
PARMA - Maureen A. Rober!·
son. 13, of North Royalton and John
I. Tokic. 19, ofSe~en Hills. both passe nsers, in a two-vehicle crash on a
clly street

Now m his founh term. he pre·
sides as chairman of the Hou se Committee on C1vil and Commerc1al
Law. and as a member of the House
Elh1cs and Elections Comm1Uee and
on lhe House Pubhc Util1l1es Commlllee.
In 1994 and 1996, Ed rece1ved the
Watchdog of lhe Trea,ury Award
from the Un1ted Conservatives of
Oh1o He also received the Ohio
R0und Table Leadership Award in
1994
Ed and hiS w1fe. Lee. ha~e three
children. Megan, Jake and Zoe. They
reSJde m Olmsted Township.
Ticket&lt; for the dmner are $1 0 each
and are avmlable from counly Republican commltlee members

I"GEI.S CflttPET
I"VE"TORY BLOWOOT

Ill/ remaining Carpet and Vinfdl on Sale!! (2 Weeks onlfd)
/vlust sell all to make room r New

CARPET
&amp; .

Starting
at

Sq. Yd.

VINYL

No subscr~phon by ma1l pcrm tlled m arras
where home earner srrv tce 11 1va.hblt

Publtspcr' restn~es the rfght to adJUSt r111es dur·
1ng the subscnplton pertod SubscnpiiOn rate
ch11ngcs may be tmplemenled by changmg the
ddnlton of the subscnptton
MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
lasldt Mrll:• County
13 Wf'!k&lt;
..
.. .. ..... $27 30

26 WJiu . ... .

..... SS3.K2

Sl W..b .. ... .. ... ..
........ . $1115.5~
H Rates O.IS'* Mtlp c••••,.

w.... . . ... .......... ......... 129.25
26 Wecb
156.611

·ll

52 \\l&lt;b . .. .

618 EAST MAIN ST.· POMEROY
OPEN MON.-FRI. 9-8, SAT. 9-5

MasterCardNJsa/Discover

.. ...........$1119.7l

(·

992-6674

175 N. 2nd. Ave.

992-7028

•

OH

�•

-.

Sports

Monday, February 2, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio·

The Dally ·sentinel·

Southern girls beat·'
South·Gallia 47,;,34 r:

Page4
Monday, February 2, 1998

Moon leads·AFC all-stars to -29-24 win over NFC.in Pro Bowl
a 29-24 victory over the NFC.

By KEN PETERS
HONOLULU (AP)- The 1997

"I proved tol myself that I could
still play the game. I got hun last
for Warren Moon.
year, and a lot of people gave up on
The41-year-old Seattle Seahawks me. I was able to come back and have
quarterback. by four years the senior a decent year. and I got a chance to
player m the Pro Bowl and almost play here again. Good things haptwo decades older than some of the pened.''
Moon's ninth Pro Bowl appearall-stars, fimshed h1s season on a h1gh
note, eammg the game's MVP award. ance was a bit of a nuke. He got a call
"It's been a good year for me as last week asking 1f he would replace
far a.~ my proving th10gs to myself," John Elway on the AFC squad.
While many quanerbacks over the
Moon sa~d Sunday after he ral hed the
AFC to 15 founh-quarter points and years have passed up the Pro Bowl,
NFL season was a redemption year

Moon jumped at the chance.
"You look at all the guys who
have played in this game and get
these types of honors, and if you're
put in that category, you don ' I tum it
down," he said.
Since he missed the first all-star
practices. Moon said he told the other two AFC quanerbacks. Mark
Brunell and Drew Bledsoe, to make
sure their team was ahead ·when he
came on 10 the founh quaner.
" I had a crash course in . t?e,
offense," said Moon, who scoredjilt

go-ahead touchdown on a one-yard
sneak with 1·59 remaining.
" I told Mark and Drew before the
game that they should try not to have
me have to run the two-mmute
offense to win the game. I barely
knew the offense."
He was at quanerback when the
AFC scored two touchdowns in the
final two minutes, including his scoring run.
"They called my number and
asked if I could do a quanerback
sneak," he said. "I said, 'Sure.' I've

done a lot of them in my career."
Moon punched the ball in easily:
AFC coach Bill Cowher quipped:
"Even though he is older than I am,
I thought he could run the quarterback sneak pretty well."
Both Denver's Elway and Green
Bay's B.rett Favre, the scheduled Pro
Bowl starters, pulled out of the game
because they face minor surgery during the offseason - Elway on his
right shoulder and Favre on his left
knee.
Neither.injury was serious enough

to keep them out of the Super Bowl,
won 31-24 by Denver.
Moon said of Elway's absence at
the all-star game "He did everything
he wanted to do as far as the season
was concerned. He won the Super
Bowl, and I'm sure he's still JUst
basking in that glory. It doesn't both·
er me, because I got an opponunit~
because of it."
Favre's replacement, Chris Chandler of Atlanta. d1dn't fare as well. He
lost two fumbles in the final two minutes, one of wh1ch set up Moon's
short touchdown run.

Scoreboard
Tuesday's games

Basketball

Atlanta a1 Colorado 9 p 111
PtuiOI.Irlphtu Ill Scan !c. 10 p m
New En~tl nnd at Lona Bench 10 :40 p m

NBA standings

Wednesday's games

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Phll&lt;ldclptmt 31 San

J ~.

1010 p m

Allanhc Olvb;kwl

»:
27

Iwn
M1am1

New YIM'k

L t&lt;J.

17
19

614
11&gt;8
161

21
26 20
21 l1
21 24
ll 21
14 29

Ntw Jt'rsey
Wash1ng1on

Bose on
Orlando
Phlllldelphla

!:ill

100
407

m

2
l
I

••7•

nn

12'

12
14
Ii

717
702
609

I

"

bOO

Centnl Division
12
11

• 28
27
26 I i
21 ll
21 24
10 11

191
Ill
467
ll2

-·-

'

'"

6
IJ'•l
1!',.

22'..

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mtdwnt Division

Iwn

11:

San Anlomo

11

Umh
Mmnesocn
Houston
Vancouver .

10 14
21 19
21 21

J1

702
682
168
477
lM1
!M2
091

14

11

M 16
4 40

Onlla'

Oenv~r

Padf'lc: Dhbion
16 10
11 II
29 14
21 10
19 27
10 17
16

Seaule
LA Ulken

Phoenu.
PMianJ

Sacrnmenco

L.A Cl1~pc:rs

Golden

e.u.

L

IUIC

7M1
710
614
16K
411

,.2

211

'
Saturday's scores

!LII
I '•
(I'··

10''-

IIJ'I
21 '1}
27'~

2

~·,,

10
11
26'..
21

Sunday's scores
New York 89, Mtamtfll

Mtlwuukec 118 Mmnesota 110
LA Laken 112. Cht~;ago 87
8as~nn 107 HOl1Sion 96
Ut.lh II 5 Golden Stat~: KA
S.m Amomn 101. S.~eramcnto 91
Pm'11and91 Turunto 90
lndt.ma 99 LA Chpp!n 92
Se,lltlc 9?, New Ja ~y M1

Tonight's games
DetroLiat W;~Sinngwn 7 pm
Pbotnu af Ptnlatkl!'ht.t 7 '0 p m
Atlanta at Mmmt, 7 10 J'l m
Mtnnesuta .tt CUVELAND. 7 lOr m
V:liii.:OUVCf

at O:llbs .II

mr m

rm

Tuesday's gHmes
Phoc!ntx at Tomntt• 7 r m
BosiUII .11 C'harlauc 7 \0 flll\
Atlant• ;u 0rl.ll1llu lip Ill
N~w Ynrk at M1lw.wkl:c " 10 pm
v.mwuvcr ,,, HI!U \11111, K 10 pIll
New Jersey at Ponl.md 10 Jl m
Ut.lh v~ L 1\ Chpr-:rs ,,, An.tlk'llll C.1ltl 10 XI

pm

S;~n

Antmun .11 Gnltkn St,tll' 10 lOp m
lnJ1an,t :t1 S:teran~ntn, 10 10 p m

e.u.

