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Pomeroy • Mlddlepo~ Ohio

Page 12 • The Daily Sentinel

· Thursday, February 5, 1998

Ohio Lottery

Former World Wa II Tuskegee
Airman promotes avfation to youth

Mr. and Mrs. Steven Barnett

----tGannaway-Barnett
maids were Elo zabcth Down1e of
Columbu s. Tiffany Sherman of
Youngstown, and Robyn DeRosa,
.sister of the groom. of Charlotte, N.
C. The attendants wore floor length
black halter bodice gow ns and carried nosegays and fire and ice roses .
Shawn Bush of CheSler was best
man. Groomsmen were Michael
Smith. Gallipolis, Randall Johnston
of Quantico, Va. and Jake Gannaway. brmher of the bride. Marieua.
A dinner-dance reception was
held at the Blcnnerhasset Hotel in
Parkersburg. The rehearsal dinner
hosted by the groom's parents was
the Lafayelle Hotel in Marietta.
The bride is a 1997 graduate of
Ohio University and a graduate stu1cnt in the Ohio University physical
therapy program. The groom is also
a 1997 graduate of Ohio University
and is employed by Archer Daniels
Midland of Fostoria as a cbemical
cngmeer.
Following a honeym oon 10
lire and icc roses.
Jamaica.
the couple resides 10
lorena Turley of Point Pleasant,
Athens
a
nd
Ftndlay.
W. Va. was maid of honor. Brides-

Allison NiCoc Gannaway and
Steven Ronald Barnett were married
on Aug. 2. 1997 at the First Presbyterian Church in Mariella with the
Rev. Craig Butler offi ciating the
double-rin g ceremony.
The bride is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Thomas ..Gannaway of
Salem Center, and the granddaughter of Charlie and Bracci Coe, and
Mary Gannaway of Draper, Va., and
the late Thomas Gannaway.
The groom is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Ronald Barnell of Tuppers
Plains. He is the grandson of
Edward and Irene Rakowitt of San
Antonio, Texas. Clarence Barnell of
Tuppers Plains. and the late Georgia
Barnett.
Given in noJmage by her parent~
and escorted to the altar by her
father. the bride wore a candlelight
ivory off-the-shoulder gown will:
&gt;Ced pearl bodice. She carried a cascadi ng bouquet of V~rginia roses and

For basic luning, he was sent to
Keesler Fieldt- Miss" which was
strictly segregated, "separate but
equal." Blaclt, trainees lived separately, ate septrately "and had our
own PX."
•
Harmon hall· experienced' scgregalion as a boy in Los Angeles. "We
had to si t . in the balcony at the
movies; there '¥as o".ly one restaurant (Clinton '!!~, Cafeteria) in Los
Angeles that served blacks."
But he camt&lt;from an integrated
school and neighborhood. so resented the need for an all-black outfit.
"It was a paradox," he says. " We
wanted to fly, but we objected to
being segregated."
Trained black pilots didn 't fly in
combat until ~er Eleanor Rooseve h. intcreste\ in the possibility.
visited Tuskegee Institute. an allblack college in Alabama, and tlcw
as a passenger ; ith Alfred Anderson, a black pilot who had taught
himself to fly.
After the flight, Mrs. Roosevelt
went on the rcl!!lnd: "That's one
myth we can gel rid of- black pen1
pic can fly."
Airfields at Tuskegee became a
~~ining ground !9! black pilots in
1941. Not evcry''~plicant got in.
says Harmon. w~se college-prep
courses in algcbj)l, physics and
trigonometry keptifilm going.
He was assig~c~ to the 477th
Composite Group"'which included
new bomber pilotsAJid fighter pilots
back from the war i!) Europe.
The 477th was:VUining to go to
Japan when the war ended. After
four years, in 194~. the Tuskegee
program closed down.

Discharged · from service, Harmon enrolled at Pepperdine C9llegc
to study music composition and conducting.
When the K11rean War broke out,
he was recalled In duty to a desegregated and nev ty organized U.S. Air
Force.
By then. he' was accustomed to a
desegregated world - in college. at
businesses wnere he worked as an
insurance salesman. bowling pin setter. and actor in several movies.
During his hitch. Hannon was
often the only black crcwmember
and he was both pilot and commanding officer. He flew B-29s, B-36s.
B-50s and other big planes.

"Dreams of a Promised Land"
The leader and three appointed with many opinions.''
was the theme of the pledge service readers presented the program.
Close to $20 million in undcsigpresented by Karen Walker at the Afterwards, each member walked to nated giving by the one million
January meeting of the Racine Unit- the altar and placed her pledge card member UMW. is used for provided Methodist Women.
in the basket and poured her cup of ing food, shelter, education. humanOn an altar table there was a soil in the container with four bulbs. rights advocacy, and empowcnnent
cross, a basket for t~c pledge cards
The seeds were planted as a of women, children and youth withand an empty plant container.
reminder of the seeds of hope grow- in the United States and beyond.
The program f0c•sed on seeking ing in the lives of people whose Lee said.
a promised land. it ...,as noted that strength . cour1ge and faith in God
Ti:e business meeting opened
many have wandered in the wilder- are nunured. _Prayer ended the· pro- with memhers repeating the UMW .
ness for long years, persevering gram.
purpose. One new member was
through faith and commitment.
Lee Lee gave the mission repon. welcomed.
Walker said that we must share the She stated that mission in the 21st
Karen Walkc1 gave the secretary's
repon and correspondence
dreams and realities of searching . century will not be the same as in
for Christians in Brazil. this year's the 20th or 19th centuries.
was read.
The new prayer chain list was
mission study topic of UMW.
Global mission will mean a
After scripture was read from change 10 environment and distributed and the new program
J,oshua. a hymn was sung. pledge resources.
book was explained.
Ladies will start working on
cards were distributed and small
Mission will have to be interaccup~ of polling soil were given to
tive and will involve people within Monday morn.ings at the ~·burch
each member.
the church and the secular world staning at 9:30. Trying . to increase

membership was discussed. It was
agreed to serve Alpha Delta Kappa
dinner on April 21.
Spring retreat will be April 25
and School of Christian Missiorl
will be in July and some mcmhers
arc planning to attend.
The 1998 Prayer Calendar is on
order. Get well cards were signed
and the next meeting was
announced for Feh. 23.
Refreshments were served by
Chris Hill and Ella Mac Hill.
Aucnding were those named and
Alice Wolfe, Jennifer Walker,
Melissa Harkness Ruth Frank, Tara
Norman. Mar~ic West, M:~rilyn
Bogard . Judy Papc. Cindy Winebrenner, :md guest Belly Jean
Bryant .

By BETH ASHLEY
Marin Independent Journal
Anhur Harmon was one of the
legendary black pilots who rna~
World War II history in a group
called the Tuskegee Airmen.
Toda-'. he no longer flies, but is a
proud member of the Tusk( ~ee Airmen Inc. (TAl), a national organizalion of ex -pilots. FAA officials and
civilians (not necessarily black)
founded in 1972 to promote aviation
as a career for economically disadvantaged youth.
" 1 was glad to be part of the
Tuskegee Airmen - proud to be
pan of it,'' says Harm~n . 72, of San
Rafael, Calif.
But as a youth in 1943 he didn't
care about making history: " I just
had this burning desire to fly."
The Tuskegee Aonnen - 992 of
them - were ihe f~rst-cver African
Americans to be trained as pilots in
thc Anny Air Corps (precursor to the
Air Force. who ch was limned in
1947).
The military services were stnctly segregated then . and opr,ortunities
for black people were few. In fact.
the black airmen flew in one-man
li ghter planes instead of mul:ieng10cd bombers hecause no one in
authority thought a black man could
command a flight crew: The compromise was "one man , one plane."
says Hannon.
Training for hlack pilots came
only after very public pressure from
the black press. the NAACP, thenSen. Harry S. Truman and first lady
Eleanor Roosevelt.
The black pilots' record was
impeccable: Those who flew protec-

tive escon for B-17 missions over
Europe never lost a single bomber,
Harmon says, although 66 of their
• own number were killed.
Ron Lucas, 65, of Terra Linda,
Calif., is national president for the
Tuskegee Airmen Inc. and has been
in touch with filmmaker G,urge
Lucas about another film about the
Tu~kegee Ainnen.
·
Lucasfilm spokesman Lynne
Hale says, "George is still very
muc~ interested in the Tuske.gee
story. The project is still in development."
Such a film would not be the
lirst. An original HBO production,
" Tuskeegee Airmen," aired in
August 1995, starring Laurence
Fishburne, Counney Vance and
Allen Payne.
In reality, Tuskegee Ainnen Inc.
has I,900 members nationwide, but
there arc only 300 of the original airmen left - and only half belong.
Most of the 300 are in their 70s.
Their wanime commander,
retired Gen. Benjamin 0 . Davis Jr..
is 85.
But they were mostly teen-agers
when World War II broke out. A rule
change in 1942 allowed young men
to apply for pilot training at age 17
and be called up as soon as they finishcd high school and turned 18.
Before that. pilot-trainees were older
and had to be college graduates.
Harmon, who had made model
airplanes as a kid and belonged to
the radio-sponsored Jimmy Allen
Flying Club, 'enlisted while a senior
in high school and joined at 18 .
"Somehow. I was going to fly," he
says.

Racine United Methodist Women host

Bobcats, Herd
post victories
in league play
Sports on Page 5

en tine
'Vol. 48, NO. zoe

:Sy JOHN McCARTHY
'Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS- Republican Gov. George Voinovich said he would veto
any pan of Ohio's new school-funding plan that was not paid for after the
·next school year.
The Senate's top Democrat agreed with Voinovich and added that the governor also should look at two accountability laws that took effect last year.
Those laws have no funding beyond June 30, 1999, either.
"He has to take a close look at that and see if they're funded, if he's responsible, .. said Sen"!" Minority Leader Ben Espy, D-Columbus.
Voinovich 's threat came Thursday, one day after the Legislature decided
not to ask voters to raise the state sales tax by a penny per dollar- t'rom 5
percent to 6 percent - a.&lt; pan of a change in the Ohio Constitution. The deadline for putting constitutional issues on the May 5 primary ballot was Wednesday.
Lawmakers may consider a similar bill that would ask voters to raise the
sales tax without changing the constitution, which would give legislators a

Far East that he won't name.
He was transferred to Alaska and
in 1904 becmno chief of lloght sa iCty for the Alaskan Air Command.
retiring four years later.
mu~: h

Air-

alive.

Two years ago. he attended a
reunion in Tuskegee .
"They sent an csc(lrl for us a~ the

Alabama border. and we drove in
four buses hack to Tuskegee." he
said. "It was a highly emotional
""t.
.
Harmon regrets that he missed
becoming a fighter pilot. " I was
very gung -ho then. and I yearned f&lt;ir
comhat.l still do ."
But mostly he's grateful that he
got to fly: "My hoyhood dream
came true ... ·

From AP, Staff Reports
Meigs County's routine was
mostly unaffected by overnight
snowfall and ice that plagued other parts Of Ohio.
·
Southern local Schools operated this morning on a normal sehed:
ule on all bus routes with the
exception of Roy Jones Road.
according to Superintendent James
Lawrence.
. Syracuse Elementary iti South·
I sent its students home at
noon Thursday due to heating
problems that were correCted in Ihe
afternoon.
The geographic area associated
with Southern LoctJI escaped much
of the snow and ice that was
expected to fall during the night.
Lawrence said.
Eastern and Meigs Local
schools were operating on a
delayed schedule this morning,
mostly due to ice-covered roads in
the we.&lt;tern and nonhero pans of
the county.
Some cancellations were noted.
including Access Head Stan classes and home visits.
No accidents were reported
overnight by the Meigs County
Sheriff's Depanment.
Rush-hour ·commuters had to
negotiate icy bridges and mads
again today as the Cincinnati area
coped with a record-breaking
snowstorm that kept most schools
and many businesses closed in
southern Ohio for,.:u~ird consecutoveday.
~

By MARGE COLBORN
The Detroit News
You·,.~

seen

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t l(h.' . li~ht!

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yuu \\i.lnl

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hudgct IS limitcLI .
A~.· t:nn..lin~ to Los Ang~lc..; Jc~1gnl!r

Cohn Cowie and Vaseline market in!!
pcr-.;onncJ ,. ynu 'it ill c:m turn your ho-

hum hathroom onto a pleasure palace
simpl y arid inexpensively. Here arc
their enhance- the-sen ses tips for
transformi ng a hathronm into a.
0

. mouJ roo m:

EDISON ALIVE -A portrayal on the life and times of Thomas E_dison, his curiosity as a youngster and his career as an inventor, was
presented at the Pomeroy Elementary School recently by Mobile Ed
Productions. The actor portraying Edison was in authentic costume
lor the program which emphasized the inventor's fascination with
electricity and the telegraph. Jake Venoy was one of several students who assisted with demonstrations,

~
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' ~
"-'

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(foaming creams. beads) for fragrance. color. ski n pampering and
decoration. Clear d~cantcrs or an
. antique bowl arc ideal containers.
- Turn storage space into decorative accents. Consider rolling bath
towels and placing them in a large
wicker basket. Sachets and cedar
balls stored with towels will keep
them fresh and fragrant.
•
- Create atmosphere with candles . Gro'up candles together for
visual impact.
- lnstall'a dimmer switch or buy
soft white light bulbs to control
light. Avoid using fluorescent lighting because it can cast unnattering .
shadows on skin.
- Line drawers with inexpenSive fabric such as terry cloth cotton.
- Acccssori&gt;.e with decorative
mirrors . A group of smaller mirrors
around the vanity adds depth to the
room .
- ·...:.... fill the air with music by placing a speaker or ponable radio in the
bathroom.
-- Strategically arrange fresh
fl owers, polled plants or flowering
orchids . - ·

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Cba~arral Elite

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By KATHRYN CROW
sentinel Correspondent
Water rates will be increased in
Syracuse next month, according to
information presented to Syracuse
Village Council at Thursday night's

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·Located·
·i ,., .
.

PM, Congress lend
support to military strike
But Arab world's signals on Iraqi action stay mixed

WATCH
FOR
\._

l'ftiRA ..

ICY REMINDER - Central Ohio was hit with freezing rain
Thursday, enca1ing everything with a thick layer of Ice, lnclud·
lng these signa at Hlghbanks Metro Park In Columbus. (AP)
Sleet and freezing rain uggra-

vateu the problems caused by two
days of heavy snowfall.
"We haven't won this until the
roads are dry and the tempemture
gets above 32 degrees. There's no

snow on the roads now. but as long

as it's below freezing , bridges
have a tendency to refreeze." saii.l
Dave Yacchqri. an Ohio Dcpanment of Transportation supervisor
who oversees maintenance of the
interstate highways in Hamilton
County.

Water rate increase described
to Syracuse Council members

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willl any Sllll pun:llas8.

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Larry Ebersbach, presodent of the
Syracuse Board of Public Atl'airs. mel
with council to inlorrn them of th~
planned increase. The increase,
according lo Ebersbach. will be as
follows :
Residents 64 years of age or
younger, now paying $10.75, will
pay $12. an increase of $1.25: those
65 and older now paying $10 will pay
$10.75, an increase of 75 cents: and
those uutside Jhe corporation paying
a $12 base rate will pay $13.25, an
increase of $1.25.
Roben Wingett. grants administrJtor. met wirh council to discuss the

Bridgeman Street project.
Advertising will begin next week .
for bids on the repair/slope stabilization project. according to Wingell.
Advertising will be done over a twoweek ,peri&lt;;{J. he said.
Wingell reported that he had met
with the engineer Thursday and was
given verbal approval to proceed with
the advertising. Bids on the project
will be OIJ(ned on feb . 26 at 2 p.m.
A grant in the amount of $104.788
has been approved for the project,
. according to Wingett. Estimated cost
of construction is $100,113.25, with
the total cost of the proje~· t
$114,11 3.25. The $14,()()() is for
design and conslruction supervision,
he said.
Wingett also noted rhat easements
will have to be obtained from residents living in the area of the pro'posed construction. It was also not-

By GEORGE GEDDA
Associated Preas Writer
WASHINGTON - President
Clinton is winning strong suppon for
his Iraq policies from visiting British
Prime Minister Tony Blair and from
Congress. but the signals received
from the Arab world are decidedly
mixed.
Blair, preparing to meet with Clinton, said today while making the
roun'ds of morning television talk
c
'
shtlws: "We· Jrnve got to make it
absolutely clear to Suddam Hussein
that he is not allowed to develop
weapons of mass destruction. If he
doesn't come back into Iine to let
weapons insiJ(clors in. then we will
have to force him to do so."
Clinton, at the National Prayer
Breakfast, spoke of the "diflicult
. decision we are facing now ...
because of the concern all Americans
have that we not expose our children
- if we can help it - to the dangers
of chemical and biological warfare.''
Blair told reponers Wednesday
while en route here that he plans "to
tell people about the evils of Iraqi
President Saddam Hussein. He is a
nasty dictator sitting on an awful lot
of nasty sruff.''
Speaking on condition of
anonymity. Blair's aides said Brituin
is contemplating a period of two to
three weeks to educate the public
about the extent of lmq's arsenal and
to exhaust diplomatic options.
Those comments left the impression that the earliest period for U.S.
military action againstlr~q would be
in the second half of February.
The admini stration has said that
no decision on military action has
been made. It also has refused In discuss a timetable. rejecting appeals by
the Internati onal Olympic Committee
that any such action be delayed until

after the winter Olympic games, set
to stan friday in Japan and end Feb.
22.
"First and foremost, the president
has an obligation, as commander-inchief and as our chief diplomat. to
protect U.S. interests.'' presidential.
press secretary Mike McCurry said
Wednesday.
Clinton said Secretary of State
Madeleine Albright. in sox days of
consu ltations in Europe and the Persian Gulf. found ,l\ ."strong consensus" in suppon of the need for lra4
to allow U.N. inspectors unfettered
access to search for forbidden
weapons.
.. All of us would prefer a genuine
diplomatic solution,'' Clinton suid at
a White House education even t. "The
best way to stop Saddam from build~
ing nuclear, biological or chemical
weapons is si mply to get the international inspectors back to work with
no rel\lraints .- "

strokes against Iraq. if they are
deemed necessary. And McCurry
expressed confidence th:ot interna tional backing for a military solution
to the Iraq crisis would be fonhcom ing if diplomatic eflons fai led.
Arab League Secretary-General
Esonat Abdel Meguid said in Jordan
that il was difticult for him to believe
" that any Arab country would accept
a military strike on lmq. w~ ore
endeavoring today to find a peaceful
way out of the crisis." Jor~ani:10 and
Syrian olticials also said they oppose
the usc of l(&gt;rce.
AI-Ahram. Egypt's leading stateowned newspaiJ(r, s:oid. "The Amerilan position towan.J Iraq cannot be'
described as anything but ux:n.:ive.
aggressive. unwise anJ um.:~uin g
ahout the lives uf lrm~i s. who ar..:
unnecessarily subject In san~:tions

Defense Secretary William Cohen
said Wednesday night that Clinton agrt!t!Ll thatlrat~ mw. t comply w1th tht!
will likely approve within the ne xt United Nation s' Sccurny Co.uncil
t"o days sen·ding additional U.S. . resolut1mh . He Llicl not ment ion
lorces to the Persian Gull. Inter- Mubi..irak\ position on the u:-.e ot milviewed on CNN'&gt; "Lorry King live" itary force .
show. he siJ(c ificall y mentioned a
Albright returned amund dawn
Marine Expeditionary Unit - nor- WeUncsllay fnHH her "ix-J;1y jt1urm:y
mally a multipurpose: contmgcnt of and spent the ua} conferring wi th
about 2.01Kl Marines aboard amphibi - administration. congrc'i..,llln&lt;.d ~and
ous ships and eq uipped with a small foreign k ad..:r-; &lt;.1bout thl· latcst dcvdnumber of combat aircraft.
opmcnt:-..
They would JOin 24At~l U.S. military men and women already in the
She sU!.!!.!t:steJ th:.t t Arah lc~u.Jers '
regmn. mo' r at s~~~ with rwo aircraft public pn.;ilinns may differ sharp ly
mmbat carrier battk group&gt; that from what they say pri valo:'ly. hinting
include 14 combat &gt;hips, II suppon th:ot several she la"cd to were willvessels and .125 warplanes. ,
ing to provide military su pport.
There were strong signs ur united
" We helieve we have all the
bipanisan support in Congress for a cooperation we need across the
get-tough policy with Iraq. law - bnard." she '"id Tuesday in Bahrain
makers were busy Wednesday fa.sh- lifter meet in !.! with the emir, Sheik Isa
ioning a re~olurion supportin g air hin Sa lman AI Khalifa .

ed that Winuett has obtained a grant ·
for the pool-proj&lt;eltn the amount uf
$17,625 through the Nature Works
Program.
Council President Larry lavender
suggested that council purchase two
diving boards and two lifeguard
chairs at a total cost of $4.640, with
the money to come of the pool fund.
Total cost of planned pool projects is
$23,500. Other expenses include
electric wiring and roof repair.
Lavender also noted that council
should consider hiring a pool managel'- and lifeguards, apll_ setting
wages. He also talked about the
parade for the ba.•eball kickoff and
suggested trying to increase craft
stands at the ali-day even!.
Mayor George Connolly noted
that new picnic tables are needed for
the shelter. and suggested that the old
· (~ntlnued on Page 3)

.J

MA«£ fW) f£EL liC£ AKH;
SHJfRlR liM,., M~ • •

Athens County Prosecutor Bill they saw him accept the money, Bid• ATHENS (AP) - A grJnd jury
indicted an environmental activist for Biddlestone said Kister approached _dlestone said.
As a spokesman for the group
allegedly taking money in exchange United Mine Workers Local 1340
tor not lighting against a proposed President Don Nunley and offered to ·ohio University Campus Greens,
keep activists away from mine hear- Kister has protested proposed mining
~a l mine.
at Ohio University's Dysan Woods in
ings
in exchange for S 1.750.
• Chad Kister. 27, was indicted
Belmont County. plans by Bucking·
Dunley
contacted
the
Athens
i'hursdny on two counts of exton ion.
ham
Coal Co. lo open mines in
County
Sheriff's
Department
about
He faces up to five years in jail, if
Athens
and Perry .counties and the
the alleged plot and helped secretly
c):mvicted.
reopening
of a road in part of the
·. Kister has denied the accusation tape record Kister.
Wayne
National
F&lt;irest.
.Authorities aves ted Kister after
and ha.• said that he wa.~ sel up .
'

"

..

EXHIBITS JUDGED · - Science projects
completed by eighth grade students at the
Meigs Middle School were judged Thursday In
preparation for the annual Science Fair and ·
open hOuse to be held Monday evening. The
open house, where students, parents and oth·
'• er visitors will have the opportunity to view the
more than a hundred exhibits, will begin at 5:30
p.m., with an awards aasembly to be held a~
. Jf5:30 p.m. From the left are, Jason Hershberg·

er,' whose project dealt with moving air and
density, and Rees Wyant, center, who did an
experiment on cryogenics. He used six worms
In a glass jar which were frozen for three days,
then thawed In the refrigerator. Two survived
for saveral minutes after they were removed
from refrigeration. Pictured judging Wyant's
project Is Vinton Rankin, an environmental
technician at Philip Sporn, (Sentinel photo by
Cfharlene Hoeflich)
,
tl

\

:ond humil iation."
Clinton spnkc for 10 minules
Wednesday with Egyptian Prc, idcnt
H'"ni Muharak. McCurry saou they

Environmental activist faces indictments
CONFLICT RESOLUTION - E;rin Perkins, Amorette Salser,
Jeremy Vincent, and Eric Sydenstrlcker, left to right, were the
December and January winners of the "peace" p~ogram awar~. T!le
program is designed to assist students In solvmg their own con·
flicts, As winners the students served as "principal for a day" at the
school.

f

Brit~sh

· Coca

Simple pleasures
in the home bath

payment

couple of more weeks to work on the plan.
sizes in poo school districts. The failed tax increase would have paid for
The failed constitutional amendment would have needed 60 votes, or a them beyond he cum:nt budget.
three-tifths majority in the 99-member House. ;The final vote wa.~ 58 in favor
Mike Daws n. the governor 's press secretary. would not say which item•
and 40 opposed. The new bill would require a simpl" majority for passage. Voinovich migH veto. including increases in the state's IJ(r-pupil spending.
The Legislature on Sunday also pa.o;.~ed House Bill650, which implements The state current •uarantees per-pupil spending of $3,66 3: the_new plan
the funding changes that the tax increa.&lt;e was intended to pay for.
would raise that tigu o $3,851 next schQol year. the only year for which
Voinovich said in a news relea-;e thai he "intends to veto sections of House money is in place. and to $4,414 in four years.
Bi11650 that are unfunded beyond FY (fiscal year) 1999."
Dawson also declined to say whether Voinovich would sign the new verIf the state implemented the plan without the money, cuts lo other agen- sion of the bill, which the Legislature will begin debating next week .
"We' re having some preliminary discussions with the Legislature about
cies could averoge 3.5 percent, if the ei:onomy stays healthy, the relea.&lt;e said.
If a recession occurs in 2000, a.&lt; some economists predict. cuts could reach that and I'm nol willing to comment on that at this point," Dawson said.
Meanwhile, Espy suggested that Voinovich. in addition to vetoing the
25 percent in the budget year beginning July I, 1999, the relea.&lt;e said.
· The state's economic analysts and lawyers were studying the bill to deter- unfunded changes. also take a look at two school and student accountabili·
mine what won't be fuiuled beyond June 30, 1999. when the current budget ly bills. He urged Voinovich to seek a repeal of any unfunded programs.
Dawson played down the costs of those progmms, which include more
period ends.
The current budget has money to pay for new programs in the bill that . credits needed for gmduation and money for chaner school programs.
lawmakers passed Sunday, including ali-day kindergarten and smaller class
"Either one of those bills htiS nowhere near the financial consequences
of (House Bill) 650. It's comparing apples to buildings." Dawson said.

Snowfall
postpones·
day's start
~in schools

meeti~g on ·~,earn~ of a Promised Land'

35 cents

AGannell Co. Newspaper

Voinovich wants assurance on pia

more than 100 rcconnaisancc missions over "scnsiti,·c·· ~rcas in the

Tus~egce

1 Section, 10 Pages,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, February 6, 1998

:c 1998, Ohio Valley Publlohlllfl Compony

Harmon's time in the service -

For Hannon. the

Cloudy tonl,g ht with a
chance of snow flurries,
lows In the mid 20s.
Saturclay, cloudy, flurries
possible. Highs near 40. ·

•

he didn't rctir,c until 1968 - coin cided with the Cold War. and he flew

men story is still very

Pick 3: .
5-3-9
Pick 4:
5-9-3-1
Buckeye 5:
9·16-18·20·23

•

!

t

I

�Commentary

Page2
Friday, February 6. 1998

Pres1dent Chnton won favorable
headlines recently when he pro111 Court Street, Pomaroy, Ohio
posed expandmg Med1care to cover
814-992·2156 • FIX 992·2157
those aged 55 to 64, pnmded they
"buy m"to the prog·dm
But before the government 's
health program fm the elderly IS
expanded, we'd l1ke to propose once
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
agam that more be done to combat a
problem that's as old as Med1care
ROBERT L. WINGETT
1tself fraud , waste and abuse
Publlaher
Recent ant1-fraud lnlllatJves bj
the Health Care Fmancmg AdmmiStrauon -- the agency that runs
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
MARGARET LEf:IEW
Medtcare
- arc sure to help a hnle
Gtntl'll Maneger
Controller
The agency recently announced
plans to force all suppliers of
Durable Medt cal Equ1pment to post
TIN .S.UMI Wl''cCNJloN ,.,.,_ to the ldltM from ,....,.. on • btoMI ,.,.,. ot , _
a $50,000 surety bond as a way of
- - - _ , , _ , - , . - - olbelnf pu/&gt;11-. l)podlo!·
" " ' - jMO_.,.., .. . . . , , . - - - - ll/gnllllfW, 1 - .
weedmg out fly by -n1ght operators
.,.., ~ , _ - · fplc/tf I -lfflltto'l I l'fflol-10 I ,.,._I l who bilk the system
ot
Ill: &amp;.-. Ill 11M Edllor. .,.,. s.tlllnfl, Ill C""" St. l'omen&gt;y, 011/o
.u7fl: M, FAX 10 lf,_~IIS7
1
People like the M1am1 n1ghtclub
.~~;~~~~----------~--owner who tesuti cd under anonym•ty last week before a Senate subcommmce
Back m 1988, th1s mghtclub
owner filled out an applicatiOn to
hecomc a med1cal supply prov1der
!Xar Edttor.
tor the elderly, and sent 11 to
Have you been bramwashed by the msmuatwns and mnuendoes made by Mcd1care Without checkmg any of
the news mcdta commg from Washmgton '
the mformatiOn on the application.
These arc the kmd s of accusattons that do trrcparable damage to a person's honor and tntcgnty , to shame the htgh public office the person repre-

-~

I

Letters to the editor

Innocent until proven guilty

sents

We all know the publ1c has formed an optmon, no mauer what the outcome an opmton wtll never change,leavmg a llngenng doubt m their mmds
Let's not make a rush to JUdgment Arc we dcsccraung one of our bas1c
laws we have sworn to uphold. that a person ts mnoccnt unul proven gutlty
Ill a court of law'
I don't believe thatts what "gomg on there now
Virgil Walker
Racine

IT's

Med1care offi·
c1als gave the
applicant
a
prov1der Jdenllflcauon number over the
phone
So began a
lucrat1ve cnmmal operatiOn
m whtch the
mghtclub owner
Moller &amp;
gave
elderly
Anderson
south Flond~ans
cheap, store-bought m1lk and b1lled
Med1care for as much as $500,000
per month By the ume th1s crook
was arrested m 1994. he had m1lked
the Med1care program for $32 m•llton
Stunned lawmakers hstened as
the mghtclub owner, now scrvmg a
10 year pnson sentence. relayed h1s
story last week at a Senate subcommmee
heanng
mvesugatmg
Med1care fraud About 14 percent of
the money Mcd1carc pays out 1s lost
to fraud and waste, a total of some
$23 b1111on annually
Under the shtcld of anonym•IY
the former mghtclub owner
cxplamed that he had made a blunder when he first started the scheme

AccuWeather11 forecast for ~n.11in1e

see~ 3'1 'leaR$

Si~Ce

MY L.aST
.CoNFeSSiott. MY
CotlSC!etlce iS CLE!aR.

