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Ohio Lottery

Vikings·
slip past
Marauders

Pick 3:
030
Pick 4:
9342
.
Buckeye 5:
8-13-22-27-28

Sport. on Page 4

Pertly cloudy to~t';•
low In the 20s. Thu
,
pertly cloudy, high near
40 •

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IIOTICI1 C&amp;O MOTORS CHEVIOLET &amp; OLDSMOIIU SIRVKI Drn HAS DOUIUD II SlziTO ACCOMIIODAII 1111111111
lltiiiii1H01111'MUTS 727-2921. AS1 FOI Till SilVIO DDMTMIIIt

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1o111.47,N0.118

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'!1187, Ohio v.lley

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"J'bhhlnfl (:ompony .

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Commissio~
By JIM FREEMAN

AGunettOo.Ncwo.....-

OKs request for highway equipment

, dump truck,'I a used ·self-propelled cooperative purchasing program
. chip spreader and a 1988-or newer which allows county offices to purchase items at the state bid price.
· County Commissioners Monday Gradall excavaJor, Spencer said.
Commissioners approved the sole
afternoon approved advertising for
He said'!he highway depamnent
additional equipment for the Meigs had rented , ~c~·p spreader last year bid .submitted by Asphalt Materials
County Highway Department.
for flood repir work and added it Inc. of. Marietta for bituminous
. Highway department office man- may be a
opportunity to pur- paving material for February.
Commissioner Jeff Thornton
ager Dave Spencer, representing chase a used one .1be current Gradall
~ounty Engineer Robert Eason. · used by the':gamge, mainly for ditch opened tbe meeting with a prayer.
The board received a letter signed
~uested permission to advertise for
cleaning all{l oth.er purposes, is about ·
by the congregation of the Syracuse
additional equipment for the highway 25 years ol\1, he, explained.
~ill.
_l
In additil:m, Spencer asked if the Church of the Nazarene.
.The letter .states: "Realizing that
· Sought . is a new, 1w7 tandem county was'j till a member of the stalt

· hn1tnet Newa Staff ·

2 -... 16,.._,35_

Pom,roy-M.Iddleport, Ohio, Wednesday, January 29, 1997

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our nation was founded on prayer. we ·
supportJelfThornton's decision to do
so before the commissioners meet·
ings. Often presenled by visiting
'clergy, local village council meetings
have prayer prior to their sessions.
The U.S. Congress does likewise.
Wh~. do you commissioners deny
recognition of this God 'given privilege?"
Commission President Janet
Howard and Fred Hoffman both
indicated' lhat they suppon prayer,

with . Howard stating she thinks
prayer is a privalt affatr and best recognized during a moment of silence.
Dale Colburn and Mary Powell,
representing the Chester-Shade Historical Association, updated commissioners on work · on the old
Chester Courthouse.
The two said the group is holding
. a dinner on March 21 at. Royal Oak
Resort to raise additional fu'nds for
the restoration project.
Racine
. resident. Randy Mamhout

met with the board to discuss work
done on his house under the Racine
Community Housing Improvement
Program. He presented the board
with a list of needed electrical repairs'
and photos of existing problems to be
examined by county housing director .
Jean Trussell .
Before adjourning, commissioners
paid weekly bills consisting of I 56
entries.

Also prese nt were Clerk Gloria
Kloes, Bob Smiddy and Joe Swain.

~Mei, gs - board'tC)Ks ·. -----Computer ·donation--.~h~:=:~er ~

:new school Qruses
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The Meigs Local ·Board of Edu· youngsters~ ile~ five through eight.
cation approved the purchase of five
Buckley,m• :nt10ned that drug testnew school buses at its regular meet- ing for ath~te s participating in win1ng Monday night at the disttict's een- ter season sports has been completed
-ttal office in Pomeroy.
with all s~i 11ts testing free of drugs.
· · The five International chassis will
In -persppnel matters, the board
'be purchased ftom Siowe's in Mari- approved \tYjln Lemley as a substi·etta while the Thomas bodies will be lute teach!i und accepted the resigti)stalled by the Davis Body Compa· nation of t.\11 y Kennedy as a substiby of Langsville.
tute secreiJin.·. . ·
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· . The buses will cost about $56,000
In othCJl business, the board:
each, . according to Superintendent
-- Autharized Buckley and TreaBill Buckley, and will' be purchased surer Cindy Rthonemus to sell surpl~s
with money from the district's per- schOol equipment;
"
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-- Accep~:d donations of'$685.96
marient improvements levy.
- : Each bus will include additional· and $2·,977.184 from 'the classes of
. Ofety measures such as flashing red !995 and 19•96, respectively, for the
1
• : ~bes on the extending "stop" signs
purpose of buying folding chairs for
l)nd an exltl\(ling metal barrier ~o help ..tbe high school gymnasium;
•lh'eveilt youngsters from walking roo . --Author !zed B!jCkltY and RhoneA!IlF to the 'front of.the ll~s. Bucklet : in'"iiS"ioger~ UP.i~{ft!!!J,l !!'!&amp;h s~rvice
· ~· .'~*' ,. ·~ ~ -·--·. ~•-:- ... -"1'·-:provliters 81.pll·1111"ettiie- fOr b1ds to
• Dunng pubhc part1C1Pat,1on, .the replace thc i•~istrict's trash truck.
·
ljoard•was·a&lt;ldressed by Norma TorPresent \Iiiere board Presid!mt John
,Ys, Margie Skidmore and . Mary Hood and '' board members Roger
Grimm on the district's "Sex Can Abbott, Randy Humphreys, Larry
Wait" program which is funded by a - Rupe-and Stoll Walton.
Well ness Grant.
.
1be nex1 meeting willlle held Feb.
: The abstinence-based program is 10 at 7 p.m. .at the central office in the
incorporaltd into health classes for Pomeroy M.unicipal Building. •

successor

By AARON MARSHALL
Gennett News Service
COLUMBUS - (Special to the
OVP) , With State Rep. Michael
Shoemaker now officially named to
the Ohio Senate, the.selection spot-.
light now turns to his 91 st District
seat which 'will be filled by the Ohio
House Democrats.
Chillicothe Mayor Joe Sulzer confirmed Tuesday that he was " very
inte~es ted " in Shoemaker's seal, '

