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                  <text>•
•

Ohio Lottery

Purdue
outlasts
Ohio State

Pick 3:
364
Pick 4:

0418
Super Lotto:

Partly cloudy tonight,
low In the 20a. Friday,
partly cloudy, high In the
~.
.

22-24-26-33-39-46

Sports on Page 6

Kicker:

44-1-1-8-5

•
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· 'Vol, 47, NO. 1114
'}
·01187, Ohio V.lley Publlahlng Compon,;

Pomeroy·Middl~port, Ohio, Thursday, February 6, 1997

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2 Sectlone, 12 hgll, 3 5 A O.nnett Co. NIWII31PIF'

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97 5·10

2~WH

.Meigs County Humane SocietY reorganizes
,Jiy CHARLENE HOEFLICH . son.
.
' .Sentinel Nawa Staff • .
cm0 1r,hovsersy over the past several together toward what is in the ani00
to Waitt, the· new· II·
.
·mals' best 1'nterests," sa1'd McLead..
According
The Me·1'gs C 1 HJ. · s ·
be
.ely ch
.
oun
Y umane OCI· fllem r board "reflects the ·general
McLead
.
said
that
many
of
the
The new board at the reorganizad 1 ad h'
d d fi
. ~&gt;oals ange
· 1meeting
· reaffitnned Its
· suppm't
d ob'e t'eiS 1p anth e med . membership's endorsement of the members either resigned or became uona
.., ti an held lee 1ves at e annua1 new directions the society plans to inactive last spring due to l1't1'gat1'on o f PUP, accord'mg to wail!.
mee ng
·recent1Y·· at the Thrift take." ·
.
which was pending against the soci·
She reponed that work has starlShoppe iii Middlepon.
She •said that -the new board is ety. She added that after she and the
d
· N
ffi
1
e on the pound upgrade and that.it
.
ew o tceli e ected were Alden interested in renewing past projects prior board, consisting of. Hat eI will include the construction of a
~aiu, President; (inda Foreman, a and pursuing new ones. .
Sprag'ue, SharaMcl..ead,SharonRus- pavt.,,.1on-type buildin• over the· old
,
oonner cruelty investigator for the
"The Pound Upgrade Pro;ect · se.II and Keith Mcl..ead, "got every. ' · • of runs, and
the add 111on
MCHS , vice president; Rita Lewis, (PUP), organized to upgrade 'and thing resolved .... .they wanted to structure,
11
'd'
·
eventua y s1 1ng and a ventilation
.i:harter mem ber an'd fonni:r officer, improve the county pound, was ini' come back in and take over."
system.
treasu
d Ell R'' 1 ·
· d · · II
d MCHS
·
•
rer; an
en loe,, ongttme . ttate ongma Y un cr
aus·
As for the annual meeting,
"We attribute the success of PUP
. volunteer at the Thrift Shoppe, ·sec- - piees but later opposed by .the previ- · Mcl..ead said .a dispute arose as-to . to ·8 good-t'at't'-11 effon on the pan of
tetary ·
· b rd
·
ous oa which has been operating · ,whll were active members ~nd . who different-grouj&gt;S working togeth~r." .
: Elected to serve. on the board of (the MCHS) in the past nine months," were not, and who was ehgtble to commented the new MCHS presidirectors with the new officers were said Waitt
vote. "Those who wanted to add 'dent.
. ..
.
. llorothy Davis, Tom Dooley, Nonga
A statement from Sharon McLc~d. board members had the numbers,."
The PUP Fund includes donations
"'obens• Fred Hofliman, Charics Ri'te, 1mme
·
d'tate past prest'de nt. m
· d'1catcd · s~,said. .
·
"'
.
.·
from
the Meigs County Commis:Aiice Wolfe, and Bernadette Ander- that the MCHS has been m a state of
1JUSt Wish everyone could work sioners, concerned residents, and

°

By MARTIN CRUTSINGER

WASHINGTON · - President
Clinton sent'Congress today a J1.69
Jrillion spending plan that cuts taxes
.for the middle class, provides billions
' of dollars to upgrade educat1ori and
· .still claiflls balance in 2002. A key
· ;Republicarrsaid it wasn't a bold step,
. :but perhaps a first step toward .a bal: ,anced budget
':''' Balancing. \lie budJei .after tl!ree
'ilcc.i'4es ofl'ed:ih~' istl\e ~liP' priotiiy
: ofCiinton 's secon~· tenn, and he por. .trayed
. . his .plan
. as a.good-.faith offer

• Y·&amp; ENGINE
•

·Man sentenced on .
·$ex, assault counts
•

.

• A Reedsville man charged with
,sexually abusing hjs daughter was
._Sentenced in Meigs County Coun on
Wednesday.
.
: • Mic~el Pooler pleaded guilty to
.three-. counts of assault and three
.~ounts or'sexual imPosition a~ was
~ntenced to two years in prison. He
also ordered to undergo special
..:Qunseling for sexual offenders.
: According to Prosecutinl! Attor·
~Y Johit R. Lentes, one of Pooler's
'daupters reponed the cfime to ·his
office, and maintained that she had
:l!een sexually abused for approxi·
'l!lately (0 years. ,
.
.
' • Poo
. ler, who was re""""'nted by
pubtill defender Steve
will be
tl)ll!iponed to Orient Reception-Cen·
· t• ·
.,_,.,.., "
.. :r ·....;
·11

.was

su;;;.

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Building program contract documents as completed by Vargo. Ca.'sady, Ingham. an4· Gihbs were :
. approved in special session of the
Eastern Local Board of Education :
·:
Tuesday ~ight.
1llc document.• will nuw he sub- •
mined to th.~ Ohio pcpanment of :
Education, DcfiClnme.\lt -nf Building :
~'~l~tanc~ , and \he ~panmcnt of :
Cohlmercc Jor lin;il apprpv~l. · ··
:
The fuvlcw pnlecss sl)imld take ;
about thr~c tn four weeks. said Deryl :
Wells, superintendent. He indicated •
that the project should he r.;ady Ill he :
advcniscd for hid in M:orch with bids :
to be received in citrly ApriJ:
. :
. · Ba.'ed nn that schedule. '\Yell sai,d. :
it is hoped that conslruc.rinn can hcgin ·:
__s&lt;~mctimc in May.
.
·:
Plans call i(&gt;r an $K . ~9 million_•

workers put on their program In the form of a
puppet show before the student~- The program will also be held in other county elementary schools.
. .

-L ocal youngsters target
of .wei/ness program
·
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.,

i:ouR BY TWO - Youngsters at Syracuea
Elementary School were taught Wednesday
afternoon thatlhttlr younger albllnga need tour
Immunizations by age 2 as part of 11 HeahhCorps program at the school. HaalthCorps ·

County, was honored witli an official ·
Senate resolution form Senate Minority leader Ben Espy, D-Columbus. As
Espy presented the res_olution t\)
Long, he praised fonncr Senator for
his practical law experience and hard
work. ·"Jan. We hate to sec you go
because every day you spent here vou
.
spent working eKtremely hard."
: new~st senator.
Other Senators fonn both political
·: From the foot of the speaker's ros: !rum on . the Ooor of the newly panics then followed suit risirrg to
Carleton School in Syracuse at a lat: restored Senate chamher, Long swore . praise Long, with several mentioning By JIM FREEMAN
· ~ r date.
: in Shoomakerduring the Senate's full his thoughtful-quiet spoken manner, Sentlnel News Staff
Prolccting youngster rrom preThe first part l1f the prugram
· session: on Wednesday. "It was spe- dry sense of humor and hard labor on
vcntahle
diseases
and
from
acciden·
employs
a puppet show. Four hy
cial because Jan Michael Long was · behalf of his constituency. For his
: doing the swearing in." said the pari.· Long kept his rcm81'ks brief tal poisoping wus the goal of a pro- Two.
The show cncnu·ra~cs yuungslcrs
· Bourneville Democrat. who served ·thanking· his colfeagues, stafT mem- gram at Syracuse Elementary School
Wednesday
afternoon
presented
hy
.
tn
help remind their parents thm
: 14 years in the Ohio House before bers. family and media mqmbcrs.for
the
HealthCorps
project.
younger
siblings need four vaccinu: ascending to the senate. "It was real - their .suppon during his 10-ycar leg·
HealthCorps
is
sponsored
hy
the
tions
hy
age
2.
· ·
•
: ly a special' moment of tmnsition, but islativc career.
1
Children watching the puppet
Newly .sworn-in State S,c'nator Ohio U~ivcrsity College or Osten• the process mo•es on." During the
:(cremony. whicti occurred minutes Michae.l, Shoemaker · had scarcely pathic Medicine's Community Scr- sh~lw lctirn hoW many viSits lo lhc
after the scna;tc voted unanimously to heard his new title of Senator when viCe, Rural Action. thc.Athcns Coun- doctor that a hahy must make in order
_itcccpt Long's resignation. Shoc- a more apt phra,;c could have applied: 'ty Dcpunment of Human Services. 10 be fully immunized against polio.
Tri-County Mental Health and Coun~ measles. diphtheria and mumps. and
··maker wa.• Onnked by a dozen fami- Kingmaker.
:ty members including his wife, Vic
With the Ohio Senate Democrat- seling . Health Recovery . Services learn the hasic cnnccpt uf _immu;ki, who held the bible used in the ic caucus deadlocked at live 'votes and Planned Parenthood of Southeast · · nizations.
"Bahics got to get thci.r four hy 2,"
apiece in lhcir dccisiun .on·•whn to · Ohio.
·inauguration.
HealthCi&gt;rps workers conducted nne song goes. "Make sure mum and
And while the ceremony Wll$ a· name to the Senate's 33rd District:
: new beginning for Shoemaker, who Shoemaker was forced into the sticky the program in Pumcroy, Syrucuse. · dad know too.''
. Afterwards, children were visited
:along with his (ather, Myrl. had kept situation of casting the deciding vote. Letan Falls and Racine Wednesday
A.•
expected:
Shoemaker
chose
and
at
Salishury.
Chester.
Solem
in
their clhssmoms for the poison pre·
·the 91 st District Seat in the family's
' bands for 38 years.' it seemingly State Representative Rohen liagan Ccnicr and Rutland today. The pro- . vcntion program, pr\)vided through
. :marked the end of Long's legislative for the Youngstown area scat over gram w1ll he held at Middlepon. liar· the Central Ohio Poison Center ·toriner Sen . Harry Mcshcl . T~c scat riSI)nville. Riverview and Tuppers part of Culumbus: Children's Hospi·
· ) taroor.
·
had
opened because S~n . Joseph Plains elementary. schools and at taL
&lt; The Circleville Democrat. who is
Vukovich
stepped
down
Wednesday
· ~tepping down to become a Juve..nileiProbate Coun Judge in Pickaway · to become an appellate court 'judge.·
: By AARON' MARSHALL;
. :Special to lhtt Sentinel .
COLUMBUS- Clearly marking a
:changing of t)lc southern Ohio pol it·
: ical guard, outgoing .17th District
:: Ohio S,enator Jan Michael Long
· ~wore· in fonner 91st District Rep.
·: ~ichael Shoemaker as the, districl

97 S~1 '(f"4·WHE

Eastern
board OKs
building
contract
documents

to Republicans to achievi,- that.
"I urge Congress to help me fin· ish the job and balance the budget by
2002- giving the American people ·
the balanced budget they deserve,"
the president said in his budget message. ·
·
Under the president's spendigg
· blueprint, the d&lt;:ficit wilT rise this
y~ar, And nearly two:thirds of !he
$388 'billio"' .in de.ficit savings CJ!n·
!On envisions wilt ··njlt&lt; oecur "Unti~
' 2001 and 2002. after · ire ,bas left
office. .· , : ·" .
~- . .
·
Coiltlnped ot;a PiP 3

:Shoeroaker·s worn irt
,:as 17th District Senator

}~~- t,_:·~w:

"there is clearly a need for more than ·
one shelter In ihe county."
· She described the Pound Upgrade.
Project as a step toward "s.igniftcantly improving the situation fc:ir the
dogs .. a necessary shon-tcnn solution, but not a long-term one.''
.
· Named new manager of the Thrift
Shoppc wa.' Dorothy Da~is, who will '
be a.'Sistcd l)y longtime volunteers. ·
Nonga Robens. Ellen Rife. and oth- ·
er members. Waite reponed that a ·
grand reopening o[ the Thrift Shoppe
is hcing planned. ·
·
· Dorothea Fisher. founder of the '
group. will he returning to work on ·
.The membership will also orgathe reorgani1.cd spay and neuter pro·
ni-ze a grant-writing committee to. gram and will he assisted by Rita
work on funding for a-society-operDavis. Waiti reported.
ated ~og shelter, since, she said.•.

President Clinton
!lends .$1.69 trillion
:proposal to Congress
.AP Economics Wrltar

,

.
county organizations. \IS well as out&lt; d.
o f -state donors and •ranl-aun
n'l•
•
"
agepcies. Waitt commended the commissioners andProsecutin• Auorney
John Lentes, legal advisor," for rnov· ~
mg orward on the upgrading of the
facility.
'
Waitt said that the .new board
plans to work wt' th grant agenc1·es and
·
do. nors on the establishment of ·a cat
shelter, and with the dog warden, Bill
Dye,-to establish a· formal adoption
. program which would include
·
. required spaying and neutering of
ado. pted animals . .