Where has honor gone?
Dear Edtlor,
AI one t1me m1lllons of people from all around the world came to our
shores They wanted our freedoms, our llbert1es and our lifestyle, but even
more 1mportantthey wanted our form of government and the type of leaders
that we had At one ume nauons and peoples looked to Amenca s pohucal
leaders for leadership and for gu1dance.
There was a ttme m our past that those elected to office had a h1gh sense
of duty and honor Back then 1f an elected offic1al was caught m a scandal
and had been or was about to be exposed to d1sgrace and d1shonor themselves and the1r pany. they would purchase a rope and go to the nearest bam.
or they would lock ihemselves m the1r office and shortly after that there
would be a loud bang.
When Andrew Jackson was President and a man dared 10 call his w1fe a
whore because she was a d1vorccd woman and a nat1ve Amencan woman,
Prcs1den1 Jackson challenged the man to a duel out behmd the While House
where he shot and k1lled the man Respect for h1m and the office went up
after th1s took place
Those m government today cannot keep their pants Zipped up, cannot
keep the IT hands out of other people's pockets, and they cannot keep theiT
elecuon prom1scs PreSident Clinton adm1ts that he slept w1th Genmfer
Flowers years ago. but he states he dtdn't have a 12-year affaiT w1th her
It doesn't make any difference 1f 11 was 12 years or 12 months He sull
went to bed w1th someone other tharrhis WJ[e That m nsclf was not a smart
move Hillary Clmton IS a very powerful, very aggrcssJVC and very mtelhgcnt woman 11 her husband " Impeached because ol another sexual atfmr
she may sue hun lor dtVOJ CC und m the procc" destroy hun as well And 1f
all that happens he may lose the love and support of their one and only chtld
We should remember two old saymgs that power corrupts and absolute
power corrupts ,Jhsolutcly. and that those who lorget h1story arc doomed 10
repeat 11
The w,Jy thmgs .uc gomg, do not be surpnscd 1f sometime 10 the next
century someone sets up ,1 hall of shame where those governors congressmen . scn,Jiors vtcc preSidents and preSidents who ha\c dtsgraccd and dtshonored themselves m olficc wtll he cnshnncd for all the world to sec
We have commlltecs that look mto thcJT alfam once they arc 10 olficc I
thmk the ttme has come lur America to have a commlllee to look 1nto them
he lore they arc 10 olticc A comnul!cc wnh equal numhers from hoth Sides
and a committee w1th lhc power and authonty to mlorm the pubhc of what
they find
If thmgs contmue as they arc do not he surpnsed 1f someday you sec the
olilce ol preSident lor sale up 10 the highest h1ddcr as the leadership ol
~tnl.:ICnl Rome om:c wa:-. Anc1cn1 Rome ha ~ I he most powerful war mach1nc
· .md lor ~00 years from I00 B C to 400 A D was the power that ruled wcst~tn Eu10pc
, ' But anc1cnt Rome Iell hccau&gt;c the leadership was more mtercstcd m lill'tng thCIT own pockets and because they lost s1ght of the way they were elected In serve thCJr people and the IT natiOn Every Amen&lt; an wa&gt; g•ven by our
Joundtng fathers the most powerful means to ca~se and effect government m
the world M1lhons 11f Amemans lought suffered hell on canh and countless numhcr&gt; of them d1ed to ensure that we and those who come after us
Will always have the power to vote 11 doesn't mauer 11 you have a f1fth grade
cducat1on m a Hanard cdu&lt;allon, tl you arc d1rt poor or 1f you arc worth a
1m Ilion dollars
At someumc Amenca Will reach the crossroads of history If we gutde her
on the correct path, there 1s no hmll to what she can do and become If we
allow her unto the wrong path. then we too m1ght go as anc1en1 Rome In
1992 I heard people say they didn't hkc Chnton or Bush, but they were gmng
to vote for the lesser of two ev1ls
Why should we have to do so' Th1s IS our country The 11u1e has come for
us to take II back What would happen 1f, at the next elcctJ• n, mstead ol 30
m•llion voters turmng out all 100 m1lhon voters would •um out No one
should ever g•vc up thc1r power 10 vote tn Amenca
lJJS up to all of us to sc, to 11 tloul those elected to of' ·,· can keep theiT
pants 11pped up. can keep thcJT hands out of others' pocl ~I&lt; and can keep
their election pro m1scs to the very nest of thc1r ab1llty, or we Will put mto
office lhOSC who Will
· We have the nght we have the power Let us go forward to a new and
hcucr Amcnca. an Amcnca where we the people w1ll be proud of our elected leader and the leadership that they g1vc
David Edwards
Pomeroy

Today in history
By The Associated Press
Today 1s Fnday. Feb 6. the 37th day ol 1998 There arc 328 days left m
the year
Today's H1ghhght m History
On Feb 6. 1952. Bntam \ Kmg George VI died H1s daughter, Elizabeth
II succeeded h1m
'
On th1s date
In 1756. Amcnca's th1rd VICe president. Aaron Burr, was born 1n Newark,
NJ
In 1778. the Umted States won ofticl31 recognttJon from France as the
nat1ons s1gned trcaucs m Pans
.
Jn 1788 Massachusells became 1hc s1xth state to rat1fy the U S ConsU·
lUll On.

Must we send ground troops to Iraq?
By William A. Rusher
At a dmncr m Los Angeles
recently. Lady Thatcher was asked
what the Unncd States ought to do
about Iraq She replied 'fJTmly that
Saddam Husscm could not he
allowed to get awuy w11h dcfymg
the tcnns ol the mspcctwn agtcc·
mcnt he &gt;~gncd at the end of the Gulf
War .md that accordmgly m1l11ary
force ought to he applied 11 necessary She added wryly that she
regrcllcd thai her own tcnwc .ts
pnmc mm~&gt;tcr had ended he lore the
Gulf W.u hcgan because when 11
w,IS over she would have sorted
out Saddam Husscm
When asked whc1he1 her call tor
mlluary a&lt;l!on was conhncd to atr
power. or mdudcd ground lmces as
well she responded that 11 mdudcd
wh,\tcvcr

1t

tnok There

1s

no pomt

she tnsJSted on hall mc.tsures
Th1s IS a lact that the Chnton
adm1msll at1on ha&gt; been extremely
reluctant to rccogm1c II now seems

ready to mll1c1 nulltary damage on
Iraq through the usc of mr power
and we can assume that thiS 11mc 11
won 't he confmcd to the 'pmpncks" WC have mn1e1ed prCVIOUS

ly But nohody
scnously &gt;up
poses I hat all
power. m any
quantlly can
chmmate
entirely whatever nudcar

chemical. or
b•ol og ~eal

weapons Saddam has manRusher
aged to conceal let alone
bnng the rcg1mc to tis knees
For that . only g10und troops w111
sullicc It rna) he true . as some students of Iraq contend lhattl&gt; ground
lorccs today arc ,, mere shadow ol
the lraq1 army that was so tcsound mgly def eated 1n the Gull War Dutil
"equally true that the Un1tcd States
today cannot put m the l1eld anythmg hkc the powerful .1rmy that
Gcn Schwarzkopf co mmanded m
IYYU .. repeated cuts m the dctcnS&lt;'
budget have seen to that Nor. even
1f Bntam contnbutcs a token force.
can we expect anythmg like the
assistance we rccc1vcd last lime

from our other European alhes and

the lncndly Arab states
Fmally, 11 must be remembered
that 1f we commll almost our entire
avmlablc ground lorces to a renewed
war agamst Iraq , we wtll Simply he
mvumg North Korea tn launch us
long-threatened mvas10n ol South
Korea wh1lc we arc lca&gt;t ahlc to
respond ellecllvcly
How d1d we get 1nto thts mess' 1
have never suhscnhed to the theory
that 11 s all George Bu&gt;h's f,IUit ..
that he ought to have ordered
Schwarzkopf to proceed to Baghdad, oust Sadd.un. and mstall a
tncndly Iraq1 gnvernmcnt II Bush
had pushed northward mto Iraq. the
cnngrcsstonal Democrats would
have denounced the move and
hlamcd Bush nm&gt;~ly for every hody
hag that &lt;amc home The domestiC
consensus, let ,,lone the mtcmallonal coalition, that supported the war
would have collapsed. wnh Jncalculahlc consequences
Yet II IS true that Saddam Hussem, playmg what 1s fundamentally
a weak hand has managed to hang
on to power. develop a stockpile of
Illegal hut lethal weapons, and even
produce fissures m the dtplomallc

coahuon arrayed agamst h1m. Sll
where do we go Irom here' Assume
that Mr Clinton orders ,ur anack&gt; It
he docs, they w1ll tcmporanly alter
the correlation of fort:cs m our favor.

but they assuredly w1ll not do the JOb
that cnes out to he done oust Saddam or at lhe very least ch.mge his
hchavtor lor the hcllcr In the lone
run. therefmc. the upshot w1ll he;
wcakcnmg ul Amcnca s prcsugc
and mllucncc m the \\hole M1ddlc
Eastern reg10n Every nauon m the
.~rca lrom Syna to lr,m will wn·
elude that Amenca s measure h:is
been taken and has proven madcquatc
In 1tscll, thl&gt; w1ll nut he lata! As
the world's only superpower. the
United States c,m at lord to look pilllui now and !hen and st1ll he cunhdcntthat 11s wJShes Will not, m moS!
cases. he l1ghtly diSregarded But we
w1lf have lost. lor the t1mc hemg.
control of events m the M1ddle Easl
William A. Rusher is a Distin·
guished Fellow of the Claremont
Institute for the Study of Stales·
manship and Political Philoso·
phy.

•

Unless 1t's apple p1c, what could
be more Amencan than Lou Gchr1g
or the Sall"day F"cnmg Post 7 In a
recent column. Ru ssell Baker qu otes
from a full-page ad m a 1937 edition
of the magazmc that Ben Franklin
founded
There was a picture of the hand-some, d1mpled star ouhc New York
Yankees g1vmg h1 s tcsttmomal about
Camel c•garcues
"For a sense of deep-down contentment, " Gehng IS say mg. JUS!
g1ve me Camels After a good, manSized meal, that hlllc phrase -'Camels set you nght '-- covers the
way I feel Camels set me nght
whether I'm caung, workmg or JUSt
cnjoymg hfe Alllhe years I' ve been
playmg, I' ve been careful about my
phys1cal conditiOn Smokc 0 I smoke
and enJOY 11 My cJgarctte 1s
Camel"
If he were ahve to say that today,
th1s all-t1me , aii-Amcncan hero
m1ght get smacked on the head wuh ·
a skateboard 1That's what happened
to a man m Dayton. Oh10. for smokmg a cJgareue'
The attackers were members of a

'

m&lt;" 1IISIIC gang
of loiOstly wh1tc ,
tnok
mtddlec 11' , yo uths m
thciT •ocns and
early 20s known
as
Stra1gh t
who
Edgers.
purport to be
scllmg an exam ple ol clean hv •ng They have
sworn off drugs ,
alcohol , smokmg and casual sex
"It could be every parent's
dream," stated an Assoc1a1ed Press
arttcle that appeared m newspapers
across the cou ntry But there Is
another s1dc to the moraliStiC credo
of the Stra•ght Edgers
' Extremists m the movement
engage m beaungs brawls and van,daiiSm," accord mg to the AP
account "They usc chams. chem1cal
spray s and clubs to enforce theJT
abstmcnt lifestyle Auacks occ ur m
schoolyards, at concerts and m parkmg lots "
R1ch Webb was auackcd last
November m h1s home m Salt Lake
C1ty by Stra1gh1 Edgers who took a

kmfc and carved an X &lt;'" h1s back
for smokmg manJuana It has left an
ugly scar
Pohcr say the vwkncc among
the Strmght Edgers IS cnnfi n~d to a
core group who can be recogn11ed
by their punk· style tauoos, sk1n
heads and p1crccd cars
"There arc some good k1ds m
Stra1gh1 Edge," says ar officer 1n the
Salt Lake C11y pollee force lhat has
ass1gned one detectiVe to full -umc
duty mvcsugatmg cnmc relalcd to
Stra1ght Edgers States such as
Texas, Wash•ngton, Callforma and
Oh10 have also rcporte\1 trouble
The group IS also mvolvcd tn the
ammal-nghts movement FJTcbombmgs have taken place at a McDonald's restaurant m Utah and at • fur
store Many Stra1ght Edgers arc also
vcgctanans Bcs1dcs avmdmg meat
and da~ry products m their d1cts,
these "vegans, " as they arc called,
wear no leather, wool or s1lk and arc
mtolerant of those who do
Is 1h1s Straight Edge philosophy
that the end (a moral socJety) JUSIJ·
ties the means (Immoral act1ons)
also at work m tbe anll·smokmg
movement m our general culture?

We have reduced good men m
our soc1cty to "socJal panahs"
because they smoke m our presence,
says column"' Kathleen Parker
"They enJOy the same status as
pedophiles and drug peddlers "
On the subject of the dangers o£
secondhand smoke, Parker, a non·
smoker says, " We who grew up m
the '50s when many parents smoke&lt;)
would be on resp~rators by now d
secondhand smoke were so lethal " .;
In lact, she says, "the nsk lo\
lung cancer among nonsmoker~
exposed to secondhand smoke 1s s&lt;i
small, mnst sc•cntJsts conSider •(
ncghg1hlc "
·
No one wants to defend smokmg/
but let 's not cnmmallzc 11, e1thcri
says Parker
'
And arc we wtlhng to drop LoJ
Gchng lrom the ranks of a truC:
Amcncan hero because he 'Smoke&lt;(
and mstead tum ourselves mlo rr
soctcty of what one hcadlme wntcr:
calls " Puntan punks" ?
•
George Plagenz is a syndical·'
ed writer for Newspaper Enter;
prise Association.
'

v

Dorothy A Compston Campbell, 93, Raven swood. W Va , d1ed Wednesday. Feb 4, 1998 m Charle&gt;ton W Va
She was born May 22. 1904 m Ravenswood. daughter of the late T H and
Lucmd~ M1ller Compston. She was a med1cal recepltont&gt;t and worked m
Charleston for Dr. Roy Summers
She was a member of the North Untied Methodist Church. Ravenswood,
and a past member of the Ravenswood Womens Club
She IS survived by three gmndchlidren. Gary A Coffey of Morrestown.
N.J , Mtchael Coffey of Huntington W Va and Julie Taylor of Sanford, Fla,
four great-grandchildren. and several meces and nephews
She wa• also preceded m death by her husband, Frank H Campbell, a
daughter, Joann Coffey, and a stster and SIX brothers
1
Semces were held today. Fnday, Feb 6, 1998 at I p m m the Roush
Funeral Home, Ravenswood, With the Rev Mtchael Curt1s offic1atmg BurIal was m the Ravenswood Cemetery

IMansfield 140" I•
IND

• IColumbus 140' I

40'

•

Donald S. Deeter
DonaldS Deeter, 79, Coolville, d1ed Thursday, Feb 5, 1998 at R1vers1de
Methodtst Hospital. Columbus
Semces Will be I p m Monday m the While Funeral Home Coolvtlle
Fnends may call at the funeral home from 2-5 p m Sunday

WVA

(}
Showers T-storms Rain

Flurries

Snow

Ice

~

u

Sunny Pt Cloudy Cloudy

, Via Associated P!llsS Graph/csNet

Clouds, flurries scheduled
to linger in area Saturday
By The Assoclafed Press
Sunny sk1es and slightly warmer temperatures w1ll return for the weekend alter the storm system shps out of the stale tomght, leuvmg another I·
2 mches of snow on beleaguered southern Oh10.
Lows tomght ·WIII be m the 20s.
The sun Will peek around scattered clouds over Oh10 on Saturday and the
mercury will chmb to around 40. the National Weather Serv1ce sa1d
The record·hlgh temperature for 1h1s date at the Columbus weather sta·
uon was 60 degrees m 1925 while the record low was II below zero m 1977
Sunsettomght w1ll be at 5·57 p m and sunnse Saturday at 7·34 a.m.
Weather forecast:
• Tomght Cloudy w1th a chance of snow tlumes Lows m the m•d 20s
L1ght and vanable wmd.
" Saturday Mostly cloudy wllh a chance of snow flumes H1ghs near 40
Saturday mght. Partly cloudy Lows 1n the upper 20s
Extended forecast:
,, Sunday Mostly clear. H1ghs m the loWer 40s
~londay Mostly clear Lows m the 20s and highs m the rritd 40s
Tuesday... Panly cloudy. Lows m lhe upper 20s and h1ghs m the m1d 40s.

Water rate increase

_ (Continued from Page 1)
be taken for use at the former
state par.k.
·
Counctlman B1ll Roush satd that·
the electnc1an who does the pool
)YOrk Will be back by the end of the'
month. He also suggested council
consider havmg a cpncrete lloor
poured in the new cmder bUIIdmg at
a cost of $400 The expendtture wa'
approved by council
Counc•lman Many Wood suggested th:lt reSidents place house
numbe'rs on the1r homes m a pmm1·
nent place
Eber PICkens Jr. reported that sev~ml complamls have been lodged
about cats runnmg loose m the VII·
lage Council ,JdvJSed nothmg about
~a Is
P1ckens also suggested a VIllage
potluck ptcntc w1th all reSidents
inv1ted to take part He also suggeSIed a large p1cntc sheller be bu11l
eqUipped w1th electnc•ty P1ckens
alsO noted that the VI II age needs a
(ull·t1me pollee ollicer
Counc1l diScussed repaiTs to the
tenniS courts The F1re Department
extended thanks to Bob Graham for
the beef which he donated to be used
t~bJes

m a fund·raiser for the tire depanment.
AppropnatJOns approved were as
follow~ Ge!)eral fund. $90.196.
street consJ'tuclJOn and repair,
$35.333; state' htghway, $5.000. fire
department, $19.900; water, $56,225.
pool $35,174; guaranty meter.
$3.800, and cemetery, $100. a total ol
$245,728
'
The mayor's report showed
rece1pts ol $573 The pollee report
showed 16 cil{lt•ons. and an mvesllgatJon of a complamt of dogs ruhmng
loose He ai!!O noted that the speed
hm11 on Bndgeman and Roy Jones
Road " bemg stnctly enforced due to
complamts
Jamce Zw1lhng. clerk-treasurer.
reported balances in the vanous fund
as lollows general lund. $30.123 91.
street construction. $16.732 18, h1gh·
way, $3,671 64. tire department,
$4.130.86, water. $4.649 11. pool
$4.874 25,
guaranty
meter,
$1 096 07 cemetery. $95 65. total
$67.473 69
Other anendmg were counc1l
members Donna Peterson and
Kathryn Crow, and a Vlst lor. Jack
Wtllmm&gt;

No verdict yet in woman?s murder
PARKERSBURG. W Va (AP) A Wood County JUry deliberated a
third day. w1thout reachmg a wrdJct
m the tnal of a man accused ol pmsomn• a woman and stufling her
bocty ~n1n a storm dram
Denms Rydbom faces hfe 1n
pnson If convtcted ot p01somng
Sheree Petry. 36. of Williamstown In
1996 and puttmg her body '" the
dram m Manella. Oh1o
The Circuli court JUry began dellb:
erat1ons atter heanng closing arguments Tuesday

Morality or extremism? Times change
By George R. Plagenz

Dorothy Compston Campbell

MICH

.. by actually buymg the m1lk
was between $180,000 and
"AI first, m order to start b1lhng $200,000
the government, 1 bought m1lk and
"My b1gges1 mistake m th1s fraud
offered 11 to elderly• people m the scheme was buymg the m1lk, " the
M1am1 area m exchange for their felon lamented " 1 would have made
Med1care beneficiary numbers, " he more money 1f I d1dn' t spend any
told the subeommmee, chaJTed by money on the m1lk "
Sen Susan Colhns. R-Mame " I
COMMANDER IN BRIEFS ..
h1red people to tell the elderly that Prcs1dcnt Chnton 's blustery auortht&lt; was free milk from the govern- ney, Robert Bennett. apparently
ment and that they only needed to thmk he's been vmd1catcd by the
have a Med1care number to quahfy
recent commotiOn surroundmg the
"I used these numbers to bill Wh1te House mtem scandal
Med1care over and over agam for
In a s1x-page mot1on tiled last
h1gh cost nutr1110nal serv1ces when I week wnh U S D1stnct Court Judge
JUSt gave them some cheap, free Susan Weber Wnght Bcnncu mad~
m1lk Later, I realized that I dtdn't a persuas1ve argument fot movmg
even need to buy the m1lk up the prcstdent's CIVIl tnal on
(Med1care) was a gold mme
The charges that he sexually harassed
government actually made 11 easy Paula Jones H1s pred JctJons that the
for me to steal. I was not reqUired to tnal would produce a ctrcus-llke
produce any documents m suppon atmosphere had been proven nght,
of the cla.ms I made to Med1carc
he cla1med In order to avmd shut1 became nch very fast b1lhng the tmg down the presidency 11 was
Medtcarc program "
')..VItal that the tnal come sooner rather
Before long. the n1ghtclub owner" 'than later
ran seven mcd1cal supply compan1cs
Bcnncll may he nght Bu1 we'd
.. all out olthc same office employ- like to rcmmd the preSident's rnhust
mg the same 20 people usmg the hamster ol some other statement~
same computers He w,JS b11lmg he's made wh1 lc trymg lo keep h1~
Mcd1care tor over 2.000 pat1cnts client out of court Could thiS be the
wh1lc provtdmg no scrv1ccs whatso- same Benncll who cned the · Sol:
ever H1s average monthly mtakc d1crs and Sa1lors Rehel Act · wh1l6
trymg to postpone the tnal unul .11tcr
Chnton 's preSidency'
ThiS act . you'll recall wa&gt; wr1t.
ten to prevent c1vll suns agamst
act1ve duty members ol the m1htary
Bcnncu argued that the Act protected Clmton as he 1s the commander
m ch1cf of the U.S anncd forces
Benne II 's argument wa&gt; nd1culcd
by commentators. and drew the lTC
of several Whnc House adv1sers
who deplored the bad puhllc1ty 11
' brought
But sexual harassment -- and
adultery -- 1s no laughmg matter m
the mthtary these days, as ev1de~ced
by the dozens of men and women
who've been drummed out of the
serv1cc on charges of adulterous
conduct In the m1htary, there IS no
dtffercnt1at10n between pubhc and
pnvatc lives, as conduct codes
demand that serv1cc personnel keeP.
themselves above reproach
We'd be mtcrcstcd to hear 1f Mr
Bennett lhmks such rules should
apply to the commander m chJCf.
Jack Anderson and Jan
Moller are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

The Daily Sentinel
'

!USPS l 1.&gt; ·96())

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m&gt;t lksmng to pay the carntr ma)
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nn a thrl!l.l , 1111 or I Z mont~ bi!SIS Crtdtl w 1ll ~

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~rm111Cd In
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The Dally Sentinel • Page 3
1

Saturday, Feb. 7

By Jack Anderson
and Jan Moller

'Estll/ifi.slietf in 1948

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

OHIO Weather

How a felon milked the Medicare system

The Daily Sentinel

-r. -

Friday, February 6, 1998
.,

areas

Publisher JU4:Ntl the rtght 10 lldJUSI ralt'S dUI

,mg the tubscr•pt ton pcn&lt;MI SubscnpC1on rate
changes m ay~ •mplcmc:rucd by c:hang.ng I be'
dutai!On or tht 5UbsC11pUon

Rydbom. who moved to the area
from Phoemx. was tned m Parkersburg because aulhonues bell(ve Petry
was k1lled m West VITgm•a and taken mto Oh1o

Office hours
, ,
change at cliniC

Woodland Centers' Me1gs Clln1e
office hours are ,changmg effectiVe
Tuesday Ollice hours un Tuesday
will be from H a.m. to 7 p m and
Wednesday from 10 am to 5 p m
Office hours on Monday. Thursday
and Fnday Will be !I a m to 5 p m

Stocks

W1lham Preston G1bbs 57 Shade, dted Thursday. Feb 5. 1998 at hiS restdence, after an extended Illness
•
Born Nov II , 1940 m Wmche&gt;ter. Ky. son of W1llmm C. and Golden
Garrell G1bbs ot Middleton, he was a 1960 graduate ot Albany H1gh School,
a 1965 graduate of Ohm Umvmlly.taught at Me1gs Htgh School for 31 years,
and was a member of P1 Kappa Alpha lratermty
He was an area beet Iarmer most ol hJS hte
He IS surv1ved by h~&gt; wtle ol 31 ye Irs, MarJone G1bbs; a daughter, Jenmfer G1bbs ot Athens. a son. Manhew G1bbs of Athens, a siSter Latna Mellou ot Mentor. and a brother. Charles Gtbbs of Mtddleton
Serv1ces will be I p m Sunday m the Hughes-Moqum Funeral Home.
Athens, wllh Mons1gnor Patnck Gaughan otticJatmg Bunal will be m the
Alexander Cemetery, Athens Fnends may call at the funeral home lrom 35 and 7-9 p m Saturday.
In lieu of flowers, memonal donat1ons may be made to the James Can·
cer Hospttal and Research Center. 300W lOth Ave, Columbus. 0hlo43210

Betty Ohlinger
Betty Ohlinger, Middleport d1ed Fnday Feb 6. 1998 at her restdence
Arrangements w1ll be announced by the Middleport Chapel of the FISher
Funeral Home

Dorothea A. Thurston
Dorothea Annette Thurston. 87. Long Bottom, d1ed Thursday. Feb 5, 1998
m the Darst Nursmg Home. Pomeroy
A reured cafetena manager for B1g Bear. she was born Dec 25. 1909 m
Chillicothe, daughter of the late Joel and OdeS&gt;a McPherson lmmeh
She IS surv1ved by her husband. Wilham Thurston ot Pomeroy. three
daughters. Jean Fry of S1lver Spnngs. Fla. Margaret Chessar of Columbus.
and Elizabeth Ballson ol Indmnapolis. two stepsons. Dav1d and Wdltam
Thurston. both of ColumMs. two stepdaughters, Sally Parsley and Carol
Atherton, both of Columbus. two ststers. Ruth Anderson of Columbus. and
Rose Breams of Cahfomm, and three brothers. Joe lmmelt and Robertlmmell,
both ol Columbo,, and Arthur Immel! of An zona
He was also preceded m death by a brother. G1lbert. and by two ststers.
Martha and Carolyn
•
GraveSide serv1ces will be I p m Saturday m the Sand H1ll Cemetery,
Long Bonom No calling hours wtll be observed and arrangements are by
the Ewmg Funeral Home, Pomeroy.