!.iJ!

~~~

1] ..
1
16
1
I K'-

M16

...17K
U4

24 II 611
11 I~ . SK\
19 10 .un
IIC 10 -l74
II 26 2Y7

CCIIomdo
Sc:itllk

t-ch•~~,;lkJ ~onfcrenr.:c

1

I'·
~

"i'
12

11tle

J Khtl tWIIIl' HO SW I ou1smn:.1&lt;1
J.t~; k sn uv1 l lt! St 7~ Ct:nlc=n.UJ 6t'l
Ml:mpln~ H, N (' Ch11rllllll' 70
M1Jo.Jk lttlll 1K l . nn ·Manm-;4
Mur~,lll St tH IIOftd:t A&amp;M M
Murr.ty St IO'l l&lt;ntk~SI."'! la:h 7U
N C.U'tlhll.l A&amp;T 79 Mtl -E Shore 14
N Carolina S1 K1 Clo:mson RO(OT)
N C A5hntllo: 87 , Ch:ult:~ton Sou1hcrn 66
N C W11n11ngtoll6~ . Go:Mgc= MllliOn 61
NE Luum&lt;~llit KO SE Ln~o~ut.ma 69
N!\.tJIIIh St 71 NW I...OOI5101fk162
Nnnl1 C.troltna 711 Wakt Forest 7\
Ultl Otllnt tuon69 V.a CllmnVJnwe.t!lh 'ib
lbo.Jiurd 77 I.J~rty ~9
•
Rl l hmond "i7 Jam~s MaJ1~nn -;o
S Carolm.a St IW H.1mp11ln U 67
s.• mturJ 11 0, Twy S1 64
Stluth Al.tb.tnl.l IO'i Tex,IS· Pan 1\II'ICti\,Ul 70
South Flond.t 70 Fluntl.J S1 tiK
SouLhL'rn.U 91 Allorn St 7'i
Tl'l\lll SSl~ 72 L(\U b'i
VMII.J~ W C.1rnhna ItO

St

COLUMBUS 100. Ptul.\delph1t 6.&amp;

Sunday's scores
t'~

New England 71
COLUMBUS 74 Ph•lnddplu.t6K
Umi! Be:w.:h M"i, Allant.t 70
Ponland K1 S.m Jt}SC K1 (OTJ

No games tonight

~'i

Mitlwt!t

lOb

OHIO17

Cl'lll M•du~t.m 71! M.rnn 77
Cre.p.lllun 6 '\ S llhnnts bl
lk!WII 67 w,~ Gr«n O.ly fH (()T)
E llhnclt!i b1, Mon:llt'aJ St 'i(',
F. M1ch1gan 7 1. Mtann Oluu fl7
Ill ·Cima ~w K2 . Wn~ht St 711
1\hnl)IS St KK N luw:. ?7
lnd1.m.tlJ"i Mmncsot.l K2
U.'ynl.1 Ill 10 Bu1kr 112 (Ol)
Mt\h•~·'" St 72 Nnrthwl'~tt!m &amp;6 !U It
M )~MIUio 1•\ luw,1Sa "iO
M11 - K.111s;1~ &lt;. ''' 7! \\' lllullll\ M
N llhm11 s b~ MARSH Al L bO
l'urduc K2 Whcutl\111 'iiJ

SE MISSnun 117 E

Saturday's score
Colnmdo

South
Houuon61

AI~ B~rmmgha.m7~ .

V.mJcrt'ltlt 6K Gcorj:ta 64

Wr5ttm Cunfrrrncr
San Jose

n

A.oll

Easltm Conrtrtnct
~
n L
••rOLUMBUS
11
1
NcwEng~md
10 19
Atl omt,,
14 2~
Phii.Kklph'''
12 2~

IMln[llka~.:h

EISI

Anlt'man U 61. W1lham &amp; Mary ~6
Connccucut 71 Rutgers 'fl
Dilrllnouth 76 Brown 60
Duquesne 89, Ln Sulle 18
F.urletgh Dtckmson 7 1 S1 Frnn~;ts , NY 6?
Gc.:orge Wn.,hHlgton 7~. VirgmHI. Tech 61
lianford 84, Towson 7'i
li olsl r.t92, BlJslon U 84
llltnms 77, Penn St 71
Lafayette 81. l.cht&amp;h 66
Long lslnnd U 81 Ccm Conntdtcut St MI
Loyola Md 7~. Manhau:m 62
M:~m t S2 Camsnu ~ 1
MJ · flalumnre Cootlly 71, W1mhrup "il
NaYyK7 , Amly06
New H a.mplltllr~ ':Ill Mrunc R9!2 OT)
N1agaru Kl, F.11rfield
Nonhcnstern 71. Orexel68 (2 OT)
Notre Datnc!7l St Juhn 'sM
Penn 79, Cornell (f8
Pnn\:cton ~R . Columbia 4~
Rnit:• 66 S1 Pt:trr 1 "i8
Seton Hall 68, rrov~tkncc :\a
St Bon~wenture 70, Sl Joseph 's ~6
Vermont 86 Delaw.U'C' 76
Vtll.1no~.t?M ~·h.tml 7"i
W.1gnt:r 64. Robert Morns 62
x.wu:r 71.J Tem1•lc 71
Y.de 71 Harvard b"i lOT)

W Kl'lltUlky 7'i NcwOrlc.m.'l

ABL standings

l'onlmd

Saturday's action

Arbns3s 76 Mu.titUI[llll St 71
Auburn MI. MtiSI UI JIJII 67
Austin Pt:3Y K-;, Tenncssox St 6"i
Cent Roru.la Ill Flum!a Atl:~nt1~ 72
Chattanougn M. Fumwn ~4
Citadel btl Gcorg1.1 Southc.,.n .-s
Coli of C'hark!stun 67, Mercer 47
Copp1n St In Dclaw.tre St 60
DaY!dson 77 App:-tbdn.m St ? I
E Tennt:s'\t:o: S1 '74 UNC-Greensboru '4
Fla lntr rn.ttlonniiOI Stetson RO
Georr,t~ St K2 Campbell ~K
Grambling St 86 Mns V alley St Kl
How. trd U 67 Bethunc·C()oitrum47
J,u;ksnn S1 62 Al.!b.mt,l St ~~

Atlant&lt;t 101, Ctwlottc Rl
CLEVELAND 90. Detroit 8M
Houston 102, Phl1adclphta 86
Phoenix 96, Orlnndo 94
Denver II 0. O.tllas 98
New J e~y 116. Vancouver 106

Om,lj,W ·'' tknver 9

NCAA Division I
men's scores

K\IIIU~ky 7~

SW Mmmm ~~ 7~ lno.l1,u1.1 S1 'itJ
S.unl Luu 1~ b4 UlUI SV IIIo: ~'i
~\Uth..-rn Mt ss 77 O..:P.1ul67
Tuk:llu :'i \ , Buwlm~ Gn.'\.'11 4 I
Vulp.tr.uso 102. Ch1u1gu St 74
W Mldllj:.tn .liM K1.'111 'iK "
W1d11t ~ St 62 Ev.ms~ tl k 'i7
Wt~ M•l..w.tuket&lt; Ill Clo:vclanJ S1 7K
Y OUIIf!:S iown St 71 NE lllmu1 ~ bli
Southwtst
Arl Lntlc Jhldi M I.OIJI~I.In.1 r\\: h 41

Arkansas St 79, L..amar 6~
Nev00:~91, North Texas 90
Oklu00ma80 Tea..a A&amp;.M 71
Oral Roberts 7S , Buffalo 61
So~o~thernMet h 9 1, Rtce67
Stephen F A11s11n 77, Snm Houston St 61.J
T~,;u 88, Oklahoma St 71
Te11.:u Sou thern K2, Prwnc Vtew 74 (OTJ
le"u·Arltngwn 7l. McNeese S1 68
Far Wtst
Anzona 70 Cahfom1:~ H
Anzona St 90, Stanford 87 (0T)
Cal Poly-SLO 87, Cal S1-Fulle11on R4
ColornOO 77 t&lt;ansns St 66
Colorado St 79, Atr Fo r~c 'it}
Fresno St 97, Sun D1ego St 94
Gonzaga 7R Santa Clara 7\
H::l'oli:U I 6R San Jotte S1 62
Idaho 12 8o1sc S1 6 7
Montan11 St 9'i IJahu St 7'i
N An zona 86 CS Nonhndgt !l'i tOT)
New Mcx1co Sl K4, Utah St 69
Ortgon 74 Oregon St 67
P.tetfit: 69 Long lk,w.:h Sr 'i()
Pc=p~rdtne 74, San D1ego 6 '\
Potthmd 69, Sun Frnn~•s~o 62
PonlanJ St 72. E W;uhm81un S'J
Southern Cal n. WilShmgton St tl"' (OT)
St Mar) ·s Cal IJ9, Loyol;~ Marymount Ml
Te.l.as·EI PuslJ68 Bnghnm Young ~9
UC Santn Barbara 74. UC ll'\llne 66
UClA 10~. W:~Shmgton 94
Weber St 89, Sacranltnlo Sl ~4
Wyomtng 11. UNLV 62

Sunday's action
[""

Boston College 74, GcOfg"'lown 6J
cQJgate 80, Bu~knc:ll 7~
l1,mu 81, St!~Rilfl2 (0T)
Mass.adJustiiS M'i Day1un 6'J
Rhfll.k l ~l.uW ?'i , h1rJh.un 70
Syr:~~.:u~e IW Pm~bur~h 7\
fuws\111 Kl M.m~ 'i7

Suuth
Ouk~

YO G..'1.1f~t.l Tcd1 fl'l

Anntl.t M&lt;l.

Kentu~ky

7.11

Mar4Ut'IIC M 1ui.I11C 411

M tryl.uu.l17 Vlrt:nll.t 7ll
Stlulh C.11nl10.1 67 l'llh llll\,111 tJ'i
1\ltdt«'llt
Br.ttlley 11) L&gt;r.1kc 'i l
K.m ~u t12. Nd&gt;w~l&gt;.t 71
Mt~;htg.tn tiO. low.t 66

Suuthw•5t
TcA.ISOtmti.UI 11)2 ruls t 100 tOl)
To:x,L\ hd1 KO, IJ.1yh•r 7 l

Kttne S1

7~

Mm ·O:Ulnmuth IH

Ktngs P:~ 74 Allcntnwn 01
Ku1z1own 61 Cbt!yn~y ·-'2

Suulh

Ullay~llt: 6tl, l.c:h1~h 60
Loyu l&lt;~ MJ fl7 St Pelt• ~ ~'i

Lyt.:unnng 11 Dcl.twtrc 'V.tl 4'i
lyntkln St bl, Notr~ U.lltiC N H 'ill
MIT S"i Won.estcr l ~'i.h 6 l
M.unc- F.Irntln~t tm Kl No:w Ett~l mtl J 2
Mass Collegc'i1 F1kht-mgS1 -''
Memah 61 A lbn ~ht ~~
M1am• ~I Gevrgctuwti 74
M1lk:nvt llt: 7~ M .m ~ lidd :'i4
Mtsertcordl&lt;~ 7~ lmm.LlUitt.l \1
Mo11o)66.NJ Tec h~l
Montdatr St 70 Sttll kh111 St 4H
Morav1an 70 Lo:b.~rwn V,1 t ~'i
N llhno1 s ~6 MARSHI\LL K2
Navy 74 Army 4K
Neun1ann 70 CcJ.tr Crest 'i~
New Rochelle 'i-1 Meo.J~.u Evers -IY
Nt&lt;~g.tm li4. Rtllt.'r M
Nonhe.lstt.-rn 62 Dre1d 'iO
Onennl.t St 61 New P,1hl St ~ 1
Po:nn 71 CorndiOI
Pocsd.mt St 62 Ull\~ ll'l;h 42
Prin~ ecun

09 Colum~•·• 'i I

Rosemont 74 W!l)llt172

Ruwnn

~"i . Ru1~(·n·Ncw,1rk

112

Connl'\:tt~ut 71 New H.unp1l11rc Cull
M.n~ 71 E Clii ii iC~ II ~u t '7
S~ lcm St 71&lt; RnJI!-~""'alcr M . • ~~ 'i"i

S
S

Sl:r.mtnntll

h7

~w

&lt;;\
Shppcry Hud ·ll ~
Sten.r 1' C.tmsHts 'i'i
St Bonaventure 74 lt~rJit ,ml 6-1
St Ehz,tbl:th 66 Ste\cns lcdt \IJ
St Fr.1nc1~ NY N luulc1!!1t IJ1 d.: 11 1~tln l1'
St Franl:t S, P.1 69 Mntunnuth N J -'lJ
St M.try s MJ 77 s.,h~bury Sr '\fl
St Mldloll:l ~67 l.cMuyu~ ~(!(011
St Rose K6 Cunlt!fdl.l N Y 'i()
St Vltk.:CIIIIUI , 1),11!1111.'11 62
Stunl'lul176. Ml'ITIIIu~ k 11)
Smuy Brunk ~2 M.L\S ·Luwdl ~I
Tuwst~n 16 f-i,artluro.J 'i I
Tufh Hl , H.um lh 1n '\~
Sluppensbur~ K~

Umnu\ 7~ Utdm~llll ~t;
Vt ll,llli.IVOJ "K uu ~tnn Cullc~~ l'i

W Clmlll'\:ltLUt KI M,,,s IJuMIIII J l
W v,, Wcslynfl6 Wc ~ t Lttlcn yhl
Wapnt:r 6H Rnho:r1 Mnrm h 1
wa.~h &amp;Jdl 61llt•d 'it
Wc=~t...y 60. Nntl\: b.m~~: Mo.J ~7
West Vtr)!lllhl Kl'l PIII~UI!!It fll
Wcslfi1.'k! St 70 I r.tnllll!!ll.llll St fl-1
Westnunstl"r P.l 42 Scttm H1ll ll
Wl~l'lllt~ Jcsurt 'i I Gknv•ll.: St .-~
Wtlkc~

HJ FDU - M .tJt ~un Itt

Wm P.111'rstul

fl~ . Rutt!~n

(.:ulttl•u ~7

Al.tbnma A&amp;M 79, Mt~s 48
Albany Ga 7\, Fort Valley St 7 1
Apral&lt;~chtan St M 'W Carohna 4?
Ark..ans;~s 79 Kentucky 61
Auburn 67, L.SU 'i9
Augustil St 8l, Amuuon!! Atl,mt tl 79 "
Austtn Pe,t) 76 Tennessee Sr 'i9
Brll.trmlnl.' 91, 1ru.ltanapohs M
Btl mom "i6 Nonh Gl.'nt"j:t:'l 2Y
lklmonl Abbey K~ Mnunt Ohve 70
Brthcl Tenn MO I~ 70 t2 OT)
Brescia 91, Ashury 11,1
C.tmpbell K1 S.tmfurJ ~I
Canon·Newmim N Wmg.11c (Jl
Cat.twb,l6'i Lenmr-Rhyne 62
Cent floml.t MI Flum.lu Arl,tnlll 72
Ch.ulcshm Southern 7'\, N C ·Ashcvtllc 6 l
Ch.m.mut•i!·' 100 Wulhlfd 92
Chnstt1pher Newpon SO, Mctht~&lt;.hst 72
Clark All,mta 7"i Murns Brown 72
Coker R2 Longwood "i9
Coil of Ch.1rb tnn 7\ Jatk$OIIVIIJC St 6'
CulumDus St 72 Fr:tncts M.tnon 60
Cumba l &lt;~nd. Ky HI Cutnbt:rl.md Tcnn 71
D:tv!d~tn71 Gwrgm SoulhL"fll M
Och.1 St 91). Ark.tns,ts Telh~7 (2 OT) t
Emmanuel 90 L1mc ~tnnc 64
Emory&amp;.Hcmry96 . V.a Wcsky.m iN
Fcnum 66, Shcn:tn&amp;.lu;th 64
Fit lntt:rn:mon.tl 72. Stctsofl "il
Flt)(ld.l A&amp;M 7fl, Mt~rg.tn St 'ill
Fll)(ld.t Southrrn M . Bmy 47
Funn.m 7'i E. Ti!n tk~ll_"C '\t 67
G.t $nulhwl'slern 61 Southern Wedey.m -''i
(H.•or~t:ll•wn Ky K'i No~tlh Gr~-cnvdlt: 74
Geur!!m Cull 74, N C ·l'cmbfc1k\: 'i1
Gr.nnbhng St Kl M1ss V.tltcy St 1'17
Grt."'!nsbnw62 N C W1.'slcynn 46
GtJJIIttrtJ 77 W.t~hmgtnn &amp; U."C W
Hml~tnn U 91, S Camhn.t St 62 •
Htgh Pmnt 711 1'.1)'l'llcvtlle St 7"i
Huw:trd U 76 lkthonc·Cnukm.m "i I
J.tckson St 7~. Al.th.tnt;t St 70 (01)
Jolmwn C Smuh 74. t1 vtn~Hmc 70
Ky Wt'sky.m 7oJ N Kcntucky 72 {01)
Lunder 66, ClaytlJn St ~-1
Ltht.Tty 7{) R.klford 66
· Ltnlllln Mcmurtal 76 \J,,IJ~JSI~ St 74
L(lUI S I:lrt:IT~'\:h IIH, Tt!II..IS P.111 Allll!fl l:olll -II
Lou t ~YIIk Kl lu!.uk.'M
Lynn 61 l~lierd &lt;;7
M.trs H1!1 KIC, G.!rdncr·Wcbh 7\
Mary W.as htn~ ttlll bl Yurk •l,a ~'i
Mtl-E Shtnc 70 N C.truhn 1 A&amp;l 'i-1
NE L.IUI~I.In.l 70 S[ ! .J IUI SI 10.1 4'i
NW Lt\UUI.II\,1M1, Ntdlllll~ Sl 'iiJ
Nunh Alahmn,1% MontcY,tllu 7b
Nonh Flono.l.t77 S (' ·S p., rt,mhu r~ 41

OaldanJ CJty 6'i, Kentucky Cltmt1.1n 'i1
Pf..-t ff~r S4 Bartnn 7S
PR!sbytc=n.m 71, Nev. berry 69
Rtco: 77 Snut l~rn Mcth 61
Rollin~ 7' Tounp.t 60
Shaw KR, Ehzahcrh Cny St 6"i
St•uth Larnhna. 79 MmiSslpfll 72
St•ulhcrn U 67 Alwrn St ~M
Spnnj: Htl1 7l D•llarJ 71 (10T)
1 o:nn Wcsl!.'y m &lt;i6, Ahcj,l Unyd 49 1
To:nn -Man111 IB MtJdk Tcnn 71
Tcnlll:~~l! Tcd1 62 Murr.1y St (I()
fu.t s·Arlmgton74 M~Nt.'\' St:S t 6~
ro:Jt.t s-EI P.rsn "iO Ut..,h 4(l
Troy St q Mer~ l'f ~6
Unwn Ky 76 l.unbu1h Ml
Unwn Tenn K6 Ucny 67
Vtr~uuu St Kl, St 1'.1ul ~ 'i~
V tr~1111. 1 Umnn !ill, St Au~ ustmc s 61
W Kc111ud:y 111 ~W LnUI M.ut.t f16
We~~ Al.tboLI\1,16"i, Al,t Hunt sYIIIC 62
W~sl nuntl,\ 07, We' ! Gcnq!l:1 'il
M1dwtsl
Allnan 74 Album f14
Akwn 04, Cent Mtdn~.m 6\
Ashl.md ll'i W,tym: M1ch 60
Aug~ hor(! 6\J, Bethel Mum 67
Hnldwm W,tlJ.tce ~7 . Hctdclbcrg46
RcnnliJl St 62 SW Mmnc Mit.t ~IJ
Bcthany, K.111 60 Snu thwc~ll'rn K 111 44
RlutTton 112, M:tJnnn.l 76
8owhngGn.-cn67 lnkJn61
llr1,tr Chtr 90, NurthW\: ~ I crn /uw.t "i~
Buen.1 Vm,t 77. M,Lrfll\ Lot her f•2
Uutll'r 76 IJctron (J I
C.tptt,tl7l, Muskmpum61
C.Jrdtn.ll Stntd1 b~ C.trl h,tgc 'iH
CeJ.1rvtllc Ill, M.1l11nc 6 1
Cl:lll low.tKI ,Cnmd llnw.l49

Celli Mls.,uun 07 SW ll.tpll"'' (Jl
Cent Sl . Ohw 77. Kcnhl~;ky St \~
Cmc tnn.tll H1. SnuthL'rrl Mm (,(,
Cl.trkc 61 Ucnctllc llfll' Ill ~7
DcP.IU..w 7'i, f.r.mkhn M
l&gt;cri.tn~t! lib St M.tr)' 7'i
0..:111 $1111 ~H. Krnyon 11)
L&gt;u.mc 106 0.111.1 W
L Kl.'ntu~ky Kb, Sl M1 s~t 1Urt 77
L.trtll.nn fl7 hlkt:l~~.: ny \K
l.mJllm.t St •n M11 Suutl,, rn ~'J
I un·b ?~ Rtllkford ll)
l'v.m~d I)() Mt ~M•II rt V.1l l7
F~·rr1s St 92 Snt!IIMW V.tl St 7~
illh.ll,ay 77 G.annuu 72
F11rt H.tys St 70 Rei! I~ 'i'i
Gushcu M lndt.l!l.l Wc ~ l cy.m C1l
Gr.tml V,tllcy St YIJ , Nurthwutll.l M1d1 !ll
Grl·envt llc ~7 l,rmupt,l 'i6
H,lntlVl'r 77 R•)sc.Hulrnan 'i4

t'u WtSI
New Ml.'xlw 77 Ut.d• l-1

NCAA Division I
women's scores
SHtturday's adinn

"FREE ZONE"

E~ast

Alh,my Ph.1rm."y 'if! rnnn y (utut ~I
Altl.my N Y 71J Bndj.tt'pun 611
Alhcn11s M.I~IIU\ IJ'i Rt \h!r 7 I
Alvo:rm.l7!( lle,.,,.r J!(
A1111:1 Mm.1 69 I. N,t1..11\:lll' b.1
A s~ UII\flllllll ta7 P.1~ ~ ta!
Bmuch ~) Jnhn J.1y 46
Bentley (Ill (.)utnnlpt .l~ ~o
BIIIJhamtun St 7tJ llr.mtl.·t ~ 'i7
Dnsltln U 1(-l H 11 l ~tr.t J1
Uillol'\111111 ~~~ W(•sky Ill (ollll H
Urn.:klklll S1 71 I rt!tluw 1 St f17
Ury.mt 71 S1 An~ 1111 71
lJulkndl74 (.ol~. ll~o: (1'J
( W r u~ t ~ l :-ilmth.tntptu114H
C.tbrtl\1 117 bstl'rll ~'\
C tthult~ U 7'J G.tll.tuJct 'iM
CL'ul Co tllll'll l ~ll l '\t 9 2 l.un}! hl.utd U 7:!.
Cl~:\d, md Sr 116 Wn~lll St 70
G~o~st GutrJ 6 7 N Y M.101un..- 17
Culhy Ill CumMIIlUI Cull (14
(ulby·S,twyer 10] Mu~l.'rW1111.11m l(l
Cullc}!c ul N J 'i9 M.tlll.ljln 40
(llJlJllll St ICI) Llcl . tw,~rc St M
C.•nl.mJ S1 b2 JJI:in shtlfJ!h St 41J
Cuny fo 7 Nl'w l.nt:l.llltl Cull "iiC
l&gt;ann~o•ulh 7'i llmwn 12
l &gt;&lt;t~l ~ &amp; IIL111~ 74 W Vtr~llll•t St 'i4
o .•yhlll h7 M.ISSolt: huscth .'i'i
Dd.tw If.: b7 v~rmunt (l2
Dumtl\l\ 111 NY 7' P1ula Pham~:~~.:y '\(1
llnwlul)! 71 (}ul'l.'IIS Cull 'il
l:.l111twruiU l..~._k H.l\l'II.U

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Jr.u1kltn l'tt'rn• OM S,u:ro.:J Ht:an M
Gctlt.');l'o St KO (h we~ll St ~
Cii'IIY~~~~~~ 70 W.t~hlll}!t•m MJ Ml
(1r1ne (\ty 71 W,tyucshur~ SO

H tn.uo.J 74 Y,,J,: 'i~
H nu~hwn (J(I Gctk:\ ,1 ,1
hu.h,au 1 1'.1 7\ C.thlut'lllol P,1 'i 1J
Juh1t\ H1~1~111~ H-1 W M.1ryl.md "i.l
Jum.at.t 72 Wu.lcnlr 'i(l

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(5

Terri Jividen - F.ranchisee

------------------------~'
GNCLiveWell

13 Ohio River Plaza, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
441-9849
10:00-8:00 Mon .•Thurs.
10:00-9:00 Fri.-Sat.
12:011-6:00 Sun.

I

•

'

The Southern Tornado gals overcame a 10-1 1 first quaner defic11 to
cla1m a 47-37 non-league wm over
the South Gallia Rebels Saturday
afternoon· m Charles W Hayman
gymnasiUm
A Sabnna Mooney led Rebel club
jumped to an 11 -10 lead m the first
penod. then Southern (3-12) started
to wrestle the momentum .tway from
the ViSitOrs. K1m Sayre had her best
game of the year m spark:ng South ern to a 15-8 second quaner and 2519 lead at the mlermJSsJon
Southern never agam trailed 10
putting a 14- 11 and 8-7 thnd and
founh quaner together, leading 39-30
afterthree and47-37 in the final
,,
Sayre ended the day w1th 18
pomts on SIX field goals and a three
pomt goal , wh1le also lead10g in
shooting three-pointers was one-of the many factors In their a4:s7
rebounds With e1ghl and pulling five
setback. (OVP photo by G. Spencer Osborne)
asSJSis in the record book
Freshman Nicole Benson had
another good game w1th 10 po10ts
and six rebounds
South Gallm was Jed by Sabrina
Mooney 's 13 pomts
Coac h Allan Cnsp was very
pleased w1th the Southern effort and
11-poml effort gamed mostly on 3- Fnday.
hopes the wm will carry momenlum
Meigs will host Federal Hock1ng 1010 thiS week's league ranks.
for-13 field-goal shooting. He was
Tuesday and play at Nelsonville
held to four points after halftime.
Southern h1t 17-45 lwo - pomte~&gt;
Dame! Hannan, the Marauders· 6- agamst Nelsonville-York Fnday
( 18-47 overall). 1-2 threc-pott11crs,
foot-3 junior postman w1th the dou- Quarter l2tllb
and was I0-18 at the Ime w11 h 24
15-12-7-23=57
ble-figure scoring average, was held Me1gs
rebounds (Sayre 8, Benson 6) South
15-24-25-20=84
to two pomts. Those came on a firsl- R1ver Valley
Gallia hit 13-46 two-pomters, 1-5
quaner finger-roll layup that gave
three-po1nters, and was 8-27 at the
Meigs (8-6): Beha 2-1-415= I0, hne w11h 37 rebounds (Waugh 5.
Meigs a 7-5 lead, its 'only one of the
Giles 4-0-012=8, Rodriguez 2-1- Mooney 6).
night, at the 2:43 mark.
H1s basket was the only shot he 112=8. McKmney 3-0-111=7. Davis
Southern had seven steals (friend
took in a first half in wh1ch he was 1-0-414=6. Humphreys 2-0-112=5. 2). II asmts (Sayre 5. Caldwell 5).
whistled for three foul s. He took hi s Roush 2-0-010=4, Mea~ows 1-0last two shots. both of wh1ch riussed 114=3. Davenpon 1-0-011 =2. Hannan
1-0-010=2. O'Bnen 0-0-112= I.
the mark. in the third quaner.
Reserve notes: In the preceding Totals: 19/46-2/25-13/~3=57
Total FG: 21-71 (2\1 6%)
junior varsity encounter, River Valley
Rebounds~ 39 (Beha M. Rndngucz
outlasted a third-quaner rally by the
Marauders to claim a 58-54 victory. 7)
Blocked shots: I (by Humphreys)
' Steve Conley led th~ Raiders with
I 8 points, of which 14 came m the
Assists: 9
Steals: 6
first half. Teammate Kyle Dee! had
Thmovers: 20
14 points, of which 12 came before
Fouls: 17
halftime.
Zach Meadows led the Marauders
River Valley (9-6): J;~mes 9-Jwith 15 points, of which 10 came m
the second half. Teammate Justin 7/8=28, Fowble 2-3-2/2=15, Rocchi
3-0-4/4=10, Sullivan 2-1-314=10.
Roush finished Wllh 12
The ruture: The Ra1ders will stan Drummond 3-0-111=7, Toler 2-0a three-game road tour Tuesday with 112=5, Mollohan 2-0-010=4, Halfhill
a stop in The Plains against Athens
1-0-010=2, Polcyn 1-0-0/0=2.
Then they will play at Point Pleasant Wellington 0-0- 1/2= I. Totals: 25/475/17-19/2Jz84
Total FG: 30-64 (46.9%)
Rebounds: 38 (James 14. Toler 8)
Blocked shots: none
Assists: 29 (James. Rocchi &amp; Sullivan 4 each)
Steals: 8
Thrnovers: 15

\

•'\ \

/ _'2'

TAKING AIM - The Meigs Marauders' Sean O'Brien takes aim
from behind the three-point arc In the first hall of Saturday night's
road game against River Valley. ~~arauders' lack of success In

Raiders tally 'fourth straight win

River Valley rolls past Meigs 84-57
By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
OVP Staff Writer
In Saturday night's varsity boys'
basketball rematch at River Valley
High School. the host Raiders got
double-dJgJt offense from four of
their star!ers that pushed them to an
84-57 WID over the Me1gs Mamuders
The decJSJOn, connng on the'heels
of River Valley's 54-44 wm over
Southeastern Ohio Athletic League
rival Jackson. gave the Raiders the1r
founh consecutive victory.
The Marauders, who lost a 71 -55
decismn to Tn-Valley. Conference
division rival Alexander the previous
night, tied the game five times 10 the
first quarter thai saw sophomore
guard/forward Steve Beha use the
two baskets that got him hts first five
pomts to tie the game tw1 ~e. The second of these came on a three-point
shot from beh10d the fou-l circle with
24 seconds left 10 the first quarter.
Thai created a 15-15 deadlock that
stood at the penod's end.
In the second quaner, the Raiders
apparently decided they had seen
enough. Starting w11h senior guard
Bryan Drummond's two baskets and
a bonus foul shot in a I0-seconsJ span
in the first minute, they scored eight
unanswered points before Beha's
two free throws at the 5:36 mark
trimmed the hosts' lead to 23-17
The Marauders. who later fell
behind by nine, got consecutive bas~ts fr11m junior ~enter Way lon _Me K10ney,junior guard Angelo Rodnguez
(a pass from senior guard Sean
O'Brien set him up for the alley-oop
layup at the 3·44 mark) and sen1or
guard Collin Roush (he stole the ball
and took it in for the layup) to cut
River Valley's lead to 28-25 With
3:27 left.
But R1ver Valley, starting with a