which ranges over three counties, and
would be pursuing the nomination
from tho House Democrats.
·when three-term Mayor was
asked if a potential move to Columb.us
the naturld next step up the
~~~:~~;:Jid~-1 for him, he .politely
's
" It's not ·so much the
step as it is another Slcp. Irs an
opportunity to· serve all of Ross
County as well as Vinton and Pick·
away Counties," he said .

. Other candidates whom Shoemaker said have contacted him about
an interest in the seal were Circleville

relator Bill Stout. Jonncr Logan Elm
School Board Member Bill Archer
imd Fonner Unioto School Superintendent Paul Folmar.

Past. year .wais
·
wettest on record

WASHINGTON (AP) - Stonns wettest, 8Cj :ording to new figures
slamming into the West Coast ·and from the l~ational Climatic Data
moisture marching noi'th in the Center.
"it's pre•tty obvious what caused
Atlantic made last year the wettest on
record on opposite·.sides·ofthe coun- the. West t&lt;•• he so wet; it was the
try.
prevalent iilonn track. hitting the '
For Oregon and Idaho in the West West Coast, •as it's doing right now,"
and Massachusetts, Pennsylvania and William 0 .•·Brown of the Asheville,
'!lest Virgin'ia in the East, 1996 N.C.. climnle center, a part of the
recorded the most rain and snow ever. National Oceanic and Atmospheric
For New York, it was the second Administra ~ton~ said Tuesday.

Rutland Bottled · Gas
responds to cor·~plai~t
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. J.B. Vanity of Alhens, attorney for Plains, McConnelsville. Torch, Jack•
Rutland Bottled Gas Service, issued son. and Gallipolis. It will continue
astatement Tuesday concerning com- its custom.,:nnientcid business as it
plaints made to the Public Utilities ·has in th(·. past. The Company is
Commission of Ohio against the proud to rqx)tt that complaints concompany.
ceming its servi~ have been practiThe statement comes in response . cally non-&lt;lxistent."
to a news release in Sunday's TimesThe j'Ul!O complaint against
Sentinel from the Southeastern Ohio Rutland , Bottled Gas Company
Cegal Services announcing the recent brought b ·y the Southeastern Ohio
filing of complaints with the PUCO Legal Se11'Yices was ~i~alf of
·!lgainst two propane C!Jmpanies.
Rebecca · Haning an
elvina
·,. Ylll)ity's statement on behalf of his Stephenscon, Athens ·County resi•
c,lient reads:
.
dents. It . charges. that the Rutland
: "Officials of Rutland Bottled Gas , company "entered into agreements to
Service deny any and all allegations ·· provide u1ninterrupted gas service to
made by Southeastern Ohio Legal their resp•ective premises'' and that
Services in relation to complaints contract \ 'Vas not fulfilled.
·
made to the Public Utilities Com- .
Geor1•:e Grate of Rutland Bottled
'mission of Ohio. The alleged com- Gas Servi ce says the company did not
plaints ~ave been pf!lsented to two -have a c;ontract with Haning and
courts of record and both rendered Stephenson, but rather had a contract
· d~isions favorable to Rutland.
with the •property owner.
, "Company attorney, J. B. Vanity.
· The ~ ~omplaint with the PUCO
Jr. of Athens, confirms that tho also addresses the issue of re&amp;ulation
Athens Municipal Court dismi~sed of propalile companies and asks t!lat
the,complaints as withoot merit. on the PUCO iS$ue an order d.eclaring
January 4, 1996 and ruled in favor of that propane companies be subject to
·Rutland. That dismissal was appealed its jurisd ictiori.
tq; the Fourth District Cour.t of
Edltor'i .Note: The lleWS
Appeals of Ohio and it rendered a· ' rehauiqSuaci!IY'a11mei-SeDdnel
decision in favor of Rutland on Sep- sboulcl .l:gve been prefaced by an
telnber 30, 1996. Rutland is confident editor's, aote statiD&amp; that eMf
that these same baseless allegations aetlou &lt;iutllae elleaed p i e wlll also be dismissed by the Public ot- Pf·lri7 11 lpef a..,Cher and do
Ulilities Commission of Ohio.
not tltlllJIIoh pit or. bmocence. It
: "Rutland is a reputable, customer wa aot: Georp Gnte coateadl
oriented business that ll$5 endured fill' tlutt lie ,1lhoUI
beea CGDtact·

· o1ier hltr ac;enwry Inti ll$5 ~
oCsattorled CIIStllmers in Southeast·

erp.Ohio and Southwestern West V1r-.
· smia with' pllllits II' Rudand. 1be

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No nominating · process has been

Peoples Bank of Rutland ·recently ·donated
thla IBM computer to Rutland Elementary
School. Rutland branch bank manager DHJIIf-

Clinton answers •reporters .on fund
raising~ then goes to $1 million bash
WASHINGTON (AP)- By day,
he's a champion of campaign finance
reform . .But by night President Clinton is still the Democrats' milliondollar man.
Hours after. a White House news
conference dominated by questions
about Democratic Party. fund-raising
irregularities, Clinton was the star
attraction at a $1 million donors' dinncr.
About 70 busjness leaders paid
S10,000 per person or $1 5,000 per
organization to attend the Democra-

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:Seven people e nterin~ the dinner
through the hotel's main door
declined comment.
One donor arrived in a chauf"Tcr the rest. of the Amencan pco· feured Lincoln Town ·Car, another in
pie this may sound · ridiculous, but a Mercedes-Benz with a "Clinton$10,000 is a small amount to pay-to Gore '96" bumper sticker. .
converse with intelligent people that
But most arrived by laxi or on
will be able tQ help you ," Scan P.
foot,
and many men ve ntured out
O'Keefe, 29, president of Winco
Gorp., a small communications com- without overcoats on.a chilly ni gh1;
pany based in Los Ange les, said after the city's bigge&lt;tlobbyists arc based
on K Street , within walking distance
the dinner.
Not everyone was so talkative. of the Carlton.

(ic National Committee event al the
Carlton Hotel just across LaFayeue
Square from the 'Whit.c House. ,

Racine Council members
settle into new chambers
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Racine Village Council continued
the. business of getting set*d into
new chambers during their most
recent council meeti~g :. Council held its first meeting in
the municipal building. fonnerly the
RaCine Elementary School; on Jan·. 7.
Council hired Rick Miller to
replace the front porch ceiling on the'
building . and agreed to purchase
some limestone for the parking lot
and cold mix for patching.

· Mayor Scott Hill reported the
need for a new flag for the building
and also request!!(~ a sig11 board for
the en1rance. Council approved the
purchase of the sign with several
members to check on obtaining a
flag.
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Paint for the downstairs hallway
· was purchased.
aerl!: Karen Lyons reported that
ldll•sdoe- pub-:etired examiner lor
Shirley
f!IINd au tUt lie cllllltl ~ ....... . the ;rateBeeale,
.
audi~&lt;K's
recently
ot .... II ory, He **ld have beal. donated to the villqcoffice,
a
tiling
cabinet
For ll8l ..... tluiC We apoloclze.

eel...,_,.,..

· fers looks on.as flnit graders Emily' Davis and
Seth Johnson exainlne the computer. The bank
is the school's partner In education.

and other office suppfics she no
longer uses .
In addition, discussion was held
on· the Syracuse-Racine Sewer District moving its offices into the
municipal building. .It was indicated
the move would be around March I.
A lease is to be worked out
between the village and scw~r district, it was noted:
In his report, Siteet Commission·
er Glenn Rizer reported finding evidence of some6nc tampering with
one of the recently installed water
meters.
He reported the meters have been
read and thatbillini will soon be handled monthly.
Now that water in the villoge is
metered, council also discussed mak·ing waltr leak insurance available. It
was noted that an ordinance will be
preporetl after the Racine Board of
Public Alftlin makes its rccommendati(la.

In other business, council:
-- Approved the purchase of a preventative mai ntenance agreement for
the copier the village purchased. The
warranty time from the company had
expired .
-- Approved a rc&lt;:omme'ndation by
Hill to add replacement cost on the.
fire trucks.
-- Approved the Davis-Quickel
Agency of Pomeroy to handle the
workers compensaiion claims on
behalf of the village.
·
Hill reported that Rick Hin4man
from the Buckeye Hills-Hocking Val·
ley Regional Development District
will visit Racine. It is possible the village may have to pay back $5,000
received earlier.
Attending were council members
· Raben Beegle, Henry Bentz, J&lt;?f!n
Dudding, Dale Hart, Henry Lyons
and Larry Wolfe. Others attending
were ,Fire Chief John Holman IUid
Bobbie Roy, member of the board of
pub,ic affairs.

established by the Ohio House for the
. Shoemaker scat. However, the Ohio
House Democratic caucus will likely follow a process similar to the one
taken by Ohio Senate oiTicials in the
Long scat. In that case, oi'llcials set
a deadline for those interested in the
.scat to apply via mail, consulted with
county party officials in the district
and interviewed all prospective applicants during the same private caucus
session .

Gro.up wants
·better coverage
for diabetics
CINCINNATI (AP) - Too many
insurance companies in Ohio fail to
cover lhe day-to-day needs of dia·
betics, according.to a coaliiion of diabetes groups pushing for state law

a

tha'l requires coverage.

"Some insurance companies offer
good programs. Those companies we
applaud. But there arc a lot of people
out there who can't get !he coverage
they need, " said Kim White, a
. spokeswoman for the Ohio chapter of ·
the American Diabetes Association.
Senate hearings on a proP.,sed dia·
betes coverage bill were scheduled to
begin today in Columbus.

Explosives used to
break up ice jam
COSHOCTON (AP) - The Walhonding River opened to traffic again
after authorities blew up a huge ice
Jam.
(:oshocton County Sheriff David
Corbett said Tuesday's blast .broke up
,the I 112-mile,long jam that had been
forming for ~I most a week.
Emergency crews said the detonation, set off by remote control,
went off without a hitch.'
ijut they took· no chances, stationing spotters along the river to
make sure the chunks of ice kept
moving. Several bridges along the
river, which t1ows through east-central Ohio, were closed tempororily as
the ch1111kl paH!Id underneath.
The jam·luid ~·*- noiJd.
ing alid temponry ev~elllllione in
nearh)· Warsaw.

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·Trial date set in alleged rapes

Russian doves appeared -after Chernob_
yl
WASHINGTON - lalcc!mial
Dcfeatle s-a-y Willi.a c-.

is .., ,;...p..t the ....., . . . .
while .,_,... Dlllioas .,...,
-IIJeiOiialiou wilb a.-ia.
added ro tbe Warsaw Pact bloc. Bat
Cohen may be surpriaed by wbal
changed even tbe hadcat
Jack Anderson . · Oaemobyl
he finds. For tbe Ruuius may he
bird-linen in the Soviet u,.ion, and
more williJil tbaa the Peatagon brass
gave Mikhail Gotbaclll:v mucb more
and
Ill aceept ndical mluctions in nuclear
room to negotiue. . ·
-..pons. The reasons for this dovish
Michael Blnsteln
U.S. intelligence reports, summarized to our associllle Dale Van Alta.
JICISllR date back more than a ·
~
decade, to the Oleraobyl disaster.
missiles .just til . pace with the reveal that after Cbemobyl, the SoviThe last arms accord between United Stares. I
• they have ets began to ponder the wl~ility
RussiaatheUnitedStates,STARI' · been telling U.S. negotiators they of nuclear facilities in Eastern
D, wassignedjusa days before Pres- want a new treaty, STAin' III, which Europe. Even a regional battle, they
ident Gcoqe Bush left office in Jan- would lower the ceiling to 2,000 feared, could result in "significant"
1181)' 1993. Congress waited until last deployed nukes.
,
.
damage · to the Eastern ~
y..- hefooe ratifying the pact, but the
As more classified documents states, and per1taops even Western
Russian Parliament is still stalling.
from the former Soviet Union have Europe. This f&lt;'ar, analysts say,
But Russia's r&lt;:luctance has lillie become available til U.S. espionage helped compel Soviet President
· · to do with •Y desire til retain its mas- services, it's becoming increasingly Mikhail Ooabacf.w to begin negotisive nuclear stockpile. Rather, Russ- clear that the 1986 Cherbobyl disas- ating medium-range nliclear and conian politicos (ek the treaty_die! not go ter was· the chief catalyst behind the ventional-force tnl'aties in the Euro7
f• enough to reduce the overall arms SOviet Union's decision·' to start pean theater.
Experts agree, o f course, that the
level -- and in fact would virtually reducing ;is nuclear stockpile. A key
most
signif1C8111 deterrent to the Soviforce Russia to build more strategic U.S. report, c;lassif"led !'Top Secret."
nuclear weapons than they already and authored by the Defense Nuclear ets launching a conventional war
have.
Age""y, first concluded this several against Western l:Urope was the
STAin' II set a ceiling of 3,500 yean ago.
nuclear deterrent force ·JH:Ovided by

111 Ccrult St., ........, Ohio
11+1D-2111 • Fa: JD.21I7

By

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A Gannett
Newspapef
Co.

ROBERT L WINGETT
' Publlehlr

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·,Campaign ·reform
I By WALTER R. IIIEARS

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l · WASHINGTON - eamp.ign finance reform IS a motto IIIII can't DUIS
! - but it can misfire, llpin.
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I Republican and DemocrJtic acconls that something ought to be done

politieal money fray when tbe slogans
to specifics.
!..aboutPresident
Clinton will he pressing the caae for aa overhaul in his State
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Buropoan conflicr cOuld be 11011nuc:lar. It suJFIIed til tbem that in
any military enpa-. an erraat
·strike could hit a civilian ractor and
a dispersal of radiation worse
than 111011 nuclear bombs.
Reactor. No. 4 at the Olernobyl
complex exploded in April 1986,
becoming the worst nuclear reactor
IICCident in history. The falloul was
the equivalent of 10 H~siz.e!l
nuclear bombs. And yet only S percent of·the·reactor's radioacti'YC merills were released before tbe expJo:
sion was contained It was still a dil'
cb11Je larJc enough to drop radiation
on every country in the Northcm
Hemisphere. ·
. h was enough to fon:e the evacuation of more than 300,000 Soviet&amp;, .
and render 3,000 square miles in the
vicinity uninhabitable.
A year after the accident, Oor·
bachev rached Ul ~~ with
President Ronald Reaaan to eliminale
a whole class of medium·rance
nuclear missiles. At the time, then:
were IS2 non-miliWy nuc ... reactors operating · in Western lluropf:,
most of them in France. the United
Kingdom and West Germany.
'
· The Soviet military leaders, who
became more Supportive of Gorbachev's .pellcC initiatives as 1 resul~
knew after Chemobyl thai it would lie
impossible to acquire more laft!l in
Europe: by conquest withoUt risking
serious contamination that might lasa
for centuries.lbere would be·no way
to prevent an accidental strike on
Western or Eastern European civilian
nuclear reacton which could result in
a meltdown or other serious radiation
leaks.
Tens of thousands would die froan
the radioactive clouds, either withlll
days -- or yean later from the various diseases callsed by radiati011.
There would be_no !fAY. l~ ~ d!ie~, ~'"·
radioilctivit)' out ofilii: soal or~ .
table, turning the breadbasket of
Europe into a wasteland.
Jack Aadenoa 111111 Ju MoUer
are wrlten for Uniled Feaba110
Sylldlcate, IK.

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Gore in four? Don't bet :on it
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Letters to the editor

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Th·omas, Teddy· ~r

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Grover:·You decid~j

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Luella M. Bowen, 98, McAnbur, died Tuesday, Jan. 28, 1997, at Huston
Nuninc Home in Hamden.
Aboatemlker,she wubom Oct 10, 1898, inCoiUII)bus. She was a member of the McArthur Firat Presbyterian Church, the Wilkesville American
Legion Post 4'16 Auxiliary, the Buckeye State Disabled American Veterans
Poat 8 Auxiliary, a chaner member of the Vtnton County Gold Star MotherS and the Vtnton Township Garden Club.
·
,
She·is survived by a son and daughter-in4aw, Robert and Mildred Bowen
of Pomeroy; daughten and a son-in-law, Helen Martin of McArthur and Minnie and Richaad Hursey·of St. Peters, Mo.; six grandchildren; six great-grandchildren Uld two great-great-grandchildren.
She was preceded in death by her husba!Jd, Gomer E. Bowen; two sons;
a daughter; two grandchildren; paren~; a sister ~nd three brothers.
Services will be held Friday, 1 p.m.' at the ·Garrett Funeral Home in
McArthur with James Cummings officiating. Burial will follow in Elk Cemetery.
.
.
.
Friends may call Thursday, 2-4 and 6-8 p.m. at the funeral horne.

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a--. ol any illusioel dtlla

of the Union message next Tuesday, and a Whi- House aide said he regrets
1 not milking ira higher'priority earlier in his adminisll'llion.
!
Th&amp;t's understandable, given tbe Democratic: fund-raising excesses that ·
; are about to come under Republicari-led congressional investigaiiilns . . ·
. . . .:
.
1
...
:
··
·.'!
·.
·.
Clinton has promised the sponsors of a bipartisan campaign finance bill
- ~-~:: .. _ -~~- :
that he will use every fonan available to try to Bet it passed this y..-. The
."!~:
.
Democratic National Cotmnittee, which relpCd the disputed, foreign-linked
... ..._ . .... .•.
;: -:.! 'donations of the 1996 cm!paign and returned SLS million of tlan. has
""· . . .
...
--:-;:..,;.. ......·~ ..
; imposed new limits and rules on its own future fund raising, including a bar
~ --~=.~
: on contributions from noncitizens.
·
..- . ...· -:-: · .. """':."
-:: : ...
,
•
z-,.
Unilateral first steps, the pn:sident said. proposing that both parties stop
·'
... _.. -.. : · ...
' taking the unrestricted donalions that flow ~ ~urrent political financ:e
- .. -~ . - .·- -...-· "='"'". .......-~
laws- $141 million to the Republicans, $122 millton to the Democtats an
the last campaign. "If you will do it, we will do it," Clinton said the day
-;
after his inauguration.
·
·
=-.._.· -.:-...
_...
, They're not doing it, at least not yet, on either side, although the self.
imposed DeiiiOCI'Mic rules limit donors to the party to no inore than$100,000
.
'
~·_,__.
a year. The ceiling On contributions to a candidalle in each elec:tjon is S1,000,
,jT , .
set in 1974 and unchanged since.
·
·
~··
.
., '
The campaign finance bill Clinton has endorsed would ban unregul':tec!• ·
~ ~·
,... '
'
"soft money" donatioits to the political parties. It also would seekJo hmll
· congressional campaign spending by offering incentives to ~idatcs who
agree to run Within the ceilinss. It would end, or limit, contributions by politieal action couunittees.
That's the bipanisan bill Clinton is qing Congress.til handle ~uicldy,
before people lose interest and the momentum for reform ebbs. He said delay
would doom the measure.
·.
·
Sen.•Tom Daschle, the minority leader, put campaign reform atop the .
Democratic priority list, and said there's been talk enough. Over tbe put
decade, he said, Congress has held 29 seu of hearings on ~ subject, ~~~
No SOOtier bad AI .Gore been event." The fact that the
Pfl'Si- centage immigta!lts,
result- , . Of all the·
· ·.
has sti.rred 17 fili!lusters, and the Senate has voted 113 tames o!' questions swi&gt;m to a second term as vice pres- . dent knowingly and willfully covered ed in as many liS 100.• ~00 criminal ·ecosystem, the vice president F ·
of carnpaisn finance. No bill has passed Congress. ·.
.
ident before speculation began about . up the trUth about a fund-raising aliens receiving U.S. citizenship. ceives global warming to• be "the
While Republican leaden said they_W~l to deal ~th refoo.n, thf:y'~ not his pn:sidenlial prospects. As the event in which illegal contributions according to the House •Oovemment most dangerous of all," notwith· rushing the issue. Republicans ma~ !JC
to waat out ~ anvesbgatiOIIS, veep marched down Pennsylvania
Reform and Oversight Committee. . standing the fact that the overwhich are to deal with the fund-raasang practices of both Jl11'11CS, but are cer- Avenue this week. from the Capitol
Joseph
Perkins
·,He revealed hypocritieal tenden- whelming majority of climatologists
tain to coneentrate on.the DemocniiS' Asian..Qlnnected campaign money.
to the White House, he was cheered
cies on the tobacco issue, Perhaps the disagree with him.
• '
The only campaign finance item among Senate GOP priority bills is one by supporters chanting "Gore in were solicited suggests an obstrUction most maudlin moment o)rtast sumGore's proposal to attack thfs
that includes a ban on the use of union dues for political purposes, money four" and carrying signs predicting of justice.
.
mer's Democratic Nati&lt;in'al Conven- non-problem is to punish Americllris
spcintto Democratic advantage - $3S million in the last congressional cam- "Gore 2000."
He compromised the citizenship tion occurred when Gor1;·shameless- for using fossil fuels by forcing the~
paigns.
·
.
.
.
,
Well, not to rain on the vice pres- process. With Gore's blessing, 111em- ly recalled how his cigariltte-smoking to pay "carbon" taxes, which would
Bipartisanship is tested to the pomt of testiness on matters bke that
ident's inaugural parade, but he's a hers of his staff waged an intense sister died from lung cwncer in 1984, drive up the cost of both gasoline and
"I .knelt by her bed imd held her ·electricity.
·
·
Republicans are rankled over Clinton's remark to the Democratic Nation- long way from sitting in the Oval campaign to push the Immigration
The veep_also advocates a "vitgi)l
al Committee that the GOP gets the big.money and the Democrats get the · Office. Not just because no two-term and Naturalization Service to accel- hand," he mourned. "Aind in a very
Democratic vice president has ever erate its program to naturalize I mil- short time her breathi:ng became materials fee," which would be
' blame.
·
.
labored and she breatltled her last assessed against such industries
· "On the otlief side, our friends may not think that they have any anier- become president, but also because ' lion immigrants. '
The White House repeatedly breatl). And that i.s why ' lmtil I draw paper products and haluralgas. Coniesl in campaign finanee reform," Clinton ~din that J'!". 21 speech. "~y Oore has politically damaged himself
denied that its so-called "Cititenship my last breath, I wiil P,Sur my heart panies would pay Gore's materiats
should they? They raise the money, they nuae paore .{on:tgn money, they nuse on.several eounts:
He lied about Donorgate. Last · USA" program was politically nioti- and soul into the ca,use '(If protecting tax (on top of the myriad corporate
· m()re money in big contributions, and we take alllhe heat.
April, the vice pn:sidenl was the main vated. But in a smoking e-mail mes- our children from the dangers of 'taxes and fees they already pay)
"It's a free ride," he c()l't:'plained.
. ,.
,
-~ · "
draw at a fund-raiser held at, of all sage last March a Gore aide com- smoking."
·
based on the natural resources they .
· '1 don't think the defense 'everybody does 11, as what we re saymg,
Yes, of course. But (lore neglect· use.'Of course, this would raise pn!said Lanny Davis, lawYer-spokesman for the White ~ouse in _the fund-llis- places, a Buddhist temple in Los plained' to the veep that INS was not
i!ll eases. But he said on CNN Sunday that Republtcan pre_s•den~ offe~ Angeles. The ~vent raked in moving fast enough with efforts to ed to mention that he gll:adly accept- duction costs for affected industries,
White House access to their big donon, too, and that Clanton s sess1ons wtlh $140,000. Am9ng the donors, su.p- produce "a million new voters by ed campaign contrib\lli9ns from which 11lmost certainly would he
posedly, were several Buddh1st election day."
·
tobaccO"- industry politJical action passed along to American consumers.
Democratic money people were neither unprecedented nor wrong.
Bowing to pressure from the vice committees for six yeanrs afler his
Then Gore would create a new
"What is wrona here is 'the system," he said. "President Clinton has said monks, each of whom happened to
have
a
spare
SS,OOO
to
contribute
to
president's
offiCI'.
the
INS
clearly
cut
beloved
sister
passed
a\.~
ay.
federal
~?ureaucracy devoted to "techtlie system is rotten. We need to reform it." .
.
.
the
Democratic
campaign
cause,
comers.
For
instance,
it
authorized
a
And
as
recently
as
I~!IJI,
he
proudnology
aSsessment." .Jt would piy
To which Sen. Mitch McConnell, the rankang opponent of bills seeking
though
they
all
had
taken
a
vow
of
half-dozen
firms,
,with
muhiple
ly
proclaimed
to
an
nudience
in
"close
attention
to all the costs 11114
to limit campaign spending, countered t~t the debate is. driven by cond~ct
.
. ·
offices throughout the country, to Nonh' Carolina: "Througit•out most of benefits -.- both monet;uy and ecO;
that violates exisiing law, includins donataons from fore1gners and contnb- poverty.
When Gore was asked about this administer citizenship tests on civics my life: I've raised tolil!o:co. I want logical" ornciw technologies. Sueh ·a
uton 'giving money in the names of other people.
..
illegal.fund•raiser, a month before his and English.
you to know that with my own regulatory body would pose a serious
"So I have just !Wo words to the president," the Kentucky Republican
re-election,
he
pleaded
ignorance.
"I
After
a
television
expose
revealed
hands, all of my life, I' put it in the .threat to growing young industrieS/Is
said. "Reform yourself."
did not know that at the time," he .. that employees of these finns were plant beds and transfenred it. I've ,biotechnology.
•
declared.
"The
p'eople
with
me
did
·
providing
lest
answers
to
immigrants
hoed
it.
I'
ve
chopped
'it.
ll've
shredI
Though
the
next
presidential
elec· EDITOR'SNOTE-WIIterR.Mean,vkepm'Jcntandcolu...... .
for'DaeAIIoc:Jated ..._, Jaas reported OD W....l....... aad ...lioul pol• not~' On another occasion, when the who in many cases couldn 't speak ded it, spiked it, put it in the barn and !tion is four years away, it is not tclo :
vice president was asked again about English, the INS was forced to shut stripped it and sold it." A..men.
early for the American people to take
Illes for IDOftlbaia 30 yllan.
his temple visit he stated, " It was not down 40 of these citizenship mills.
He's an environmental! extremist. a hard look at their sitting vice pn:s- .
billed as a fund-raiser. ·It was billed But that was after untold thousands In his 1993 jeremiad. " Eluth in the ident. They may be troubled by whai
as c9mmunity-outreach event."
of immigrants frauduleiuly obtained . Balance: ECqlogy and tlioe- Human they find.
l
'
.
Well lo and behold, last w~ek their U.S. citizenship.
Spirit,"GoredirelywamH&gt;fa "glob- : Joeepb l'erklal! Is .a
. Gore finally admitted that he knew,
Even more egregious, the INS · al ecological crisis." His 1;olution is for tloe S~ Dlqo Uaioa-1iiiMIIII!
county
not rellglow
beforehand, ~ his night out with the neglected to conduct criminal !lack- higher taxes, more govemment reg- and the !IUI!aor ol "Rllht Like M~'(
Dear Editor:
.
era do decide to OJ!!:n meetings with Buddhists was a "finance-related ground checks for an unspecified per- ulation and new federal pr1~grarns.
&lt;Ynlon-1iibuDe Pu~l).
: ·.
11 has come to my •ttention that a prayer (and, yes, I am aw~ .o f
recently efforts have been made, at precedents),'then a Protestant mlmsmeetinas of the Meigs County C~- ter would open up one meeting, arabmissioners, to open the proceedinJs bi would open the next, then a
Catholic ·priest, and so forth if
-- Bolli men evaded the draft aOO:
wi~t!~ ~lings·. are opened lnlention is'to reflect the many dlfIs our own B.C. a TJ., or a T.R., tics say, to compare · himself with age (Cleveland was47; Clinton was
·presidents who were ·elected just 46).
"~
,
I' ·
ie of our cotn
or maybe a W.M.?
avoided military service. Cleveland,: ·
jiy a prayer offered by a county com- · .erent re lglous v ws
- . _. I,P.C!Sonally think he is more akin ·before a new-century. That,would he
Botii men were essentil~ly con- in fac~ paid another man to pull Civ-'
fi ......., my, munity.
G C I.e •
.. ml'ss•'oner 01' a rel;oioul
John Adams and William McKinley. servative politicians who believed in il War duty for him (it was leJal in;
.,.
.-~
Our
't ~.. plenty to to . . t s see:
feelina is that this is hiJhly inapprocommuni Y· '~
What this is about, of course, is
"sound money" and foughl: to hold · · those days). He had a good ex~:!
prillle. Althouall I have no reason to offer in the way of religious instrue-. Bill Clinton's place in history. Pundown
inflation (Cleveland by sup- ·He had to take care of a mother and:
Joseph
Spear
.......1 the · s1'ncen'ty of the faith of. tion, counselin1. and so fonh. It
ha _,_.....,,
.,._,
diu ve
begun ruminating
porting the gold s'-ndard; ctinton by 1several siblings.·
·•
thole involved, I ask the cornmia- leellll that this county aovernment, lbouc it, and several times in the past
William McKinley? The nonde- appointing ·strong-money advocates · -- Clinton ~ly tolerates thef
sionerl. and 'all :county officials, to IOI'ely in need of citizen panici~on year•.Clinton himaelf has speculated script Ohio Republican who kept his to the Federal Reserve Boaad). Both . ~- Cleveland hated it. "I don't,
·'"'"aider
lbe followinJthouJhta· .
and
u well u .__
inmlled
· ds and I'1ked served during a t1111e of N•lentless thin!\ there ~ver was ~ time wbeni
""''
nonuintemt,
'c · ..._v•loptl.-1,
. more ecothan
. , ......
..,.,.., hi s rung on the Jadder of pres- ·fimger to the PQl'f
t teaI wm
· Oun in a pluralil'iic,· cammuntty,
"" •
~, ,...
'tdentt'al dt' stt'nctt'on
nothing better· than meeting people
• one e-•·k
to worry. ibout
. • The Meip
• w'tll .... ~·u- and shaking hands an.d impartlng immigration. Both were anti-tarif!: newspaper lyina was.~ general and(
iwl o.,e ,,,_
-"""" up il( Pcol'le
wath
,...,..,,
As
...
_
penon
who
Cleveland constantly fought ~he bus•- so RICin as at present, wrote Orovq • ; .
· ·
CoiUity Co!lllllll
' 11'onen serve the
. u"' .
"" ~ f upbeat messages?
(or nece!lllrily· any) rei'agtous
com·ness intere~ts that wanted pn)tection; to a friend .
. .
.
~
' '
o1
county to __ ...._ ·county buaineu, pyana tbe White Hou_se at tbe ,._
'""' o
.
·
mitment. W. are not all one c or,
""'"""''
a new ~••h..., Clinton nMurall
He does sound familiar, doesn't Clinton eliminated trade banriers on
- Bill c.tls himself the Comeback'
se•/ polilical Jlllly. or ~llpop .' We not ~liJious bawinus. I sugat tbe ·
-·:-~· · .
Y
most
~?f
the
North
American
conti~:
,Kid.
Grover is the .only ~ident to 1
- -·'-tv no1 .tl Plotellllll. It commiaio!'m leaw the llllller'll nf ~ ~~I_If wttb ~ who · he? al
...
""'" ,__,,
..-....., and "-'""to otben.
- · - •.11nu 1r momen!S m bme.
Personal1y, I have ways thou.,.t nont.
. · ·,erve two nonconsecutive lenni. I
_.,, that die CGUIIty ..,,...;...,
,...,,
He doean 1 t1ady say he .. Thomu , of Bill Clinton as the .Grover CleveIf those likenesse$ are ins"'tlicient When the Clevelands left the White ~
cililADI OUihl to be WO!tlq til he
SinceNiy,
~ Wlllll, Jelfersoll ~ncmt8fe. or lildcly Roo- · land of the 20th century. Both were to convince you that Bill Cllinlllll is ; 1Ji&lt;IIIIC 6n March 4, 1889, wife ;
mm IIIIIIIOI--illclulive.lllod!~eveJt·lebon •buthedoessubdvsug
Democrats in a Republican age. Grover Cleveland redu~t, try thele:
Pnnce&amp; told the sllfl': '"like llood
., ..... •
-•··'-Sa wv •
1
. til' 'f¥CI'dl, I u .. CIJIIIIIy - - - - . pst that he could be, if he IMIII8• lnd~. Cleveland was the first
•• Both men weie eleclejl despite •care of all the furniture and orna- •
to maiGe the molt olhis opportunilioa. Democrat elected after the Civil War, a sensational ~x scandal. ' We Ill ' 111111ta ... for I ·Want IIi find evwythin; ;
Pjw ,_., ·. ; ••=ir·l'tuidlat ~ Yelllin ua~-· lmllidoa •
Leubialedobeel*ihawpolnt- andAheonlyonelllsetveinaRepub- know a!Jout Oennifer Flowm. Clc~ jUst • it is .aow when we c:ome biCir I
plin:!O.cuuuiltrruttl lifT :H.,anaiiaid~IQ tllliciYYTfDIIwwkl ed ~ lliiii _TJ. and T.R. ICIUally · Jican reign IIIII ran froin 1860 to land, in his youD~~~~: &gt;-'•
an ,lpin. w. ue cominJ t.cli jUir IOUii j'
aroloitprl~e..,...•MYV.I.ajiCI.AIIIUit' 77'm1Middlt~plllle j il:hieveddleir ....• :uAFI'I!Rtbe 1912. Both .enod u aovemon illegitimare child and lllmiu.d It ' yej~n frvm Ieday." •
_.
OCII\r.n~...,.i!tMG awwidi~R *1141 1;: rldrr 1 calendrlcalodui Uliiiii'DOd. CihiiOI
(CiilwlandinNcivYott).Bolhwcrc .after the Buffalo new~. broke · ·
,
·
•~
OeoiJelusll;la u uhSIJ2111i'lollxjdpl~:
.
.
: 'wvuidbe--,lllea4!• ,, rlr;t tjll It ntattirelalivelyyqung tile story during the 188-4 Cllllpllip.

..-. ....:t _..

• I

the

Luella M. Bowen

.

For Soviet amlir.y lllrlllieli*.lbe the Uaiaed SC.. and _. NATO
mala JIIIIIIC* c.f a .udell' - ' allies ia ttae rep..
·The Olonlobyl e. . . . . rollbed
Iii bold the UlliiDd SC.. It bay

uid~daal-ofltillinlpls

The Dally Sentinel•.Page 3

lM...a.ld 131· I·
IND.

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• • •t

• IColumbusl34· ·I

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38•

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v..

-ted,.,... Otlp/llcsNeJ

W.'IIA.

Mayford •pappy• Harris

Mayford Asberry "Pappy" Harris, 76, Long Bottom, died Tuesday, Jan.
· 28, 1997, at his llome.
· Born May 31, 1920, in Spencer. W.Va., son of the late Dexter Bryan and
Helen Evelyn Proffitt Harris, he was a life-long farmer and retired from
· Kaiser Alumin\un..
.
Pt.
He is survived by his ·wife, Wilma C. Suck Harris of Long Bottom; sons
,.
and daughters-in-law, Mayford anil Karen Harris Jr. of Xenia, Ronald Harris of Germantown, N.C., Robert and Trennia Harris of Long Bottom,
· Thomas and Jackie Hlirris of Mendenhall, England, and James and Barbara
Harris of Latrobe, Pa.; daughters and sons-in-law, Mary and Reeder Houck
Tonight.:.Partly cloudy. Low in of Parkeraburg, W.Va., Alice Sharp of Belpre, Laura and Bruce Hawley of
the lower 20s. Calm wind.
Long Bottom, Nita and Rick White of San Antonio, Texas, Bonnie Nunn of
Thursday... Partly cloudy. High Springfield, Ga., Uld Sheila and Michael Connolly of Tuppers Plams; 32
near 40.
grandchildren and 13 great-grandchildren'
.
· ·
Also surviving are brQihers, Charles R. Hams of Ponland, Dale D. HIU'ris of Grove Hill, Ala., and Paul E. Harris of Racine; a sister, Emogene Allen
·o f New Knoxville; arid a daughter-in-law, Shirley Harris Rockhold of Tup'
• r 'I;
.
· ·
. •· ~
·
,54.50; pl41its . 53.50-55.00, few at pers Plains..
He
was
preceded
in
death
by
a
son,
Donald;
two
brothers,
James
and
•
53.25.
Bryan
Harris;
a
grandson
and
a
great-granddaughter.
.
U.S. ) ,&lt;3, 230-260 lbs. 46.50Services will be ·he'!d Friday, 2 p.m. at Roush Funeral J:lome m
. 52.00, 21«1'-'230 lbs. 41.50-46.50.
Ravenswood,
W.Va .. with the Revs. Sharon Hausman, Doug Quinn and
. Sows: near steady.
floward
Allen
officiating. Burial will follow in Rainbow Ridge Cemetery,
U.S. 1-3 300-450 lbs. 42.00-45.00,
'
few 41.00; 450-SOO lbs. 45.00-48.00; Long Bottom.
Friends
may
'Call
Thursday,
2-4
and
7-9
p.m.
at
the
funeral
home.
S00-650 lbs. 48.50-53.00, f~w over.
650 lbs. 54.00-54.50.
Boars: 38.00-39.00.

:roday's weather forecast
·By The Anocilted Preu
Sootbeulem Ohio
-: Today...Mostly sunny. High in the
;upper 30s. Calm wind.

.·Today's livestoc~ report
'

'

-

. .. COLUMBUS (AP) - . lndianac
. phio . direct hog prices at selected
.-buying point, Wednesday as,provid.ed by the U.S. Department of Agri: J:UII~ Market News:
.. Barrows Uld gilts: 50 cents with
:some 1.00 lower;' demand moderate
.,pn a .;.oderale movement
... U.S. 1-2, 230-260 lbs. country
.- paints. 52.00-54.00, few at 54.25-

J.

Byron E. Hysell

HEAP funds still available

•..

'

.

l',.

•

;

.

' If the escalating price of home · heating bills. The amount of assist&gt;eating fuel and the recent harsh win- lance is determined by total house'ter weather has created a weather- hold incomt, the number of people in
. related emergency, Emergency the household and the type of heatHEAP funds are still available ing fuel used.
through Gallia-Meigs Cemmpnity
The income guidelines for both
'Action Agency, according to Letha progi'am) ' is the same. · However,
't&gt;roffitt, the HEAP/Outreach project Regular HEAP requires the previous
. 12 moniJiS' in~ome while the past
ditector.
HEAPprovideshelpforourarea's three months' income is acceptable
neediest residents, who may be on a on Emer&amp;e!ICY HEAP. The l2-month
fixed income or among the working · period .oflhree-month period for tile
poor. HEAP helps senior citizens and income test is determined from the
-(ainj)ies-.with ·children a)loid the date of applic~tion; making it ·possi'
bl• for some with decreased income
., I
choice _Qf "heating or eati.ng."
,,, "P~wle who ,need help should during tl)ese periods to qualify later ,
~~qose . HEAP," Proffitt said. "Most
in the prQgJ;am.·
·
.
.
~fthe HEAP recipients are our neigh-_
Eumples of these types of snuaKenneth T. Wood, 87, 23 Vinton St., Gallip_olis, died Monday Jan. 27,
bors "''ho are living on .fixed income !ions eou!ll. o:x;curf~om layoff, stnke, 1997 at Holzer Senior Care Center..
or working for low wages. They are reuremeilt, d1sab1111y or .death of a . Born Jan . 5, 1910 in Springfield T!Jwnship, son of the late Harold and
;lderly' or single-parent households spouse.or,hou~e~oldmember. Docu- . Carrie Quickie Wood, he attended Rio Grande College and was a rcttrcd
,and our disabled. HEAP gives_them mentatton ,venfymg mcome must be employee of the Gallipolis Developmental-Center.
.
·'
ihe exifa help they need to make it P,rovided '!(he'! ap~lying for HEAP.
Surviving is his wife, Dorothy Z. Hart, whom he marned Oct. K, 1955
through the harsh Ohio winters.". .
The fol\owmg, mcome 'le~els by at Canlesburg, Ky.; and a sister-in-law, Oleta Wood of Galhpohs.
, Ellle~ncy HEAP provides as.sis- tJousehol~l should be used to.deterIn addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by a brother, Carl
iance to hOuseholds that lu!ve had mine eligibflity. These income guide- Wood.
utilitieS&gt;disconnected, faq: the threat . lines rep~nt the I SO percent calServices will .be 2 p.m. Thursday at the Cremeens Funeral Chapel,_with
j #f discQnnection, or have IQ days or culation q:ijl are .revised annually. Rev, AI Earley officiating. Burial will be at Mound Hill Cemetery. fnends' .
')~ss supply of bulk fuel. The_progra!ll Allowable,. ~nnuall~come for a one- may call at the chapel tonight from 6-8.
·
·
'allows a one-time payment of up to person household IS $11 ;160; two
$175 per he~ting season to restore or persons. $1 S,S40; three people,
'.r.etain home heating services: Home- $19,4.70; four people, $2?.400; five .
:~wilds or renters m~y qualify if their people, $27,330; a_nd SIX people,
total household income is at or below $3 )-,260. Households With more than TrusteeS tn meet
VFW-building, 8 to II p.m. Out of
'·rso percent of the federal po~erty six membe-;s should ad~ an additionLetart Township Trustees will the Blue band to provide music,
.'guideli~.es .
.
· . . al $3,930 to,the yearly tncome.
·
·meet at 6 p.m. Monday at the office caller, Jim Brown.
· • Emergency HEAP income chgt.
Apphca\lons · for both . programs ~uilding .
·
'Sility
be for thj: past three or ·12 , can be mad'l Monday through ThursBoil order lifted
(ponths. Th!&gt;5e not qualifying on day from 9,a.m. to n'lPn• and I to 3 Gnnge sets meeting
·
The Tuppers Plains-Chester Water
\hrce monlh~' income are asked 10 p.m. at e1ther the Gal Ita County OutStar Orange 778 and Star Junior , District announced today that a boil
,prcseni,t.hcir .full 12 months' inco!lle reach o~ce,•l!63 Port~r Road, Porter. Grange 878 will meet Saturday. 6:30 order on consumers in Olive Townsee if eligibility can be met on that the Me1gs_County Outreach office, p.m . potluck followed by meeting ship, Coolville Road between Eden
6asis. the de!id)ine for Emergency 39350 Unto~ Ave., Pomeroy,_or the and inspection of ope~ingclosing an~ Ri~ge to P,utmanville, including Rye
. 'tiEAP is March, 31 . . .
.
CA~ ce_ntral 1office at Chesh1rc. No . third degree at ~p.m . ·
Road, Deeter Road, Heiney Road,
~. The Regular HEAP program apphcat1ons,IIJ'e takenon F~1day .
Lydia Road, and Rice Run Rolld has
~ffers !.J:!eatina ,assistance oncQ per
Add111ontll tnformauon on -these Dance scheduled
been lifted. The results of the sample
~eating season til low-income,house- programs m•y be obtamed by calling
A round and square dance will be taken Monday ate considered safe,
. h_olds while defraying the high cost of the Cheshtre~AAoffice at367-7B41 held Saturday at the Tuppers Plains officials repon.
JAome hc;aling. Regular HEAP pays a or 992-6629,,the Gall1a County Om. J!Ortiort.o f eligible household winter' reach office at388-8232 or the Me1gs
. , .
CountvI Outreach office at 992-5605.
&gt;
,. · ;, · ' ·
.
The toll-free number for Regular
.Units of the Meigs County Emer- VMH.
Sentinel • HEAP inquiries is 1-800,.282-0880, gency
Mcdi•al Service recorded eight RACIIIIE
·''
. ,
. for the hearing-impaired with a
1.
8:04 a.m. , Cross Street, .Sandra
. telecommunications device for the calls for assistance Tuesday. Units MCloti, VMH:
,.. •. ttJSPS ~t3-Htl ''
,
responding included: ·
'Publls~ . evcry -..on, "!•ndaidwoulh'
deaf(TDD), 1-800-686-1557.
9:08 a.m., Salser Rood. Marion
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Friday, JIJ,.Coart SL, ~. Olllo. by die
Easterday,
VMH;
9:42
a.m.,
Country
Mobile
Home·
Ohio Va)Jey·PUbfishiiiJ Coqt~t~yJOannett Co.,
-Poll!l!fOY, 0111~ 45769, Ph. Jl!n-21~. Second
I
:49
p.in
.. Elf!l Street, Billy ·Hill
.Park, Darl\"in, Clarence dCiffith,
elm ,......I'Od·OI Po.....,., Ohio.
Sr.,
treated
at.the
scene.
Holzer Medical Center;
..
,.
f.
'
'
,..,..,.,_ At!Ocli/IOII ....... AJMIIhe Ohid
•
I :28 p.m:, Zuspan Hollow Road,
Am Ele Po- ............. ........... 41},
New-AI!OCI- ,
.
Akzo .~ .................................... 70 it
Hobson, Connie Shoulders, Veterans ·
Aahland OU ...........................42'~
Memorial Hospital, Middleport
1'0S'I'MAnaR:,_ Seed ad!lrel• correedons to
Vetonns Memorial
!fb&lt; DailY S.ntind, II t C..n St., Pomeroy,
ATAT .....................................38\
squad
assisted;
.
.
.
Tuesday'
admissions - Marion
bmo4576'i.
Blink One ..............................44~.
•
\
!)r
- 3:27 p.m., Main Street, Middle- Easterday, Racine.
Bob EVIIna .~..........,.................14
•
'IWJISCIUPTION RATIIII
7
port, Walter Green, VMH, MiddleTuesday discharges- Neil BoneBo'lJ"'W'•~•'''"'''''''''''''''''''40 4 port squad assisted;
·
ChefnPiore: ...............................17
bne Weet....... :..................................:.......$2.00 ·
cutter Sr., Pomeroy.
·
4:30 p:m., Flatwoods Road, April
Chjlrmlng Sh0pt,.................... 4\
o.., Molti!J.............................................. sa.70
Center
Holzer
Medical
One y....... ,.....,.........................,.,.... $1011.00
cttY Holcllng .........................21\ Foreman, HMC, Pomeroy sq~ad .
bi.eharses Jan. 28 - Gladys
Federal Moful ......................2,3'.4
assisted;
,
I ·ltNGLI COPY 1'111(:1 .
Cooper,
Mrs. Brett· McDaniel and
·aMJWtt .................... ~.............. 76
.l'&lt;ill ...J: .....,...................................... 35 Celllt
6:20 p.m., Overbrook Nursing son, George Thomas.
·
QooclyMr
'"*·,•r·················....sa\ 1 , Ce~ier, Middleport, William Kimes,
$ui&gt;i&lt;ribeol'iloc detlrinaoo P'Y,.. coni« IMY
Ko.fnlrt:.~·~ ... ~.,-~ .................~ ...
(Published with pennisslon)

Ken·neth T..·. Woo·d.

Meigs

'

ant:~ouncements

Sl!"

,i?

Meigs·EMS logs 8 c~lls

Two a"ested in Syracuse theft .
.Two Syracuse men were arrested Tuesday in the theft 'o f $2,700
reportedly stolen from a Syracuse man's truck on Dec. 21.
Larry Huffman, Rustic Hills, reported the money was stolen from ·
the glove compartment of his truck, accol'\ling to Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
.
,
..
Ben Kauff. 18, Huffman's step§on, was llfTCSied Tuesday evenmg
and is being'charged with theft of at least $500 of the amount.
Dennis Foley, 20, was.also arrested and charged with a felony count
of receiving stolen propeny. A felony count of receiving stolen prop·
erty is also pending against a Lebanon Township youth who was
allegedly in Syracuse the night of the theft, Soulsby said.
. • ~auff and Foley ·are being held in local jails.
.
None 9f the money was recovered as it reportedly has been spent,
Soulsby said.
·
·

Criminal damaging charges-filed
1

Criminal damaging charges have been ftled against 18-year-old
. Stephanie Jones of Racine in the puncturing of a tire on Julie Hensler's
·vehicle while it was parked at the Soutl)ern, Belpre basketball game
on Jan·. 21 , reponed Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
Jones had just turned 18 the dqy before the incident, he added.
In addition, charges of criminal damaging are being filed against
. a Racine juvenile for the puncturing of two tires on Southern High
School Principal Gordon Fish~ r.'s van, Soulsby said.
The' juvenile was not with Jones, he added. "These were two separate ·incidents."
.
,

Breaking .and entering reported
Paul Black, owner of the Racine Laundromat, reported the building was entered between 6:30p.m., Sunday, and 7:30a.m., Monday,
with the change machine being _tipped off the wall and removed.
Thieves entered by breaking a pane of glass in the rear door. Meigs
County Sheriff James M. Soulsby said.
·
.
It was reported there should have been a large number of $1 bills
in the machine, he added.
.
Anyone with inf~nnation on ihe theft is asked to contact the sheriffs department .

·Pomeroy accidents reported ·
No injuries or citations were reported following two accidents investigated by the Pomeroy Polic!! Department Tuesday morning .
Janice M. Curry, 53, Pomeroy,.was eastbound on East Main Street
around 8:04 a.m. whep her 1986 Ford slid on a patch of ice and went
off of the road into a field, causing light damage to the right-front qu3f- ·
ter and door, the report staled.
, ,
At 9:56a.m. on Linn Street, Max Davis, 79, Middleport, was pulling
out of a parking place an.d collided with a car driven by Marvin ~
er, Racine, that was backing up after pulling into another parking place;'
·
a repon stated.
Damage to Krider's '1994 Dodge was listed as light while Davis'
1995 Mercury sustained moderate damage.

Syra~se

courts cases settled

The fonoJingc~e's were resolved' ' under court suspension, .costs only.
Monday in the Syracuse Mayor's
Forfe1hng bonds were: Jeffrey
Court of Mayor George Connolly. · Boats, Magnolia, speed, ·$55 ; Greg
Appearing were: Steven W.'Ileev- . Monon, lnglcwood. speed, $53;.Gary
cr, Racine, speed, $50; Crystal liar- · Norris; ~acine, ellplred. tags, $90;
nett, Racine, speed, $55: Robert J. Janics Johnson, Sneedv1lle, Tenn.,
Hill, Syracuse, speed, $56, no motor- speed, $5 I ; Momca Chadwell,
cycle endorsement, $165; Gregory Racmc;speed, $49; James Anderson,
Gatrell, Middleport, no tail lights, Racme, speed, $50;Wallace Hatfield,
· costs only; Clifford Roseberry, Syra- Pomeroy, speed , $50; Helen Pic~c~s,
cuse_, speed, $51 plus costs; Shanna Racmc, speed, $51 ; Terry W1~h s,
Doucet, Racine, expired tags, costs . New Albany, speed, $51 .. James A.
only; Steven Miller, Racine, $peed, Staats, Ravenswood, W.Va., speed,
$SS, fictitious tags, $250; driving ~51.

Middleport
Mayor•s Cou
The following cases were resolved ·
Tuesday evening in the Middleport
Mayor's Court of Mayor Dewey Horton.

., ··•·

Forfeiting bonds on speeding violations were: · Sandy M. Chapell,
Pomeroy, $50; Chris!li V. Rose, Long
Bouom, $47; Steven James Batey,
Middleport, $48; Connie L, Romine,
Middleport, $47; Charles H. Burtoh,
Pomeroy, ·$47; Joshua C. Howard,
P'omcroy, $47; Steven W. Bunce, ·
Pomeroy, $52; Christopher C. Byron,
Stewart, $49; Joseph A. McCany,
Bidwell, $47; Ryan K.' Rowe, Mlddlepon; $51 : Sharon R. Fields, Lctan,
·W.Va., $52:, Roger E. Carpenter,
Langsville, $47; Danny C. Buffington. Pomeroy. $52.

.

·Stocks

Hospital news

..

111c.rrtw•--

Jiwn clrriet elch w«k.

·

' - - " " ji:U1CI ............................. 4GI ...

1

· ~· iubtcripoioo by moll pennined lo Where hO.e Cllrier 101'\'ice It available.
~""'- .......... odjuto .........
perto4. S.bt&lt;:ripoi"" ·'"'"
!!iOnia ...., be lnoplomcolod by ehtoaiOJ lbio
-furation ofdle 11""!1 t: lo•.
•

1111 ....

-

f,

,.,.,q,aon

MAIL S!JIISCRII'TIONS

'

·-Mollo~
~ ~ ...................
... . ............... $27.30

-

Ulltltld .......~ .. ~. ~................ H.~.18\
Ohio Valley Bank ....................38

OM Yalley.................~ .......... u.37
~pll1 .................................2 ,.
P..-n Flnl ............................... 14~
Roola::lflll ••••:..........................13\

••

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·pmlt in advance direct to The Deity Sentinel
on alhi'ee, tilt« IZ""""" batit. Ctedlt wiU be

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

~.~

RD-SIIIff ................................171
~t~or~~r'a ................................ 7~

~, Benk ................................35
Wertdy'a .................................21\
·~ ..........................18,.

-·-·-

.of.:.:=:•.:==.
-......_ : :~

:lfWtoU
...............................................
..
52
... ~................... _ ..... ,SI$116.61
.12 •. ~----.....~-•
''

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Pain maybe
eliminated
for millions

' '

The Daily

I

r •

· Byron E. Hysell, 89, Chillicothe, died Monday, Jan. 27, 1997, in Chillicolhe where he made his home with his niece and nephew, Margaret A. and
Don I. Dailey. ·
·
·.
·
. . .
He was born MayS, 1907, in Pomeroy, son ofthe late W1lham A. and
Bertha French Hysell. He'serVed in the U.S. Army Engin~ers in Europe dtir·
ing World War .ll and retired from the Columbus Depot m 1967. He was a
member of the Humboldt Lodge 476 F&amp;AM in Columbus and was a member-of the Humbold~ Glee C,hib. He made his home in Lancaster after' his
retirement untill991.
·
He is survived by a sister, Polly Eichinger; sisters-in-law, Orell~ Hysell,
Thelma Hawley and Eileen Clark, all of Pomeroy,.and by several meces and
nephews. ,
. .
.
He was preceded in death by h1s wtfe, the former Alma Wood; a bwth·
.er. Cecil Hysell; and a sister, Agnes McGhee:-, . · , , . . ,
. . ,.
Services will be held Friday, 10 a.m. at Ewmg funeral Home In Pomeroy
with Pastor RictWd Jones officiating. Masonic services by the Pomeroy lodge
will be' held Thursday a\ 7 'p.m. at the funeral home.
·

A trial date of March 23 has been tentatively set for Darrell B.-ney, 42, of Shade who faces four counts of rape, eight COUIIU ()(sexual battery and four counts of felonious 'sexual penetration .
Barney appeared before Meigs County Common Pleas Court Judge
Fred W. Crow.III who set bond at $20,000 and ordered Barney to stay
away from the alleged victim in the incidents.
The alleged crimes took place from 1993 to 1996 arid involved a
minor, according to court documents.

I

(SPECIAL)-- A new drug has been
approved that is 'ex~itlng research-ers in the treatment of pain. This
material has been formulated into a
new pro&lt;luct known · as "Artbur
Itisw" Uld is being called a "Medical Miracle" by some, in t~e treat·
mentofdebilitatingconditionssliCh
as arthritis, butsitis, rh~UI'aulJ.ism,
painful muscle aches, joint aches,
simplebackache,bruises,andmpre,
Although the mechanism of action
is u""leai-, experimentsindicatethat
Al;tfaur ldln. relieves .pain by first
selectivelf llllrll:ting, and then dcstroy.ing i~ ·mt:l5cnger chem~l .
f
whicll canies pain sensations to tilt
brain, thus eilrninating pain,in the .
affected area. ArQur 1d.;. is an
odorless. &amp;reueless. lion-staining
cream and lsav~lable immediately
withojrt a prescription and is glllr·
anteed to wortt. · .,. .,., · '

OPEN YOUR DOOR ·TO A HIGH SCHOOL
FOREIGN EXCHANGE STUDENT. . Several
countries to choose from, sc,ndln•vlan,
Eu,...11, South American, Asian or one of the
. New Independent States from the former Soviet
Union. Auguat arrival, Call Today! Call 1-800.
SIBUNG today. American Intercultural Student
Exchange! A nonprofit ~ exempt educational
foundation• • •

PICKENS
HARDWARE

.

&lt;

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:;~w~-.~~··~*~~~J~.m~~~•!T!'!~~1~1~~~----------------~~~~~~~P~a~m~-~-u,~·~M~h~~~d-~p~~~~~~Oh~~~~------------------!The~~D~•·~~~S~e~a~d~~~·!~~..
!-~~~

The Daily S_entin~l

·Sports

~rlmble de.feats
··Eastern 58-52

Wednlld8y,...,....., d,1117

-V inton County·
beats Meigs 60-54

In Top 25 college ba•ketbil/1,

a

-· Shaq' to reliev~ O:laju.won On ·wes·t squad
NEW YORK (AP) - Shaquille
O'Neal, Karl Malone .and Clyde
Drexler expect to be All-Stars every
·· season. Tom Gugliotta, Christian
: Laettncr and Eddie Jones, on the oth. er ha,nd; are new to this son of thing.
Gugliotta, Laettner and Jones
: made the NBA An:star team for the
· first time Tuesday when the Eastern
and Western conference coaches
·" each picked their seven reserves.
' ."Your goal isn'tjust to make the
' NBA," said· Laettner, an- Atlanta
for\Yard. "Your goal is to be considered a very good player in the NBA.
And for that 10 happen, you have to
: be an AII~Star."
. O'Neal,1neanwhile, will be starting the All-Star game on the bench
' for the firSt time in his. five years in
the NBA.
O'Neal was a four-time starter for
' the Eastern Conference when he was
. with the Orlando Magic. But the Los
Angeles Laken' center, second in the
league in scoring to Michael Jordan,
will back up Houston's Hak eem
Olajuwon for the \Vest. . . -·
"He's a legend in the game,"
O'Neal said of Olajuwon. "That's
fine ."
The Nos. 3, 4 and 5 scorers Malone of Utah, Latrell Sprewell of

Raptors, ·~avaliers and Bulls get wins

R
I
.
o
·
0
·REACH .OVE . .·.,5 . ..
Es TH
M
0
YOUR E . _ .11
55 6

~-saints

~ -

,J, ·

PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Der, rick Coleman is back with the
: Philadelphia 76ers, and feeling a lit. une&lt;cuse d
tic persecuted about h1s

the missed practice at $1 ,000 and the
Coleman, who maintained that it
·fine forthe missed game at $83,000, · wasn't necessary that he attend Satthe equivalent of one game's pay for urday's game because he was still
Coleman, who is making $6.8 mil- injured, is averaging 18.2 poipL• and
9.2 rebounds. .
ll'on th1's season:
~~~the~.
h
8
'd
"Afte·
r
watch1'ng
him
practiCe,
I
The 76en;.started t e season 7- .
"I feel like O.J.,'' Coleman sa1
as he was surrounded by reporters thl.nk he's ready to be activated," but have gone 2-27 since and, at 9· Tues- Greenberg sa1'd,· "We're glad that 33, have_
following the 76ers • pract1ce
. tbe NBA's second-wqn;t
day. "I want to thank everybody for he'll be ready to suit up (against record.
being concerned about my welfare." · Toronto)."
Before brushing past the media,
Coleman quickly explained why he
wasn't al the team's practice Monday.
·
·
·
"I missed practice because I was
snowed in in the city of Detroi~ " he
'
said. ~'(know I'll be fined, and that's
alii have to say."
3RD &amp; PEARL ST.
Coleman, expected · to play
94~0SE (7673)
tonight when the 76ers play in
Toronto after being activated rroin
FEATURING:
the injured list, has missed nine
giiJIICS because of a lacerated finger.
He was visiting his hometown over ·
the weekend.
'·
SilkS • Balloons
The 76ers got a further scare
Specfalty-Gifts·.
..-hen rookie guard Allen Iverson
went to hospital for a 11wrt time
Amllh-Crafted Pie Safe