: v . which will he renovated as a part of ;

the project.
' •
In other maucrs. the board ••
'approved:
:
-- a rcsnlutio~ granting eighth :
grade
students permission to take the •
.
ninth
grade
proficiency test in March:
The program is designed to teach'
·
approved
a twn-yCar contract
children and adults how to spot' poisuns. p&lt;,is,m-pnx&gt;f their surroundings · with the Ea"em Local Education
and what io do in case ol' accidental Association ;
-- aprrovcd a three year cuncract
· poisonings.
"
with
the Eastern Lcacal Chapter 44H
The program fcacuses largely o~
"preny" poisnns. those that resemble of the Ohin Association of Public •
.:
h:mnless products. driQks or candy. School Employees;
..
adopted
salary
schedules
for
six
:
Children were shown a variety of
:
items . inclu~ing son drinks, candy administrative assistants.
untl C4KJking product:\ t~at hear an
.

~m: anny

rcscmhlancc to some com-

mon household items that cuuld he
Uungcnlus tn _children if ingeSted.
Yt•ungstcrs were l41ld that cleaning
mutcrials and other poison.&lt;should he
kept up -high oul of reach of young

children.
, HculthCurps is one or rive projects
nut oft he Appalachian Access AmcriCorps Program. The purpose uf this
project is. ln improVe access lo healthcare information and services in
Athens, Hocking, Mcigs .and Vinton
counties.

.c!IY _MICHAEL ' FLE~AN
Associated Pre11 Wiiter

'SANTA MONICA, Calif. - The

O.J. Simpson civil trial shifts today
to the punitive damages phase, when
the jury decides whether to heap
more money on top of the $8.5 mil·
lion "it already awar&lt;jed.

The plaiittiUs intend to argue for
millions mcirc (n punish Simpson for
the 1994 sla,hing deaths of ex-wife
Nicole Brown Simpson · and her
friend Ronald Goldm,n. Tho defense
was expected to plead lor monetary_
mercy.
'
This pan of the trial will comh1nc

snaring rhcwric ahoutjusticc with dry
testimony ah&lt;out :assets and liahilities.
At lettst four lawyers and two tinancial witnesses will speak to jurors;
testimony was expecte-d to last u[i tu
three days.
Among the mos.t important issues
is how much money Simpson nctu-

JObleSS. benefit claims down b{12,000

'

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No one hurt in fire

Middlepon and Pnmcrny vol- •:
untcer lircfightcrs responded tn a : ·
house lire at 94Eim Street, Mid- •
dleport, at 4:28 this morning.
••
Firefighters and members uf the •
Rutland squad of the Meigs Coun- :
ty Emergency Medical Services ~
responded to the residenc.c of Sarah :
Johnson and remained on the scene •
•
until press time.
No injuries were reported.
•
•
~--------~--------~----~

·Simpson trial moves to punitive damages phase l••••.. .

ter on Feb. 18 to begin his sentence.
The 19-year-old victim received
assistance from the Meigs County
Victims Assi~tance Program.
"I want people to know that other .
children who are sexually ~bused
The department' . also sharply moderating job growth.
should not be afraid to repon i~ and WASHINGTON (AP) - Tlie num· ·
·get help," she sald after her father's bCr of newly laiil-off American work- revised the number of claims during · . The Federal Reserve mi Wcdnessentencing. "There is protection and ers filing claims for jobless benefits the week ended Jan. 25. down to just day decided to hold shon-tenn interfell b¥ 12,000 last week, the biggest 337,000. Last week, it estimated the est rates steady, apparently convinced
assistance available.•
number had risen by 10,000 to the economy is slowing on its own
The victim · says she is t flOW drop in three wee~s .
.The Labor pepar~ment said today 35 1,000.
.
· and nO! threatening an outbreak o'r
estransed from the oth'&lt;t members of
Analysts have altributcd some. of inOation.
·
her family but thatshe does not t'llgret that new applications for unemployment
insurance
totaled
a
seasonally
the
recent
volatility
to
year-end
prob·
On
Friday,
the
·Labor
Dcpanment
reporting the crime. . · · rl
"I want to helP. others who III'C also adjusted 325,000, lowest since · · lems adj~sting the data for seasonal •repons 'on the employ~nt situation
for January. It reponed Jut nronth
dealil)l! with this problem," sl\e said. 321,000 during the week ended Jan. variations.
11, The decline was the 1111e~t $ince
~any analysts had expected new that'lhli unemployment raic remained
"Chi~n should not be afmid tu seek
help.''
.
. '
r • .
claim~ plunged by 45,000 durina ~ clums to fall to 345,000 18$1 'Week, Jl unchanae&lt;J al .5.3 percent in 'DecemJan. 11 week.
levt&gt;l th~t nrany contend indicates · ~r,' while payrolls arew by 262,000._
...
'&lt;'

construction of a 72'J)()() square fuot :
K tbrough K building to· he con- :
structed adjacent to the high sehoul ·:

{

,

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ally has left after 2 1/2 ~ostly yem '·: :'
of litigation and a precipitous dmp iii ~
his earning power.
. .,
Under California law, any 'punltive :;
award is supppsed
to hear 1~O!IIC. ...
""
. h' .
rcscm hi ancc to as tmanciul stale: Jt•s ·..::
· supposed to hurt him hut not &lt;lcslroy ..
~m

.

·

.

.k

Lawyers prohahly will arjUc OVer
acc?.un~ant~ ' interpretations of Simp-

•~

.!':

.,.
son s hnanc1al statements, &amp;flU ·ill!! .
di fferences are expected 1o he Jlt"')'o . ,:
found .
.
.lliO
Be)lre the trial staned, Slmf18011 .:;
t?ld"'ffitintifT.' he was worth $8 ml~ .;;:
hon, but then, 45 days - l!llct; .. -"'
claimed to be wonh jtllll S~ ";!
plaintiff lawyer Peter Oclbl11111 tiitW ..
Wednesday in court.
-: ··
. ~
And the defense llitl In~ t1t11
Simpson ~ ....
1,

-j

7

J)Kin...... ' $1ma
·. ·

the pa.u six
~
11te best csti......_ t tn illij
'
CoatJa...·~·-J R
•
j
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•

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�commentary

. . Pagt2

••

Thundsy, ~-I, 1117

..

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publllher
CHARLENE HOEFUCH

MARGARET LEHEW
.

G1nenl ~nagar

Controller

Clinton's challenges
By NANCY BENAC
Alaoclated Preu Writ8r
WASHINGTON -Brace yourself, America.
President CliniOIIIOSSed out enough capitai-C Challenges, Crusades and
Calls for action Tuesday night to keep an entire nation busy for awhile.
With ~\Jch high-minded tlourishes, Clinton tried to elevate his small-bore,
sccOI)d-tenn agenda into something grand,
·
'!Jut his hourlong State of the Union dissertation also served as tacit
acknowledgement of the limitations on Clinton's reach at a time of divided
government and growing constraints on federal spending.
•
''\'ou just really can't do anything wuhout money, and there's no mon- ·
ey," said Marc Landy, a political science professor at BCI'ton College. "The
commitment to balance the budget ends the notion of any impressive Democratic initiatives."
.
ll's not just Congress to whom the linger-wagging Clinton dispensed a
htany of low-cost challenges.
,
Parents: Read to your ch1ldren. Art1sts: Celebrate the American spirit.
States: Adopt education standards. Young people: Consider becoming teachers. Employers: Hire welfare recipients . .
The list goes on.
"He sounded very Republican, almost liki: George Bush or Ronald Reagan, in tcnns of asking people to improve their own communities and asking governors to work with him and asking Amcticans to improve their situation," sa1d James Thurber, a political scientist at American University.
Some ofC::linton's suggestions bordered on the bizarre: Children's hospitals should be hooked up to the Interne~ he said, "so that a child in bed
can stay in touch with school, family and friends. A sick child' need no longer
be a child alone."
That's a far cry from the giant overhaul of ihe nation's health-care system that Clinton proposed in his first year as president.
Granted, he did also advocate eKtending health coverage this year to 5
million ch1ldren whose parents call'! afford insurance when they lose their
jobs. But c,ven Clinton cast that as merely one step toward the broader goal
of affordable, quality health care for all.
V,:here once health-care dommated, education took center stage this
spee~h. Clinton's ,IO-poillt proposal would increase federal spending on education b~ 20 percent, but many elements were I'!'PUCkaged from speeches .
and campaigns past. Some, in fact, were rcrljnSJrom last year's State of the
Union addn;,s.s.
· ·
,
,
,
.
Still, his cmp!tasis on education did allow him to highlight "something
that sounds Big-D Democratic" while generally ~ewlbg to more moderate
priorities such as tax cuts and a balan~d budget. satd Charles Jones, a political scientist at the University of Wisconsm. ·
On three items of "unfinished business,'' Clinton's calls for action were
largely a reOection· of his own late embrace of these lcgislauvc leftovers.
-"Let this Congress be the Congress that finally balances the budget,"
' Clinton urged to a standing ovation. No mention that he came around to
• embracing a balanced budget only after the Republican congrcssioqal sweep
: of the 1994 elections- or that he voted the balanced budget plan the GOP
Congress sent him in 1995.
·
-Campaign finance refor'1'i "by the day we celebrate the birth of our
democracy - July the 4th.:' Clinton challenged. This came from a president who showed litile enthusiasm for the issue until ,hiS party hecame the
large! of withering criticism for improper contributions during the last campa~-

.

-"Give someone on welfare the chance to work," Clinton exhorted. The
.presidCniwhoreluctailtly signed a Republican welfare b1ll heforc la&lt;l year's
election nfter vetoing two previous verSions is now trying to make the program more palatable and lessen its impact on legal immigrants.
. Sen. Thad Cochran, R-Miss., allowed that Clinton had come up wuli "a
tong list of objectives and goals, hut I really think that we're going to he
better off if we keep it short and simple."
That may be the most Clinton can hope for.
.
"Compared to the great presidential agcnda,-.6f .the past," sa1d Bruce
Buchanan, a political scientist at the University ofT~Kas. "he's trying to make
the best of a moderate hand."
.

•

:
EDITOR'S NOTE.- .N-.:y Benac covers national affairs for The
~- Aaoclated l'ral.
("
.

Ples~ CJIItOII COilld be to volunt.ecr servJCC wftat ~ Kennedy
was to s o - t &amp;el vtce, but the
chances arc ~ he .- like George
Bush before him-- wdlletthe opportunity slip.
'
Clint~n annou~. along with
Bush, rettred Gen. Cohn Powell, and
fonher HUD Secretary Henry Cis-.
neros, a Presidents' Summit on
Nati_onai .Service in Philadelphia on
Apnl 27, but he won't endorse the
biggest boost~ vol_unteerism cool~
get: a ~ credtt for mcreased chantable g1vmg.
That idea, which would cost $45
bilhon over live years, is the ~hief
proposal of !_he Project for American
·Renewal, ptoneered by Sen. Dan
'Coats: R-Ind., and Rep. John Kasich,
.R-Ohio.
. With practically the entire politi·
cal establishment agreed that "the em
of bi~ govemme,nt is ~veri' the big
questiOn becomes: Who will do the
work that needs to be done?_ .. . .
· lncreas10gly, the answer IS c1v1l
society"-- "churches" and 'the myrtad . "volunta~
associations_"
descnbed by_Aiexts de ~~ue~11l~ 10
the 19th century _as the d1~11ngu1shmg
feat.!'re _of_ Amencan soctety..
.
In hiS maugural addr~ss m 1989,
Bush provtdcd the most eloquent call

yet for "a aew c a . . - in the
lives of others" and uid he wanted

to cstllblish all8liOJUJI clhic whereby
citizens could RotloolLat.thcmselves

Morf,on

v

..6

.,

,oOOyrBCal

in the mirror unless they were
' involved in some sort of voluntary
service.
There was a chailce tbat he could
have stimulated the kind of dedication to ~ervice that Kennedy inspired
in the 1960s. when thousands- of
young people were attracted to government after hearing the "Ask not
what your country can do for you"
lines in his inaugural.
•
Unfortw!ately, Bush gotlno further
than establishing the "thousand
points of tight" program to highlight
eKisting volunteer efforts. Kennedy
created the Peace Corps and had his
C~binet taking military-style hikes,
but Bush failed to follow the uampie with, say, a high-profile tutoring
program by the White House staff.
Clinton established AmeriCorps, a
national service program involving
SO,OOO people over the last three
years, and, besides calling for the
April summit, is now trying to get a
million volunteers to become literacv tutors.

. OHIO

for hirins welf- ~ipieniS

wete

aspirin! to the mantle, including former Sen. Bill Bradley. D-NJ., ud
fonncr Education Secretaric. Lam.or ·
AlcKander and ·Bill Bennett.
They are involved ill three of at
least seven major "civic renewal"
projects uader way to figure out,how
to harness the massive non-profit,
non-government sector of society to
do wlw government can't or won't.
Coats and Kasich are relaunching
their American Renewal project this
week, joining forces with Reps. J.C.
Watts, R-Oida., and Jim Talent, RMo., leaders of a House task force
'ch~ed with devising non-Great
Soctety means 1o help the poor. · .
Besides the tn credit, which
Coats says might generate $50.8 billion in new charitable giving in live
years,~ group's agendaJneludes a
fund to match local cff0!'5 to help
poor people establish businesses;
reclaim abandoned housing, and
establish maternity shelter$.
Clinton political guru Pick Morris, who once worked as a campaign
eonsultanti'or Coats, confesses in his
book "Behind the Oval Office" that
such 1996 Clinton proposals as an

tax credit idea, too, but he won:t.
White House udes say that in his
State or the Union message, ClintOn
was expected to propose $100 billiOn
in tax cuts, mainly to help fin8119C
collesc educations, and can't alford
any more.
·
The idea is in trouble with mo'sl
Republicans, too, who prefer a pe_rchild family tax cut aad a reduction
in capital gains taXes.
;
Coats and Kasich would finan4c
one-third of their $45 billion taX cut
by cuuing ."corporate welfare'' arid
two-thirds by culling federal socijl
progrart)s. thereby offending both
conservative and lilll;ral sp;cial intercsts.
. •
'
"It's.' an uphill fight," Coats
acknowledges.
·
Besides Clinton's summit aad the
Coats-Kasich initiative, Bennell and
former Sen. Sam Nunn, D-Ga.. are •
co-chairs of a National Commission'
on Civic Renewal, whil:h ltcld its li,..l
plenary session la.'lt month to try tp
de_termine through poll~ ~d acad':'
mlc papers whether CIVIC engagement, trust. and social indicaiors at:e
improv!ng, a":ometimes claimed. or
collapsmg, as IS also asserted.
The data suggest. said eKccutivc
d1rector William Golston, a fnnncr
Clinton White Hou.'c aide. that trust
is down but volunteer activity is holding stelldy or rising. The commission
will come up with sug~estions by the
end of the year for 1m proving both.;
AleKandcr, an all-but-declare~
. 2000 presideptial candidate, is heading a National Commission on Phil-anthropy and C1vic Renewal, whic~.
if AleKandcr's _1996 platform is any'
indication, will propose private charity as a substitute for government
welfare.
,
Meantime_. Bradley is leading th!:
Penn National Commission on Soci.ety, Culture and Community, dedi-:
cated to combating "incivility aad'
utrem1sm" in society. And fonRcr,
Rep. Pat Schroeder, D-Colo., is head:,
ing a $1 million Institute for Civil·
Society study to lind creative anti-,
poverty solutions.
·
Clearly. "civil society" is an idea·
whose lime ha&lt; come. Bui it's still a:
movement in search of a leader.
.
·(Morton Kondraeke is executl~e editor of. Roll Ca!l, the qews-:
paper or.Capitol lfHI.)
I
.