layup and two fr~e throws by sen1or
guard Nick Rocch1, scored mne unanswered points to perm.mently plll its
lead into double-dig11 territory
In the third quarter, the RaJders
sank all of the1r four three-po101
attempts en mute to a 10-for- 13 fieldgoal shootmg effort that built most of
their 30-pomt lead by the penod's
end.
As cruc1al to the construction of
that margin was the Rmders' defense
agamst Me1gs 10 the m-fo~l range

Meigs reserves
beat South Point,
fall to Alexander

I liz .11'-.:1htu~n 9\, SiJ1ll.JUChmum fo~
lnllt ~1111 71 lnh11~11n &amp; W.alc!ii H. I 'i1

The Daily Sentinel • page 5

The Meigs Marauder reserve
boys· basketball team split a pair of
games last week . The Marauders
defeated South Point last Tuesday,
and then dropped a TVC game to
AleKander on fnday.
After a loss to R1ver Valley on Saturday the Little Marauders of Coach
Pat O'Brien own a 7-5 murk overall
and a 5-3 record 10 the TVC headmg
mto Tuesday's game with Federal
Hockmg
Against South Pomt, Me1gs
outscored the hosl 33-25 in the second half to pull away from a two
pomt halftime lead and post a 56-46
win. Grant Abbott led the Marauders
with 22 pomts, including 12 10 the
third penod Zach Meadows .added
17.
Willie Anderson led the POinters
Wllh 14.
On Fnday. Alexander posted a 5138 win over Meigs . Jeremy Johnsqn
led the Spanans with 17 points
Abbott and Chuck Murray led the
Marauders with tl points, James
Stanley added I0

Meigs girls have
three home dates
The Meigs Marauder girls basketball team will have three home
games this week as the Lady
Marauders stan down the stretch.
Meigs will host Nelsonville-York ,
today, Belp~ on Thursday and Point
Pleasant 6n Saturday.
The reserve game for alt three
contest will get underway at 6 p.m.,
with the varsity game to follow.

from the basket. The Marauders,
who missed 16 of 19 field-goal
attempts 10 act three. m~&lt;sed seven
out of nine in a s1x-foo1 mdius from
the basket.
·
The' shooters: James, who scored
15 of his game-high 28 points in the
first half, notched his fifth straight
20-point-or-hJgher game in part on
10-fpr-20 fi eld-goal shoot1ng.
Classmate and fellow forward
Ryan Fowble fini shed w1th a personal
season-high 15 points- he equaled
his combined pomt production from
the previous three games- gleaned
mostly from 5-for-9 field-goal shootmg. II was his first double-figure
scoring effort since his 11-point
showing in a 66-56 los~ to Logan on
Jan 9.
Rocchi ( 10 pomts partly from 3-7
FGs). who didn ' t score against Jackson the night before. talli~d his first
douhle-d•gll sconng effon smce his
12-point effon in the Raiders' 61-33
win over Wahama on Jan. 20.
Sullivan (10 points panly from 34 FGs) registered his first double-figure sconng effon since the Raitlers'
71-54 win over Fairland on Jan. 6,
when he had a season-h1gh 14 pomts.
Beha le!l the Marauders with an

16 turnovers, and 21 foul s. Soul~ r
Ga)ha had 16turnovers and 18 fouls,,
Southern won the reserve game ·
35-241ed by Heather D.1iley w11h 10.
points and Katie Cummms and Tam,
my Fryar w11h mne e.och
·
Southern goes 1u Waterfor~
ton1ght
Quarter !Qta1s
I '
Sout h Gallia
11-8- 11 -7=37
Southern
I 0- 15 -14-8=47 '
' I
South Gallia: Sabnna Mooney 41-216= 13. Kan Clark 2-0-0=4. Jess1 -,
ca Clary 1-0-012=2. Rachel Waugh 31 ,
0-317=9. Ang1e John son 2-0-0/4=4,
Robyn Harmon 1-0-012=2. Toni
Osborne 0-0-214=2. Kmltn G1bson Q~0-112=1. Totals: 13-1 -8/27=37 ·
Southern: Cynthia Ca ldwel l 1-0 '
112=3, Jenn v Fnend 1-0-2/4=4. K1
Sayre 6-l-3i4= 18. S1acy Lyons J-0~
0=6. K1m lhle 2-0-0=4. N1cole Ben
son 4-0-212= 10. Patty Lawrence 0-0.
112=1, Heather Dailey 0-0-114=1 ' !
Totals: 17-1-10/18=47

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Lillie things
11re Worlh A lol

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the Cl~tssified Section!

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South Gallia boys

beat Eastern 66-53
- In Saturday night's varsity boys'
basketball game at South Galli a High
School, the host Rebels got-doubledigit offense from four players that
helped them notch a 66-53 wm over
Eastern
The decis1on gave the Rebels.
winners of three of their last four
games, their second season series
sweep of the season with1n 24 hours.
They did the same to Hannan Friday
night.
Junior guard/forward Rufus Stanley led all scorers with 15 pomts. of
which 12 came in the fifllt half that
helped South Gallia break a 11 -lltie
at the forst quaner's end. Also making sigmficanl mvestmenls in the VICtory were semor forward Jason Johnson with 12 and Jumors J R Boothe
and Jeremy Dav1s, bcMh of whom had
11 -poinl effons.
Mall BISsell ~nd Joe Brown led the
Eagles wllh 13-point efforts. Teammate Eric Sm11h had 12.
Reserve notes: Eastern, led by
Josh W111's 15 po10ts and Jeremy
Coleman,s 12. recorded a 45-38 victory m the preceding reserve game.
Mall Bes- led the Rebels w11h 17
points. Teammate Josh Staton had
nme.

The ruture: South Gallia will

23
Wllh aa stop
m Ironton
agamst
start
three-game
Toad
tour Ironton
Frida,
St ·Joe.
Public Notice
·Eastern will host Wellston Tuesday
and Miller Friday.
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Quarter llltalli
Bid tor Trucks Legal Ad
Eastern
11 -12-10-20=53
The Tuppers PlaineSouth Galha
11 -16- 17-22=66 Cheater Water Dlatrlct- Ia
tnvlttng btda for two trucke,
a one ton 1998 Cab and
Eastern (3-12): · Bissell 3-2- Chanla, and a bid for a
1/1=13. Brown 3-0-7110=13. Sm1th 1998 heavy-half Pick-up
All apeclflcatlona lor
5-0-212=12.i{ehll-1-212=7. Driggs truck.
lhe two truck bid a ean be
0-1-0/0=3. Durst 0-1-0/0=3. Will 1- picked up et the Tuppero
0-0/0=2. Totals·:
13/29-5/15- Plalna·Cheater Water
District's maIn oIll c e
12/15=53
located on SR 7, 3 mllea
Total FG: 18-44 (40.9%)
south or Tuppers Plains.
Rebounds: 25
The mailing addrt81 Ia
Thrnovers: 24
39561 Bar 30 Road.
Reedsville, OH 45772. We
Fouls: 19
will alao mall or fax a copy
the two specification
South Gallia (6-9): Stanley 3-3- or
ahoota.
0/0= 15, Johnson 4-0-4/6= 12. Boothe
The phone I Ia 1·740-9853-0-5/6= II. DaviS 3-0-517= II. Cook 331. Blda will be opened
3-0-0/0=6. M1chael 2-0-111=5, Bess Thuraday,February 5th,
0-0-2/2=2 Queen 1-0-012=2. Rush J. 1998, at 10:00 a.m. at the
Diatrlct'a main office. The
0-0/0=2 Totals~ 20/30-3/9-17/24=66 District reservea the right to
. TotalFG: 23-39(59'k)
waive any lnlormalltltl and
reject eny and all blda. ·
Rebounds: 22 (Cook 5)
By Herold H. Blackston
Assists: 14 (Boothe, Michael &amp;
President of tha Board of
Queen 3 each)
Dlractoro
Steals: 15 (Boothe 5)
(t) 19, 26, (2) 2, 3tc
Thrnovers: 20
Public Notice
Fouls: 18
Fouled out: Stanley
NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
Sealed proposal• lor the
rehabilitation &amp; lnetallatlon
ol wood flooring on flret
and tocond floor of the
Hlatorlc
Choater
Courthouee, Cheater, Melgo
County, Ohlo will be
received by the Melge
County Commlaelonera 11
their office at the
Courthouto, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 until 10:00 a.m., Feb.
23, 1998 and then at 1:00
pm., at eald office opened
and reed eloud for the following:
The provision ol neceoeery matartale and lnatallelion of Oa_k plank flooring of
the flret atory floor of the
Cheatar Courthouae and
the provlalon or neceaeary
matarlala and rehabilitation
of tho support oyatem and
Installation of Southern
Yellow Pine plank flooring
of the IICOnd story floor Of
the Cheater ' CourthOUII.
Biddera ohall provide their
own meaaursmenta and
matarlala flat, however, bldo
must conform to tha Project
'Specifications provided In
the Bid Packet.
Prospective blddara wishlng to view and Inspect the
project alta may contact
Mary Powell 11 · 740-8922822 or Dala Colburn at
740-992-!1861 to fnapect lha
~
project alto and for any furthtr qu•tlone 11 to the

r~F~o~u~l~s:~~~~::~==-j-==:;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

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Ri\NDALL F. HAWKINS
MD

Board Certlfled Internal Medicine

304·675· 7700

Medtcal 01Bce Bldg. 2520 Valley Dr.

Suite 212-Pt. Pleasant,

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Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
project.
1998 lor lmprovemonto u:
24 lor Healing and Cooling
Plana, Speclflcatlono, and
Gallla, Hocking. Meigs, Historic Preservation Offlee
bid form• may be toCured Monroe, Morgan, Noble, approval. Bidders ahould :
at the office of Melge VInton and Washington nota that Federal Prevailing
county Commlastoners. No Counties, Ohlo lor-Improv- Wage Rates apply to this
depoalt will be required lor Ing sections GALJvarlous • project. All bids must con·
each eel of plana and epec· 7/varlouo - 2.205/Varlous, form to the Proje~t
lflcatlona.
Stale Route 7 and various SpeclllcaUons provided In
Each bid muat be accom- In the Cities of Belpre and the Bid Packet.
panted by either a btd bond Marlstta ,
VIllages
or
Prospective bidders wla~­
In an amount ol100% of the Clarington and Balle Valley, lng to view and Inspect thlt
bid amount with a aurety by Herbldlcal Spraying
project site may contact
satloloctory to the aforesaid
"The data sat lor comple- Mary Powell at 740-992Melga
County tion olthls work shall be as 2622 or Dale Colburn It :
Commloalonere or by ceni- sat forth ln the bidding pro- 740-992-5661 to Inspect the
fled check, caahlera eheck, pooal."
Plana and project aile and lor any fu•·
or letter ol credit upon a Speclllcatlone are on file In !her questions as lo the
solvent bank In the amount tho
Department
of project.
of notloeathan 10% of the Transportation.
Plana, Spoclflcallona, and
JERRYWRAY bid forms may be secured
bid amount In favor of the
aforesaid Meigs County
DIRECTOR OF at the office of Meigs
Commlealonero. Bid Bonde
TRANSPORTATION County Commlaalonsrs. No
shall be accompanied by (212. 9 2TC
deposit will be required for :
Proof of Authority of tho
each set of plans and apac·
offiCial or agent signing the
lflcallons.
bond.
Public Notice
Each bid must be accomBide shall be sealed and !--_;_;===:.::.:::::..__ panied by either a bid bond
marked aa Bl~ lor Cheater
In an amount ol100% of the
NOTICE TO
Hlatorlc
Counhouse
bid amount with a surety
CONTRACTORS
Heating and Air conditionsatisfactory to the aforeseld
Sealed
proposals
lor
the
lng Protect and mailed or
Meigs
County
delivered to: Meigs County purchaae and Installation of Commissioners or by cart~
Control
Heating/Air
Units
In
Co m mt e 1 Io n e r s ,
check, cashiers check,
Historic Cheater fled
Counhouse, Pomeroy, Ohio tho
or
Iotter
ol credit upon a
Counhouae, Cheater, Melga
45769,solvant
bank
In the amounr
Attantlon of blddoro Ia County, Ohio will bo of not less than 10% of the.
called to all of the .requlr• received by the Meigs ·bid amount In favor of tho&lt;
menta contained In thla bid County Commloalonara at aforesaid Meigs County'
at tho
packet, pantcutarly to the their office
Commissioners. Bid Bondot
Federal Labor Standards Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio shall bs accompanied by&gt;
Provlolona and Davie- 45769 until 10·00 a.m., Fob. Proof of Authority of the'
Bacon Wageo, varloua 23, 1998 and then at 1:00 official or agent signing the•
lnaurance requlr,menta, pm., at said office opened bond.
'
various equal opponunlly and read aloud lor tho folBlda
shall
be
sealed
and~
provlalone, and the requlr• lowing:
marked as Bid for Chesler:
menl for a payment bond Tho purchaU and Installa- Historic
Courthouse,
tion
In
tho
Historic
Cheeter
and performQnce bond lor
Healing end Air condition-·
Counhouaa
or
the
1ollow100% of the contract price.
lng Protect and mailed or:
1
No bidder may withdraw lng:
delivered to· Meigs County•
'
Two
(2)
hanging
Electric
hie btd within thirty (30)
Commissioners,
days alter the actual date of Ductloas Heat Pumps · 2 112 Counhouse, Pomeroy, Ohio[
tho opening thereof. Meigs Ton, 3000 Watt, with remote 45769
'
County Commissioners HIP thermostat, and all
Attention
of
bidders
Is'
reserve the right to waive required Refrigerant Line, called to all of tho require-;
ony Informalities or to reject to be Installed for service menls contained In this bid '
on and to the sacond floor
any or all btds.
packet, particularly to tha i
of the Courthouse.
Janet Howard, President
Federal
Labor Standards
Tho purchase and InstallaMelga County
Provisions and Davia- :
tion
of
one
(1)
Electric
AIC
commlasloners
live (5) Ton unit with match- Bacon Wageo, various 1
(2) 2, o, 16 3TC
Ing evaporator coli plus Insurance requirements,
neaded thermootalo plus all various equal opponuntty 1
Public Notice
required refrigerant line and provlslona, and the require· \
one (1) 120,000 BTU Natural men! lor a payment bond 1
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Gao Furnace unit plus end performance bond lor '
STATE OF OHIO
of the contract price.
DEPARTMENT OF TRANS- needed thermostat Installa- 100%
No bidder may withdraw 1•
tion, to be lnatalled lor serPORTATION
vice on and to the first floor his bid wlthtn thirty (30) '
Columbus, Ohio
of tho Courthouse. Bidders days alter the actual dale of ,
Office of Contracts
dpenlng thereof. Meigs
Legal Copy Number 9S-1t3 will be responsible lor mea- the
County
Commissioners
surements and materials
UNIT PRIC E CONTRACT
reserve
the
right to wolve
ltst.
Bids
must
provide
a
Mailing Date 1 •2 3.'~8
any
1
nlormalllles
Sealed proposals will be placem en t sketch and any or all bids. or to reject
accepted from all pro-quail- explanation ol lnalallatlon
Howard, President
fled bidders at the Office of for review and approval by Janet
Meigs
County
the
Ohio
Historical
Contracts, Room 118 of the
Commtoalonars
Ohto
Department
of Pratorvatlon Office. Bid
Transportation, Columbus, Packet will c;ontaln a copy (2) 2, 9, 16 3TC
Ohio, until 10:00 a m., of the ·National Park
Wednesday, February 18, Servlce'l Preoervetlpn Briel

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Monday, February 2,1998

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The Dally Sentinel • Page 7· ;
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Senia·r Citizens
Center to cel·ebrate
25th anniversary

FEBRUARY MENUS l

~~--~~------~------~--------~------1 !

MONDAY

The Multipurpose Senior teers to deliver the meals, but due
Citizens Center will be celebrating to federal guidelines, they could not
the 25th anniversary of its opening deliver to persons residing in,outlyin April. Many of the senior ser- ing areas of the county. A Hot Shot
vices have been in operation since Truck was funded through the
early 1973. For e~ample, trans· Meigs County Commissioner's
portation and the Retired and Community Development Block
Senior Volunteer Prograr,n.
Grant funds in 1993. The Hot Shot
By the fall of 1973, it was vehicle .maintained the correct food
apparent that a meal program was temperatures and allowed the pro·
needed, since activities held in the gram to expand into the Long
old Pomeroy Junior High building Bottom-Reedsville areas. · Two
were attracting older adults from more Hot Shot vehicles have been ·
throughout the county. A weekly purchased, enabling the Senior
potluck dinner was held each Center to provide the Home
Thursday with soup and sandwich- Delivered Meal service through the
es served other days, Funding was entire county. In 1983, there were
received through the Older 12,432 home delivered meals. In
Americans Act in 1974 to begin a 1990, there were 26,932 meals with
Nutrition Program. This program 47,865 home delivered meals sent
'
was funded through the Gallia- in 1997.
Meigs Community Action Agency
A new nutrition service began
with Loretta Beegle hin!d as the in 1997. Evening meals are served
first cook. In 1976, the Home on Tuesday and Thursdays. Over
Delivered Meal Program began 250 individuals have attended the
delivery of meals to the frail elder- evening meal site with 2,546 meals
ly living with in the Pomeroy· served. The public is invited to
attend the · evening meal program
Middleport area.
The Meigs County Council on and the Congregate njeal served at
Aging, Inc. became the grantee for noon Monday through Friday.
the Senior N1,1trition Programs in
The Retired and Senior
1983. While the number of persons Volunteer Program also received
attending the meal site remained funding in 1973. Four volunteers
constant during the 1980's, the will receive 25 .year service awards
requests for the Home Delivered in 1998: C.E. Blakeslee, Loretta
Meals increased. For many years Beegle, Lula Hampton · and
the Nutrition program used volun· Ma~orie Brewer.

TUESDAY

2
Oven Baked
Chicken
Augratin Potatoes
Brussel Sprouts
Bread
Peaches with Sa1~c~

I

TUESDAY

FRIDAY

THURSDAY

: Umestone Hauling
·Hou~e &amp;Trailer Sites
Land Clearing &amp; ·
Grading
Septic System &amp;
Utilities
Estimates

4

Ham Loaf
Sweet Potatoes
Green Beans
Bread
Applesauce

Mushroom Steak
!lashed Potatoes
with Gravy
Buttered Corn
BiSCj,lit
Blushing Pears

Chicken and Noodle s Chili Con Carne
Cole Slaw
Broccoli/Carrots
Crackers
and Cauliflower
Fruit Cocktail in
Bread
Red Gelatin
Apple Cherry Crisp
•Brownie

Meat Balls in
Brown Gravy
Noodles
Tossed Salad
Bread
Mandai'ian Oran

Salmon Patty
Oven Roast PotatGes
Buttered Carrots
Bread
Tropical Mixed
Fruit

BBQ Chicken Fillet
Scall'o ped Potatoes
Broccoli
Bread
Pineapple Chunks '

20
Meatloaf
Parslied Boiled
Potatoes
Spinach
Bread
·Applesauce

Baked Steak
Mashed Potatoes
with Gravy
Buttered Peas
Bread
Peach Slices

Navy Beans and Ham
Cole Slaw
Cornbread
Fresh Apple
Rocky Road Pudding

16
Macaroni &amp; Cheese
Creamed Tomatoes
.Green Beans
Bread
Pear Halves

17
Tul'ltey Weiner
Mashed Potatoes
Sauerkraut ,
Bread
Fruit Cocktail

18
Vegetable Beef
Pimento Cheese
Sandwich
Crackers
Peachy Creamy
Pudding &amp;, Cookie

19
Oven Baked Chicken
Mashed Potatoes
with Gravy
Harvard Beets
Bread
Banana

Liver &amp; Onions
Mashed Potatoes
with Gravy
Peas &amp; Carrots
Bread
Fruit

Sloppy Joe on Bun
Baked Beans
Skin On Potatoes
Honey Bee Ambrosia

Beef. Stew
Cole Slaw
Biscuit
Pineapple and
Cottage Cheese

Salisbury Steak
with TomatoeR
. Scalloped Potatoes
Lima Beans
Bread
. Pears in Lime

(614) 992-3838

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Scalloped Chicken
Broccoli &amp; Cheese
Sweet Potatoes
Bread
Apricots
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February activities

The Meigs County Senior
Citizens Center is open Monday
through Friday from 8:00 to 4:30.
Regularly ·scheduled activities are
quilting,.sewing, cards, games, and
pool.
·
Weekly activities are . Line
Dancing classes, wit)l instructor
Paulette Harrison, on Mondays
from 1:00 to 2:00 with a cost of
$1.00; Knitting Circle on