-BVJIGI1NDJ AND BRAS$
FLOULS -a·GIRS .

Fresh Cut Arrangiments_-.

1\lelday beciUHI of I stomach ¥iNS.
(WII'IOII wu released after consullllion with the '-" phylic:iln. He
alto i1 ellpiiCIId to play tolliJitt.
CJeaenl m= 1=r Bntl Orceabeq
ieAdld todi~~ bowmudt
. Olhaoll'wwWbefilletfl'ormiaaiDI

nopical Wood Gifts. from COlli Rica
a....ln 1 TIII~

Blunoid Pottery

ByN~RJ~EANS(AP)-Bdorc

!''~~~':~:his

•

Bobb~

Harbaugh_~

to

·'

'

GAI.I,IPOLIS

·PT. PLEASANT, WV

446-2342

675-1333

. : CLEVELAND (AP). _ Bill•
fK-ds critical of the grinniqg Clevec
Ji...,o lndt' -- • loom, Chief Wahoo, go
.... ~
-··
11n display
in 'mo-id-February at two
'· · 1 ti 001
'
tyTheocab1.11 boand
was ·designed by·
oar Heap of Birds. a half• enne and half-Arapaho Ameri- ylndillll who is an 1410Ciate prof ·
ssor of an at the Uni~ily 0
!&lt;lahoma. The billboards Will • ·

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT

I ,

back~rs

Wative Ameri~an gr'!ups plan_ d_isplay ·_ ·
anti~Chlef Wahoo billboards 1n mid-February

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aA image resemblin~ the mascot and
"S 'I ~ R
"
say, mt e or ac_lsm.
In a sta.temen_t ISsued Thesday,
backers sat.d the b!llboard IS meant- to
provoke dtscusston about raciSm
and the negative effects such.a logo
•
has on the seI.-esteem
o.fInd 1ans.
Billboard ~poniOI'S mclude the
American Indtan Mov~nt ~ t_he ,
·c
'itce f 500 Y.
of Digntty
ommt. ,o . . ~
. ·
and Rei~Jtancd, aa l.n4tan group.

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~7,

aft~r

CALtNOW •••
992-2156

name-Ditka head coach

..
••

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{

•
"

. The team has defended the
Wahoo logo as honoring LouiS
s'ockale&lt;is, 8 Penobscot from M
_ame
to
' who was 'the first American
b blndJan
11 He
play major-league ase .a ·
played for Cleveland (rom 1897-99.
Team officials couldsd not. hbe
reached for comment Tue ay·mg t
A mCSIIIge seeking co":'~nt- was
left at die home of Bob DiBtasto, the
. teun'svt.:o-•itle
_ nt~_or..,blicrela-&lt;
~

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Lan;:::~alh&lt;ickingtookal0-21ead . }:.~~f~:nn~~.~~~~game57-

· .
·
.
sandwiching .six Chapman points
·
·
around a Jamie Evansbu&lt;;ket Led hy
Stoudamire, ·averaging 20.3 Ryan Evans, Jenrod Mills, Adam
·points, 8.2 assists and 4.1 rebounds, . Roush and Jesse Maynard Southern
was last season's Rookie of the co,me ·backto 15-10 but fell. off the
·Year.
paceasJ.R.Springercannedapair
"I'm notmad,I'mdisappointed," of jumren off Chapman assists.
-he said. "They were telling me no Chapman ended the night with eight
one from a team with under .500 assists as well. Atthe end of the fint ·
record made the team. I guess now frame, Federal hadtaken a 25-12
records dictate everything in this lead.
league."
Chapman scored seven earlyEveryone on the E~st squad points around two J~se Maynard
played for a team that was at .500 or drivfes and a Jerrod Millsgoal to give
better going into Tuesday night's Federal his biggest Jead ,at 37-20 at
games.
the 4:14 ark. Chapmal) scored four
This is the IOth ·AII-Star selection morcpoints at the line with a perfect
for Malone and Drexler, the fifth for 7 _7 stint in the frame as Federal
Richmond, thelourth for Tim Hard- rolled 10 a 41-26 lead. Mills hadaway, Mourning and·Mutombo, the scored two straight for Southern, but
third for Baker and Sprewell, and the the SHS defense couldn't stop Chapsecond for Brandon and Rice.
man. .
Doug Collins of Detroit is the
Dubbed the "Ice-man" for his
East coach and Rudy Tomjanovich clutch performance, Chapman sat
of Houston is the West coach.
out the last 2:35 of thehalf. Federal
The East, which won 129-11_8 at stumbled, Ryan Norris and· Adam
San Antomo last year when Jordan Roush capitalized for Southern, then
was the MVP for th~ second lime, , , Mills hit akey goal at the buzzer to
leads the senes 29-17.
tighten the score at47-35 atthe hal[
Southern came ou( I ike a house
· afire in the second half. Ryan Norris took the reigns ofthe Southern
scoring machi.ne, sparking the attack
with a big three and a couple clutch
two's.Jamie Evans had a key drive as
welL
.
Jesse Maynard came up with a
couple steals and hit consecutive
goals to pull Southern towithin two,
62-60, Roush tied it "at 62-62 and
Tyson Buckley hit a big goal for 6462 SQuthern lead.
Chapman hit a pair of free
throws to tie, then Vogt canned a

32. ·
Quarter mtl4
Southern
12-23-27-18=80
· Federal Hocking 25-22-17-29=93
Southern: Adam Roush 4-04/5=12, Ryan Norris 3-2-7110=19.
Jamie Evans 2-1-011=7, Jesse Maynard 6-0-212=14, Pete Sisson 2-0011 =4, Jerrod Mills 5-0-3/4=13, Oilly Sheppard 1-0=2, Tyson Buckley
5-0-1/1=11 . Totals: 27-3-17124=80
· Federal Hocking: Joe Cpen !0=2, Josh Chapman 5-4-21122=43;
Ben Beha 1-0-0=2, Pat Quinn 3-0212=8, ChuckVogt 1-2- 1/1=9, Neil
Nelson 1-0-0-2, Jason Brown 1-0012=2. Amos Cotterill 1-0-3/3:5:
Derek Hill2-l -3/4=10, J.R. Spri'nger
2-10/2=7. Benji Brite 1-0-112=3.
Totals: 20-11-321311=93 ·
'T':
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25 h00p$.

(Continued from Page 4)
Gary Lumpkin scoflld 24 poinL•
to lead the Musketeers ( 14-3,5-2) in
the matchup of Atlantic 10 division
leaden; . .
Xavier was 9-of-16 from behind ·
the three-point arc after going only
12-of-49 from lhere in their last three
games.
}'reston Murphy had 20 points to
lead the visiting Rams ( 12-6, 6-2),
who 'were unahle to overcome the
second-half foul trouble of seven- .
foot center Michael Andersen.
Baylor 76, No. 23 Texas 72
Damond Mannon's three-pointer
wit~ 21 seconds to play snapped the
game's linal tic, and the Bean; ( 137,2-6 Big 12)·went on to their lirst
win over a ranked team sin~e beating Arkans;IS in .1990.

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Golden State and Mitch Richmond Mutombo and Laettner of Atlanta .
of Sacramento- also were picked · and Glen Rice of Charlotte.
for the West
· The starters for both teams were
The other West reserves are announced previously.
Drexler of Houston, Gugliotta of · For the East, it's Jordan and Pen- .
Minnesota and Jones, the NBA steals ny Haroaway of Orlando at guard,
leader from the Lakers.
Patrick Ewing_of New York at cenGugliotta is the lint Minnesota ter, and Grant Hill of Detroit and
player ever to make the All-Star Scottie Pippen of Chicago at far· team.
· '
ward.
."[think we've added some legit, For the West, it's Gary Payton of
imacy to this organization with the. . Seattle and ~ohn StgcktonofUtah at
·new management we have and the · guard. OlaJuwon at center, and
.players we have," Gugliotta said. · Chru:les Barkley of Houston and
"Now to have a player named as an . Shawn Kemp of Seattle at forward.
All-Star is going to add to it. I think
·There sui! could be some changes
you're seeing a lot of positive things on the rosters ..'!1'e Rockets l~amed
come out, and there's gomg to be a Tuesday that ·lnJunes w1ll stdehne
lot more to come." ·
Barkley for I 0 days and Drexler for
Jones said his work in the offsea- two games.
·son paid off with a trip to the game
Among those left off the teams
in Cleveland on Feb. 9.
were Tor9nto guard Damon .
"I put myself in position to be a Stoudamire, ·Golden State forward
better player," he said. "Not for Joe Smith and Minnesota forward
Kevin Garnett. ·
rewards, but to. be beuer· •.or th's
1
team. When you get rewards like
Indian~ guard Reggie Miller, Mil·
•
•
h
d'd
·
the
m
waukee
forward Glenn Robinson,
this, u s .or w at you t m su - .
mer."
.
Philadelphia guard Allen Iverson,
'The East reserves are Vm Baker Washington forward Chris Webber
of Milwaukee, Terrell Brandon of and New Jersey swingman Kendall ·
Cleveland, Tim Hardaway and Alon- Gill - all of them averaging more
w · Mourning of- Miami,_ Dikembe than 20 points - ·also were left off.

missed it."
Mora brought the 30-year-old
Ditka,
takes over a team that franchise its only winning sen.•ons
• · he left football in 1992, Mike Ditka has not had a winning season in four and playoff appearances. But after
.. developed a reputation as a tough years, only five in 30 yean;, finished . going 12-4 in 1992, the Saints: for•
1ay- 3-13 in 1996 and has never won a tunes tumbled. After a85-0hsturt m
guy who put up withI .111 1e .romp
en;,-management or the media.
· playoff game.
,
!993, the telll)1 finisl\ed -8 1 at year.
Ditka the latest coach to shake
"I think the past is for cowards;" The next two seasons they went 7' off burn'out and return from the said Ditka, who signed a 3-year con- . 9. Mora quit when the team opened
, broadcast booth to the sidelines, is tract. "The record has been written. 2-6 in 1996. Venturi went 1-7.
The .Saints did not sell out a home
', . the new coach of the New OrIeans It can't be erased. We will just go on ·
from·
here."
game.
last seas0n, and season ticket
•. Saints.
~
He's also intent on showing that
One thing that hasn't changed is sales fell as well.
Ditka was
. new Ditka's approach to the game - a
his old image doesn_'t mateh hIS
· elected to the Hall- of
h ·
combination of hard-hitting de tense Fame for his 12 seasons as a llg t
:: wa~.j' wantto create a sense of pride. and grind-it-out offense that won end with the Bears. Philadelphia
:· here," Ditka said lie was hircil as the Chicago fans and games.
Eagles and Cowboys. · ·
·:· Saints' 12th head coach. " 1 want to
.. D1' tka s111'd he plans m.ultiple-setHe wa.• an · a..sistanl coach for
·; make it fun for everybody, especial- defenses with an emphasis on pres- Dallas when the Belli'S made him
·· ·
1 suring the quarterback. Offensively, tl!eir coach in 1982.
led Chicago
,; ly the people in the_ org_amzn,t,ton.
rd He
· NFC
c 1.
he
wants
tO
COncentrate
on
the
runtO
0
112-68
teCO
i
SIX
entra.
' want the fans to enJOY II too.
·
,' Ditka, an NBC studio analyst the . ni~g game, a weak pdint for the · titles, three NFC vhampionshlp
.
. games and the 46-10 Super Howl
&lt;past four years, was offered thejol,l'\ Sa1~tsforyears.
':Jan. 20. and on,TueSday he signed a
I w1sh I could tell you I was an win over New England, a game
' three-year contract that will pay him oiTensive genius, but you're going to · played in New Orleans.
~between $5.5 million and $6 million ~ee us run the football," Ditka said'
Ditko was coach of the year in
::over the length of the deal. He a_nd ''You may not like it. It may be bor- -1985and '88,and his 1990and 1991
~owner Tom Benson said they dec1ding, but I won a lot of football ga'!'es · teams each finishe~ 1-5. I!' 1992,
:led last week not to announce his hir• ' that way. We're going to learn to run however, the Bears hmshcd lourth m
1
B 1
be lore we learn to pass."
the NFC Central and did not make
:1ing until after the Supe~ ow on
Former Saints wide receiver Dan- the playolfs.
:!Sunday in order no,t to d1ven anenhe
D' k •
-'lion from the NFL,. marquee game. ny Abramowicz, special teams coach . · That was also I year 11 a s
'' Ditka is the latest coach to leave in Chicago, will be Dit.ka's offensive temper flared frequently. The most
'!
. booth and et back into cOordin~tor, qnd former Gian!s scc- famq_us linide occ~rrcd. when t_he
;the br&lt;;JOO~
I'1
h' g onlh Dick ·ondary coach Zaven Yaratian will be Bears traveled to Mmneso!_a and J1m
1
·);:oach ?8· r ~r t. IS mh of ihe St. . defensive cOordinator.
·
Harbaugh call~d an audible to
.Ye"!'ell returne as14coa~ and last . Rick Venturi the -interim head change a play Ditko called. :
LOUIS Rams j:r ye pi 'ced Don -. coach
Jim Mora resigned eight
Harbaugh's pass was intercepted
¥ear Jlm;.~;r . ~son crw:year stay games into, the s~ason, was retained ·and returned for _a tou~hdown. The
;ii~ula tn lamia tera
Bears lost 21 -20, and D!tka
05 assistant head coach and linehealth is good now,
coach;
April will Ski'Oa111ed at
the'slde.
· d ·5 1 ed and his out- rematn us spec1al teams coach. .
hne.
Ins a~ttt~ ~ ! re ax '
·
Bill Kuharich the general man"I lost (the team) that last year
15
look posltlietved. .
d the enthu·
ager for the past'•ear, was promo!- there," Ditka said. "!lost them up in
••· "I bave
t · rtve
an
.
'
· growmg.
" D'tk
and M'
mnesota
an d .cou ld n't gc t them
11asm
IS
I a said · "I ed to p!'e$ldent, general manager
·
back
"
Oidn't realize until now how much I ~hi_ef operating officer,
·

-TV .TIMES

KAY PfJC)FH I I -10M DAVIS

· - · · . . -Mol- tJtv
.....
. ,.._-..
) l)l!actiw.
. . ,... . . ._.... die be let

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'

·g ets 93-80 victory
over Southern

EasiCm came to life in the ICCOnd
round led by Casto, who hit two big
the 'Inmble Tomc:IIS ~8-S21Uesday field goal1 and lllliOIIICIItum building
night in boys' vanity buketball three. Otto, Kehl, Durst, and Hollon
action at Eulem High School.
all hopped on the scoring band wagThe Tnmble win avenJed an ear- on as Eastern cut the lead to 28-24.
·· 8y SCOTT WOLFE
ion! th= for thC Lancen togive
lier loss to EaStern in the first game
Eastem lost its wind at halftime,
Sentinel
Comtspondent
them the lead for good. Southern and
of the season 58-55.Eastem falls to coming but the second half to the
Led
by
a
record
breaking
perforFederal
diced back and forth for
7-9 overall. SophomO&lt;C Brady l\'aee tune of only fourpoints. Eastern also
manee
by
senior
point
guart1
Josh
·
much
of
the thirdframe, but strugtallied 19 points to lead all seon:rs ·got in foul trouble~ Dillard, Casto,
Chapman,
t~e
Federal
Hockgled
coming
out in the founh. Fedand headed a Tomcat p!ll'lldethal saw and · Durst all had four fouls and
ingLancers rolled to 93-80 Tri-Valeral gained a four point lead and
. ·Zach Miller post II, Josh Limo len, Ottofouled out. Overall, one of the
ley
Conference
victpry
over
.
the
gained someneeded breathing room
.. David Guthrie nine, and Josh main differences of the game wa.• the
Southern
Tornadoes
Tuesdaynight
at
enroute
to the win.
·
.. MCClelland 4. Senior Josh Casto led 24-32 night Trimble had altho line.
Federal
Hocking.
Chapman's
effort
Chapman
gave
Federal
an
11the Eagles with 15 points, including
Eastern had only 5-9 atteiupb.
overshadowed a great comeback
point lead 87-76 at the I :45 mark
" • a great first half effon the kept the
Tt:imble went on to lead 37-2K.
elTon by theTomadocs, who after
when he broke the schoolmark.
·. Eagles in the game and brought them then held on to the 58-52 win.- Dil- .
once
falling
to
a
17-point
deficit:
Unselfish in his performance, Chap· .. to within striking distance at 27-24. lard had eleven pointsin the linul
came back to take a 64-62 lead ·.in
man passed up several other late
- Despite being held scoreless round on two free throws untltlu1...,
thethird
period.
.
scoring
opportunitiestp pick up the
' "through three quarters, Eric Dillard _· th=-pointer$. ·
Chapman
hit
21-22
free
throws
assists.
Federal
rolled on to the 93•·•endc with elcvt!n, SteveDurst nine,
, East~m had 2j).rehountls (C'astu 7:
I
and
had
a
60
percent
shooting
night
80
win.
.
LAUNCHES THREE~POINTER -Eastern's Josh Casto (20) puts
· •Daniel tto sevenf, Rick Hollon six Hollon 6, Dusrt 8), hud unc blnck.
Coach Howie Caldwell did a
up
a three-pointer Just behind .the arc In front of Trimble's Du•tln from the floorenroute to a 43-point ,
· ,·~nd Jeremy Kehl two.
two charges taken,l'our steals. _i4
effort,
setting
a
new
Federal
Hockgreat
job firing up his Tornadoes, but
· 'The Tomcats, usually a deliberate . ·turnovers, ten assists. and 23 fuuk . Jennlc:e ( (11), Zlc:h Miller (12) andJoah Mc:Cielland(24) during 111ing
all•time
scoring
record.
Chaptoo
much
adrenaline was used to fuel
dly nlght'l Hocking Dlvl•lon contest at Ealtem High Schoo~ where
· offensive team, rolled to a potent 19· Trimble · hit 2-5 three's, 14-JK · the
Tomc:all won 58-52.
·
man'snew standard of c&lt;cellence · the c'omeback, leaving nothing but
. 9 first periodlead. Brady Trace, hit 2- from the field, and was _24-32 at the
eclipSed lhe former record of 40 held fumes in the Tornadoes fuel tilnks
-:3 free throws, and tallied $iX points line. THS had 29~bounds (Trace 10.
Ouartu lfllab
by post m~n Dan Bisc, who setthe
going down the stretch.
Trimble:
Brady
Trace
6-0•· in the first frame, while.Zach Miller Guthrie 7); two blocks, seven stculs.
Ea.&lt;t~rn
9-15-4-24=52 7/1();19, Josh McClelland 2-0=4, mark back in 1976.
Federal hit 20-40 for 50%, 8-13
; ·canned a two' and long three. Eric !5 turnovers; 12 assists (Limo 6), Trimble
19-8-10-21=58 Josh Limo 3-1-112= I 0, David
Just last l"e~k. Chapman notched · for 61 %, hit 32-38 for 84% and had
Dillard was taken clear out of the and 17 fouls.
.
Eastern: Eric Dillard 0-3-214=11, Guthrie 2-0-5/6=9, Zilch Miller 1-1- 8 poi,nts against Wellston, coming 291ed by Vogt's seven. FH had three
. Eastern offense, which struggled
Trimble won the reserve game Josh Casto 6-1 -0-15, Rick Hollon 2- 6/8= II, Dustin Jennicie 0-212=2, just two shy of arecord. Before last steals, 19tumoven;, 14 assists and 16
throughout the night with a 5-24 42-38 led by Robbie Cooper by 12 . 0-2/2=6,Daniel Otto 4-0-113=7, Jere- Kyle Patton 0-0-3/4=3. Totals 14-2- nights game, C~apman was averag- fouls.
. three point shooting deficit and a 16- and Eric Coffman ten. Jeremy Cas- my Kohl_ 1-0=2, Steve Durst 3-1- 24132=58
ing nearly 20 points per game.
Southern hit27-68 for 39%. 3-15
, ·43 night from the floor.
to had nine.
0=9. Totals16-S•SI9=52
Federal Hocking hit 32-38 over- for 20% and hit 17-24, at the line.
alii!! the foul line. The 93 points was SHS had 32 rebounds (Mills 8,
. Coaches pick NBA A/1-Stsr Gsine reserve list
.
a season-high team output for the Buckley 7), Steals nine (Ma~nard4); ,
13