One ticket nets Buckeye 5 prize
CLEVELAND (AP)- One 11~k· $359.552, and wmners w1ll share
et matched all five numbers drawn m $2 II .586
There were 112 Buckeye 5 tickets
Thursday mght's Buckeye 5 drawing
and tt's worth $100.000. the Ohto wtth tour ollhe numbers. and each"
wonh $250 The 4.2421Jckets show·
Louery sa1d
The wmnmg !J&lt;ket wa' purcha,ed mg three of the numbers are each
worth $10. and the 41.166 11ckets
at St1ll Water Depot m Dayton
Sales m Buckeye 5 totaled showmg two olthe numbers are each
worth $1

Meigs EMS runs ·

Unlls of the Me1gs County Emergency Med1cal Semce recorded stx
calls for a"IStance Thursday Umts
respondmg mcluded
CENTRAL DISPATCH
12 47 p m • South Second Avenue.
Middleport. Ann Dav1s Hol zer Medtcal Center.
2·23 p m , Lmcoln Htll. Pom~roy.
Herman Michael. Veterans Memon·
al Hosp1tal,
5·20 p m. Laurel Cltff Ro,1d
Pomeroy. Alhson Lee. VMH.
Pomeroy squad asstst\!d.
7:18pm. Kmgs H11l Road. Brady
Knous, VMH. Pomeroy squad asstsl·
ed
MIDDLEPORT
12 30 p m . South Second Avenue.
Dorothy Roush . VMH
RACINE
9 44 a m Founh Street. Mane
Spaun, VMH

J

WASHINGTON (AP) A
lawyer for Pres1dent Clinton's personal secretary dented today that the
pres ident or anyone else tned to mlluence h1s client's testimony m the
Mon1ca Lewmsky controversy
Larry Wechsler was respondmg to
disclosures that Clinton summoned
secretary Belly Curne to the Wh1te
House the day alter the president's
deposllton on the Paula Jones sexual
harassment case to go over the IT recollections of Ms Lewmsky's contact
w1th Chnton
"I want to be absolutely clear"
Wechsler sa1d "To the extent there 1s
any 1mphcauon or the slightest suggestiOn that Mrs Cume bel1eved that
the prestdent. or anyone else, tned to
mtluence her recollection. that "
absolutely false and a mtscharacten·
zauon ol the facts "
A Whne House offic1al sa1d that m
ht s meellng w1th Mrs Cume about
Ms Lewmsky. Clinton was trymg to
"jog h1s own memory" to make sure
there was nothmg else that he could
add to h1s deposuton tesumony ·
The New York T1mes reported
today that Mrs Cume has told mvesttgators the preSident led her through
an account of hiS rela11onsh1p Wllh
Ms Lewmsky that d1fters m one crll·
1cal aspect from her own recollectiOns
The difference between Chntun's
account and Mrs Cume s account.
accordmg to the Tunes Mrs Cume
has told mvesttgators that the preSI dent and Ms Lewmsky were somelimes alone. Clinton sa1d under quesllomng m the Paula lone. sexual
harassment lawsuit thai he and Ms
Lewmsky were not alone •
The Times sa1d Mrs Cume
retneved gtfts from the prestdent to
Ms Lew1nsky and prov1ded them to
mvestJg,Jtors. who are trym~ to determme whether the prestdent tned to
h1de aspects of h1s relallon&gt;htp Wtlh
Ms Lewinsky
Quo11ng lawyers tam11iar wuh
Mrs Cume's account, the T1me&gt;
reported that the tlems the secretary
retneved and turned over to mvesllgators mcluded a dress. a brooch. and
a hat pm
Wechsler smd early today m a telephone interv1ew that any •mph cation
or suggestton that "Mrs Cume was
aware of any legal or ethical lmpropnety by anyone " entirely maccurate "
While House press secretary M1ke
Mc'Curry complamed ol "leaks about
mformatJon m a grand JUry proceedmg 'speetfically dented by people
who unhke me know the facts "
' I thmk thiS ts approachmg the
potnl where tt's beyond appalling and
11 s dangerous, McCurry smd
McCurry satd he agrees with the
1dea Jhatthe news slones may be pan
of an orchestrated campa1gn by
Starr's oltice to pressure Ms Lewm-

Local Briefs:

Boil order lifted
A Tuppers Plums-Chester Water
DIStncl bot I advtsory 1ssued Tuesday
has been II fled lor the Metgs County wstomers along lOrange Townshtp) Kaylor Road to Allred, Allred
Veterans Memorial
Thursday admts&gt;~ons - Brady Road Woods Road. Mudsock. MerKnous. M1ddlepon. Phyllis Vmmg. cer. Owl Hollow, Tucker Road and
C 1rr Road.lOitve Township) Success
Pomeroy.
Road. Joppa. L1mberger R1dge and
Thursd.ay discharges- none
Pme Tree On ve
Holzer Medical Center
Discharj:es Feb. S- Mrs Arn1e
Article~i filed
Comer and daughter. Mrs Randall
Arttcles
of mcorporJtJOn have
Gerlach and son. Brenda Robert.
been
liled
m
lhe olfice of Secretary
Robert Lucas Naom1 McGuire
ol
State
Bob
Taft by Shade R1ver
Birth - Mr and Mrs Dav1d
Agr~cultural
SeTVJce
Inc, mcorpo·
Kuhn. son. B1dwell
rated
by
Thoma'
W
Karr,
Pomeroy
(Published with permission)

Hospital news

THURSDAY

Am Ele Power ..................... .49~.
Akzo ..................................... 92l.
AmrTech ............................... 41'' •
Ashland Oil ..........................53'1.
AT&amp;T ..................................... 64~
Bank One .............................. 60'1.
Bob Evans ..................... 21 ')•
Borg-Warner .........................53\
Broughton ............................ 15'1.
Champion .............................16),
Charm Shps ............................ 4\
City Holding .........................48'/,
Federal Mogu1.. ..................... 46),
Gannen ................................. 61 ),
Goodyear ..............................63\
Kmart ................................... 12~.
Kroger ...................................42
Lands End ............................. 44'1.
Limited .................................28'1•
Oak Hill Fin I ............................27
OVB ....................................... 34'1.
One Valley ............................. 36),
Peoples ................................. 40~
Prem Flnl .................................23
Rockwell ..............................59\
AD/Shell ...............,................53\
Sears ....................................
Shoney's ................................. 3'1,
Star Bank ..............................51\
Wencly's ............................... 21 '%.
Worthlngton ........................ 16'·

sv.

-·-·-

William P. Gibbs

Lawyer denies' Clinton
tried to influence Currie :

Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Advest
of Gallipolis.

TIMAUEN,
KJRSnE ALLEY IN

FOR RICHER OR
POORERPG•,

sky mto makmg statements that are ;
nottrue
c
'I suspect that some others on the
behalf of the pres1dent, perhaps people on hts legal team are g01ng to
want to pursue th1s later today," sa1d ·
McCurry
Whuewater prosecutor Kenne1h '
Starr and Ms Lewmsky's lawyer
traded charges over the1r negotiatiOns
Wilham Gtnsburg. the Los Ange· ·
les auorney who represents Ms .
Lewmsky, told The Assoc1ated Press
that Starr s ottice IS trymg to " pres· :
sure Ms Lewmsky mto statements · '
that are not true "
,
Earl1er. Starr smd hJS office was ·
bemg demed a face-to-face mterv1ew '
wuh Ms Lewmsky a clatm that ·
Gmsburg demed
White Hou &gt;e pohllcal a1de Paul
Begala sa1d on ABC s "Good Morn- .
mg Amenca" that Clmton 1s bemg
smeared by "cnmmalleak s ·
"Let's fmd out who's bchmd•
these cnmmalleaks and let's get to
the bottom of that. because someone
WIShes the preSident til . and they are
lymg and leakmg every day · he sa1d
Former Whue House adv1sero
George Stephanopoulos satd today ,
the latest repons are ·bad ne ws lor ·
the preSident and bad news for Ken
Starr" Appeanng on ABC where he '
now works as a consultant.
Stephanopoulos sa1d Clinton may be
forced to address the latest repon al '
a JOint news conference today w1th
Bnush Pnme MmJster Tony BlaiT '
Gmsburg. m hiS &gt;latemenl Thur&gt;day. sa1d Starr secretly had agreed to '
grant Ms Lewmsky lull unmumty '
from pro&gt;ecullon m exchange for her
test1mony but that Starr was contm·
u1Ag to pre"ure her mto making
statements "that are not true "
Starr said h1s office could n01
grant Ms. Lewmsk y tmmumty
because hiS mvesllgators had not
been g1ven a lace·to-la&lt;e mtemew •
W1th her The pro,.,cutor wrote that
" there 1s no subsutute tor lookmg a
1
wttness m the eye ·
Gmsburg sa1d m h1s statement •
" H1&gt; contmued tnststence that he :
cannot have a face·to-face talk wtth
M' Lewmsky has oiO basts m t.tel .
St,lrr's otlice declmed to make an
1mmedmte &lt;Omment
The back and lorth came as Starr
cla1med "very significant pmgress" '
m hiS mvesttgauon of allegatiOns that
Clmton had an 18-month affmr wtth ·
Ms Lewmsky begmmng when she '
wa• 21 and then tried to cover 11 up. •
A number of former and pre,.,nt"
Wh1te House a1des have been called
to te,ttfy before a grand JUry stUmg '
m Wa~,~h.ngton . mcludmg Clmton s

deputy ch1el' ul stall. John Pudesla .•
who appeared Thursday
"Nothmg 1n my tesumony con·
trad1cted the strnnj! dent.tls the pres-•
1dent gave to Jhest au:u,:.JI IOns . .

Podesta smd afterward
Clmton on Thursday loft open tbe
poss1b1hty that some nt h• ' .uues
t.:ould be mstru&lt;:tt!d not to an:-ower l:Cf ,
tam questions from prn'ift.:Utors who
tlfl! pre~enung ev1ilenu: to a grand

JUry. cmploymg the doctnn~ of exe,-·
uttve pnv1lege
Podesta satd he answered all4uesJ
liOn&gt;and would return for more ques110 010!!

J

Boih Clinton ,md ~h Lewmsky
have dented havmc a 'aual rela·
uonsh1p m e1ther atliJ,Ivlh or depo•
stiJons they made on 1he Jones law·
sUI I. sources sa1d
------

Put experien (e

on ~our siue.

A. your loco! Nationwide"
Agency, we con oller you

olfordoble IOIIJt'cnce plans, lost
fair seNice, and the experience
it tokes to recommend what
producls ore right for you

ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30

for more inlonnotion,

448 0123

just gi&gt;e US D miJ

MEIGS C-GUNTY REAL ESTATE OWNERS
THE TAX BOOKS ARE NOW OPEN FOR 1997.
COLLECTION OF THE REAL ESTATE TAXES,
ALSO FOR DELINQUENT TAXES.
CLOSING DATE IS FEBRUARY 24, 1998

TRAILER TAl DEADLINE IS FEBRUARY 2, 1998
NO EXTENSION WILL BE GUNTED ON TUlLER TAXES.
HOWARD E. FUNK
MEIGS COUNTY TREASURER

Paula K. Dillon
Assoc~ate Agent
Jtm Rogers &amp; Associates
33105 ttmlld,luite#l, Pomeroy, ~ 45769

Office 740.992.2318

BBJ..«S.9426

~NAT10NWIDE
u~~~c!

FAILURE TO RECEIVE TAX STATEMENTS DOES NOT AVOID ANY PENALTY, INTEREST, OR
CHARGE INCURRED FOR SUCH DELAY. Ohio Revised Code 323.13
.

•

.

�Friday, February 6, 1998

The Daily Sentin~l-~

Sports
an awel\ome offens1ve performance

by JUmor cenler Valene Karr, who
tossed on 32 poonts and had none
rebounds

Karr hot 77 percent from the floor,
hotlong 16-23 field goals. to lead an
Eastern team that exhobited ponpoint
shooting throughoul lhe noght Karr
had 20 at the half and 14 on the first
period.
Kom Mayle was credlled w1th
playong another good defensove
game.
Eastern coach Paul Brannon saod,
"We pa&lt;Sed really well and ran our
break well Everyone contnbuted

and a lot of younger girls came on and
d1d a good JOb off the bench."
Jessica Brannon added 12 points
and had I0 rebounds, Juh Hayman
added none. Kom Mayle eoght, Lacey
Bunting eoghl and Chao;alle Hollon
SIX.

Eastern hll 38-87 from the floor
for 44 percent Val Karr hll 16-23 for
77 percent, Juh Hayman was 4-7
57%, Jessoca Brannon was 6-1 0,
K1m Mayle was 4-11. Lacey Bunlong

4-6 and Chasaloe Hollon 3-6. Eatem
h1l 2-7 at the hne wllh 43 reb'ounds
(Jessoca Brannon 10. Karr 9, Wolfe
5).
Eastern had four blocks. all by
Karr; 26 steals (Brannon 9, Karr4) 8
turnovers. 22 a"osts (Hayman 6, Jess
4. Val4) and 18 fouls Tnmble hot
17-44.6-15. With 19 rchounds led by
Lent wolh 13 Tnmble (0-18 &amp; 0-15)
had three steals. 35 turnovers. eoght
ass1s1s and II fouls

Easlern won Ihe reserve gnme 4036 led by Juh Bmley wub II pooms.
and Sarah Chfford h.1d eogh1 Je.sica
Ash Jwd ten and Shawna Juslon had
I0 for Tnmble
Eastern plays Walerlord Mondily,
South Gal loa Wednesday and Southern Thursday
Quarter ll!1Jib
20-19-15-24=78
Easlern
Tnmble
9-7 -6-18=40
Eastern: S!ephanoe Evans 1-0-

By DOUG ALDEN
. Associated Preas Writer
The two learns woth lhe worst
records an lhe M1d-Amencan Conference played Ihe game of lhe night.
Ohio. m lasl place in lhe MAC
East. beat Wcsl-lrailer Cenlral Michigan 122-121 on a double overtime
lhnller Thursday on three clutch free
lhrol"s by Duslm Ford.
Tim KISner made a lhree-poonl
play lo give the Ch1ppewasa 121-119
lead w11h 6.8 seconds to play. Ford
took the mbounds pass and dribhled
up the nght s1de and was fouled by
Cenlral's Lee Hampton wilh a second
10 play.
·
"There was no ques11on he fouled
me," saod Ford, whose free 1hrows
snapped a live-game losing skid for
the Bobcats
Jom Peterson led OhiO with 32
poonls, oncluding none 3 pomlers

0=2. Valene K,irr 16-0-0=32. Juli
Hayman 4-0-1/2=9. Jessoca Brannon
6-0-011 =12. Kom Mayle 4-0-0=8.
Lacey Bunlong 4-0-0=8. Chasahe .
Hollon 3-0-0=6. Ango Wolfe 0-01/2= I Totals: 38-0-2/1•78
Trimble: Bobbo Lenl 11-03/11=25. Kryslal Weaver 1-0-2/1=4.
Jill Rochards 0-0-112= I. Robyn Sullon 1-0-0=2. Amber Sox 3-0-0=6.
Shawn Julson 1-0-0=2 Totals: 17-06/15=40

Federal Hocking girls record 55-37 victory over Southern
Federal Hockong pulled away
from a 45-35 tally woth four monules
leflon the game 1oclaom a 55-37 won
over lhe Soulhern Tornadoes Thursday mghl during gorls' vars11y HockIng DIVISIOn ac11on op Hayman gymnasiUm

Loke in us pas! few games. Southern spullered early. !hen pla)'ed gallanlly 10 come b.tck late on I he game
before runnong oul of sleam
Federal Hockmg, behond oh fearless freshmen (three slartcd) blolzed
lo an 18-5 firs I penod lead Soul hem
came back wolh some offense on !he

second quaner 10 pull wuhon 12 al
32-20 al lhe half
The lhord quarter was faorly even.
but Southern couldn't make any headway unlil early on lhe fourth quaner.
Soulhern onoloated a full court press
and scored five poonls m a row w11h
buckels by Kom lhle and Kun Sayre.
Thai cui lhe score to 45-35
Federal Hockmg called lome and
adJUSted lo lhe press, sconng a couple quock buckeiS and Sou1hern was
only able 10 score lwo poonls lhe re&lt;l
of Ihe way Federal pushed onward to
a 55-37 won

Federal was led by Came Russell
wolh 12 points, Mochelle Bush and
Terella Waderker each added e1ght.
Abbe Linscou seven. He1d1 Rasmussen sox and Counney Spnnger 5
Southern was led by Sayre With 16
pomts. Jenny Fnend added SIX, Slacy Lyons four, Kim lhle four and
Nocole Benson three.
Soulhem h1l 9-30 overall (6-26
two-poonters) and was 3-4 on lhreepo1nter&lt; wolh 16-27 atlhe line and 18
rebounds (Fnend 7) Federal hoi 19371wo-poomers. 21-40 overall. hol23 lhree-poonters and was 9-15 at lhe

lone wi1h 25 rebounds (Waderker 6.
Linscou 6)
Southern had 12 sleals !Cynlhoa
Caldwell 3, S1acy Lyons 3. Jenny
Fnend 3); six assosls (Caldwell3), 26
lurnovers and 12 foul s Federal
Hocking had 25 turnovers and 20
team fouls
Southern. now 3-14. goes to Tnmble Monday. Federal Hockong IS now
8-6 in the league and 9-8 overall. second m the league to Easlern
Quarter IJilJI]s
Soulhern
5-15-11-6=37
Federal Hockong 18-14-13-10=55

Southern: Cynlhoa C,lidwell 0-02/2=2. Jenny Friend 1-0-4/6=6. Kom
Sayre 2-3-3n=J6. Slacy Lyons 0-04n=4, Kom lhle l-2n=4. Nicole
Benson 1-0-112=1. Pauy L1wrence 10-0=2 Totals: 6-3-16/27•37
Federal Hocking: Kan Trudo 0-

ATHENS. Ohoo (AP)- Marlene
Slolhngs os sconng p&lt;llnl' on bunches agam
S1ollongs holds lhe slale hogh
~chool basketball scoo ong record for
boys or gorls "llh 3.51 ~ pomls during her career a1 Beaver Eastern Hogh
School on Poke County. She was The
Associated Press' Ms. Ba,kelball for
lhe slale Ill 1993
She never found 1he sconng louch
on two seasons al Ohoo Stale and sow
hmlled ac11on because of an lllJUry
lasl season afler lransferrong to Oh10
Unoversoly
But she has relurned 10 her nld
form 1h1s season. leading the MldAmencan Conference wolh an average of 22 9 poonls per game before
the Bobcals played Cemral M1rhogan

on Thursday Thai figure ranked her
eoghlh natu)nally on lhos week's
NCAA stallslocs
Her bog numbers m hogh school
maonly were a result of her threepOlO! shoolont. and 11's no dolferenl
thos year She has 63 long-rnnge baskets Ill 187 auempls - bolh school
records - and &lt;el school and MAC
smgle-game marks on Dec. 30 by
goong 10 for 21 from beyond 1he arc
wh1le sconng 41 agaon'l Robert Morns
The 5-fool-11 forward-guard is
second on lhe league wilh 4 7 assists
per game and averages 4 8 rebounds
per contesl She led lhc Bobcats to a
7-2 record on January and " the
MAC's mosl recenl player of the
week award wonner

"I had recrulled her m hogh school
and knew what an excellenllalent she
IS." sa1d Bobcats coach Marsha
Reali. "But I'm a coach who likes
balanced scoring and ol slill depends
on how you fit onto the learn context
"She's dou\g it while puttong up
bog numbers. The ev1dence os lhat
she's leadong us in assists ·" well as
sconng."
Slolhngs and Amy Turner. 1he
Bobcals'lwo leading scorers lhJS season. are former Oh1o Stale teammates. Both left the Buckeyes in
Apnl 1995 but bad vosoled lhe Ohm
campus at dofferenllomes
" People always ask of we planned
to transfer 10ge1her. but we dodn' l
know Ihis os where we'd bolh end
up." Slollmgs smd

Secrecy rules stadium on eve of
Winter Olympic Games Saturday

She found more fruslmlion litan
fun at Ohoo Stale afler enrolh~g there
following lhe Buckeyes' runner-up
finish in the NCAA lournamcnt in
1993
"I felt for two years I gave it m)
best wilh what I could control and loc
man&gt;.' !hongs oul of my conlro
weren't good for me." she saod
"II wasn't wrong for everybody. II
ended up beong not so goo\t for me
but when I lefl. I didn 'I go around
d1scouragong mher people from goong
there ."
Now she's th'i veteran leader of a
team on whoch half of lhe e~ghl-play­
er rotation, oncludong lwo slaners. are
freshmen.
''I've had fun helpong lhe freshmen along," S1ollmgs saod. " If we
got 10 the NCAA Tournamcnl. we· d
hnve the opportunoty 10 snrpnse some
people."

0-212=2. Mochelle Bush 4-0-0=8.
Carne Russell 3-1-3/6= 12. Jennofer
Bush 1-1211=7. Terella Waderker 4- ~
0-0=8. Abbe Lonscon 3-0-112=7. He1- ··:.
do Rasmussen 3-0-0=6. Jam1e Lin- : ;
SCOII 2-0-1/2:5
Totols: 20-2- - ·
9/15•55

W

NAGANO. Japan (API- Over al
Ihe sladoum they spent Ihe day mlhe
final saages of a secrcl drc" rehearsal
-a &lt;ecrellhat more Ihan 3.000 spec-lalors shared On the slrects, people
'hopped. wandered - and some
colloded wolh thos ye.1r's fiN real
''"le of Olympoc dosarmy.
A day before lhc llJ9R Wonler
Games opened. as Japan's emperor
sped toward Nagano on a bulk11raon.
!he head of the lnwrnallonal Olympoc
Commonee seemed upbeal of,, Joule

Meigs-Belpre girls'
game rescheduled
The Tn- Valley' Conference gorls
game belween Meogs and Belpre !hal
was scheduled lobe played Thursday
noghl was postponed becau-.c of Ihe
bad weather.
The game has been tenlalovely
rescheduled for Monday. Feh lo
Meogs will host Pmnl Pleasant
Salurday. wolh lhe re,erve gam~
starting al 6 P m Me1gs woll open
DIVISIOn II secuonal tournament play
un Thursu.oy Feb. 19 at Roo Gr.mde
agaonst Jackson
Tocke" for Ihe 1oum.1mcn1 g.une
woll be avaolable on the athkllc
boosler buolh allhe remaononf home
gorl' game' or !rom 9 p m 1 p m .
Monday-Fn&lt;.l.ly 1111hc schoololfice

guarded all he rcl.oll\ e smoolhncss of
lhe runup lo Day One.
"So far 'o good." IOC Presodent
Juan Amonoo Samaranch saod !his
'lnomong
The last Olympoc Games, on
Allanla. were roundly criiiCiltd for
log~SIIcal doffoculhes from transporlaloon 10 computtr prohlems. Up
to now. !hough. slncl Japanese org"nozaloon &lt;eemed more lhe order of
!hongs.
Unull.ue lhos aflernoon. th.olos AI
a ceremony on a downtown squ.1re 10
maok lh&lt; Olympoc ll.1mc\ arro v.ol. a
tumoul

,,f ~vC'rJIIhou ....JnU '~l'laiOI'\

appe.1red to 'urpro-.c pnlore OJ firers
strugg led\\ llh the '''·•rm' lor J 11me
before rc-&lt;&gt;riiOf 10 ,, louuspeaker.
drnwnong 0111 S.om.or.ondo-, word, as
lhc) ordered people to Jo,per'c
· You c.on ·, f&lt;l on." nne ollicer
warned ''Follow poloce onslnocloons
and mm e on You are a nuh.utce "
The Ji:" who could 'ee w.olched
Amenc.on liftorc ,k,ol&lt;r Kmu Yamagurho .omllwu J.op.onese gold med,J1'1' c.1rry 11tree torches onto the
'&lt;Ju.ore compklong relays Ihat
broughl 1he Jl.omc over lhree routes
aero" J.1p.on
" Iill keeps up like lhis.lhings are
gnong 1o 0., " real mess," s:ml Aken11 01.1 a ,peclalnr who-;e \' I&lt;W was
hlodeu ··we JUst aren't accuslnmed
1u dc.ohng wolh bog evcnls Joke 1hos I
hope
goes OK"

On 1he whok. though. excuemenl
wa.' buoldong. thal much was clear on
the sko slopes of Hakuha on the oce
ronks of 1he M-Wave and While
Rong venue&lt;. and on lhe post-prachce
comments of athletes from around
the world
"It's probably going to be one of
the grealest expenences of my life~
lome." saod U S speed skater and
1wo-ume Sliver medalist Enc Aaim
or BosiOn. who Will begin hiS fourth
Olympocs by c.orrymg 1he American
!lag 1n10 Ihe npenmg ceremony Salurday.

NBA standings

Pm11cipan1'

1n

thai extra,·aganza

gave ol ,, final run-lhrnugh Froday,
mmu' a lew cruc1al details - ltke
Emperor Akihoto and Empress
Mtchoko S1and-ins played !heir roles
m !he rehearsal. wh1ch reporters
were permiued 10 allend under the
condotoon !hey didn'l report details
beforehand
The focus on secrecy showed.
Ol)mpoc volunleers lrnversed the
cherry-blossom-shaped Minami
Nagano Sports Park. demanding
reporter&lt; shut off laplop computers.
"They're Mrnid you might e-mail out
detmls," om: said. apologizmg. Phone
calls. however. were permolled.
Some aspects of Ihe ceremony are
common knowle-dge. !hough. one
being the pariiUP"IIonn of 1he everpopuh1r sumo wresllers, represenlmg
Japan's national spon.

Atlanllc Dhtl'liton

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New

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200

NOTICETO
•· CONTRACTORS
,Seallcl propoeall lor lh1
IMiallaUon of ,.... roof on
tl(e EMS H..clquartera Civic
Center Community Building
ItT Rutland, Melgl County,
Ohio wHf be racelvect by 11M
Melga
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Sunday. F•b. H-lhru Feh. 24
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Transactions
8aseball
Aml'ncan

Ll'li~Ul'

ROSTON Rl I) SOX i\.p~-:~11 tu lcrnu w11h
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vtded In Bid Paekot
Pro1pactlv1 blddtrt wloiiJng to Ylow and lnapectllle
project olio may contact
Marcil Elliott at 740-7422233 or AONIIIIIry Eakow II
7-40-742-2121 to lnlpeclllle
proj.ct alte and lor any lurlhtr qu11t1ona aa to the
C(lmmlaalonora at lhllr proj.ct.
olllca at tha CourthouN,
Plana,SpadffiCIIIOnl,and
Pomeroy, Ohio 457ft until bid lonna may be aecurecl
10:00 a.m.; March 2, 11188 at the office of M•lga
and then Ill :00 pm., II Nlcl County~No
office opened and r•ad dlpolll will be required lor
IIOUIIIor 11M following:
ICii Ill ol plana and 11110'
The lnetallatlon of • lftcatlona.
EICII bid mull be aq:orn.
rtplacallltlnl roof on 11M
Rutland Civic c - r EMS Jlllllad by lither a bid bond
H•~dquarteta l""'ted on In an amount of100% Dillie
Mlln SIIHI, S.R. 124 bid amount with a IUI't!Y
RuJiand, Melga County, llllllactory to 11M aloNeald
Ohio. Speclllcallona pro- MIIQI
County
;:

475 South Cllurch Street· Rl~cy, WV 1100-8Z.!-0417- 372-2844
ttoaday-Saltlrday 9 am. - 8 pJD. •S.nday I p.m. - 8 p.m

TltlouJjt F-111.

2(()

16

Saturday's J:ame:li

~ flunbet8T237A

"i~U

~71

7 ~1

: llnwhuf ( m~::n 7H N lll11k 1~ 'i•/
• Kt·m 70 l a• kLklfl7
• ~hatnt 7l 11.111 S1 (17

was $11.950

-1
"i

~'i()

~\1

• M/\ll:'\Hi\1 I 7X W Ml t htf.!.llllll
: Aln•n f\IJ I M1d11~ m f• 7

1 wasstt,950
Mf nm fall Sllr rrka,

II
.. lb
!1

l"i
II

Thursday 's

'M1s $10.950

•LCJ19 Wlll!elllale • Flly J.Oided!

8T396A

lit--___.

' ' 1\
7 41 7 II 'J

n n

"i-4'1

\VNilmsiun

Strd Ntmbeo8TIII2A

1 was Sl1,950
1!11 Cll:- PKkl.

' , _ Togo.

4'i(l

'

-

s9 950 $9950 $9,950
Slid -

IJ II

7

('HIO

MICkiH 11tlllrrslll VII

..

ft:l.

A.Ln111
l)alwhnj: (ir~'t.: tl

sn 950
'

w
I.
II 'I

l!: L ft:l.