IND.

• . . . ...
..

By The AIIOCiaiecl P....a

'SOutbeaslem OhiO

· Today...Cioudy with a chance of
fiurries this moming ...Then partial
clearing. High ncar 40. West wind 5
•to 10 mph.
' 1 Tonight...lncreasing cloudiness.
•P&gt;w in the upper 20s. Calm wind.
Frid11y...Cioudy with a chance of
'light rain. High 40 to 45. Chance of
rllin 30 percent.

illll or ~hinJIOO. D.C.?

.

Since the first of the year they

II*Vc bitted 1,1100. They have crucified Brother Newt aad discredited the

ilhics of Brothef Bill.
•
Now, neither one of these have put
II !!lead or ~utter on my plate.

trumpeting and the jackas!ICS braying
the news.
·
If all this hot air could be bottled
up that balloonist could have went to
the moon.
VII'Jiil Walker,
Radne

Today_in history
' By The Alloclated P....a

.

Today is Thursday, Fe~. 6, tbc 37th day of 1997. There are 328 days left
in the year.
'
Today's Highlight in History:
.
,.
.
.
On Feb. 6, 189S. ~seballlegcnd Babe Ruth was bortJ m Balumore.
On this date: '
.
··
.
In 17S6, America's third vice president, Aaron Burr, was born m Ncw~k,

~tTtcial

NJin 1778 the. United States won
recogni!ion from France as the
tlvo nation; signed a pair of tteatie~ in Paris.
·
.
,
.
.InJZ§_8, Mas.w:hl!""tt•l!ecame the siKth state to rat1fy the U.S. Consu-

l!ltion~
.
aad ' .
'lied
1n 1899. a peace treaty belween the United States . Spam was ratt 1
by the U.S.·Senllle.
.
...
In 1933 the 20th Amendment to the Constitution - the :'IIIIIC due ..
IIIICndmenj which moved the start of presidential, ¥icc-presidential and cllll,.w•iolt•llerrnl fr0.n MII'Ch to JanulfY - - cloc:lared in cffiiCI.
.
1n 1943, a Los All,eltts jury acq~itll!d 1111101',Error Flynn of three ~~

~~1$11:l.·aKIIIt~Vl· ~lnia•" :ie
... m~r , •• n, •

'

,

t111ybia_.
.

•.

By TONY SNOW
Creators Syndicate
WASHINGTON -- As a token uf
the New Bipartisanship, Democrats
and 1!-cpublisans have begun touting
volunteerism. .
They both say they want to cclcbrate good deeds by bestowing grunts
and tax cll:dits upon "volunteers."
Ev1dcntly, salvatiOn through compassion is out. The new · slogan for
aliruiSm: Show me the-money!
This seems mystifying, since one
docsn 't need to bribe Americans into
helpmg thelf neighbors. Commenta,
tors sine~ Tocqueville have marvclcd at this nation's unique sci !lessness.
Independent Sector, an organization that prQmot~ lind ~1ud1es non:
profit work, says 68.5_per(.-cnt of all
households contributed to charity m
199~ aad nearly half of all Americans
volun~ time. In total . .we gave
rouBhly SSOO "'Ilion in time and
money.
No major industrial power comes
cl011e to this record. The dollar value
f)f contributions hits a new high
•111101:' every .year-- whi_ch is '!'markable stnce we have less ume than ever
to help I~ ID _need.
,
A 1111'8et portton of the itdul,t ~
ulatlon works today than at anJ1 pot~t

•

m our history. The average work
week is approaching all-time highs.
as well.
We don't slave away because we
love the coffee .at the ollicc. Most uf
us have little choice. Last· year, the
average two-earner family surrendered an unprecedented 3K.4 percent
of its earnings to federal, stale and
local govcrntnents.
Unfortunately, the people who
charge for food. clbthing. shelter,
.education, health care and othc{
necessities don't adjust prices to
rcllcctthc tu situation. They have to
keep pace ·with their own soaring
costs.
So if we warit to cat, clothe ourselves, relld a 1ood·book. provide for
our kids -- and pay our ta•cs .. we
have to take second jobs, work longer
or both.
This trend eKposcs the fatal !law
in the idea of "rewarding" volunteerism through lax breaks. ·The
moment Congress decides to help by
kicking ·back money, it will have to
lind ways of replacing the lost re~­
cnue -- .in .other words. raise taxes.
P~le will adjust to this chanac
by working longer, which mean~
,they'll have less time to sivc. As the
proportion of volunteers be1ins to
slip.. :WI!r'hi~flon will rcHJOnd with

•

Service.

, , Auetion results from Wednesday's
Oallipolis Producers Livestock AssoCiation:
.
C:: Total head: 300.
•; : HOGS -17. Prices, steady.
Butcher hogs, all wetghts, $47.755.L25; sows, nla; boars, $37-$37.50;
Feeder pigs, $30.
, , CATILE -273; Steers. nla
ffl:ifers, nla; choice, nla; heifers, nla;
Holstein, nla.

.COLUMBUS (AP) - IndianaOhio direct hog prices at selected
buying pomts Thursday as provided
by the U.S. D!Jpartment of Agnculturc Markel News:
Burrows and gilts: mostly 50 cents
lower; demand light to moderate on
a mOderate to light movement.
~US. 1-2, 230-260 lbs. country
.eojnts 5 1.50..:53.00: few at S I.?&lt;J and
33.50: plants 52.50-54.00. lew at
.52.25.
"·u.s. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 45.5011.00: 210-230 lbs. 40.50-45.50. ·

..'

!

11'- iawmakcrs really wanted tu
encouruttc public-spiritedness, they "
W!fuld cut taKes. C&lt;msidcr two telling
trcn~s. The pruponion of people
who donate time and money has lilllen rnul!hly 10 percent since 19K9, as
tax hufdens have !'r&lt;&gt;wn. Conversely,
contribUtions rose dr~matically after
the RcMan-I[Jl&lt; cut• in the mid-I 9KOs.
There seems to be a pretty strong corrclatinn between giving and available
income: The h1gher our tax burdens,
the less we have let\ to help others.
Alas, th1~ economic argument
isn't likely to imprc."-' politicians.
Their.plans have almost nothing to do
with·hclping people who serve soup ·
to the shivering homeless, pick ap a
stray animal or donate to a clean-thepark campaign. The political recommendations arc designed to brins
honor. aad glory ·to the people who
~them --to provoke us to 'say:
'
. ~
"w.ill, isn't thai nice? The politicians
Wrllie 'lbily
Creaton S)'ll-. · . •
Wanl'~o honor sood people, rathcf
than ,I the slcucballl they usually tlclllle, 57'rt Well Cl!llhlry IUW.,, I
Suite 7110, Lei Anaeta, Calif. ·; !
han~jout'with."
nlen ia somethina puy about
. ..

J

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&gt;•

~,

~

•I

.,
'

•

COWS - Demand and price
trend, $2 higher; utility.' $26-29:
standard, $30-44; commercial. $2226: CQ- n/a; bulls, stead) 1-butchcrs,
$28.75-$47.50.
:
FEEDER CA1TLE • st4cad;
Yearling, steers, $55'-$51;· heifers.
$4Si$58; calves· steers, $55-$65;
bac~ to .th&lt;; farm babies. ·5115 and
down.
,:;
Feeder sale Wci!ncsday.
Feb. 12, 2 p.m

Today's livestock r-eport

the idea of praising voluntccrism l
through taK breaks and grants. The !
rCccnl cnntmvcrsy nvcr Nc~t Gin-:, · •!
grich 's college course exposed the-. 1 ·
way some nun~prolit urganizalions : !
scheme to get federal money while': t
pretending In serve n•'Cdy people. .
As tho Johri ~ uang caper shows,_ : !
sain" d&lt;Ml'tlnhhy lhrtax preferences ;
and politicians never grant favors' · t
without eKacting a pouad of nesh in: ', : .
return. lf~nngrcss decides to "hon- ;
&lt;If" candy stripers and nursing-home '&gt;
voluntecr.iby granting them tbe !lllme • ;
son hf favors il nnw hands out let ~ t '
ethanol producers and mohair farm: :
,crs, it will dcrtn charity what oil slicks
do for sea utters.
· ·· ; '
'Thc·cmly wor.c thmg would be for' · : ,
Uncle Sam Ut become a Great Scout'·
•'
•
., 'jo
Leader. who nr~an1zcs pe11plc's .. •
cxcursior)s into !ovcrnmcrit·sanc ~ . ; ,
tinned voluntccrism. Ima-gine a gcn-' . • 1
cration of Clintnn Knmsumols !
decked out in starched jeans and han&lt;' ~ ~
danna.,, -rocking in fmnt of a camp-- . :
r.rc, singmg spintuals penned by Sal- " •
ly Struthel'!l.
:

......

1

,
Extendecl forecast
Friday night ... Cioudf with a
chance of light snow... Possibly some
light rain early. Low from the upper
20s to the lower 30s.
··
Saturday... Achallce oflight ram or
Sno\11. H1gh in the upper 30s.
Sunday and mondpy ... Partly
cloudy. Low in the mid 20s and high
in the upper 40s

Wednesday's G.PLA resuRs

. -'

s-,

SJ"mlnson

Editor's note: A lawsuit outhnes Leonard S. Sigal! of Reynoldsburg .
the grievances of one party agamst
In other actmn:
an01her. It does n01 establish guilt or
-- Ovemite Transpol1'ation Comhinocence.
pany of Chairlotte, N.C::' is seeking
Longtime Meigs County Public $3,332.33 plus costs aild interest
t~braries director Ruth Powers, Mid- from Michael and Darlene Warner. ·
'dlepo~ filed suit Monday in the . doing' business as lnfl)!ite Fiber·
~eigs County Court of Common works Company of stateH~outc 124,
Pleas against the Meigs County Pub- Racine·
:0:
lie Library Board pfTrustees.
-- R~bert E. and June"J. Richards
· ~ Powers is appealing the tennina- of Waldo seek quiet title action,
· ·tiim of her employment by the library guaranteed right of way J1iK1 $1 O,boo
'board following an executive session in damages from Jh,~-mie Ca1n,
by the board on ,Jan. 2, according to Pomeroy, and George lt~nd Bonita
trcr complaint.
E. Ingles of Rutland stel'i1111ing from
•· 'Named in the suit arc board Pres- a property dispute;
'ldent Patricia Holter of Pomeroy and
-- First Natiqnal Bank of CincinVicc-president Patncia Mills of Mid- nati seeks $4,491.66 plus costs and
dleport. Alsq naiJied are board mcm- interest from Roben K. Chapman of
hers Wanda Eblin of Pomc'roy, Mary Middleport;
.
~- ' Yost' df · Syracuse, Charles
-- BankOne, Columbu5, N.A.,'
Blakeslee of Pomeroy. Robert W. seeks $2,855.22 plus,costs and mtcr·Crow of Syracuse and i)(Jugla' L11- est from Marcia and Rick W. Morris
·tic of Racipc.
,
of Pomeroy.
= .
'
' · She is_ represented by attorney _ _
~

,,r

juicier hrcaks. And the cycle will
hegm anew -- until. smncwhcrc at 'the
end of the rmnhow. every charitable
organization in the cnuntry will owe
1ts CKislcncc to the Internal R~venuc

°

·Library board named in .suit

~

a.w you feh the hot atr blowmg

Mae E·. McPeek -

Today's weather forecast

one

~Letters to the editor·
••
hot air
Cutting taxes woul.d lift spirits of most Americans
...••. O..i'dil!ll- More political
.
All I have heard arc the elephants
.
.
••

I

'

..