Wednesday from I 0 to 12; chair sitting exercises on Tuesdays and
, . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . Thursdays at 11 :15.
The winter session of the
"Over 55 Exercise Class" will be
held on Mondays and Wednesdays
at
3:30 through April I. The cost ,
The Senior Center Nutrition Program evening meal program will
for the class, which consists of
be held on Tuesdays and Thursdays with serving from ·4:45 p. m.to 5:30
bending and stretching for muscle
p.m. A suggested donation for the evening meal is $4.00.
toning and strengthening and walk·
The evening meal is intended to provide a nutritional meal at a reaing and low impact aerobics for
sonable cost. Dollafli generated will be used to support the existing
cardiovascular conditioning, is 50¢
lunch and home delivered meal programs.
for each session attended.
A representative from the
Athens Social Security Office will
be at the Center on Wednesday,
February II and 25 from 10 to II
February
February 3
a.m.
Mushroom Steak
Chili Con Carne
Wednesday, February 11 . the
Mashed Potatoes
Grilled Cheese
Stroke Support Group will meet
with Gravy
from I :00 to 2:30, with Lia Tipton,
Sandwich ·
Holzer
Rehabilitation, Coordinator.
Buttered Corn
Fruit Cocktail
Thursday,
February 12 • a
.R oll-Beverage
in Gelatin
Valentine/Presidents
Day party will
Emerald Isle Puddin!
Brownie
be held with games beginning at
February 10
1:00.
February 12
Thursday, February 19 • the ·
Meat Balls in
BBQ Chicken Fille~
monthly
Blood Pressure Clinic will
Brown Gravy over
Scalloped Potatoes
be
held
from
9:30 to 11 :00. Blood
,Noodles - Peas
Broccoli
Sugar
test.s
will
be available for
Tossed Salad
Roll - Beverage
$1.00 during the clinic.
Roll - Beverage
Pineapple Upside
Friday, February 20 • the
Tropical Mixed Trui
Down Cake
Arthritis Support Group will meet
from 10:30 to noon.
February 17
February 19
Thursday, February 26 • the
Roast Beef
Meatloaf
monthly birthday party will be held
Baked Potato
with seniors having birthdays in the
Mashed Potatoes
Green Beans
month honored.
and Gravy
Roll - Beverage
Thursday, February 26 • the
Spinach
.
Alzheimer's
Support Group will
Peachy Creamy
Roll - Beverage
meet
at
I
:00,
with
Lenora Leifheit,
Pudding
Apple Cherry. Crisp
R.N., Coordinator.
February 24
February 26
The Senior Center will sponsor
• Scalloped Chicken
Beef Stew
evening dances on Friday, February
Cole Slaw
13 and 27 from 8 to 11 p.m. Music
Sweet Potatoes
will
be by "Ollt of the Blue" with
Biscuit - Beverage
Broccoli &amp; Cheese
Art
Conant,
caller for the square
Gingerbread with
Roll - Beverage
with
line dancing, round
dances,
Lemon Sauce
Carrot Cake
dancing and clogging during the
evening. Cost for admission is
$5.00 per couple and $3.00 for sinMarch 3
March
5
le. The ublic is invited. ·
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Even I•ng MeaIs ·

WEDNESDAY

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..,,

The Nutrition Program kitchen staff, (from left) Mary Morton, Ramona Hawk, Ruth Sellers and ' '
Wilda Blaney, are shown packing the meal trays used in the Home Delivered Meal program. The kitchen .
staff prepared 200·235 meals dally during January, as well as serving evening meals every Thesday and
'h

THURSDAY

."'.'

-

Pork Steak
Mashed Potatoes
with Gravy
Buttered Carrots
Roll - Beverage
Applesauc.e Cake

Turkey and Dressin
Mashed Potatoes
with Gravy
Green Beans
Roll - Beverage
Fruit Cup

Emergency·
HEAP

'

..•
...

.' ·'',.
. •'

provid1es 1/3
served at noon Monday
Certter dining site. Persons over age 60 are invited to attend the meal pro·

If you haven't sent in your
application for the regular HEAP
Program, there is still time.
Applications will be accepted
through IV!arch 31 , 1998, and are
available
at
the
Meigs
Multipurpose Senior Center. Home
visits to assist any disabled or
homebound person ,can be
arranged.
If you have questions or need
assistance, call Darla Hawley at
992-2161.

~&amp;{» '
POMEROY, OH.

R CITIZENS DAY
Every Wednesday Storewide Savings

15o/o off

f~J

992·3785

1

GOLDEN BUCKEYE CARDS ,

HOME MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
·

Households whose primary
source and/or necessary secondary
energy source (electricity) has been
disconnected, is threatened with
disconnection, or who have less
than a ten day supply of bulk fuel
are eligible to receive HEAP emergency funds to restore or continue·
their utility service.
Emergency HEAP can also
help pay for heating system repairs
in certain cases. A household can
receive Emergency HEAP assistance ONCE per winter season.
Households may apply at the ·
Community Action Agency.
Applications are completed by
agency staff during a face-to-face
interview.
Applications for Emergency
HEAP will be accepted through
March 31, 1998.
·• ·

•'

WE HONOR

'QYJ~:J~elers
~212 EAST MAIN ST.

p

"Serving Southern Ohio fQr over 20 years"

Lift Chairs
Wheelchairs
Hospital Beds ·
Shower Stools
Grab Bars
Commode Chairs
Walking Aids
Diapers-&amp; Chux
Ostomy Supplies
Diabetic Supplies
Feeding.Pumps

Everything
for the
Patient
at

Home

Mastectomy Supplies
Cervical Pillows
Tractor Equipment
Tens Units&amp;
Supplies
Back Supports
Knee, Ankle Braces
Nursing Supplies
Support Hosiery
First Aid Supplies
Dressings

THE MEDICAL SHOPPE
ll6-2206

1480 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, OH

" ust Minutes

m Holzer"

Toll h·•·•·
I-BOO- I I .)-:.!:.!0(,

MTIINT U"l

OXYOIN·

COMPLETE HOME MEDICAL EQffiPMENT &amp; SUPPLIES

SALES • RENTALS • REPAIRS

,. HOWARD
EXCAVAJING CO.

"

,,
'~

'•

,)

FREE DELIVERY &amp; S~UP
. ":.
• HOSPITAL BEDS MEDICARE
r-H-O_M..:..E....., ... .
.,,
• WHEEL CHAIRS MEDICAID
OXYGEN
·'
• LIF'f CHAIRS
PRIVATE INSURANCE
24-HOUR · ···'
• BATHROOM AIDS
EMERGENCY
"We Treat You
SERVICE
• NEBULIZERS
WPIRATORY
• STAIR GLIDES
Like Family"
THERAPIST
_

.I\( l\ ... 0\
C \I I II'OI.I:I 01 I I 1:1 I
'•!'
1 I h - 7:!:: ::
:!::(• -71:: I
1-noo-t:;::-t,::tl
..l:.~
711 I' I\ I:~ I'.
7io .-; 1:. 'I \1\
lliiiiiiiriiiiiiilil......lliiilliilli..iiiilliii---lllllllii..iiiilliiiriiiiiiililiiiiiiiii;;......··"~~·_,.,
•• , itj:S'

·.. • i1

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Custom Homes

Remodeling

.M&amp;J

CELLULAR PHONES
360° Communications

"Build Your Dream"
1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Public 'Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
ORDINANCE•653
Snow and Ice Removal
Materials .............. 16,000.00
1998 ANNUAL
240 SupplieS/
Total Pumplng ... :.. 16,000.00
APPROPRIATION
Materlals ................3,000.00 E1·5-G Meters
ORDINANCE
Total Street Cleaning, Snow 240 Supplies/
·An Ordinance to make and lee Removal .... 3,000.00
Materlala ................ 5,000.00
appropriation for current Total Street Construction, . Total Metere ........... s,ooo.oo
Expansu and other Maintenance and Repair E1-5-A
Automotive
E¥pendlturea of the VIllage Fund ................... 140,286.36 Equipment
of, Pomeroy, State or Ohio, B2·6·B State Highway 250 Capital Outlay .8,825.00
d~rlng the fiscal year Improvement Fund
To t a I
Automotive
ending December 31, 1998. 240 Supplies/
Equlpment ..............8,825.00
Section 1. BE IT P,laterlals............... 12,368.80 E1·5-J Olhar Water Fund
ResoLVED by the council Total Stata Highway &amp; 280 Debt Sarvlca. 70,000.00
of· 1ha VIllage of Pomeroy, lmp·rovement
Total Other Water
State of Ohio, that, to Fund ..................... 12,368.80
Fund ...................... 70,00.00
piovlde tor the current Total
Program
Vl- Total lor Water Fund
expenan arid other Tranaportatlon ... 152,655.16 Appropriation .... 365,489.n
e~pendltures of the said
PROGRAM II PUBLIC
E2-5-A Sanitary Sewer Fund
VIllage of Pomeroy during
HEALTH SERVICES
240 SuppiiO&amp;/
th, fiscal year ending
CEMETERY FUND
Materlsla ......... ... 117,225.14
D•camber 31, 1998, the B3·2·A Cemetery
Total 0Hice ......... 117,225.14
following sums by and they 210 Poreonel Services
E2-5-J Other Sanitary Sewer
are hereby set aalda and 211 Satarleat
Fund
appropriated aa follows, Wages .................... 7,700.00 280 Debt
via:
212 Employee
Service ................ 15,000.00
Section 2. ThQt there be Banaflts ................. 1,300.00 Total Other Sanitary
appropriated ·from the 240 Supplies/
Sawer................... 15,000.00
GENERAL FUND
Matarlala ................. 7,175.43 EB-5-A Utility Deposit Fund
PROGRAM 1· SECURITY OF Total Camatary..... 16,175.43 240 Deposit
PERSONSAND,PROPERTY · B5-3-ARecreatlon Program Refund ................. 26,046.80
A1-1-A Pollee
Law 240 Supplies/
Total lor Utilities Deposita
Enforcement
Materlals ................6,368.85 Fund Appropriation
210 Personal Services
Total Recreation .,
26,046.80
211 Salartea/
Program ............... 6,368.85 Grand Total Enterprise
Wagee................ 197 '000 .00
FEDERAL
GRANT
FUND
Funds
COPS FAST
GRANT
212Emptoyee
Approprlatlone .. 523,761.71
Bsneflts .............. 62,000.00 B1·5-A 210 Personal POLICE DISABILITY AND
240 S pll at
Services
PENSION FUND
up ..............
e
Ma1ertate
40\000.00 211 Salaries/
PROGRAM I· SECURITY OF
250 Capital
Weges .................... 7,000.00 PERSONS AND PROPERTY
Oullay .................... 6,500.00 212 Employee
911-212 Employers'
.
Total
Pollee
Law Benellts ................. 2,360.83 Share ................... 10,282.86
Enforcemant ...... 305,500.00 Total Cops Fast
234 Auditor Fae ........ 300.00
A1·1·C Street
Grant ......................9,360.83 Total for Pollee Disability
Ughtlng ............... 20,000.00 B1-6-A Feme land Fema Ill
and Pension
240 SuppllsS/Nalarlals
230-Contractual
Fund .................... 10,582.86
Total Street
Servlces .................... 600.00 PROGRAM VII·GENERAL
Lighting ............... 20.000.00 240 Supplies/
GOVERNMENT
A1-5-A Electric Utility
Materlals .............. 27;448.14 Endowment
Fund ·
240 SupplieS/
Total Other Federal
·
Cemetery .............. 38,696.59
· Matarlals ................ 4,600.00 Grant.. ................... 28,048.14 Other Endowment
A1'5-B Gas Utility
State Grant Fund
Fund ....................... 7,417.37
240 Supplies/
B6·1 ·A Program Overtime Total for Endowment Fund
Matertals ................ 3,000.00 Grant
Approprlatlon .......46,113.96
Total Program v
210 Personal Services
Insurance Retalnage
Baste Utility
211 Salaries/
Program
Services ................ 7,600.00 Wagas .................... 6,007.85 Grand Total Trust and
PROGRAM VII-GENERAL Total State Grant ....6,007.85 Agency
Funds
GOVERNMENT
OTHER SPECIAL REVENUE Appropriations .... 56,696.62
A1-7·A
Mayor
and
FUNDS
Total All
Administrative OHicas
88·3-A Fire Fund
Approp ............ 1.479,602.28
210 Personal Servtcoa
210 Personal Services
And t~e VIllage Clerk Is
211Salsrle8/
211 Salaries/
hereby authorized to draw
Wages.................. 23 ,000 .00 Wagas ....................S,SOO.OO warrants on he Village
212 Employee
212 Employee_·
Treasurer lor paymen1s
Bene!Hs ................. ,:.150.00 from any of the foregoing
Bene"l. ................. 6'000 .00 240
Supplies/
220 Travef .................. :!QO.OO
appropriations upon
240 Supplies/
Materlats .............. 35,963.19 receiving proper certificates
Materlala ...............40, 147.82 250 Capital
•
and vouchers therefor,
240.2 Relunds ........ s,ooo.oo Outlay .................. 40,000.00 approved by the board or
Totil Mayor and
234 Auditor Fees ... 2,600.00 officers authorized by law
Admlnletrattve
Total Fire Fund ..... 84,363.19 to approve the same, or an
Offices................. 74,447.82 B!I-5-A Utility Fund
ordinance or roaolutl&lt;in f
A1·7·B Legislative Actlvlltea 240 Supplies/
council to make the
(Council)
Materlala .............. 22,231.41 OKpandlturea; provided that
210 Peraonal services
234 Auditor Fees ...... 700.00 no warrants shall be drawn
211 Salaries/
Total Utility
or paid for salarlea or
' 5 500 00 Fund ..................... 22,931.41 wages except to persona
Wag.. ....................
' .
PROGRAM 1· SECURITY OF employed by authority ol
212 Employee
Beneflla .................... soo.oo PERSONS AND PROPERTY and In accordance with law
Total Legislative
B9·F Lew Enforcement
or ordinance. Provided
Activities ............... 6,000.00 Fund
further
that
the
A1·7·D Clerk/Treasurer
240 Supplies/
appropriations
for
210 Personal Services
Materlale ................ 5,876.94 contingencies can only be
211 Salaries/
. Total Law Enforcement expended upon appeal of
Fund ....................... 5,876.94 two-thirds vote or Council
17
00
Wage.
000
· ................... ' ·
B6+A Safety Fund
lor llama of expense
212 Employee
II)Jneflts ................ 2,900.00 240 Suppllae/
constituting a legal
Total Cllrk/
Matarlala .............. 11, 156.28 obligation against the
treaaurer ............. 19,900.00 Total Safety
11 156 28 village, and for purposes
A1;7·A Lends and Buildings . Fund..................... • ·
other than those covered by
251 Capital
MOTOR VEHICLE LICENSE other
specific
TAX FUND
appropriations herein made.
Oytlay .................... 6•650 ·00
PROGRAM VI·
SECTION 12
This
TQtal Lends and
TRANSPORTATION
Bulldlngo ............... &amp;,850.00 B" 7-A Motor Vahlcla resolution shall take eHact
A1r7·F Solicitor
.,..
at the earliest · period
23G Contractual
License Ta• Fund
allowed by taw.
Service .................. 4,500.00 240 Supplies/
PASSED: January 5, 1998
Tolat Sollcltor.........4,500.00 Materlale ................ 9,052.50
John Musser
A1:·7-G Board a and Total Motor Vehlcla License
President of Council
co;nmtaelona
T&amp;K Fund ................. 9,052.50
Attest: Kathy Hysell
234 County Auditor's and Grand 'Total Special
Cieri! of council
Revenue
Fund
, .
Treaaurer •a Fee...... 220000
CERTIFICATE
Au~ltor of State's
Appropriation .... 351,996.58
Section 5705.39, R.C.· "No
Fie ........................ 7,100.00 Section 5. That there be appropriation measure shall
Toist
Board
and appropriated from the become effective until the
Commllllons ......... 9,300.00 following DEBT SERVICE county auditor Illes with the
appropriating euthorlty... a
A1•7·X Other General FUND
Go~ernmtnl·
General Obligation Bond certlfleita that tha total
appropriations from each
Prteonera................ 3,500.00 Fund
Toial Ot!ler General D-X-7 Building Fund
Government ........... 3,500.00 280 Principal/
A1!7·A Other Uaea or Funds tntereat ................... 6,384.07
In Memory
27•, •.rant1era....... 80,000 .00 Total Building
Total Other usaa or
Fund ...................... 6,384.07
Funds .................. 80,000.00 GFur~~d Total Debt Service
In Memory of Ron Smith
Sec11on 3. That there be
As a New Year stans
appropriated from the Approprlatlons ...... 6,384.07
without you
G•neral
Fund
lor Section 6. That there be
co~tlngenctes ror purposes appropriated from the · My memories of us I'll
.not otherwise provided. tor, following Capital Pro) acts
carry on •
to · tha expended In Fund
ac6ordance with the Conatructlon Fund
You took my hean with
provisions of Section B5-A
Down I own
you,'
57(!5.40, R.C. , lh e sum or Revitalization .
The day God called you
$537,597.82.
.
270 Other Uaea of
.Grand Total General Fund Fundi ..................... 3,1 65 ·48
home.
~
r1 tt n .... 537,
5'9.
7 82 Total for Construction
Ap~ropao
All the fun we had with
Seotlon 4. That there be Fund ....................... 3,165.48
family &amp; friends
ap~roprlatad from he Grend Total Capital Pro)ects
following Spacial Revenue Fund
I'll always have our
Fu~da. Street Conttructlon, Appropriation ........ 3,165.48
memories.
Mali1tenance, and Repair Section .7. That there be
I'Ucherish them, Ron you
Fund.
appropriated from . the
' PROGRAM VIfollowing Enterprise lUnda.
knew, you were my i{lol.
TRANSPORTATION
E1·5-A Water Fund
M· riero, My Best Best
BHI·B Street Maintenance 210 Personal Servtcaa
Friend
anci'Repalr.210 Personal
211 Ssltrlea/
Strvlcat
Wagea .................. 93,000.00
You made my life so much
211 ,_lerleat
.
212 Employee
better by just knowing
Wages .................. eo,ooo.oo
Benell1a ............... 30,000.00
you .
212 Employee ·
230 Contractual
"-!11~11t
Sarvlcta ............. 15,000.00
20'000·00· 240
Sadly missed &amp; neve
...
,
au
................
Suppllaa/
240tt Pr.lla/
forgotten.
127,864.n
111 • ,11 .............. 18,286.....
. Matertelt
om ............274
·-n
Total Street Maintenance Total ce......... ........
Love Elle
and Repalr.......... 137,286.30
Et-5-E Pumping
B1·6·C Strear Cleaning, 240Suppllt8/

" WARNER INSURANCE
JEFF.
113 W. 2ND ST.

POMEROY, OH.

SUNSET HOME·
CONSTRUCTION
New Construction &amp; Remodelin.g
Minor Repairs • Cabinets • Siding
Roofs • Decks • Garages
Free Estimates

614·992·5479

SAYRE
TRUCKING

.SNOW

REMOVAL

Hauling, Excavating
&amp; Trenching
Limestone·&amp;Gravel
Septic Systems
Trailer &amp;House Sites
Reasonable Retes

Driveways,
Parking Lots, etc.
Call Anytime
Home

Joe N. Sayre

Cell Phone

614-742-2138

591·1897

Public Notice

Public Notice
, custody the Flies. Journals
1and Recordo are required by
the Laws or the State of
Ohio 10 be kapt, do hereby
certify that the foregoing
An n u al
Appropriation
Ordinance Is taken and
copied from the original
Ordinance now on lllowlth
aald VIllage, that tht
foregoing Ordinance hu
been comparld by ma with
the ' said original and that
the same Ia a true and
correct copy thereof.
Witness my signature, this
5 day or January, 1998.
Kathy Hysell
Clerk of the VIllage or
Pomeroy
Meigs County, Ohio
(2)2,92tc

fund, taken together·with all r
other
outatandtng,'
appropriations, do not ·
excaed such official
esttmata or amended ·
official aaftmata. When 1he
appropriation · doea not
exceed such oftlclat
aattmate, the county auditor
shall give auch certificate
forthwith upon receiving
from the appropriating
authority a cartllled cop~ of
the
appropriation
measure ... "

The State of Ohio .Meigs
County, ea,
··
I, Kathy Hytell, Clerk of the
VIllage of Pomeroy In said
County, and In whoae

614-992-3141

The Family of Ronald
E. Smith want to thank
each &amp; everyone for all
the kindness &amp;
·sympathy you showed.
Th~nk you for the food
&amp; flowers you sent It
will not be forgotten.
Thank you Rev.
Swigger, Rev. Grimm,
Dan
Hayman ,
McDaniel Trio, Ladles
of Rutland Nazarene
Church for the fine
Dinner, Ladies Aux.
128 post .
A special thaqk you
American Legion Post
128 for the touching
service you performed.
Ron would of been
very proud of you all.
(He is sadly missed)'
from all of Ron's
family

plies To: CL~ 309. c/o Gallipolis
Daily Tribu ne . 825 Third Avenue,
Galll&gt;ol~.

Chapter 13

For Information Regarding
Bankruptcy contact:
William Safranek,
Attorney At Law
614-592-5025
Athens, Ohio

Free handcrafted country collect·