Wm

()v~nll

ft'\,\ S

1\nltln., S1 7tJ W.uhm~lnn St 70
l s Sol'llkrn.lnhllll 74 Clrand C.lllyun 4"i
l.1ll'uly Punwtl.l 'iK tS DIIIIIIIIJ.:IIl'l H1ll ~ '7
l'.1l St.lk: · l A "i() Ut' Rl ~t:tsllk ~ I
(HIIIl.t}!t72 Suu,Jt'llr.l71
ltl.1ho S1 f•K I \.\. ,,,Junj!lnn .JH
Munt.m111 (.'S Nc•rthrlllf.!~ ~X
N l\n.w111 1'J Monl.wM S1 lb
l'unl.md (I() s.m I r.mt i X tl ~0

Gw) tk'•lJ M ....,., y t.'J )m.,;oln l'.t fll1
1\111)!~ I' 1 1U (. ..:nll'rJ;lfY N J fll

f)in\eon

lJ I Chnsu_.m Arufltl'fs h7

F•rW..I

IJuqttt:SIII.' fiH flj u ~ htrr)!h 6]

I ndt\ull

( 'unr

W

(.urry "17 J&lt;nj!l'r Wllh.wm H
lluwh~ti! '.II Ml•r\ y NY flO

l'nrll.rud ,rr I unl! lk ll h 7 I' 111
( ,;lnr.MI1• Soul Jnsl 11 11111

fo:~"t

PC (

~

Voiii\.UU\ !..f

~7

Saturday's ~umes
CtJniJit.t.U Hush Ill 'p m

l.tycll~o:

Wnmll'f 116 M,,s ~ 1lh1 n l'~rr)' 11
Y11u BtMr,lnl.lll ~ 2 You M,lllll!;)
Vuu I tlx r1y Ml Huhh trcl (,(]

r~- .t~(\lll~ll.mfrh (1\,sm •St (J()

NCAA Division I
women's scores
ll1md t ~IJ Jilllll J ty 46
Hrtlo; kl'"rl S1 M.J H1 l~r1-l 1J
( h,l'lt'SIIIII W Vol 1JI W V,t W\ \1) II
(.,,/hy S IW)'n '}1 N1\l11 • l~ .I'J

Sunday's games

outhwest

l~.:ntr.JI U
ou.tdJU.tfH
H.tn.IIII·Stuunutts M M3ry H.tt,hn·H.tyhlf fl2
H1111~1111 62 Jlralfll' V1cw H
M~Murry K1 ll 1ll.c~; f,tJ !UI!
Mulw~·'ll'rn S1 I ~l_.,, 71'1 1\tlf.!dt&gt; St Sf,
Or..1l Kuht.:rb f11J V.tlt'·lr.n:-u 'ilJ
Sl Otlahullkl IIlii H.llthllj! 7 \
SW Otil.lllum.a h \ Nl O)r;l.~ tlllllot 'if,
SW fl' u,St 71 N1dtnii~St "il
S.un Humhm S1 7"i t.kNct'.....- S1 ~X
~IUIIII..'f'H Ml·lh til s til Jl,...... S! ~l
Tl·U~ i\&amp;M lrro:Ulf.!'" 'lt.· 11 I. Nl'l~ Ml'\ (~tl 71

I

1~\011

Kc111 (9-J l 6-6 Easll rellorned to
500 111 conference play by hangong
on ag.un sl Toledo ( 13-7. 8-4 East).
Jose D.1vos scored 20 poonts and
AI Moore had 10 rebounds 10 lead lhe
Golden Fl.oshes D,l\'os wenl 4 for 4
I rom Ihe lrce- lhrow lone lo clo nch I he
won
Casey Shaw ,md Cl,tylon Burch
led Toledo wo lh 15 poollls e.1ch An
Norman .1dded 12
Bowlong Green (9-11. 6-6 East)
trailed early bullook an 11 -9 advanlage on Knk Cowans J.oyup .md leu
1he res I of 1he W.O) De~·l.or Moore led ,
the F.1Jcnns wllh 17 poonh .md Cow- :
an llnoshed wllh 15 poonls .ond 14 •
rebounds
Bunon Anderson led 1hc Huskies
(9-11, 5-7 Wesl) wolh 16 poonts

Tonr~ht's ~ames
llull .iln 7 \() p m
I ilmomun.11 V. nt ~uu\~;r IOpm

-17
Ptultr.'Cf N (clllr.rl '4 Ednn 1!1
Pnmt (W V_.t l Pl~.t~ tnt fl6 M.m ...·u,l "i9
R.JVI'IIIIOI 62 G 111\:IISVIIk 42
RL•ulwlllt L1sii'J11 7H I nmhl~ .Ul
R~j!lll;l -.1\ H.t th.!W.I)' Uruwn 2tJ
R1d1wllotl N Unton b2 M1 Glll'_.k112
RtJt.: Ly Rtvu luthl-r.nl W 71 C••lumttt.l :lCI
Rm ~ h1rl1 -I'J tlnll.md Sprtllj! ~ 7
S.mdud:)' '\9 I mttlfl.t ~~~

Ohio H.S. girls' scores

F.ast

~amt
: lOI UMIJU\,11 ~·.IIII I.' IU[HII

~. K-1

Grl't:IIVIIlt: ttl
S1 flh S U1.d1 ~0

/\rk M unn~~·

Artzu11.1 112 Washmglon HI
-1\'411111&lt;1 St K2 W.L~ Inn~:t unS I M
1Jn1 !1t: S1 71 Nl·w Mclll~:u Sl "i'J
t.'.1l Pnly Sl 0 ~~~ I..am~ lk.1dt S1 7J
Ctl S1 I ullcrtcon "il U(' lrvmi: 41!
I W.L,hlllt!lnn 71'1 ldahtl St 7~
hliihu )I'\ Nurlh I u.L~ 72
lnyul.l M.uymllllll! KO ~~ M.try s C1l 71
N Arrwn.1 101 Mnnt,nl;l S1 1)1'1 (0 I )
N1·w M!..'ll.:11 K11 Wynnun~ ~~~
Oro.')!.on tn UCI A HI
Orct:un S1 Xl ~1u1hc:rn ('_.,)7~
P.tt; lri"' 76 UC S.unaBarbara 60
l'llfll.md S1 7 1J ~.~~:r.rmcnurSI 67
S .UilJIC~t l 7X PL'flJ)CrtJmt' 7U
1I
I~ l.t~ CIV1~1tani.J9 Fn:snn S1 1
UNL V "i.., Arr hMH' '\7

1ft p 111

Saturday's

Slack tt.mboi 7TIZI&amp;A
• All Power•

Ynun~~tnwu

U!th Kl lln~hatll Yt tUR~ Me
U1 1h S1 7~ Nl•v,tt.f:t "i2

(UI UMIIUS 71 l'nrtl_.mtl 70

sg,~~JJ

Slott tblbef f6138
• Nt C&lt;onlilioo • Al*lrnalc

7
~~

I!

Lt•n!! Jll:_.tdt
San JnSt.:

• M Poweo• Flly Loadod!

s9 950
'Was$11,950

' Was $11,950

l.!

10

Wnlrrn (.'on(rrrntr

Ntmber 7T232C

W..-h~l~'l' t.~

100 Mtutsslfltll M7
Clllnr.llkl St fH reus-F.I P:ISII :\K
Mc1nplus 76 Huut lon b'
Nldtulls St K~ SW rt'J..u S1 Kl
Pr.Urtl: VI&lt;.'W 101 , Wtlt:}' tl7
S.1m Hi lU!ilnn S1 7\ Md~«s..: S1 60
r..--.a.~ r.ll'l 1\lnt:n~:: .tn Kll. W K~lu~k y t17
lua ~ San i\ntonltl K.'\ SE UM.t!Siana 7K
lui s., 7"i Rt~l.' h2

l!:)..

v,,,

SIU l:dw.tnl:..~•lk• M~ Ky Wl.'slt:y.m 711
SW Mn~1un S1 72, l&gt;r.1h t'W
:-tpm•tt 1\rlllw M StCilol H~'IJ!hl s 'II

i\rbn~.1s

t'on(rnnc•

Pvnl.111d

I!Bt PIIIIIC Crald AI SE

c.)luu~yll\ ! 01!
M.tr~h.lll74 W M ldli~,IH 7~

M1d11l!"n T\'\:h IJh s~}!lltlw
N luw_., 7K lllmm5 Sl 6K
S lnch.tn t II() (kql,~tnllk.' ~~

41!

IIJ

~

the E.1glcs

S1rykL-r""" Htlhup n (01'1
Sw.mtvn ~b Evcr~I\.'CII .J"i
T1lf111 C.1\vcn 67 I '"lllfl.l St Wc:iuklm ~ot;
Tul Otl.lw,, H•lh 4'J ful l'n~; cnud Jt.1f'l 1&amp;
Tul Wbnn'lt.'f' 71 I rcnll.lnl ~~~s ~ 'il'!
U1t1;.1 4 I Gr:m\'t llc 4tt (0 n
V.m Duren 7\ Arhn}!ltJn +I
V.tn Wl-rt l"i Cclm,1 q
V.m Wc:r1 lmwfn,ccw ~)( Alkn I \7
Wurren Ch.mtrwn -'fl IJrnullu:l•l ~I
W.tUM:Illl tol-l Ar~hl'lt &gt; lll-1 7
Wcmun CW V 1 J M.ii.lom~o~ 111 l1•111111u t1l
W!lln- Hiflthr (l(J (.hmllmlunnlluniiY l "i

U:wrst.7

1\ rk · ltttlc Krd 70 l... nnar fl7

h filii

,.

q Ohh:t N.!t.tf\tk "-'

Ofm, 7-1 I n ·SI.IIC ~'
(. tlflk.'Nntll.' M M.ltlunna 'if1
IJIIftJI ftJ Hurun :'iiJ
fl'ITI\ S1 7\ L.1kc Sut'IL Jlllf S1 "i \
lllklby 77 W t yl~ Mtdl "it.
H.u1mb 1! L1Gr 111~t: IJ() M~ K&lt;.'tlt.il'l.'\.' K~
H•II ~J.1k· 7ll M1~h .lJc ~rhunt 47
lnJt.lll.ljluh:.. M! S1 Jto:~qll ~ IIIli 74

Far West

li _.COI UMRUS
Nl.'w I ngl.mrJ
1\il.ml_.t
l'lul.ulclj•ln 1

was S8.950

~

•-~~~lrm

:ijam

lf.l2 &amp;rl Mrlra 41111r

Midwesl
Akrun K4 I ~ Mtdllf.lll fJIJ
Aljutl'&lt;l\ M ('~tll\;1\itl!.t Mtc. h n
1\!oltl.tnd 71. {, umun 4~
llltd:hurn Xfl Wcstnunstcr Mn Ml
Buwlm~: Grl'\'11 1J.t N llh 11111\ M7 (011
lindley 71 lnth,ln.t S1 fMI
ltutkr W W1s .{ir...'l'tt ll.cy 70

V,t1r.1r.rr:m ';HI Orul Rub,.-r116X
W llhMJI ~ 11~ Nl: llhnon 6M
W1:oo Grt:en H ty h6 Clevd.lntl Sl 1'.1

;\BL standings

1!194 nrvy cavalltr

IA"'' w

w ,nwn:o. n.~"'"l CJl
X.Lvk.'r NOMl Mutull' ~~J

Soulhwesl

Sunday's game

Pclll~\1111'

21 IJ

Anah&lt;.'uu
Cnl~..ry

and Bosley had 16 apoece lor Akron
Dcorock Owl scored 17 and Earl t
Boykons fonoshed &gt;uth 15 poonts for '

Pttbhur~h .11

Ol~il" 7'\ Gltt!'tlnlmrte 61
Cntawa-Giamkrl .JIJ W.lp.tkoncl., "-'
P..-mtk!rvtllc EoulwuuJ 'IIi&amp; M11lhury Lake\~

!...'t:h (WC ll.t)'l" n M
U1111111 79 Juhu :.~m (. Smtih f.CI
Wc:-.11\),lh;Unil 77 Ru' ' 41

{'.tn h.t~o.:
C~.:nt S1

l'.tr~v..ty 1X
N ~rtll!l' \llll' l .tll' ~~d~&lt;' 1•) Ofknf)t,.,r I ~
llrcn'll'l\(.,(1 N&lt;.'\\ Ktlu~\ilk -17
New M1Jdlctuv. n Sprlll~ 'ill I t~\\d l\11 1. ~I
Nl:w ~·..:~d 11 N n.~ tumor, '"
Nnfl.ltlllt.t M Cuy.thnt: 1V 11! t hr -I'J
Nnrw.tlk Sl l'.m i-IH l' lyu~tlu/h 11
{ h'.tngr.· fr.l I Wll L~hur}! ~ 1 ) I0 I I
Ort!!!Ull Cl.l)' "i(J I llll.lf.ty l!
Ort.')!llll Str11d1 Hi ll.1111111ry LrLI'\ttlt&gt; 1-1
N~w

M

MIS\IS~tjlpl S1

er lellmg the Brpncos back on 11
"They just con1rolled lhe entore
game From the ge1-go we were nes er on 11." Western coac h Bob
Donewald saod.
Joda Burgess scored 17 poonls .ond
Derrock Wnghl pulled down a careerbest 16 rebounds for the Thundenng
Herd (8-11, 4-8 Easl).
Saddi Washonglon scored a gamehogh 19 p01n1s for lhe Broncos (I~5. 9-3 Wesl), who had won sox on a
row and none of the or las! I0 games
W.11hong1on was lhe only Wc,tern
pl.t)er 10 score on double figures
Akron (11 -9. 7-5 East) saill holds
a slom lead on I he E.JSI despole goong
cold 10 lhe fu1.ol monule-and-.1-half
Ryan Andn&lt;k's l.1yup wolh I 13 to
play lurned oullo be lhe game wonncr as Easlern ( 12-8. 8-4 We&lt;t) also
couldn't score Ihe reSI of Ihe way
George Phollips scored 17 poonls
and had 13 rebounds. and Andnck

Sl I.IIU I ~ l Otl, lllll I
Oti,IW,\ \, l llftlllltl 2
[),;lfl&gt;ll 'i ltmp.• U.cy .f
Cnlnr.1d11 4 ( hll.l~ol
Plnlllll"'pln,l h l'htklll~ 2
(. 1lj! II)' ~ S.m Ju~ 2
L 115 1\u~cb I N Y K llll!l'f\ I

Mtn,kr bM

V1 r~nut

Huvrhn~ Grt:(n 7K N llhnot~ &lt;ti•J
CtJ\t:1nn.tt1 IIH 1JtPaul71
('rcli!htnn 1JI S lllmon 71
IA1rn11 9-1 l..tlynl'l. fJI b'\
Mt~htp:.tn 74 Ncwrhwe~r ... rn 67
Mu K.tnsas C1ty H1) Clm.1p:u S1 M

IJ.t
tJl Wash111p.tnn K\

'7

72 Ckot.•'"" "i~

VH~IIIIt

Y1 1Un~s1t1wn St h6 S Uuh ~~

(h lflllllt: !OM V:u,.;uuwr •n
• Arl,mt.l IUM Cl EVI.LAND •»
• b:trnrt 10·1. Ht1U~Iim')2
: M1.nm'JI Mtlwaukc.oc K7

wasS7.950

V1r~n11t

l\kmn(J9 E Mldllj:;lllh7

7)17
7'\h
fl74

Thursday's ~ores

:·

• /\ II Slar G unc .11 Ncw

Application deadline is April 1, 1998. Applications will be taken by appointment
only. Please call Samantha Rumley, Housing Developer at 367-7341 or 992·6629
or schedule an. appointment.

.

Manst74. Manhatt.tn flO
RUIJ.CB 71 Notrt: 0,1f1'l! 61
S1 Juscflh s 76 Dre-.d M

Midwesl
10

72

V.~tuk:rh l h

Snuth llc1ntl.ih2 Luuuvdlc 60
Stlulht'rn Mtt' IN rulanc )lb j 2 ()I )
s,.,.rl~n F Au ~un 1~ . NE l..tlUt~t m' 70
1 ~nrtc\:k'\.' S1 lH Mor ...-ht.:.lll S1 fl(l
r~nncs~'l: k·..:h 77 St MIS)UIIn "\7
rc.u s·l\rhni!IHil 71 NW LoutM.ma M
I rny Sl 7K J k:kstmvlll.: Sl 7\

71~

h)~

PacifiC' lliYision

304·67 5· 7700

Was$5,950

P.1 6\

1 .-~».wu.m.t 'll'~ h H . Ncw ()fl.:,uu 6"i
Mu.Mit Tcun 67, E llltnms6'i
Nnrlh C.1rnhn.t '17 Outc 7\ •
SW Ultustatl.l b7 Snudt Al.tb;un;t ~ \

WF.STERN CONI"ERENCE

l ~nwr

$5,950 $6,950

St ffJ Ruhcr1 Mnrm M

I Ia lnh.."rn.,Uon:ll 71, St..,1!&gt;tm 60

•

We will be building a total ol 10 new homes in Gallia and Meigs counties. The
homes will have 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, dining room, living room, kitchen, and 1V. car
garage.
Potential homeowners must meet income guidelines and a local banl(s credit
guidelines.
Income guidelines are:
• 1 person $12,222- $17,654
• 2 person $13,968 - $20,176
• 3 person $15,714- $22,698
• 4 person $17,496 - $25,220'
• 5 person $18,857-$27,237
• 6 person $20,254 - $29,255

.

C~nl Cnnn~:~o:lldtl

M.l~~~llo n l.tdt. )IIU6 7 UIII&lt;~Hh•llll l ~~~ ~:!

M '"I lin n I u' l••" 7h l .url ~" ~ 'i
M.rumn: ~lo Antholll) W•') 11\: \(1
M~Atllmr \' 1n111u t11 11111) 4'! t\1,_ 1 11tl~r "' '
MlGu!ll'y Upj'lo.'r SLh•ln V.tl l hh !11111 l'uTy

SW l..num.m.t61 NcwOrleltlls '\1
'11 Ant.lrt.'w's 72 Mnunt Ohvc (lt) lOTI
r ..'f\11 w..-sky Ill 71 llr).m .ltJ
Trevcu.t N,tz,lfl:llt.: ~~~ I r~'Cd· H.tn.k:ttt&lt;IH Hll
Umttll Ky f1l rilo:c\lllc.: fl(l
V,1 W!...,;il,•yan7-l W,t, IIIIIJ!hlll 1ft 1-~.\.' tl"i

IJ()Siun U IW H.trtlun.l 72

Austan P~.t Y HH, E Kcnt~ky 79
Cent FJondot MH. finn~ A.ll.mlt~ 67
Ct"ntcn.u)l IU S tmfuni6M

: No games tonight or Saturday

The Gallia-Meigs Community Action
Agency's Housing program is offering a low:i~terest loa~. which requires ~o down
payment and closing costs will be at a m1mmum. Th1s program IS available to
anyone with low to moderate income.

Gallla-Melgs CAA will not discriminate in the sale of any homes in regard to Race,
Sex, Color, National Origin, Handicap, Age, Familial Status, Marital Status, or
Religion. We comply with all of the Federal Fair Housing Laws and Amendments
and the Equal Opportunity Act.
.

East

lO

\'

"I 1hough1 lhal lhe key ' 1omgh1
was gellong a good st,trt agaonst
Bonzo." Moamo coach Charhe Coles
saod. " I know thai he wasn'l really
heallhy Bonzo's .1 tremendous compelolor and no one hkes 10 see htm
hun He got 24 poonls and he didn 'I
do much 10 the first h.1lf"
Wells needs JUSI 80 poonls 10 loe
former Moamo ployer Ron Harper's
MAC record of 2.377 career poonls
Hos lhree-poonler woth 3 12 to play
c.1pped a Ball Slalc rally and loed Ihe~
g&lt;~me ltl 60 btll Fuerson responded
wolh a layup and three-poonter to puo
the RedHawks back on conlrol.
"ThiS may have been Fnerson'best game all -around," Coles saad
"He had real conlrol of lhal game "
Ball Slale's loss opened Ihe dooo
for second-place WC\tern M1chognn
10 move mlo a toe for lhe West lead,
bul M.1rshall shul ot in a hurry by
jump1ng out Jo a 22-6 lead and nev-

R.lndulph-M,w.:on 70 Rtl&lt;tnukc ~~

Arknnms St 70 b c;kstiCWIIIc b'\

Accepting New Patients

$3,950

Lynn 17 tk'f'ry (lfl (0 I)
M.U11n Mt.•t butllsl 72 Bethl'l leon bl
Ml'f~::cr 6M Coli ul O~o~rlcstun 42
Mcl!ttW.h!&gt;l 71 Gfet:nsht.lrtl DM
Mt ~SIS!IIptll Col 7~. Howurt.l Puync n
N K ~nt uc:ky 61 lnd Pur fl w.,ync n
NE l o~tUtM.IIM '){} S1cphcn F 1\usun H7 'OT!
NW Lt•u•~t.tn.t "iiJ, Tu.ts Arhn~ton •n

OHIO

South

OFFJCE HOURS:
MON·FRI 8:3D-5:00, WED 8:3G-NOON

.----------------· ------------.
Home ownership can become a ----------rea_lity.

.

Mt ~ hl~tn 31

Other NCAA
Division I men's scores

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Board Certified Internal Medicine

~

On the other side of the slandings.
M1am1 upsel West-leader Ball Slate
73-67. while Akron held on to the lop
spot in lhe East with a 69-67 YICtory
over Eastern Mochigan.
Also Thursday, Bowlmg Green
beal Northern Illinois 78-59. Kent
held off Toledo 70-67 and Marshall
upset Weslem Mich1gan 78-63
Miamo ( 11-9, 5-7 East) got 25
poonls and I0 rebounds from Wally
Szczerb1ak and 24 poonls from
Damon Fnerson to knock off hand
the Cardinals ( 16-4. 10-2 Wesl) only
their second conference loss.
"Comong an to lomghl we fdllhal
we hnd 10 do a Jub on Szczerboak .md
Fnerson. We dodn 't gelol done so Ihal
means a loss for 1he Cardinals," Ball
State coach Ray McCallum sa1d.
Ball Stale's Bonzi Wells, coming
off a hop onjury. scored 24 poonts
despile holling JUS! one of hos firs!
seven shots.

Cent Mu:: htgun al MARSHAll

I

By TED ANTHONY

"We really got momentum in lhe
second half gelling Jimmy Peterson
involved," Ohio coach Larry Hunter
said. Peterson "had a whale of a ballgame."
Basra Fakhir added 21 points and
13 rebounds for Ohio
The victory didn'llifllhe Bobcats
from the bollom of the East standings, but Ohio no longer is alone wilh
lhe worst record in lhe league Ohio
and Central are both 4-16 overall and
2-10 in conference play.
"I didn'lthink we had "n advantage gomg mto the second OT We
just don't have enough experience in
b1g games," Cenlral coach Jay Smith
sa1d.
Dan Schell scored 32 potnls for
Central, which ralhed from a 21poinl deficllto force the overtime.
"Coach said no maner how many
we are down we should never slop
playong." Schell said.

N llhnuu 011 Mmm1

Basketball

RANDALL F. HAWKINS
MD .

Ex-Buckeye finds old touch in Ohio lineup

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

Ohio tops ,Central Michigan in two OTs; Marshall ·also wins

·
Page 4.·
Friday, februal) 6, 1998

Karr, Brannon lead Eastern varsity past Trimble 78-40
The Easlern Eagle; gorls look,yet
another step towards a Hockong Dovosoon Tro- Valley. Conference champoonshop by defeatong dovosoon foe
Tromble 78-40 Thur&lt;day noght at
Eastern Hogh School
The Eagles(l2-3 ovemll &amp; 10-3
on the Hockong DIVISion) were led by

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

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Public Notice

Public Notice

commlutonara or by cert~
ftad chKI&lt;, caahltra check,
or IIIII• of credit upon 1
101vent benk In 11M amount
of not 1 - than 10% Of the
bid amount In favor of 11M
elortNid Molga Couhty
Commloatonera. Bid Bonde
wH be aeeompanlld by
Proof of Authority of tho
olllclal or 11J1r11 algnlng 11M
bond.
Bkll WI! be -ltd and
11111rkld ea 8141 lor AUIIand
EMS Civic C•nl•r Roof
Raplacament ProJect and
mallld or d•llvtred to:
Mtlgl
· County
commtaalonara,
Courthoult, Pomwoy, Ohio

menta contalnlel In lbla bid
pack.t, particularly to the
hdtral Labor Slandarda
Provlalona and Davia·
Bacon Wagoa, varloua
lnauranc• rtqillremanta,
veri.,.. equel opportunity
provlalon1, and 11M n~qulr•
mant lor a payment bond
and performance bond lor
100% of liM contriCI price.
No bidder 11111y withdraw
hla bid within thirty (30)
dlya lftlr 11M actual dlla of
11M opening lllerKI. Melga
County
Comm1111onera
.....,. tn. riGht to walvt

45781.
Attantlon of blddtrl Ia
called to aU of liM AlqUI,._

$23,650*

$22,950*

$13,950*

Omd Nrw lgtl Clrvy Fill Size
Ell. Cab lrd 118ar 4x 4Plckap

IIrand Nrw I~!Jil Chrvy lllazer
41k111r 4Wbeelllrlvr

llrand New 1q~H 1111DIIHC
Grand Am SE Sedan

• Vale&lt; V-8 Powet

•Ne~GemtaOOfl

•Ai CorOOOfl
• Siv~rado Pacltage

tN.!I Airbags
•4Wheel An~loct
Brakes
• Custom Clolh Jnteror
• AirNIUIII'Iliee!S
•IJllldetll

• """"' W'ondtlws

• POWIII Door l.oclts
•POWIII l!itors

• fUie111i1g
• Cruise Contol

• 4Wheel OIIYe
• 4300 Vorlec V.S
• A!Aomal~
• .AJr Concltton

• AM/FM Cassella
• n1 SleeMQ
• CruiSe Coolrol

• Cuslom C~~

1n1enor
• Power Wlnctows
• Power Doot locks • Alllnonum l'tlleels
• loa&lt;l!&lt;l
• Power fllrrors

•Aulomahi
• A• Cordloon
• Power Doot Loci&lt;s
• AWfM Cassene

• S~kld Wheels
• Rear Spoj~r

• Rear Wirdow Oetrosl • \Vel Eq•pped
• 4 Wheel Anb lock

Bral&lt;es

any lnlorm81ltlalo or to ~ICI

any or all blda.
Janet "-111, PNIIdant
Metga Counly
Comm.....,_.
1
(2)0, 11, 18 3TC

• Dual Aubags
• Cuslom C~lh lnlenor

lnl&amp;rthango
De~letship II

Moniily -Saturday 9 8JIL • 8 p.m. • Sunday I p.RL - 8 p.m.

I ( 111 .

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F.riday, February

6, 1998

The Dally Sentln,J •

p-omeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 7

!

' PomerOYr

Middleport ,

••..
wo..hip - !Oa.m., 6 p.m.
We&lt;lnesday Services. 7 p.m.

Apostolic
Church of JHus Christ Apostolic

H-nisonville Road
Pastor: Rev. Victor Roush

Middleport Chun:h of Christ
5th and Main

VanZandt and Ward Rd
Pastor: James Miller

Sunday School 9:30a.m.
Wo,.hip : II a.m., 7:30p.m.

Pastor: AJ Hartson
Youth Minister: Bill Frazier

Sunda)' School · 10:30 a.m.
Evening - 7·30 p.m.
We&lt;dn~•day Services · 7:30
·

Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Woiship- 8:15,10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.()
Wednesday Services ~ 7 p.m.

Assembly of God

Rose of Sharon HolinHI Chur&lt;h
Leading Creek Rd ., Rutland
P.c~stor : Rev. Dewe y King

Sunday school- 9:30a.m.

Keno Church of Christ
Wo11hip- 9:30a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
Pastor-Jeffrey Wallace
1st and 3rd Sunday

Ubtrty AsSitmblly of "
P.O. Box 467,
Mason , W.Va.

Pastor: Neil Tennant
Sundav Services- 10:00 a.m. and 7 p.m.
ThUrsday Prayer Meeting - 7 p.m.

Sunday worship -7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meeting- 7 p.m.

Pine Grove Bible Holiness Chur&lt;h
1/2 mi le off Ro. 325
Pastor: Rev. O'Dell Manley

Baptist

Bearwallow Rldao Church of Christ

Sunday School - 9:30a .m.

Pastor:Terry Stewart

Worship . 10: 30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.

Hop&lt; Boptl!t Chun:h (Southom)
Pastor: Jim Diny

Wednesday Servia:s - 6:30p.m.

570 Grant St., Middleport
Sunday school ·9:30a.m.
Worship 11 a.m. and S p.m.
F,... Will Baptist Chun:h·

Ash Street, Middleport

Worship -7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Wednesday Servia:s- 7 p.m.

Sunday Service ·7:00p.m.
Sunday School- 10 a.m.

Hysell Run Holiness Church
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.

Tuppers Plain Cbun:b ofCbriot

Worship - 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.

Thursday Service - 7:30p.m.
Lau,..l Cliff F,... Melhodlst Cburch

Rotl01d Fin! Baptist Chun:h
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:45 a.m.
Pomeroy Ftnt Bopdst-

Pastor: David DeWitt
Sunda y School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service ·7:00p.m.

Sunday School - 10:15 a.m.
Youth- 5:30pm Sunday
Bible Study Wednesday 7 pm

Easl Main St.

Sunday School . 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 o.m.
Flrit Southern Bo~liot
41872 Pomeroy Poke
Pastor: E. Lamar O'Bryant
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m., 7:00p.m.

Bradbury Church of Christ
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Rulland Chur&lt;b of·Christ

Latter-Day Samts

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wm ship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Wednesday Services- 7:00p.m.
First Baptist Churth

Bradford Chun:h of Christ

Pastor: Mark Morrow

Corner of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.
Minister: Doug Shamblin
Youth Minister: Bill Amberger

6th and Palmer St., Middleport
Sunday School-9:15a.m.
Worship - IO:i5 a.m., 7:00p.m.

Reo'l!onlzed Chun:h of Jesus Christ
or Latter Day Saints
Portland-Racine Rd.
Pastor: Jerry Singer

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services-7:30p.m. .

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.

Wednesday Service- 7:00p.m.

Worship - 8:00a.m., 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.

Wednesday Services -7:00p.m.
Racine First Baplist

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.

Hkkory Hills Chun:h of Christ
Evangelist Joseph B. Hoskins
Sunday School - 9 a.m.

Wednesday Services-7:00p.m.

Worship- 10 a.m., 7 p.m.

Silver Run Baptist
Pastor: Bill Little
Sunday School- !Oa.m.
Worship - 11a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7:30p.m.

The Chun:h of JHus
Christ of Latter-Day Saints
St. Rt. 160,446-6247 or446-7486
Sunday School 10:20-11 a.m.
Relief Society/Priesthood ll :05-12:00 noon
Sacrament Service 9-10:15 a.m.
Homemaking mect.ing, 1st Thurs. • 7 p.m.

Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Uberty Christlaa Church

Lutheran

Dexter

Pastor: Woody Call

St. John Lutheran Chun:h

Sunday Evening - 6:30p.m.
Thu~ay Scf\licc · 6:30p.m.

Mt. Union Baptist
Pastor : Joe N. Sayre
Sunday School-9:45 a.m.

Pine Grove
Rev. George Weirick

Worship-9:00a.m.
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.

Lanpvllle Christian Chun:h
Sunday School - 9:)0 a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Evening · 6:30p.m.

Wednesday Services- 6:30p.m.