'

•IC91umbusl36· I

W. VA. ''

suspended liim for two games after he
But of course Rodman is nut ynui-;
let loosc a foul-mouthi:d attack on average Joe. He's a mtllionairc athofficials that wa&lt; picked up by tele- lete whose every mnve is fodder for •
VISion microphones. It's undefSland- the journalists who cnvcrh1s sport. :
able that the players' association, Instead of chasmg them away, he ·
which ha• a vested interest in dcfcnd- draws people to the places Where he
mg the indefcnsihlc. mllied 1&lt;1. Rod- works. While at times the media
man's side. But I'm at a loss to attcnliun he gets exaggerates his
eKplaiii why Jackson has gotten problems. Rudman alone is respon' ·
involved in his case,
sihlc for the bad things he dues.
thing In punish a man.
"It's
It's another thin~ In take away his
l,m not sUre than anyone can save .
dignity," Jackson satd of the NBA's
him
frnm himself. Cenainly no1 Jack:
call for Rodman tu get psychiatric
counseling. But the issue here isn't son or the bas~cthall players' union,
Despite his strange behavior, they :
dignity, it's sanity.
don't
want him sent on' to counseling. '
Rodmlfn's hehavior un and ol)' the
League ullicials on the other hand
hru;kct~all coun hu.' hecome incrcuswant a d(ICtor to determine if Rodman
ing~y erratic. Fnun hi!' cvcr·changm~
hair color. to Ius. gender-bending is a threat to himself or others. They
ways and his increasingly vwlcnt wal\1 to make sure that he isn't a tickacts, tbe NBA star is a trnuhling cmg- mg tim~;_bnmh.
ma who seems to he ahout tn
implode. ,
What's wrong wnh Ihan
., , '
If he worked on Wall Street. nr fur
Dennis Rodmah is a 11reat .,_ .
the Puslul Service. that kind behav- ketbaU player who acts more and
Ior would send people rushmg l(~r the nlore like a, troubled man. Aad .. ;
eKils- and land Rudman m either a worry that ir he doesn •t get help1 :
~traitjackcl or jail.
soon he's ~:oing to snap.
·

The Daily Sentinel

Sows~ steady to I.OU lowe~.
U.S. 1-3 300-450 lhs. '41.0044.50; 450-500 .lbs. 44.0Q'-47.00:
500-650 lbs: 47 .~52.00, few at
53 .00.'
..
Boars: 38.00-39.00.
'
Estimated receipts: 33,000.
Summary of Wednesday~4 Producers L1vcstock Associatioil auctions at Gallipolis and Mt. Vcrl.on:
Hogs: steady' to 3.00 hi~hll~.
Butcher hogs: 47.7~-55.85.
Cuulc. I .00 to 2.00 )uwcr.,
Slaughter steers: choice .p~.0068.00; select 55.00-62.00.
Slaughter heifers: choice 61.0&lt;).
69.50: select 54,{)().61'.00.
'

.

!USPS ZI3-9MI)
Pubhdted cYery Afternoon. Monday through
Frld:.y, Ill Court Sl.. Pom:roy, Ohm. by the
Ohio YQIIey Publl~hms Cqmpooy1Gnn1'11.1l Co..
Pomeroy. Ohio 4n69, Ph. m-21 ~. Second
elMs potnngc paid at Pomeroy: Ohto.
Mtmbm Tht: AM«mted l'n:~R. lind the ~
New~ Asmation

IIOSTMASTER: Sl.:nd

addwo~

L·orrectiop$ to

'

SUIISCRIPTION R~TKS
BJ C.nitr or MoW Routt
()ne Week .............. ' .. .... ... .... ' ......... $2 00
0.,0 t.laolh.......... .. .......... .. ....... . .. $810
Onc't'ear .. ' ........ .......................... $11J.'.OO
,

Stocks

.

SII'IGI.H COPY PRICF.

I..W.Molp~

Jl

26
32

..

. n~

~'

i ·JMlJrl HIJ .~

Hospital new·s

j

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Meigs

:

~MS

..... U

111;1S PR,

logs 4 calls

---Meigs announcements-Trustees to meet
Members of the Salisbury Township Board of Trustees will hold their
regular meeting the second Monday
of each month at 6 p.m. at the townsh'ip building .on Rocksprings Road.

Cancer Society to meet
The Meigs County unit of the
American Cancer Soctety will meet
at 5 p.m. Feb. IS 10 the conference
room al Veterans Memorial Hospital.

0P PI&amp;&amp;A. I PI!PSl
Aim A. JIIO.IGIW lkWIII U . l~ eecll..
PICJI UP YOVR !'ICJIITS ,,. CAW.IPOLL(S
IJUIIIIlRO'S PillA LOCATeD MU't' 1'0
SniiiC VAI.Ln Cn!IIA 011! AT

"Yotilt- Local Mohawk Color
Center Dealer"

Carpet
Starting at

$ 99

' I

sq. yd .
Now offering FREE ·
In Home Shopping

'

Divorce asked -- Kimberly
Phillips. Pomeroy, from Gury Alan
Phillips. Pomeroy. JO:!). 2!J,
Divorce} gr~ntcd -- Claude K.
Nea.o;c and Gloria M. Nease. Fell. 3,
Sberri L Billings from Johnny Ray
Bill10gs, Feb. 3.

(SP•l.C YALLBl CIN!NA)
COIIIIIC 11001111 'nAT MJIJI CA'I''
Ct.IIIT IAS'niOOO tn. 'AIIBOLUT. '&lt;*a'
'V..U: VACA!'IOII'

INGEL'.SCARPET

Divorces and
. dissolutions
The following actions to end marriage were filed in th~ ollice of Meigs
County Clerk of Courts Larry
Spencer,
Dissolution asked -- Todd Tripp,
Pomeroy, and Kelly Tcipp,' Long
Bouom. Jan. 30.

PICKr:D UP

IA~RDAYI

I.M:W I'D:IK:. ltiiCIIrYBB Ill lq SLICim

.

7:37 p.m., Maples Apartments,
Units of the Meigs County 'Emergency Medical Service recorded four Ethel Newman. VMH.
calls for assistance Wednesday. Units SYRACUSE
9:20 a.m .. Morning Star Road,
respondmg included:
1
Cordie Collins, VMH.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
12:02 p.m., Overbrook Nursing TUPPERS PLAINS
7:51 p.m .. state Route 7, Dustin
Center, Middlcpo{l. Teresa Bycr, VetKehler,
St. Joseph's Hospllul.
erans Memorial Hospital.
POMEROY

.INGEL'S CAR·PET
'

169 N. 2nd Ave.

{'

992-7028

MiddlepOrt, Oh

ADDITIONS TO OUR
MEDICAL STAFF

AT&amp;T ..............................'".....38\

Banlt One ..............................43"'

Bob Evans ............................13\
Borg-Warner ...........................31
Chllmplon ...............................17

Channing Shop1 ................... 4'~t:'ldlng ..........................:m
·
I Mogul .........................24

Gannett .................................77'1.

Ltlndl End.............................2i'!.
Umlted ..................................17\
Ohio' Valley Bltnk ....................31

MAIL SUIIICIIPTIONS .

. ...-

Galll•a man pleads not gul"lty

AmrTec:h ...............................58\:

s.i:w:rlbcn: not dc!l•nnJ to j,ay 1~ cnmt.'f may
remh In ndvwe dinxt tn The Da•l)" ~ntmel
on,b tbrrc. d11. or 12 month bolt~. Cr.:dil will be
Jivcn c.ricreoch week.

_,i......

WMUHf&lt;·otl

Akzo ,.....................................72'•

Dn.lly ...... ,,\...,.... ........................... ~!li Cent~

Publiahcr ~me naht 10 ladj••t ~ dw•
hiiJ the ~b!lcription penod. SubKtripdon nMe
~...,."' 1. .- ..... by
_ o ( .......... ri .. ion.

-·,'j~, Tl

Am Ele Power .......................40"/.

Goodyear ................................~

No ~~~~ripiton by mail p:t.lmllcd in nn:a•
where hDlnc t.rir M."I'Vict is a¥ailllblc

although small-bore, government
programs.
"The pres1dent of the United
States, while declaring the era of big
government at an end, every day
comes up with another program to .
e.paad government," Kasich said in
a CNN interview.
Though the two Sides diller on
many pomts, neither IS eager to
repeat last year's acrimonious standoff that led to two panial government
shutdowns This has fueled hopes that
after years of wrangling. ncgouations
in 1997 may actually produce a
bipanisan pact.
For the 1998 fiscal year, which
begins Oct I. Clinton proposes
spendmg S1.69 tnllion , up 3.5 percent from projected spending of
S1.63 trillion this ·year.
The new budget projects that the
deficit. which posted a fourth-straight
decline 10$107.3 billion 1n 1996, will
rise to $125 6 billion this year before
staning to decline again. It would
achieve a $17 b1lllon surplus in
2002

• b renner
Dorot hy W1ne

Aahland 011 ......•.•••••••••.....•...•42~

'fflc Daily &amp;.-ntmel. Ill Coort St .. Pomeroy.
Olllo4.m•9

The release of the massive livevolume set of budget documc;nts,
bpuad in marbleized green, was the
first move in what is likely to be
Duo 0 . LonJSifelh, 74, Middleport, died Wednesday, Feb. S, 1997, at months of hard bargaining between
Rocksprinp Rehlbilir.tion Center, Pomeroy.
the White House and Congress.
A rctiRd gunJDiith for the Middleport Gun Shop, he was born Jan. 27,
The GOP has already let it he
1923, in Meigs County, son of the late Clarence and Aadra Harmon known it will insist on tax cuts douLongstreliL He aacnded several churches in l'.liddlepon.
ble Clmton's $98 b11lion. They also
He is survived by two nieces. Barbara Simpkins and Susan Longstreth
want steeper and quicker reductions
of Charlestdn, W.Va.; a sister-in-law, Catherine Longstreth of Charleston; in spending and more power shifted
and by several cousins.
from Washington to the states. ·
He was preceded in deatti by a brother, Severn Longstreth. .
" This is not the bold step we were
Graveside services will be held Friday, II a.m. at Mil~ Standish Cemehoping for." said Senate Budget
tery, Outer,' with the Rev. James Keesee officiating. No calling hours will
Committee Chairman Pete Domeni'be pbserved aad arrangements are by Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy.
ci, R-N.M. "But if the admmistration
is senous about sitting down and
working with Congress, 11 may be a
Mae Estella McPeck, 86, of Lons Bottom, died Tuesday, Feb. 4, 1997, · first step toward a balanced budget." .
. .
House Budget Commmee Chairat the HoIzer Medieal Ccnte r, Gall tpo 1IS.
J h Kas' h R Oh'
d
BomatLongBottomonNov.24,1916,shewasthedaughterofthelate man
n
IC ~ · , lo,expresse
Alfred and Laura Catherine Bonar Swan.
concerns that Chnton s budget conShe was secretary and treasurer of Sand Hill Cemetery at Long Bottom, tamed so many references 10 new,
a member of the Long Bottorn Community Association, the Long Bottom .
and Meigs County Senior Citizens, Pythian Sisters, Racine Chapter of the
y,
Order of the Eastern Star, and the Long Bottom U~ited Methodist Church
. Coatlnued from pa&amp;e t
where she was secretary.
'
h
h $6
- Surviving are one sister, Leota Ferrell of Medway, and several nieces and s~n .15 now won no more t an
neyhews.
m~lbon- aad probably much lessShe was preceded In death by her husband, Leoyd McPeek; a brother, w1th nearly all of hiS ~orth tn the
Shetley Swan; and three ~isters, Vera Swan, Leona Hensley, and Ada Bis- fonn of h1s estate, wh1ch has been
sell.
'
mortgaged to pay legal btlls. .
Funeral services will be held at 1 p.m. Saturday at the Whitt Funeral
S1mpson lawrer Robert Bake~,
Home, Coolville. The Rev. Charles Eaton will offictate and burial will be who must ~ace a Jury that_ has unamin Saad Hiii'Ccmetery of Long Bottom.
mously_ rejeCted everythtng he has
Friends may call at the funeral home Friday, 2 to 4 and 7to 9 p.m. Memo- swd, wdl probably plead lise~ merrials may be sent to Sand Hill Cemetery, P. 0. Box 501, Coolv1lle, Ohio cy,~rgumgh1scbenthasnothtngleft
47523.
to g1ve.
.
.
"He's gomg to tell the JUry that
they' ve already sent a message. that
.
.
.
hiS chcnt heard the message, that hts
. Dorothy Winebrenne~. ?a, Syracuse, died Wednesday, Feb. 5, 1997. at client is broke, that he has no way to
her residence:
.
pay that $8.5 million verdict, let alone
She was born March 8, 1923, in Minersville, daughter of the late Steve respond in pumtivc damages," c1vil
and Wilma McKamey Robson. She was the owner/operator of Dorothy's lawyer Larry Feldman predicted. '
Beauty Salon in Syracuse. She was a member of the Asbury Methodist
S1mpson also can take any numChurch, a member of the Belles ·and Beaus Square Dance Club and a mem- her of court ac11ons, from filing for
ber of the United Methodist Women.
bankruptcy protection to appealing
She is survived by her husband, William D. Winebrenner of Syracust; the verd1ct and seeking to get the
daughters and sons-in-law, Stefanic and Bill Arnott, and Cathy and De~nis damage award reduced. That means
Moore, all of Syracuse; a son, Steven D. Winebrenner of Belle, W.Va.; e1ght more legal papers, more hearings.
grandchildren; a great-granddaughter and a sister, Wanda Burdette of Gal- more Simpson legal battles.
lipolis.
· .
.
.
A key witness for the plaintiffs
Services will be held Saturday, I p.m. at F1sher Funeral Home. M1ddle- will he a forenSic accountant who ha.•
port, with the Rev. Charles Neville officiating. Burial w11l follow in Gilmore been poring over what they have
Cemetery, Minersville.
·
crnnplaino:d is the scant financial data
Friends may call Friday, 7-'9 p.m. at the funeral home.
Simpson submitted.
,
,
, The plaintiffs also intend to call an
CKpcn In licensing and marketing Of
famous names and faces to discuss
· · A Rodney man entered a not Monday when deputies 'located a how the loothall great, who once ran
guilty plea on Wednesday in the Gal- body in Raccoon Creek, which they through airpons for Hertz, can still
make a few more bucks. Undcr'Caili a County Common Ple115 Court at believe is Sowders.
Thc
body
has
been
transported
10 iforn10 law, crcd1tors can garnish up
his arraignment on a charge of agl!ravated robbery and aggravated murder the Franklin County Morgue for pos- to 25 percent of fut~rc wages.
in the alleged death of a TennesSee itive idcntir.cation.
\
.
Sheriff J,ames ll,. Taylo~ ·rcported
m~ .....
!.\. .. , ••
~
Richard A. Hubman, 29, remains this morning thai a sci ofSowders VETERANS MEMORIAL
in' the Gallia County Jail on a finacrprinls were located · at the
Wednesday admissions -- Teresa
$250.000 bond for events deputies Mansticld Penitentiary and have been Byer, Middleport; Ethel Newman,
believe led to the death of Troy Sow- forwarded •to the coroner for identi- Pomctoy.
ders. 56
lication purposes.
Vfcdnesday discharges -- None.'
A prctnal for Human ha• been set
Sowders was beheved to be residing at Quail Creek Trailer Park with for Feb. 10 at 9 a.m. m the Galha
Hubman and Brett Pelfrey at the time County Common Plea' Court.
Pelfrey, 25. 383 Quail Creek
of h1s disappearance.
Due to cv1dencc lound in Sowders Road. has pleaded gu1hy to a bill of
abandoned van, Gallia County information cha,rgc of complicity to
robbery m the Galli a County Comdeputies suspect (oul play.
A maJor hreak in the case came mon Pleas Cnurl.