lbles · can be yours today . Just
call Alicia at 304-675-5776 today
and I'll bring my country store

right to your door!!
How To Destroy The Desire For
Cigarettes. Completely Test Prov·
en! Ru sh $2 .00 To : WHBJ 394
Smith Street, Perth Amboy, NJ

081161 .
I , Cathy Criner Wi ll Not Be Ae·
sponsible For Any Other Debts
Other Than My Own As Of 1/30/

98.

special Herbal Alfair. Feb. 14th. 1

f'\.1'-'-"' '"su"'E.~e.~:;~g:;~;e.M

to 4pm, contact Maureen at 7 40·

742-7243.

40

IONES'd' ~

TREE

P.M. 740.446-9864.

·GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45831

""'"'

(614)
. 367·0266
1·800·950·3359

20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins . Owner: Ronnie Jones

Fr•• E•tltnat••

5 Female and 1 male Border Coltie /Spangle mixed , 10wks old.
Call between 1Dam &amp; Spm week-

days. 304-67.5·2198.
Great With Children, Long Hatred
Black &amp; White Mare Dog Approx.
1 Year Old. Pius 1 Black Female

Puppy, 740·446·7503, 740-446·
4479.

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

Free puppies to anyone willing to
give them a good home, call 740·
992·6451 between 8:00am5:00pm Monday thru Friday.
Full Size Mattress &amp; Box Springs,
Comfortable But Stained, 740·

446·1810.

60 Lost and Found
Found : male cat on SA 7 near ·
Beacon station &amp; Kerr's Run,

740·949-2266.

74().245'0603.

70

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
A1J. Yenl Saleo Mull
Be Paid In

1he cloy before 1he ad

II to run. Sunday
edition· 2:00p.m.

Frldoy. Monday edition
• 10:00 a.m. Saturday.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp;Vicinity

Phone: (614) 446-4759
441-1191

All Yard Sales Mull Be Paid In
Advance. Ceadllne: 1:QOpm the
day before "the ad Ia to run,
Sunday &amp; Mondlty edlllon -

1:OOpm Friday.

COUNTRY CANDLE SHOP .
AND MORE
Triple Seented Candles
Croeks, Cakes &amp; Refills
Come Sn11llthe Sweet Scent of Country Can41u
Rt. 124, Minersville, OH
1/12/981 mo. pd.

Help Wanted

TRUCKING
DUMP. TRUCK
SERVICE
Agricultural Ume,
Limestone • Gravel
Dirt· Sand
985-4422
Chester, Ohio

llOBERT BISSEll
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
•Garages
·Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES

985-4473
7/22/tfn

10125196/tfn

80

Auction
and Flea Market

Rick Pearson Auction Company,
lull l ime au ctiOneer. complete
auction
se rvice .
LI Censed
166,0hto &amp; West Virginia . J04·

773-5785 Or 304-773-5447.

Tues. 10-8, Wed.-Sat. 10-2

R. L. HOLLON

Inside yard sale. B93 South 3rd.
Middleport, Feb. 2nd. Jrd , 4th,
n1ne to lour.

90

Wanted to Buy

Absolute Top Dollar : All U.S. Sll·
ver And Gold Coins, Pro olse ts.
Clamonds. Antique Jewelry, Gold
Rings, Pre·1930 U.S. Curren cy,
Sterling, Ere . Acquisitions Jewelry
· M.T.S. Com Shop, 151 Second
Avenue. Gallipolis. 740-446·2842.
Antiques , lop prices paid. Rive r·
lne Antiques . Pomeroy, Ohio,
Russ Moore owner . 740·992·

2526.
Antiques- no item too large or too
small . Als o es1ates . appra isals,
relimshing, custom orders , 740-

992·6576
Beante Bab1es Would like To
Buy Retired Beanie Babies -600-

654·4834
Clean l ale Model Cars Or
Trucks. 1990 Models Or Newer,
Smith Buick Pon1iac. 1900 Ea st·
ern Avenue. Gjtllipohs.
R.

J &amp; D Auto Parts . Buying
wrecked or salvaged vehicles .

304-773-5033.

McFEE ROOFING
&amp; PAINTING
Specializing In:
New Roofs, Roof Repairs,
Gutters, lnterjor &amp;
E&gt;&lt;lerlor Painting,
Drywall Repair.
Lowest retes during the
winter months of
Jan .-Feb.-Mar.
Quality Work GuBranleed

Free Eat. • Fully !neurad
Hi14·992·9057
Middleport, Oh .

Pat's Herb Corner
Located at Dan's
290 N. 2nd Ave.,
Middleport, OH
Pat Arnold
Independent
Distributor
VItamins, Herbal
Supplements,
Natural Weight Loss
Products

,TIMBER: We pay cash for tracts
of limber. II interested in selling
your t1mber. please let our pro.
tessional forestry stall manage
your limber lor income. wildlife ,
and a pla ce to enroy tne out doors . Superior Hardwoods of
Ohio Lumber Co . PO Box 606
Wellston. Ohio 45692, ( 740)364 ~

4577.
We Buy Auto's In Any Condition .

Call 740·388·9062.
PART.

•
(Lime Stone· ·
Low Rates)

WICKS
HAULING
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt
614-992·3470

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

YOUNG':
CARPENTER SEVICE
·Room Additions
•New Garages
·Eiec.trlcal &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing
•Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YPUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

,,

I

Or 740·446-

Will Work FOr $3 .00 An Hour.
Ask FofTim, 740.44H473.

110

Help Wanted

······"Drivers Wanled········
500 Mile Radius ·Home Every
Weekend, Heallh Insurance Provided Wuh Family Coverage
Ava1lable 401K Aet lremenl "Plan ,
First In ·First Out Dispatch Late
Model Conv. t ractors With
Flatbed Trailers , Competitive Pay
·Percentage Of Gross, Contact 1·

800-854-4157

AVON l All Areas I Shirley ,
Spears. 304-675·1429.

'

'

Advance.

DEADLINE : 2 :00p.m.

Owner
Full31lnsurelf Free Estf.,...tes
20 YRS. EXP.

.

Lo st: Purse. Lost Between Odd
Lots And Silver Bridge Plaza, Reward! 937 -5 88·5006, Or Local

179 Rand St.
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
Rick Johnson

. 20th
In Memory
· Happy
Birthday Bub

YOUR MESSAGE
CAN BE SEEN HERE
FOR A TOTAL OF
$7.00 PER DAY.

Giveaway

1 Year Old Mixed Collie &amp; Border
Collie Pup, Female, Call Before 6

ACE TREE SERVICE

.WANTED: Full·time PROGRAM ASSIST·
ANT position available · in Gallla-Meigs
Counties. Hours: 8:30 am-5 pm, M·F.
Requirements: High school diploma/
GED, office skills, computer skills, valid
driver's license, three years good driving
experience and previous experience
working with people with mental
retardation.
Six
months previous
supervisory experience preferred. Must
have adequate automobile insurance
coverage.
Starting
salary: $7 .00/hr.
Excellent benefit package. Send resume
to: P.O. Box 604, Jackson, OH 45640;
ATTN: Cecilia. Deadline for applicants:
2/5/9~. Equal Opportunity Employer.

Cathy Criner

VALENTINE TEA HEABALLY [
SPICED Tea lor two! Tea lor yout1
Lively presentation on Love
Herbs &amp; Potions. Teas &amp; a tasty
lunch provided! Join us lor this

TREE CARE
Top • Trim • Cable • Removal • Crane • Hauling
• Stump Grinding •

You may be gone
but will never be
forgotten. We think of
you as much today as
we thought of you
when you were here.
You witt always be
here In our hearts and
memories.
We love you
very much,
Mom, Misty, Billy,
Anthany, Hannie, Aunt
Sherry &amp; family,
Aunt Shauna &amp; family,
friends.

OH 45631 .

3D Announcements

BANKRUPTCY

(740) 992•3980
110

Gentleman Seeking Companlonst1ip From Nice Female For Talks,
Walk&amp; &amp; Friendship . Send Re-

play Ohio's da~ng game, HIOO·
ROMANCE. extension 7484.

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES
614·992-7643
(No Sunday Calls)
2112M/Itn

Card of Thanks

Personals

Bored Ohio Housewives t 's 1·
900·285·9077 EKI . 4587 18 +
Sorv·U 619-645-8434 S2.991Min.

Start dating tonlghtl Have fun,

740·742·3411

Chapter 7

005

',

"·

�Page 8 • The Daily Sentinel

Po!'lleroy • Middleport, Ohio

.Monday, February 2, 19"

Monday, February

1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Th'e Dally Sentinel • Page 9

. . ._ NEA Crossword Puzzle

.J
PHILLIP
ALDER

Computer Users Needed Work
own hours S20k to $50k/yr 1

800-348 7186 &lt;1508

CNA or HMK needed to provide
In home services for the elderly/

disabled

Dependable And Flex ble Cerlt
fted Nurse Atd Needed For In

Home Care Call Adrtanne Or An

ge 1800 481 6334

$6 OOhr

In

Mason

County

ca11 sea 453-4992

Computer useres Needed Work
Own Hrs $20K $50K Nr 1 BOO

3481186X 1173

Drivers Needed Local Company
OTA Flatbed Operators For M1d
wesl &amp; Soulhern U S Age 23
Year Mmlmum Expenenced Mm
1mum 01 2 Years Good Equ p
men! Good Pay Plenty 01 Work
Home 98% Weekends Insurance
Available 740 446-1922
Driven Here 1 Your Chancel
1993 Fre•gtllllner Convenhonals
With Select Plus Warranty And
1994 1n1ernauona1 Convenuonals
Quit Buying Your Comp•ny A
Truekl We Ollar Placemenl Ft
nancln9 AnrJ tJanagement And
With Our CredH RebUilding Pro
gram Poor Cred 1 Or Bankruptcy
Is No Problem To Qualify For Our
No Money Down Program Call
HI00-377 3101 Class A COL 1
Yr OTR And HazMal Requ~red

Wanted Hair Dresser And Nail
Techn1c1an With Clientele 740

256-6336 740.4411880
180 Wanted To Do
Furn1ture repa1r ref nlsh and res
torahon also custom orders Oh o
Refmlshlng Shop larry

Philips 740 992-6576

Georges Porlable Sawmlll don t
haul your togs to the m11l 1ust call

304 675

1957

Housecleaning And Offlee Clean
mg References Ava ilable 740
446 1417
Do You Need Oual1ty House
cleanmg? Please Call 740 441 0449 Honest Hardworkmg Have
Aelerances

EXPERIENCED SALES PEA
SON WANTED FOR BUSY
CONSTRUCTION BUSINESS 9646 614 367 7010
Requ irement s - Knowledge Of
Res•denflal Remodeling Aoofmg WE WANT TO WORK I Do You

4514

Need An Extra Par 01 Hands ?
We Have Them Male Or Female
Will Work lnstde &amp; Out Clean
Haul Do Odd Jobs Run Errands
Do Laundry Call Us To Do Your
01rty WorK 740 441 1290 Day Or
N1ght

Will babysit 10 my Racine home
non smoker state Cert1f1ed 740

888 430 7576 Exr 3208 TOLL
FREE 24 Hrs
Garage Door lnstalle Helper Mu st Be Mechanically Inclined
Valid Dnver s License Requ red
Apply At Chr s11an s Co nslruc
liOn Inc 1403 Eastern Ave Gal
hpols 74(}4464514

HVAC SERVICE TECHNICAN
Dav1d White Serv1 ces Inc Is
Currenlly lnterv•ewmg For A
Oualtlied Serv ce Tecnmc1an
ThiS Is A Full Ttme Pos1ton W•lh
Good Starling Pay Vacallon
Hol1day Pay And Heallh In
suran ce Must Have Atteast 5
Years Background In Se rv1ce
Must Be W1lhng To Work Some
Installation If Necessary Resume
And References Can Be Droppea

011 AI Our Olllce AI 1102 Jack

son P ke Galltpohs Oh1o 45631
Or Matled To P 0 Box 250
Alhens Ohio 45701 Atlent1on
ServiCe Manager

JOIN OUR PERMANENT
PERSISTENT WAVE OF
GOOD FORTUNE
ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE

FINANCIAL
Business
Opportunity
INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
210

recommend s that you do bu s
ne ss w th people you know and
NOT l o send money lhrougn the
rna I until you have mvestlgated
theoffenng

ness Centrally
B•dwell Porter
Chance To Own
ness Blackburn
0008

located In The
Area Ellcellent
Your Own Bus1
Really 740 446

International Company Needs
Help W1th Mall Order Home
Based Bustness $500 $6 000
Mo PTIFT Call For lnvervlew 1

800 242 8292
230

PO Boll 370 Dunba WV 25064

EOE
Movmg To Gall•pohs In Need 01
Batlys11ter In My Home Or Close
To Butav111e Road Call Alter 5
PM Weekdays 7 40 384 4288
740.446 1817

OHIO OPERATING
ENGINEERS LOCAL 18
APPRENTICESHIP IN
CONSTRUCTION
Men And Women Ages 18 And
Over Learn To Operate And
Repa r Ear!h Mov1ng Machmes
And Cranes
Apphca1 ons Dates February 9
10 11 And February 19 :20 21
1998 From 9 00 AM

Professional
Serv1ces

Llvmgston s basement wa1e1
proohng all basement repairs
done free estlmales l~fet l me
guaran!ee 1Oyrs on job exper1
ence 304 675 2145

AwhcaiiOn Fee $10 DO Cash
Non Refundable
Contact Oh10 Operating
Engineers Tra1nmg Center
Phone 74(}385-2567

EOE
Pleasanl Valley Hosp• tal ~ ~ cur
rently seekmg a lull t me/pa r!
t me/per d1em Med1ca1 Records
Coder .Must be able to code us
mg lCD 9 CM and CPT 4 codmg
system Mu st have comple ted
Medical Term1notogy Anat omy
and PhySiology College courses
AFIT RRA and CCS requ~ted
Send re sume to Pe rson nel at
P1easan1 Valley Hosp uat 25220
Valley Or Pt Pleasan l wv

25550 AAIEOE

Staff Accoumant Aespons•blllltes
Include Comp1hng Fmanc1 al
Statements For Non Prof1t Agen
cy Expet~e nce In Comptlal•on Of
S!atemenls Payroll And General
Ledger A Must Salary Commen
su rate Wtth Expeuence Send
Resume By February 9 To J D
P.O Bott 98 AuUand Oh10 45775

All real estale advert s1ng 10
tt11s newspaper IS subJect to
the Feaerat Far Housmg Act
ol 1968 wh1ch makes lt 1llegal
lo adven•se any preference
1mttatmn or d swm•nat•on
based on race color rehg1on
sex lam•ltal slatus or naltonal
ong1n or any mtent1on to
make any such preference
llmllatlon or dlscrlm•na!IOfl
Th1s newspaper w1ll not
Knowmgly accept
adverttSemenls lor real estale
W~ICh IS Ill VIOlatiOn Of!he
•taw Our readers are hereby
nlormed that all dwell1ngs
advertiSed m this newspaper
are available on an equal
oppor1un ty bass

310 Homes lor Sale
1985 Ranch 3 Bedroorps 1 Ba!h
La,rge L1v1ngroom La r!)e Kllchen
1 Acre Gall pohs C1ty Schools
$67 000 740 446 4323
2 Year Old All Bnck Ranch ~
~ Huge Rooms Oak Tflm
Doors &amp; Cabmets 2 Batns 3
Bedrooms Full Basement Large
Garage 15 To 20 Acres 740

367 7465

2592 Sq Ft 3 Bedrooms 2
Baths F1mshed Basment 2 112
Car Garage I Acre MOL Gal•
polls $110 000 740 446--4441
3 Bedroom Home

28 Gav•n

Slreel Rodney $45 500 Even
ngs 740.245-9258
3 Bedroom Ranch On I 5 Acre
La! Full Ba sement Attached Ga
rage &amp; Carport Mor"e AC &amp;
50 x70 Bldg W1th Loll 740 367

7465
3 or 4 bedroom b1 level 2 baths
1 car garage 90 oy 175 101 304
882 2689
•
$4 000 1 5 Bdrm l ocal Gov 1 &amp;
BanK Repo s Call 1 800 522

830 AM 5 PM MF ReqUire

•

REAL ESTATE

WANTED Class A COL l'"ck

ASSISTANT Pos1t10n Avaltabl!\
tn Gallla /Me1gs Counlles Hours

ments Hig h School Dtploma 11
GED Ofllce Sk•lls Computer
SkillS Valid Onver s License
Three Year s Good Or~ v tng Ex
perlence And Prev1ous Ellpen
ence Workmg W11h People W1th
Mental Aetardatron S1x Months
Previous Supervisory Expenence
Preferred Must Have Adequate
Automoblle Insurance Coverage
Starting Salary $7 00 /Hr Excel
lent Benefrt Package Send Ae
sume To PO Box 604 Jackson

OH 45640 ATTN Cec111a Dead
line For Appllcan1S 2/5/98 Equal
Opportumly Employer

9Q2 5064 Equal Housing Oppor

Call For Free Maps "' Owner F1

In New Haven 1br furn1shed apt
Includes washer &amp; dryer deposit
&amp; references 304 882 2566

FP 1 Salh 2 Car Garage Ap

nanclng lnlo Take 10% orr Llsled

Prices On Cash Purchases!

320 Mobile Homes
lor Sale

Ridgewood Subdlvlston Sandhill
Road H1lltop lot ready for spnng
bul ding Newly paved road Ask

MUST SELL 14lC80 3 Bedrooms

2 Baths Owner Fmanctng Avail

able 304 736 7295

mg $18 000 304 675 8648
TAX REFUND
"BUY LAND"

lnvesl Your Refund In
Something That lasts Forever

"LAND

CAMP HUNT RETIRE

1996 Schut 3bedrooms 2baths
vanyl s d•ng shingled roof barn
bUIIdtng pnce reduced 304 675

On One 01 Our 5 To 20 Acre
Country 8UIIdmg Lots
GALLIA COUNTY NEW 5 Acre
Lots Open Meadows $12 900
Up $1 290 Down We Also Have
Land In Gat11a Jackson SciOto
P1ke Ross Athens Meigs Coun

1275

1998 3br 2 baths lots of ~xtras
set on lol Gall lor more mlo 304
755 7191
3 Bedroom 2 bath 1998 model
home •ncl udes Free ael up &amp;
delivery Skirting air color TV
&amp; VCR Included All for $219/mo
Only wh1 e supples last Call to
day J04 755-5865

3 Bedrooms

ues
Land Conlracts 10% Down

Loaded Wtlh GE Appltances
Slartmg AI $299/Mo

FAMILY, ..

4 Bedrooms 2 Large Baths
Starting $359/Mo Lim ited Ttme
Offar Only At Qakwood Bart&gt;ours
vtlle WVA 304 736 3409
'
C..atom made homes where
the customer &amp;etl the
prtce &amp; we own the bank

Only AI

Oakwood Homes
of Nitro wv

304-755-5885

Disco unt Mobile Home Parts &amp;
Accessoues Lowest Installed
Prices On lntenherm &amp; Coleman
Furnaces Heat Pumps &amp; A r
Condtlloners Hugh In ven tory
W1th Easy Over The Phone Bank
Finane ng Ava•lab le Repla ce
ment Parts And Sen11ce Cal ls
Comptele Slack Waler Heaters
Sklrtmg K1ts $299 95 Anchors
Wood &amp; F1berg ass Step s Root
Coatmgs Tubs Smks Plumbmg
Supplies Breakers Ele ctrica l
Supplie s Range Hood &amp; Parts
Doors Wmdows Etc Bennetts
Mob1le Home HTG &amp; CLG 1391
Sallord School Road Galltpolls
OH 1 740 446 9416 Or Toll Free

2730 X 1709
Great Neighborhood 5 Miles
South Of Gatlpolls 3 Bedrooms 1
1/2 Baths Fueplace Oak Cab•
nets Carpon 1 Acre MIL
$79 500 Additional land Ava11
a~e 740..446-0035

ENTERTAINER
3bedrooms
2baths startng at $219fmo
SUNRISE Loaded With GE ap
phances startmg at $299/mo
FAMILY 4bedrooms 2 arge
baths stanrng $359/mo L•m•ted
t1me offer only at Oakwood Bar
bOUrSVIIIe WV 304 736 3409
Free au lree sklfl 16x80 3 or 4
bedroom S1 350/down $299/mo
Call1 BOO 691 6777
Handyman Spec:lal Cash Only
2~3 Bedrooms 51 500 &amp; Upl
Only 3 Left 304 755-5561
large selection ol used homes 2
or 3 bedrooms Starttng at $2995
Ou1ck delivery Call 740 365

9621
MUST SELL 14x60 3bedrooms
2balhs owner lmanctng avail

304

ao~

736 7295

New 1998 14x70 three bedroom
Includes 6 months FREE lot rent
Incudes sk1r11ng deluxe steps
and setup Only $187 08 per
month With $1075 down Call 1

80(}837 3238

One bedroom apartment In Mid
dleport all uttllhes paid $270 per
month $100 depo&amp;lt 740 992

7806

740-992 3725

44fHJ008

Wanted To Buy Land In Galha
Counly Area For Future Home
site Any Acreage 740 379-

9384

2 Bedroom house w/u1111ty room
$350/mo Deposit &amp; references

304 675 2749

3 bedroom house stOve refng
e alor washer/dryer clean no m
s1de pets depos•t reqUired 740

S.c,nty 740.256 6367

Newly decoraled 3br w/lull base
men! references &amp; depostl no

pelS 304 675-5162
Pomeroy HUD approved $300
per month 740 992 5986 or 740
992 7511
R10 Grande Area 3 Bedroom
Bath &amp; 1/2 $490/Mo DepoSit Ae

qwred W/0 Hook Up 1 888 840
0521
Small 2br clean qu1e1 carpeted
no pets $275/mo $250 deposll

304 773-9192

420 Mobile Homes
lor Rent
14x16 2 Bedrooms AC W&amp;D

sm Porc')ilOO 740 256 1044
2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes
$260 $300 sewer water and
!rash mcluded 7-40.992 2167
2 Bedroom Mob•le Home You
Pay U!111118S &amp; Depos11 In Porter

A•ea6t4 388 9162
2 Bedroom Tratler Newly Aemo
deled References &amp; Oepos•l
$275/Mo State Route 7 South
2 Bedroom tra1ter references &amp;
depos•t requ red Leave mes

sage 304 675 I076

HUD Approved 740 388 9326
3970

Beauttful R1ver V1ew In Kanauga
Fosler Mob1te Home Park 740
44Hl181

House and property approx 4a
cres Ideal starter home Beech

Sl Pomeroy OH 304 882 2077

skle ol Pomeroy 740 992 5039
440

Apartments
lor Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartments tur
n shed and unfurmshed security
deposit requ~red no pets 7 40

675-1550

2 Bedroom ap.a.ument lor ren1 m

5858

Kitchen dmlng room 2 bedroom
Oalh IMng room front &amp; bact&lt; lui~
lenglh porches gas furnace City
water outbu1ldlrtg garage 112
m1le East ol Rac•ne 740 949

34 acres Route 160 near Galtlpcr
Us half clea red and wooded
pond road frontage water and
eteetrlc access1b le $2 000 C::ill

740.742 2045 aner 5 30 p m

6373
Brass neadboard &amp; bed frame
(full s12e) excellent condition
$125 ant1que Vtctorlan style
dresser/vantly with 1111 m rror
must see $265 anllque swive l