Wednesda y Serv'ia: 7:30p.m.

Bethlehem Bopdot Church
Great Bend, Route 124, Racine, OH
Pastor : Daniel Berdine

Hemlock Grove Chun:h
Pastor: Gene Zopp
Sunday school - 10:30 a.m .
Worship - 9:30a.m., 7 p.m.

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Sunday Worshi~- 10:30 a.m. &amp; 6 p.m.
Wednesday Boble Study · 6:00p.m.

Our Saviour Lutheran Chun:h
Wa lnut and Henry Sl11.., Ravenswood, W.Va .
Inuim pastors: Rev. Robert Hupp

Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.
Worship- ll a.m.
St. Paul Lutheran Church
Corner Sycamore &amp; Second St., Pomeroy
Rev. George WeiTick

Reedsville Church of Christ

Old Bethel Free Will Baptist Church
28601"St. Ro. 7, Middleport
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evening- 7:30p.m.
Thur&gt;day Services - 7:30

Pastor: Philip Sturm

Sunday School - 9:45 ~. m.
Worship - 11 a.m.

Sunday School: 9:30a.m.
Worship Service: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

United Methodist

Christian Union

Hillside Baptist Chun:h
So. Rt. 143 just off Rt. 7

Graham United Melhodlst
Worship- 9:30a.m. (I so &amp; 2nd Sun),
7:30p.m. (3rd &amp; 4th Sun)
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Hartford Chun:h of Cbristln
Chrisllan Union

Pastor: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.

Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship- 1!a.m., 6 p.m.

Hartford, W.Va.
Pastor:Jim Hughes

WcOnesday Services -7 p.m.

Mt. Olive United Methodist
Off 124 behind Wilkesville

Sunday School - II a.m.
Wo11hip · 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.

Victorv Baptist fndep&lt;ndant
525 N. 2nd St. Middleport

_Wednesday Sen-kc:s ·7:30p.m'.

Pastor : James E. Keesee
Worship • lOa.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Scf\liccs -.7 p.m.

Church of God
Mt. Moriah Church of God

Faith Baptist Church

Racine
Pastor: Rev. James Satterfield

Railroad St ., Mason

Pastor: Rev. Ralph Spires

Sunday School . 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Services - 7 p.m.
Meigs Cooperatin Parish

Northeast Cluster
Alfred

Sunday School - 9:45a.m.

Sunday School - 10 a.m.

Pastor: Sharon Hausman

Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Worshap- 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Woi-ship- II a.m., 6:30p.m.

Rutland Chun:h of Gnd

Forest Run Baptist

Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Worship· 9 a.m.

Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m., 6 p.m.

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.

Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

ML Moriah Baptist
Fourth &amp; Main St., Middleport

Syracuse Flnt Church of Gnd
Apple and Second Sts.

Pastor: Rev. Gilbert Craig, Jr.

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Thursday Services - 7 p.m.

Joppa
Pastor: Bob Randolph
Worship - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.

Pastor: Rev. David Russell
Sunday School and Wor ~hip · 10 a.m.
Evenirig Services· 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services. 6:30 p.m.

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m.
Antiquity Baptist
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m.

Long Bottom
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.

Chur&lt;h of God of Prophecy
OJ. White Rd. off So. Ro. 160

Sunday Evening - 6:00p.m.

Pastor: P.J . Chapman
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship · II a.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Rutland Fm Will Baptist
Salem St.
Pastor: Rev. Paul T~ylor

Sunday School- 10 a.m.

Reedsville
Woiship - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.
UMYF Sunday 6:30p.m.
First Sunday of Month - 7:30p.m. service

Congregational

Evening ~

7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Catholic
Sacred Heart C~tholic Cbun:b
161 Mulberry Ave .. Pomeroy, 992-5898

Trinity Chur&lt;h

Tuppers Plains St. Paul

Second &amp; Lynn, Pomeroy
Pastor: Rev. Roland Wildman
Sunday school and worship 10:25

Sunday 'School. 9 a.m.

Pastor: Re\', Walter E. Heinz

Episcopal

Sat. Con. 4:45-5:15p.m.; Mi1S5- 5:30,p.m.
Sun. Con. -8:45-9:15 a.m.,

Gnce Episcopo! Chun:h

Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Worship - 10 a.m.
Tuesday Services · 7;30 p.m.

326 E Main St., Pomeroy
Rector: Re v. D. A. duPianticr
Holy Eucharist and

Sun. Mass- 9:30 a.m.
D[tiley Mass - 8:30a.m.

Minister: Danny Bias

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wo rship- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servicts- 7 p.m.

3773 Georges Creek Road, Gallipolis, OH

The Bdleven' Fellowohlp Ministry
New Lime Rd., RuUand
Pastor: Rev. Margaret J. Robinson
Services: Wednesdoy, 7:30p.m.
Sunday, 2:30p.m.

Pentecostal

Middleport Pentecostal
Third Ave.
Pastor: Rev. Clark Baker
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening- 6 p.m.

Presbyterian

. Sunday School 10 a.m.
Evening-7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Pastor: D~Wayne Stutler

Syracuoo First Unlted Presbyteriart
Pastor: Rev. Krisana Robinson

Faith Veley Tabemacle Chun:h
· Bailty Run Rood

. Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m. (1st &amp; 3rt! Sun)

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship- II a.m.

Pastor: Rev. Emmett Rawson

East Letart

Sunday Evening 7 p.m.

Pastor: Brian Harkness

Thursday Service - 7 p.m.

.Hanis&lt;H"IIIe Presbyterian C..n:h

Syncwc Million
1411 Bridgeman St., SytoatS&lt;
Sunday School- 10 a.m.

Worship - 9 a.m.

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship- 9 a.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.
Racine

Sunday School-9:45a.m.

Evc'ning - 6 p.m.

Pastor: Brian Harkness

Middleport Presbyterian
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Wonhip- JO a.m.

Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.

Hizel Communi!)' Chun:•
Off Rt 124
Pastor: Edsel Hart
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Coolville United Methodist Parish
Pastor: Helen Kline
Coolvlle Church
Main &amp; Fifth St.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship- 9 a.m.
Tuesday Services- 7 p.m.

Seventh-Day Adventist
Seveotll-Day Adnndst
Mulberry His. Rd., Pomeroy

Dyesvlllo Community Chun:h
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m .. 7 p.m.

Bethel Chun:h
Township Rd., 468C
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services- 10 a.m.

Pastor: Roy Lawinsky
Saturday Services:

Sabbath School - 2 p.m.
Worship· 3 p.m.

Mone Chapel Chun:•
Sunday school- 10 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.

Hocklngport Chun:h
Grand Street

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship- II a.m.
Wednesday Services- 8 p.m.

Torch Chun:h
Co. Rd. 63
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Won~hip · 10:30 a.m.

Enterprise
Pastor: Keith Rader

Sunday School - 10 a.m.

Dan\lllle Holiness Church

Worship . 9 a.m.

Pastor: Dr. J.D. Young

Flatwoods

Sunday school - 9:30 a.m.

Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.

~

Sunday worship - 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer service · 7 p.m.

Sunday School - 11 a.m.

Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

United Brethren

Faltil G01pol Chun:h
LongBottom
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship - J0:4Sa.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30p.m.

ML Hennon United Breth,..n
Ia Chriat Chun:b
Texas Community off CR 82
·

Pastor: Robert Sanders

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

MI. Olive Commoalty Cbun:b
Pastor: Lawrence Bush .

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Evening- 7 p.m.
Wedneday Service- 7 p.m.

Nazarene

Eden United B,..thren In Christ
2 1/2 miles north of Reedsville
on State Route 124

Pastor: Rev. Robert Markley
Sunday School - II a.m.
Sunday Worship- 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Seovices ' 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Youth Service- 7:30p.m.

United Faith Cbon:h
Rt 7 on Pomeroy By-Pass

Middleport Chun:h of tile Naza,..ne
Pastor: Gregory A. Cundiff
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.

Pastor: Rev. Roben E. Smith, Sr.

Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Wednesday Ser:vice - 7 p.m.

RH&lt;Iovllle Fellowthlp
Chun:h of tho Nazarene
Pastor: Teresa Waldeck .
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Full Gospel I.Jtlllthouoo

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wo11hip- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Forest Run
Pastor : Chad Emrick

33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy
Pilstor: Roy Hunter

Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evening 7:30p.m.

Tuesday &amp; Thursday -7:30p.m.
South Bethel New Testament

Syracuse Church of tbe Naza,..no
Pastor, Robert J. Coen

Silver Ridge ·

4·4:30 Saturday .
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
w.,n,,p - 10.30 a.m., 6 p.m.

stated effecllve dote.
Pursuant to Ohio Revised
Code Section 3745.04, a
final action may be appealed to the Environmental
Review Appeals Commission .(ERAC) formerl-y
known aa the Environmental Soard of Ravlow) by
a person who has a party to
a proceeding belore the
dlreclor by riling an appeal
wltbln 30 days of notice of
tho !Inti action. Pursuant to
Ohio Revised Code Section

Carieton Interdenominational Chun:h.
Kingsbury Road
·
Pastor: Jeff Smith
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship Service 10:30 a.m.
No Sunday or Wednesday Night Services

Pomeroy Church ofthe Naza,..no
Pastor: Rev. Lloyd D. Grimm,lr.

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Chester Chun:h of the Nazarene

F....dom Gospel Misoion
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31
Pastor: Rev. Roger Willford
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 7 p.m.

. Pastor: Rev. Herbert Grate

Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services. 7 p.m.

Pastor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Portland Flnt Chun:h ofthe Nazarene
Pastor: Mark Matson

,,

Falnlew Bible Chul'&lt;h
letart, W.Va. Rt..l

Worship- 10:30 p.m.
Sunday School - 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Pastor: John Hart

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study - 7:00p.m.

Other Churches
Harvest Oulrfacb Mlnlstrla
47439·Reibel Rd., Chester

Faith Fellowship Cruootlo for Christ
Pastor: Rev. Franklin Dickens
Service: Friday, 7 p.m.

. Pastor: Rev. Mary M&lt;:Daniel

Sunday Services: 10 a.m. &amp; 6 p.m.

Craw's Family
Restaura11t

"Featuring Kentucky Fried Chic;ken•

228 w. Main st.,

Pomeroy _

992·5432

TIME FOR
CLEANING?
· Clean

=·=

-

SUp·p I V1
'-

PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors'
Prescriptions

)1

.L'!!l
&lt;:::::::?

115

attic with the help of the
CLASSIFIED SECTIO.N

Memorial

Mei,s-s Coun1y~ Oldesl Fli.rul

Hospital

1521AST MAIN POMEROY, OHIO 45769
614/992 2644
614/992-6298

E. Memorial Dr. Pomeroy

I

.CLASSIFIED SECTION I

for everything

SfiVIRL ..

Appearing Friday 8 :00-12:00
Saturday 9 :30-1 :30
POMEROY EAGLES CLUB
Members and Guest Invited

••

.-~'

20 YRS. EXP.

.

· Driveways,

ets".· Zippo's". t -800·225-9019.
Cle an late Model Cars Or
Trucks, 1990 Models Or Newer.
Smith Buick Pontiac, 1900 Eastern Avenue. Gallrpolis.

Tues. 10-8, Wed.-Sat. 1Q-2

Come Sn1ell the Sweel Scent of Country Candles

Rt. 124, Minersville, OH
{740) 992•3980 1/t2/981 mo

pd

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Garages • Replacement Windows

Parking Lots, etc.

Room Additions • Roofing

Call Anytime

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614-992·7643
(No Sunday Calls)

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304·773·5033.
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5677.
Wanted To Buy: AKC Regi stered
Chinese Pug Tan Or Bla ck, 740:
446-1 511.
Wanted To Buy: Used Moblte
Homes, 740-446·0175, 304·675·

5965.
We Buy Aut o's In Any Condition .

Call "0 388-9062, Or 740·4462/12/12Jth'l

PART.

Will Work For $3.00 An Hour.

Ask For Tim. 74Q-44t -1473.

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Personals

t-900-263·5900 Ext 702t
$2.99/Min &amp; 1B• Serv-U

(6191645-8434
In M!)mory

In Memory of Ron Smith
As a NeW Year stans

Start dating tonight! Have fun .
play Oh io's dating game. 1-BOQ.
ROMANCE, e)ltension 7484.

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

Fr••

withoul you

My memories of us I'll
carry on
You took my hean with
you,
The day God called you
home.
Ali 1he fun we had wiih
family &amp; friends
I'll always have our
memories.
I'll cherish them, Ron you
knew, you were my idol.
My Hero, My Best Best
Friend
You made my life so much
better by jus1 knowing
you.
Sadly missed &amp; neve
forgotten.
Love EUi

.

The family of Dorothy
J. Douglas wish to
thank the Pomeroy
EMS nursing staff,
doctors of Pleasant
Valley Hospital,
Overbrook Nursing
Center staff at
Pomeroy, Fisher
Funeral Home, F!ev.
Chad Emerick,
relatives, friends, and
neighbors, pallbearers
and for floral
arrangements and any
acts Of kindness
during the Illness and
death or my wife and
grandmother.
God Blass,
Lawrance Douglas,
Brei &amp; Margo Florian

Help Wanted

Time

PIZZA EXPRESS

Viilld Ohio RN License required.
BSN preferred • .

lnteiltsted persons may contact Jean

Lambert at 740-992-2104 ext. 278. EEO

•

REMOVAL

992-6576.

SPORTS

Hours Varied

U,_~~~O~h-~J :~

Triple Scented Candles
Crocks, Cakes &amp; Refills

SNOW

Antiques , top prices paid, A.iver·
ine Antique s. Pom'eroy, Ot'llo,
Russ Moore owner . 740·992·

CASH PAID FOR : WW II , Korea,
Vietnam : ' Flight Jackets" (Ieath·
er &amp; nylon), ·souven ir Tour Jack-

Enthusias,asts
Have Fun Wllh Our
SportsiEntertalnmenl Una
· Today!

AT. 7
•

Umestone Hauling
House &amp; Trailer Sites
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septic System &amp;
Utilities
Estimates

005

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
SKILLED NURSING FACiliTY

Large One Item $5.99

AND MORE

12/18/lln

Abso lute Top Dollar : All U.S. Sit·
ver And Gold Coins , P·roofsets.
Diamonds. Anhque Jewelry~
Ring s. Pre -1930 U.S. Cur ncy,
Sterling, Etc. Acquisitions Je elry
, MTS_Com Shop. 151 Second
Avenue . Gallipolis, 740-446-2842.

An1iques- no 11em too large or too
small. Also estates. appraisals,
refinishing , custom orders, 740-

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Restorative Nurse

15"

EXCAVATING CO.

591-1897

Card of Thanks

The family of
Donald Moore
would like to thank
everyone for their
cards, flowers,
prayers, food or who
helped In any way
during his death.
Special thanks to
Sheriff Jim Soulsby,
Ewing Funeral
Home, neighbors,
Carpenters Local
, 650 and area
churches.
Your kindness was
greatly appreciated.
Vfife, Betty Moore
and family.

COUNTRY CANDLE SHOP

(614) 992-3838

Wanted to Buy

2526.

HOWARD

Cell Phone

Card of Thanks ·

o

In

the Clauified Section!

Wolfe
We all lOve you both.

9,92-9200 •
Pick Op or Delivery

992 2121

.

Monica Holman

Part

,-•

Lillie things
are Worth Alot

In memory of

11

I

day to day until finally disposed or.
Any paraon lnteraated
may flit wrlnen exceptlorta
to nld account or to mat-·
tera pertsolnlng to tha execution of lhe truat, not l11a
than five daya prior to tha
date aet for hearing.
Robert E. Buck, Judge
Common Pl111 Court,
Probate Dlvlalon
Meigs County, Ohio
(2) 6

Happy Birthday
Jarrod.

RT. 7

'

PIZZA EXPRESS
18" Deluxe $14.99
16" 3 Item $9.99
992-9200

'

Public Notice

21!

.,
I

248, Chester, Oh.
_
992 2104
Bill Quickel 992-66n
985 3308
J---------------------i-------~94~~~2~804~-------r~~-:~~-~=-~~--~9:9~2-~29~55~======~P;o;m~e;ro;y~·1-----------------------~~~~~~~~~·~·'~··W.~orhS~~ICan"
~i•~rr ~unrrll( ~ow ~nc.
•
L.
...av
EWING FUNERAL HOME
SNOUFFER
TIME FOR SPRING
26!1 South Second Avonuo
Ill tJ nurry... .I.IU
FIRE &amp; SAFETY
CLASSIFIED
ADS
CLEANING?
uldd~~::'~?s':4is7eo
"Dignity and SetVice Always·
SALES &amp; SERVICE
Clean out your basement or
a supermarket
Bruce R. Filhlr- Dlroclor
Established 1913
992·7075
.
.
attic with the help of the
SIIOEaotllolnStrHt
a•o~~L· nMI
OH 457&amp;t
"""
•
172 North Seco
_ nd Ave.
St. Rt.

-.

out your basement or

-,--R-AC-I-NE_M_O_W_ER--t--R.:..:..:...:..IO...:.::..::E::.:.N..:.:O:..:.._U_R----.;,.-I--SW-IS_H_.E_fi_J&amp;..:__L_O_H_SE-I-1.....,~-::..;:.;;;;..._:_.:..;;Vo.;:;;e_te-ra-n-s-t--J'n=r:ancfs FLORISf

CLINIC
Briggs &amp; Stratton
Master Service li;.fthnlclan
GENCIES In.,_
""
IKEIF!OSENE HEATER "~""~1n1

•'

Free Estfmgles

Pliorie: (614) 446-4759
441-1191

Athens, Ohio

ll27t'TFN

Look Who's

Factory Choke Only

White's Chapel Wesleyan
Coolville Road

Pastor: Samuel Basye

614~592-5025

Public Notice

RUTLAND
AMERICAN
LEGION
BEECH GROVE
ROAD
GUN SHOOT
SUN., 1:00 PM

effective upon Issuance o.r a

Wednesday Servi&lt;:e • 7 p.m.

Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

WIJH AWANT AD

.'

Pastor: Roben Barber
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship,; 10 a.m., 7 p.m.

Radio Ministry- Ravenswod Station

t---D-av-:-t...O-ulc-ke-1Ag-e-ncy-Inc-.
INSURANCE

.

Wednesday Services-7:00p.m.

Pastor: Sam Anderson

Sunday School- II a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.
Sutton '

614-992-5479

F111l31 lns11red

Rick Pearson Auction Company,
lull time auction eer, complete
auct1on
service .
Licensed '
w66 .0hio &amp; West Virginia, 304·
773-578 5 Or 304-773·5447.

90

179 Rand St.
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
Rick Johnson
Owner

Attorney At Law

POMEROY, OH.

CARE

ACE TREE SERVICE

William Safranek,

3745.07, o final action 1991 TOYOTA 4X4
COUNTY: MEIGS
Issuing, ·denying , modifyVIN JT4RNOIP5M0012865
PUBLIC NOTICE
The following applications lng, revoking, or renewing a 1994 CHEVROLET VAN
and/or verified complalnlo permll, license, or variance . VIN 1GBEG25K9RF171495
were received and the which Is not preceded by a t986 OLDSMOBILE
following draft, proposed, proposed action, may be VIN 1G3WR14W7JD357108
The terms of sale are
or flnol actions wore laaued appealed to the ERAC by
by the Ohio Environmental filing an appeal within 30 cash.
The Home National Bank
Protection Agency (OEPA) days of issuance of'lhe flna'l
last wet~k- "Actlono: Include acllon. ERAC appeals must · reserves the right to reject
lhe edllptlon; modification, be flied with: Environ- any or all bids or to remove
or rep'lial of ordara (olher mental Review Appeals any unit from the sale at
t.han emergency orders) ; Commission, 236 East Town any lime.
Room
300,
Arrangements may be
the
lseuanca, denial, Street ,
modUicatlon or revocation Columbus, Ohio 43215. A made lo lnspacl a~y of the
of licenses, permits, leases, copy of the appeal must be above named vehicles prior
varlancea, or certificates; served on the director to sale by calling 949-2210.
and lhe approval or wllhln 3 days after filing lhe (I) 2t, 23, 26, 30;
(2) 4, 6, 11, 13 Sic
disapproval of plano and appeal with tho ERAC.
specifications. "Draft
Public Notice
Draft Title v air Permll to
Actions": are written state- Operate
Meigs Compressor
ments of the Director of
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
Environmental Protec-tion's Statlort
COURT, PROBATE
Environmental Affairs
(Director's) Intent ·wllh
DIVISION
respect to the Issuance, Departmenl
MEIGS COUNTY OHIO
Charleston, OH
denial, etc . of e permit,
IN THE MATIER OF THE
Application No.(s)
llcenae, order, etc. InterSETILEMENT OF
0653000022
ested _persona may submit
ACCOUNTS,
Application covers whole
written comments or
PROBATE COURT,
requalt a pubic meellng facility.
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Flnel Issuance of Permit
regarding draft actions .
Accounls and vouchers of
Comment&amp; or public to lnslall
the following named rlduMayor and council
meeting requests musl be
clary has been flied In the
Pomeroy, OH
submllted within 30 days of
Probate
Court,
Meigs
Issue Dale 01 /26/98 County, Ohio, for approval
notice of the drat! action.
Application No. 06-053'74
"Proposed Actions" are
and settlement:
This final action not
. written slalomenta of tho
ESTATE NO . 294B9 - The
Olrector's . Intent wllh preceded by proposed Firat Account of Norma J.
respect to tho laauance, acllon ~nd Is appealable to Holman, Guardian of the
de'ntah ;~ r11odlf1Cation, revo: · ERAC. Sanllary sewert 0lor
Person and Eotate of James
cation , or renewal of a lower Pomeroy Sewer Hiram Smith, an Alleged
permit, license, or variance. Project, Phase 2
Incompetent.
Written comments and (2) 6, 11C
Unless exceptions ora
requaata for a public
filed therelo, said account
meellng regarding a
will be for hearing before
proposed action may ba
said Court on the 6th day of
Public
Notice
'1
submllted within 30 dayo of
Marph, 1998, at which time
·notice of the propoaed
PUBLIC NOTICE
said account will be considaction. An adjudication
On Saturday, February 14, ered and continued from
hearing may be held on a t996 tit tO:OO a.m., the
proposed a~tlon If a hearing Home National Bank wiJI
request or objection Is offer for sale at public
Happy Ad
recalved by the OEPA w"hln auction on the ba.nk parking
30 days of Issuance of the . lot the following vehicles:
proposed action . Wrllten 19B6 PLYMOUTH FURRY
comments , requests for
VIN 1 P3BB26P7GX5B9t 81
public meetings, and 1986 BUICK LESABRE
adjudication hearing reVIN 1G4HR3737GH425674q'ueats must bO sent to: 1977 RV
.
Hearing Clerk, Ohio EnviVIN M50CA6J026619
ronmental
Protection 1990 ISUZU 4X4
Agency, P.O. Box 1049,
VIN JAACR11E5L7254341
Columbus, Ohio 43216-1049
(Telephone : 614-644-2t29).
30 Announcements
"Final Actions" ere actions
of lhe Director which are

Evening- 7 p.m.
Wednesday SerJices- 7 p.m.

MiddlepOrt Community Chun:b
575 Pearl St., Middleport

Morain&amp; Star

JEFF WARNER INSURANCE

Auction
and Flea Market

f

1

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

For Information Regarding
Bankruptcy contact:

"'

Public Notice

St. Rt. 124, Racine
Pastor: William Hoback

Sunday worship- 10 a.m.
Wednesday service -6:30p.m.

Pastor: Dewayne Stutler

360° Communications

COMPLETE

(Lime Stone·
Low-Rates)

SNOW

REMOVAL

WICKS

Driveways,

HAULING

Parking Lets, etc.

Limestone,

Home

Gravel, Sand,

614-992·3141

Top Soil, Fill Dirt

Cell Phone

614·992·3470

591-1897

Call

Anytime

McFEE ROOFING
&amp; PAINTING

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

Specializing In:
Now Roofa, Roof Repairs,
Guftero, lnlerlor &amp;
Exterior Painting, .
Drywall Repair. .
Loweal ralea during·the
winter montha of
Jan.-Feb.-Mar.
Qusllly Work Guaranteed
Free Eat. • Fully Insured
1-614-992-90S7
Middleport, Oh.

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

SAYRE
TRUCKING
Hauling, Excavating
&amp; Trenching
Umestone &amp; Gravel
Septic Systems
Trailer &amp; House Sites

Reasonable Rates

N. Sayre
614-742·2138
Joe

BINGO
MON. &amp; WED.
6:30P.M.
·RUTLAND
POST 467

STAR BURST

· $700.00
$50.00 OR MORE
PER GAME

BEECH GROVE
ROAD

1

1\ucti on Friday &amp; Saturday
7:00pm . Mt. Alto Auction Rt. 2.&amp;
·crossroads " Fri·Grocerlea &amp;
used consignment Sat- Ron i_
Price, all new. Ed Frazier t930.

740·742·3411

Chapter 13

#

"-

80

Free Estimates

Joe Wllaon
(614) 992-4277'

it

-------·

Pentecostal Assembly
Sunday School- 10 a.m.

Pastor: Robcn Vance

Chapter 7

•

some collectibles .

Roofs • Decks • Garages

BANKRUP!CY

CELLULAR PHONES
113 W. 2ND ST.

614-742-3090
614-742-3324
614-742-3076

Wednesday- 7 p.m. &amp; Youth 7 p.m.

Sunday-9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m. (2nd &amp; 4th Sun)

Call Us For A Free Estimate

Pastor: Bill Staten
Sundaf Services- 10 am. &amp; 7 p.m.

Hanioonvllle C~mmunlty Chun:h

Pastor: Dewayne Stutler

Home Improvements

1 New Ufe Victory Center

Carmel

1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

CCIII 614-843·5426"""' 1mo. ..,

33151 Happy Hollow Road
Middleport, Ohio 45769
Additions, Roofing,
Siding,
Pole Barns,
Decks, Painting

·Worship· 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m:

Elldtlme House of Prayer
(at Burlingham church off Route 33)

Free Estimates

KINGS' .

Clifton Tabernacle Chun:h
Clifton, W.Va.
Sunday School- 10 a.m.

Worship - 9 a.m.
Wednesday Services- 10 a.m.

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Holiness

Church announcements
sponsored by these area
merchants.

Sunday-7:00p.m.
Wednesday-7:00p.m.
Friday-7:00p.m.

Long Bottom

Sunday School - 10 a.m.

"Build Your Dream"

•

Basement sate· February 6·7.
307 Spring Avenue. Pomeroy.
9am-3pm . Nothing over $1 .00.
much misc. $1.001 bag, you fill.

Minor Repairs • Cabinets • Siding

Over 20 years experience.

10/25/96.'tln

SUNSET HOME
CONSTRUCTION
New Construction &amp; Remo~eling

Pastor: William Van Meter .

Pastor: Steve Reed
Sunday School -9:30a.m. ·
Worship- 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.
Friday - fellowshop service 7 p.m.

Pastor: Dewayne Stutler

Pas10r: Chad Emrick

Wednesday Services- 7:30p.m.

31057 State Route 325, Langsvlle

J'omeroy Wesbide Chun:b of Christ
33226 Children's Home Rd.

Chun:h of Jesus Christ,
Apostolic Faith
114 mile past Fort Meigs on New Lima Rd.

Pastor: Theron Durham

Rullaod Chur&lt;h of tho Nuarene

Worship - It a.m.

Coffee hour following

Pomeroy Chun:h of Christ
212 W. Main St.

Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Faith Full Gospel Chur&lt;h

Sunday School- 9:15a.m.
Worship- 10:15 a.m.

Central Cluster
Asbury (Synocuse)

Sunday School - 9:45 a.m.

Sunday School 10:30 a.m.

Church of Christ

Pastor: Roben E. Musser

Chester

Pastor: Randy Barr

Pastor : Arius Hurt

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 am

Hobson Cbristion Fdlowshlp Church
Sunday service, 10:00 a.m., 7:00p.m.
')'outh Fellowship Sunday, 7:00p.m.
Wednesday service, 7-:00 p.m.

Salem Center
Pastor: Ron Fierce

Betllaoy

Chrloilao Fellowoblp Center
Salem St., Rutland

·'

Remodeling

M.&amp;J

• Vinyl Siding • Garages
• New Homes • Pole Buildings
• Room Additions

SERVICE
Agricultural Lime,
Limestone • Gravel
Dirt· Sand
985-4422
Chester, Ohio

RQ91&lt;ina ure Chun:h
500 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport

Custom Homes

tOtiSTROCTIOtl

DUMP TRUCK

•

'

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship- 11:15 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.

Thursday Services ~ 1 p.m.

Sunday Evening- 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Pastor: Rev. Roy .McCarty

Pastot: Tom Runyon

Pastor: D11vid Dailey
Evening · 7 p.m.

LOttG•s

L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

R.

Pastor: lawrence Foreman

Rutlasod
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.

Rutland Community Church

t :OIIpm Frtdllv-

Sunday Schoo19:30 a.m.

Thursday service, 7 p.m.

.Snowville
Sunday Sch09l - 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.

Sunday &amp; Monday t~ltlon•.

Sdvenville Word of Faith

Sunday service, 10 a.m.

Sunday School-9:15a.m.
&lt;Worship- 10 a.m.
Youth Fellowship, Sunday- 6 p.m.