throup !he _first quarter, then fell to

left when Kruger scored. But Daniel
Hannan scored wjth two seconds left
in the half to cut the Viking lead to
25-22 at intennission.
Meigs went on a 8-0 run at the
'
sturt of the third period to take a 30By The AIIOCieted Pren
• basketball that l!eservea to have
25 lead with 6: 16 left on a Hannan
Tim Duncan has been impressing something like (the double-double
bucket. Davenport gave Meigs a 42people with his scoring, rebounding, streak) continue, it's him," Odom
·passing and shot blocking since he's said.
.
35 lead at the I :23 mark or' the period on a bucket, but a three point play
been at Wake Forest. ·
The Hokies (10-9) were held to a
by Caudill with I :07 left pulled the
- On Tuesday night, he showed thai season=low point total, and just like
he is so much more than statislics as every ot~ Wake Forest opponent
Vikings to within 42-40. Waylon .
McKinney seeing the first varsity
the second-ranked Demon -Deacons this season, they were held to unc!er
action of his career scored with four
beat Virginia Tech 61 -44.
·39 percent shooting. Virginia Tech
The 6-foot-1 0 all-America center star Ace Custis, guarded by Duncan
seconds left to give Melgs a 44-40
took just five shots in the non-con- most of the game. finished with nine
lead heading into the final period.
ferenee game after coach Dave · points- his_second-lowest total of
The Vikings jumped out to a 50Odom inet with him about the the season.
46 lead with 3:50 left in the game
importanCe of Wake· Forest getting
"It all starts with Tilll Duncan,"
when Kruger hit one of two from the
its
outside
shooting
back
on
track.
Virginia
Tech coach Bill Foster _saKI.
line. But Davenport drained another
"I talked with him two or three "1 feel like his unselfish att1tude
three pointer with 3:44 left to pull
times over the weekend about our bleeds off on everybody else. How
Meigs to within 50:49. ·
perimeter guys not being in gear, and · can .you not be an unselfish team
It was a two or three point game
we
have to get them involved," .with a player like him?"
much of the rest of the game, A
Odom said. "I know he gave up , in other games involving ranked
bucket by Kruger put Vinton on top
ONE•HANDED SHOT- Melga guard Brad Whltllltch (21) take•
55-51 with 58 seconds left in the a on.tlanded lhot among1t tour VInton County playera during shots early to keep them involved." 'teams Thesday night, it WIJ! No. 9
The emphasis placed on the long 'Louisville 71. DePaui ,S4; No. 16
game. But Whitlatch drained a tri-· Tue1day nlght'e Ohio Dlvl1lon c:ontlltll In McArthur, ~ the
jumper
was shown by 14 of Wake Michigan 67, Penn State 59; No. 20
VIkings survived Whitlatch'• 17-polnt attack to win &amp;o-54. (Sentinel
fecta with 37 seconds left to pull
photo
.by
Da)le
Harrla)
·
Forest's
first 18 shots coming from Xavier 91, Rhode Island 79; 811d
Meigs to within 56-54. Vinton Counthree-point range.
Baylor 76. No. 23 Thxas 72.
ty went to the line si• times in the
"I
was
not
uncomfortable
al
all
·
No. 9 Louls-.JIIe 71
final 20 seconds and made four of times, Meigs had I 0 steals led by
YQrk on Friday evening to play the ·
early
with
the
shotS
going
up
from
·
'
· DePaul 54
them to i~e the victory.
·
· Witherell and Davenport with three . Buckeyes. Nelsonville•York hosted
outside
because
the
ball
went
inside
DeJuan
Wheat scoted seven of
Caudill led a trio of Viking in each. Meigs had five blocks with .the Vikings in a make-up contest en
first· almost every time," Odom his:iOpointsduringan 1·1-0run,that
double figures with 18, Kruger and · Whitlatch and Hannan getting two Wednesday.
· said referring to the ball going into spanned the halves, ·and the Card!Damron added 12 points each. The each: Meigs was called for 22 per- Ouarter l!!lala
the post and then out to the perime- nals (17-2, 4-1 Conference USA)
Vikings had 33 rebounds led by sonal fouls.
·
Meigs
12-10-22-10,54
ter. "It's too many ifyoujustlook at scored 25 points off DePaul~s seaCaudill with nine and Damron with
.In the reserve contest t1Je Maraud- Vinton County
9-16-15-20,60
eight. The .Vikings turned the ball ers defeated the league leading
Meigs: Brad Davenport 1-2-0..8, numbers: but the fact that the ball son-high 26 turnovers. Wheat hit a
three-pointer at the halftime buzzer,
over I 0 times and was tailed for II Vikings 48-4 7 in overtime. Meigs Brad Whitlatch 7-1-0=17, Collin went inside first, it's OK."
The
Demon
Deacons
(
16-1)
went
opened
the second half with a layup
fouls.
took a three point lead with eight Roush 1-1-0=5, Daniel Hannan 6-0- .
16-for-65
from
three-point
range
in
and
capped
the run w1th an ·18-foot
Whitlatch led Meigs with 17 seconds left on two Sean O'Brien
1=13, Josh Withereiii-J-2=7, Waytheir
last
four
games,
and
Jerry
jumper
to
give
Louisville a 36-23
points, he was joined in double fig- free throws, but Aaron Ward nailed ion McKinney 2-0-0=4. Totals: 111Braswell'was
the
shooter
in
the
worst
'
lead
with
18:40
to
play.
ures by Hannan with 13. Meigs hit a three pointer 'with three seconds 5·3=54
.
Charles Gelati had career-highs of
23 of 56 from the floor including live left to force the over time. O'Brien
,Vinlon Counly: Matt Hatem 1- slump of all, going I 1-for-40 from
the
field
in
his
last
six
games.
24
points and 16 rebounds for the
of 16 from three point range for 41% led Meigs· with 14, Steve Beha 0-0=2, Todd Braden 2-0-2=6, Ryan
He.
hit
three
three-pointers
and
.visiting
Blue Demons (3-15, 1·6),
and went to the line five times hit- added 12 and John Davidson added Caudill 5-0-8=18, Nate Henderson
finished
with
13
points,
his
first
douwho
have
lost five straig~t
ting three for 60%. The Marauders
I 0. Aaron and Gabe Ward led the
3-0-0=6, Matt Bethel 1-0-0..2, Jason
No. 16 Mlcbipa .67
had 27 rebounds led ·by Hannan with Vikings with 12 each.
Kruger 4-1-1=12, Chad Damro.n.J- ble-digit scoring game In more than_
three
weeks.
'
' Pean St. 59 '
nine and turned the · ball over 10
Meigs will tr~~el to Nelson vi He- .0-6=16. Totals: 20-1·17=60
"We passed the ball', we got in
Louis Bullock scored 23 points to
motion, we rim our offense and we lead the Wolverines ( 15-5, 5-3 Big
'In the NBA,
got what we wanted," Duncap .s~id .. Ten) to their first win at State Coi" We tried to get back to our bos1cs, · lege sinc_e the Fab Five won there in
back to just passing the ball, finding February 1993. ·
.
the open, people and making people
Michigan led 50-37 with 14:21to
guard everybody."
·
·
play, only to see tbe Nittany Lions
Duncan finished with a season- (8-9, 1-7) close to 51-47 with 7:39to
By The AIIOCieted PriiQ
Elsewhere in the NBA, it was
celebrated his fifth consecutive AllJazz 114, Nuggets 99 .
low 12 points, and Odom'kaid he was . play. Bullock helped hold \)ff Penn
Toronto and New Jeney came up New York I09, Boston 107; Wash- Star selection with 28 points and nine
At Salt Lake City, Karl Malone unaware when he took•Duncan out · State by making six free t!vows to
' with record-setting· performances. ington 102, Orlando 82; Charlotte . assists for Sacramento. Mi'nnesota scored 28 points and Jeff Hornacek with 7:48 left that he was two close the scoring:
· ' · ., ·
That was good for the ~ptors and 98,lndiana 97; Detroit 93, Milwau- got 25 points and eigbt rebounds added 27 as Utah defeated Denver. rebounds shy of his 26th ·straight
Pete Lisicky led Penn State,
bad for the Nets:
kee 84; Sacramento 91, Minnesota from Tom Gugliotta, who was sele«;t- Hornacek scored I 0 points during a double-double. After being told, which has lost II of its last ' 13 conThe Raptors got the most lopsided 88; Los Angeles Lakers 102, Dallas ed to his first All-Star game.
· decisive 19-6 'third-quurterrun. Den- Odom reluctantly put Duncan back fercnce games, with 19 points.
victory in theirtwo-year history, 120- 83; Utah 114, Denver-99; Ch1cago
· Pistons 93, Bucks 84
ver's Mark Jackson had 20 points, 12 in, and it took him 1:10 to get his two
No. 20 Xnier 91
84 over Portland on Tuesday night. - HI, Yancouver 96; and Atlanta 112,
At Milwaukee, Grant Hill scored assists and 10 rebounds.
rebounds and keep the streak alive.
Rhode Island 79 · .
Doug Christie led Toronto with 33 Los Angeles Clippers 96.
22 points and Detroit held its oppo"If there is a player in college
(See TOP 25 on Page 5)
points, tying a career high. . ·
Bullets 102, Magit 82
.
nent
under
100
points
for
ihe
22nd
_
_
_
_
.;.
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
.
.
---------,
"They just came out and JUmped
At Landover, Chns Webber had straight game. The Houston Rockets · 1
us," Portland guard Kenny Ando:rson 17 points and 14 rebounds as Washsaid.· "They ·outhustled us and hit ington 'snapped Orlando's four-game are the only team to score 100
their shots. They did everything winning streak. Juwan Howard had · apointsagainstDetroitthisseoson,
115-96 victory on Dec. 12. Glenn
in .
rightandwedideverything wrong." 26 points and 10 rebounds for the Robinson scored 15 points for the
Meanwhile, New Jersey was held Bullets, who won for only the thlfd_ Bucks.
to its lowest 'point total since joining time in nine games. Anfernee Hard.
Hornets
Pacers
the NBA in 1976, losing to the away scored 22 for the Magic.
Glen
Rice 98,
scored
3d97points,
•
.
Cleveland Cavaliers 84-62. ·
Knicks 109, Celtks 107
including a 'pair of clinching foul
•
·•we have to get better as indiAt New York, Chris Childs made shots with four seconds left. Reggie
viduals and get better as a team," a three-pointer with 8.4 seconds left Miller scored 26 points for the Pac•
·
, ·
Nets conch John Calipari said. - his only basket of the game -·
"Tnday we took a giant step back· and the Knicks beat Boston for the ~~~:ho have lost three straight at
w,anls, and it was a team effort." . . 18th straight time. Allan Houston
Lakers 102, Mavericks 83
.
•
· The Cavs' stingy defense held the scored 25 points and Charles Oakley
Shaquille O'Neal had 31 points
· ·.
.
.
·
Nets to I 0 points in the first quancr · had a season-high 20 for the Knicks, and 10 rebounds ils Los Angeles won
' • and II in the fourth.
who shot a season-high 58.4 percent at Dallas. The Mavs, playing without
"We've all had our nights where from the field. Boston rookie suspended star Chris Gatling, led 51we can't make .our shots," Cleveland Antoine Walker had 27 points and a 49 midway through the .third period
coach Mike Fratello said. "There's season-high 16 rebounds.
before the Lakers took control with
82 games. It can happen to any of
Kings 91, Tlmberwolves 88
an 18-2 run . Jarnal Mashburn scored
u.s."
'
At Minneapolis, Mitch ·Richmond 26 points for Dallas.

Sixers' Coleman blames Detroit snow
for unexcused absence from practice

Federal Hocki.n g

• The Eastern Eqlcs stumbled

Wake Forest beats
VT 61 ~44; Xavier
and Louisville win

By DAVE HARRIS
Seritlnel Comlepondent
The Vinton County 'Vikings took
advantpge of a decided scoring
advantage from the foul line to post
a 60-54 victory over the Meigs
Marauders in TVC basketball action
Tuesday at Vinton County.
Vinton with the win raises it's
record to 10-5 overall and 8-2 in the
TVC. Meigs drops their sixth game
in the last seven, those six losses
have come by a total of 23 points.
The Marauders record is now 4-7 in
the Ohio Division and 5-11 overall . .
Both teams were playing without
key members in the game, the
Vikings starting point guard Rob
Murphy missed the contest due to an
injury sustained in a car accident,
while the Marauders played without
starting forward Matt Williams who
was ilL
The difference in the contest was
from the foul line where the physi-.
cal Vikings went to the line 30 times
hitting 17 of them. The Marauders
only went to the charity stripe five
times, hilling three. .
. Vinton jumped out to an early 62 lead.on ~ three pointer from Jason ·
· Kruger with 4:461eft. Josh Witherell
nailed a three for Meigs with 4:08
left to pull Meigs to within 6-5.
1\vo straight buckets by Brad
Whitlatchgave the Marauders a 9-8
lead with I :47 le(t. Brad Davenport
nailed a th=·pointer from deep on
the left wiog with I: 17 left to put
Meigs on top 12.8. Ryan Caudill hit
one of two from the line with 44 seconds left to put Meigs on top 12-9
after one period.
·
Meigs had a five· point ·lead on
two different oeeasioqs in the second
period, but Vinton ballled back and
took a 20-191ead ·with 2:351eft on
a Chad Damron bucket. The Vikings
increased the lead'to 25-20 with I :05

Lee( by Chapman's 43-po/nt cllnl!:,

The Daily Sentinel

• Sweethearts • Moms &amp; Dads • Grandparents • Teachers
• Babysitters • Friends
.

.

Anyone who ~ould appreciate a thoughtful word from you! All Valentine
Hearts will be published In the February 14th issue at a cost of only $6.001

MUST BE PREPAID!

r------~----------~-----.---

r mess• II . .•• ~· "••
tile heart
mailto:along
~· LimTt 20
with and
$6.00
.
.

1 Print

you
_

,__ Tile Daily Sentinel
Valentia Hearts
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, OH_45769

•J

•

words!

\

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'·... ,•...

Mull Be

•

dlld By Feb. 7

�,

w.di .. ar ,, ......., .. 1tli

Ponw'oy •lllddlepotl, Ohio

,...T Jt II~' JM~
. . 21, 1117

Pom1r0J • Middleport, Ohio

The Deily Sentinel• Pllge 7

Scoreboard
2-Wic:Wie (2) )2-0..................___ ,.,:10)
3-E . r - (2) 11-1 ..- ......... _ .....223
(3) 12-2........... , ....:111
3YORK 12-1..........162
6-0IESAPEAICE (I )13-t ---............ 154
7 - - - - , lo.l...... - ..... 131

-72,N.~!S

..:lkt;t;;-;;;:;

NBA sta*"''"P
~~CE
!.,; ..............Jf I~ ~ Iii

Is
N. ~ 11-2 ......................19
9-0o. VA-SII-S .................................. .16

. •

si• 46. 13-ALBANY ALEXANO£R 43.

w-..... . . . . .

22

Or!Mdo ..............,.. 19
...... Jtnoy ............ II
.,.,._ .....................9
Ptliladdphia,............ 9

••

Al- ... :............... 29 12
18
~ ...... 24 11
M i l -............. 21 22
l.ooi.o ................... l9 22
T......, ..................IS 27
CoorloOc ................ 2.5

.7111

14-Bedfml a-t (2140. ls-s..lto•lllc
s.........h (I) 26. '16-Yao. LibatyJ ~
17 (lie)-8MCyntl Wy.ford, l.a1 Creek.

6\

DtrilloDJV

~ Wen.Uneolaview (32)14-0 ......~

n•
13

.571
.481
.46:1
.357

2·0.1pllooSt.lobo'o(4) 12-1 .............. 284

J.Ldplic: 12-0 ...................................... 278
4-S. O&gt;otlaloo SE(2114-1 .................. 260
3-Wa~(l)ll-0 .......... 243

11
II

22~

--·-

Eut Clintoa II. 19-&lt;iermantj;flV~
View 17. 20-Aurora U. 2•-WH
•
BURG 14. 22-Spona Hi&amp;hlontf I 3.

8

.S81

6-Z... Rr w(l) 13-1.................. 209 .
7-Ncw Kaoaville Il-l ......................... 148
8-Kalida 11-2 ....................................... 130
9-Cri-Uocoltiii-3 ................... .S2
IO.Jadlooc.e-t4-l.......................d 9

WFSI'ERN CONFERENCE

r..
:Be . " r.r.
Houtcoa ..................32 II .744

Gl

.698

2
I)

Utah ....................... 30 13
Minnesor.a - ............ 19 24

.~2

Dollu ..................... l4 27
Den-.cr ............. :...... IJ 31

.:141
.29.5

' 19~
~ 19~

NACE GIIEEN ll

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. and broadcastm rates Ohio hi&amp;h IChool
&amp;irl•' bukdball teams in the foonh week·
ly reautar·season poll of 1996-97 for The
· AssociMCd Pma (by Ohio HiJh School
· Alhle1ic Auociation di'lilions; won·IOit

record tbrOI.J&amp;h 11mr1 of)~. 26; first·
place, v01es ia pc:nlhese:&amp;): .

_

Toronlo 120, Portland 84 _
New York 109. Boooo la1
CLEVIL\NO 84, New Jtnoy 62
Wubi- 102. ~ 82
O..loll&lt; 98, lodi- 'n
Detioit93, Milw•kec 14
Satrarntnlo 91 , Minne&amp;OI&amp; 88
L.A. Loken 102. Dollu 83
Ullh 114, Denver 99

Di.tslonl

:rfll.
1-PickerinJIOn (25} IS.O............. ... .... 272

TorontoiiPhil.seJ(mia. 7:30p.m.
Phocniut OrllndO, 7:30p.m.

2·WCC11Cf 13.0 .................................... 210
J.U.........k12) 14-0 ........................ 202
4-Cieveland Hts. 14-1 .......................... 158
S-Dayron CJ &lt;I.) 16-0 ........ _..: .............. 136
6-Col. Brookhaven I.S.O.. :.................... l:\0
Rock)'RiverM11Jnilica~14-2 ....... 1~
a-YQu. Boardman 13·1 .......................... 87
9-WadswOfth 1~·1 .,........ , ..........
61
IO.W. tbeiiU lakota 14-1 .................... ~.,
Olhcn ncdvlfll 12 or mon polnu:
II (lie).CiR. HUJhes. Tol. Cent. Calh. 14. .

hdiWI ac O...Jone. 7:30p.m
New York al CLEVELAND, 7:30

lea

Ponlud It Detroit. 7:30p.m.
l."'-. Laken al San Arnoaio, 8:30

2-Avonl.ake(l) 15-0 ..........................lOS

Oaieq,o Ill·, Vanc:ou\ler 96

All"""' Ill, L.A. Cllppen 96

42

Bolton ar MimU, 7:30p.m.

p.m.
p.m.

Dtrisioa n

.

1-0arfieki Hts. Trillity (21 )14-2 .......... 26~
3-Belltfontaine{)) 1.5.0....................... 196
4-C~ .VA..s.J {I) IS-1 ........................... 174
S-Beloit W. Bnux:h (2} IS-0 ................ 152
6-Dovcr 15·1 ........................................ 124
7-~le)' 13-1 .............................. .......... 92
8-Mi letabura w. Holmes 12-2.. ............ 66
9- you, M.ooney 1~ · 2 .............................. 63
A1hvtlle Teays Val 1~1 ................ M
Olhen rud,-lna12 or more polnll:
II-VINCENT WARREN 23 .. 12·Jeffer·
son Area 18. IJ (tie)-Eiida, U.linaton 17.

-

Se.lnle 11 Golden StMe, IO:lO p.m.

Tbursdloy's llliJIHS

Phoeni~

a1 New Jersey, 1:30 p.m.

MinneiO(a a1 Dallu, 8:30p.m.
Denver 11 Hou11on, 8:30p.m.
Atlaoll .. Utah. 9 p.m.
Van®uver at L.A. Clippcn. 10;)0 .
p.m.
Oicaco ar Sacnmcn10, 10:30 p.m.

IHeooy 12.

NCAA Division I
men's scores

...

lli-69.w-.-.sr
Hopcwcii·Loudo• 60, Fo11ori1 Sr.
Wendelinl6
Kittton Ri4F 73. St&gt;ri"'·N . Ridse,-IJie

Ca~h .

110 Samhoville -

OreenSl

·
.nmn c.tven 106. Erie CMich.l M..
oonS4
·
Tol. Emn-.nuel BDpf. 84. Tol. Chri•-

Trim~
·, 57

61

.a

Mlddlet:owa Mldison 6S, Tri-Counl)'
N. 50

Uhrh:tu:viUe O.)'tn00119, Cwrollron

W. Geaup64, Madilon S7
W. Lafiyene Rid&amp;ewoqd 60, Lake-

A Friend
toSeeAlex
''Ihi'Ough.

7-Manina Fony (I) 1.!-0 ........................ 78

10-Monal Ridgedolc 1.!-0...................... 56
Othen reftlwlna U or rnon pobltl:
II -BELPRE (2) 33. 12-Wcynavflle 30. .
J 3-SuJarcreek Ouaway 21. 14Doylestown Chippewa II. IS (tie}Leov·
hrabura LaBrae 1.6. 17 (tie)·Columbia
Stution Columbia. Garren1vllle Garfield
14. 19-WarteilCblUTlpion 13.

Soutbwtlt

6.1, Fort Frye

SlOW 73, Y011. Boafdman 64
Sneuboro .f9, Rave~~na 4S
Syl'lania NorihYiew 56, Bowlina

Fall• (2) 14-0....................... US

:rum

.

·
l9, 0T
Stcwlll1 Federal Hpctfaa 91, Rach•e
Srotltero!O
.
.

lllllilburJ 96, l..cmoo-MOIW'OC 52
iddletown ~nwic:lc 70, Eq:ewood

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Divt.loti.Iv

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68, Aboot Much·

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Far West
N. Arizona 61. S. Utah 58

Ohio men's.
college scores ·

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-ccd LuSS,

E. 8

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Cltill. Zaote Trace 67. Ri~ Oa~
SE4l
Cia. Aoderson 43, Wintoa Wooc21·41
' Cin. Filllle)'COWR 41, Cin. Mlriemonl
30

.
Cin. Hirrison 64, Cin. Aileen 1S

a ...,Hp 64. a ... Wtioilwrnl 'l4
Sl

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Hillid 66. Gallooa~j'IUd 44
llollattd Spri.,_ 47.Old 34 '
lfoorDtt 5S,
Ptold01 48
JMutovm.55, Uckla~Hll. •2
Kalida 73, Spent:ervil 39 . :
Kanoao """"" 57. UiboonbtoiJ 36 •
Uliqton 44, Marion Hardin&amp; )3 '
Uberty eo- 38, Oo:lta 27
Lr.... Cattt. S4, Luthenn w. 4(1
LoudonYiiJe 62, Dillion 44 ;. ' 1t
MT.Ieroa j2, Collins Weslem Re·
ltfYC: ' • 201'
M~a 97; PMCiinroa :\1
Manon ElKin 63. Mandield Sf: h ·

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·let' I 20

Cia. !DdiMI Hill !16, On. Deer r.t 43
Cin. McAuley 60, an .. R.Oaer Bacoa

Mlrioft Plealul 7!1, Mount Giad it.

•I

=ville •2. Olettt':f.: 40 ·
n 63.,Ciinton- ulie 37
Mentoc Late Cath. 49, Mayfichf 38
Miami E. l6. Gttoltam 3S
Mll!ml 49. Hamlhlln J4 .
Millbuoy •Loke 50. Genca 21
Minner 64, New 8nmwa49
MoJido« Chr. 4.1, Mauillca Ov. 36.
Nav~ Fairlcu 51. Tuilaw 44
New Albant60. Tree of Life .50 ,
New Pario -~Trail 61, Cenkt·
ville, Ind. 37
' ' . \,
'
New KMAvillc 79: Hou•on 71 •
New Lebanon Dixie SO, Ml_ddtelown

Cia. MI. Norre: 0... &lt;tl,'. .oa 32
Ci•. Norllawest 75, Amell67, 20T
Cia. St. Unula 62; Cin!McNicbolu
61 , 0T
· Cia. SuiMlit Country D:!.)' 49, Miami
Vnl. 26
··
· , Cin. Toyltlo 46, Cin. Madtijro 30
Cin.'l'urpin 70, Cin. N~ 4J

· Cin. tJnuliM 72. Cin. McifCy ~
Chi. Western Hilla 70v Cin. Mt.
llcaltlly50
I
. Cin. WilhroW 60, Cia: Toft~
Cin. W,.Omins67; 0b. R~nJ41
C~. Collinwood 13, Clc. Biic 27
c~ ..E. Tech 46. c~. ~·28
Cle! Glenvilat: 70, Cle. Lifftoln-West

Modi101t 27
New ~I St, AtU'\t!on 3] . !
Ncwllllo • 'l1lrmu onhi~t'"' &lt;Ill
N. Ridae,-jlle Lake Rid,e !i. Open

56

Door30

Clc. Kennody 6S, Cle. R"'*' :14
Oe. Mlll'ltudl 56, Cle. Jollai'Hay J9·
Cle. VA-SJ 87, C~. St. S2
Cleiir Fork47, W. Holmcs-44
Clyde 45, Scnduoky St. Marys 38
Col. Acadcm)' S8, Oelawon: Cbr. ~S

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Oolllllbor 66, Milan Editon !i9
Ontario 47, FI!IC!ericklowo 43
Oranac Chr. .fl. Medina First Bapl.

J1

Oreaoa Clay !I 1. Tol. Roaers26 ·

•

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Orwell Grand VaL 69, Lonbtown 46

••

When Mary Beth PomentP chose . g~i y~ and your baby off to the
O'Bieness Memorial Hospital to
best p&lt;issible start. It's_about ·
give. birth to Alex, she chose more ha,ving someone close-by to give
than a hospi~ perinatal unit Sh~
y~ ·advice based on the latest ,__ .
chose people who would be there
re!learch.
not only during the birthing expeOur doctors and nurses (many
.rience, but peopl!l who would be
of whom are certified neonatal
there during her'pregnancy and
nurses) are here Jor you. To talk
long ·after her stay.
to. To question. To listen. That's a
You see, motherhood is more
commitment not just duiing a few 1'
thanjuSt'the moment of birth. It's
.
hours of the birthing experien-ce,
:.~
. the.joy of:preparation. It's learnbu~ for a lifetime. ··· "&lt;r&gt; '·•··
ing and m1derstanding what will

North Coast Conference

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college scores
Mld-Oblo Cooference

nndlar 12. Milone 48 ·

·
eec:::~. ~non Nazarene 68,
RIO GRANilE 79, Urtxwo 73
Shlw.e Sc. 108, Ohio Oominicnn M
Walth :II, Tiffin oiO

.

73

Ashville

Te&lt;~yl

-counbies

Norllt C.St Conference

.

Ohio Conference.

Nor1~rn

S1 •
i:ipilal7!i, John Carroll !i2
Heidelbe:r&amp; 69, Himm !i4
'Mr.ietta 70. Otterbein 64
Mwkin1un1 67, MooN Union 57 .

Ohio H.S. boys' poD

Val. 7?, Log;!n Elm

.'

Dt.......

'· ~8. Li~M!~Il 11·11......._.... ..............294
3-;l)!lo'- - 100 (. ) I 1........... .. 281

4-'lltl. St. Fnocll (I) 12-2.................... 286
$-l.abwood St. Edwttnl (7) I0.1 ......... 264
11-Qo. w - c21 13·1 ...................... 199
7-do...... 12·1 ................................... 16J
~-r
12-2 .................. 1110
. 11-~Wtlicf I -2.. ....:..................................59
M&lt;:Kioloy 10.3 .... ,................!10

"'"'land

to.r-

1'1011••11
......Gfe.,lllc
-·
11·00,.
Qoi.._
-14.u12-Cic.
•1. 11-W~il! 5outlo 30. 1&lt;1-Lcboaan
20. 15 (de)-M..,illol W•hinflon, To).
c.~t: Cod!. 17. 17· ¥ - • • .

. 59
· '

llr.W..'n ·

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H I ioiAitor(l)l2-2j...................247
' ...~~(1)12- .........:........ 245
3-t .....................................,m

(I) 13-1 .............................. 113
11 ·~· l-.~......................... 130

.

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tl.c- -

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We will have hourly specials

6:\,

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we

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497 PIIIL ST. • MIDDUPOIT
OPII 24 HOURS I DIY-7 DAYS I Will

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O'BLE·NESS .

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can not advertise -them! ·
The houriy ' . Is'wl be
announced ecich~r in the store
on~ 30, 31 &amp; ·
1 from
. 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. each !

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Memorial Hospital ·

Col•a~biana

l

55 Hospital Drive, Athens, OH 4570 I
614-593-SSS I

'

""~~~~~~ ......, _ _ Conolll&lt;l.

II lin
11
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w.- a MoatooiMI'': .,
.

:.

I

Col. EaotSI,Col. Beedlcroft38
, Col. Eatmoor !i9, Col. BriJJ• 54; ·
Col. lnct,pmdnce 92. Col. Marion·
Flltlklln42 '
·
Col. Miffiin73, Col. CenteMial SO
Col. Ratly S8, Col. St. CMiea 51
Col. .......t Ridoo 69, Col, !"}
Col. w-1'.1. Newn Ctoh. "'
Col. WHrs.IOae 74, Col., Linden.

CohaMitiUI
Coamow52

~u!!!;;;·~
7

•

!

Cleo&lt; Foot. 88, Looou ll
Col. Brookhaven 61. Cof. Nonhland .

MoKioley -49
Coltlw- 61, Cdl•&lt;ll

..

MCI) t;l-1 ........................96
Mlll. p 1:11 I (I) 11•3 ....................91

~t'M.

- -- - .