P•ano stoo l w11h cove red seat
very mea $75 Pro lorm exerc1se
b ke $50 Power Walk treadmill
$75 740 949 6400 afte1 4pm

2bdrm apts total electriC ap ..
pllances lumtshed laundry room
lac~ltl8s close to sct1ool m town
Applications available at Village

from $260 to S334 Walk to shop
&amp; movies Call 740 446 2566'

Equal Housing Opportun~ty

Furntshed Efficiency Apartment
Central Heat &amp; Air Conditioned
Carpet Throughou t Private Park
lng All U!llllies Furnished Except
Electric Priva te &amp; Quiet 7 40

446-2602

740 386 8010

Bu1ldmg
Supplies

Block brt ck sewer p1pes wrnd
ows lintels e1c Claude W1n1ers
A10 Grande OH Call 740 245

5121

Pets lor Sale

Couch with matcnmg chair
mauve/ rust colored very good

1125 7~7-o275
Craftsman 6 Inch Jotnter $250
New 2 Horse Power Crallsman
AoutB&lt; &amp; Table 740.44~
ECONOMY
condition

Heating And Coolmg

Up-Grade \tiur
PreSO!ll System

From $38 00 !Call For Dalal~
740.245-9009

Hay &amp; Grain

BARNED Round bail s m1xed
nay never wet 304 882 2077

Hay lorsa~ 304 675 2991

740.44~2897

12wks old male blacK/tan
shots &amp; wormed 304 576 2209
At&lt;C Regtstered Black Lao 2
Males 2 Females 740 446 4551
740.446 9044
AKC regtstered Chmese Shar Pat
pups lots ol wonkles $250 &amp; up
_6_14_94~9.:2.:12:.:6......_____

AKC Registered M1nl Dachsnund

N On Rl 2 304 615 3960 Leave
Message
TRANSPORTATION

Need A Car No Cred1l? Bad!
Cred•t? Bankruptcy? We Can,
Help' Reestabli sh Credit Must •
Make $1 so week Take Home 1o•
To 20% Down 12 Months &amp; :
12 000 M1les Warranty Available ,
ThiS Is Bank Financng 740 446 1
8172 Or7403646042
' '

BARNEY
I WOULDN'T GIVE A HOOT
TO BE TH' QUEEN

I

1981 Chevy 112 ton PICk up runs;
good body la ir $800 740 992 1
5529
:

OF SHEElY !!

7512
1969 Mu slang 6 Cyhnder Auto
Ex cellent lnl $5 000 304 675

3960

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

call 1995 Ford F 150 XL l•fi
m1le s lots of extras 304 61-51

·I

I

256 1738
t
1995 Chevy S IOV6 5 Spe~d~
AM/FM Cassette AC TiltCrUise Bedtm er 24 000 M•l•!f.
7404410995

·t

1996 Chevy S I o LS packa!fe 1
44 000 m1les $9 500 304 1

5s ~d

576 2485 after :lpm
1997 Dodge 4x4 D•esel 1 Ton •
Dually Compeltety Loaded Excel :
len! Cond1110n Must Se ll! 74.0,
441-0996 Aller 4 PM

1969 Nova SS 396 375 Less
Motor &amp; Trans $3 000 (740

84 000 Aclual M1les 350

Eng~ne

Automatic $475 Call Alter 4 00
P:M 614 446--3570
1985 Olds Cutlass Brougham
VB Eng1ne GoOd lntenor and Ex
tenor $1 000 1984 Pon11ac T100
85 000 Aclual Mt les 4 Speed
$100 1 740144~9653
1985 Plymouth Trlmos Charger
A 1 Cond1l on New T~tes New
Banery New Wmdsh1eld $1 000

OBO 740 256--6731

1966 Dodge 600 mce depend
able car PS PB automat•c am'fm
cassette $1299 740 949 2045
1966 Monle Carlo 305 Needs
Work $500 740 367-Q303

good $800 I982 Dodge Ar~es
runs good $500 740 992 5329
1987 Toyota Tercel $800 1988
Grand Am $900 1988 Silverado

or (740)446 4336

1990 Dodge Omn1 $1 500 1996
Jeep Cherokee 740 379 9047
1991 GEO Strom G S I 3r auto
ps pb exc cond 614 386 8258
1992 Chevy Lum•na Euro Fully
l oaded Garage Kept Excellent
Condrt1011 740 367 7671

740-388 8536

German Shepherds- Pure WhttA

AKC 3 Pups Lefl $395. 740 286
8753 74D-28U851

1992 Pon t•a c Grand AM Blactl
AC CrUISe Till LOOkS &amp; Runs
Excellent $3 900 Ask For Amos

740.446-8172 740.256-6251

1994 Chrysler LeBaron Landau 4
Doors V 6 All Op t•on s 35 000
M1les Pn ce d Near Wholesale

74o-256-1924

1994 Mercury Cougar XR7 8Cyt
PS PB Leather lntenor Elecu•c
Red Excellent Condition Adult
Driven 43 000 M1les 614 4.(6-

7527

Golden Re triever Pups At&lt;C
Registered 6 Weeks 1st Shots
And Wormed $225 740 446

1995 Saturn SC2 Aulomahc Air
Cruise AM/FM Cassene Tr unk

_ss_5_c1_7_4D-_44_&amp;-_2_8_99......_ _ __

(Senous lnqulfi&amp;s Onlyl) 740

Recognized Safe &amp; Ellecllve
Against Hook Round &amp; Tape

1996 Plym out h Neon G1een 4
Doors Auto Air 31 ooo Miles

1HAPPY JACK TRIVERMICIDE

worms In Dogs &amp; Cats Available

0 T C BROWNS TRUSTWOR·
THY HARDWARE 740.446 8828
(&amp; J D NORTH PRODUCE 740
446 1933) (VISit www happyjack
Inc com)

l MT t:\XDV~Tl'aE.IV-J...LY
'
!':1"-~TOF

Ae~ase

'

P'

"'

MY ~ID"-Y Bllt::l tJAVE m!Vt:()l

pt.,~T I

:
'
I
:

Rlr. N&amp;TF

~$5~~~-74.:0_4_46-4~2~0_7_____.:~.~
1987 Ford Ranger 4x4 89 E'n '
gme Standard Trans CampBr

ER OR MAYSE IT

WASN T HER IT
~OSABLY I.IA5N T
1'\Y l"IISIAKE R&gt;Rt&gt;ET
lT
FOR(;ET IT

Top $3 500 OBO 740 256 1176 ,
.... 1

1989 GMC Safa r• Full Custom I
van $3 950 740-446-4222
~

112 000 Call After 5 PM

446-4015

$7 200 OBO 74().256-6340 740.
256-6467
Call Ernie At Galha Auto Sales

Jackson PIKe 740 446 0724
Bank Financing

FOI'.t&gt;EI IT

'

1990 Ford Ranger XlT 4K4 All
tomal c 6 Cylinder 49 000 M•les' ....
Ex ce llenl Condtlton 740 446 .... !

I

'

1993 Ford Explorer 4 Doors Ac;..
Automati c PW PO Pl 4 W~ ~
Luggage Rack 740 446 4999 : ..~
1996 Dodge Granae Caravan Ell~
cellen t CondtiiOn 26 000 Mti&amp;S Loaded Rear A r Captarns
Cha1rs T1nted Windows Aoslt
wood Color Automat iC $19 000

JUST BECAUSE 'I'Ou'~e
SMALL '(01.1 DON'T ALWAVS

060 740 36 7-{)629

I-lAVE TO 8E AFRAID

1984 KS Blazer Camper Spec•al
94K M•les AC AT PS PB T11t
AMI FM Cassella New T~r es
New Exhaust Body Good Runs

Dbl
4•

Pass
All pass

The marn questiOn rn the Chnst·
mas compeuuon concerned 1h1s deal
West leads lhe spade Jack agamsl four
beans G1ven that you know 1he post ·
uons of all 52 cards would you pre·
fer to defend or declare'
I had mtended the answer to be to
defend If East wrns the first mck
w11h the spade kmg, the contract
makes, East eventually bemg end
played wuh h1s heart kmg lo open up
clubs Bul suppose East ducks at tnck
one I thought that at tnck 1wo South
would relurn the spade c1ght whtch
Wesl must cover With the 10 (else
South runs 11 to East and ends up wnh
the same trump endplay) After dum
my s spade ace wms 1hc spade scv
en goes to East's mnc, declarer dts
cardmg a low d1amond South looks
safe bul Easl leads a fourth spade
wh1ch Wesl ruffs With lhc heart
queen Suddenly the contract ts dead 1
Dummy must overruff but when
declarer leads a trump Easl wms wnh
the kmg and ext is safely wrth hts low
trump He must collect two club
mcks a1 1he end
However JUst before thts column
was sent out to the newspapers I was
checkmg the firsl hatch of readers
answers W1lham Percl from
Pawnee Okla pomtcd out that Soulh
always gets home Afler wmmng
wrth the spade queen he plays a club
to dummy s kmg East wms and
swrtches to a dtamond but declarer
wms m the dummy and leads anoth
er club establtshmg hts Jack, on
wh1ch he dtscards dummy s dta
mood loser South loses only one
hean and two clubs
Well done, Mr Percl 1 Full mfor
malton about the pnze wmners wtll
be prrnted on March 23

LEARN TO F161lT SACK

LET ANt(ONE PUSiol
'(01.1 AROVND 1

way around it,

Classified Ads

Motorcycles

1984 Honda Acc ord LX Fo ur
Door Aulo W•nd ows And Door
Locks AM /FM Cassette Needs
TLC Besl Offer Call Alter 4 PM

IMONDAY

ROBOTMAN

1990 Harley Dav1dson Ultra Clas ••
SIC With Ma!Chmg Putt Bet111ld'"'\
Tra1ier $14 500 740 256-9227
• :

'.,

760 Auto Parts &amp;
,,,
_____A_c_c_e_ss_o_r_le_s___

.·l
I
I

20 11 Car haul ng tra•ler 2 7001b,.,
ad es electnc brakes 2 Dov"
tall B•g car dollv 1111 sw•val ,
lenders l1 gh1s new 1rre s good I
co nd $1 800 lor both 304 67!?,.

1

I

1139
r
BUDGET PRICE TRANSMIS.
SIONS Used /Rebu 11 All Typet
Access Over 10 000 Transm s
s1ons &amp; Clutche s 740 245 SU77 "'

New ga s lanks 1 ton nucW
wheels &amp; radiators 0 &amp; A Auto
R•pley WV 304 372 3933 or 1
800 273 9329

.•

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncond•honal hfet1me guarantee
Local references I urn shed E6; •

tabllshed 1975 Call (740) 44&amp;-"
0870 Or 1 800 287 0576 Rogers
Waterproofing

Appliance Parts And Se1vlce All
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex•.
penance Al l Work Guara nteed
Fren ch C•ty Maytag 740 446
7795

1

C&amp;C General Home Main
lenen ce Patntmg vmyl stdmg
carpentry doors w•ndows baths ~
mob le home repaJr and more For
free est1mate ca I Chel 740 992! , 1
6323

lo .,

840 Electrical and
Relrlgeri'tlon

1' ·

:::-:-~~.:::.:.;_.::::,:.::___. _

PISCES (Feb 20 March 20) G1ve
lull a11en110n today to work that
affccls your personal mlerem If you
get careless, you won't have lhe
proper backup to catch your mtstakes
ARIES (March 21 ·Apnl 19) At a
soc1al galhcrrng today, you m1ght find
yourself wtth someone who makes
you uncomfortable Circulate until
you find a fnendly face
TAURUS (Apnl 20-May 20) In
Tuesday Feb 3 1998
your eagerness to finalrze mailers
The year ahead could be a lot loday you m1ght be wtllrng lo seule
more act1ve than usual, filled wtlh lor second best mstead of allowmg
new friends and contacts Be sure you adequate t1mc for the tssues to
don't sever old relattonshtps how· malurc
ever, ro accommodate new pals
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) II ts
AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb 19) Be w1se not to let compamons speak for
certam your partner has a hand m you today 1f you feel thetr tdeas don't
makmg dectstons that affect mutual serve your best rnlerests Be on ihe
mterests If you lake tt upon yourself , safe stde and thmk for yourself
'CANCER (June 21 July 22)
to call all the shots you'll be mvlt·
trouble Trymg to patch up a bro- Unless you are a careful shopper
ken romance? The Aslro·Graph today. you may wmd up paymg
Matchmaker can help you understand more than IS reasonable for a momenwhat to do to make the relatiOnship ' tary wh1m you feel a need to graufy
work Mall $2 75 to Matchmaker, c/o
LEO (July 23-Aug 22) You are a
th1s newspaper PO Box 1758, Mur- brt more mdeciSI ve than usual today,
ray H1ll Statton, New York, NY causmg you to make last· mmute

ASTRO-GRAPH

SERVICES
Home
Improvements

women

(abbr.)
52 Guldo'o high
note
53 Legal

mollllr

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
c.brity ~ ayptggrarr. are aNied !rum quota110N by llmDUS peop6l pu!and preMnl
Eactt l8ttei tnlhl cipher
rodlly • ClUe J equals T

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SVEO

PVSS
VR

MZA

V R

BG

RZNOEON ,

DKZP

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(FZBFX)

JZCZNNZP

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION "Norman Bates 1s the Hamlet of horner roles Not
your standard guy · - Anlhony Perktns

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lettars of the
four scrambled words below rc form four s•mple words

ACERES

I

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3

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store compla1nt department
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Compleoe tho chuckle quoted

by ftlhng •n the m1ss1ng words
you develop from step No 3 below

A PRINT NUMBER£0 LETTERS
~ IN THESE SQUARES

t) ~7;c:~~~i~ lETTERs

TO

IIIIIIII

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS
Val1se • Blaze - Rebus - Gentle - BELIEVE
Knowtng how polrtrc1ans work today you can be sure
when someth1ng IS offic1ally den1ed you know you can
BELIEVE 11

_74~0~2::.45~5~58-=6--'--------~: '

810

eltictrlclty
22 Building
matorlal
23 Ralae cropa
24 Part of a plant
25 Umpires'
cello
27 Calendar

50 121h11foderl

6

DON'T

agency
Type of

29 Mlalald
31 Takealn
33 Compote
Ingredient
38 Pan of a corn
plant
40 Goofed
41 Tr111hplle
42 Moving part
of a machine
43 Shakeepeara'arl44 French drum
46 Meadowa
47 A~:tual being
46 Fr holy

1L-.J.-...1...
1 -..1.-.J.l-...L.- J

1

21

28~.:!mbone

I •

.

Grea11740-44~3580

740

2•

PEANI I I~

....

Residenllal or commercial wiring \
new serviCe or re pairs Master u 1
censed ele ctricia n Rid~our ,.,
Electncal WV000306 304 675' , l l

changes to your plans ihat could ere
ale uncertarnues for you and associ
ates
VIRGO (Aug 23 Sepl 22) It w1ll
make you feel beuer aboul yourself
today tf you help others, but be smart
and_draw the hne w1th anyone who
you sense ts trymg to use you
LIBRA (Sepl 23 Oct 23) A friend
of yours who ts a preuy strong pro
moter mtght talk you mto somethmg
today whe•• the nsk 1s greater !han
the potcnual returns Be careful
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov 22) Do
one thmg at a nme nght today. rather
than attempl , to do several asstgn
ments simultaneously Gtve each the
attentiOn that IS reqUired
SAGIITARIUS (Nov 23-Dec
21) Gtve your uleas a chance to work 1
today mstead of packtng m every·
thmg at the first setback In order to
succeed, you must be pa11ent and
adaptable
CAPRICORN (Dec 22 Jan 19)
Today, tt 's best not to mvolve your·
self m endeavors that stratn your
resources You are better off bemg
prudent mstead of tmpuiSive
)

I

\

'I

CHi::.l')T~

1987 Ford Bro nc o II XLT 4~4\ 1
New Jasper Motor Rebuilt Autol
Tran sm1 ss1on E11.cellent Cond1
110nl Seno us tnqulfi&amp;S Onf)t:..

1992 Della 88 Loaded $6 500

256 125.2 740 256-1738

ngt ts h Redl ick Mate 3 Years
Old 1st Place Wmner In UK C

P'

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs

740 682-7512

AKC Stbenan Husky Pupp1es
La1ge Type Blue Eyes Beaullful

1 rea&lt;Jy to go 2/1198 304 895

THE BORN LOSER

446-()103

6656

Eoal

By Phillip Alder

1992 Ford Range r XLT extended.

1986 Cnevy Astr a Cargo van
good cond•t•on $2795 may con
Sid er guns on trad e 740 992
Gt54

Nonb

The answers
at long last

I

1993 Ford Ranger XLT 5 Sp eed
A1r $5 750 740 256 1252 740

Science Guy
18 Map abbr
20 Gov1 farm

Openmg lead • J

OL' BULLET It

1991 Chevy P1ck Up Truck 1~
Ton 6 Cy tmde r 5 Speed AC
Pos1 Trac $4950 Call After J
PM (7 40) 446- 3570
...

2264

West
Pass

I'D DRUTHER BE

1985 Chevy 3/4 !on p1ckup 35~
automaltc 76 000 m1tes second;
owner exce ll ent conditio n 740

I

710 Autos lor Sale
1969 BUICk GS S3 000 740-682-

1992 Chrysler LeBaron Convert
1ble V 6 Auto A1r $5 300 740

Beautiful AKC Reg German
Shephard pupp1es good blood

Soutb

'

742 2979 740 992 3394

13 Loulo -, the

Vulnerable Ne1ther
Dealer East

Uplon Used Cars At 62 3 Mtlel
South of Le on WV Flnanclni
Available 304 458 1069
•

Evemngs 740 256 1687

puppies call614 992 9969

Rare Colors S125 $200 740

• Q8
•109632
t A 64
• J 4 2

I

1989 Cutlass Cata1s 2 Door
Auto Burgundy V 6 Am Fm
Cassette Clean (740)441 - 0995

AKC Reg German Shephard

Concrete &amp; Plastic Septic Tanks
300 Thru 2 000 Gallons Aon
Evans Enterprises Jackson OH

740 379-2836

A Groom Shop Pel Gr oom ng
Featunng Hydro Bath Don
Sheets 373 George s Creek Ad

Beauty Shop equ1pmen1 3 slyl
mg chairs 3 floor mals 2 sham
poo bowls 1 dryer w/c half m1r
rors &amp; extras Wtll sell all logeth
er or separate 304 675 4873 or

OBO 1986 Subaru good for
parts $300 Tandy RL1000 com
puter $400 ~!most new motorcy
cia lrallef $600 740-992 2242

Slud Cot PhOne (740)25&amp;M39

SMrti&gt;Bd $3 150 740.3ll6-11906

740 446 0231

Complete shoe and leather shop
and mventory lor sell or lease

740.44~3570

6046

7402561197

Stove 74o-379 9110

Livestock

1987 Chevy F1fth Avenue run

8 AKC Reg Black Labs born 12/
25197 wormed S200ea 304 675

Bnck K lchen Cabinet Complete
Wllh Counter Lazy Susans Dou
ble Stamless Steel S1nk BUilt In

John Deere

1975 Buick Century 2 Doors

550

1

plows 740 247-4793

682 7512

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

to 940 diSCS also holds lapes

Set ol three 14

$37 oo Per 1oo All Brass Com
press1on F1tt1ngs In Stock

5~0

1-900-537 9528
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 52 Weslwood Drive

3/4 200 PSI

Moore owner

Call 740 992 6636 after 6 pm
COs &amp; tapes not 1ncluded

2555 FWA With Loader M F
3070 FWA Cab &amp; Air 6610 Ford
Cab &amp; Alf TWS Ford FWA Cab
&amp; Air J 0 4430 Cab &amp; A1r I H
1086 Cab &amp; Alr Case I H 585
FWA With Loader J D 550 B
Dozer J 0 450E Dozer J D 7200
Vacuum Corn Planter Also O!her
Traclors &amp; EqUipmenl

$21 95 Per 100 1" 200 PSI

Antiques

Brand New! Great Gtftl CO/video
storage un1t Bla ck and cherry
Never out ol box $125 Holds up

746-286-2731
J 0 2955 FWA Ca b &amp; Arr J 0

Square Bates $2 00 Each 1 M1le

D~lver

304 675 6188

Of Jackson On St At 139

VHS C Camcorder $250 200
Channel Hand Held Scanner

Wood For Sa le $35 A Load W111

6 oo p m 740 992 2526 Russ

JOE RUSS FARM
EQUIPMENT &amp; FER71L~ER
Located 8 Miles South

304 675 6166

$200Bolh 740256-1216

Buy or sell R1venne Anuques
1124 E Mam Street on At 124
Pomeroy Hours M T W 10 00
am lo 600 pm Sunday 100 to

HydrauliC 011 lowes! pnce Ill
lawn Vent tree gas neaters pro
pane &amp; natural gas on sale now
S1der's Equ1pment 304 675 7421

M1xed Hay Delano Jackson Farm
Ph 740-446 1104 740 441 0450

Wes!mghouse Washer &amp; Dryer
Looks Like New
Runs Fme

el BDL 700 Calrber 243 $450
740 446 4855

949 2630

•AQ5

Soutb

640

W01ghr Loss LOSE UP TO 30
LBS 30 Oays Or Recommended
100% GUARANTEED RESULTS
1 sea 294 8079

Sporting
Goods

Ford 3000 Dtesel live PTO good
rubber New Holland 256 Do ~ly
Wheel rake 3 pi PTO cu i off
saw wheel horse 16 hp garden
tractor mower blade cha1ns 614

•K9532
• K 7
• 10 5 3

• QJ 8 7
• 10 9 8 6 3

C edit Problems ? We Can Help!
Easy Bank Fmancmg For Used ,
Vahle es No Turn Downs Ca l

446 6306 1 800 291 0098
STORAGE TANKS 3 000 Gallon

Jadlson Oh10 1 600 537 9528

Open 9 30 5 oo Moo Sal
304 675-SOFA (7632)

--~=-=~~~.:.::.:.::~~·

720 Trucks lor Sale

East

•Q

1969 GMC S1erra LWB P1 ck Up I
Ellcellent Cond1t1on V 8 Auto :
82 ooo M11es Cook Motors 740 1

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES

Polly 1 New &amp; Used Furniture
We oow have Armt Surp usm
2101 Jefferson Ave

West
• J I0 4

Full Blooded Heeler Dogs One 9
Week Old Pup Two 1 Year Old
Dogs $50 Each Reg slere d
Ouaner Horse Foals ICF Fun

Waterline Spec1al

IQ-4 Only

• K?

Se1zed And Sold
Locally This Month
Trucks 4x4 s Etc

5 Month Old Reg1stered Pam!

675-7163

Mov•na Sale Used Furniture
Store 130 Bulav•lle Pike Galhpo
lis Ohto 50% Off Gilt Shop And
Most Furniture Mon Tues Wed

I

88 Chevy rollback 17 1/2 feel a1J
mmum bed ac pw pi 4 sp nice~
truck readv to work ser ious 111 ,
qwes only 740 949 311 7

Washer &amp; dryer 30 etectnc
range refngera lor new carpet
vanous s1zes &amp; co lors Lock on
lree sland small RCA sa1ell 1te
d1st1 27" Fisher color TV 304

PC $275 Call740 886-6373

7787

02-02 98

• A76
•AJ854
t K92

WARM UP H1gh Elhctency Natu
ral And LP Gas Furnaces l•le
11me Warranty On Heat Exchang
er "If You Don t Ca ll Us We Both
Lose! Free Estimates! Add On
Heat Pumps Only Sllg htv H1gher
Call Us Today 1997 Is The
Twenty Seventh Year In The
Heattng &amp; Cooling Business! 740

Good Cond110n $100 740 446
7395
GOOD USED APPLIANCES liS

L vmg Room Su11e Never used 2

2 Fa rma n Cubs With Cu hvators