All Yard Salta .l luat Be Plkl In _.
Advance. Doodltno: 1 :OOpm till
do~ before the ad 11 to ru~, f

Calvary Bible Cbun:h
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pastor: Rev. Blackwood
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service -7:30p.m.

Pastor Michael Pangio

Peart Chapel
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Wol!hip- 10 a.m.

Rock~rinp
Putor: Kellh Rader

Pastor: Lts Hayman
Wednesday Servicc-7:00 p.m.

Mlnonvlllo
Pastor: Chad Emrick
Sunday School- 9 a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m.

Pastor : Rev. John Neville
Children's service - 10 a.m.

Pastor: Roger Watson

Instrumental
Pastor: Scot Brown
Worship Service · 9 a.m.
Communion · 10 a.m.

Heath (Middlepori)
Pastor: Vemigaye Sullivan
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worohip - 10:30 a.m.

Wesleyan Bible Holiness Church
· 75 Pearl St., Middleport.

Sunday School-9:30a.m
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.

Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.
Appe Ute Center
"Full-Gospel Church'
l'astol! John &amp;.Patty Wade
603 Second Ave. Mason
773-5017
Service time: Sunday 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday 7 pm
Faltb Chapel Open Billie Cbur&lt;~
923 S. Third St., Middleport

Sunday School -10 a.m.
Worobip- 9 a.m.
Thursday Services - 6:30p.m.

Pomeroy
Pastor: Robert E. Robinson
Sunday School - 9:15 a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study Tuesday -.10 a.m.

Zion Church of Christ
Pomeroy. Harrisonville Rd. (Rt.l43)

Wcdnc:sl.hl} Service· 7 p.m.

•

Calvary Pll&amp;rim Chapel

&amp; VIcinity

985-4473
7/22/lfn
Pat's Herb Corner
Located at Dan's
290 N. 2nd Ave.,
Middleport; OH

30 Announcements
VALENTI NE TEA HEABALLY
SPI CED Tea for two! Tea for youtl
lively pre sent atio n on Love
Herbs &amp; Pot tons. Teas &amp; a tasty
lunch provided! Join us for this
special Herbal Affair, Feb. 14th. t
to 4pm, contact Maureen at 740·

742·7243.
40

Giveaway

10 wk . old mate puppy, very
playful , to good honie only. 304·

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

AVON ! All Areas ! Shirley
Spear&amp;, 304-675-1429.

(

Carleton SchootiMeigs lndu stnes
seeks a substitute Health Services Coordinator (RN· or LPN ) to
work with students and adults w1th
development al dis ab1h11es. Must
be a registered nurse or hcensed
pra chcat nurse currently hcensed
in the State of Ohro. Send resume
to:
Steve Beha, h ecutrve Director
Carleton SchOOl/Meigs Industries
P.O. Box 307
t310 Carleton St
Syracuse. O:hio 45779
CNA or HMK needed to provide
in home services for the elderly/
disabled in Mason Co unty
$6.00hr. Call t -888-453-4992.
Computer Useres Needed. WDfk
Own Hrs. $20K ·$50K JYr.. t·BOO·

4 Ad orabl e Puppies To A Good
Home , Tarri er Mixed , Wi ll Be
VrJry Small Dogs. 7 40- 446-7 538,
Between 5 &amp; 7 P.M. Only.

348·7186 X 1173
Co mputer Users nee ded . Work
own hou rs. $20k · $50k/ year. 1·
800·348·7186X 1509.

4 CUle, cudDly, 1a1. Bwk otd, darK
gray kittens. will deliver to Poi nt
Pleasant. 304·895-3590.
Boxer puppi es, mother pure bred.
Call alter 5pm. 304·67 ~ ·4032 .
Cooper nose Be agt e. female .

304-675· 7340.
Female Beagle Spayed . Good
Aabbtl Hunter, 740·245-5130.
Free pup p1es to anyone w1Uing to
grve them a good hOme, call 740·
99 2· 645t betwe en 8:00am·
5:00pm Monday thru Friday.
Puppies 2 males. 3 females. flee
oo good home. 304-695·3659. ,
Reg1stered Cocker Spantel, Mate.
Black &amp; White. Neutered . Gol den
Aetnever. Brittany Spante!. t 112
Years Old. 740·367-Q153
Tan &amp; Whi te, Female Puppy To
Good Home. 740-446-8402
To A Gooa Home 2 Fem ale s
Par t Rot! Well er &amp; M1xed Bl ack
lab Oogs, 4 Mon ths Old , 6 14 ·

60

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SEVICE

Help Wanted

675·6752.

388-9673.

Vitamins, Herbal
Supplements,
Natural Weight Loss
Products

110

Lost and Found

Found Coll1e Dog, Male. Northup
Area . Call To ldent1 ty 740· 446-

Dependable Ancl Ft exibte Certi·
lied Nurse· Aid Needed For In
Home Care. Call Adrianne Or An~
gie t·800·4B1 -63 34
Front Desk Cl erk. Position Avail·
able: Full Time Employment. Exer·
paince Preferred . Apply In Person
M-F Between 9 A.M. And 2 P.M.
At Budget Inn 260 Jackson Pik8,
In Gallt polis. (Formerly Econo

Lodge )

-G-ar~a~ge_O_o_o_r-tn_s_ta_ll_er_H_o_tp_e_r-- !
Mus t Be Mechanically Inclined .
Vali d Or1ver's License Required .
Apply At Chr ts tian·s Construe·
lion. tnc.. 1403 Eastern Ave .. Gallipolis. 740-446-4514.
Genera l Refu se Se rvic e ol Ma·
son County Is seeM1ng candidate
lor a part-time clerical opportuni - 1
ty_c andidates ,shou ld possess J
skill s and exper ience in custom· r
ar service and PC. lnlerestea ln OI Vtduals shOuld submit resume
to: Gener al Refu se Service of
Mason County 91 Hubbard Ave
Gallipolis. orl45631 .
Moving To Gal ~i po lis : In Need Of
Babys11t er In My Home Or Close
To Bulavtlle Roa d, Call Altar 5
P.M. W.ee kd ays , 74 0· 384 ·4288 ,
740-446·1 817.

3897

OAK HILL COMMUNITY
MEDICAL CENTER

Found gray tong· hatred klllen, SR
1241 Hysell Run VICIOI!y, 740·992·
51 t2
Lost· 5 yr old. wnile, tong haired,
Ja ck Russell tam er. McCumber
H1ll Rd beh1nd Ru tla nd toward
OeA1e r, $tOO re ward, no que s·
!tons asked . Aatph Spencer, 74Q-

742·2904.
Lost dresser drawer between Po&amp; Racine, 7•0·949· 2431 ,
leave message.
me r Q~

Los t: Truck Bedli ner Between
Holzer And Kanauga On 1/31198,
· Appreciate You r Hones ty, Ed
Hams. 740. 446-5330.

70

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

AL..L Yard Sa lea Must
Be Paid In Advance.
DEADLINE: 2:00p.m.
· tho dly borora thl.lld
Ia to run. Sunday

ediUon - 2:00 p.m.
Friday. Monday ocllllon
- tO:OO o.m. S811tnloy.

JOB

PO~TING

OIRECrDR OF HOME HEALTH
We Are Seekmg A Nursing Man ager Professional To Ass ume
leadership In Our Home Health
Depart men t. Ou altf ica t10ns In clude An Ohio Aeg tstered Nurse
Lic ense And Two (2) Ye ar s EK ·
perience In Home Heal1h Nursing.
Home Care Management E"peri·
ence And BSN Preferred. Work·
lng Knowledge 01 Medicare And
JCAHO Requirements . Competitive Salary And Benefits. Send
Resume To: Oak Hill Community
Med1ca1 Center. Anenlion: Brenda
McKenzte, 350 Charlotte AVenue,
Oak Hill, OH 45656
EOE

~~-------------

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•4
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g~~e~~a%ee~d~~;,~~~:sc~~P~I~~ ~
wes1 &amp; Sou ther n U.S. Age 23 l

Year Minimum, Expe rienced, fw11n- .\1
lmum 0 1 2 Year s. Good EQuip- ;
ment. Good Pav. Plenty Of Work , _.
Home 98% Weekends, Insurance ..
Ava ilable. 7•()-446-1922.
•~
'I

�-

...

'· friday, February 6, 1998

The Dally Sentinel • .Page 9

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

':~~~--~~~~~----~~~~~==============~
BRIDOI
NEA Crossword Puzzle

PHILLIP
ALDER

EXPERIENCED SALES PER·
SON WANTED FOR BUSY
CONSTRUCTION BUSINESS
Req urrements - Knowledg e 01
Aeside nllal Remodehng Aoolmg

And Rel ate a Expertence Wrtn
Brddrng Jobs To Include Maten
als Ann Labor Must Be Fa mrtrar
W th The Gallrpolr s Pt Pl easan t
Areas QUALIFIED Applt cants
Can Sto p In AI Ch ustran s Con
stru ctlo n In c
1403 Eastern

Ave To Drop Ofl A Resume Or
Frll Out An Applrca!lon Pay
Based On Expenence 740 446
4514

FIRE YOUR BOSS
700 Compantes Ortenng Work AI
Home Opportunrtres ExcUmg In

come Polenllal l CALL NOW 1
888 430 7576 Exl 3208 TOLL
FREE 24 Hrs
FOOD SERVICE
DIRECTOR IDIETICIA~
Regronat Health Care Consutung
Company Needs Food Servrce
01rector IOieiiCian For Long Term
Care Fact11ty In Gallrpolr s Oh o
Arrracttve Wage &amp; Benel1t Pack
age Must Be Experrenced &amp; Lt
censed Fax Resume To 614

833 4465
Pleasant Valley Ho spr rat Is cur
rentty seeking a lull t1me /part
time/per drem Med cat Records
Coder Must be able to code us

1ng lCD 9 CM and CPT4 COding
system Must have co mpleted
Medrcal Termrnotog y Anatomy
and Phys1otogy College courses
ART A RA and CCS requtred
Send resume to Per so nnel at
Pleasant Valley Hospttat 25220
Valley Dr Pt Plea sant WV

25550 AAIEOE
Wanted Harr Dresser And Na11
Te chnr ctan Wtth Cl1enteta 740

256 6336 740 441 1880

180 Wanted To Do

All real estate advertrsmg In
this newspaper rs subJect to
the Federal Farr Housrng Act
ol 1968 whtch makes rt rllegal
to advertrse "any preference
lrmrtauon or diSCflm1nat1on
based on race color relrglon
sex lamtltal status or natrona!
ongrn or any ntentiOn to
make any such preference
It mila! on or d1scrrm1natton •
Thts newspaper wtlt not
knowtngly accept
advertisements for real estate
wh ch Is rn VIOlatiOn of the
taw Our readers are herebv
mformed that alt dwethngs
adver11sed tn lh1s newspaper
are avrulatlte on an equal
oppanunlty bas1s

Attention Mobile Home Owners
Areas Largest Inventory Of Inter
lherm &amp; Coleman Heat Pumps
Air Conditioners Furnaces &amp;
Parts Huge Buying Power Means
The Lowest Installed Pnce Easy
Over The Phone Bantc Financmg
Catt Bennetts Mobrle Home HTG

Buying Slandlng Timber And
Lancl Wilh T1n-ber 74Q.£82 7318

Custom made hornet where
the customer uts the

price &amp; we own the bonk

Only AI
OakWoodHomea
o!Nitto wv
304-755-5885

Discount Mobile Home Parts &amp;
Accessories Water Heaters VI

nyl

Sk~rllng

Kl15 $299 95 An

chars Wood &amp; Fiberglass Steps
Roof Coatrngs Oocrs Wmdows

Plumbing &amp; Eleclrlcal SupplieS
Btockrng Wood &amp; Wedges And
Moret Call Bennetts Mob1le

HO!l'&lt;l Supply All 74()-446-9416
Double wrde 10'Yo down $196f
mo Free delrvery &amp; setup 1 800

441Hl008

31 0 Homes for Sale
3 Bedroom Ranch On 1 5 Acre

Lol Full Basemen1 AHached Ga

rage &amp; Carport

More AC &amp;

50 x70 Bldg Wllh loft 740 367
7465

ENTERTAINER
3bedrooms
2baths starttng at S219fmo

SUNRISE loaded wilh GE ap
pltances starling at $299fmo
FAMILY
4bedrooms 2 large
baths starting $359/mo L1m1ted
trme offer only at Oakwood Bar
boursvrlle WV 304 73&amp;-3409

3 or 4 bedroom b1 level 2 baths
1 car garage 90 by 175 lot 304
882 2689
3br tlome 1 acre tot located In

Free arr free sktrt 16x80 3 or 4
bedroom S1 350/down $299fmo
Calll 900 691 67n

Gallipo liS Ferry across from 84
lumber Prrce reduce d mce
304 675 5010 after Spm

2&amp;3 Bedrooms $1,50() &amp; Up1

BUV HOMES AS LOW AS

$4,000 1 5 Bdrm Local Gov 1 &amp;
Bank Repo s Call 1 800 522
2730 X 1709

Handyman Special cash Only

Only 3left 304 755 5561

Large selechon ol tJsed homes 2
or 3 bedrooms Star1mg at $2995
Outck delrvery Call 740 385

9621

RENTALS

2 Chairs rose &amp; blue very mce

410 Houses for Rent

Brass bed 304 675-7643

2 Bedroom fenced In front yard
In Hartlord $250/mo + deposrt
References required 304 882

Appliances
Recondltlone~
Washers Dryers Ranges Refr1
graters 90 Day Guarantee!
French C1ty Maytag 740 446

3886

5218
3 bedroom house stove relrrg
erator washer/dryer clean no In
s1de pets deposrt requrred 740

992 3090
3 Bedrooms 2 Baths Galha
County Fa rm House Washer &amp;
Dryer Hook Up Dishwasher 740

379 2639
For sale or rent 4br completely
redecorated all new carpet
throughout $375/mo 304 675

9648 614 367 7010
WE WANT TO WORKI Do You
Need An Extra Parr Of Hands ?
We Have Them Male Or Female
Wt11 Work ln stde &amp; Out Clean
Haul Do Odd Jobs Run Errands
Do Laundry Call Us To Do Your
D1rty Work 740 441 1290 Day Or

Nighl

•

Will Care For Elderly Or Hand!
capped Pe r sons In MIJ Home
Relerances 740 441 1536
WHI do custom saw1ng $ Ot to
$ 12 a br ft and plamng $ 10hr
for new lumber Also have lumber
for sale and wtll take orders

Slabs lor sale $5 oo p ck up
rruck toad West Coiumb a olf At
62 on Lte\ling IRd 3 2 miles

W1ll haul Junk or trash away $35/

load 304 675 5035

Wtll take care ol elderly pe rson
tn ther r home have 10yr s ex
perlence W1ll do housekeeprng

anyllme

Call 304 675 1426

FINANCIAL

210

Business
Opportunity

House and property approx 4a
cres Ideal star ter home Beech

Sl Pomeroy OH 304 882 2077
Krtchen d1ntng room 2 bedroom
bath hvrng room front &amp; back lull
length porches gas furnace crly
water outbuilding garage 112
mile East of Racrne 740 949

2118
NEW CONSTRUCTION

Boau

trful Two Story Colonral414 Th1rd
Avenue Gall pohs 3 Bedrooms 2
112 Baths LA &amp; FA Formal Dtmng
Room Oak Trim F1reptace Much
More Home Ehg1ble Fo r Tax
Abatement S 179 500 304 273

2940

POMEROY lAND CONTRACT
Spa ctous 3 br house w11h 2 car
r
garage new roo! new
unrt corner tor only $22 000

R1 ver Frontage Gall potr s Brr ck
Ran ch
Wrap Around Deck
Cathedral LA 3 BR 2 Baths Low
er Le11et 2 Aec Rooms Wet Bar
F P 1 Bath 2 Ca r Garage Ap
pomtment 740 797 4468

320 Mobile Homes
lor Sale
"NOW AVAILABLE"
A beaut1lut repossessed mobtle
home on large lo l tn Gat11polrs
1995 Noms 14x80 2br 2 bath
exc co nd Mu st See• Bank must
see tmmedrate ly p11ce neg 3
month s free tot rent Call
Mtchelle or Kr1s11 at 1 800 78 7

6663
CaH 304 675 4678

recommends th at you do bu sr
ness wrth people you know and
NOT to se nd money through the
mat! untrl yo u have tnve st1gated
rhe ofleftng

2 Baths Owner F nancrng Avari

BUTCHER SHOP · SlAUGHTER

0008
Commer cral burldrng &amp; lo t on
Matn Stree t rn Mason WV
20K80 Call evemngs 304 675

4975
Heallh &amp; Weatlh
We Help People Oeve op 2nd In
comes Become Fmanc1ally Free
With Ste p By Slep Tratntng 24
Hour tnlorm ahon Line 740 245

5075
Co mp any Needs
Help W1tM Mall Order Horne
Based Busmes s $500 $6 000
Mo PT/FT Call For Free tnlorma
ttonal Booklet 1 800 204 7048

230

t2~65

Tra1ler 3br I balh $5 500

MUST SELL 14x80 3 Bedrooms

able 304 736 7295

1994 Sultan Elect11c Heat Pump
2 Bedrooms 2 Baths
$17 900

740 446 3653

1997 Kentuck1an 14~70 3br 2
lull bath $19 900 Delivery &amp; sel

up 304 372 3400
1998 14xBO Kentuckran all elec
tr rc 3br 2 bath delrvery &amp; set
up ale mslalted $26 900 30 4

372 3400
1998 3br 2 baths loiS of extras
set on lot Call for more mlo 304

755 7191
1998 Contessed 28x70 3br 2 lull
bath all electnc tot model only
Delivery &amp; set up afc rnsralled

$57 000 304 372 3400

tnre rnaflon&lt;~l

Professional
Serv~ces

Ltvrn.gston s basemen! water
proofing all ba sement repa rs
done tree es!lmar es l1let 1me
guarantee 10yrs on JOb e~~:per1
ence 304-675 2145

310 Hames lor Sale
1985 Ranch 3 Bedrooms 1 Bath
Large Uvlngmom La1ge Ktlchen
1 Acre Gallr polts C11y Schools

$67 000 7&lt;0-446 4323
2 Ye ar Old All Br ick Ranch E.re..e_
~ Huge Rooms Oak Trrm
Doors &amp; Cabrnets 2 Baths 3
Bedroo ms Full Basement Large
Garage 15 To 20 Acres 740

367 7465
2592 Sq Ft 3 Bedrooms 2
Barhs F1nrshed Ba sment 2 112
Car Garage 1 Acre MOL Galli
, pairs Reduced $1 06 000 740
44&amp;-4441

3 112 yr old home se tr rng on
beautiful 7 lf2 acre lot fully
equrpped k!lchen family room wl
flraplace attached large garage
heat pump &amp; maintenance free
sldtng 304 882 2296 anyt1me

New double w1de repo $999
down Free delrvery and setup

304

736 7295

New Repos Never Ltved In Only
2 Left Free Oelrvery &amp; Set up
Call F nance Lrne For Free Ap
proval 1 800 948 5678
One 1978 10 x46 Offrce Tratler
Wtth Electnc Forced Atr Heat
And 2 Ton Central A/C Umt One
1987 12 x69 Oflrce Trailer Wllh
Electr ic Force d Atr Heat And
Central AJC Untt Please Call 740

256 6327 From 8 00 AM To 4 30

Cooon1011 $125 740 367.0279
DP Slepper $125 740 245 9019
Aller6 PM
GOOD USED APPLIANCES

Quiet Country Setting wtth beau
trful mob1le home lorced to sell
Fmancrng available 304 7!)5

5566

pels 304 675 5162

PC $275 Caii74Q-886 6373

Pomeroy HUD approved $300
per month 740 992 5986 or 740

9927511
Alo Grande Area 3 Bedroom

Balh &amp; 1/2 $450/Mo OepoSII Re
qu1rod W/D Hook Up 1 888 640
0521
Small clean quiet carpeted no
pets $275fmo $250 deposit

304 773 9192

420 Mobile Homes

Magrc Chef gas range good con
drt1on 740.742 2997
Movtng Sale Used Furniture
Store 130 Bulavrlle Ptke Gatllpo
hs Ohto 50% Ofl Grit Shop And
Most Furnrrure Man Tues Wed

lo-4 Only

Polly s New &amp;Uaed Fumllure
We now have Army Surplustll
2101 Jefferson Ave
Open 9 30 5 00 Man Sat

304 675-SOFA (7632)

and

1998 G1les 14x70 all electnc de
l1very &amp; set up 3br 2 bath vmyl
&amp; sk lrtmg rnstalled $19 900

304 372 3400
1998 Ke nt 14x 70 Vrnyl &amp; sh m
gte 3br 2 bath de livery &amp; set
up ale 1nstalled $ 26 900 304

372 3400

372 3400
lsi T1me Buyen; E Z Frnanc1ng
2 or 3 Bedroom around $200 per
month Fr ee delrvery &amp; set up
Calt credtt ltne 1 80D-948 5678

3 Bedroom 2 bath 1998 model
home rncludes Free sei•UP &amp;
d(!llvery Skirting air, color TV
&amp; VCR included All lor $219/mo
Only wh1te ~u pphes last Call to
day 304 755 5885

5 New 1997 14 Wldes Unbel1ev
able Prrce Must Sell Before Jan
31s t To Close Ou t Physical
Year Call Cred1t Ltne t BOO 9-48

5678

$219/Mo
SUNRISE

Loaded W1th GE Appliances
Startmg A1 $299fMo

120 feet long 80 feet long on oth
er s1de 75 feet wrde level lot rn

Mddleporl $23 000 OBO 740
992 2290
34 acres Route 160 near Galttpo
hs half clea red and wooded
pond road frontage water and
electnc access1bte $22 000 Cal
740 742 2045 alter 5 30 p m
4 Acre Lot s For Sate On Black
Top Road County Water Near
850 Senous Jnqurres Only 740
24 5-5064

BRUNER lAND
740-441·1492
Gallla Co Gathpohs Nerghbor
hood Ad 10 Acres l ots Of Level
$19 000 Or 22 Acres Wrth Pond
NOW $24 000 Frtendtv R1dge 8 5
Acres $7 500 Or 6 5 Acr es
$8 000 Counry Water
Meigs Co Danv lie Ntce 17
Acre s $18 000 Or 9 Acre s
$17000 $1000 Down -+ $2121
Mo County Water
Call For Free Maps -+ Owner F1
nanclng lnlo Take 10°~&lt;~ 011 lrsted
Prtces On Cash Purchases!

TAX REFUND
"BUY LAND"
Invest Your Refund In
Something That Lasts Forever

"LAND
All O,.er Southern Oh10

CAMP HUNT, RETIRE
On One 01 Our 5 To 20 Acre
Country BUild ng Lots

GALLIA COUNTY NEW 5 Acre
LoiS Open Meadows 112 900
Up $1 290 Down We Also Have
Land In Gatha Jackson Sc1oto
P1ke Ross Athens Me gs Coun

ues

2 Large Bath6

Slarling 1359/Mo llmllod T1me

Offer Onl~ At OakwOOd Barbours
vrl!e WVA 304 736-3409

1279
Three bedroom mob1le home out
side ol Pomeroy 7AO 992 5039

Two 2 bedroom trarters on New
Ltma Ad call 740 742 2803 after

6pm

1 and 2 bedroom apartments fur
nrshed and unfurmsned secunty
deposu reQuired no pels 740
1br apartment pr~ vate qwet De
post! References $250/mo 304
2bdrm apts total electoc ap
phances furnrshed lalJndry room
facilities close to school rn town
Applications avarlabte at V1llage
Green Apts ltl49 or call 740 992

3711 EOH
663 Thrrd Ave 2 Bedroom $300
Plus Utrttlles Deposll Aequrred

(7 40)245--!1595 Aller 6 p m
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 52 Westwood Dn ve
from $260 to $334 Watk to shop
&amp; mov1es Call 740 446 2568
Equal HolJstng Opponumty

Fronlage 6 Woods APlus
'
CALL MIKE TODAY I
ANTHONY LAND CO, LTD

--1-80().213-8365

Wanled To Buy Land In Gallla
County Area For Future Home·

slle Any Acreage, 740 3799384

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise
1 Ttnted Insulated Slldrng W nd
ows 5 x5 l Shaped K1tchen
Counter 95• By 59" Wtth Stam
tess Steel Srnk &amp; Faucets Plus
24' Countertop 74()..256-6512
Brand New! Great GUll CDivldeo
storage lJnit Black and cherry
Never out o! bOll $125 Holds up
to 940 discs also holds tape s
Call 740 992 6636 atter 6 pm
COs &amp; tapes not Included
Concrete &amp; Ptasllc Septrc Tanks
300 Thru 2
Gallons Ron
Evans Enterpuses Jackson OH

ooo

ECONOMY
Healing And Coottng

Up Grade Your
Present System
From $38 00 fCall For Oelatls

74()-245-9009

F1rewood For Sale $35 Prck Up
Load Will Deliver 740 256 1440

740.256 9172
$40 ATruck Load De

lrvered Call 740 446 4362 No An
swer Leave Message
Gardall Secunty Safe Firepro of
Brand New Never Used Wrll
Sacr~frce Sale Is 15"Wxt7• Deep

BAANED Round ball' mrxec
hay never wet 3()4 882 20n

lor $150 Yamaha Keyboard
$125 19" Zentlh TV $60 ~_, 20
Inch Sytvanta TV $1 00 Panaso
nrc Mrcrowave $70 Brother Word
Processor $140 J&amp;B Tectmoto

gy 372 S1a1e Roule 160 Galllpo11&amp;
3f4 200 PSI

Ntce one bedroom apartment utrl
IlleS paid ll() pelS 740 992 5858
Now Takrng Appli cations - 35
Wes t 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments S2951Mo 740 446

0006
One l:ledroom apartmen\ In Mid
dleport all ultlthes pard $270 per
month $100 depostt 740 992
7806

Three bedroom - $300 per month
two bedroom $260 per month

utrhlles and deposrt Thrrd Street
Racine Ohro 740 247-4292
One bedroom apartmenl In Mtd
dleport 740..992·2176

No Pels Aele!lnce

LBS 30 Days Or Recommended

W1zard Atdrng Mower 18 HP
74Q-256 1424 Ask For Lawrence
Wood For Sale $35 A Load Wtll
Del~er

74()-388 8010

550

Building
Supplies

Block bnck sewer p1pes wrnd
ows lrntets etc Claude Wtnlers
R o Grande OH Call 740 245
5121

560

Pets far Sale

A Groom Shop Pel Groom1ng
Featurmg Hydro Bath Don
Sheets 373 Georges Cree~ Ad

74()-446 0231

AKC reg~ s tered Chtnese Shar Pet
pups tots of wnnkles $250 &amp; up

614 949 2126
AKC Reg istered Male Cocker
Span1el Black &amp; White 4 Years

Old $150 74()-379 2728

Oalmatton Pupp1es Full Blooded
$50 Each Have Both Parents On
Premises 740 256--1172

388 8922

German Shepherds- Pure Whrte
AKC 3 Pups lett $330 2 Lefled

740 286 8753 740 286-6851

Golden Aelnever Pup s AKC
Aegrstered 6 Wee~s 1~~ Sho ls
And Wormed $225 740 446

6651 740 446 2699
Jack Russell Ra t Terner puppres
shors &amp; wormed tarls docked
ready to go Valentrnes S75ea

304 675 7946

9426 Can See At 718 Th1rd Ave
nue Gall!pohs

UKC tllack &amp; tan coonhOund pup

Gall Clubs 100 Sets Under $100
300 Wood fMedat Duvers Under
$100 Club Budder Aeparred 740

245 5747
Grutlb s P1ano tunrng &amp; reparrs
Problems? Need Juned? Callltle
prano Dr 740-446-4525

Kodak 8mm vrdeo camera outfit
Includes camera full l unllon
8mm VCR play back untl baller
1es AC adapter carrytng cas e

304 882 2566

WelgM Loss LOSE UP TO 30

Old Englrsh Sheep Dog Pups 2
Males 1 Female 304 523-3719

In New Haven 1br lurnrshed apt
rnctudes washer &amp; dryer depostt
&amp; references 304 882t2566
Middleport North 4th Ave 2br
lurntshed apr depostt &amp; referenc

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson Oh10 1 800 537 9528

JET
AERATION MOTORS

p1es good bloodline $175 740
949 2702
FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

610 Farm Equipment

Large sport card cottecuon best
oHer or w111 trade lor car large an
I!QlJe book collectron best offer
must see 740 992 5787 even

ongs

Like New Refngerator Whrte'

$250 00 740 367 0544

Monument Sate Ourtttng Busr
ness! Johns Monumenls 113 Off
Until Stock Is Sold 130 Bu!avtlle
P1ke Galhpolis OhtO
NordtcTrack Llke New $65
Cooktng ElectriC S1011e $75 740

37!'-2720 AFTER 6 PM
Oa k

Curto

Corner

Cabmet

$199 95 Oak Kllchen Carl
$34 95 Business Ollice Desk
$295 Old Fashroned Stove
Woodburner $119 95 740 446
3385