Dano 0. Longstreth

than ever for someone to fill it. If "swiped from C011ts."
·
Ointon doeSn't, there arc others
Ointon should swipe the charily

'

Gannett Newa Service
WASHINGTON - The more I
see - and hear - of Dennis R\)dman the more I worry about him.
. Rodman. a professional basketball
" player who has transcended the sport
to become an annoying icon of popular culture. is suspended rrom the
.game for kicking a court:side photographer in the groin.
The cross-dressing bad boy of pro
basketball comm1ttcd th1s foul&lt;\uring
a televised game in wh1ch cameras
captured him thrusting h1s foot into
the man's crotch He offered no
defense for what he did. just a m~aly­
mouthed complaint that the guy was
taking it when he appeared to recOil
in pain. For this had act, Rodman was
tined $25.000, suspended fur a\ lea't
II games and ordered to undergo
counseling. Hc'lllosc S 1.1 million m
wages for the games he was ordered
to sit out.
Now we hear that Rodman, who
was suspended twice before for bad
conduct. is halki 0g at undergoing
L·nunsclmg:. He is supported m has

and

1111op11on tax credit and tax incenti~

Tha Keanedy role rcmaiiiS open,

oo-Jud the time is more ripe

..

President Clinton..•

MICH.

Rodman needs counseling, .n ot Je~se Ja_c kson
. recalcitrance by the NBA Basketball
Players Association and Jesse Jack'son. After Radman refused to see a
league
ps~chiatrist
Jackson
UQnOunced thai he has taken on the
job uf counseling basketball's reigning troublemaker. Jackson is a man of
In any talents. hut psychiatry isn't one
i1f them.
·
.
·For ihc record, I like Jesse Jackson. More ot\cn than not I agree with
the things he docs and says. But nm
this time. Rodman doesn't need to he
counseled by the black. Baptist minister He needs tn sec a shrink.
Sure, he would probably bencli!
from some ot Jackson's soul-saving
w1sdom, but what he needs even
more 1s for somebody tn get inside
his head. He needs someone to figure
out what makes him . t1ck. As a
rehounder Dcnms Rodman has no
peer. And, sadly, as professional basketball's reigning llakc he is also
unmatched.
Last season Rodman wa.• suspended for six garries by the league.
for head-bolting a referee. Earlier this
season his team, the Chicago Bulls,

V/e.1the1

A&lt;aow~ rorecu~

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By DeWAYNE WICKHAM

The Dally SanUnel• Page 3

Frldlly, Feb. 7

·•

The n;.ny Sentinel · What ·will cnritOrld.ci tor: VOIUnteei'lsm?
111 eo..t Sl, P~y, Ohio.
114-112-2154• Fu: 912·2157

_Thcndly, Febrully I, 1817

K·rnert .....................................11

One Valtey.............. :..............37:•

~pl ...................................28:41
Prem Ftnt .............................. 14'4

RoC~I ................................
A~twll

6R

.............................. 17

1

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Shortey!• ................................ 7~
Star 8ar1k. ..............................38~

_._.._

• ....,..................................21\
WCJfttJtngton
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Ltll.=

ltock r.por11 .... thl 10:3
provldH by . . .
DIG
IL
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Veterans Memorial Hospital is pleased to announce the addition
of two new physlci~ns to its Medical Staff. ·
Th~y are Dr. Satywan Chhabria (Cha-bree-uh) and' Dr:
Khawaja A- Rahman (Ra-MON).
.
Both are natives of Pakistan. Dr. Chhabria came to the United States in 1993 and trained at the St. Jolsepti
Hospital in Chi~go. Dr. Rahman worked at the Queens Hospital Center in New York, ·an affiliate of the Mt.
Sinai ¥edical Center and has been with the Westem Reserve Care System in Youngstown for tt'te past tWq

years.

)

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•

Both of our new physicians are trained in intemal medicine and they also will be perfonning family practic8
services in Meigs County.
Their oftlcea are in the Meigs Medical Building, adjacent to Vaterana Memorial Hospitat Appolntmt.nts can
be made by phone -~·
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The Daily Sentin,.!.~ ·

Sports ·
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Southern boys' cage crews to·host Eastern in rematch

lbu....:ley, Februaryl,1887
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Friday nighlll Cliartea W. Hayman gymnasium in Racine, the
Soulhcrn 1brnadoes host cross coon,
ty rival !!astern in a baule for CoUnty pride.
In tile last EHS-SHS game, J.anuary 12, !his particular l!astemSouthem bout again registered high
on the richter scale for excitment as
the Tornadoes claimed a hard-foua;:u

'

~!!!'_!!ern y,J,~!~~rl~-~~00 ~~.:6~. ~~ ,~~~r~~~~~~~~~~, ~M '"'~

Southern got the ball back with 20 2 full coun press tha turned the I5- )fendricks ten.
plays in the sectionalt&lt;Kiniament at Conny Horst I-0=2. Tolals1 lA-l·
seconds left and marched the ball 5 lead into a close 15-12 er~~;ounter,
Soull)em hit 26-56 two's, 2-9 AleKander February 12.
8112-62
.
across half court where· Turley · but once again Turley took charge three's, was 8-12 at the line and had Oyertcr lllllb
Rawnswood: Tracey Hendr~cks
prompty called tlie SHS time. South- and fought off the Red Devilettes a.~
34 rebounds (Turley 10. Proffitt 8', Southern
17-18-K-19=62 4-0=8. Leslie Rardin 5-0-3n=l3,
ern set up the piay, but RHS took Southern rolled to a 33-21 advah'
Friend6).SHShad 14steals(Thrley Ravenswood
12-19-12-17=60 Billie ,Hcndricks 1-1-518=10, Sarah
away the clearing and pick and ·roll tage: Just prior to haif, Ravenswood
8,Caldwell4, Proffitt 2); had 13
Southern: Renee Thrley 9-2- Arrington 8-0-115=17. Amanda Hcrn ·
off the , oghtsidc..
stormed back compliments of the
assists (Thrley .7, Caldwell 3); 14 · 719=31. Cynthia caldwell 3'0=6. 0-20=6, Rehecca Ferreii3-Q-(Y.1=6.
Thrley quickly recognized the press to cut thej~ o 35-3 L Sou•hturnovers, I?foul~, and two ~Joe;-. . !(im Sayre 1-0=2, Brianne Proffitt 9- . Totals: 21·3-9/Z1=fi0
remaining option,.Proffit responded ern was never agam as domtnant as
RHS htt 24-49 twos, 3-7 threes, was
from the left ide and went opposite it was in its.first half bid, but had the 9-21 at.the line with 26 rebounds, ten
for the winning score. RHS called will power to get the job done going
steals, eight assists, 18 turnovers, 17
time with one second left, but Tur- down the stretch.
fouls and one block.
Icy stole the ball on the inbounds to
Ravenswood had tied the score 111
Southern led the reserve game 22·
run out the clock.
53-53 at the end of the third frame,
20 with just.over a minute to go, but
Earlier, Southern jumped out to a then led by as much as one-two
on several occasions took ill advised
15-5 lead as Renee Turley Iit up the points in a nip-and-tuck battle that
shots, then forced a costly foul that
nets with scverahhree pointers nnd saw many. ties and lead chnnges.
resulted in a Red· Devil score at the
numerous heart-pounding drives into
Sarah Arrington tied .the score at
bucket and a ning at ovenime.
the big Ravenswood front lines. J:lri- 60-60 for RHS settin .gup the stage · · Ravenswood went on io claiin the
A~ults ·run.e out up to· two-thirds of 311 commercials
anne Proffitt made a couple big plays . for the Southern heroics.
31-28 will,
from the post and hit a free throw as ,
Southern was led by Turley's 31
Rebecca Ferrell had nine for RHS
by svvirching chann~l! or leaving the room.
well .to spark the Tornadoes, wh&lt;) led points, while another senior Proffitt
and Sarah Dennis 8. SHS was led by
'
19-16 at the end of the first rou.nd.
added 18. Arrinj((on had 17 for
o/o of. commercials missed by switching
channels or leaving the room•

Sentinel COfl'ttSpondent
Just like the opening stages of the
game, Ravenswood made two strong
comeback. bids only to fall shon as
the So4thern Lady Tornadoes
claimed a dramatic 62-60 non-league
triumph over the Red Devils. who
were ranked eighth in WVa. Class
AA. ·Southern now . moves to 13-7
overall. Ravenswood is I I -4.
A Renee Turley dri~ble and assist
to Brianne Proffitt on the opposite
block produced the winning combi-

Alumni group sues Miami Univers!ty
over plans to Sf!bstitute nickname

'

The Meigs Marauders finished in
lifth place in the John DenO\Cia.-.ic
Wrestling Tournament held last
weekend at Athens High SchooL
Poim Pleasant won the tournament with a team score of 174, folOXFORD, Ohio (AP) _:___ A group manent orders to bar the. nickname
lowed by Fairfield Union with 135. of alumni sued Miami University change.
·
The. host team 'Athens finished ' in and its boardoftrustees Wednesday
Croskery said the litigation
third place with 124, followed hy to try and stop.the university's plan
"amounts to a lawsuit against pol itLogan (108), Meigs (9~). Marietta to adopt a spbstitute friday for its ical correctness."
·
(91), Johnstown Monrow (69), Bel- traditional Redskins team nickname.
"It's ridiculous;" · university
pre (61 ), River Valley (55) and Fed' ·
The lawsuit accused the board of spokesman Richard Little said of the
era! Hocking (25).
secretly discussing the proposed lawsuit. "It's hardly worth me com·· Pirst place finishers for the nickname change, even though the menting on, to he honest with you."
fl:tarauders were Adam Thomas in change has been the subject of
. Miami.'s president, James Garthe 135 (IOUnd weight class and Josh months of public dialog, a campus land, is -to recommend a new team
Roberts in the 275 pound division. forum and news reports. The lawsuit nickname to the trustees at their
Third place went to Brian Young (B demands that the board conduct a meeting Friday on the Oxford camteam) in the 275 pound class, fourth public hearing befo~ changing the pus. The board could act on the recplace included Shawn Michaels in name.
ommendation then, Little said.
the 125 pound cla.~s. David Shuler in
Cincinnati · lawyer · Robert
Asked whether the university has
tile 1'52 class and iosh Howard in the Croskery, who sa.id he represents .13
any plans to delay that schedule, Lit·21 S class. Filth place were Jay Fish- plaintills including Miami Universisaid: "None whatsoever."
er in the 130 pound class, and Vin: ty alumni and an American Indian, tie The
administration said tlie Oklacent ,Broderick in the 1'71 pound filed the lawsuit late this morning in
homa-based Miami Tribe, for whom
dass.
Butler County Common Pleas Court, the state university is named, had
• Team members include freshman . in Hamilton. The lawsuit asks Judge withdrawn its support iri July for the
Ghris Snouffer ( 103), senior Mike Michael Sage for temporary and per- .
Redskins name, citing concerns that
Klein ( 112), freshman . Chris
. rawsczyn (119), senior Shawn '
ichaels ·( 125), senior Jay Fisher
( 3()), senior. Adimt Thomas and
~hnJ.an Jim Ycauger ( 135), senior
.
.
.
Ulltavo L. ucio a.nd freshman Brunt
on ( 140). sopl)omme, Davtd
1Cr' (l52). fnis~man C.D. Ellis
·junior Vincent. Broderick .
( 7l)~, Juni~r Ja•on Roush (189),
nlot .. Josli Howard, . sophomore ·
1\'ranco ,R.omuno and junior Rayrjlond Cotterill (215), and senior Josh
Robei1s and junior Brain Young(hcaV)jWCight).
.
· i Meigs will host the Tn-Vallcy
&lt;:onfcn\1\ce tournament this Saturday
~ M~ig~ High School. Weigh·i.ns
will gel underway at 10 a.m. wtth
OPEN MON.-FRI. 9-6; SAT. 9-5
992-6674
J.rcstljng starting at II a.m. AdmisMasterCard/VIae/Discover
slot\ is $3 for adplts and $2 lor stu.at moat area locations.