Ford Jub1lee 2 641 Fords BOO
Ford 861 Ford 3 3 000 Ford
Diesels M F 35 Diesel M F 135
PS Graderblades Plows btsc
N H Hayrakes Bush Hogs Hay
tedders 2 Sets Cultlvalors For
Farmal Cuos New &amp; used Parts
For Fords And Massey Fergu
son s Kessel s Tractor &amp; Equtp
1402 Jackson Ptke Gallipolis
OhiO 740 446 6906 740 446

2 Horse Tra1ter W1tt1 New Tues &amp;
Brakes $975 Ca ll Alter 4 PM

tor $150 Yamaha Keyboard
$125 19" Zemlh Tv $60 20
tncn Svlvama TV $100 Panaso
nlc M1crowave $70 Brother Wor d
Processor $1 40 J&amp;B Technolo
gy 372 State Route 160 Galltpo

Washers drye rs refrigerators
ranges Skaggs Appliances 76
Vma Street Call 740 446 7398
1 llliO 499 3499

s 9368
'
198P 1990 Cars For $100'11

VICkie

630

$125 14 Inch NEG SVGA

DP Stepper $125 La rge Blue
Malchmg Coucn &amp; Cha ir Very

520

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

$15 740.3811-8996

Sunquest super tannmg bed w/
la c•at tanne r New bu lbs st11lm
box S1 600 304 675 4873 or

Inner Spr ng Mattress New Nev
er used $285 740 886 6373

Ext

Nonb

1 800 522 2730 X3901

light Covers Wtll Flt 1991 Chev
rotet Beretla Pa1d $40 Wtll Sell

Upnght Ron Evans Enterpn ses
Jackson Oh•o 1 800 537 9528

Sunk Bed Sel Solid Wood wllh

$6000 1989 Mazda 323 $:1000

Green Apts t49 or call 740.992
3711 EOH

M1ddlepor1 $23 000 OBO 740
992 2290

Appliances
Recond itioned
Washers Dryers Ranges Refn
graters 90 Day Guarantee!
French C1ty Mavtag 740 446

8 Sl•de In Camper Good Cond1
$650 OBO New Remmglon
Tent Sleeps 6 11 8"11. 10 $135

2 be&lt;i'oom apartment In Pomeroy
utili ties pa•d no pets 740 992

er S1de 75 tee! wtde level lot In

Household
Goods

Three bedroom mobile home out

New Double Wtde Aepo $999 00
Down Free Delivery And Set Upl

~44.:1_-oee=::.l- - - - - - 120 ~et bng llllleel bng on oth

510

530

736 7295

740 886-9236

Set Of Four 14 Inch Amencan
Rac •ng Wheels 5 Star Des•gn
With Black Tum Atmos1 New

Aemlnglon H1gh Power Alfie Mod

3 Bedroom trailer m Henderson
WV $300/mo +deposit &amp; refer
ences 304 675 1972 alter Gpm

PI Pleasant 304 675 2174 or
614-448-2200

Road 2 Mtles From 141 Wooded
Lot, W1Bu1ld1ng Slte $13 000 740-

6pm

Blaoen 740 256 1568

1br apartmenl pr~vate qu et De
pos1t Referen ces $250/mo 304

Well Kepted Will
Fmance $47 500

Refmlshed turn ture la~as lamps
walnut dresser kllct1en cupiJoard
locust-post 740 698 3006 alter

Mobile home s1te available bet
ween Athens and Pomeroy ca n

65 A.cre Fa rm Fenced Newer 3
Bedroom Home 2 Balhs Central
Air &amp; Flfeplace Detached 30lC40
Vmyl S!de Garage Large Barn
With 6 Stalls 1 &amp; Tack Room Frost
Free Water In Barn 10 M1les
From Ga111po IS $650/Mo Plus

SINGLE PARENT PROGRAM

330 Farms lor Sale

304 773 5341

460 Space lor Rent

Box Sprmg &amp; Matress New Nev
er Used $199 Call 740 886

1100 Flfst Avenue 740 4463573 Furn1sl'1ed Apartment With
Carporl And All Ulll1t1es Paid
Close To Church

736 7295

hook ups Call alter 2 00 p m
304,773 5651 Mason WV

7795

Single Parent Program Spec•al
I nancmg on 2 3 &amp; 4 bedroom
homes Paymenta 11 low 11
1180 Call now 304-755-5885

304

R &amp; S Furniture
Mason WV
Buy Sell Trade
Used &amp; Anttques
Furndure

Sleeping rooms with cooktng
Also trailer space on river All

9923090

304 882

888 265 2123

Pa1d $440 W111 Sell $275 Head

992 2218

Spec1al Fmancmg Av81labte 304

~eSI pr~e

Furnished
Rooms

410 Houses lor Rent
No pets

wmter blowout

spec 1a1 All mvenlory must gol!
170 free channels lree monthly
gu1de tree bonus g•tt Guaranleed

MERCHANDISE

5566

736-7295
SINGLE PARENT PROGRAM

PRIMESTAR

740 385 4367

New double wtde repo $999
down Free dehvery and setup

Spec al f nancmg ava1lab e 304

Power Wheels four wneeler with
charger $50 Sharp typewnter
$40 Emerson TV/am tm rad10
combo $50 Lloyds amJfm a track
works $10 electnc 15 weedeat
er $20 gray female kmen to g•ve
away 740 949 3076 anyume

RENTALS

3bedroom n New Haven WV

Quiet Country Setthig w•th beau
111u mobtle home forced to sell
Ftnan c• ng ava•lable 304 755

M1d

Upstair~ 2 Rooms &amp; Bath Fur
mshed Clean No Pets Reference

450

3 Bedrooms Total Electnc New
Furance New Carpel Pnvate Lol

One 1978 10 x46 Off•ce Tra ler
wnn Eleclr•c Forced AH Heat
And 2 Ton Central A/C Umt One
1987 12 ~69 Oll1ce Tra1ler W•th
ElectriC Forced A r Heat And
Central AJC Unl! Please Call 740
256 6327 From 8 00 AM To 4 30
PM Monday Thru FrKjay

Pomeroy Thnll Shop now buymg
Lev• Jeans toys chtld ren s cloth
•ng must be In excellent condl
t1on Tuesday through Friday

and couage AI Porter (740) 3681100

Real Estate
Wanted

Home For S.le By Owner BeauiJ 350 Lots &amp; Acreage
lui Lol River Viffw Sl At 7 SoU1h
3 Bedrooms Garage Oulbuilding. ,)1 0 Acres On Neighborhood

2118

Aepatred New &amp; Rebu~l In Slack
Call Aon Evans 1 800.537 9528

CARS FOR $1001 Trucks
4 wheelers motor homes
ture eleclron•cs computers ttl~.tJ
by FBI lAS DEA Ava table ytl.,_l
area now Call 1 &amp;00 513 43&lt;$~

Used $500 New Ask1ng $325
74Q-245-9243

610 Farm Equipment

Plano Dr 740 446 45.25
JET
AERATION MOTORS

Upstairs and Downstairs apart
ments Avatlable 91 Cedar Tra1ter

www coun!rytyme com

360

245 5747

Now Tak ing Applications 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse

dleport 740.992 2178

Crate BX 100 Bass Amp Hardy

Goll Clubs 100 Sets Under $100
300 Wood /Me dal Dnvers Under
S100 Club Builder Repa1red 740

1519

New 2Bx80 3 or 4 bedroom
$39 995 Free del1very 1 800
691 6777

304 736 7295

Ftrewood $40 A Truck Load De
rv&amp;Fed Call 740 446 4362 No An
swer Leave Message

&amp; Deposll Required 740 446

Call Today For FREE Maps
ANTHONY LAND CO LTD
1 900-213-8385

Cash Pad For Land In Gallla
Cou nty Blackburn Realty 740

$219/Mo
SUNRISE,

Load Wtll Oehver 740 256 1440

740-256 9172

Grubb s P1ano tunmg &amp; repa1rs
Problems' Need Tuned' Call the

111

Musical
Instruments

F1rewood For Sale $35 Pick Up

lovely one bedroom apartment
equipped k1tchen ut1Ut1es tnclud
ed m Mlddlepon ca ll 740 992
7833 after 6pm References and
depoSit required

One bedroom apartment

388 8922
570

0006

All Over Soulhern OhiO

Wormed &amp; Shots $50 Each 740

r

Apar1men1s $295/Mo 740 446

1994 Sultao ElectfiC Heat Pump
2 Bedrooms 2 Baths $17 900

740-446 3653

740 245 9617

NOW $24 000 Fnendly Ridge 8 5 pori From $236 $304 Call 740

polntment 740 797-4468

Cal 304 675-4678

19B9 Magnavox Console Tv
Needs Some Repa1r $50 OBO

Gracious living 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at Vtllage Manor and
R verslde Apartments In Middle

Acres $7 500 Or 6 5 Acres
S8 000 Countyer Water

691 6777
DREAM HOME SERIES

BUY HOMES AS LOW AS

menl 304 937 3410
WANTED Full T1me PROGRAM

011111 Co Gall•pohs Neighbor
hood Rd 10 Acre lots Of Level

Apartment in Pomeroy 6 rooms 3
bedrooms bath &amp; hall washer/
dryer hook up no pets $300 a
month $150 deposit 614 66?..
3083 after Spm

Al11er Fron tage Gallipolis Brick
Ranch
Wrap Around DecK
Cathedral LR 3 BA 2 Baths Low
er Leve l 2 Rec Rooms Wei Bar

Double wtde 10% down $196/
mo Free deltvery &amp; selup 1 800

EOE

drivers Resume &amp; references re
quesled w/app •cat10n Apply at
Valley Brook Concrete Aooer ts
burg plant or phone lor appo nl

Meigs Co Danville Nice 17
Acres S18 000 Or 9 Acres
$17 000 $1 000 Down + $212
Mo County Water

$19 000 Or 22 Acres W1th Pond

I 800 872 5967 WV010212

To300PM

Delmallon Full Blooded Puppies

74~11492

es 740.949-9004 aner 6pm

BUTCHER SHOP SLAUGHTER
HOUSE Old ESiaOIIShmenl Sus

Calli 80D-346 0162

304 768 4469 Or Mall To PMI

back split ra11 In front two porch

BRUNER LAND

Buy•ng S!andmg Timber And
Land W1lh Tlrnb&amp;r 740.682 7318

Needed For The Galltpolts
Area Exce lent Entry Level
Sales &amp; Marketing PositiOn
Guaranteed $330 Per Week To
Start Plus CommiSSIOn &amp; Bonus
Sales Expenence Helpful
We Will Tra n Excellenl
Managemenl Opporlunlfy
Med1cal Personna To Do Mobile
Insurance Exams &amp; Blood Draws
In Me gs Calmly F&lt;tle Resume To

two car garage and storage bwld
ln g Included puvacy fence n

949 3016

FIRE YOUR BOSS
700 Compames Otlenng Work At
Home Opportun 11es Ex clllng In
come Potant1a11 CALL NOW 1

stove refrlgeratelr dishwasher
and garbage disposal cenual air

12x65 Tra1ler 3br I bath $5 500

ProfesSional Tree Serv1ce Stump
Remova l Free Esti mates! In
suranee B1dwell Oh1o 614 J88

And Aelaled Experience W lh
B ddmg Jobs To Include Maten
als And labor Must Be Fam1ila
W1th The Galt pohs PI Pleasant
A eas QUALIFIED Appl1canls
Can Stop In At Chr shan s Con
struchon Inc 1403 Eastern
Ave To Drop Olf A Resume Or
F II Out An Appl1cal10n Pay
Based On Experience 740 446

Mason m~ular home on 1001
100 lot three bedtoom two full
baths large lr/dr combo kitllr
combo With workmg fireplace ut~1
I~ roo m comes equ1pped with

42 Singer Vlkltl45 Actraaa
1 Belli 10011
Jotnne6 City vehlclea 46 Bandleader
10 01 an ortery
Brown
12 Cametot'a
411 Dlalncllnod
moglc!an
51 Leoat
14 Tomorrow, In 54 Relocation
Mexico
helpen
15 Spookily
65 Polite word
16 COITlploo pt
56 Rorem and
17 Scottish beret
Beatty
19 Poker stake
57 Donkey•
20 01 no value
23 Poet Robert DOWN
26 ExpiOIIYII lnlta
27 Actor Brynner 1 Renown
2 Horae color
30 Wild oiMep
3 Eagle
32Gumtree
4 Airline Info
34 Whlrt
5 -Romo
35 AUanllc and
6 Fair grade
Pacific
7 Talltatry
38 Alpa, eg
8 Thln pancake
(abbr I
9 Soli dopoaH
37 - de France
11 Tardy
39 Gem weight
40 Andel country 12 Souvenir
ACROSS

I

FEBRUARY21

�.

Page 10 • ~ Dally Sentinel

Ann
Landers
IW1, Ws AnJCics Times
SyiWiicaLc and Crcuors
SyndiniC.

Dear Ann Landers: A while
back, you printed a ,letter from a
woman who said she had absentmindedly placed a set of keys on the
roof of her car and forgotten all
about them. After driving across the
Oakland Bay Bridge and up and
down the winding hills of San Francisco, she was amazed to discover
that the keys were sti ll there. Here is
something that tops that story by a

Immunization van coming to Meigs County
Free immunizations will be avail- Immunization Program along with
able for all area children from birth the Ohio Department of Health Is
through middle school in two loca- now offering the Hepatitis B. vactions in Meigs County next week.
cine to all chrldren ·born after Nov.
The Ohio University College of 22, 1991 and to all eligible II. 12
psteopathic Medicine Childhood and 13 year olds. In order to be eliImmunization Program (CHIP), a gible a child must qualify for the
mobile health program will be at Vaccine for Children Program.
Reed's Store in Reedsville from · The child must fall into one of the
noon to 2 p.m. on Feb. II ; and at following four categories: be
. McDonald's in Pomeroy from 3 to 5 enrolled in the Medicaid program.
p.m. that day. McDonald's will pro- have no health · insurance, he an
vide a free food coupon to every American Indian or Alaskan Native,
child immunized during the or have insurance which docs not
Pomeroy clinic.
cover vaccines.
In addition to providing required
.The Hepatitis B. Vacc ine is a
·immunizations. the Childhood three shot series over a minimum of

six months. To receive immuniza:

lions, previous shot records are to be
brought.
The clinic is provided by the
Ohio University College of Ostco·
pathic Medicine Childhood Immu·
ni zati on Program's community
mobile health unit and the Ohio
Department of Health in cooperation
with the Meigs County Health
Department. ando McDonald's of
Pomeroy.
For more informatton about the
immuni zati on program, residents
may call 1-800·844-2654 or the
Meigs County Health Department,
992-6626. '

. pollee and the Depanment of Chil- hadn' t planned to rarsc any . more
drcn and Famrly Servrces have ruled t!h1ldren. I owe them a whole Jot.
thrs an accrdent. No charges are
I never ki)Cw my father, but 1
being filed against the mother, who have an idea he wasn't much good.
was m a panrc when she realized My oldest sister died of a drug overwhat had happened . Bless . those dose. She w~s 23. I have another sis truckers for havmg the mtelhgence ter who is 21. She Jives with her
and compassiOn to stop and rescue boyfriend. and they have a little
that child. They truly are knights of baby. 1 also have a brother, 19, who
the road.
li ves with his girlfriend. They are
. Dear Ann Landers: I hope you taking care of my lillie brother. He is
wrll pnnt my letter so kids who have 10 years old. My youngest sister was
a lovmg mother and father will real- the lucky one. She got adopted by
izc how lucky they are .
so me very nice people.
. I am a.' 3-year-old gir l. My mom
I consider myself fortu nate that
tncd to gtve me away a couple of my grandparenLs were willing 10
ltmcs, but nobody wanted me. Final- take me in. My grandpa is legally
ly. my grandparents took me in , even blind, but he is a wonderful person
though they were getting older and and taught me never 10 complain

At the January membership meet, ing of the Meigs County Humane
Society, we accomplished, I think a
good deal, as we elected new officers and board members, reviewed
last year's activities, and made new
committee assignments.
It 's always useful for an organization to look over the previous
year's accomplishments as it sets
goals for the year, and this we did as
people from all areas of the community. some with little time to spare.
· came together to recommit themselves to the society and offer practical guidance. I feel fortunate that
we have such people active with us.
The county 's animals cannot. after
all. speak for themselves and we
need every one of you .
We arc looking forward to the
employment of a new humane educator/cruelty investi gator. workin:&gt;under the auspices of the Meigs
County Prosecuting Attorney's
Office. We arc also searching now
k&gt;r one or two foster homes. for any
animals surrendered to ihe new ofli l'cr will need a place to live tern:
porarily. If you 'have experience of
fostering or, arc willing to foster.
please contaCI me at P.O. Box 6K2,
Pomeroy.
· TI1is coming year. we will he
implementing new fund raising
ideas. so that we can sec our dream

of a cat shelter become a reality.
: However, one of our goals. and
part of our mission statement .:. . . _
~ddrcssing the issue of humane ca_ucation - can he implemented
immediately, thanks to one .of our
members. Linda Foreman. who has
been active with the Spay/Neuter
Program. as well as the Thrift
Shoppc, and has done cruelty mvestigati ons in the past . ts now 10
charge of co.mmunity outreach . She
will have a small budget with which

she can rent or purchase videos, buy and respond to the calls about ignopamphlets, make posters, and so rant neglect and deliberate. Daily
forth , to aid her when she gives pre- they are reminded of the problems in
sentations on a variety of topics. our community - the dog whose
including training and care.
lung was pierced by an arrow and
Ms. Foreman is particularly inter- later died, the cat and her kiucns left
ested in reaching young people who in an abandoned house, the homewant to care for and train family pets less puppy.' I thank them for remindor want to help improve the lot of ing us in turn and keeping us on
animals in general. You may call her track , particularly since I know that
direCIIy at 992-4060 to ask her to they hear far more sad stories than
speak to a class, 4-H, church, or they do happy endings.
social group. I am so envious of
And happier endings arc what we
Linda's unflagging patience and arc really about.
generosity when addressing the
whole range of humane issues.
Speaking of good fortune , I
would like to note that we have not
missed Bob Hoeflich 's generous
plugs in The Daily Sentinel for the
MCHS. and writer Brian Reed has
been most helpful - in countless
ways - as he . gently remind s me
about my columns. (His new killy.
Stewart. is indeed one lucky boy')
I am. as always, so grateful to our
_society's founder. Dorothea Fisher.
who ' has continued 10 be my .wise
mentor and constant friend . I would
also like to thank charter member
Rita Lewis. our treasurer. who is to
he applauded for her common sense
approach to our money mailers (She
has those mystifying figures al her
fin gertips) and her longtime commitment to the animals.
We have a wondcrful hoard of
directors and counsel in Linda
Warner. Dog Wa:.r. Bijl Dye
remains a dispenser of sound advice
and solid hacker of our activrlics.
And Janet Howard. Fred Hoffman ,
and Jeff Thornton havo been enduring helpers. Finally. there arc our
Thrift Shoppe volunteers. Many Of
you have met these lovely, tireless,
self-effacing women who work so
hard for us , so you probably have a
sense of what they do, What you not
may know is that they arc the first
ones to hear about the sorts of things
many of us (myself included} would
rather not ·know allout. They h~ar

Community Calendar
MONDAY
POMEROY - Friends of Meigs
County Library. Monday, 7 p.m at
the Pumcroy Library.

because there are a lot of folks v.:no
.are worse off. I don't want to srgn
my name to this letter so just say i
am -- From California
Dear California: 1 admire you~
spirit. If your reason for writing was
to let a Jot of teenagers know how.
lucky they arc, I'm sure you sueceeded. 1 don't know what your
goals are in life, but I'd be willing to
bet you' ll reach them. You have a loi
of the right stuff.

POMEROY - Meigs High
School Band Boosters, Monday, 7
p.m. in the band room.
RACINE - Racine Village
Council, Monday. 7 p.m. municipal
building.
CARPENTER Board of
Trustees. Columliia Township. Mon·
day, 7:30p.m. at the fire station.
RACIN E - . Southern Local
Board ~,f Equcation, special session.
Monday, 6::!0 p.m. at Southern High
School cafeteria. Racine. to consider
contract with OAPSE Local 453 and
a construction bond issue .
SYRACUSE - Meigs County
Republican Commiuee, special session, Monday. 7:30 p.m., Carleton
School. Syracuse.
PORTLAND
Portland PTO
Monday. 7 p.m. at the element~ry
school.
LETART

Letart Township

Trustees, Monday. 6 p.m. at the
ofticc building.

•

SYRACUSE- Sulton Tt•wnship
Trustees, Monday, 7:30 p.m. Syracuse Municipal Building.
TUESDAY
POMEROY- J.E.WEL. Tuesday, 7 p.m., home of Brian and Kim
Hupp with guest speaker, Karen·
Foreman, a testimony on adoption.

Calif. 90045

..........

3417~-­
~/422- US!I

.._

_

.._...

Wai·Mort )(M/A'lA-6912

MIDDLEPORT - Ladies Auxiliary, Middleport Fire Department, 7
p.m. Tuesday.

Shop at home.:.

Buy from the.Classifieds!

Southern. proposing
bond issue for May 5

POMEROY - Salisbury Township. 6 p.m. Tuesday, townhall hall
at Rock Springs.

ALFRED - Orange Township
Trustees, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, home
of Osie Foil rod.
, PAGEVILLE - Scipio Township Trustees. Tuesday, 6:30 p.m.