•

58

1Mill •
flo.
.(.' lQ:i;/
ir(l3) 14-0,.,.,.,·,i,...,,ID
. l-Qi.lloflt: ..... (2)11·2 ............... 281

)

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. Cin. Aiken ~9. Cilt. Glen Eate 13
Cin, KinJ• !i8, Cin. Loveland 42
· Cin. t:a Salle 14, Cin. Walnut Hill• S2
Cin. N. Colle~ Hill 6.4i, St. Bemnrd
Sl
Cin. Seven Hmlaa. On.'Loc:klaod 64
Cia. Sumtnil72, Cin. l.anclr:narlt 60
Citdeville 49, Hnmikon Twp. -4S
c...Ouholic SS. Elyria Cath. Sl
Cle. Crlllnwood ~9. Cle. I'JIII 46
Clo. E. Tedt 76. Clc. Sroth 6.1
Cle. O~nville 81. Cle. Uncoln-Wal
71
c~. lndepende""' 64, Beachwoocl62
C~ . Kennedy 7~. Clc. Rhotlea 67
Clc. Monhall62, Ck. Hoy S9
Clc. Un.lvcnity 78, Kemton 68
Cle. Hu. Lutheran E. 100, Willo-Hill

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dtillk:01he 70. Upper AriU.aton 67

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Brodford 73, Nontvidge 62, OT
Breck1ville 62, Nordollim Sot
Bridgeport 65, Union Loc:.al 63, OT
Br~mn M. Uberty Cemer 45
CaftlbridJe J8, Steubenville J4
Can1on Herimte 60, Mopdore 47
Can-oil 67, Fnmkliri 4J
Cauervillc !'i:\, Sprin&amp;. Sowh SO
Chane! 57, Holy Name 38
Chardon 76, Garreusville 61
&lt;.llardon ND-CL 76, p.... , 4S
Clteoapealce 77, Rrclt Hill 53 ·

Ohio Wesle)'M 74, Bluffion 58

.· {

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Scio67

NOII-!'onfereni:e play

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·d~play to Sample &amp;
receive _recipes ·from
11 a.m~ to6 .m.
each cJaY.

..,

Aullimown-FitCh !i!i, Poland 42
Barbenon 78, Wlldlwonb 63
. Batavia 71, Cii. Country Day 61
84!11aire·S3, Meadowbrook 4!'i
Buk.!y !:\,Col. Acoderpy 42 ·
Black River 88, Hillsdllle 44
Bloom-:Carr01158, Fairfield Union .50
Bluffipn ,, 4, CPI')'·Rawlon 49
BowenloP Cooolloil Val. 70, Jewcu-

~yon 70, pberlin .11
.
.

CERD-.-·

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.. from

.,

Akron Buchtel8~. Akron Ceni.-Hower66
Akron Covemry 60, CantonS. 55
Akron Ellet 68, Akron Kemnorr: 62
Akron Firestone !10, Akron Garfield
78
Akron Hoban~~. Rootstown 52
Akron N. 69, Akron E. 62
Akron St.V·St.M 68, Hudson We51em Reserve 47
Alexander 48, Miller 47_
Amanda-Ciearcreek , 62 , Canal
Winchester J7
Ashtabula Ed&amp;ewood 81, Ashtabula
Harbor74
.

Ohio st:·Newwk forfeited to Wal1h
Shawnee St 90, Ohio Valley 78
'Yitteftb:er&amp; 76, ~ance .18

•sSOGIR

Ma~ different foods

fll.

· Ohio H.S. boys' scores

Non-conrerence play

Mt VerDOn N11ZW1!11D 83, Wilberforce

GRILL

CElli
•'25Gin-

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11-LOrain Carh. (1 ) 32. 12-Warren
Kennedy 289. 13-Findlay Liber1)'-~lon
19. 14-East Canton 18. IS·Danville 17.

kenyOn 88. Oberlin 76

KET

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AtttOra -41 , Berbhirc n

Ba;"\"'dae PAIN Val. 83, Hund'llon
f.

•

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VAUG·
SUPER

••

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llantiltco Rcu 64, L Cllriltiao 14
' iiiiMway Browa 38. ~ Htt. .U. ·
dlewllS
- 7 1 ; Klnlaod46
62,lAewoccl so

1-S. Charleston SE(22) 15·0 ...............261
2-Fon Lbramie(l) 15-0
........217
3-Biuffion I J-0 ................ .................... 184
4-Lakc.irJe DMbury 12--0 ............ ,....... 166
5-Bascom Hopewcii·Loudon (2).14-0 .ISS
6-NewWillh. Buckc)'t(:ent(l) l:'i-0 .. .108
7-K.alida Il -l ......................................... 99
8-Minster I J-1 ....................................... 8]
9-Berlin Hiland 14-2 .............................. 76
10-Bowentown ConOtton Val. 14-2 ...... :\J
Odttn l'ftelwlna 12 or more poin&amp;l:

Baylor 16, Teus 72
Teus A&amp;:M 61, MiPOUri :'i1 .

....

1a... 4S, Medina ~llftd 44

ADi-S7. AktatoEIIcl48 .
A......kl.l. Wayue T - 3S

ss. w. Libaty

Shad)'lide SB, Bcli.i~ S1. Jobns !il
Shalca H11. 112, Gaofield Hh. 74
Solon lS, O.y- Falk S2
Spri"'l. Ncrtlo SUicava-aeeto 50
Spri"'. Ncrtlo 52. llcava-aeelo 50 ·
Sprina. Shawnee 62, BellerontDinCI

70, Garfield Htt.

Covet~toy

Abon
-·~
' fJms 47, RiftmaD 41 .
Akron St.V-St.M ss. A-Kaomooe

. Lot:ot ·
Saliacville Srotheno 74. United

8-Bainbridac Paint VII. 16-l ................. n
9-0AK HILL (3) IS-I. ........................... ~7

Mldwtlt

B.W.Wjn.Wallncc 59, Ohio

Ridry Rldpmont

rian 79
Tol. Sr. Johnt6.5, ToI. Waite 41

fll.·

Xavier, Ohio91 , Rhode l1land :79

75

-

Ricbmood EditoD 75, Oak ·(W.Va.)
01•••7
.
. Ridtmttod Hll. 64, Lllthenn W. S7

Ma.mee S4, Roaford ~ .
McAnhttr Vi•""' Co: 110, Meir St
McContb S6, Potric~ llettry.l.
McDcnald 79, S. ~· 5I
Medtanlc•butJ 76, Tnlld 69
Medina 83, N. RklpviUe 60
Mediu Fint Bapt. 101, Faith 0.. 64
Medina IIIJhlond 86, Medina Bu&lt;lt·

, Mearor Late

• ·.

S·N. Uma S. Ranae (I) 14-0 ............... 114
6-AndovcrPy. Vlil.l4-0 ......................... 93

W"'"'Fvrest61, V~nioTech44 .

·

layland &amp;.tcteye LoQI 62. Beaver
LrcaUS
·
·
~67, Lotti Cloverleltf 40

..

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.
· Bri,..I61•.F~.,... S2·•" .
tbapin Falls 67. Middlef.leld Canli·

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1..cbuoe 66. OrJord TaJawandl 4S
lalbtto&amp;·Faioflcld 66, N. Adomo 53
Llt:kiq 1111. 86•..-;.- u- 11
L i - 62, Sebri!II4S
Loaaa 103, Point (W.Va.) Pleuanl69
Lonill Catb, gj, Vamilioa 58
Lorain Clear-view 11. ()pea Door l9
Louisvine 6$, Can1oo Timken 45
Louin111e Aquinu 60, Waterloo 44
LowellvUie Sl, Jldloa-Milton ~
Nt. Blonchonl Rimdale 63, v.. Bu..,.48
Malvern S9, Strublq 57
Maranllha Cllr. 67, Dela~Otr. $1
Maryavillc 62. Col. DeSaJa 59
Massillon Ov. 69, ltopdore Chr. 45

Obio B.S. girls' scores

itdantl Ky. 9J,SooMhO~IIaSI
Rl..,.elna Soult.e.n· 68, Ketu Roo-

" - E . 59, Prrbmoutlt W. 43

...,_., 110, Tri·Valley 41
Laneul« FioberCatlo. 68;He11Ml

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43

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Mlri.. ft: Hi• 13,

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lJot=&lt;lj,TJi.Villqo41 ·
De
St,lohn1SI, Miller City 36
E.
68, Sattdy VoUI
Edpttca 38, ~ 32
a ... wooti...... 67•. Nootbwoodl46
Fort lenni"" 57, ~ville 3S
!3, t.IWvy 29 .
Franklin Fun.ace Or.cn .56, Eutem
Pike S3
Rou47. Finttlo/ 46
•S2, Govvopon 7'
' Gaadr:DIIuttea I1Wq Val. !I!I .. Tus~
cnw'uVal. 31

.

Plbtoo61,PoiMVa1.49
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-ville Cbr. n VICICIJI C.. St

~~ .Edwaoi 711, MIIPic HtL

) -Wauseon 14-0 ................................... 193

South

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L:Ue Rid&amp;e 71,'Cie.

1-Cin. Wyoming (1.5) 13-0 ............... ... 2J9

Auburn 12, Alabama 62
.
Ow5eston Soothem 'J9, Radford 7J ·
LoW1viUe 71, OePDul S4
Tmf St 1 I, Alabanm St. 61
Vi1Jinill6. N. Carolina St. 50

.·

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2-Urict (4) 16-0 ..................... ...., .......... 199
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GoeettooS7.~S6 -

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LaB.. S9.1kuotfidd32

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Col. E
61, Col. ~ 31
Cot. u••·McK.iaa.,. I. Col.

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w. - . . 1

NlleiM&lt;Killlcy71, W. Bnutdt65
Qr. S7, LiiiCOID B.... St
Nw ....... 73, Elmwood 40
Oat IUD II, '--ville Val. 69
~ Sl: WillrualtbY S. 44
a...,. Cllr. 66, CGmoiluoity Cbr. 24
Otooto 69. Mnlboooy Latte 6t5
~allilb Sl. o.- Stritt:h 43
l'li...villc Har.e)' 81. c-t 66
Pai.aYille ltiYenlde 86. Jeffertoa
76,lOT
• .
htlos ....... W.VL 76.Maritoltll69
-...,60,0elphosldknoo43
-.sa.-.Browtol6

Go&lt;weCity47, - -..
lllmikoa 66, a.. W"-. Woock j9
IIMUitop Bldia 73, Oa.ohrl:di·N•·

Division Ul

H""illd 74, Ldli&amp;h S8
Michipn67, Penn St. 59
S)'111Cuse 9J, Seton Hall60
·Temple 70, La Salle 61, 20T

Sl.OT

O...a 57, AolotaiNia 38
Oeuiptuwa 65, Clc::rnloDI rob I I·
eraSI
...r-G-cod 6s. lmoot0oo St. lcaoph 55
Gnttvilte 11 • ..._ u- sJ

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•r ;w 7-t. CoL Notird

'ttl40
Col. Mifllia17, Col. C
Col. OlliollooUI. T - Actod.IO
Coploy 76,-42
.
Fllllo Val. Qr. 62, H....

1•. Ci•.

Newtn· p:.SI,Philo-44
New Philadclpbia Tu1. Citb. 7),
--.S4
NowR ' •
dti~U-ter50
NowR St, ..,_,. WOIIIIito&amp;tonll
Falla 60, w.,.. a.an.;..

.

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. . _ 72, lllllap 71 '
Felic:il)' 66. Wi" ' • 45
-61.-ltlverSS
Pt. l..onlllie .S3j Allll *5
llolloway W..taotl 68. llilllaod S9
GomrloJJ411odi• Hilaool12
Gates Mill• Gilmour 72, Cotutabia

eyeS6

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Col. •

,- Col.

-~65.1141...... 5!

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Tonight's games

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62

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How a alate panel or 1por11 Wters

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.Ohio H.S. girls' pOll

hdtleDh'lliolt
l.A. l.akm ...........J2 12 .727
Seattle ......-....... ~ ....10 B .698
Po.tland .................2.5 19 ·' "
SICI'aiUC'nto ............ l9 25 .4Jl
OokteaState .......... l7 2j .40:5
L.A. en_. ......... 16 2.5 .390
Phoeni• .................. IS 28 .:149

'J'u....J 01ICOI'e5

Olloono...to~Uor_..,-,

II·WortbiDJIOil Ouiabao (I) 36. 12-St.
-Henry 31 . IJ.MeOonald 27. 14· Bril·
tolville Bristol 18. 15 (tie}Bowentown
Coaonon Valley, FRANKliN FUR·

11

San AntoDio ........... ll 29 . .27$
Vancouver ...............8 ~8 . 114

61

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19
20\
21 \

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lloUait....................31 II .738

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21 .m
20 .481
30 .:1611
31 .W
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Ncw Yodr. ..............JI

................. ., .......
..... Or. 6!. Tllllplo Or. 22

;t hospiitd we can tUl

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Pomeioy • Mlddl1port, Ohio

Page 8 • The o.lly Sllollnel

A good tailor will make .your·clothes

and you

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ViedMeclay, January 29, 1917

The Dally Sai1tlnel• Page 9

Pomeroy • MiddlepOrt, Ohio

look great
'? Other tbinp to conllider: o- lbe tailor lpll~

By DIANA NELSON

Are JilT' 11 well-pr

biuer and three inches taller than you ~re.
That soft wool blazer at your'favorile coasipment shop is
just $8- but ill wide llpels make YIIU look like a reject from
"Sitllrday Nipt Fever."
Yool'.d fix those tom pockets and get new buttons for your
winter coat- if only you could find the time.
The secret weapon of thrifty clothes lovers, yard-sale veterans and consignment-store fanatics is not knowing whit's
trendy or when to negotiate over price: It's finding a good
tailor.
.
Simple alterations can make an out-of-date outfit seem
brand new. They can make a haggard coat last one more ~.
son. They can resurrect items with broken.zippers and tom
seams that olherwise would be destined for the giveaway
box.
•
Years ago, most families may have boasted someone competent enough at sewing to lake care of S!ICh uisks; far fewer
do today.
So we're shopping for alterations and tailoring.
But how do yoo find dependable, skillful sewing help?
How much .should you expect services to cost? Ale there .
some jobs you ougtltto JrY yourself? Is it worth it?
~o you go ahead an,d buy that estate-sale skirt or the thrift·
store blazer. Is it wortl! it to pay for alterations?
.It depends on the .OWSlity of lhe garment and .what alterations are needed; You can go to a dry cleaner and get a .but. ton reattached for SO cents. Or you can pay up to $7S to get
a jacket relined. · , ·
·
Try on the garmeqt Look at yourself from every ansle.
Bring a friend to help you analyze your potential purchase.
Does .it need hemming? A new zipper? Or does it need a total
revamp- new pockets, a narrower shoulder, a different collar? Some alterations cost far more than others.
Think about accessories. lbat skirt may not need hem-'
ming if you're planning on wearing heels wilh it. A well-·
placed pin may hide a· small snag in an otherwise perfect
sweater:
·
'
. Consider the price end quality of the garment. Is the fabric nice? Is it lined?, That slightly ill-fighting black dress,
bought for $40 at a cQnsignment shop, needed a replacement
zipper,($20) and a two-inch hem ($10) - . almost doubling
the price of lhe garment. Conversely, a tailor can remove the
power shoulder pads from a DKNY blazer, bought for $100
at an estate sale. It can be restyled down to size for about
$30. '
Hqw do I find a good ~lor?
Just about anyone can·hang a sign outside the door that says
'·'Alterations." · ·

hem, a Week for a jiiCkel relilliaa?

The t.oullvllle CourleNoumel
to llecp lbr1111 ~ fllbion trends? Poes he uk you apecifil: queatiOM lbo.4
Your stylish aunt iJ clearing out her closet and ofteriaJ whit you Willi done? Are you ccmlonable with ber wortin&amp;style? Call she
you LaCroill dresses and Dior suits. Too had she's two sizes promise ,a reaoonahle - - . . d 011 simple items -a couple of days for f

So how do you find - y o u c:u tnut?
Interview your best-dressed. friends. If you know a co-

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. Beder Busincu Bureau cu
Cai!MBBB
~·
The
teD you the number of•complaints a bus
ness has Ud and wlleiber thole complaints have been resolved. Keep i
mind lhM almost any business wiU have complain!S; it~s whit !he shQJI d
with lhoae compllints 'lhat's important Wu ~oney refunded? Wert ame
ed to suit the customer? Does the sbop have a Jot of repeat business? Ast
.
.
quesuons.
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FOOD &amp;.DRUG

SWt-aJ '
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.Give your new tailor a small job for starters, liUCh as cuffing pants. Yo0
c~n see. if you •re happy with the.wodt bef~ you ask him to taper an ~xpell'l
uve swt.
,
.
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,
The cost? You will usually need to bring an item to the alteralion expe
if you W8Jit a reliable'estimate.lf irs a big or tricky job, get a couple or opi~
ions., Consider com~lexity when you 'd~ide betw~n lhat nice w_om~ ~
cbun:h.or ~ c~reer wlor. Chesper may not be better 1f the garment 1.5 h1ghly
valued and the"job demanding.
.
;
Don't expect miracles. Don't buy a size 6 skirt and expect to make a siz;
16 out of' it If the blazer fits You in the shoulder, you've got il fijhtinJ .
chance of,getting it cut· to fit the rest of your body. If irs a mile too·tigh't
give it to charity. .
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U.S.D.A. CHOICE

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Boneless
huck
Roast
Pound

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·•
Prices for alterations can vary widely and depend partly on gaonent con'\.
struction ~nd specific nfleds..
.
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Alteration or men's and women's garments usually will be priced t~
same if styles are sim.ilar.
·~
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Certain fabrics, such as silk. may be more expensive lhan cotton or .~
polyester blend. If items are lined, that could also increase cost.
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Boneless
ForA Better
Value!
s-..,save $1.50/1/,1. ,....._,..

••••••llill•ipil•••••••••••••••
YOIJR
AMONG ·THE.- ·'
PET Vl\LENTINESI
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SUPERIOR

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worker who's always in style, always impeccably dressed,
ask if he or she can recommend someone. Check bulletin
boards at fabric stores: which often have business cards and
information. Talk to your neighborhood dry cleaner, who
may offer simple mending or alierations,;
Collect a few opinions, then go to the shop you've chosen,
garment in hand. - Ask questi.ons. ·"Like doctors, tailors
usually have a specialty," said William Anderson, manager
.of Borden TailorS in Louisville, Ky. A tailor for SO years who
star)ed out in ·New York's garment district, Anderson has
·~11 hill. ll!!sin~ JIO from l!'QStl)' ..~~~~~:~l~nf.·!l;~~
maklng a suitJrom scratch) to alteratibns 8iid rep'iirs. " Some
do alterillions, while mainiainingthe originli line of t)le pr~

softele
Pound·

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GROUND F~ESH DAILY (5-LBS. OR MORE)

Genuine
undBeeF
Pound ·

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~~P~E:R:FE:C~T~:r.~=~~=;~:~:~~~~~~~~t=~~i~~~~~~~
a~e~~~f.g';S~~c~~':_!~.~~"~!-'~!a:~e,~t
that doesn't fit
1a11p
·-Check out examples of finished work.

(

you

alteration&amp; will give th*t garment a good

Is stitching even? Arc hems stnight? Do seams lie flat?

.Yes, you can repair·that garment yourself
The Loulsvllla Courler..Jo11rnal Thread needle . Make two or' three
You've bent safety pins to real· tiny stitches in place an inch or two .
b\lfore lhe rip begins. (Some people
· ·tach shirt buttons.
would
make a knot to hold fabric,
You've used duct tape to hold up
.
but
this
gives a neater finish.)
torn hems.
~- Usc a backstitch to hold fabric
You 'vc stapled split scams shut
togi:lher
tightly, following the line
in desperation.
·
the
old
stitches
made. It might help
Fine emergency measures, but
to imagine writing cursive lower,don 't S!OP lhere. It's not ~ard to
case "e's" backwards in small
stitch ypur way to permanent solu- .
loops: Bring your needle forward
tions to ,some simple problems.
one-quarter inch ·under fabric, then
Allee Colombo, The Louisville pull it through and stitch through
Courier·Joumal's assistant food cdi- fabric where you' started'. This time
. tor and ·a sewing veteran. provided carry needle onc-quancr inch for: step·b~~st~p guidan_ce to thre~ sim- ward under garment and bring it ~P·
:pJe clothmg repans: _mend•.ng a re-entering fabric where you started.
. 'tipped-out seam, replacmg ra button Repeat. Don't pull thread too .tight
• and stitching pan o( a hem that's or scam wi!J-pucker.
· ·
• pulled open.
3. Continue till you've stitched
.
an inch or so past the end of the
Ripped
•:
. seam
ripped seam: Make two or three tiny
:. You'll need a needle and thread that stitches in place to anchor end. of
)natcljes fabric color as .closely as . thread. Snip it off onc-quancr inch.
•lJossible. (We've tised contrasting • ·
:
; 'bread for th~.photos s,o you can sec ' .~
Sewo;. on a button
; .
d ha
· -stitches better.) If the np 1s long, you
:• .... .;e-ed traight pins to hold fabric . You .11 need a needle and thrc.a t I
I
. mk·•- ~.
matcjlcs fabnc color as closely as
' ,......~ plac:e w 11 e you sew. . .
. possible. You may also need pin or
/ / .; I. Turn ga.rment Inside out. toothpick to create a loose enough

a

OUR SPECI4L PAGE(S)

"shank" so there's room to button
You'll need a needle. thread that
the.·button easily.
matches fabric color and '8 few
I. Thread n~cdle · so truit loose straight pins to hold hem in place.
ends are the s.ame length- about 15
I. Your goal is to l!cm neatly and
inches. This double thickness will securely,. using stitches that .show as
hold the button securely. Make two little ·as . possible. Work from the
or three tiny stitches in place to .wrong side of the g111111ent- that is,
anchor thread. (This gives a neater facing the inside.
finish than a knot, but that's fine ·
2. Aftcrthrcading needle, make a
too.)
couple of tiny stiiches in the hem
2. Set a straight pin across the fabric to anchor thi'C!id (or knot your
buuon as you sew it on- or a tooth· thread to hold it iii place). (Usc a
pick if cloth is thick or you want a · single thread, not \k?uble as used in
looser space between the bullon and replacing bullons.) .
fabric.
·Stan an inch or so before the rip
Sew button on, keeping stitches begins. Take a small :stitch in hem,
as uniform as possible. It doesn't then catch just a thread or two of
matter if you make two 'little lines or garment fabric . .To keep stitching
"x' shapes with stitches. For neat· super-neat, you •.can then run your •
ness, keep fabric entry points as needle through the hem fold for a
close togelher as possible.
·
half-inch.
3. Once butto~ is firmly sewn,
3. Bring out needle. Again, take
remove pin or toothpick. Wrap just ·a thread or two of garment fabthread in a tight circle between but· ric and repeat until the hem is comton and fabric. Again, make a couple pletcd, continuing a.couplc·of stitch·
of tiny stitches to anchor. Snip . cs beyond ripped-out-hem area.
thread closely so the end is hidden · Make a couple of tiny stitches in ·
by button.
hem fabric to anchor and cut lhrcad.

According to the Harris polling firm, former Scouts ire m'uch more likely to graduate from high school, graduate from college, be listed in Who's
Who and be financially successful as adults who were not in Scouting.
Pranks said.
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IT.'S NOT TOO LATE

Join us in a study of the last book in .
. th~·.Bible: The Revelation.
It's not t&lt;&gt;o late to join us . .You can get
handouts &amp; tapes of miss~ sessio~s.
.
.Wbere: First Baptist Church of
Middleport
Comer of 6th &amp; Palmer
• · ~: 7 p.m. each Wednesday

60ft/Lb.

''FOR. PETS ONLY"
'

SUGAR SWEET

.WILL BE PUBLISHED THURSDA't .
. · FEBRUARY 13TH IN

White
essGrapes

Allo a special ~n for In Memory Valentine Pets.

·THE Di«\ILY SENTINEL
;~ ONLY''·

Pound

~6~~ :

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Pl-..endose Hlf·

"PET'S NAME"
Owner's Name

addreuecJ ~mped
env..o.,. to ret"m ·
your photo.

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...•. ,lfurryl "-••~ •
.FrldiJf;·Fehiuary Ttb at 3 p.m. ,

Kroger lt(lllk
1/2-Callon Paper ca,rton. . .

r-------~--~-~-------------~,

1.. . ·v~ENTtNE PETs ·

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lpef•~ Name·

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II Owr!tr'a Harp•
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IAmoU~ Eriolol•cl: .

tor

piCtures

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. · ·D••IInl Friday, ·Fibruary 7th at 3 p.m.
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*II or·brlng the entry form: .

The·~ Daily .Sentinel

''Pastor: MarkMortow
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110·Court St. '
41788

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save at
least.

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Wwdi

Poln•ot •lllddllpoit, Ohio

Community
calendar

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fne wavke • P' .... , ...
'11
:::-;:
. . . . . . : W e t ' Tile

rahd•il•l'w ltepr.
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. type. ......... prilltell • llpiiCe
........ ...
"'lie ..,..reed
te rua • Jtl~cllc •zher fllclaya.
.WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Annual membership meeting of lhe.Meigs County Humane Society will be held
'Wednesday, 6:30 p.m. at lhe Thrift
Shop in Middleport. .

Jolin C. \\blf1 D.O.
·· Aaociate Plufessor
of Family MediCine

WE

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data-'

Chicken leg

Products
cube24pk,
12 oz. carla

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¢

by Bob Hoeflich

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The Women's Auxiliary at Veterans Memorial Hospital hopes there are a 1
Jot of that type organization around Mei.Bs County.
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The auxiliary is facing a .linancial challenge in being able to provide toys
for children who are brought into the emergency room. The Auxiliary with
a little help here and there has done this for many years.
There arc many such children and it's a traumatic experience for them in
the medical selling. The Auxiliary is now asking that other organizations
help out with the project. In fact, the ·group is hoping that there will he a
number of such groups willing to help. Each helping group if at all feasible
will be ask to provide the toys for one month.
When I say toy.s, I used the word loosely. The favorite item and one recommended is a stuffed animal which the children can squeeze and hug during the ordeal of waiting, being examined, and going through any needed :
procedures.
If your group can belp with such a project, would you be good enough to
call Libby Fisher at 949-2378? The auxiliary will really appreciate the help
of your organization.
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These four. a Jewish Rabbi, a
Roman Catholic Priest, and two
Protestant Ministers calmly issued
life-belts to American servicemen
aboard the troop transport after it
was torPedoed on Feb. 3, 1943. ·

A reader recently called and asked that I address the problem of "playing
games" with older people.and the point is well taken.
The reader says that frequently older people are approached with such
questions as "Do you know whom I am?" or "Do you n:member me?'' She
says in your approacli you should just comment: "I'm John Jones" and then ;
add any information on how you happen to know about. the older individual !
or any other topic you want to discuss.
Not a bad suggestion at all. Often too much time goes by even for young
people to remember every name and every face let alone the. senior citizen.
So play it cool with the older person. They'll appr.:ciate your help, and will ·
be happy to coml'lunicate without playing the guessing game.
So we arc presently advised that Dave Thomas of Wendy's World did,
indeed, survive quadruple by-pass operation and is recuperating in Florida. So undoubtedly Dave will be bringing us some new humorous commer- i
cials soon.
-------Ursula and Jason McDaniel are in from Germany.
Ursula is a specialist in the IU1RCd forces performing as a crane operator
while Jason, who is not in the anncd forces, is an area· manager fpr
Cycleiechs.
Ursula was sent to Germany in July, 1995, and was joined there by Jason
in August ·o r the saine year. They now Jive in Kaiserlautem, Germany. and
Ursula duties are in Miesau.
Uriula and Jason are very fond of Germ311y and Ursula may reenlist in
lhe service when her cuircnt enlistment expires in 1999 with t1Je hope that /
sllcand Juon can .have a tonaer stay in Germany. They are enjoying the ,
' l!'lvelins and ·seeing points of interest. One ohheir favorite O!llings was a:
stay in a castle at Bl!'lapest, Hunaary.
.
·
I
Unula and Jason ire JUCIU of lheir parents in Meigs County until Feb. 7
w-.n lhey will return to Oermuy. Her parents are Mrs. Maxii)C Hart, Ball ,
Run Raid, and.Jaek Hart of Rock Spriop Rciad. His parents are Ralph and
Judy McDaniel, State Route 124, Pomeroy. U~a·s grandparents are Mr.
llld MR. 1'llomlt Hilt also of the Rock Sprin1s Rold.
'

,.. c.-m,a.nas--·
.-- .
.uen

.

.

Orange Juice.~~~~!~
·
.
.

Corn, Peas, Green Be•ns, Mixed Vegetables

Jill,..

Nat-,._

Snow Floss

Tomato Juice

3/$100

ijarted

46 oz.

'

Limit 12 cleaae
'

.

Whitney
Pink Salmon

·gg¢

14,75

oz.

to

..

.Van Cam·p
'

3/$

4 roll

pkg.

.•89¢

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Win A

liD~ llil!kiJ'©OO
ThlaWeek

u- ~; 4/.$ 400

1.21 oz..

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Good Only at

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.