Packard Bell PC 133 MHZ, 1'0GB

$7 200 M F 110 Manure Spread
er S1 500 1 Row Tobacco Seller

$500 740-61l2 6731
JOE RUSS FARM
EQUIPMENT 6 FERTILIZER
Localad 8 Mllel SOUlh
Of Jackson On 51 R1. 139
740.286-2731
J D 295S FWA Cab &amp; A~r J D
2555 FWA Wilh loader MF
3070 FWA CaD &amp; Air 6610 Ford
Cab &amp; Alf TWS Ford FWA Cab
&amp; Air J 0 4430 Cab &amp; Alf I H
1086 Cab &amp; Alf Case I H 585
FWA Wrth Loader J D 550 B
Dozer J 0 450E Dozer J D 7200
Vatuum Corn Planter Also Other

1519

16 MB Ram 14 4 Fax Software
Canon Color Printer With Acces

Upstairs and DoWnsta~rs apart
ments Available 91 Cedar Trailer

sorles New PC Desk &amp; Chair

Tractors &amp;EqU1pmen1

Plus Extras! E118rythlng Used Ap·
prox 50 Hours Total Package ,

John Deere Day February 6

and Collage AI Porler (740) 3881100

450

Furnished
Rooms

Circle Motel Lowest Rale s In
Town Newly Remodeled HBO
Clnamax Show time &amp; D1sney
Weekly Ratas Or Monthly Rates
Construction Workers Welcome

$2 600 SacrHice $1 800 J C Pon
ny Air Condlllonor, $150 740·
256-6294
L1ke New Alcon Hydrauli c
Wheelchair Uft For U&amp;e In A

1998 11 oo A M Carm,cahels

· Farm &amp; Lawn Inc 668 Pmecrest
Drive Galhpolts OH Come See
What s New! 740 446 2412 1

N On AI 2 304 675 3960 Leave

Message

TRANSPORTATION

71 0 Autos lor Sale
89 Dodge Daytona !tit atr au
toma11c sunroof new motor
shocks struts tires l:lody has
80 000 m1tes verv t;:lean and
good lookmg car $3800 negot1
able consider trade for 4x4 740

992 6304
1969 BUICk GS $3 000 740 6827512
1969 Mustang 6 Cylinder Auto
Exifellem lnt $5 000 304#675

3960

1969 Nova SS 396 375 Less
Molor &amp; Trans $3 000 (7 40
682-7512
1978 Chrysler Cordoba $400
1989 Chevy Cavalier $300 304

675 3734
1981 Monte Carlo dependable
power seats V 8 qutck 304 882

3328

•

1996 Dodge 600 n1ce depend
able car PS P8 automatic amllm
cassette $1299 740 949 2045
1986 Monte Carlo 305 Needs

Work $500,740 367..0303
1987 Chrysler Ftllh Avenue run .,

good $800 1982 Dodge Anes
runs good $500 740-992 5529
t988 Ford Ftesra $300 front end
damage 304 675 4684

Sectional sofa wtonoman excel
lent condition Call after 6pm

~--67_~----~----~-, =446-~154~2~~~~~--

Sleeping rooms wltn cooking
Also traile r space on river All

Sewing Machine Brothers Com

TDg Dozer

merclal Semi High Speed Slralghl
Lock S111ch 740 446 1124 740
446 1162

wench Good under Carnage
Gas /Diesel Engme AHer 5 740
256 6762

o

1

Blade Isaac

PAW l! DON'T FERGIT
TO WATCH TH'

~~~~~§~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

'"'

Cassette Automatic AC PS PB
Bedhner Cover Onglnal Fc(rc
Warranty $9 700 6t4 446-2847 ,

(,OlJGtl SOUNI&gt;S'

M~l&gt;u:AL

MUC~ BeTTf~.

OfFIG.f

r

1997 Dodge 4x4 D1esel 1 Ton

Dually Gompellely Loaded Ex&lt;'l·
len1 Cond111on MuSI Sell' 7~0

~ TtiAN~S.

'

lP

l'Vt BEEN

Excellent Cond1tron V 8 Auto
82 000 Mtles Cook Motors 7f

P,AGTICING.

'

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs '
92 S 10 4x4 4 3 hter automa c
a1r excellent cond11ton witt s II
below book senous ~nqulrles only

740.992 7614 or 74()-949 2210

I"

Wf\u:£. WOOLD YOO UK£ rt'.£ TO
PUT ffi~YI&gt;D\:) 7

1978 Chevy 4x4 New 305 Auto

1988 S 10 Blazer 2 8 Aulo AC
Slereo 1984 Chevy 4x4 250 4
Speed $11 000 For All Sell Slip

t 988 Volkswagen Jeua Dresel 4
Doors Th ree Speed Transmrs

slon High Miles And Needs
Some Work $200 Or Best Offer
740 245 9841 A!ler 7 PM
\989 Chevy Celebnty 4 cylrnder
automattc runs good looks good
$1200 wtth or without parts car
prrce firm call 740 949 2252
evenngs
1989 Dodge Omnr New Pa1n) Job
KCellent CondtiiOn 5 Speed

$2 200 080 740 446 7252 Aller
5PM
1991 GEO Strom G S I arr auto
ps pb exc cond 614 386 8258
1991 Lumma Euro 4 Doors. Black
PS PB Ttlt Cru1se Electrtc
Wrndow s locks AMIFM Cas
sene New Front Ttres E1cellent
Condttton Askmg $4 600 1-40

446-0795
1991 Ponr1ac Grand Prrx SE 2
Doors Black Sunroof PS PB Tilt
CrUISe Electnc Wmdows &amp;
Lo cks AM /FM Cassella New
Front Ttres Excellent Condrtton
Askrng $4 899 740-446 0795
1992 Chevy Capnce Good
Workrng Order Needs L illie

Work Asls 740-441 -9511

1994 Mercury Cougar XR7 8Cyl
PS PB Learher tntertor Electnc
Red Excellent Condrt1on Adult
Drrven 43 000 Mt les 614 4467527
~

$5 750 OBO 740.256-6340 'i40
256-6467

Asking

1986 Chevy Astra Cargo 118n
good condrhon $2795 may con
stder guns on trade 740 992

6154

1987 Ford Bronco II XLT 4x4
New Jasper Motor Reburlt AUto
Transmrssron Excellenl Cone1
honl Serrous lnqurnes Only

SHE DOEStl T
5/W

HAV£ TO

$5 300 74()-44&amp;-4207

AN"C'TH1Nu'

I CAN TELL!

1988 Ford Ranger XLT 4x4 5
speed bed hner $3 950 740

t" C.AN SEE

THE SIGNS 1

949 3403
1989 Bronco 4114 v 6 automatiC
loaded clean looks and runs
good htgh mrles $3600 740 247

4292
1989 GMC Safari Full Custom

Van $3 950 740-446 4222
t990 Ford Ranger XLT 414 2 9
Liter
6 AT 49
M11es Ex

v

ooo

cellenl Cond111on $6 900 740
440-0656

o&amp;o
5 speed $3900 1978 Clil

1991 GEO Tra cker 4•4 97
mo~s

1M GLAD TO SEE VOU RE
WALKIN6 A LOT IF VOU
FLV TOO MUCH, '(OU'LL
WEAR OUT 'fOUR WIN65

vy Blazer &lt;1x4 $2500 740 74~

'2574

1

1993 Ford Explorer 4 Doors AC
AutomatiC PW PO Pl 4

Luggage Rae!&lt; 7&lt;0-446-4999

(Seuous l nqurr les Onlyl) 740

446-4015

Wr

by FBI IRS DEA Available your
area now Call 1 800 ·513 4343

EX1 S 93611

1980 1990 Cars For $100111
Selled Ancl Scld
Locally This "lonlh
Trucks 4x4 &amp; Etc

1 8Q0.522 2730, X3901

West

Pass

Pau
Paas
Pau

North

3•
56

Paaa
Pass

TloiAT'S WI-IV D065 DON T
J.IAVE WIN6S. OUR ANCESTORS
WORE TfiEM OUT.

Indian
27 Jump
29 One of
Taylor'• exH
30 Heraldic
border

Db I

YeiHI
40 Vearnllel
41 Peer·thlpllel

lrulll
42 Hosiery color
43 GIINOUI
element
45 Faithful
46 Vatican
IHdlr
47 Sclmethlng
unique

4t C:.l. abbr.

SOStcr52 Pnllx lor blr
53 Roman 550

CELEBRITV CIPHER
by Lula Campos

Cellbrily ~ a~wnt.,. CfN1ecl from quoc.tiGM by IM'IOIA ~ put .oo ,.._..
e.::h ilnti In ltw o1JNr t&amp;lndl tor anohr Todly. c:1ut- L ~ y

'P

K N J 'X

IJ NE

HMDVXDRX
AVMDDII
RXDEVMX

EUPAU

KPRVRXDII,

NM

T L

THINGS I
TELL '(OU..

XUD

T L

EPYDR.'

HIIVJHDII.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION "Myths are a waste of lime They prevent
progressiOn • - Barbra Stre1sand

S©\\~~-ltt.trs·
- - - - - - - ldltod
I POllAN
JUt DAILY
PUULII

WOlD
lAM I

~,CLAY

Rearrange Jettars of
0 four
scromblod words

low

the

be

to form four srmple words

DELNOF

I.
RE P I L

I I I 1~
,,....,___;RO.,_;.;N.,U.:._M..---11 ::::
r-

6

I Is I 1

•

Alter a long and bonng leelure I concluded that one
shouldn't use a gallon of wards
lor a thought that ts only a

~-1-. . _M,I-=0.,I,.;.r. .:;jr- 0:..,.l--ll ~. i;~~:;= ~~h~h:h~~~.~g q~~:d~
17£:::.

~

way around it,

EVR

8..:

V

I

de'llelop from step No J below

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES
UNSCRAM!ILE FOR
ANSWER

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Fiddle - Blaze - Whelk - Prefix - FEEL LIKE
When I reJect gomg lo work my husband lectures me
thai professionals can do the1r best even when they don't
FFFI I IKF II'

ROBOTMAN
CLOS~ IT1 JUST

ClQSI: ~0\JR

080 74()-367-Q629

SI"JmRING

1984 K5 Blazer Camper Spec1a1
94K Mrtes AC AT PS PB Ttll
AM/ FM Cassette New Tues
New Exhaust Body Good Runs
Great! 740.446-3580

Bl&lt;1141\0LE ''

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

BUDGET PRICE TRANSMIS·
StONS, Used / Aebwlt Alt Types,
Access Over 10 000 Transml s·
srons &amp; Clutches 740 245 5677
New gas tanks 1 ton truh"
wheels &amp; radiators 0 &amp; A Auto
Rrpley WV 304 372 3933 or 1

ASTRO·GRAPH

800-273-!Y.l29

SERVICES
Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncond1tl0nallrlet1me guarantee
local references lurnlshe(l £i

tabl1shed 1975 Call (7401 44l·
0870 Or 1 BOO 287 0576 Rogers
App11ance Parts And Service All
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ell
perrence Atl Work Guarantee4
French Cuv Maytag " 740 .448

7795

C&amp;C General Home Main#
tanence Painting vrnyl sldrng
carpentry doors wmdows baths
mobl~ home repatr and more Fo~
free estrmate call Chet 740 992·

6323

lh

840 Electrical and
Refrigeration
Resldenttal or commercial wiring,
new serv1ce or repairs Master U·
censed efectnclan Rid.enm1f
•

PISCES (Feb 20 March 20)
W1thm your social cm:lc today you II
s1and OUl as Ihe dommallng mnucncc
Fncnds w1lllook 10 you for d1rec11on,
wh1ch you II l1c able to supply eaSI
ly
ARIES (Man:h 21 Apnl 19) A
stu;:ky ~IIUilliUn you VC been anXIOUS
10 1csolvc can he condudcd sallslac·
tunly today Be llex1blc and prepared

In l:nmpnumsc a hll

Waterproofrng

1786

OM'I Mck
25 Overtake
26 Peruvian

Pau

NO, VOU CAN

Grande caravan e)

Eleclrlcal WV000308 304 675

24 Lying on

Pua

Classified Ads

cellenl Condr11on 26 000 Mrlas
Loaded
~ear Arr Captart\5
Chaus Tmted Wmdows RoSl
wood Color Automahc $19 oop

810

eyetem

Eut

eeueve soMe

1995 Toyola T 100 4x4 $13 500
740.446 3040

760

9 Type of pick?
10 T•nnle plltyer

you

1

740-446 2532

DO&lt;lg~

19 - Faithful
21AMarllyn22 Aquatic
mammale
23 WIICII

N..hlae
11 Dye
12 Exerclae

8 Dr.'e org.

2•

concluded that It was s1lly to double
an opposmg slam conlract JUSt
because you thought1t would fa1l If
11 d1d go down you already had a
great result And unless the opponents
were unreliable. one down was prolr
ably the bes1 you could hope for
So, L1gh1ner recommended doubltng 10 ask for an unusual lead The
trump smt and any su1t b1d by the
defenders are out Often. the doubler
has a Slde·5ul1 vo1d , l!"h1ch he hopes
partner w1ll lind ~f partner 1s m
doubt, dummy s first-bid sun1s usu·
ally 1he ch01ce
\_
However Ely j:ulbcrtson the
maJOr-domo of bndge m 1hosc days.
reJecled 11 Why' Because the lirs1
ume 11 occurred when 1hey were part·
ners, L1~htner doubled when on lead
h1msclf' To make mauers worse the
opponcms redoubled Evcn1Ually
1hough, 11s ellicacy became apparcn1
.. as m th1s deal
North'sJUmp 10 f1vc spades asked
Sou1h to h1d SIX unless he had lwo
heart losers And when Sou1h d1d
ra1se, Eas1 made a L1ghtner double
Una1ded surely Wes1 would have
led 1he heart Jack Declarer would
carefully cover wnh dummy s queen
and get home Yc1 after lhc double 11
wasn'1 hard for West 10 selcc1 a diamond h1s longest sun East rutfcd
and cashed the heart ace to defea11hc
slam
One warnmg II helps 10 feel con
, hdent thai you can beat any other
1 slam the opponents m1ght run to. after
11hey have been t1pped off thai lhm
present chotec ts m Jeopardy If you
thmk they can make, say, s1x no·
lrump, 11 mtght be exped1en1 to pass
and hope partner 1s cnJoymg one of
h1s more msp1rcd moments

1993 GMC 1500 4x4 SLE 57 250

1996

tlc:kneatlly
7 Author
Julea-

Back m 1929, Theodore L1ghtner

M TK 10903 Dark Blue Bed I n4r
350, V 8 Auto A1r Smrth s GM~

Call Erme At Gallra Auto Sales

Jeckspn Pike 740 446 0724
Bank Financing

1

1

1995 Saturn SC2 Automallc Arr

Cruise AM/Ft-1 Cassella Trunk
Release $12 000 Call Aner s PM

YOU COUt.DmP OJER..
" COI&lt;:tx.E.S:&gt; ffiC't-lE I

$3 600 Sieve Work 740 446
4172 7402561619

740-446 2532
1995 Neon 4 Doors White Wrth
Rad Ra c tng Stnpes Auto Au
Cassette Ttl! 73 500 Mljes

,..

WK.
'::EAT, N-ID &amp;:
I~ 1\-'E

1985 Dodge 4x4 SWB 318 4

1995 Bu1ck Park Avenue Fully
Equtpped Factory Program Car
LealhfH Sealrng Sm1th s GMC
740 446 2532
1995 Cad1llac Sedan Deville Oarll;
Blue All Power 4 3 Liter V 8
Leather lnter ror Smtih s GMC

r

cmnx..'

erate Or Trade Up For A Chevy
o4x4 Truck 740..441 1595
Good

6 Sleeplng-

y Phillip Alder

1994 S 10 Pick Up LS Black;~
Speed V6 AM/FM Till CrUISe
$8 995 7&lt;0 446-9664

Runs

volcano,

MauM5 Baaebllll'e Mel

Uncclne
32 About
33 Tiny Ned
34 Terrify
35 Move furtively

The leading
ouble

1619

Speed

airline

21 Forde end

37-voyove
38 Small aelllnt

lent Condition No Rust 614 446

446-0103

2 Horne of Adam
3 Optra by Verdi
4 Hawaiian

31 Prophet

1988 Ford Ranger XLT Exlenlfed
Cab 6 Cylinder PS PB PW ~r
AM/FM Cassella $3 300 Excll

441-0996After 4 PM

1 Whizzes

STEWPOT!!

t 988 Olds 4 door In Good Con

diiOO $1 60Q 00 740 3e7 0544

4 wheelers motor homes furm
ture electronrcs computer&amp; etc

10 Ft fertthzer Sp(eader 3 Sub
Soller t40 Farmalt W11h Cultlvllor
&amp; Side Dresser t 3SO Hours. 740

36
66
Pass

$4 600 304 576 2408

1989 GMC S1orra lWB PiCk

CARS FOR $1001 Trucks boals

Hog &amp; 3 D1sk, MF 6 Fl Mower

Dbl

1996 Ford Ranger XlT AM/RW

MF240 Diesel 500 HolJrs Bush

1&lt;0 441 !i698, 740-441 5167

hook ups Call aller 2 00 p m
304 773 !i651 Mason WV
f

Square Bates $2 00 Eac~ 1 Mtle

BARNEY

automa!lc 76 000 miles seco~d
owner ex.cellent condtUon 7.(o
1985 Ford F 150 no rust, new
paint new motor 351 exc co~c:t

80().594 1111

van $1 000 740-446-0609

South

Mixed Hay Delano Jackson Farm

14 Actor Ee~vez ~Rut
15 Hevingfeel
55 Flee
11 , .....,..
56 Tanned
17 Nehoor •'-P 57 Type of C08IItr
11MHeureol
weight
DOWN

Vulnerable East-West
Dealer: East

6504

742 2979 7&lt;0 992 3394

1993 Ford Thunderbrtd Low Mtle
age Sunrool leather Seats CO
Antr Theft System 740 446-3108

I H Ga s Tracror 2250 Loaner

L~

245-5047

698 8254

AJ 98
• Q 9' 2
t

engme good body rough good
\Ires new brakes $800 304 675

1985 Chevy 3/4 1on pickup 350

del1very possible SR 143 four
mrles north of Harrl&amp;onvllle 740

K Q8 7
• 4

caii741J.742 3800 aHer 4pm

45 Nevallddr.
48 The- Cometh
51 Biblical hero

31Fiavor
37 l(ltcllen
appliance
3!1 Adopt (1

a

1976 GMC dump truck no c6L
required good condition $325.0

1979 Chev P/U acyl aulo

•

South

I

large Round Bales Mrx.ed Hay
1500 Pounds Kept Olf Ground
W1U Load Phone Evenings 740

1993 Black GEO T1ackor $5 000
304 675 7349

Cond1hon S3 000 740 379-2366

• 874 3

Sell' 74()-3e7 7117

1992 Della 88 Loaded $6 500

9 Ft Hayb1ne W11h Extra Culling
Bar $ t 200 Rand Hay Baler Inter
nat1ona1 2400 5K5 Bates Good

t105432
• 10 5

304 675 5724

740 682-7512

$350 304 675 6504

1975 Chevy shor1 wheel ba'e !

Hay &amp; straw deliVery available

1992 Chevy Lumrna Euro Fully
Loaded Garage Kepr Excellent
Con&lt;:llton 740 367- 7671

~

86 Mazde runs gooo $500 080

4x4 new paint exhaust tires
350 engine while tn color

1 FIIIIIIC
7 Mlpzlne, Fllr
13 Foole

CIUN)

41 Bog
44 Sulllx lor -

21 Adhelenta of
lllem
25 WOII!Icllor en

J;:til
• 63 2
•AK8653

740 992 4133

ACROSS

20G-Ietter

• 9 ;
• J 10 9 7

1984 Chevy P1ck Up Long Whttel
Base Excellent Condition Must

$125 14 Inch NEC SVGA Monl

x21 " High ASking $400 740 446

Repa1red New &amp; Aebu11! In Sloct
Call Roo Evans 1 800 537 9528

C~an

VHS ~C Camcorder $250 200
Channe l Hand Held Scanner

Oatmat1o n Full Blooded Puppres
wormed &amp; ShOts sso Each 740.

Grac1ous lrvrng 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at VIllage Manor and
Atverstde Apartment s rn M1ddle
port From $236 $304 Cat! 740
992 5064 Equal Housrng Opper
run111es

&amp; Deposit Requ ired 740 446 ·

I NEED LANDI
11 You Have Land I Need To

Moore owner

F~rewoocf

1-80().21:1-8365

Real Estate
Wanted

Antiques

Buy or sell Rrvertne Antrques
1124 E Mam Street on At 124
Pom eroy Hours M T W 10 00
am to600pm Sunday 100to

Apartments
for Rent

Upstairs 2 Rooms &amp; Bath Fur

360

530

Current Ty Beame babtes $9 00
&amp; up call 740 992 4 186 leave
message

mSiled

Valley Gem Woodburner Bnck
Uned Excellent Condrtlon $150
740 446-1214 After 5 PM

100% GUARANTEED RESULTS
1 888 294-8079

Two bedroom tra1ter rn Long Bot
tom no tnsrde pets no depostt

Call Today For FREE Maps
ANTHONY LAND CO, LTD
www countrytymo tom

Aemmgton Htgh Power Adle M~

el BOL 700 Caliber 243 $450
740 446-4855

1 800 537 9528

OS

446 6306 1 800 291 0098

$37 00 Per 100 All Brass Com
prass1on Flltrngs In Stock

Sporting
Goods

no pets 740 667 3083 after Spm

Land Contracls 10'"!. Down

fAMll.l'..
4 Bed roo ms

Mobile Home For Rent 740·446

675-1550

Hear From You NOWI We Pay
Top SSS For Farms &amp; Vacant
Land 20 To; 300 Acre s Road

3 Bedrooms

3 Bedroom Trailer MeJCarvrlle
Area 740 256 6574

992 2218

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

1998 Kentuckran 14 x80 all etec
tuc 3br 2 bath delivery &amp; set
up ai r. tnstalled $23 900 304

sage 304-675 1076

736 7295

304 736 7295

520

6 00 p m 740 992 2526 Russ

2 BedrOom tra1ter references &amp;
deposit required Leave mes

Speetal ltnanc:rng avatlable 304

New Oouble Wide Repo $999 00

Call Us Today 1997 Is The
Twenty Seventh Year !n The
Heaung &amp; Coolrng Busmessl 740r

$21 95 Per 100 1" 200 PSI

(740)446-0893

440

Down Free Delivery And Set Upl

Heal Pumps Only Slighly Higher

Waterline Specral

2 Bedroom Trailer Central Heat/
Air 2 Bedroom House In Town
Reference and DepoSit Requrred

SINGLE PARENT PROGRAM

736 7295

ral And LP Gas Furnaces Life
time Warranty On Heat Ex.chang
er "II You Don 1 Call us we Both
Lose• · Free Estimates! Add On

Hay &amp; Grain

Round hay bales 1200 lbs $14

740 843 5218

Spec1al F1nancrng Avatlabte 304

WARN UP Htgh Elftclency Nalu

640

Upnght Ron Evans Enterprises
Jackson Ohto 1 BOO 537 9528

1180 Call now304 755 5865

SINGLE PARENT PROGRAM

Furn~ll.re

Llvrng Room Swte Never used 2

S1ree1 1250 monlh $100 clepoSII
hnancrng on 2 3 &amp; 4 l:ledroom
homes Payments as low 11

Tall &amp; VertJGfnlle 740

Newly d~corated 3br w/full bi:~se
ment re1erences &amp; deposit no

Two bedroom trailer on Condor

Single Parent Program Spectal

J Year Old Black Standarr1 Breac

Ph 740-446 1104 740 441·0450

PM Monday Thru Friday

E Taylor Really 740 992 5333
740 992 1064 740 446 1529

INOTICEI
OHIO VAllEY PUBLISHING CO

HOUSE Old EstabliShment Busl
ne ss Ce ntrally Located In The
BH:Iwen Porter Area Excellent
Chance To Own Your Own Bust
ness Blackburn Realty 740 446

304 773-5341

West

$2 500 304 773-5616

STORAGE TANKS 3 000 Gallon

2 Bedroom Mobile Home You
Pay Ulthti9S &amp; DepOSII In Porter
Area 614 388 9162

Leave message rl no answer
Wtltrng to clean homes Ca ll 304
675 1173 Ask lor Lrnda Love

Bunk Bed Set Sohd Wood with
inner Sprmg Matlress New Nev

12yr old AOHA Gekling $1 200
Horse Shoeing 304 675-7409

I 800 499 3499

Pels $235/Mo $1 oo DepoSI1
740 446-:Je 17

Furntture repa1r refmtsh and res
toratron also custom orders Ohto
Valley Reltnt shrng Shop Larry
f-htlltpS 74().992-6576

Profess anal Tree Servrce Stump
Remov al Free Estrmarest In
surance 81dwe lt Ohio 614 388

Buy Sell Trade
Used &amp; Anttques

Livestock

6676

2 Bedroom Mobtle Home No

clean1ng 304 675 ll731l

A &amp; S Furniture
Maaon,WV

630

Washers dryers relrrgerators
ranges Skaggs Appliances 76
Vtne Street Call 740 446 7398

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mob1le homes

Dependable Lady Wrll Do House

Yrs Old Pa1d $2 395 Asking
$1250 740 446 2707 Aller 500
PM

Box Spring &amp; Matress New Nev

Chatr &amp; Matchrng Sola Good

720 Trucks for Sale

Penllum 150 MHZ 16 MB Ram
1 2 GB Hard Dnve 28 8K Fa( I
Modem 16 Brt Stereo Sound Card
And Speakers Keyboard Mquse
Wtndows Soltware less Than 2

02~118

•AKJ

Proteva Touch Seues Computer

er Used $199 Call 740 886
6373
er used $285 740 886 6373

North
a A J tO 4
• Q2
t K Q 7 6

PRIMESTAR wtnter blowout
spectal All tnventory must gol!
170 lree channels free monthly
gutde free bonus gtll Guarant&amp;ed
lowest puce 588 265 2123

7795

3 bedroom house In Pomeroy no
Inside pets no deposrt 740 943

S260 $300 sewer water
trash rrlCiuded 740 992 2167

304 675 1957

Household
Goods

lor Rent

3509

Georges Portable Sawmrli don I
haul your logs 10 lhe milt JUSt call

MERCHANDISE

510

691 6777
DREAM HOME SERIES

740~67

Cash Pard For Land In Gallla
County Blackburn Really 740

&amp; CLG 1 800-872 5967

Cert1fted day care three open
1ngs call Met1 ssa at 740 992

p~kup

Mobile home srte available bet
ween Athens and Pomeroy call

- ---:

'

Saturday. Fell 7. 1998
If your counterpart can oiler wh,u
you lack. a J&lt;Hnl endeavor can wor~
oul very fortunalely m lhc year
it)Jead Just be sure lhere 1s panty m
what each conmbu1es
AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb 19) A
matter tha11s of financ1al1mportanco
to you shouiJ be tended to promptly
today Qu1ck act1on wtll help fulfill
yourcxpe• Lal1ons Trymg to patch up
a broken romance? The Astro-Graph
Matchmaker car. help yo u undersLand
what to do 10 make lhe relauonsh1p
work Mml $2 75to Matchmaker, c/o
thiS newspaper, PO Box 1758, Murray H1ll S1a11on New York. NY
10156
I'

TAURUS IApnl 20-May 201
lnstc.ul ol conllnuuusly postpomng
your s1,1rtmg lime ol an endeavor you
w,m, to launch. hght lhc fuse today
Tlus 1&gt; a good 11mc for act1on
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Tan·
g11lle developments look promiSing
for you 1oday You should gel 1he
rcwgm11on as well as matenal ben·
cfi1s to wh1ch you rc ent1tled
CANCER (June 21-July 22) If
there 1s a pcrsonalmterest you would
hkc to advance, th1s 1s lhe nght day
to assert yourself Be sure you have
a bluepnnt m mmd
LEO (July 2~-Aug 22) Give
express1on to your mtUIItve urges
today tf they encourage you 10 make

I

spcc1 fic ahcrat\ons m your commer·
c1al atla1rs All should work out well
VIRGO (Aug 23-Scpt 22) An
en1erpnsmg fnend could be of grca1
help to you today regardmg a proJeCt
you rc dcvelopmg He or she IS the
onG-who can get 1hmgs dnne
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct 23) lmtla·
uve cnc~psulated m the proper degree
of boldness IS the element that can
offer you success 1oday m your chosen field of endeavor
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov 22) A
new acquam1ance w11h whom you're
ml·~rested romanllcally Will respond
to your overtures today Let your feel·
mgs be known, you"ll be glad vou
d1d
SAGITIARIUS (Nov 23-Dec
21) A mauer of consequence w1ll
begm to make tis presence fell today,
yc1 be screened from your v1ew It
could be benefic1al for allm the long
run
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan 19)
Much can be accomplished today by •
working IR close COnJUnCtiOn With an
amb1t10us partner Selec1 an ally Who
1s as Slrong as yourself

IFRIDAY

FEBRUARY 61

�•j

"
'

.

. .. ,

-·

\

By The .Bend

~entinel
Page 10

The:,Daily
..

·

Along the River

Friday, February 6, 1998

Slowpa~eof

get real! Your d_
ead mother isn't really watching{·every move you make
those two sentences have had a
Dear Dlinois: I suggest that you hrst year, I lived in 14 different
tremendous
Impact
on
my
personal
phone
the minister and ask him if he places and had to sell most of the
Ann
hfe.
w1ll please speak to your husband thmgs I cherished in order to eat.
Landers
M~ husband now refuses lo have . and put him at ease about this matPlease tell your young readers
I'H1 . l..M AIIJCkl TIIMI
any
tnt1ma1e
contact
With
me
for
ter.
Then,
urge
your
husband
to
who
think life would be wonderful if
Syn.daulc ~n.d Creal\lJJ
Syno.IKl.C
fear h1s mother Will "see" us. Even make an appointment" with the min- they left home and were free 10 do
lho~gh he always had been a ,bn
ISler and d1scuss 11.
. .
whatever they pleased to work
upughJ about h1s sexual ur~es, our
~o not try to reason With h1m . It thmg~ out with their parents.
Dear Ann Landers: I am 26
sex hfe was a&lt;kquate. I don 1_ know won l help. He needs to be set
Its an ugly world outth"ere. The
years old and have been married for
how long I can put up wnh th1s total straight by the minister.
in,dependence I was so eager to have
two years. My husband's mother, a
abstmence.
.
Dear Ann Landers: .I recently wasn't worth much. -· Learned the
truly love ly person, passed away
I know you are not a Methodist, overheard two leenage guls talkmg Hard Way in Silver Spring, Md.
suddenly. My husband took it very
Ann, but smce you have many con- about moving o~t o( their parents'
Dear Learned: I hope every
hard . At the end of the funeral sertacts m the rehg1ous world, w1ll you homes .. They satd the1r lolk~ were teenage g1rl who has flirted with the
vice, our Methodist minister. in an,.
please find the answer to these ques- too stnct, and they couldn 1 take 1dea of leavmg home will clip this
effort to comfort my husband, said,
li ons· Can anyone m h~aven really their rules anymore. Please, Ann, tell column and put it where she can
"I know you were very close to your
them to s ta~ where they are .
read it whenever that notion surmother Be assured lhat she will be sc\. '
I
I am 22 years old and _left home faces .
looking do.wn from heaven and will
when I was 16. What a m1stakc that
When things get rough , talk to a
he with you always."
was' I have been through things no school counselor, the mother of a
At first. I anached no neat
g ~rl should have to npenencc. The close fnend. an aunt or an older
importance to that comment," but

Beat of the.Bend ..
by Bob Hoeflich
The awnings at numerous
P&lt;1meroy business houses lo&lt;1k
great. Righi"'
If you agree then you won" t
be surprised lo learn that Capital
City Awning of Columbus which
did the lnsta!iatlons received the
design award in the renewal projects category awarded al the
1997 Industrial Fabric and
Equipment · Exposition held
recently in Nashville, Tenn.
The Columbus firm worked
on the multi -a wning project
which contribules to the overall
restoration of the historic district
in Pomeroy More than 21 st(.re
fronts were included in the project in which traditional , brightly
colored store awnings and
valances were created to hide the
existing metal marquees and
awnings. Michael E. McConnel
was the designer/project manager for the Pomeroy improve ment.
The 1997 competition was the
5:~h anniversary of the contest
and there were 323 entries from
115 companies in 13 different

Abc was horn on Fell. 12 and
so was Glada M. Davis who will
mark her I OOth hirthday on that
date. Cards can be sent to her at
52~95 Couniy road 3t. Portland.
Ohio 45770. Glada is the mother of Mary K. Holter whom
many of you know.
' Members of the Middleport
Pentecostal Church are hoping
that their "rose" project will be
quite beneficial to the church
building fund .
With Valentine's Day upeom.ing church members a.re selling
roses which they will deliver or .
you can pick them up. The roses
will be available on Feb. 12, 13
and 14 and will cost $25 a dozen.
And talk about "flavors" .
Church members will be taking
orders for roses in red, lavender,
yellow, pink and one called fire
and icc.
·You can place your ordor by
telephoning 992.-3200.

Life is pretty unpleasant for
Opic Cobb these days .
For the past three months
countries so the competition was
keen. The design award was just Opic has been Oat on his back.
one of several cmcgorics judged During that time nary a drop of
water or a bite of food has
in the contest.
. entered his Oody by way of his
Many of you will remember mouth. A feeding tube has been
former resident Aaron Kelton- jnscrted into his stomach and he
who lived in Meigs County for musi have special food through
many years.
the tube . He wanted · you to
Aaron will be marking his know. Messages and cards will
K5th birthday on Feb. 23. He is . reach him at 691 ~ycamorc St..
presentl y li ving with his daugh- Middleport.
tcr. Kaaron Austin. 7319 W1llson
Road . Richmond. Va .. 23231 and
This taste ,,r had weather just
cards will reach him there . had In happen . II hasn"t hccn
Aaron fell in Scptcmhcr rccciv- pleasant hut it's hccn nntl1in•
ing a serious injury so he isn ., · &amp;:om pared to what has occurred
running any fool ra~.:cs these in other locations ;u:ross the
Jays .
nation. Think or it that way and
. you ~.:an keep smiling.

---Sermonette---

"Jesus and the Sea"
By Bonnie Shiveley
I"m socxCJt ed I'm nhouttodic'
Have you ever tell that way"! It 's
onl y Fchruary. hut my heart is set
toward October when my husband
and I wi ll fly to London. then to Tel
Aviv. Israel.
We" vc pored over our itinerary of
our visit 10 the Hnly Land. Of the
many places we'll sec. my mind
kee ps going hack to the Sea of
Galil ee. We ' ll spend two nights at
Ttbcrias on the shores of that beautiful fr&lt;shwatcr ta~e .
Arc you ready for a lesson in
geography"! The lake lies 700 feet
below sea level: while neamy, western hills tower 1.500 feet ahovc sea
lc\"CI. On the

C~lSI.

mountains of

Gikad lmve peaks or more than
3JOO kct. Snow-covered Lehanon
Mountain ~ ri se in the nonh and feed
the Jordan River which fl ows into
the Sea. It 's 13 miles long. ciuht
ini lcs wide. and suhjcct 10 sudden
.and violent storms.
I"ve always loved the slories of
Jesus and the Sea. One day, such ·
large crowds gathered around Him.
got into a boat and sat out on the
lake · where he taughl _them many
parables. Eager listeners. some only
curious. stood along lhe shore at the
water 's edge.
'
When evening ·came. He said,
"Let us go over to the other side."
While the disciples rowed the boat. a

cousin, but STAY HOME. Repeat to
yourself one of my favorite mottos .
. "and this too shall pass "
Dear A~n Landers: You asked
your readers to tell you what they've
found while jogging. For si~ years,
my wife and I have made a practice
of looking on the ground no mancr
where we are.
Rarely does a day go by that one
of us doesn 't find something, but f
still 'can't figure out how Craig
Davidson in Phoefih managed 10
ijnd $5,170. We currently have $400
in our container. -· Lowell and Marlcne in Indiana
Dear Lowell arid Marlene:
Maybe you missed the column in
which I said that Craig's wife verificd his statement on the phone. She
10ld me he run s a lot more than the

..

development

average jogger and has found
$5,170. J, believe her. Here's one
more:
Dear Ann: When 1 was 9 years
old, 1 found a dime-· a lot of money
in 1938. 1 showed the dime to my
grandmother. and she told me the
follow ing smry.: Once, there was a
man who found a $5 bill in the gutter. He spent the rest of his life looking for more. He never saw the trees,
the flowers. the mountains or the
rainbows . All he ever saw was gut- ·
ters. -- Gene in Fort Collins, Colo.

unba
A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Send questions to Ann Landers, Creators Syndicate. 5177 W. Century
Blvd .. Suite 700. Los Angeles. Calif.

weary Jesus fell asleep in the stern.
Other boats went with them .
The sky darkcn~d . tbe wild wind
swooped down the mountain gorges,
howling over the sea. The tossing
waves beat. into the boat and white
foam washed at the men 's feet. Mark
4:35-5: 1 (NASB) tells the story:
The Community Calendar is pub"A nd there arose a fierce gale of lished as· a .free service to non-profit
wind, and the waves were hreaking groups wishing to announce meeting
over the boat so.much that the board and special events. The calendar is
was already filling up."
not designed to . promote sales or
The disc iples awoke Jesus.
fund raiser.; of any type . Items arc
"'He rebuked the wind and said to printed as space permits and cannot
the sea. 'Hush. he still.' And the be guaranteed to run a specific numwind died down and it hecamc per- . ber of.days.
fectly calm."
The terri lied disciples said 10 one SATURDAY
another, " W~o then is this, that even
SALEM CENTER S1"
the wind &lt;..Jd the sea ohcy Him '' Grange 778 and Star Junior Grange
And the~· came to the other side of 878. Saturday, potluck supp&lt;"' m
the sea."
6 : ~0 p.m. followed by f&lt;&gt;urth dc·•rce
Can y• •U imagine heing there team practice at 7:30p.m. and meetthe thrashing pounding water pour- ing at 8 p.m. Junior Grange will hold
ing over the sides of your sinking its baking contest.
boar! What happened to the other
boats when Jesus simply spoke MONDAY
"Hush ·J"
MIDDLEPORT - DAY. Meigs
He saved them , too. The water '"thajncr 53. Monday;anhc hall with
became mirror-like. What a miracle' dinner at 6:30 p.m. and the meeting
Who then is this? He is the Cre- at 7 p.m.
ator of the sea who spoke 11 into
hcing. Why couldn't he calm it"'
POMEROY - Meigs Local
What ahout you"! Is your ship . Board of Education meeting Monahout to sink"' Why not invite Jesus day. 7 p.m. at the district ccniiOI
IO get in with you"! This all-power- ·. OffiCe on the second noor of the
ruL ever-present Captain will still ·Pomeroy Municipal Building.
1he raging storm s in your life .
Accepting Him as your personal
RACINE - Racine Board of
Savior means repenting of si n and Public Affairs, Monday, 10:30 a.m.
trusting Him to save you. That 's the at the municipal building. ·
beginning of inner peace.
How I look forward to my boat TUESDAY
ride on the same Sea of Galile; · CHESTER - Chester Township
without the storm 'please - I ~on ' t Board of Trustees, regular meeting,
. want that much excitement!
Tuesday, 7 p.m. at the residence of
Father, thank You. When we are trustee David Koblentz,.Scout Camp
helpless, You bring strength and Road. Annual appropriations will ·be
peace to our troubled lives. Amen-.
made.

GALLIPOLIS - Unable to collect the 60 votes
Wednesday to put a proposed constitutional amendment
before voters, the House plans to start work next week
on legislation that would need the support of only 50 of
the 99 members to get the half-cent sales tax increase on
the May ballot.
Republican U.S. Congressional candidate Frank Cre,
means, however, continues to urge Ohio lawmakers to
resist any sales tax proposal. And, a conservative group
has vowed to block House plans to take another crack at
a court-ordered fix of the ~tate's school-funding system.
Only proposed constitutional amendments have to be
approved at least 90 days before an election. Therefore,
the move would buy lawmakers an extra couple of
weeks to come up with a plan to change the way Ohio

Sticker........... $18,462
Discount.. .... $1539.19
Invoice ..... $16,922.81
Dealer Mark Up ... $10
Rebate .... ........... $750

Sticker ........... $20,253
Discount.. .... $1392.29
lnvoice ..... $18,860.71
Dealer Mark Up ... $10

9

1998 OLDS
CUTLASS

O&lt;e9

Stitker ........... $23,730
Discount.. .... $1973.87
lnvoice ..... $21 ,756.13
Dealer Mark Up ... $10
Rebate ............ $1500

Winter Olympics
· ' ·

1998 CHEVY S-1 0
PICKUP

CHEVY 4X4
PICKUP

~

Sticker...........$24,358 Sticker ........... $14,000 Sticker...... ,,,$22, 197
Discount. ..... $2273. 72 Discount.. ...... $868. 77 Discount. .....$2729.75
Invoice .... . $22,054.28 lnvoice ..... $13,131.23 lnvoice ..... $19,467.25
Dealer Mark Up ... $1 0 Dealer Mark Up ... $1 0 Dealer Mark Up ... $10
Rebate ............ $1000 Rebate ............ $1500

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y.-r

~·"'
Cfl~"

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NO MONEY OOWN

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Sticker........... $39, 145
DiscounL. ... $2974.42
Invoice ..... $36,170.58
Dealer Mark Up ... $10
Rebate ............ $2000

YoU'

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CCI~"

1997 CHEVROLET
CAVALIER

11,999 13,989 *9899

95 BUICK CENTURY- owt~tr very llkt car-_,_,___,,,__ , ......,_,........................ 58,00
92 CADILlAC SEDAN DEVILL£ Loadtd. ltatlter, _eon_., ____, ... __...............- ....- ........517,850
93LUMINA Z34 Extra Clean Black, ......_ ....·.............- ....·--·........................ -·----·~ ..••• 510,490
96 DODGE AVINGER loa4td, Ru Gilly 23,000 llln
__........--............- ...................512,280
91 CADillAC SEDAN DEVILLE. loaded. lltflttr, Ht~~~~t/slver ............_,___ ,,___,_....... 510,999
95 CHEVROLET 3/4 TON 4 WD Vl,'350, air, 111to, tit, cnise, AM/FM cass, Red, Sharp...- ......517,400
97 FORD EXPLORER XlT loadH, lilly 15,000 ...s, Mlrao~, lib new condition, ·-·...- ....-Only 524,800
97 GMC SIERA I /2 TON 4 WD EXT CAB WITH lRD DOOR, VI, ato, air, tilt, aulst,
AM/FM cassene, Gr1111. 14,ooo lilies

Good Morning
••

,_.._ _ _,,,__,____, 522,900
97 PONTIAC TRANSPORT VAN FWD V6, air, tit, cruise, casstHe, W... 1,000 mills, and Ollly ..... 519,860
..

r-1

tmes

Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • February 8, 1998

pays for public education.
Not so fast, says David Zanolli, president of the
Solon-based Ohio Roundtable.
"The Legislature is attempting to subvert the intent
of the Constitution," Zanotti said Friday ..
Zanotti promised a legal challenge if the Legislature
goes through with the plan.
The group disagrees with the Ohio Supreme Qlurt's
ruling against the current funding system, believing it is
up to a legislature to decide how schools are funded .
The court gave the Legislature one year - until
March 24 -to make the funding more tqual among districts and ease the reliance on property taxes.
House Speaker Jo Ann Davidson, R-Reynoldsburg,
conceded that the alternative route to the ballot has

Vol. 32, No. 52
.

.

•Without extre moMy, Ohio Gov. George
Volnovlch h•• Mid he Will veto large pert• of any
-lt:liool-tundln1 re,(Pn:r! bill.
.
, "It 11 unfortun$
Volnovlch:edmlnl•fra·
Uon wlehl• to' eolve 'Ohlil'l echoot futidtri(l problem
by relelng
•I~ primary ~ongre~OIJifl?!,'td,l·
dlte Frenk CremNnl, R·Gilllpolle. , "The (IOvernor'•
propoHfl .-l~' tiUC·It. e bed Idee on "''" cocinte;;' !
' C~an~ ·MJdld, :tFtret It pute en
·gruter bu,.;~;

"''''lhe

wee,,;

never been tried before. But she told reporters
this week that it is allowed under a 147-yearold section of the Ohio Constitution.
The .section allows the Legislature to delegate its authority when dealing with educa- . tte(' o~ 'oti[o"oltiDile; ~o '"' •J~dY. "O~eiUXf,d; ' . ,
tion-related subjects- in this case to the vot- ', HOOf''d, It '#gnD'!' lff/UQtl~l , 1/Hfi!lfft.l~~'mJ·:Ip ~ , ,
ers. That interpretation is incorrect, Zanotti
favor of • quick fix; third, etu.dte;;·,•h~W It mly not , ~·
said.
even
work."
.
'' · ., ·,.. ·. &lt; . · · ': ·
..,
A half-cent increase in the sales tax - to
5.5 percent- would raise about $550 million
wishes to solve Ohio's school funding problem by raisa year. The money, ;wo\119. ~ split be.tween .·
ing taxes," said Cremeans, the Gallipolis Republican
education and property lllll eutdor homeowners.
Without the extra money, Gov. George Voinovich has who is seeking his party's nomination to run for the
Sixtll District Qlngressional seat now held by Ted
said he will veto large parl5 of the bill.
"It is unfortunate that the Voinovich administration Strickland, D-Lucasville.

even

Calendan
C!aSslfteds
Comics
Ed!torlab
A!onl! the River
Obituaries
Soorts

C%&amp;4 ·
0%-S

Insert
A4
Cl

AS
Bl-6

Shoemaker announces bid for senate
By JIM FREEMAN
Times-Sentinel Staff
POMEROY ~ State Senator Mike Shoemaker of Bourneville, who represents the
Ohio 17th Senate District including Galli a and
Meigs counties, along with eastern Pickaway,
Ross, Scioto, Lawrence, Vinton and Jackson
counties, formally"announced his plans Friday
to seek the Democratic nomination for slate
senate seat.
He announced his candidacy Friday in
Meigs and Gallia counties during a brief series
of stops throughout the district.
Shoemaker, 52, formerly represented the
Ohio 91st House District before being
appointed last year to complete the term of
Senator Jan Michael Long of Circleville.
In Meigs County, stopping at the Meigs
County Public Library in Pomeroy, Shoemak·
er was welComed by county Democratic Party
Chairwoman Sue Maison and about 30 other
well -wishers.
In his brief address, he downplayed the
impact of partisan politics saying that he has to

I

Bankruptcy does not mean that you
can never again finance a new
vehicle. Call me for details on how
you can drive a nice car now.
Aak for Mr. Barcus.

"serve all sides here in southeastern Ohio" and
said he hopes the race does not result in negative campaigning - something he said he has
avoided in 14 years as a state representative.
"Thirty-second commercials shouldn't
decide a race," he said.
Shoemaker said his platform would be
based on quality of life issues affecting southeastern Ohio, a region he said is ignored by
urban legislators.
"Their idea of helping us to spend $200,000
on an Office of Appalachian Sensitivity to
help all of us who move to Qllumbus," he
said .
Referring to the newly appointed Transportati.on Review Advisory Council, which
helps the Ohio Department of Transportation
determine what major new construction projects will be built, Shoemaker observed that
five members of the seven member council
live along 1-71.
During the recent ·school funding debate in
the Ohio Legislature, Shoemaker said lawmakers lost sight of the children.

' His term and that of Nancy Parker Campbell, audi·
tor, will expire this year.
Campbell has indicated that she plans to file for her
party's .nomination in May. Both Hoffman and Campbell are Republicans.
According· to Jane Frymyer, deputy director, at the
Meigs County Board of Elections, two Republicans and
three Democrats have picked up petitions for the open
seat on the County Commission.
Petitions of candidacy are available at the Board of
Elections Office, said Frymycr, who explained that to
get on the May primary ballot a registered voter must
secure 50 valid signatures, file it with that office, and
pay the $80 filing fee.

Signatures must be by those of the s.amc political
party or of undeclared status, said Frymyer.
Independent candidates for a seat on the commission
or the auditor's post have until the day before the May
Primary to file petitions. The independents will join the
Republican and Democrat Party nominees on the
November ballot.
Those filing as independents are required to have
only 25 signatures on their petition of candidacy.
They can be the signatures of any registered voter.
Filing deadline is May 4, 4 p.n1. and the filing fee is
$80.
Central commiiteemen in both parties will be elected
in all 28 precincts in the May prima1y.
·

0

'•

•

Details on
pageA2

•

ByJENNIFERRICHTER
Times-Sentinel Staff
I ··
GALLIPOLIS - Due
to inclement weather
conditions on Wednesday, Thursday on Friday
of last week, the Giillia
County Local Schools
along with the Gallipolis
City Schools were forced
to use three of their five
calamity days.
Since it is only February and severe weather
cbuld -quito possibly still
affect this region ·n, the
months to com. , the
schools do have a backup plan to fall back on, if
necessary, to make up
any days exceeding five.
The state board of 1111"""'-.:.;;_;_..:;._;::..:;::t.:l:,..2...~c__.._,__ _ _ _ ____.:_ _~__,;_-:__::;:!d._L':L4f.!J.rt':!!ilt.l
education requires every
SCHOOLS BUSES remained unmoved for county received eiHI, enow and freezing rain
school district to schedule the latter pert of lett week dui to the Inclement Jut week which forced tht achoola throughout
an additional five school weather conditione thl1 hit the region. The the county to canctl.
days on their school calendar each year to be used as calamity by hand-held radio giving a report on the roads each has traveled.
days.
"Max Haffelt and I, we travel certain county roads starting
These days are specifically meant for use during severe about 3 a.m. and usually by 5 a.m. we make decision amongst
weather conditions such as flooding and icy or snowy conditions. ourselves and then make a recommendation to our superintenEach school district must also plan an alternate calendar in dents," said Deckard.
case these days exceed five. The extra days of school are epmIf the outcome of their more than 80 mile drive shows that the
monly added during Spring break or following the original end roads are slick or impassable and the risk driving on them is high
of the school year. By law, the school must be operating for 182 they jointly recommend cancellation of school.
days each school year.
· · ·
"We have to think about the liability and safety of our students
Canceling school is not an easy process, explained Kenny and staff," said Deckard. "Our biggest part of our students are
Deckard, director of transportation for Gallipolis City Schools not in the city but off the main roads. We have to consider all the
and Max Haffelt, director of business for Gallia County Local students' safety. There is more to canceling school than worrying
Schools.
.
about the city of Gallipolis."
.
The two men work in conjunction with each other ptior to
This past week, the two were able to make the determination
canceling school. The evening before canceling, the two set off that the roa.ds were impas~abie earlier in the evening based on the
for drives along the county and city roads to see how safe and updated weather reports received from the state highway patrol,
passable they are to drive on. The two keep in constant contact
Continued on page A2

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
nmea-Sintlnel Stllff
POMEROY- With less than two weeks before the
filing deadline, only .one candidate had filed a petition
of candidacy with the Meigs County Board of Elections
as of late Friday afternoon.
·
The deadline for filing petitions for the May Primary is Feb. 19.
In the primary each party will nominate candidates
to go onto the general election ballot in November. The
terms of one county commissioner and the auditor will
expire t~is year.
The one petition filed is that of the incumbent com- ·
missioner, Fred Hoffman.

Low rate financing in lieu of rebate available on some models. This may affect your final price. $10
over invoice in stock.and ordered vehicles. Copy of invoice available per request.

,;;r;cc~ rjlt.:~

Today'• Glbau-.-adbw
12 Sections • 94 Pages

Cl J998 Ohio Valley Ptlbliahina Co.

96 DODGE RAM Dl50 SWB 2 WD VI, 11110, air, tit, nlst, cassene, while, li,OOhlles ..-._517,450
89 DODGE 0150 PICKUP LWB, 2WD, a1r, am, VI, tilt, enhe, PL. PW, n Blue, on• owner ........,_ 54,650
96 5·10 BWER V6, 1111o, *• tit, cn_lst, 4Dr, Ru.~------...._, ____,_,518,600

iii

·-

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.With their restoration mission
completed in winter socked .
southern West Virginia, American
Electric Power linemen from the
Point Pleasant/Gallipolis District
were detoured to Cannonsburg,
Ky., to help workers restore electric power there.
Rex Cumings and Ray
Andrew~ of the Pomeroy area,
Gary Derenberger of Point Pleasant and Bill Kuhn of Gallipolis
were sent on Jan. 28 to Bluefield,
W.Va., where snow, ice and wind
resulted iq widespread electric
outages, according to Point Pleasant/Gallipolis District manager
Mary T. Kent.
Winter storm-related outages
affecting more than 17,500 customers current! y are being reported in all of the company's Virginia, Tennessee, Kentucky and
~est Virginia regions, accoraing
to AEP Southern Ohio Region
spokeswoman Debbi.e May.
. As of friday morning, more
than 10,000 customers were
reported without power in the
company's Kentucky region
where traveling restoration crews
from Athens, Chillicothe and
Point Pleasant were being rerouted along with sevetal bucket
and digger trucks .

8

8

;pagiB5 ~

Local linemen help
storm·plagued region

Yota'

1998
BlAZER

• Enton.olnment: P~go CO •

HI: 40s
Low: 20s