Page ville.

.

Go with the best in
personalized
.
respiratory eare: ·
.

Commissioners explore solutions ·
·to make veterans office accessible

PRESCR·IPTION OXYGEN!!

office adjacent to the veterans office,
By BRIAN J. REED
which is handicapped-accessible, in
.Sentinel News Staff
Solutions to accessibility prob- the event that a veteran was unable to
lems at the Meigs County Veterans use the VSO building.
The board ·of elections, however,
Service office were again discussed ,
in
its November meeting. deemed
when the Meigs County Commissioners met in regular session on that proposal "unsatisfactory," citing
Monday.
usc of !,heir otlice ~s a polling place
..Jh~ i ssu~ of acces.~ I~ tile ll!lil~ing, at times, and li"!i!«;&lt;! space i~ .the
locat~~ ,Qn Mulberry Av~nue. Jllis board of elections offtFC•
Curtis stressed the heed for a pribeen discussed with the board before.
but no remedies to the inaccessibili- vate and comfortable area that can be
ty problem have been found. The used by veterans and Service Officer
building, rented from Rob!:rt Wingett Max Cale in the event that a veteran ·
at a cost of $175 per month, is not in cannot access the regular VSO facilcompli~nce with Americans with
ity. ' .
Disabilities Act standards.
Denver Curtis, veterans service
Commissioners Jeffrey Tliomton
officer for the Disabled American and Fred HotTman both said Monday
Vetemns, ha• requested that the board they favor considering a new location
consider options to malic services for the veterans service office, and
more accessible to area veterans. Cur- Commissioner Janet Howard agreed.
tis allended yesterday's meeting to saying that the county should conagain request modifications.
sider ·tinding a location that would
The commissioners late last year allow the county to consolidate all of
deemed a ramp to acces1; the build- its offices .which now pay rent.
ing impractical because of the
Curtis ·also spoke to the board
entrance's location in the building and about a new Veterans Administration
btcause such a ramp would interfere clinic in Athens. and stressed the
with the sidewalk in front of the importance of local veterans becombuilding.
ing familiar with the facility, located .
The commissioners also proposed in the old Sportsman Restaurant on
use of space in the board of elections . We~t Union Street.

CELLULARONE

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Jo&lt;k-

384 ,.., s.... 61 m86·6073

By AARON MARSHALL
Sentinel Columbus Bureau
COLUM BUS
With u
revamped school funding f'ormula .
already pushed through the General
Assembly, Ohio House lawmakers
failed to strike an agreement early
today on a proposal that funds it. .
House lawmakers are now considering a ri.val plan that still features
a halt~cent sales tax hike to be placed
on the ballot: However. the money
generated would be .used only for
school building construction and
prpperty ta'x relief.
·"I'm into the art of the doable."
said House Speaker Jo Ann David-

•

•

I

-.,

2CMW ~ Slrwi61A/ W2·7070

1«lJ ~ :;...., 61'!35J.858J

Wai-Mott 61 A/894·· 1
198w...ty l'll:uo 614/ 90·1226

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Kentucky

11 7W. . . . . 606/325-Z:W
Wol-Man bOd/324·2759

c.noin ...,lrictions apply. All min.,., bo.ed on local mirulo$, IOam!ng and toll ""' not included.
Offer limited " qt.oliRed ro1o pbis. Offer expires soon. Buoness Qjslomt\n pieii,. conlod your ..leo - -·
(

Curtis said that veterans should
see that their names are on the VA
system so that they can access the
Athens clinic when needed, rather
than driving to Chillicothe. The number at the clinic is 593-7314.
The commissioners tabled a
reques! from County Home Superintendent Sharon Johnson. asking for
an lli!d!t~o~a~(uf1:1i,'R,e,~;r.OiMI&gt;Yee for
tHe fatrlit}'. ilila requestrng that a pantime position now funded be made
full-time. due to vacations and sick
leave, which Johnson said by letter
have !tift the facility's staff shorthanded.
·
Funding for the home ~as been
limited to the end of March, when
Commission President Janet Howard
has indicated the home will close to
permanent residents.
The board approved a request by
resolution, authorizing the Meigs
County Department of Human Ser,
vices to join the County Commissioners .Association of Ohio. and
approved the transfer of $52.000
within the budget of the Soil and
Water Conservation 'District.
Present were commissioners
Howard. Hoffman and Thornton, and
Clerk Gloria Kloes .

son. R-Reynoldsburg. She also indi- Bill 650. was passed by the General
cated that' a provision in the earli'er Assembly over the weekend. It
plan that eliminated a bu.siness prop- includes a new distribution formula
erty tax rollback in exchange for the calling for another six percent
phasing out of the inventory tax wa.~ · . statewide to schools in each of the
likely put of the equation now.
next four years. It u.ses $100 riiilliqn
If the sales tax hike .measure is in cuts to state government and.$200
passed by lawmakers. then voters million diced from an income ta ~
would still have to approve the issue reduction fund to boost education
at ballotlloxes this May.
funding in 1999.
A new resolution could be voted
State funding for transportation.
on again as soon as this nlomfng in gifted, vocational and special educathe Ohio House. If the House does tion were altered in the bill. It also
approve it. the .Senate is expected to includes a blueprint to reduce class
act quickly to approve the resolution. sizes 'in kinderganen thorough third
A companion piece of school grade and expand all-day kinderfunding reform leg islation. Hovse garten in some schools.

Area·lawmakers see
positives in budget

1.502 LMm ,_,. 61 ~ £11.0S..1

170C.V.."- "-'/ l7,.23SS
Waj.,.._, 61 A/316·'1271

2 Sections, 18 Pages, 35' cents
A Gannett Co . Newspaper

r.
IN THE RUNNING- Bruce Douglas of Toledo Introduced members of his family to the media
during the formal announcement of his candidacy for the Democratic nomination for governor at the Statehouse In Columbus Monday. To the right Is Douglas'
wife, Dee. (AP)
'

.

.

Multimillionaire looks to nab
Democrats' nod for governor
By JOHN McCARTHY
When Douglas decided to ~pend
Associated Press Writer
his own money. that freed Fisher
COLUMBUS - A longtime from the $2,500 limit on individual
political insider says a relative donations. · Campaign . finance
ouL&lt;iderhas as much chance as Lee reports filed last week showed
Fisher to become the Democratic that Fisher had about $2.4 million
•nominee for l!OVem6r.
in cash at year's, end .
Tamef"'Ril'Vnlb;' a · £ilenioctlfttc
Robert'Riclimun. Fisher's camconsultant from Toledo. said Mon- paign manager, said Douglas probday that Bruce Douglas is about as ably will spe nd more than Fisher.
well-known a~ Fisher. who is four
" We have to go out and raise
years removed from his years as money the old-fashioned way, by
attorney general.
convincing p.:ople that Lee is the
" They (voters} don't know best candidate," Richman said. " I
either candidate," said Ruvolo. am very confident we will have the
who is one of Douglas' campaign resources we need to comp.:te."
Against the backdrop of the
advisers.
·school-funding
d~bate in the LegDouglas, a 64-year-old multimillionaire developer from Toledo islature. Douglas pledged at a news
said his campaign for the Democ- conference to raise more money for
ratic nomination on May 5 will education by asking lawmakers IO
focus on education.
increase the sales tax by I 112 cents
Douglas intends to reach into per dollar and raising the cigareue
his own wallet to get elected. but Ia&lt; from 24 cents a pack 10 49
he would not affix a dollar amount cents. He also would reduce propto what he will spe nd. ·
erty taxes by 20 percent.
" We're going to spend whatevHe said the other candidates in
er it takes to get ttie ideas out,"
the race - Fisher and Republican
Douglas said at a Statehouse news Bob Taft- have been too quiet on
conference.
the issue.

"Our schools are in shambles.
literally and liguratively." Douglas
said. "No one can tell me we can't
solve these problems. acting
together."
Lawmakers are considering a
pia~ that would raise the statewide
sales tax by a half-cent. to 5-112
cents a dollar. Legislative lenders
were struggling to find the threelifths majority needed to place the
issue before voters in the same primary in which Douglas will face
Fisher.
He said his polls show that the·
public supports .tax increases li1r
schools.
Richman countered - Douglas"
claiJll that Fisher hadn't offered an
education plan. He said Fisher
pr~fers

cutting existing programs to

raising taxes, but will wail until the
Legi ~-l ~t ure
befor~

plan

finishes work on its
commenting furth~r.

Taft campaign spokesman Breit
Buen~ k

di smissed Douglas' state·

ment as "factually challenged"
said Taft ha; made it clear he
would make budget cuts before
thinking about tax increases.

Legislators wrangle .over funding mechanism for school proposal

•

•

32 Er.t.om Str.ll04/4Jb.6692

Ohio

enttne

a

• Free Activation

JO.t/l6V- ~

W.\dt

~~614/77H'l00

EAST MEIGS - Eastern Local
Board of Education, special session,
Tuesday. 5:30 p.m. at the library:
Purpose. personnel and construction , with discuss ion and possible
action to be taken .
'

!

By JIM FREEMAN
district ha~ approached voters in renovatiolls to t,he high school. LatSentinel News Staff
hopes of building a new school.
er, on Aug. 6, 1996, voters narrowly
The Southern Local School DisIn November 1985, voters in the rejected, by approximately 50 votes,
trict will once again place school Southern Local School District were a 5.42 mill building issue.
construction is~ue before voters with presented with a 6. 19-mill, 23-year
District officials said at least lwo
a 5.39 mill. 23-year bond and levy bond issue for construction of a new things have changed making a bond
ilisue on the May 5.primary ballot.
elementary school building and for issue more appealing.
The Southern Local Board of renovations to the high school buildSuperintendent James Lawrence
Education approved the measure dur- "ing. The measure was defeated by said less millage was required fo• the
in_g a special meeting Monday night almost a two-to-one margin, 1,288 to upcoming ballot issue due to condi~~ the Southern High School in
682 votes.
tions in the bond market, while TreaRacine.
Seven years later, in November surer Dennie Hill said the taxpayers
The district hopes to build a new. 1992, the district proposed a similar are no longer paying for any of the
district-wide K-8 elementary school 5.8-mill. 23-year bond issue. The buildings in the district since the high
and add on to the existing h,igh school levy failed I,495 to 768, again by a school and later additions to the high
by coupling the $4,042.000 the bond two-to-one margin.
school are now paid off.
i'ssue would raise locally with
In March 1996, district voters narSouthern is one of two district in
$3,685,400 donated · by the state rowly rejected by a 110-vote margin the state, ,along with Norwalk City
under a school building funding plan a 6.1 -mill, 23-year bond levy issue Schools, still offered funding under
began in 1990.
once again in an anemptto construct the 1990 building assistance pro~mm,
May s·will mark the fifth time the a district-wide K-8 building and for
(Continued on Page 3)

17 Main SloW: l04/7SHT141

Oanwlil'blc

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, February 3, 1998

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Send questions to Ann Landers,
Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Century Blvd., Suite 700. Los Angeles,

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Prescription Oxygen is pleased to
announce that our office has relocated
from 210 E~ Main St~ in Pomeroy
to 47442 Rt. #338 in Racine.
.Looking to a New Year- and Happier
Our P~one . No. has cha ..ged·
'Endings for Meigs Humane Society
..
from 614·992·7267
to 740·949·0202
By Alden Waitt, President
Meigs County Humane Society

•

Monday, February 2, 1998:

Teenage girl tharikful for grandp~rer,ts' loving care
secuon and spotted what he thought
A oman rn Trnley Park, Ill., was a .toy car seat on the hrghway.
placed her 2-month-old son, who He mrght have contmued on h1s
was m hrs car seat, on the roof of her way, butt he baby blanket caught hJS
car. Tite woman, who also had her 6- eye, and he turned back to mvesuyear-old and 4-year-old chrldren m gate.
.
.
the car, had pulled o~er to ptck up a
Prough and hrs co-worker,
fnend and the fnend s mfant.,
Harold Eaton, drscovered the baby
In orde_r IO make room for the two and flagged down a passmg poltce
new passengers, she temporanly car. An ambulance was called, and
placed her mfa nt son on the roof of the mfant was t aken to the hesp nal.
the car. She then took off, forgettmg The doctors satd the car seat. protect·
that the baby was there. The chrld, ed the chrld from senous IDJUry.
sull strapped to the car seat. feU off
. The baby is in good condllion.
the roof of the car mto a busy r.nter- wnh JUSt a few .~uts, and brutses, so
s~cllon , wtth cars whtzzrng by rn all one ~tght say, All swe ll that ends
drrecl!ons.
well .. I call 11 a mtracle. -- Relieved
Mtchael Prough, a trucker from m Chrcago .
Memllvtlle, Ind ., passed the mlciDear Ch1cago: So do I. The

.

'

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

count~ mrle. .

...

By PAMELA BROGAN
Gannett New[l Service
· WASHING'fON - Pomeroy-area 'lawmakers are expn:ssin g bi.partisan
support for President Clinton's 1999 budget plan to use tbe highway tru.~t
fund to pay for the Appalachian Development Highway System.
• "It's a major plus for us," said Rep."Ted Strickla~d. D-Ohio, who repre-sehts 12 counties in Appalachia.
Clinton is proposing nearly $2.2 billion be spent from the transportation
fund over six years to fund the ARC highway system.
Rep. Bob Ney. R-Ohio, whose district also is made up mostly of
Appalachia. agreed.
·
"That's not a bad idea. we pay for highways in Illinois and other places,
so I don 't see·why we shouldn' t pay for the ARC highway out of the trust
fund," Ney said.
Rep. Alan Mollohan~ D-W.Va., said it wa~ a "good idea" to include the
ARC highway in the transportation trust fund because of the high costs of
building roads through mountainous terrain.
"This will finally give us ·a chance to finish the job," said Mollohan. ,
About 75 percent of the 3,025 ARC roadway is complete. Of the remaining 166 miles of unfinished highway. abou! 20~ miles are located in Ohio. •
Strickland also praised Clinton's budget for including expa11ded Medicare
coverage, more school aid, and a "Consumer Bill of Rights" for consumers
seeking treatment from managed care companies.
\,

"

During a day marked more by ordered by an Ohio Supreme Court not goi ng to he Llynamicly different
canceled votes and recessed sessions ruling last year.
in the ne.tr future than it is now," said
than by action, Davidson and her
Compounaing the problem for Sta te Rep . Bill Batchelder. R-MediDemocratic counterpart. • House · the House leaders were the wide ly na. the second-highe't ranking GOP
. Minority Leader Ross Boggs. D- · divergent reasons that membef' are House member. "There is plenty of
Andover, met privately throu ghout offering for opposing the measure.
money to fund all the sc hool aclivi the day trying 'to wring votes out of
lri the Republican caucus. a so lid ties ... without a tax increa ~e. ·· ~
reluctant members.
group of hardcore conservatives
Meanwh ile. State Rep . John
Lawmakers are racing. to meet a numbering, from 21 to 25 have repeat- Carey. R-Well.,ton. supporb pulling
Wednesday deadline lo gef !he half- edl y stated that they oppme any sales a sales tax hike on the ballot saying
ce nt sale~ tax on the May ballot.lfthe . tax ·increase. even one that goes it will be the best plan that can be
agreed upon.
House manages to get a half-cent before voters.
measure passed. the Senate is expectPointing to increases in stale
"I don 't rhink it compile' with the
.ed to act quickly to pa&gt;Wi it.
income taxes collected gene rated court bull think it move' us close r."
Also looming fs a March 24 dead- from a growing economy. they argue · he .,aid. "If my ch ild is starving. I'd
line to implement an overhaul of the that a tax hike is not necessary.
rather give him half a loaf of bread
state's school funding sys tem as
"In a_! I likelihood. the economy is
(Cpntinued on Page 3)

Reyision in tax language
wins approval in Pomeroy
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
Changes to the language of
Pomeroy's income tax regulations
were approved when Pomeroy Vil lage Council met Monday' evening.
The third and linal reading on the
amended village tax resolution was
held la.&lt;t night. The new resolution
modifies language only. and does not
change taxation rates.
· According to Clerk Kathy Hyse ll ,
the new wording on the resolution
brings the tax code into uniformity
with federal taxation language. Like
the original ordinance, it requires the
withholding of I percent income tax
for all employees working within the
village
~nd the remitting of those taxLEGISLATORS' RESPONSE - Senate Budget Committee
•
es
by
employers
to the village on a
Chairman Pete Domenlci, R·N.M., left, end House Budget Com- .
quanerly
basis.
mlttee Chairman .John Kaalch, R-Ohlo, accused President ClinThe amendments also include new
ton of returning to olcl-falhloned Democratic tax-and-spend polilanguage clarifying net profits for the
cies In hl1 budget propoul during a Capitol Hill news conference
Monday. (AP)
t
purpose of tax withholding.
l?

'

•

Jim Fry of Seneca Drive met with
council to discuss various problems
experienced in the Salisbury community with the village water system.
Fry asked counci l to con;ider
installing a valve system to prevent
outages in the area when a water leak
or other service problem is experi. enced downtown. Fry also related
· problems experienced by re1idents in
· the area with water pressure · and
water quality after service problem.&lt;
occur.
Mayor Frank Vaughan told Fry he
would investigate the problems with
the village water department.
Counci I approved the purchase of
used guard rail to be installed on East
Main Street in the Spring Avenue '.
· area. The cost of $4,950 to PDK Con- ·
struction will include installation of
I, 100 feet of £Uardrail. Installation is
expected to begin at once. according
(Continued on Page 3)
'•

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