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Includes

-¥.r&amp;HOME
APPLIANCES ON
SALE
·..,..w.....
.
bclvdoo looo

'

Kenrnore'

Kenmore
appliances:
America's '1
brand I

PowerMar.- Jr.l

A $50 value

39999

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Save
*100

. .. .

12.0-omp
Whlaper~ne,

micron ~r
fHtratton Jpnd

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swivet hople.

...., - -

262t2 ..

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One out of every
two American
homes has a ·
Kenmore ... quality
design and
· dependable
performance ore just
· two reasons-why!

34evel wosh
dishwasher with
Quiet Guard· Plus
sound ins!utalton.
15765

conister vac with

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Kenmore'

"'iitrlpool

soa••
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18.8 cu. fl.'
refrlgerotor with

30in. e~lric

range wii!J.oelf·
cleaning ovan
ond smooth
rad.i anl coaktop.
Solid btdck glass

odjustoble spit~
proof. slldOH&gt;Ut

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·save .•so

and adjustQble

door. 66461 ·

door bins with
gollon storage,
Twin crispers,
meat drawer.
65971

(Mfr. 1Rf3661XDW)

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Sale endi-.Scilurclay, F. .ruary I

$200
FrHCaahl
Stop In Th• Store

For Detalla

a

to pay the price ·in real dollars.
-sidering plan to ban smoking in the
·After a 1993 Jaw that directed workplace. All states would have to ·
Michigan restaurants to set aside at comply with OSHA standarcl~ at a
least 50 percent of their seating for minimum, although individuai states
nonsmokers, restaurant'owners were could supersede federal standards
faced with changing ·their busi~esses with stricter nonsmoking codes.
or being lined.
In the past two years, lawmakers
"The whole process can be very in C1!1ifomia, Maryland, Washingexpensive and very upsetting in the ton, Utah and Vermont have passed
sense of rebuilding an entire restau- or considered codes to ban workrant," said Bob Harrington, techni- place smoking.
cal directo,r of ihc National RestauIn Detroit recently, hair stylist
rant Associalion. "A ventilation sys- Jane Anna Demor exhaled a thin
tem is nothing you can buy off a stream of blue smoke, stubbed out
hardware shelf."
her cigarette and headed back · to
Neither. the National · Restaurant work inside the mall where she
Association · nor th.e Michigan works, which bans all indoor smok.Restaurant Association has com: ing.
.
piled ligures for the complete costs
."U~til a couple of years ~go, we
of complying with smoking Jaws, used to smoke in the bathroom,",she
but equipment deale~; say ventila- said. "People complained. They
tion systems for smaller restaurants moved us outside. But the .way I
of •75 to 100 seats cost ahout think ahout it, you face more danger
$10,000.
'(
just driving to work than from
This year, the Occupational Safe- breathing secondhand smoke."
ty and Health Administration is con-

e

Powill's Super
Value

Hamburger or Tuna Helper

.,_ ~~~- H.PM~~, ~. . !-:-,~

59"
_
.........
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Send questions to Ann Laaden,
Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Century Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angel..,
Calif. 90045
.

:• - Serious depressive symptoms ·
l)tarly doubled w~jtes' rates of treat- .
qlent and raised blacks' rates almost
CRAFTS"'Atf
1reefold. . ·
·
'; ·Troubled people mig!tt smo~e;
d[ink O!i ~~t more, whtch could ratse
blood wessure, Ionas says. Plus,
. abxiety, constricts blood vessels,
pfomoting higher pressure.
Craftlman 6-HP,
.Dklllord
:• But why the racial differences?
16-gai. wet/dry
w.atfierHandllf
··~tacks may have fewer ec?nomic
110e Includes
ciulomot~ batlwy.
accenorles.
rosources to cope wtth anx1ety or
12-month
""rvploeement
1.7700
· d4pression," says David Williams of
.and 60fnonlh ~- . 3642AII
~iversity of Michigan's Institl'tc'
fllr Social Research, Ann Arbor.
'1There · could . be biologically
OW1nad It Operated By:
.b d racial differences, too.
. Bobby It Van.... Muncy
· .The findings should spark inter- ·
Open In Galllpolla, 430 Sliver Brldga .
at QMQs. says Redfot;d Williams.
Plaza, llori~-Thure. N, FrL N,
o Quke tlniversity Medical Sch&lt;&gt;?l,;
·
Saturday ..7, Phone.(114) 441-1541
·
rham, N.C. "Treating lhe5!' peo·'
p for depression or anxiety befpte\
1 heavY,-dUty trouble ~ couldl
'WOIII CAIICOUiif ott IIMI POl lAM~~ 0 1 , _ - Mctt.""' ,.,,,..,.,,,._,.,... """""""'_.. _..,._,.""
sawe m~lion~ later.... Ultmtately, the
, """a1 moet k:lr\l* ..,.._ OJIM . _ eDJdMI. ErwliwwrmliNI uc;tQgiN . . - · Olft7...,1rotbut* andC~ .
.
.
+ketO!ace·rs going to force us into·
e WAN 01'1 .a.J•aflao4 IMita:;
h&lt;Jrl!t odlqUOIIt tfOCk ol odwifiMCIItml. Wtwn CMI Ol llaCkl OCCW, 'p'OU I'IOYt d Cf'IOa ~""" OflliON.= • A IOii"'C::ntCt tCif it'll
1tm wotlt&lt;luc«&lt; • An tqUa1 Of btltlf 1em allht ~priCe llfw lltmWOI nat NGad. l't*lanchd: ~
ptventiiSn."
_
. •

16 oz.
Cottonelle '
Bathroom Tissue

.

It was Grandfather's birthday. He
was 79.

~tment. ·

Pork N Beans

a

Wllile you'n! llkial ltlv......,. of the January bqains do keep in mind
lhat
of
llOIIIII up I• mid-february llld in """I you .
follc!w .._ up with Jlll)'lna lilY llldicio1181 income lall, Now with those tbinp
4
·
·
·
ill "'""' do bep aiUIIq.
'

bSATODAY
_.
t: High anxiety or depression leYels .
In middle-age are warning flags for
(uture h!gh blood pressure, suggests
II large federal study. .
,
:; Anxious or depressed middle-.age
lldults with normal blood· pressure .
. ~ about twi!!C as likely as calm,
liappy peers to develop hy~rten~ion
~icr, sho\\ findings in Archives of f.-mily"Mdicine.
t• "Anxiety and de!lression are
tlnport~nt , players here. They're key
•lsk factors ... 11nd primary physi~ans should be_screening for them,"
f&amp;Ys B.(U~e Jonas of the National
~enter for Health Statistics.
~ Jonas studied 2,992 adults who
out with normal blood pres~ure . They were followed an average
(if 13 years, and major influences on .
ltJood pres5ure wc!re taken into
account Mood disorders . reliably
tiredicted future 'irouble: '
'
!! - ·Highly anxiq11s white$ ages 4~
64 were more than twice JIS likely · ·
~ tho$e. with little anxiety to get
!reatmenl for hypertension later;
;linong, b.I!ICks with normal blood
~essure , , high anxiety more than
l(ipled the risk for later hypertensiOn

129

Stokely Vegetable$ ·

I

~ignal high · ·.
~load pressure
hy MARILYN EUAS

$

BORDEN

come."

G;ULIPOLIS

.anx1eW r,nay-,

48oz•.

'

time. But today was · his birthday,
and they were sure to come.
- At suppertime, be _left lhe cake
untoucbed so lhey could c,ut it llld
have degsen with him. After supper.
he sat on the pon:h waitins.
At 8:30, be went to his room to
prepare for bed. Before retiring, he
left a note on the door that read. "Be
sure to wake me up when they

·!

~

15.5 oz.

Oil

Do you belong to an organization which has helping others woven into its :

Gilmore said that of the many
World War II incidents, probably
none stirred the nation more deeply
than lhe story of these four men of
-God whose heroic efforts were credited with the saving of more th~~R
200 Jives.

~

B~ans

l

Y JEREMY PEARCE .
.number coriJI!Ircd tp othernsks," he places. Restaurants made quick and
Bayard said the EPA's conclusion
Detl:oH News
·
said. "We kiii . SO~OOO people on our expensive moves to trcatc non- '.· wasil't based on coroner reports, but
· While' many people use the health highways ev#'; year."
smoking seating and install systems on a statistical projection from those
ffccts of secondhand smoke as an
· But· otherS, including C. Everett to filter smoke from the air.
studies. Most of those studied were
ncentive to make smokers quit, you (\oop, the former surgeon general, · EPA officials and tobacco com: women across the age spectrum·
more likely to kill y,ourself.or die believe smoking - . inclUding sec- pany executives fired broadsides at married to husbands who smoked.
• m diabetes or liver disease than ondhand smoke - is a legitimate each other in what became one of
"We tried to be reliable. We conthe testiest public health cam.paigns tacted the tobacco people, we conifrom lung cancer from .breathing . _health concern.
tse&lt;:ondhand tobacco smoke, federal
"We haven't abolished ,smoking, on recor&lt;l. But now . one of the tacted the anti-tobacco people. We
tJ!ealth siatistics show.
but I do think we have to legislate report's authors said that facts ahout even looked at studies outside of the
; And the odds are that you are far against smQI&lt;ing in public places," the dangers of secondhand smoke country," Bayard said.
'lllore likely to die from blood poi- said Koop. 1
were limong the battle's frrst vic- · The study has provided a wealth
~ning, homicide or lUI accident at
The EPA joined the charge tims. of material for health groups. The
twork. in your home or on the high- against sCCQildhand smoke in the
"Boil!· sides overstated the case American Lung Association blames
:ways.
.
. early t99(),1r l'wo federal studies in (on ·secondhand smoke)," ~aid .EPA secondhand smoke for causing .
. • In fact, the 3,000 annual lung ·lhe 198()s h8d targeted it as ,a danger. _ statistician Steven Bayard, an author 150,000 to ·300,000 respiratory
· ~a"eer deaths. the Environmental but the EP~, wanted 10 take a'Cioser · of the report.
_
infections in children under 18 each
:Protection Agency links to passive look, using data fr9m &lt;;llher studies
The EP~ examined 3,1 studies year. And the American Heart Asso~moking are a fractio_
n of · the from around the wdrld.
involving 300,000 people, and con- ciation said 37,000 to 40,000 Amer0100,000 dealhs reported from pneu'J:he result, pu!Jiished in Decem· eluded secondhand smoke is a sig- icans die annually of heart disease
)nonia and AIDS.
ber 1992, C!j,ragcd lhe tobacco indus- · nificant .health risk. Scientists connected with secondhand smoke.
: The EPA's estinlate "isn't meant try and fuel~!! the "smoke-free" rev- fqcused on II studies done in the ·
But some business owners still
(O be precise,:' said J~nnifer.Jinot, ari
olution in public places.
United States and estimated that question if the effon of a ban is
~vironmental health scientist at the
I:.awmalliirs in many states used about 3,000 Americans die every worth the cost. Figures based on sta~PA. "It's probably give-or-take a the EPA study as a platform to write . year from lung cance~; from breath·
tistical projections, they say, hold
~ousand. But it does show that it's bills banning smoking in public
ing secondhand smoke.
· little weight when businesses have
IW1 impartant public health, prob~em. "
.
.
.
t Fatiy foods ~ontribute to the
tJeaths of nearly I million Ametittans a year - · yet· cigareues, ·not
tter, are the target of health groups
d lawmakers.
.
·
.
. The EPA numbers do not add up ·
for Dr. Bruce 9JUn, whQ teaches risk .
~seSSJI!~n,t' at the Univ~rsity of
J)"ichi~'s School of Pubhc Health.
!l "The'way r look at it, second}l
Jiand smoke mortali[¥js a very small

. l

Beat·of the Bend ...

· James Gilmore, chaplain of Post
39, announced that special. services
wil.l be held Sunday at 10:30 am. at
the Pomeroy First · Baptist Church
where the Rev. Paul Stinson is the
pastor. Legionnaires will attend in a
group and the public is invited to
· attend the special service.

tallOI II l!lbjec:t to edilinli ·

.Joan
.. of Arc
.• Kidney or Chill .

erisc'o
'

Irian effort 10 provide our reader·lhip wiJh c.nent news, the OaltiJIO:
. D.ity Tribune will not ~,_
Ill
_,.,.
~f. after 60 da~s from the
~ , ,_, even1:
_ .. _.._ --.,
11
1
articlll ill lhe IOCiely
mlllt
be Nbmitted within 30 .days of
occ:•u ce. All ~ ·1111111 be
sllll.llilt ~ wlthill ,,42 dayt of lhe

..

Bounty
Towels

r

This bas been a difficult prcgttanIf only grown chiklfen and grand- nice when they came.
cy for my wife, and lhe last thing she children could understand the
He skipped his daily walk to the
needs is Ill this aggravation. Sbe has importance of making precious town cafe where he had coffee with
tried to talk to her parents, but noth- moments happen in lhe lives of the his cronies. He wanted to be home ·
ing she says makes any difference. people they love before it's too late. wben they came.
1'leasc belp us out, Ann. -· ·Stressed Tell them, Ann, that no maller how
He put his porch chair on lhe
in St. Paul, Minn.
busy they arc, they must make time sidewalk so he could gel a better
Dear Stressed: Accept the fact for the important things. Please print view of the street when they drove
that nothing you say will make any that column again. -- Dee in Bilkers- up to. help celebrate his binhday.
difference. Be gracious about what- field, Calif.
At noon, he got tired but decided
ever they bring, and then throw it
Dear Dec: I believe the column to .forgo his nap so he could be there
out, give it away or bave a garage you want to see again has been when they came. Most of the rest of
sale of your·own.
·
among the most frequently 'request- the afternoon he spent near the teleDear Ann Landers: You've given ed over lhe years. Here it is: It was phone so he could answer it when
us. some wonderful columns that Grandfather's Birthday by Rudy Joe they called.
inspire the spirit of love. One very Mano
·
He has live matTied children, 13
special story moved me to tears. It
It was Grandfather's birthday. He grandchildren and three.great-grandspeaks of an :old man who plans .his was 79. He got up early, shaved, children. One son and a daughter
birthday in hopes of seeing his fam- showered, combed his hair and put live within 10 miles of' his place:
ily arrive.
on his Sunday best so he would look They hadn't visited him for a long

ou're. more ·u.kely to die from fatty foods than secondhand smoke

~.

In observance off'tcials of Drew
Webster Post 39, Pomeroy, and clergymen arc planning a special program for the observance of the .54th
ilnniversary of the sinking of the
USS Dorchester and the heroism
demonstrated by four valiant chaplains.
·

\

it's Ill slUff lhey've picked up at
pnaesales.
Ann
I don't mind that lhe lifts are secLanderS
ondband. EWirythinc is in cood condition. The problem is that my inlaws don't ult if we need or want
any of this. They just bring it over. If
I tell them .we already have something else picked out. lhey gtt !eally
ANN LANDERS
Ann Landers: My wife is upset and say we don't appreciate
~eight months' prcgnmt with our first lhem and that lhey sh\)uldn't·have to
if it's OJ( to buy something for
~';~j~j~,;and my in-laws are already ask
lheir own grandchild.
O:•
us nuts.
Shouldn't . the patents-to-be
· The.
isn't even born yet, and
wife's parents have given us a dt:cidc what kind of clothing and
hjghehair, car seat, playpen and baby furniture they want? My wife
tdressing table. I haven't even men- and I won't be having any more chil•tioned the toys and clothes. And dren because of medical problems,
lnorie of it can be taken back because. so we will never again ,have this
opportunity.

bepression, .

In commemoration of die dramatc sacrifice of four · armed forces
haplains during World War ll, the
''tnerican Legion will obServe Reli- ·
i1ous Emphasis Week, Feb. 2-8, JRd
Four Chaplains' Sunday, Feb. 2.

.N,ws policy

••

Pepsi Cola

¢

·

Legion to
bbsen~e Four
ChapJains
unday

I

7

211ter

Quarters................ 39
·

When the supply, of .life preservers was exhausted, the · four
Chaplains removed their own life
belts and gave them to four·soldiCI'S
and th'en stood calmly on the sinking
sliip, their arms around one another's
sllqulders, and their heads bowed in
"""'
. cr.
,...,
IMpired bY the heroic deed of
thei!C four Chaplains, The American .
. Legion each year marks the ang!versary of their supreme sacnlice
thrOUJh special services and proJ111111S' throughout the nation. This
annual observance, as a part of the
Lcpm's "Service to God and Coun. tey" program. he.t~ bring new
emphasis to the rehgtous upects of
our American heritaae and the need
for. conlinuinJ 'adherence 10 the
basiC religioui conceptS upon which
America was fOunded, Gilmore laid.

·couple should be gracious·with unsolicitect-gifts for child

THE RIGHT TO LIMIT
PRICES GOOD THRU FEBRUARY 1, 1997.
WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

~ : rve enclosed bad for saw ,.tmeuo. non-prescription medicine that may ease my proswe poblem. It appears that I can use this prod- .
uct without harm, at least that is what the lid and my urologist say. What I
pC)UBLE COUPONS EVERVDAV.SEE STORE FOR DETAILS
need to kaow is will it do ony good? Is it efficacious? My urologist wouldn't addrns my questions about its value.
Answer: I receive many letters about simibir concems. That is, can one
believe lhe health claims made in ldvertisements for vitamins, herbs, mediTHURSDAY
SYRACUSE ·- Meigs County cines and other health related procluc!s. Thm hu been on increased effort .to:
Board of Mental Retardation and directly .IIIIJket this type of item to YO!I Md me. including AA intercstinll
trend to dertise prescription drugs to individuals with ldvice to "speak to I
Developmental Disabilities, Thurs- your
doctor._"
.
day, 8 p.m. Carleton School, special
Despite federal rules about truth in ldvertising, It is wise to be 'skeptical
meeting.
'
about information in any lid. Remember, lhe ldvertiser only makes money ,
POMEROY .. Prayer and plan- bY sellins its product. Therefore, lhe product is represented in its.very bes«··I
ning meeting for upcoming Feb. .I light. ·Spokespersons have" views that arc strongly biased by the soun:e
concert with Contemporary Christ- their pay check and. occasionally olher reasons, but lhey don't represent
1
ian Music group, "Harvest" at lhe even-handed evaluation. The ldvertising for saw paJmello, a plant exi:ract 1
Rutland Civic Center. Prayer meet- that is claimed to reduce symptoms of enlargement or chronic disease of the
ing to be at lhe Pomeroy Public · prostate (prostatism) that often aftlicts men over SO, is a good example. •
Library. Everyone invited. Rev. .
The ad uses the current popular words "natural".and "herbal" to promote
Peter Tremblay for more informa- a general acceptance of its worth and safety. A ~ choice of words by lhe•.
ad copy writer, butlhey J'e.ally tell you and me nothing of imponance. There!
tion.
are many 'natural" and "herbal" plants oot there.that are far.mon: hazard•oos,I
to Our health than "synthetic" or "artificial" products. So ignore lhe emoSATURDAY
HARRISONVILLE
Har- tional response and search for lhe facts.
risonville Lodge 411, F&amp;:AM .• SatI can find no literature in lhe National Library of Medicine Medline
urday, 7:30 p.m. at, lhe Masonic base about benefits or hazards from saw palmeuo. This means !hal the
Temple. Refreshments.
ical studies quoted by lhe advertisement were sufficiently inaCcurate that.
lhey wcre11't published in a credible peer-reviewed journal. In other words,
SUNDAY .
it wasn't worth the paper it w~ printed on!
POMEROY -- Big Bend StemThis doesn't mean that saw palmetto·is without benefit. however. Since
wheel Festival commiuee. Sunday, 2 . this product can't be patented, no drug company is willing to spend the milp.m at the Carpenters Hall.
lions of dollars necessary to do studies that would prove its useMncss
lb.
because lhey can't recover lheir investment from exclusive rights to sales.
TUESDAY
Saw palmetto claims to work by inhibiling the production of a hormone,
POMEROY -- Choice home eduDHT.
which promotes pros'tate enlargement and lhe resultant symptoms of
••
cators, I0 a.m. Tuesday at the
prostatism.
If this is so, it is safe to assume that lhe real benefit from taking
Pomeroy Library conference room.
For more information contact it is very small. You see, there is a prescription medication that works in the
same way but is much slt'onger than saw palmetto. The drug was promoted
Tammy Jones, 992-674,3.
with much fanfare wben it first went on sale several years ago. Additional
careful studies since then have shown it hll! 'only modest benefit in a very
oelcctJUOUP of men.
I think that it is safe to assume your. llrologist just didn't want to be quot-,
eel, bui I will. Any benefit for your prostate from taking saw palmetto is like- ·
ly to be no greater than you ·would expect from taking a sugar pill (i.e., a
placebo).
"F-'Iy Medklae1' Is a weekly e..llliUI. Th IUbmlt quatlons, write to
I Jolla c. Wolf, D.o., Oblo Uaivenity CGUeae 111 Osteopathic Medtciae,
Gronenor HaD, Atbeal, Ohio 45701.

I

1117

Products
STORE HOURS
Monday ttvu Sunday
8AM-10PM
298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
. ~cepla Credit Cwde

Medicine

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

Coca Cola

POWE

Family

II

•'

7

-·

•!Jn 1654, a bridp in Rowley,
~··· was pcrtnitted to charge a tOll
for animals, while people.ctomd me

,

Saturd•y, ,. 1, :a..,

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moy YCWY

J P • • "' fDW

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c""""' occowA

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- . . .- . CICCI.Iale
AI tun..
"" """ - - · lOA In ,.,
01 011/'tll"' ~ tnCIY chOnfe olttf

o(charg~.

.;;,

" .The store you inow
is rio~ close to laom~

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: ,...12•The D•ltfSull.net

... : Wedn11Ny, .,.nuary 21,1187

w~.. cMy.JM'*Y21,1117

Po_mtroy•lllddl•port, Ohio

~:o·hio Valley Ch~istian School announces honor roll students
The following students have
made !be A honor roll a1 Ohio Valley

Chrillian School for !he third six
weeks. • lndicales straight A's.
Fll'lt Gnde • •Jonathan Beaver,
*Richelle Blankenship, "Lindsay
i'tcarr, *Zachary Carr, •vaneetha
'Christopher, *Kari Evans, Megan
Goode-Sheets, *Joshua Haner,
Olivia Hanlon, Olivia McGovern,
'' Healher Moran, *Jesse Robinson,
,Nicholas Stevens, *Laurel Stone,
*Heather Wagner and *Christopher
.Williams.
.
Second GJ:ade • *Whitnee Caldwell, Matthew Christopher, •Sarah
Cochran, *Brandon Coughenour, ·
• Adriane Eastman, •Carol Fahmy,
.. •Jaymes Haggerty, Stephanie Jarvis,
. Megan Mahan, Travis Massie, *Gar".rison Salisbury, Drew Scouten.
·· •Crystal Thomas, Michael Williams
;and *Ethan Young.
.. Third Grade - *Brandon Bartee,
· •Sara Beckley, *Vanessa Burris,
: •Kristi Davis, *Jacob Eldridge,
: *Kelli Irwin, Joee Jarvis, *Cory
~ Kelley, *Richard McCreedy, *D.J.
· Montgomery and Keith Peck.
• Fourth Grade • Aimee Agustin,
; *Aaron Beaver, Annie Carter, *Hai:Jie Carter, Kerry Carter, Heath.er
.: Chamberlain, *Kaleb Eldridge,
·*Leah· Hickman and Elizabeth
· Stevens.
: Fifth Grade· Brody Blankenship,
. • Ashleigh Greene, Tessa Haggerty,
:John Moran, *Lindsey Wheeler:
• Alyssa Zirille;
:. sixth Grade · Deanna Bryan,
.'Jeremy Evans~ *Chelsea Gooch,
i*Christina Taylor, Maria Wagner;
•seventh Grade: Gabriel Jenkins,
Michael Jenks, Joe Meyn, •Ginny
;Miller.
: Eighth Grade - • Amanda Hop.J&lt;ins, •_Erica M~sie, Adarn Staple'ton and *Nathan Williams.
. Ninth Grade • *Meredith Clark,
'*Courtney Gooch, Abigail Meyn,
·Laura Pollard, *Miranda Simmons,.,.Jonathan Taylor, *Melody Webster
;_and *Christen Zirille.
· ' · Tenth 'grade • *Becky Birchfield,
Shannon Enright, *Dani Jenks, Josh
Rowland and Andrew Williams . .
: Eleventh Grade:. •Vandana
Agrawal, Jessica Carnes, Suzanne
Clark, Maggie Meyn, Do ·Pollard,
Lisa Jo Vollbom.
1 Twelfth Gra,de • *1on Hall,
Jtachel Hamrick, Nathan Smithand
Ben Taylor.
· ! The following students have
ade the B Honor Roll for the third
weeks.
.
.
First Grade • Daniel Kleynen,
am Massie, Ashley Mitchell . ·
Second .Grade - Kalee Edmonds,
~I Lynch, Edward McGovern,
Cody Sheets and Cami Thomas.
t ·Third Grade • Jessica Burleson, Sarah Burleson, Logan Gary,
chelle Green .. Shana Justice and
· ke Stinson.
Fourth Grade .. Michael Blank,
t;fatthew Clarke, Andrew Holcomb,
kendra Queen, Matthew Simmons;
~arah Smith; Fifth drade: Rachel
· Jllackwood, Nathan Bowman, Britany ·Cox, Dianna Jarvis, Joshua
arvis, ijeath Massie and Crystal
aylor.
Sixth Grade • William Burleson,
! Ryan Carter, Scottie Frans, John
j Polcyn and Kelsey Salisbury.
Seventh Grade • Andrew ·
Blankenship. Adam Holcomb and
Chad Mourning.
•
Eighth Grade · Brad Bowman,
~ A.rnanda Wilcox; Ninth Grade: Abc
' Abtarns, April Agustin, Chris Bur~ nell, Joshua Simmons. Valerie Tayt lor.
f Tentli Grade • Gabrielle Blackwoqd, Lisa Bowman, Conncy
Cromlish, Jolie Graham, Andrew
t-1eyn and Brynn Moss.
·
J Eleventh Grade · Stephanie Jenk)ns, Jaddy Newbold, Esther Siminons, Tony Staley and ieremy'
olfe.
.
Twelfth Grade - Melissa Brown,
ieah Lanier, Billy Miller, Leisa
illters and Amber Wolfe. '
The following students have
made the A Horior Roll for the first
5cmcster:
· · First .Grade · *Jonathan Beaver,
*Richelle Blankenship, *L1ndsay
Cal'i': •zachary Carr. *Vaneetha
Cl1rlstopher, *Kari Evans, Megan·
Goode-Sheets, • Joshua Haner,
Olivja Hanlon, Olivia McGovern,
Heather Moran, •Jesse Robinson,
Nicholas Stevens, 0Laurel Stone,
Heather Wagner and Christopher
Williams.
.
Second Grade · *Whitnee Caldwell. *Matthew Christopher, •Sarah.
Cochran, *Brandon Coughenour,
• Adriane Eastman, Kalee Edmonds,
~~ Fahiny, *Jaymes Haggerty,
'SICJ!hanie Jarvis, Megan Mahan,
Travis Massie,· Edward McGovern,
OaritiOil
Drew· Sco)lten.
Sheets,
Thomas,
.

.II

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I. 1

.I

II .

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flinDINI thll may be wcneaed by
sudden lteec!inJ. Ita aaenenl rule,
this "dizziaess," which is really
liaJ¥head•dluu, is lsytllJitom people expedeiiCCiiom time 10 time
wben blood pressure falb lnd 'the
brain is temporarily deprived of a
normal blood supply.
Lightheadedaess, therefore, is
often "orthostatic," meanina thai it
occurs during nopid changes in posilion. This S)'ll'ptom. is common in
patients on medication for hypertension, in young adults (who tend to
have low blood pressure anywa&gt;:),
!'ftd in people with anemia and other

·

WEEKDAYS
7 AM liON.·SAT. MIDIIIIGHI SUNDAYS I

I
I
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I
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I

28 OZ. PIG.
IANQUD

.

ASSI. 9·16 OZ. PIG.

I.
I

I
I
I
I
·' . I
I

-Hellmann's

·

Y,

tiL.

2/
.•uz:
·11

Sour Cream or
French Onion
Dip

I
I
I
I
I
I

UnltH Y•lley leU

Chocolate
Milk . J60L

.-

a
PREFERRED .
SELECTION

12 PACK, I OZ•.CAliS

SODA
ASST. JUYOIS .
UMII3

y, tiL

21

or

Implied

M8rge Fetty's first grade Clall at Rutland Ele!Mntliry School Wll the achool winner In I
- ' atock picking conteat aponaorecl by People• Bank, the achool'l partner In educlllon.
Here, Rutfllld 'branch 1111111g1r Dell Jefferl fiNIIntl • $400 prize to F~. Studentli 1hown are
Mlchlef Duvall, Matt Bo1well, Jonathan Aullaugh, J111le Mullins, Bathany Gibbs, rm.ny
~ · McDonald, Jacob ~Sames, Seth Johnaon, Emily .Davl1, Keith Wllllaml, Katie Doczl, Larry Hell,
t Joey McDonald, Andrew Denney, Kotl Priddy, Brlttlny Harrllon, Heatl)tr .Hawlay, C.111dy Will~
-f ford, Lindley Houeer, JOihua. Stercher and Matthew'McDonlld.
.
·

•
:
:

(Ume SIOJie.