~~~~~fi~."~
· ~~·~ brother's death

y.-r

Sticker........... $19, 144
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lnvoice ... .. $17,521.70
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• Page 81 •

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Closing school for calamity Portland ~an
days 'not an easy process' charged w•th

1998 BUICK
CENTURY

LUMINA

Rodman's
tBad as I
WannaBe'

Conservatives blast school-funding
plan as House begins work on backup

9004~

$1

Today's NBA
All-Star game
preview

• Featured on page C1

RACO planning
for flower festival
The Racine Area Community
Organization voted to maintain its
incumbent ofllccrs at the group's
first meeting of the year held Jan.
27.
They arc Kathryn Han. president;
Dr. Melanic Weese , vice-president ;
Lillian Weese, secretary; Ann Zirkic.
treasurer. Delores Cleland will continue as corresponding secretary and
Jane Cleland as reporter.
Discussion • Mlas held on Ihe
upcoming fifth annual RACO
Flower Festival which will be held
April 25 at Star Mill Park.
Chairmen for the event are
Melanie Weese and Tonja Hunter.
Entertainment groups are being
booked and other activities are being
planned. Marilyn Powell, parade
chairwoman, may be contacted at
949-2676 and Weese may be contacted at 949-240 I for information
concerning the reserving of space
for food , craft or vending booths.
Mary Ball and Pauline Wolfe will
contact area flower growers.
Dan Smith of the Meigs County
Fair Board attended the meeting and
discussed working at the fair gates
with the group. The fair will be held
during the third week of August.
Delores Cleland made lap -robes
to be given to shut-ins or health care
centers.
In other business the group voted
· to give four $500 scholarships to
Southern High School seniors,
donated $200 to the Racine Fire
Department Building Project, donated $200 for entertainment for the
July 4 celebration, and purchased 12
sluffed animals donated to the
Racine Emergency Squad to be distributed to children.
Members expressed appreciation
to contrihutors and participants at
"Chrislmas in the Park". noting that
treats not distributed by Santa were
given to senior citizens and shut-ins
in the village; Veterans Memorial
Extended Health Care Center and
the Meig s County Home .
Twenty members and three
guests allcndcd the meeting. Libhy
Fisher gave the prayer bef&lt;1re the
meal and David Zirkle adjourned the
meeting hy leading the Pledge of
Allegiance .
The next meeting will be held on
Feb. 24 at Star Mill Park.

1ns1"d e

•

'

1·

PORTLAND -A Portland man is in custody of the
Meigs County Sheriff, charged with the Friday murder
of his brother.
Dead is William Jack
..
Underwood, 41, of Barringer Ridge Road. His
brother, Richard Eugene
Underwood, 37, is charged
wi.th aggravated murder
with a firearm specification.
According to Sheriff
James M. Soulsby, William
Underwood was shot twice ·
- " ln""the · face amj ih the"
back of the head - s,hortly
before 6 p.m. on Friday
evening. A 20-gauge shotgun was used in the shooting.
Soulsby said that his office received a telephone call
Friday evening from the West Virginia State Police,
stating that Richard Underwoop's ex-wife had reported
a phone call from him, advising that the brothers had
been involved in a fight and that Richard Underwood
had shot his brother, Jack.
Richard Underwood allegedly told his ex-wife that
the body was still outside of the brothers' mobile home .
Deputies found the body, covered with a blanket,
behind the trailer.
Both brothers had been living in the trailer in
Lebanon Township since December, according to
Soulsby.
William Jack Underwood was pronounced dead at
the scene by County Coroner Dr. Douglas Hunter.
Agents from the Ohio Bureau of Criminallnv_estigation
and Deputies Scott Trussell, Danny Leonard and Ben
Davidson were at the scene with Soulsby.
Soulsby said Saturday that Richard Underwood was
interviewed by Assistant Prosecuting Attorney Charles
Knight at the sheriffs department on Friday night.
The body was taken to Ewing Funeral Home for
transport to the Franklin County Coroner's office, where
an autopsy will be performed.

Solution to school funding
depends on bi-partisan
effort, says Sen. Shoemaker
By KEVIN KELLY
Times-Sentinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - Only when partisan bickeri~g is
put aside will legislators come up with a suitable pfan to
adequately fund Ohio schools, State Sen. Michael Shoemaker believes.
Shoemaker, D-Bourneville, said the state has to look
at its $1.2 billion -and growing- surplus in discussions about bringi'llg all schools on a par with wealthier
,
districts.
"A lot of people have difficulty with why we're not
spending what we have now," Shoemake• said Friday
after announcing his candidacy in Pomeroy and Gallipolis for a new term representing the 17th District.
Lawmakers have until March 24 to meet the state
Supreme Qlurt's deadline for creating a new school
funding system, after the old procedure was found
unconstitutional by the high court last year. A plan
pulling a state sales tax increase on the ballot was rejected last week. ·
"We have made allempts to fix it before," ShoemakContlnued on page A2

Only five valid signatures are required on the petition of candidacy but they must be of voters residing in
the same precinct as the petitioner. There is no fee to file
for central commilleeman.
The Feb: 19 dead line is also in effect for issues to go
on the May ballot.
Already scheduled are a 1.8 mill levy for a continuing period of time for Carleton School/Meigs Industries, and a I mill renewal levy for five years for the
Meigs County Council on Aging.
Whil e papers have not yet been filed with the Board
of Elections, the Southern Local Board of Education
last Monday night voted to place a 5.39 mill, 23 year
bond and levy issue on the May ballot.

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