Thinfcing about retirement?

some perceive the ierrn to be a racial
. slur.
The lawsuit filed tOday alleged
.that Miami's lioard iampered with
the tribe's resolution,
'
On Tuesday, Miami's administra· ·
lion released 18 j&gt;o;&gt;sible new nick- ·
names. Administrators said lhey l)nd
nprrowed the list to three replacements, but declined to say which
were'the favorites.
The names: 1be 1809ers (or 'Niner.); Thunderbirds; Bison; Thunder;
Red Arrows; jted and Whiie; Lcgends; RedHawks; ·The Miami (or
Miamis); ThunderHawks; War ·
Hawks; Arr&lt;&gt;Ws; Pride; Fire; ·Buckskins (or 'Skins); Mighty Red;
Ohioans; and.Big Red (or Red).
In Seplell)ber;1he school's board
of trustees voJed to drop tl)e Redskins nall)e

Total adults

62%

Aged 18-34

67%

College educaied

65%

, ln .households,

$75 ~99,999

e

Don't strip Kansas of its ~o. I
king just yet.
'
Despite losing their firsiJame of
season on 1\a~iday night - iri
~ouble overtime at Missouri - the
~ayhawks mfght still n:tain the top
pot irl the next AP 'lbp '25 poll.
. That's because No. .8 Duke
~napped a nine~game losing streak to
. !Wake Forest with. a 73-68 upset of
the second-ranked Demon Deacons
:Ot winston-Salem. N.t;:., on Wednes)lay night. No, 3 Kentucky also lost
'Tuesday night.
l · If Kansas wins an imponant Big
112 game at No. 61owa State on Sat"rday, the Jayh~wks will probably
not relinquish the No. I ranking
they've held since 1~ second week .
bf the season. ·
' A Kansas 1oss would give Wake ·
~mother shOt at No. I, pending a Sunday visit to - where else'!- Mis- ,

r

The Daily Sentinel. The Welcome Medium.

c)e.vtErr
1/•r J&lt;jo}(j Mo·-llfl

flf,',·rit'fllf'!f

.\lm ~T II)• ( :.UUII'II Rl~·'" \1 · lmt•rvii'Wf&gt; 1": S.lu1111t.111. 'l{n m .l.

. .---------------~~~~~~-----------------. .

IRE FUR·NITURE -APPLIANCE
IN·GALLIPOLIS

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618 EAST MAIN ST., POMEROY

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. the losses by Kansas and Kentucky might have caused the Demon
Deacons (I 8-2, 8-2) to anticipate the
first No. I ranking in Wake F:orest
history:
,
· However, the Blue Devils (18-5,
7-3) would have none .of it.
· Duke played well down the
stretch and became the lir.;t team to
shoot over ·39 perl:ent this Season
against the Demon Oeaeons with a ·
46.4 percent effort . ..
"I would have liked to have had .
(the No. I ranking) only for our fans, ..
. and mayhc our team - 20 years
down tHe road it would have been
neoit," Wake Forest ; diach Dave
Odom said.
"It's not a goal of mine, it's not
a goal of oors when we stoined, as a
matter oftact it still hlisn 't been mentioned," Odom added. "Maybe we'll
get another soot at it, who knows."
. Coincidentally. in 1!19-+ it wa&lt;
Wake Fore~l that beat Duke twi&lt;:e both times denying the Blue Devils
th8' top fiin~ing: · '~·-·
'''
· )ciT ·Capel led Duke • with 18
.points, 'oinp Roshown McLeod added
(6 for the Blue Devils, who ohly
tun1ed the ,ball over nine times using a smaller lineup against the taller
Demon Deacons.
Tim Duncan led Wake Forest
with 26 points on ll ;of-13 shooting,
hut missed live rrec·throws during a
crucial two-minute span late and didn't take a shOI in the final five minutes.
.
."My strqkc wasn't going, and ,
: al'ter the · second 'lmd third ones I
staned thinking ubuut it a~d missed ·
two more, " Duocan suid of·his diJ'Iiculties at the foul line. "I really did
reel bad. I felt it was my fault at that
puinl."

FURNITURE.~ &amp;
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APPLIANCE·

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Elsewhere in the Top 25 Wednesday night, 'it was No. 4 Minnesota
H5. Penn State 70; No. 6 Iowa State
61, Baylor 52; No.7 Maryland 66,
North.Carolinn State SS; No. 14Arizuna 87, Arizona Stale 71; and
· Ncbrlllika'77, No.J5 Color~do . 69.
No. 4 Minnesota 8S .
· Penn St. 70 ·
At Minneapolis,, Sam ·Jacolison
scoflld 22 points. :tnd the Golden
Gophers J'urced 18 l'irst-hal r
turnovers. huilding a 2J-roint lead.
gobhy Jackson added 16 points
and tied ·u, scason-IJigh with nine
assists lin the Gulden Gophers (2,02. 9-1 Big Ten), who sh•~ 70 percent ·
in tlic lirst half.

Gun ·cabinets

Curio Cabinets
Reg.
!\ SALE 5399 curio ........... 5299
5389 6 gun .......... '289
*599 curio ........... 5449
'469 6- gul') ......... '359 · 5
769 corner curio. 5579
5669 8-gun ... ;... 5499
5989 Large curio .. 5739
5869 1
...... 5649

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...
Tappan
Frigidaire

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NOW ONLY
5519 OVII 'Wtlt/40tain-.................... 5369

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Reg.

6l9 OVII 'Wtlt/4 CIM*s...~...........___ s479

5

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·~029 Rect. TaWt/4CWnN .......,_'-729
.,.·.. Rect. 'Wtlt/4 caster d.iis..............~s649
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....... Tallll.4·cllalrs-...•,........ _

$6'59

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'2119 w 'O.. TM/4 .,._ cWn~ sl054
Monday
1:30-8:00

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TuN.-Sat.

.1:30-5:00

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50

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Zenith

DAYBED ·sPECIAL

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Sam1u"'

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Includes white or almond daybed,
link springs, mattress, 7 pillows · &amp;
coverlet set.

$199
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FLOOR
COVERING
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· SATURDAY 8 AM TIL 5 PM
SUN~AY 1 PM TIL 4 PM
•FREE ~CING
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Phone 441-1401
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• 26 styles ·of carpet on sale
• 13 p~tterns
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hoped for heading into Sunday's visit by No. 1 Kansas.
The Cyclof!Cs miJSCd 13 of their
first 17 shots before using a 16-0run
to take control from the Bears (148, 3-7).
No. 7 !Yiaryland "
. North Carolina St. SS
At College Park, Md., Laron
Profit rebounded .from a 'two-game
slump and so did the Terrapins, who
won their sixth straight over ihe
Wolfpack.
Keith llooth scored 16 of his 21
points in the second half and Profit
scored 20 f(lr Maryland (18-4, 7-3
Atlantic Coast Conference), which

lost to Florida State and Wake Forest last week.
Profit, who scored 14 points com·
bined in the two losses, mode ei1ht

of 13 shots, including three alley-oop
dunks and two three-pointers.
·Danny Strong scored 19 for N.C.
· State (9-10, 1-9).

No. 14 Arizona tr7
Arizona St. 71
At Tucson, Miles Simol\,scercd
· 1.1 of his 22 points during the lirsi:
nine minutes of the second half to:
pace the Wildcats ( 14-5, 7'3 Pac-10).
The Sun Devils led 36-30 att .
halftime. but were undone when top'
scorer and lloor leader Jeremy Veal, .
picked up his fourth foul eli!'IY in-the(
second half.
With Veal out, Arizona State;
committed' turnovers on nine of its~:
neKt 10 possessions, and the Wild'cats went on a 17-4 run.

·

Mike Bihhy added 17 points h&gt;r,
·Arizona ( 14-5, 7-3 Pac-10).
Veal finished with 27 points h&gt;r,
the Sun D~v1l s ( 10-12. 2-M).

Turn yourself In today...
we have a checking
accolllltlltting your
descrfptlon,
..
. GETTING AROUND Wallaton'l Zach Holzapfal (right) Ia the task
of the moment lor the Meigs Mltrauden' Brad Whitlatch, who Is lookIng for ail open tMmmata durl!lg Tuelday night's Ohio Dlvlalon
garne at Meigs High School, whetll the Golden Jlocketa won 65-63•
Whhlatch flnilhed with 19 polntl. (Sentinel photo by Deve Harris)

-RE
FIRST BUCK- Nlne-ynr-old Joshua Hayman, the 1011 of Mike
end Kaleen ~aymsn 'Of Reedllvllle, downed hla flrat buck on Dec.
'2, 11196. He racently completed the Ohio Hunter Education Courw
with a SCOJe of 99. Hla favorite hobbles Include hunting, fishing and
go-cart_ra!llng.

"14 K Gold Diamond Re·~rts"
.· ESPEC::IAI..LY PRIC::ED

The. · Gul/iptl/i$ Daily Tribrme,
tire Daily Senti1rel and !he Sanda~·
Ttme$-'sentbiel value the contribu·
lions thCir,rcilders mali:c !O the sports ·
sections o( these popers. and they
will continue to 1;&gt;c published.
However. cenain deadlines for
submisslons"will be observed.
The deadline for photo$ and related articles for foqtball and other fall
. spons i.s t.he Saturday ' before the
Super Bowl. .
·
. Thc deadline for photos and ,elated articles for. basketball (summer
basketball 31)11 rel~ted camps fall
under t'he, summer sportS deadline l
and Other'winter spons is the last day
ofthe.N(IA linals . .·
·
· 1be deadline for submissions of
local ;bWICball- and softball.related
phottJs and· related articles, from T·
ball io the majors, a5 welt us other
sprin11md summe~ spons, is tho day
. of the laltcame pf the World Stri~These deadlines !ll't ia pice to
allOW' contribulon tho time they
~to Bt:ijuin! their phlltos ~ the
pholqi-Y studiOideveiOI'f:l' of
choice lind. '18 ~~~ the lllffi t,bo .·
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come on strong off the reserve club ·
and Jesse Maynard has had som
red-hot 1ames. whete he has utilized''
his speed to get the steals and spark
the fast break. 1)-son Buckley has
become much stronger in the post ...:
welL
'
Game time Friday is 6:30 for the
reserve game and 8 p.m. for the varsity tilt. Fans ar~ urged to come ear:
ly to get a good scat.

~oori. ·

Get more Impact In the newspaper.

~lll\1\III."IH' .II.II, lm.

j

It ·is only the eighth 20-win season in school·history for Minnesota,
'and the 20-2 record matches its best
start ever, equaling the. I •n~-73 and.
1976-77 teams.
•·
.
Penn State (8-11 , 1-9) lost forthe
ninth; time in .10 games.
I No. 6 Iowa St. 61
· · . B.@ylor s2
.
At Ames. Kenny Pratt.scored 16
points, including a key basket late,
and Dedri.c Willouahby added 14 as
the Cyclones (16-3 overall, 7-2 Big
12) overcame a sluggi~h perfor_mance.
· Iowa State won .its fifth straight,
but not with the kind of effort it

l

70%

·!60),

~nls.
~ . ."

•;BY The ~nociated ,,...

.

'S.ourl~ :

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when he cot~ly foul trouble.
Many teams have had tho philosophy that if you stop Eric Dillard,
you slop the Eaales. That proved true
in the first game. but Coach Tony
Deem hopes he has rectified that situation and likewise other Eagles
have really stepped forward. Other
Eastern spot starters are Corey
Yonker and Jeremy Kehl.
, For Southern, Jerrod Mills has

netted 14 points 11!1&lt;1 seven rebounds.
and Steve Durst arabbed eight
rebounds and had seven points.
Bastem's Eric Dill.-d, the team's
leading scorer wilh an 11-point average. scored the pme's firsl two
points, but that's all he wu allowed
Jhe remainder of tho contest Dillard's play was limited to 14:23, less
than half of the 32 minute regulation,

Du·ke tops Wake Forest 73-68 to help Kansas stay at No. 1

'

in·tou rn_,y

70-61 victory befroe a packed house and six rebounds, while Adam
at l!astem High School.
•
Roush nOtched ten, and Billy ShepSouthern was led in scor- pard eiJ~t.
ing by senor Jamie · EY!111J, who
l!asfern was led by Daniel Otto's
se-.1 at will at crucial mon\ents in nineteen points 'and nine rebounds.
the game, notchinc20 points as well .Otto picked up the slack levied on
as lead the ,Tornadoes with seven the Eagles when ace guard Eric Dilrebounds. Ryan "Butch" Norris, lard went down in foul trouble. Josh
who always takes a ·liking to the Casto had a solid seventeen point
!!astern hardwood. posted ·16 poirits . performance, while Rickie Hollon

In Top 25 c.ollege hoops,

Don't you?

Meigs
matmen
take fifth

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�Febru.y 8, 1117'
Page 6 • The Dally Sanllnel

"""radi!V, F*'lllrY I, 1111'

Pomeloy • Mlddlapatt. Ohio

.

.I

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By HANK LOWENKRON
WEST LAFAYETI1!. Ind. (AP)
- February continues to be a gn:at
month for coach Gene Keady's Purdue Boilermakers - 14 straight
victo ries and a 2 1·3 record over the
last four seasons.
The latest victory came Wednesday night when Purdue htid\ ts rn&lt;&gt;SI
produchve pomt total of the sca.&lt;on.
defeating Ohio State 94-77.
Chad Austin scon:d 26 points and
Brad Miller had a career-high I K
rebounds and 17 points as the Boilermakers topped the Buckeyes for
the seventh consecutive time.
"It.'s that. time since I've hcen

to me," said Miller, whose previous
hiJh rebound tOial was 14 apinst
Bowl!ns Green on Nov. 30.
Miller's double-double was the
eiJhllllhil season and the lllh of his
career for the 6-foot-11 junior cen:
ter.
l
Five Boilcnnakers finished in
double figures . Mike. Robinson
scon:d IS, Brian Cardinal had II and
oeserve Jaraan Cornell chipped in 14.
Damon Stringer led Ohio State
w.ilh 20 and Neshaun Coleman had
17. Jasbn Singleton finishe!l wilh 16
and Shaun Stoncrook scon:d 12.
Ohio State stayed close for much
of the Jame, trailing 52·47 liefore

..