IReligion: Making a ·:mid-life turn toward God

IWEITARW...
USf WANT ADl..:--:: ·
AHANDY ,

BINGO
RACINE, OHIO .
AMERICAN LEGION
POST 602
MRYSUNDAY

Low Allll)

WICKS
HAULING

ROBERT BISSELL
COIISTIUCnOII
•New Homes

•Garages
¥By LESLIE SCANLON
· · about one-third are 40 or older. ~t .
As a volunteer, Pat ' was busy
•Complete
Louisville Courter..Joumal ~outhem seminary, about six of.· organizin~ .Vacation Bible School
Remodeling
· Pat Feltrup-Exum has looked into every 10: students enrolled in the · and Christian youth programs for
Limestone,
Door• Open 4:30
Stop
&amp; Compare
!the faces of her sons .and pondered . 1994-95 academic year were over . _area churches. Bl!t as. she got close
G1me
Startl
8:45
Gravel, Sand,
FREE
, the call of God.
.
30 and about one· quarter were over to the teen-agers, she felt confronted
Poy out lo occontlnglo
! Why, her boys wonder, did !heir 40; Officials at the schools point to by "major issues like families'
ESTIMATEEJ
number of playel'll.
Top Soli, FlU Dirt
:parents uproot !hem fnim the sc!tool doctors, lawyers: forest ran~ers, b~aking up and abuse -. ~~.I did985 4473
Under now managornont.
614-992-3470
:fllld tbe Floridl\ ,t9,wn theY loveol,... ,.IJQI!~~~s, busmess , execuiJves, ·. '!' t know how 10 deal WJth 1t. . ·
Public wotcomo
•ltl'6ve them thousands of miles from · teachers · and military officers who
·She . began going . to college to·
·
·
"Ill foil1
:their ·grandparents, and give up a all have ·been willing to transform prepareforacareerinChristianedu- .--~~~~--,
•comfortable house and an affluent their lives to follow the voice of cation or youth ministry. A minister
GRUESER~S
Htlll
Yolr
:lifeforthecrampedquartersofmar.' GOd.
she respected said: "God is knock;ried student housing7 ·
··
- - Pearl Gillespie, SO, gn:w up in a ing on yo~r door. How long are you
laftt•••l"
: Pat and Bll!cc Feltrup-Exlim Baptist church at a titrie when going 10 resist tl!is call?"
Body work, car, lru!:k
New Conatructlon 6
;believ'l they have an answer: aiJ church was in~gral i~ the life of the
.Uncertain about what they ~hould · •Driveways ·
&amp; truck painting, .
Remodeling'
•answer from !he heart, the spirit, the black c~mumty, but few women do, _Pat and Bruce p~yed that If God
•Parking Lots
minor mech1nlc..
C
:soul. After years of earning their liv- were encouraged to become preach- wanted them to go mto the m1mstry,
repair.
Kitchen a!Jinetl
At 2 Locatlona
:ing 'in the secular world, !hey felt ers.
.
"He'd ·make it reallyhclebar,'d' Pat
-Etc.
1'1/ne-upa,-OII ChaRge,
VInyl SldlnGg • R~
Rutland, Oh.
•God.was calling them to minislryShe. married young and had three said. That sumqter, her us an was
Call Anytime
Wax, Buffing
Decks· arage1
61 .._742•2986
:a .call that had been whispering in sons, but then divorced. She found laid off from his job, the only
Oh
Free Estlmataa
acl
949" 3327
, :their hearts over time and gradually herself in her 30s; attending college, employee let go in his region as part
Long lit., Rutland,
'
4-$411
R ne, 011· ·
61 742
;was sp&lt;;aking louder and louder.
yearning to wor~ ~ore closely with' of a national corporate dow_nsizing.
· 591•1897
-2135, Alii~~~~ '=====111:"'::1:..._::,...:!.!:=:6:14A=99:94:9-:!2202~~~
• Their decision- to g1ve up the matters of !he spmt and !he heart.
Wuh that, the coupl~ y1elded to ' 1~;:=====~lJ=======:; - 1
:upwardly mobile life and attend
In 1994, after working as uocial what they believed w~- the w~ll of :1
;Louisville Presbyterian Theological worker and lay preacher,. G•llesp1.e GQd. Bruce began tak1~g semmary
'Seminary~ is beiog echoed atsem- enrolled at the Presbytenan · sem1· classes through a satellite program.
linaries across the country.
nary with a full-tuition scholarship.
and Pat scrambled to finish her
Aulhorizad AGA Distributor
New Homes • Vlnyi 'Sidlng New
: Exact numbers.are hard to come
"Semi~ for me is the hardest undergraduate degree. To make ends
~Welding Supplies. lnduslrial Gases. Machine Shop
·Garages • Replacement Windows
iby, but seminary officials nationally thing I've ever d~ne,_" ~ said, in meet ihey mowed la~ns and painted
· Services • Sieel Sales &amp; Fabrication. Repair Welding
,., !say the .average age of theological part because she_s J~ggl~ng class houses. They put their house on the , •Aiumlnuni/Stainless. Tool Dressing, ornamental
• Room Additions • Roofing
. Slaps • Sial(&amp;, Railings, Patio Furniture, Fireplace .
•students is rising and it is no longer work and three. part-ume jobs. But market, sold much of the1r furmture
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL ·
:Uncommon for students io cotrie 'to "I think _I've been moving this way and dismantled the woodworking
ltem.s; Planter Hangers, Trellises &amp; lots of other stulfll _
FREE ESTIMATES
seminary with years of educati~. · all my life."
.
shop Bruce had ·proudly assembled
"No Job Too Lit,._ or Too Small" ·
aife and work experience already
For many second-career Students, · IR the garage.
•· 614-992·7643
Iunder their belts.
church has long been "a meaningful · And they learned, to their surWe will worl&lt; within your budget.
; Bob Poff, for example, practiced place of to~unity" and faith, ~ai~ . pnsc: and joy, that the Presbyterian
Ph. 773-9173 .
77~1
Calls)
daw for more than 20 years and left Jim Hubert, d1rector of adm1ss1ons sem1r1ary m Lou1svtlle could pro108
WV
'the.Virginia attorney general's office at the Presbyterian seminary. Many vide exactly w~at they n~ded: It ·
to come to Southern Baptist Theo- .have volunteered · as yout~·gro~p ·o~ered masters. degrees I? both
·logical Seminary in Louisville io l~aders and ch~rch elde~. but ~1th d1v10_11y, for Bru~e, and farmly and
.PICk up dllcardod
·study for a master's degree in divin· ume, the part-ume commitment JUSt mamage counseling, for Pat. And tt
appllancea, blllterlea,
:ity.
.
·
didn't ~m enough.
would accept not JUSt the1r c~Jidn:n,
manymetal1&amp; ·
: ' He and his wife Irene quit !heir
Unul three _Years ago, Pat Fel- but also t!K'•rrabbJt and dog, 10 cammotor blocks.
•No Job Too Small
. ' jjlbs, sold their house and dip~d trup:Exum ..sa1d, her famll~. ":" pus housmg.
oNewHomes
into savings to send the1r two ch1l- leadmg a real comfOrtable hfe
•Remodeling :.•Any and All of Your
The transition has not been easy.
dn:n to college. Poff graduated in near Tampa, where her husband,
Home Repair Needs
*Garagea
. December and now, at 52, is looking . Bruce, worked as a sales reJII'CSCnta- Money is tight and the future ·unceroCall Today for Your
•Decka
for work as a pastor or a Christian tive for a major pharmaceutical fin.n tain. For the whole family the move
to
Kentucky
has
brought
sacrifice,
·Free Estimates
writer.
and she was a stay-at-home mother.
Do You Have Hard Choice11p
"i think God -was leading me As their sons, Jordan and BJC.ndan, learning and growth.
Talk Willi f'hrchlco Nowlll 1-000·
992·2753
287· 81188 Ext 1059 U .99 ~ ·
along the way. but very slowly." he grew olcler, the couple OO,ided to
11111. lluat S. 18 Yro. 5erv·U 0111.
slid. "I don't think _he'll push you COJllmitmoreoftheirtimeandener845-~.
.
J
out on a limb...
gy to church. 'J1le &lt;leeper they got
Lonely? lag A Chanco On 11.,
At the Presbyterian seminary, 62 involved, the stronger they felt the
Whil• hmalo 41. P.O. Box 481,
percent of !he students enrolled this pull to make ministry their life's
Aiblnl. 01145710. .
!
academic year ·are over 30 - and main work.
IEETNEWPEOPI.EMFUN '

.jThe

TOOl

·I

'·'1

SNOW ·

GARAGE

REMOVAL

"11..., New Ownnsflip"

ICE CREAM

s

oxprooo

·:

S1111tt
C
i
111truct II ·

a'.!.:!

SNODGWS'
UPHOLSJEIY

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC~ :

VELVET SUPREME

.

B~

1P3XP4IIIXLN138774 . . warrantloe ~~'-'·
Tho Formoro Bonk oncl
For further lnlonnotlon,
Savlnga
Com
~Jonylllll2·7430•
'-•Y· Ohio, l'lil,orvoio (1) It, 30, 31; 3TC
right to bid Ill

742

I
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I

Y•lley lell · . ·

· 1180 ptymouth

••:

I
.I

MORTON·DINNERS· I

.S 29 .

•
••
•

.1

FOR

UICI

••

OFF REG. PRICE I
. ON
I'
2 COlE. 12 PACIS

.FAMILY ENTREES

nge

••

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COURT STREET GRILL
POMEROY, OH.

. lhlll on Slllurday, 1'obnu11y l'urlhll', The l'annol'l lltlnk
1, 1111, 111 .10:00 a.m.., a ond Bovlngo Compeny .
publlo .nlo will be hold Ill .....,•• 11M ~=eel
'211 Woot 8eoond Sttoal, any or all bide
•
POIMI'OYt Ohio, to Hll lOr
........,, tho
obovo
caoh tho following col~l- • be oold In tho
col-.!:
condition It lo In, with no

•
.•
•
•
•

SUNB

THURS. 7:30 SHARP!

NOTICE le hol'lbj glv111 collotorat prior to oole.

•

20 OZ. lilt LOAF .

TOURNAMENT

Public Notice

-~PU;;;.;;:;;IC~NO;;T;IC;E~--· 'loncl tO wlllld111W I"* • -

.•

AM·

SLICED MEATS . I

•
J

Public Notice

LIS•.

t

;-,- - - ' - - - - - - - - - . . . . . , . - - - -

~UCHRE

·' ;

c

l

•

BREAD

TENDERBEST

.

24 HOURS .

·I

UNRED YAUEY IELL

into the
irritated area are
helpful,
particularly when used in ci&gt;njunclion with an orthotic device (fitted
by a podialrist) to reduce irritation
of !he tendon: If these methods fail,
surgery may be necessary.
'
Copyri&amp;ht 199'7 NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

POlin PLEAsANT

OPEN

(where available)

.

I

POMEROY

CHIQUITA
·BANANAS

.
1

GOTT,M.D.

_

GOLDEN RIPE

I

New Yori&lt;. NY 101S6. Be sure to
mention the tide.
.DEAR DR. GOTI: I have a
P,inful spur of bone on my heel,
where the Achilles' tendon attaches.
U I have surgery, will !he spur grow
back?
· DEAR READER: Bone spurs in
or around 'tendons are common,
especially in the feet, where they can
be quite painful. Surgery is usually
· curative and permanent. However,
you have other choices, too.
Anti-inflammatory drugs (Motrin
and others) will often reduce
swelling and pain without surgery.

1

HALFTIME GIYUWAYS

~

!he Sytllplom.
· Thus, before answerina your
question, 1 (and any other doctor)
woold flrJt have to know what kind
"of " dizziness" your son experiences. Once this has been defined
more fully, suitable testing (inchld·
ing blood tests and perhaps an MRJ),
and treatment can be administered.
To give you m.ore information, 1
ani sending you a copy of my Health
Report "Ear Infections and Disorders." Other readers who would like
a copy should send $2 plus a long,
self-addressed, stiunped envelope to
P.O. Box 2017, Murray Hill Station,

OPEN MON.•SAT. 8 AM-JO PM
SUNDAYS 8 AM·10 PM
TWIN RIVERS FOODlAND

JICinS AVAIUIU IT UU FOODI.UDS

·rickets

llilmenu.
· An office eumination and a few
basic blood tests usually are enough
for a doctor to be abk 10 reusure the
patient that IIOihing's wronJ -- or
that specific tbenpy, sucb as iron
pills, may be app10priate.
On the other hand, "dizziness"
that is associated with' the unmistak,
able sensation of turning or spinning
(called . "vertigo") almost always
indicates a problem in the inner ear,
.for which a consultation with an 01&lt;&gt;laryngologist is mandatory. In such
instances, prescription druss. such
·a$ Antivert, will ordinarily control

•

IIG lEND FOODLIND

!

I

.

,.,..R H. OOTT, M.D.
• DEAJl DIL oon; My healthy
: J3-y..-old1011 bu dizzy spells that
OCCI!l' for sevcnl day• a month and
·thea diuppear. His doctor cannot
. discover lbe reason. Is this some- .
. thin1 be should be concerned about7
DEAR READER: The term
"dizziness" means different things
•10 different people. In addressing
:such a,complain~ doctors need fur~ diefinitlo~. Is ~e "dizziness" .
' Simply occasional llghtheadedness .
. oris it vertigo7
In the first instance, people com·
plain of episodic unsteadiness and

PETER

.----Stock
. picking champs-----.··-· ---:---------~.;..__ __

FOODLAND
NilE
•
Univ. Of RIO GUNDE vs. URBANA
SAT., FEB. 22, 1997 - 7:30 P.M.

r

,I

.

Tenth Grade • Becky Birchfield,
Third Grade • Jessica BuriCIOII, 'flicker. ' Ninth G!llde • Abe-Abnma,
Shannon Enrigh!. •Dani Jcnlts, Sarah Bllrleson, Michelle Green and . April Aaustln, Chris Bumeu,
*Joth Rowland; Eleventh Gnde: Luke Stinson.
Michael Francis, Laura Poll1rd,
*VandanaAgrawal, *Suzanne Clark, ·
Fourth Grade • Nalhan Beaver, Joshua Simmons and V~ 'Illylor.
Maggie Meyn, Bo Pollard, Tony Michael Blank, Andrew Holcomb,
Tenth Grade • (labrielle Bl~ek­
Staley and Lisa Jo Vollborn.
.
Kendra Queen, Matlhew Simmons · wood. Lisa Bowman, Cortney
Twelfth Grade • •Jon Hall, and Sarah Smith.
Cromlish, Jolie Graha!n. Amw
Rachel Hamrick, Nathail Smith and
Fifth Grade . Rachei ·Biackwood, Meyn, Brynn Moss, Daniel Size.
Ben Taylor.
Dianna Jarvis, Joshua 'Jarvis, Heath more and Andi-ew Williams.
Eleventh Grade • Jessica Carnes,
The following students have Massie and Crystal Taylor.
made the B Honor Roll for the first
Sixth Grade • William .Burleson, Stephanie Jenkins, Jaddy Newbold,
semester:
Ryan Carter, .Scottie Frans and Esther Simmons and Jeremy Wolfe.
TWelfth Grade • Melissa Brown,
First Grade - Daniel Kleynen, Kelsey Salisbury.
Adam Massie and Ashley Mitchell.
Seventh Grade . Andrew Micah Lanier, . Billy Miller, Lei sa
Second Grade • Zharrel Lynch, Blankenship, Gabriel Jenkins, Chad Walters and Am.ber Wolfe.
Carni Thomas and Brandon Pickens. Mourning, Eric _Pelrie and Racb~l

F8E·E.,IC

Money Orders
Wired Money
Transfers
Postage Stamps
Prepaid Phone
Cards
Utility Payments

DR.OOTr

Is teenager.
's reoccl)rring dizzy spell cause for concern?
.
..
•'Y

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E
L

l•

I

Michael Williams and *Ethan John Moran, *Lindsey Wheeler and
Young.
• Alyssa Zirille.
Third Grade • Brandon Bartee,
Sixth Grade -Deanna Bryan,
•sarah Beckley, •Vanessa Burris, Jeremy Evans, •Chelsea Gooch,
Kristi Davis, *Jacob Eldridge, John Polcyn, *Christina Taylor,
*Kelli Irwin, Joee Jarvis, *Cory •:Maria Wagner; Seventh. Grade:
Kelley, *Richard McCreedy, D. J. Michael Jenks, Joe Meyn and
Montgomery and Keith Peck.
*Ginny Miller.
Fourth Grade • Aimee Agustin,
Eighth Grade • Brad Bowman,
Aaron Beaver, Annie Carter; *Hallie • Amanda Hopkins, *Erica Massie,
Carter, Kerry Carter, Heather Cham- Adam .Stapleton and *Nathan
. berlain, Matthew Clarke, *Kaleb Willi3J!IS.
Ninth Grade ~ .
Eldridge, *Leah Hickman and *Eliz- *Meredith Clark, *Courtney Gooch,
abeth Stevens.
Abby Meyn, *Miranda Simmons,
Fifth Grade· Brody Blankenship, *Melody Webster, *Jonathan Taylor,
• Ashleigh .Greene, Tessa Haggerty, "Christen Zirille.

The o.Jiy Sentinel• , . 13

Pomeroy •Middleport, Ohio

FOODUJID

24

.Cottage

Cheese

oz.
.

"

Rotarians updated on.Early Intervention ·pro€)ram
Rita i. Fields, Meigs County's vidualized family .service plan ·
sefllice coordinator for the Early (IFSP) whi~h includes information
intervention program, ·updated the. about what your child is doing now,
Middleport-Pomeroy. Rotary Club family infortnatlon, what you want
oit Early Intervention services at the to see your child doing, c1rly inter·
. group's Monday nicht meeting at ~e · ventio11 services and the ~arne of the
.lieath pl)ilcd Metll?dist Church 10 JFSP service -coordinator. All ser·
vices are "selec~ with !he parent as
Middl~. · ..
· · Early Intervention is a federally partner and ·are offered in !he most
funde4 proJrUII adm.inistered by tbe supportivclnalli..t el\vlrof1111Cnl.
Fielda also Sllid Early Intervenstale which tequires that each countion
donates goodie bqs to local.
ty have a service coordinator.
hospitals
to be pvcn to Meip Coun- .
Services
avllilable to parents
· tor infants and toddlers (birth to 3- ty babies upon their birth. The bags
years-old) who havo special needs in &lt;:ontain infcinnalive fliers detailing ·
one or more of lbe followina areas.: the Early Intervention · prosrllllt.
cognitive (thinkina). social/behavior immunization records. devolopmenikills pbysiql dilvelopment, self- tally 1pPfVJJri11o tasks, ora1 byaihelp ~killa, IIDJUIIchF nch, vilion and development of social skills.
Club Preaident Hal Knecn called
and helrinJ, Fields e~plained.
to order.
Bach fatllil)' is entitled 10 an in!Ji· . the meetina
.

·

WAYTOOAY.
l
1·111lq.o43-5780 Eort. 1818 1
$2.99 por min. lluat INo 18""
(11191!MS.SO..

. serv-u

-Top, Trim, ·
Removal&amp;
Stump Grinding
owner:

n

FOR

•

.

..

. '.

RITAJ. FIELDS

/.

•

•

�•

Ponwror•

The Dilly Sentinel• ...... 11

NBA Cro•.worcl PU:aale

=
..............
ACROU

PHILLIP

·:

1-111~'
• ....,_.... 41

ALD!R

At.....
.,__

14Rn
Ftve v_e ry cute mil:.d pupplea
c:Nidran 10
........ 114-742·21153.'

who noad a homo -

FrH puppiH, part Autttalian
Sl'lephard, •ong &amp; ahott Mired.

Able

Avon

Repruentalivea

needed. E1rn mon8y for Chritt·
, . , billa at homefal wodt 1 -800-

Witt Do
HDUHCieanlng
MJ
Own
C1Mrwr1
&amp; KlrbJ I lJM
11p1,
.....,..,.. And ,.._C., ...........

892·8355 or :104·882·2045, Ind.

CoiNI&lt;D1o, Ot4-2!16-C7I.

Rep.

304oll75-744!i '
Nine year old. AKC R-sJ.' male
Boo10n
oxcotiont-·
ion. good ~~~~ &lt;hlklron.
llon, .. good homo, OtH82-5053.

T-.

--·

• --.

Will Worl\ln Your Homo Coring
For Elderly P.t~on 1 Dar a, 24
Hours A Dar Ao NHdod, Ot4·
3811-8783, Or 01~8748.

hou-

FI NANCIAL

""" Bo-, por1 Goldon R..., _,
30oHI7S.t80t .

Lost and Found

All homtt on tale. Free deliverr

&amp; '""P. · ·
Diajlla,. Ooublftid.. Mutt Sell
Sava Thouunda Oak Wood

HcNnooln BarboUl&amp;YIIe, 304·7311·
:1«111.

.;.;;:.::..;::;.::::.=:;:_----·1
Limited Offer! 18i7 doublewidt,
3br, 2bath, 11781 dawn, $2781
month, Froo doli•orr l ooiUp.
OniJ a1 Oakwood Ho""''· Nitro
304- 755-!1885.

Still .Loat: Large Mali' Boxer, Compuler Uaera Needed. Wotk
Brown With Black Face White Own hours. $20k to $50klrr 1·

wv.

Cheo~ weami Collar la11 81)0.348. 7tll8 11508.
Soon In Mt. H1ll, Holiday Heights

C1oillj'o AMI
271 N. Second-

Nice Z 8edroom•. S22Wa .. I Z Soli ol GoH
Mhl Down 211, N.t...... A•;•~ 1 HI $150 other •t
r.n.o::.~tl~ed, 01 4-«0· 075-5118.

Hioe hM bedtoom mobile home

M "d:ll$l:A~Oh

114o8112-4514

in Midclloporl no poll, lt4-802·

5151.

Bur or 1111. Aintlne ..:nuquea.

SnWIIWD beduacwn mobile home

1124 E. Main s-~ on R1. 12&lt;1,
Pomero,.. 11our1: M.T.W. 10:00
Lm. m 1:00 p.m., Sunday 1::00 til
o:oo p.m. Ot4·112·25:ie, Rull

lWo bodroom mobilo homo in 1.11noraviHe area, dapGoitand refer·
ncoo required, .,U lt4·802-41777

ahor 5Qm.

• .

·

Two bedroom, all electric, IWO
min out or Ru- on Now liM
Rd .. 8t4·742· 2803 or 814·742·
2421 . • '
•

&amp;VIcinity
All Yard Sain Mull Be Paid In
AdVance. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
It'll day before the ad is to run .
Sunday lldition • 2:00 p.m. Friday.
Monday edilion · tO:OO a.m. ~at·

potential from SIMI
Natn. Co. a•rd·
In open merkeL
conouucllon. (303) ~
5850.

· Pomeroy,
&amp; VIcinity .

SIIF1dlft

,IOUIICI

211nlilry ....
21 .....iltactunld
30 Journe!:.t

s.-.rct

36C0nU. .

.

New Benlc: Repo'•l Ontr 3 left,
own• llnancing available. 304·

'.
,.,. Pllll,ll~ ~·-

75S.719t .

; . If~

Rick Pearson Auction Company,
full lime auctioneer~ complete oeeu C&amp;AEfB gppgBTyNt.
auction
aarvice.
Licensed IIU Rtnlal King Conllnuea To
180,0hio &amp; Well Virginia, :104· Grow And Wan11 Qualified, Ambl·
713-5705 Or 304-n:J.S«7.
.tioua Candidates To. Join Our
C - in A P1annod Major E•· ·
pansion tn The Gallipolis Area.
90 Wanted to
College Degree Or 4 + V~tars Ot
Aboolu1t Top GoHor: Ali U.S. Sli· Retail IR. .Iautant /Managemenl
ver And Gold Colna, Prooftels, E•perience Required. High Ener·
·Diamonds. Antiq~• Jewelry, Gold gy Level And Good interpersonal
Ringo, Pra· t930 U.S. Currency, Skills A Mash Salary Baaed On
Starling, Etc. A.cquisidons JeWetry E•perienc:e. E •celfent Benelltl
• M.T.S. Coin Shop, t51 Second · And Bonus Polential . Maillfu
- . . ., Golipolt. 6t4....21142.
Resume To: Renlal King, PO Box'
703, Uaoslilon, OH 44048. Al'TN;
Clea'n li.ta Model Cart Or Hurman Reaourc:es.·Fax: 330-833Trucks, 1990 Models Or Newer, 378(.
Smith Buick Pontiac, 1eoo Ea&amp;l·
Gallipolis.
Neidld 10 Ladies To Sell Avon,

Buy

CaN 814--'-48-3358.
New Oppo~unilyl Cardinol Freight
Carrier Inc:. Ia expanding opera·
lions in .-.our afla, need drivers
lor flat bad division, mu st have
Class A -COl license &amp; 1 year
over 1t1e road e•perience. Top
Slarllng pay,, direcl daposil, sat·
tlltte communic;:ations, 40 1 K
company, paid retirement, BC18S
medical, dental &amp; vision, Ryder
program &amp; morel Cali t ·B00·220·
2421 tor an appointmefiL
POSTAL JOBS •
SWI $12.881tv, p!us benelils. For
application and 0,.m inlo..Call
t·800·25e·7808, exi·WV t27,
8am·9pm 7 days.
Sales clerk for local retail atone:
We will train the right person.
Send resume CloThe Deily Senti·
net, P.O. Box 729·39, ., 11 Co uri
S~ee!. Pomerl)y, OH 45789.

All rMI 001810 advertising in

11111-- io lltJbjoc110
the Federal Fair Hooslngkt
ot 1¥8 which makes I Illegal
to advertioe ··- ~
lrnttalton or~=·

=~~t~or.,,

=i

O!'IQin, or any lf1lenllon to
make M'f such p.efenttldl,
llmlla1lon or dllcrlmlna11on.'

This newspaper will not
Jmowlngly accapt
aciVertlllritenll tor real estate
which Ia in Yiola1ion oflhe

law. 0.. ruder~ are hOreOr

infonnerl1hat ail -ingo
adveftlle&lt;f in this ne •paper
· are available on an equal

lli!!III!II!I!!!OiliiPII"II~un..,i1y•baSI!I!Ii•l. • • •
REAL ES TATE

-31 0

I

FARM SUPPLIE S
&amp; LIVESl OCK

§I
~·

610 Farm Equipment

i

3 Bedroom hou ae. 825 '301h St.
30ol-675-e512.
3 Bodfoom. t Bath, Kil&lt;hen All·
plilmel. Anrac:tive Interior. Full

"
TRAN SPORTATIO N

Going business for sell- Second
Streel, Rt. 33 In Mason, :JO.t. 7735e5t .

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
1 112 Acre Lots Cora Mill Road
8'4-2456788
.

1 Ac:re on Crabcreek Rd. Len
lhan Sto,ooo. Make oiler. 304·
345-8705.
2 Acres wt30x40 garage &amp; 1·4170
traikr. :104·570·0007.

5 Acroo 011 01 St Rt. t60 On Kerr
Road, Close To Freeway 6 Hoa·
pita!, Gas &amp; Water Available,
6,4-...... 0116.
86 .8 Acres Walnut Township,
Galha Co. Possible Building Sites,
$35,000 080 81 4-310·211711

SERV ICES

Eldorl~ Person Has 3 Bedroom
Houatt To Share Or R8nt. 61'.4 ·

44t -0150.
Near Tuppers Plain&amp;· small tWo
bedroom house, smve, retrigera·
lor, waaherJdr~er hookUp, 11rge
i&amp;WI', $250 plus deposit, 814·985-

.

Pomeroy, 107 Pleasant Ridge, 3
bedroom, 1- 112 balh, $315 plua
deposit, call AVeninos 614·698·

~ :J04.075-t4211.

A .QrHl Opporrui'llty Check Thia
Cull II Your Not Making Atioall
. .. 110 !Hr. ll&gt;u Owe h To Your""'l
To Catil&lt;lm Toll Froo t-888·432·

6002.

'

.

rcmero)'; two bedroom, HUO,
sto\le/ rtf{igerator,' no pita, Be·
cuul~ deposit, 614·992·6886 after
5::10.
.

7Sll.
AM$TANT MANAGER/ Sli.

Ttlroe bedfoom iii Middleport,'
nice, 1400· P8f month, deposlt req·uired,, no pets; three bedr~m 'in
Pomeroy, $300 per month, dapol·
11 required, no ptts: two bldfoom
in Pomeroy, $275 per month, do·

REPRE·

SENTATIVE

·--

41Futwe!dtYL'

,,

C...,-v=•·--- !01'-----

lbe rallllldd;' tile "'!:al '!Wid'· ~
the lUCI'9CVam occilpled 117 pl.,en
below the expert ltrala? I del! So, 10
by 111 wrcethe boob, u il were, 1

TO ~ "- f'm..IN ...