AI.: run St. V-St.M l\2 . Akrnn Hoban

"'

E ASTERN CONFERENCE

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Afhmlit J)h·iliiun

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PhrlatJd phra ......... ·. I ~

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01i-.:.er.o .. ........... A 1 tJ JC7~
I:.JI!r roiC ...... ....\J 12 .7.U
l'u l.e nm..
. ....... JI I~ .n74
Churl uuc ................ .2K II,! .5%
CLEVELAND ...... .: ~ · 22 . ~ ) 2

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Mlnnesol:l ............ 22 2,

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l.&gt;alluL ............. .... 16 28
Ot:n ver ................... 16
S•m Antonio ........... II JJ
Vam:ouvcr ...............9 41

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'L.A. LukcrL ......... J~ 1J .729
se.. ulc .................... n 1:' .681
Portland ................. 2-i H .:'21

Sacrnmento:........... 21 27

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L:.A. Clippers ....... _
..19 , 2:\ . •432
GohJc.n Stale .......... 17 . 29 ..170
Phocni• ............... ,.. l7· ,.'l l .l54

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with 14:39 lefi .and the Buckeyes
never drew ~loolcr than ei,tlt poiaiS
again.
The Boilermaker5, who took lhe
lead for good at 5-4, opened their
biggest lead of tbe night at 94-75 on
jumper by Austin with IK ~nds
to go.
.
Miller, who ai!IQ contributed four :
blocks anil five assists, helped Pur- •
due record a 42-30 advantage off the ~
boards

Minmi 118. Boston 117

··
84

PhiiHiphlu IJ 3. S1111 An maio I.J1
Ulah 99. Seonle 9.S
·
• Phuem x 99. Alllllltu81
DcnvL-r 106. Wastn'ngtoo 104
L.A. Lakm lOb, Cbicato 90

Tonipt'o gomes
Sun Antonio nt New York, 7:JP r .m.
lntli11n:1 nr N&amp;..-w Jcnty, 7 : ~ p.m.

Bosron ur Or1ando:7:)0 p.m.

Milwuulee at Mhmli, 7:;t0 p.m.
s~'fafnento al C'ltnrkl4te, 7:JO p.m.
Houston at Odrnil. 7:.10 p.m.
VliOOO!J\&lt;~r 1\1 MIMeiOtA. K p.rn .

No

pniesFriday or Sat~r!lay
•

~.

;·

'

j

· ' SuadaY'ogamo

·

A it..Saa}1:filftfe at CLEVELANI&gt;.

b ·J[) Jl.nl.

.

NCAA Division I
men's scores
Eut

nudmcll t&lt;O. Lehi·p

ao~ OFF
~-

6!1

6.S, Nillfll0l6J, &lt;.rr
Holy Cnlili K.l, Army 72 ·
N:~vy 79. CoiJ'IIC S6
'

J7

•

.

11.

Ho ck ey

Pllinaville Harvt:)l 69, !uhtabuln 4~

Perry ~8. Aurom 46
Philo 72. Cruobvillc ~7

l)uka: 7:\. Wake I:'M!!t 6K

NHL standings

STARTS
1"ot&gt;AY

1

NIKE'I ASICS
REE801&lt;1 e'ASfl.ANb1 Df)(Ta1 MUSH PUPPitS
INCLUDIS .

ALL Nlf&lt;fi ANI&gt; AE'feok ,... s ...

Flut-h.l&lt;t A&amp;.M H'J. Hnfllllfon 7K

Murylrnul66. N. C!ll'olimr St. .~:'
Miuml·7w., Piushurgh 6:\
Mi s5 i s~i 11pi 79. UHJ 7J
Owl Rnhcrt~ K2. Alcorn St , 65
Ridul\muJ K6. Gt.•or~ Mot~on fi'J
Va. Cumn~tmWI!nlth 72. Jnmc ~ Madi·
!ollll triJ
.
VuiWcrhih 6Y. Wh::mplu~ 62
·
Will inm &amp;. Mary KO , Old Dnminiun
~2

lt~S

SWe"A"ISHI~'I'$ (NI~ ~, .H·~~'
. ~ ' . : . . .. '. · I . · I .· ·
*' ·t:,AR&amp;f" 'Sii1.1iC.110N'. ""I.l, C,\P$. P AND ,, 1():"'' ,:t. ,~
HURRY ,.1·115 S.A li WoN•T LA'ST LoN• I
AI.~ FR.IDA.Y .ANO SATUitD-1\V ONLY-CKIIC.k.TWIS oU-r/

SHOE PLACE ·

St. h-4 , Knn!i:U: Sr.rW
Prairie Vil'w KIJ. Hu~IUn·Til ~ltJtt111 H.l.
OT ·
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13 .WEEKS For Only

. · ForW.SI
M7. Ari7.UII&lt;I S4. 71
Guru•.atu• 7'1. Porll:md -67
1\ritJ»Ui

$18~20 ·
THAT'S
ALMOST 50% OFF THE NEWSTAND
PRICE!
'
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S, l.k11h ""· '4fM;tlaM 1'h:h ~I
, ~ l~i!'ll.~~ ''" Slml&gt;it·~~fl~

'

Old~ men's

'

. ·co,lege scores

THAT'S LIKE GETTING SIX WEEKS 'FREEI
•

. North co..t Conreren•:•
1\llq:t~t: ny IJ2, ObCdill ~b
l)o.•ni ~• • n M.\ . l)hitt W~ly 11 12

·Local, National and World News, Sports, Comics
and TV Times. All this and morel

Wilf.·nb..'fl! 1.) ~ . Ktony1.r1-UJ

~'M I~ l ~ r li I . ('~ w,•Jill'rn 7K. Ifl'

•
•

Hl"idctbl..-,.t!-71 Cllfi\nl6.1
Juhn l 'urrull7 U BaiJwin-W;dla..~ tt9
Moun! Unij1n Ml)_Hiram Cui. 78
""uski"Jum 7.1. Mlll'it."l!a ftM
llt}in Nnnlk."m 74. (&gt;lk.-rb&amp;.'in 7.l

· Non--conrrrr.nf:e play
Bluflton M . lkfi:Uk 't..' M
Geneva 1•1. l..ul.:l" Eri~ ~
RIO GRA.NVI ~ 7K . Midr.·lkartll.ll'n

.

Ohio women's
college scores
Mid·Anteri(an C I ·r ICa uwti•Jo! C'..-t'l.:rl K2. ~ ~* tH
M1a1N 62. 1?. Ntdu,_ ~I · '

OHIO ICY. ~rt-1&lt;1
Tulnln 101. K&amp;w Ml'

ton, Holur Medical Cenw ~

for

mOre information Call Lia np;

Unit, 446-5070.

' LET THE DAILY SENTINEL BE

YOUR #liNFO~ATION SOURCE!
To take advantage of.this s~ial offer, just complete the fonnbelowinclmailit with your check
or money order to: The Daily ~tinel/ Ill Court St., PomeroyOh 45769.
,
.

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1996 GEO ·
TUCKEI414

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•Thi• offer iS good for new customers only. You must not have hall delivery in the·put30 days.
•.
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YES! Pleue stut IDJ ••btcrlptloa tone- Dally Seatl1el for 13 weellls for oaly $18.10, as
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POMEROY •• Meigs County
Chamber of Commen:e luncheon,
Tues;day, noon, Carleton School.

-: h
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. . en seniors nee aSSISte . IVIng con I IOns
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lllinni ~ 70, Nunhwc~tcrn 5K
lrtwll St. 0 I, Uaylnr 52
Ken! 70. Tt~lctlu M

.. '•

CHESTER --· Chester Courthouse Restoration meeting, Monday
7 p.m . at the firehouse .. Anyone
interested invited to attend.

Susan Elliott. R.N. to lllk on VMH
day ueaunent prop3111.

.

I~
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30
I
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Midwest

•

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crulae,all~r

Gco~i il ~0 . 1\J:~bmnn 74

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162
lltr

-·-

SllVERSvn.LE
Stiversville
CQIIlRiunity 9turch, Saturday, 7:30
p.m. hymn sing. "The Delivered" to
sing ..

'I

Pickcrinatun 86, WorlhinJion Kil·

19~ .:";~!

South
Auhum Il l . Mis.•iuipt'i Sr. 68 ·
CniiJlln Sr. 90. ~JawnrC 51. Kl Ol'

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SATUltDAY

MONDAY ,
CAlli'EN'rnR - Free skin test·
ing clinic. 6 to 1 p.m Monday at the
Columbia Township Fin: Depart·
menL Connie Karscbnik, R. N .•
Meigs County tuberculosis nurse to
be there.

. meeting, Tuesday, 8 p.m. at the Carleton Sciiool.
.

•
POMEROY -- Return JD!W)wi .
:~
MIDDLEPORT -· DAV meeting.
Meigs Chapter, Daughters of the
Monday,
6:30 ·p.m. also Auxiliary,
• RU11..AND •• Rudand Township · A,merican Revolution, 10 a,m. Sat·
By LENORE VICKREY .
ery time afterward. The procedun: is - the stomach is wrapped in a com~
DAV
hall,
Route 7. Refreshments.
Trustees, n:gular session, 'Thursday, urday. Mike Gerlach to speak.
The Montgomery Advertl1er
a milestone for persons wilh GERD plete 36(klegree tum around the : .
6 p.m. Rudand Fore Station.
Dr..Kan:n Edwanls.(:rawfptd loves for wbom medicines have not been esophagus, Dr. Barry' says. 'Jbe; ·
POMEROY
Burlingham TIJESDAY
POMEROY
..
Meigs
County
unit
to eat Mexican and Thai food. Up . ' helpful.
Toupet procedure, which he prefers,:
: 1UPPERS PLAINS .. The Tup- Camp, Modern Woodmen, potluck,
of
American
Cancer
Society,
S
p.m.
until
few
months
ago,
however,
"I
was
the
fuslto
do
the
Toupet
is a 270-degree wrap, pMtially;
l!eFS Plains VFW, 7 p.m. Thursday at Saturday, 6:30 p .m. Aw~ to 25
.
1\Jesday,
confen:nce
room,
Veterans
she couldn't indulge her favorite procedure in this area," says Dr. around the esophagus.
ihe hill.
.
and SO year members.
Memorial Hospital.
spicy ineals for fear of a burning Bail)'. who said he lias done about
HARRISONVILLE
Harsensation in her upper abdomen. 15 such procedures.
· " The difference is in the post·;
• RACINE .. Post 602, American
risonville
Lodge
411
,
F&amp;M,
special
SYRACUSE
..
Meigs
County
Sometimes·
the
sensation
would
be
The
sphincter
or
valve
between
operative
morbidity," he says.:
l:.egion, Business. meiing, 6:30 p.m.
session, Saturday. ,lnspectiOII'dinne~, Board of Mental Retardation and so bad it woold trigger an asthma . the stomach and the esophagus usu- "With the Toupet, patients are USI!-!;
dinner io follow.
6:30p.m.; meeting 7:30p.m.
Oevelopment Disabilities, speeial attack.
ally closes after eating, poeventing ally able to burp and they have less~
Caffeinated sofi drinks like colas the upward movement of stomach trouble swallowing."
·•
and Mountain Dew were equally acid. But in people wilh GERD.
::
·
·
.
· painful. · .·
.
weak esophageal muscles operating
Bolh procedures take about 90;;
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
independently and .n:main safe and clothing or bed linens as necessary
"So was eating 100 late in the the value don't do lheir job, and the minutes and requin: about twO days..!.
silntlnet NMn Staff.
heallhy.
to remain di'y and clean?
evening, or eating ton much," she stomach juices back up lhrough the in the hospital . Patients can~ to;;
: Tbere comes a ti~~te when frail, • "When dOes this time &lt;:ome?
-Does lhe senior have a problem says. "I would wake up in the mid- esophagus, causing heartburn, pain normal activities In about a week.~
irtlpain:d senior citizens may not be How can someone concerned ahout n:membering to lake medications or die of the night choking. My asthma and nighttime regurgitation •. Dr. Dr. Barry says. Previously, patients:
able to live alone in their own a senior know when a supervised in taking the proper dosage?
actually got so bad 1 t,act to be 'hos- Barry says, ·
.
were in the hospital five to . seven.
hmnes.
living arrangement should be oon-Is the senior physically unllble to pitalized twice."
Medications can help some peo- . days and n:cuperated for four to siX::
: It becomes an issue of health and sidered?" asked Collins.
handle .the medications? ·
Being in the hospital was nothing pie, as· can losing weight and avoid- weeks.
:;Sl!fety.
That l,!etermination, s
said, is ..
-Is the senior unable to obtain new for the 39-year: o(d ·Mont- ing spicy .foods, 3\cohol and smok·
"
. · And it usually involves difficult difficult, but certain que · ps can . help in case of. need?
gomery, Ala., . internist ·who sees ing, he says. But for some people,
Now that her GERD and hiataf.
cJicisionS by family members.
· be answered to serve "'i a pide to
-Is the senoor unable to handle patients in the city's hospitals n:gu· like Dr. Edwards.(:rawfool, more hernia have been surgically ~
.; Makirtg the detennination as to . help in decision-malcing abj.lut inde· money and pay bills?
larly. But being a·patient her-self was help is needed.
of. Edwards-Crawford no ·Ionge~
whether an·~cd relative is physical- pendent versus supervised living. ·
-Does lhe senior get lost in famil- somelhing she'd just as soon as not
· Wilh the aid of the laparoscope, has to take medication for her aslh..,.
1~ iQd emotionally able to continue
The questions: ·
·iar situa1ions?
,
have 10 put up with. .
.
Dr. Barry was able to make several rna.
::
ioillcpendentliving can be very diffi·
-Has the senior had accidents
-Has the senior behaved inappro·
Dr. Edwanls-Crawford was lak- small incisions in Dr. ·Edwards·
:;
"Once I had my surgery, ~
C!lt,' said Glenda Collins, ~.N., becatlse of weakness, dizziness, or priately in public or lhn:atened oth- ing the medicines Prilosec for Crawford's abdomen, ralher lhan lhe
Planning and .D evelopment Director lhe inability to get around?
er5?
·
· ·
Propulsid, commonly pn:scribed for long mid-line incision used in smil- asthma completely disappeared, •";i_
of the Area Agency on Aging which
·Has use of the stove, oven or
-Does lhe senior have a mental or her
gastroesophageal
refluK iar procedures in the pasL With the s!Je says. {Asihma does not cause;:;
s4J'ves Meigs County.
appliances becO!fle' a problem emotional problem lhat makes him (GERD), in which stomach acids abdominal area magnified and trans, acid reflux, but if you have both;.: Th·help witb that ~isiofl she has because of forgelfulness?
or her a threat to himself or olhers?
"reflux" of surge upward .from the milled onto a television monitor acid reflux can make asthma worse;:
ceme up with a list of questions for
-Are lheoe stairs or conditions in
An answer 'of "yes" to even a few stomach through lhe esophagus. But lhrough the laparoscple's tiny video doctors day. They theorize that whel(
fimilies to answer.
die home lhat are hazardous?
of the questions, may indicate that she still suffered with extreme hejlrt· camera, he wrapped part of the the acid content of lhe stomac~
· : .Passport and Area Agency on
-Does the senior n:fuse to use the senior needs services and/or suP:, bum that continued to trigger her upper portion of her stomach around flows backward into the esopbagusi:
~ing in-home service 'programs ndequate safety devices such as raii- port, advised Collins.
asthma, l~ading her to· seek more lhe lowest point of her esophagus. it acts as a trigger that can cause C
offered through providers, such as ings or a walker?
If a "yes" answer is given to help.
creating a new sphincter. A large spasm in the smooth muscles of the::
senior cen~ and community action
. -Has the senior lost iniokest:in liv- many of the questions, then it may
It came in the fonn of a new hiatal hernia, in which part of her walls of the lungs).
,
ptograms, need 'to be reviewed by ing or .expressed a desi~l&lt;&gt; die?
indicate lhat lhe time has come for a Iaparoscopic surgical procedure · upper stomllch protruding., into her
Edwards-Crawford's .surgerlf
families as they consider their lovi:&lt;l
·-Is the senior unwilli~· or unable ch:""!l• in living arrangements, she known as a Toupet {pronounced like chest, was pushed back down into
couldn' t have c~me at a better tipoe;
ones' lifestyle, advised Collins. .
to pn:pate meals?
smd.
. the toupee hairpiece). Dr. . Wesley her abdominal cavity. Hiatal hernias She had n:cent bout of the flu; .
: she· said that many of these pro-Is there a demonstrated nutrjQuestions about in-home .sc:r· Barry, a Montgomery surgeon, .per- are often, but not always, the cause
which caused her ID'Iose her voice;::
gtams have enabled seniors to tional problem such as weight loss, vices, supervised living options, or formed the surgery with a lapard- of GERD, Dr. Baity says.
but she believes she would ha~·
remain in their own homes much illness, or anemia?
how to approacl!, the senior on the scope, lhin pencil-like lighted tube
In a n:lated new procedure - the been even sicker if she'd had to coni..:
l&lt;;nger than in the p.St.
-Does the senior forget to eat?
subject of altering living conditions, lhat eliminateS tbe need for a large
tend wilh asthma as well.
:_:
.
: Still for some elderly pe(lple,
·Is the senior unable or unwilling . may be directed to the Area Agency incision and gready sllonens n:cov- laparoscopic Nissen fundoplication
.
Collins pointed out, lhere comes a to get to the toilet when necessary? . on Aging at I-81J0..331-2644.
tiple when they no longer. can live
-Is the senior unable to change