.....

47 Opp D'llll "'
41C:..d'51 ,._ (pNI.)

52Chi-

PIIn

prmt' tbla deal. 11 wu1'tlpCII'tad by
~ Yfluil&amp;, trom Blealleim, In the
.oetobet lttl Issue of New Zealand

, CeLEBAI'I'Y CIPHER
.., Lull C.npw

Bridge.
South opened two clubs, showing ei·
ther' a baiaJiced hand with at least 23
high-card points or, as here, an unbal·
anced pme-.lon:e. North gave the bal·
anced positive response of two no·
• l-l.9 ...
trump. Then, over the natural
. lt'l l"'oyNU. IOOC
. tbree·heart rebid, North used two dos·
es or Blackwood. tThe second spoon·
lid ·was an "error." II you follow lour
., no-trump with live no· trump, you
·guarantee that ali four aces are held
Here, as an ace waa missing, North
should have bid the final contract not that he !mew where to go.) Finally,
wben sautb
bi six spades 10 show
·three ldnga, N
also bid six spades!
East
to thla and called for ·
the tournament director. The TD gave
East the option of accepting the bid,
but East declined to do so..Now North
had 10 change hill insuflicient,bld.
.
You or I - well, 1- wou~d have opt·
ed for six no-lrump. Then, East would
have had no trouble in doubling al)d
cashing two diamond tricks . But
aomehow North found a pass! And
when Wes! didn't lead a diamond,
South drew trumps and claimed 13
tricks: four spades, five hearts and
fourdubs. ·
Now you'W- a pair mike a slam
in a suit new!r bid naturai!y!

1!..,

K P' Z .

.

H ·YIIIJFW

XFI!PI

ZL

.IPW

Y. RUFI

BJPII

ZL

UL

"'"t:iYIIWF. ....

Z.IYZ'W

WLIIFZ.IPIK

.. 'I

.

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

1 Y I' Z

'T L N

LGI

GYIIXHYI.'

MLYPIWLI,

PLWZIP'M.

and

•

•

1'

I·';

-r-t-=.O,..::..S:.r-'j'.oTT
t-1
.

1-13

.

'

'~~:,

I~~s=~';:'~;~~~:, s~rmised
T]A c w H

":·
,.

I,

•. :· ~

·

. ..

. I work in a large offic.e and

some
w;ves st;lllhat
come
Qutworking
on the
lshortendofthe·--- ---.

0 N 0 RET

' ' .'•·I 17 I ,I 1. O
•

~

'·

One bedroom ~panment, fur·
nlahed, extra nice &amp; clean. No
pt18. Phone 30oHI75-t388.
One bedroom apartment in Pt.
Pleaoant. 01,..882-5858.
lWin Rivera Tower, ~· accepting
applications for 1br. HUD aubaid·
!zed apt. for eiHrlr and handi-

capped. EOH 304-0~5-11111.

Furnished

Rooms

•

•

~

'cOftlpleto the chuckle quoted
by filling in the "'issing · words
you develop from step No . 3 below.

STORAGE TANI&lt;S 3,00Cl Galion
Upright, Ro'n Evans Enterprises,
Jiel&lt;oon, Ohio, 1-1100· 537·9528.

t802. Ho"'!a Accord E• 4 boor, 5
110 AI
• r
"""""'
' 8(8keo,
•
' Ono
'" Own·
Illig,
Anti-Lock
er,'..Well Malnlalned. E•cellent
Coridltion; $8,000 8tH40·74t7 II
No Anaw&amp;r Plaaae L••v• Mea..,..

wa.;:ker'Qoncrete 0 ,. 1 Oft Saw
•
Wacker Rammer Compacto~.
Gravel,. Walk Behind t.!lower,
Graco Airleu Paint SlraW"er.
~~ Edger !Trencher Ombo,

550

tOP3 Cougar XA7 Load8d, Low
Mifoo, Coli Anytime, 6t4·44t·
05 9
·
·
Ford Fe111... 2 Door.
ao 000 miles. Ssp. 40 MPG, l&lt;an·
wO'bd' Casseue, New: Tirea.
Brakes&amp; E~ehauat. S2.BDD. C814)·
319-2045
t9t3 Ford Taurus .Caribbean

Block, brick, ...
pipes, wind ows, lintel., e1c. Claude Winters,
Rio Grande, OH Cali 0 t4·245·
5121 ·

460 $pi!Ce for Rent·

PUBLIC NOTICE : End 01 Year

M i
epecos
10 t8x80'o, $85 per ntonlh, .
aowor end trash included
-·2t
·
· .•
87.·.
-

Buildings, Ne•er Put. Up, With .
Biu.e prinll. 40x33X15 Was $8,310
Will liquidate For , $3,•90,
50 x90 XI 8 II St8,87u
.-. Will -:liq· ·
uidllt "for S1 0,860. Oth•r
Stralghlwalls Available. Ask For
Dave. 1·8Q0..292-0t11.

w.,

Groen 4 Doors, V·8, PW, PL.
Se.ooo Call Evenings, 814· 441 ·

...,.;;;;;;;;;;;;;-;;;:;;;;:;;;;-;:;;;;:-;,;.ICiunance Liquidation. All S1ee1
w

Pets tor Sale ·

Featuring

wv.

567?
1:-:----------1'
Ntw gas t•nkl, 1 ton
whHii

.,.02_2~...'·.,.....-'-,--,-.,.-c-..,.
Aui&gt; loans: AulD Daalor Will Ar·

·
F'
"I
E
11 v
rangeBeen
· •nan"'
ng Down
ven ·Before.
,ou
T~rnod
Avallibie For No Credit,
Bad Credit And Bankruptcy Buy·
era, Call Diane 61~·446·8172.

&amp; radiatota. 0 1 R •

Rlpl~. WV. _304-372·3833 or
8CJ0.213-t328.

SERVICES

810
.

Horne
lmprovetntnta
1'

"
f

·1

. BASEMENT .
·
WATERPROOftjG
,
Unconditional Hr.tlmo aulraniH .
Loc:al ref,r.encn Jurnlthed. Ea··
lal!liohed '975. Cali (8t-:t:O·I
0870 Or 1-800.207·05711.
,.
~~-.__ .
r
j:~"~"-;;':~'"~'"';·~·· :;-;;;;;;~ 1'
Parta And Servrc8: 'A if
Ovet 25 VIars Ef."'
I Work Gu1r1nteed,
t.tayrag, 814 ·448.!

CARS FOR StOOl Trucks , boats,
4-wheeltta, motor homea. turnl·
ture, eleclronics. compultrt ate.
by FBI. IRS. DEA . A..iial!la rour
area now. Call 1·800 ~ 51 3·4343

A Groom Shop ·· Pet Grooming.
Hydro Bath. Don
SMola. 373 Goorgn Crook Rd.
014 4411 o:!3t.

Chihuahua

Tropic- Scots· Vouch- Keenly· CLOTHES
One cutie to another. ·A successful person has more
buttons on their phone than on their CLOTHES •

wh~eia,

1
•9•3

Building

Supplies

AKC .Female

,,

(!:.......,. POL PW SR c

Rooms lor rent • Weol&lt; or """'"·
Starting at $120/mo. Goliia Hotel.
Ot4·4411-11580.
Sleeping rooms with cooking.
Alto trailer apac• on river. All
hook·Upl. Cali al1or 2:00 p.m..
304-T./:J.IiG51,1.toaonWV. "

MERCHA NDISE

ANSWERS
.

nM~: 6t4-44H2t7Aner5P.M.

posit required, nO peta. Call &amp;14·
1118?·2381 Monday thru FridiJ',
8::10 am 10 4:00 pm.

e"' S.8388

·

I

W•eka Old, Also 1 1/2 Years
Spada AKC Famale C.hlhua~ua,
8143118 0402.
'.
AI&lt;C ' Chow C'- br S11d Sorv1c:o

o1•-II!M!

PREll Labrador croljt puppiea,
'7wlli1 otd, molhtr 11 Regittertd
Lob, ...dogl. 304-075-1353.
Full blqodod Norwegian Elk·
houltd ~uppita. Call 304·075·
5e2t boloro t Oam. Uonday.frl·

Aatro·G•apll

dly, anytimoon - ·

·-.

Ll

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "An II a aerie&amp; of controlled 111P1takea
WiOOi*ollid '*"*WI tl I · - (C PC ilia ....) Jedd IIIWIII

L

450

Nicu 2br: basement, garage,
available F&amp;b. 10th, relerencea &amp;
dopooi\ No Petsl304-175-5102.

AVON I All A'r eas I Shirley

........
•eon··-

410 Houses for Rent

3504.

HeJpWanted

••

R ENTAL S

312 Wezgal 3 Bedrooms, Pomeroy Area, $3501Mo., Depos1t Re·
quirod, 5t3-57H539.

EMPLOYI.~E NT

.....

"'

tlll51
GOVT FORECLOSED Homos
For Pennies On $1 Delinquent
Tax, Repo'a, REO's. Your Aru.
Toll Froo (t) II00·2tfl.9000 Ext
H-2814 F.or CUrrent Utlings.

.

001.

43-

44 Sand !!ani

r '

map. 81 ..!113-a!MS.

3 Bedroom house for rent on Haven Heights in New Haven. 304·
882·21117.

882·5087. .

. a w.eo-t

'

"'"' .

Saverai'J.acre p.~rcela
remote. beauliful land ; Meigs
County, Scipio Township. SR 692
(Ju&amp;l oH SR 143). Owner financ1ng.

Uhfifiahft Basement. 1 Cat Ga·
rage. NN vinyl Siding I Hut
Pump. Cia, Sc~ooio. (014)·441 ·

HCIUtt for stio in ·Rutland, 6t4·

;.

-1--+-+--1

"'"'""1/..5'

~~~---~---J 11500 per acre. Call for good

Homes for Sale

31DM:.~

411T} 2 ........

l:!ll'---dla1,"""" ~ pme fnmt ..~~1---1

340 Buslneu and
Bulldrngs
IIANAOEMENT TRAINEE

·w:"
• . Bile

.~,.;. ....., ""tlliJIIItW bridg'e

BORN LOSER
fi~ BEf.l\lr&lt;io '''ft\1(£5 47""

•' .

''
I

' .
!

.

211-dlir
27 Flutwlng

From the .real wPrtd·

Why Rant? lmmac:ulale 2 Bed·
rooms , 1 Bath, Banks Appraised
Approved To Finance, ·The Firal
$0,000T-II. 3114-1311-12115.

'

_.,
..,...,...
...,.,A.... 2324 ,..,.....
Madlcr'
25 ArcMIICI

220..-·

I 77 diDn
10An=hllact

. 32-blrd

t=""r bath, 1110/mo. 304-7115-

1-77 El'it 138 304-372-3400

CUITOME~ SERVICE

l:='Duvlll

' lai~

Opiuiqlelid: • 10

West Ripley Homes
New, Used, Canmaricel, Mod

110

11
11Geefof . . . .
21 -polloi

tiiiiOT ...
011 Tit' WAY! '

lor Millo.

5837.

Fllglilina bird

A lUST

Very nice 1885 14.1170 wilh 2
baths. Largo Island kii&lt;Mn wllh
polo door. Cal 014·385-8112t alii

Wanted To Buy : little Tykea
Kltcnen Set, Workshop,' Playhouse, Poulbl8 Any Other Lltde
T~ke ·Toyl, Please Call 814·245-

7

IT--

·Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

Tn Rolund llpodall 1887 Dou·
bl-lde, 3br, 2 bath, $1,048
down, S2791mo, free delivery &amp;
MI·Up. Only II Oakwood Homoo,
Nitro WI/. 304-755-5885.

Wanted To Buy : Driving Horaea
Slandard BI'Hdl Preferred. Dan
Hershberger, 4788 Pattiot Road.
Cornltf' Of 1411 &amp; Plltiot Road, In
Cadmlo.

.:=:.-.. ·=!:•• .

• 7 2

cu:••

1 CMIIIon

'

7115-1185.

Wanted To Buy : Antiques - Furniture, 814-4-46· 7812.

g,•:,;t_;..

• 32 -tile-?
2 APP33 LlllcaPn or Ford 3 " 111100.1
34CU: : ~··· 4"""' .......

• I

Sacrtb

blue

31

9714
t A KI I

DOWN

• A KJ

•uuat 11H 5 -display made! Dou·
blawidtL $$$SAVE$$$ Froo ott·
up &amp; deliver,., free central air.
O..kwaod Homes NilrcJ,· WV. 30~

Top dollar- antiques, furniture,
gloll, china. clocks, gold, oilvor,
coins, watchel, eatares. old atone
jafa, old
&amp; white dishea,. old
wood bOJiet. milk bOttle&amp;, Melga
Count~ · Advertiaement, Osby
Mar1in, 814·992·744'1 .

.

· 'Z'I lloul'liful C1Y

• A K 73
• K Q J 10 5

NEW! Bank Ropo'a, O.nor II·
nancing avalablel 1171/mo. Fr"
- y &amp; 181-u;&gt;.:J04.75!H18t. ·

· Middleport

.

-

14 Scon:h

11-AIIn-

r::
:...........
~ _,
:-~.,..,~::&amp;.,

• 10 8 5 2

Mooldor.S.Udl¥ •o:oo.e:oo.

New 14xl0, 2 or 3 bedtDDn" wllh

urday.

713-5033. I

Pna ·

llut

t754S '
• 10 I I 6

N. . t4KIO Only make 2 par·
,.,.. &amp; , _ . . . n o - t a l ·
tet 4 yearl. kH lll·up &amp; deliV.
ery. 304-755-5885.

Gallipolis

J &amp; 0'1 Auto Parts. Buying 111vaae vehicles. Selling part&amp;. 304-

I!Mrt'?ll

20K p w'a

•9. z

440 ·Apll blllntl
· fOr Rent

· 110 I lolling

. • Q J 4

eat
• t .&amp;

Tho Plddlot't PI- Andquo &amp;
Crall Mali, 4011Main SlrHl Pl.
Piouanl, WV, 304·075-4795.

1

. • Al

11'aalloy

---·

•

Ctwlll

11 Ofllnfof.._ go. PI . f

t Q J ' IO 2
• Q 5 ~ ~- .

--·

Yard Sale

., Jweru•.

•

7

.,.;~ will

EwroiQL

Lemley's Auclion .Service, leslie
Lemley, AuCIIoneer. Houaehald,
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nate ·begin· ·work on ·balanced budget a

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• ··. WASfllNOtoN (AP) .,.... The mefttprogram&amp;pd,eliminateamajor · DaschleandotberSenateDcmbc· exempllnsthelnlltfundframbudpt
· : ; ..... js moving fllfWIId on a bel· concern about the balanced budget raiS have offered their own version of c;ilculllioas would require budpt ·
: · illced budset COIIIillllicinll amend· amendment
the amendment thai would exempt writen to find hundreds of billions in
: !Mnt while House lliP,Ubli~l try to
·President Clinton, .in a letter to the Social Se&lt;;urily trust fund fram . new aavinjs Of revenues.
• ·.t*I'Y -""'ident Clinton's claim thai Senate Democratic leader Tom .budget b!ilancing calculations.
Sill Senate Republicans. in a let·
: )~put Scx!lil Security recipiei\IS Duchle, t&gt;-S.D,. relwed
Republicans have · accused tet to Clintoa Wednesday, said dull if ·
: .·ll.rilk of loaiiiJ their benefill.. ·
day, voil:ed stronJ dpposition to the DemocraiS of us ina scare ractics he wanllto exclude Social Security
-~ .: •.' The Senile Jlldici.Y Committee amendment, aayif!.l! . it "could pose similar to their election campaip ' fram the balancecl b!ldpi arDeftd.
• • i( set to 'vote today on the Republi· grave risks to the ~ial Securily sys- !l'sertion~ that RA:Jiublicans were try· ment, he IIhould reflect that in hilspe: c.n..led,aeuure; Senate Joint Rcso- tem." · ·
.
. mg to kill Med1c8JC, and say the . cifiC budget proposals. "It would bo
:: , Ju.lion
1, thai would constibl~onally budget
Clintoa wrole}{lllt in the event thai Democratic version is merely an helpful for us to know whll llldi·
~~a balanced buclgeL ·
balancinj,requiremenll can' t attempt to undercut their push for a tlonal deficit reduction initiatives
yourecommendinQfdertocovcrthe
• . ~~ In the House. members of. the · bo 'met, "dis~ment of Social constitutional amendment.
~ 1-994 RbpubUc811 freshman clan .-e Security checJ? 'could cease ·or.
Both the administration and OOP ltqer defiCit."lhey wrole.
In 1995, the OOP version pa11ecl
: IJitrod~ng ~Jialation they say will unelected judge5_F.ould redUce bone' propqsals for balancing the budget by
: plolect•the Soeial'Securily UUII fund fits to comply wlih this constitution· 2002 consider the trust fund as a the House but in the Senate failed by
:'flc!m. llein1 used fllf (ICher govern· almandate." '" .
.
· source of general revenue, and jUstonevote,ofJCI!inlthCtwo-thinls
':II,

majority neoded for constitutional
amendmcnll. 11111 ·time, bod! the
House ~ Senate voces, cxpocted in
llle Februlry, are repnled 11 1011ups.
Selllle · Republican le8den say
they have 68 v - - one more lhan
neoded - with all $5 llepublicaas,
nine Democnta who voted fw it previously and four Dernoc:ntic liCshwho pledpd
f« an
amendment during their election
campaipa. The vote could 111m on
whether those four, including Judi· ·
ciary Committee member . Son.
Robert Thrricelli, 0-NJ., t.ck the
Rcpublicanversioa.
· .
A constillltional amendment

Wednes·

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. enter nears comp.etl
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·::for bridge ·
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. . Ari ;natilt~' Of ilie ltale's IJri!lps
rw 'l'ir-' PG!~,. .. . . rated "Pool'" .
.. or~ by '''f'!"'!D!'· A "poor"l'llt• 'l...,

:. orina..-,., .~·
is lhowi"l sipsdoliirioratioa crum·
~

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· : "It il ironic thai many of the coun-

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...... C&amp;lllle played, wltiJ; ......

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· musleeb aod

•f.io compl8in about !he level of fun!~·

in1 they receive from us," said Picter
• , y.'ykolf, a spokesman for1he Ohio
; · : ·;
(:cll:dlllnd oil pap 3

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aalcl dl!tt the facllty wll p
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wltlle provitllllc u oub ±taal
tltrouali ·lhe variaUI IICtltlda

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o
hid!J~Senate
·panel
·
f
avors
bill
to
• ~~· ~ IA1islalure adopt a
'* ' · ·
·
··
·

: cieen Air AcL .
· ·
· : ··~ • The /re&amp;Oiutioa, which the corn- ,
- :~~5-2 on Wcdnes: •clay, woUld ask COngress to provj!le
: ) tewled'iJ!fonnation lbout the costs ·
: of ~f9n)i~110111~ clean air stan. • dildl It(, U.S. Environmental Pro:~ ~'seney expeciS to adopt thi•

,.

elimtf;late medical msrijuana·use ·

.
l~t
.
COLUMBUS'•(AP) ,- "n Ohio
Sena1e Sl!bcom.rtiilcc heard testitilony on how marij...,a helps ease the
suffering qf ~AIDS and multi·
pie sclerosis patl,nts, then recornmended approval~f a bill to drop
medical use as a \lefense for mari·
•'Jelil: '
juana use.
"
La~ and some consu~r
Several Ohjoanf julfering from a
~~fea, . tha! the new ride$ ·will · variety of ailmepl$' tP!d I!Je five;'ll!iad to 'In qxpan~!)n. of Ohio's trou- mem\ler panel on ,Wednesday thaf
·~ ~ emissions ~atins pro- smoking 91' eliti!ll marijuana helps
;p, kilown 11 "B-eheck."
their conditions. 1,:
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ya· · .
They bppose leaislation that
•
.
would eliminllle a
in Ohio
·p .
on of nuclear law allowing
" of marijua:.:.,.
,· .. .. d
. Untp aftea
. na for medical
for those
·
who have a·
wri~ten reci;·: (X)tUMBUS (AP) - ·An Ohio 'am
. ~ndation. ,

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· COLUMBUS
. - Nation·
~ ,- ,TIMI Seniti: Bileru ~atural , wide Mutual
''
is facins
:-~ 'Inc! ~vinm~nt Com- . federal .sauliny ancl , '
in at
•tiiiiteo .,.,.oved the delay Wednes· , leas! seven •._.over
that the
,'~ on l $-2 Vote.
,
company told ill
10 avoid
.:: · ~Ohio, huii&amp;I'IOdtobulldadlllllP · i~nJ l)omeQwners. in minority
•J.t abcNt 2.25 million cubicfect of ne1ahborhoods.
,
.
, ~~~ve Waste collected . .. The Justice~.
· _ It is lookl~s
~the l&amp;llel for 20 yem. No site mto whether tbe'nlllon:tlli.lh-1~
. Ja ,tJ!~ to bo opened. priw to PI~ ~ cuual~ qns'!"'r VIola!·
::IQ!l5. ...
. eel avd nJhts.laws..
.
''" 'The~mci-lllll:ktht;aelecAt 1cut ltl Nalionwicle agenll
;tiallilelfroiiiSeptem· '
they ·wereoftOid"not to 'do
.. ..
'lnllf •l991,aMa.d)l999.
~i~1n~011 . ~Where
=~ u.J, eHcutiYI diJector of liiUIOI'IlteS ~ !lithe ,nUijbrity. ·
'lite ()hti,~,f,.em Jtadi011etive
~ ~~lll.ta A~;Cuae lhl! jna111:11r of
.. . . ~. laid tbO aelectioa . reftlsins to Write po)lc;lii oa the ·
- W.. -,red back .bec;..,.. the buis of I'll!» or' reaidence, in ~lif- ' Wll sill taC!flllu behiad income .... They ~ &lt;filed II
· t:fi ..,.._ '
Ohio ICelllllC~Pen_..ylvanla,
,·i:q ·.Thl mv..- ~ins. tho lite. Michipn,
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~,
. ~ filt"!!oei 1iow P, to tho 1'111 Senate. . ~ticut. . ·
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"I'll tell you lhc political realities
mended the lesi~alion. !O t~·Senate · of this bill," said Sen. Jeffrey D.
Jlidiciary Committee where' another . Johnson. 0-Cievcland. "I don't think ·
heating will be held next Wed~sday. you'll be able to sell this affinnll!vc
"I believe these people 8JC beina ·defense, but I'd be willinc to look at
siJlCere. I want to l)ear from physi· · . how we can help people with a legitcians.who oppose ·this," Sen, Louis imate need for marijuana."
'
W. Blessing Jr., committee chairman
·
and sponsor o~ lhc lcsislation, said
Led by Attorney General Betty
afterward.
. ·
·
Montgon;ery,lawmakerure tryinsto
Blessing, aCini;in~ Republican, close a loophole inadvertently creal·
and other ~ubcomrnitrec members eel last year when the defense fllf
said lhcy were concerned about res· • m.ijuana usc was included in 1
ulation.
.
l,ooo.p!ua paae overhaul of Ohio's
However, because marijua,na is crimiJi.al senteMinssuidcliries.
classified by the federaiiOVemmcnt " Luceillc Fleming, director of the
as an illegal drus. it cannot be leaal· Ohio De.,..mcnt of Alcohol and
ly prescribed by physicians, so few, Drui Addi4;tion Services, te5tified fllf
if any, will ~mmcnd its use.
the mOiaure. .
.

Insurance fa~log

'lpdW.., Iowa, .Minnesota,

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fed~ral scrutiny·,.

Nationwide spokesman John
Millen said Wednesday thai company executives have met with Jua!icc
Department officials aboUt the com·
plaints for several months.
Millen said tidlininJ. is qainll
company policy. He said Nltionwide
is working on a plan to increase busi-·
ness in urban neiahbodioods. but nilt
~~ of the Justice Deplrtment
mqumes.

~lpklps_uraaceNewsServJCe,baMd .

In OldWICk NJ.
.
The Natil!nal Fair Holllill
AI
. I'~~nee, .a "'·""'-'
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do a betulr job back home than we
can da in Columbus," Michlcl H.
Cochran. the associ ilion's cxccutivo
director, said Wednesday.
Cochran said bi1-eity officials
and developers ~cd reasonable

.Coc:f~An ·llllid ' ·
~....t\iltit!~Ji,iti•illiii
HIII!IC hy ttcp.. .
vcnioa has beallt

R-Mainovillo, tho
have a '"leu
introduc:cd in the
Robert

unempIoymen
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to revise

time claims for jolllcss benefits
Nationwide's urban uridc;writing inc:roued &amp;)' ·10,000 lut week, the
policicssince 1991.
.
-.d lllraiJIII jump followiiiJ the
The lf!li!P has found that people s*'*' drop in,six mmths.
in white neiahborhoods received bel·
Tile Labar Depwtn- said
ter COYer&amp;JC and' lower rates .... thll wJiclliona for uiiCinploya
homeowners in black areas. said i-totaledaaeuonallyadj
Shanna ·Srnid!, the aJilance's c•eeu- eel .3$1,000, hiJhest since 366,
live director.
diD'I"Ithe week ended Jan; 4.
.
"They wrote'OutZIPcodea ~
Now claims shot up by 20.000 to
~~~:•. lllowedSm""
.~ ~
. 34111 t'P.l,!!"!.:.'r._..
_ weekhadendedex~
UOAU•-. ....
uuu
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. Yf#l· ·
declile lut week. Aft«
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, tiJe biJIIII drop
O.V. r.mnw, llllior. •·Jft11~·-siM•W11111r.' ·""
dent for !he Allianlie of,~
Aulylll hiYI aarilluted 111!110 .
llilunra.lald illelllllllller
the \llllllllit)&gt; to ,e~orelld psoblns ·
plaina facitll J'oll;iio.wlde is ,.... atljulliq tbi dMa for I I 1 Ill Ylfi.
tlwly-IJQIIIiilaiqtlte% .rioat.Sotnealtoconlllitd'!-CIIII'IIIt Now
ny ......
_
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left! tellecta 1 ruhiiii-'•
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,._ ..., llb,or PuiiiD
!*iciN. ·. ·
JllllitrAIL
,tile

~t:;e~~=:,.~finn-or
eraseno_}!,~~i~n ~
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denr tha! ~ agency IS.IBvatll$411iiiJ
Nat1onw1de. News of the probe fi~ reported hast~~ b): lost

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•&gt;' d&gt;t.UMBUS (Ar)- The Senate
"

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other PI'Oinm.,

larae ldkhai, two daa rooalla,

i ·t.commends.
a

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:;b:al fundin1 and yet they are content

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of
l!lc
The sc:hooJ Wll
whel\l P1110111 .t Whittemore
'Inc. of Rye Brook, N:Y.• w11111 to ealiolllhltlllip
build a Sl .l billioa pulp inill:
favored over
. "Yfhcn Ashton wu bu1lt, we , "It olr;lously
cxpn:s&amp;ed thai it had to do with lhc Williams said.
.. ,
pulp mill," said Shirley ,Ouc, a Jllr·
Assiltut - ~ ·Mllsr ·
cnt of a former Sunnyside student. said he did not nail tho
·"People lhoulb~ we ~en: craz&gt;: and -· Stile Drl~l.a.tJ ~· Ollb .
we could not set our hands on docu· woman ... Dit:klil- 'liild ' . .
menII to prove il.
County ac:hool olficiali i ,., W
·•we had a Pollyanna view that planned a new achooll!d9ft!.-..
everyone would always do w~'s adialolucwidiPidUipl;.~
best for the children," . she said. ·
"We fcltlhal il
hill.,._
"U1fonunucly, that'' not true."
Sunnyside Mlhool ,1o•·lklllliW
Last week, !he company said it rorthe~1:~-~=r-~:1::
was postponins indefinitely the pro- the
·jcct-Jhat. wou141 employ 600 pcoplc a1 inllln
Apple Orovc in Mason County. But
Phillips
ThcOIZCII!; .
sllite R:IUiaton said they continue to
proccpthe .:ompeny 's pollution per· Phillips tlltoulh •
rna1ion Act '-it. ·
mit IJIPI ications.

countiu haYI ~ a·$S tax.

..... .

• ;·-- • ··'! '

_..
llins buclPtlian
!hit funds
"Under ~this=·=~~~==;
budJel
would be

the closure of a aehool near.the silO
for a pt•ipl)led pulp mill prove the
school bulklinJ authDrity is a political tool,- MalOn County resl·
. denll say.
The School BuildinJ Authority
votcclurlier lhil decade to CCIIIIOlidlte SWift11ide IIIII ~ 61emeit. achpols ipto AshliJI; llleftl!li'*!;

-·-; J!17.4 .ii)illion f~Jf bridge r~ra

,.

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CHAIU.ES10N, W.va. (AP) - ,
Tho 1t11e development oft"JCe's role in

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..~p Ollio c(llln!ies have taken full
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thai eoul~ ~ae an extra

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