AU Velakk• on our Lot 60
tlaro.,;a an Estemiwt
. 32 Pdint ll•ed Car lrupeetwn!
. For Added Peaee of Miml · ·
Cheek Oua One of Our Eseellent
~~rleilld4~ Se"'ke Plam!

.

-IN ·OV,_, SALI! F\OOMAll WOM6NS SHO&amp;'
AU. MENS SHOES

Pn1vitlcni.-e 7t Rutje{.S 67
S1. Peter·~
f.Urfield !'i8

•

1:\~

r

prai3

J

&lt;.:uniMu~

Min nc ~ nrn K~.

162 117
t.W 120
11'19 l!il

•

~~

POMEROY
and
pluniJtg meeting, 7 p.m. Thursday,
Pomero&gt;: Public Ubrary for Tues·
day's 7 p.m. concerUif "Hlu;vest",
COIIIeiDpor.y Ouistian music_group
ot the Rutland Ovic Center. ;

t

·

CLEMANc&amp;
. s
. ~LE

·

'66
6)
61
SM

Washinp.m ........ l'l 2.4i b -'tl l)h 1.&amp;1
T;tii1Jt3 Bay ........ IY 1:11 b .W ll9 lftO
N.Y. Isl..--n: .... l7 27 9 43 142 I~

w..,,.

.
Willow Wood Symmt!s Vall. 63.
PnrtJm.IUih'E. .\t'l
'
Wundridjr 76, Slm.'1sbor0 4:1
.
ZltiWIVille Rnlle\T.UII !i2. Col. ReallY

Pllmla ~.St . Aligwo;tinc 41
Pnrmn Pilduol47, Elyria C.Uh. ~7

~O% OFF AU. FOOTW~AR

..

K
II
7
K

-~

et...._

1BullsDAY
: POMEROY - PERI, Thiii'Sday
l(lm at the Senior Citizens Center.
lbose planning to have lunch contiel the cenlcr.

a

PinllburJh .........JO IK 5 M 201l
Bufl~ ............. .'..!719 1 61 1~1
Mn.-.ln:al ........... l'92610 .aK nt
ltwtlnn1 ..............20 2-4 7 -17 14M
Bnstdllr ......... ;... ,.20 2CJ 6 ol6 t~
Ouaw;t ............... IK 2.1 ·10 -16 1&lt;12

• • II

prallt JP'OIIPI'Iri*' 1 ton •• c
II I ead rpe 1111
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tipe. 1-.r are p;l lvl • lpiiU
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her 4 daJL

W. Branch 4K. Clftloo S. )4 ·
w. Gr•P .Cl,l...akewllod 40
W3k!ffool4~. Caldwc..-1132
WclliaJt~ JK. Oba"!i• 34. o:r
62. Sc. Jotq&gt;h 55

(~AKIN. ROOM FOR SP~IN&amp; ~CHANoass)

Wednesday'sseoros
Tt»''RIO 89. CLEVELAND

Mdlcrmolt Northwe:il :'i:'i. R~k Hill

Harbor 4J
,
.
Otseao 66. f.asswootl ~- nT

.
' .
Oay. Way~ 6J. Spri~ . North 41
DeGroff Rhcnidc ~- M:uliJ&gt;IHl Sl
Delphos St. John ' s~- Ottoville .W
Ortsden Tri· \l;tll~y ~ ~- Mn)'Jvil~ 40
Elyria ()4, Sandusky 47
f'n1rfidd «. W611.'f'l\ L.1tham l~

niNTEit.

.
Manrua Crntwood 64. Windham ~7

M~ M . G&gt;~m:U!ivillc ~~
MCI@:adore Field M . Watt!rh•• ol1
N. Royalton 42. Clovcril:u.r 40
Newbury 30, l.aun:ll7
New Cun..:u.-d Gtena -17. W. Mu~t.:·
ingun1 :\IJ
Oberlin FiNIWKis70. Mid&gt;Jiew 2IC
Orwt:ll Grand _Vall. ~4 . A=duahul.a

w.V:J..

Stnnhfn SR. Cwtr~kl 4-7
Tol. 8owllhtr72. Tol. Libbey37 . ·
Toi.Carbolic65, Tol. Rotm"
Tol. St. Ut111la ~7 . To!. Stlll'l ~I
lol. Wuitc ~8. Tol. Woodwan.l 39
Troc'lt'OOt).Madiaon r4-3, On:enviUe 2.1
VIUidnlia Bulin ~2. f';qun 29
VmniliDII !'6. N. Rid&amp;eviJte U.
Wlll'l&lt;lw Rtvn View "'· Jtokw Lr~iiiJ·
lun41

Mentor Lake: Ca&amp;h. 6K. Chancl 2'J
Miller City~- F..-. Jenninp ~ ·

Dny. P:mmo11 1'12. Day. Mc:t~Juwd:!lc

.

Steubenville Cath. , .1. Un.rdy.
49

Ata.nlkiM•ilioll
· l! L I flo. lit: Ia

Phi~tphia .......lV l!'i
Flmda ~ ............. 26 l!'i
N.Y . Rar~Jerio ..... 2121
l'kw k:ney ........ 2.~ 17

SI&lt;Ubcnvill&lt; 57. E. Liveq&gt;oolll

40

4l

'71.

Rllwnna Soolhdst 61 . Rooraown oiK
Salem 71 , Holland fll
Sidaey $4, Troy .S I
,

Marietta Jll. Ja~..--bol ~
Mp)ll RO. Cio.&lt;hen .U
Mc:Cunnelsville Mmpn :\2. Sheridan

66, CumbridJC 60
Duy. Col, Whit~ . 6J. Dmy. Bellmont

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14
11

.

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C1~hocton

Mklwr.st DINictn
Ulmh ......:..... ..........n
· Hnu-.tnn ... .. .........\2

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Cory- RJiw5an60. A~ .1~

WESTERN CONFERENCE .
Ium

Alli ;u"~ Marlint=.tun 47. Canal Fulmn
N\\' 4ft
.
•
Amn -'X. Kl'yllolutll' J I
A,·, ~trl.ak~ M . l..1lfain Clalh.
lka\'\.'f~'J\,.k tc6, SprinJ. Suulli -4--'
lk'l\'a 5fr. Strut\~villc .U
1\n.:dri.M\'dk.- 17. Mt:dilla 6~ .
Untli!t'PW1 fH. TIWumn H
Unms w~ek .SO. Mtdpark J6
llurti.MI lk-rkM!in: oiJ, Wi..:kliiTl' .' 0
Ca,msmC';tlh. Sf!. Hu4Jon ·U
Currolllon -44. Loui ~vill!! 2tJ
Ccnkrvillc 76. x~rua .'\.'
llu,t=.rin !=ails 71 . Kin land 4~
Clrt!. Hnly Nalnl! 7l Clc. Ca~:hnlic 4-&amp;
Cnal Grove 49. Pon ~ml'llllh 4~
Cvl. l&gt;caales 6 f, Ncwd Ca&amp;b. JM
C111. Hartlty frl. Cui. Wact.crstlll ~M
Conneaut :'i9, tu~lnhula Ed~cwnuU
l6

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Rll&lt;:inc SoutiM:rn 62. Ravmiwood.
W.Va. 60

·

1\kf'i,n Srrin~ tiM. Mia..'n'a 67

NBA st.andings

boo~29

for1 frye: 149. 8caJIIYiilre Sft
Gorficld Ht ~ . Trinity 96, Chardon
.
.-t;O.CLJ7
O~rr.:s MiUs Hawqn 71. Crinul61
.
Huber Ht1. .Wayne 63. Splilic,.· North
42
I
· kiTenon 72. Genm~O
'
'
· Kcua'ing Fairmont 49, nitbom -40
Lorain Adm . Kin&amp; 64, Lorain
Southview .SI
l..orai1 Clc~nicw :1l BrooUide 4-8.

Akmn Ct:ni.·Howcr 4&amp;. Akmn firt&gt;~'""-' .!~

""" Cal

i'' • • ••flw-•lceto-

.Purdue bepn pulling IWII)I with a 72. Tbe run bepn when Miller,' who
made all nine of his IRe throws. hil
·two with IS: 13 to play. Bri• Cardinal's bukd and a three-poilller by,
Cornell put Purdue ahead 59-49

Scoreboard
Basketball

.

• T1te C1

..
ca~endar· ----,....-----~;.

Pomeroy • Mkld1eport, Ohio

.;..-----,-------Community

Purdue _beats OSU 94-77to. keep alive Febfuary win
streak ·
.
ing quick tine-point shots and failhen: lhat a Purdue team s1a11s to gel Boilermakers visit Michigan State on
and understand the system," Miller Saturdtiy . and host Big Ten leader ing to go to the free throw line."
Ohio State coach Randy Ayers said:
said of the success the Boilermakers Minnesota next Wednesday.
The Boilermakers connec:ted Oil
have had while going undefeated in
"We better block out (our sue:·
February for nearly two yeaB. "I cess) or we'll gel beat by 50," Miller 20 of 26 free throws and 12 of 23
don't know if it's somelhing they put said of Saturday's ganne. "Tbey shots from beyond the lhree-poont
line. Ohio State (9- 10, 4-6) made
in the food at this time. But, it seems c~h the boards really well."
four of ei1hl from the free throw line
like every February we've played
Purdue's three-point shooting and
that well.
free throws ruined the upset hopes of and only five of 19 lhn:e-point
··It is a time ,when everyone the Buckeyes, who had won two
attemptS.
" We tried to exploit their inside
undcrstailds alljl comes together."
straight since losing Jermaine Tate
and
it worked pn:tty well," Purdue
,
Purdue ( 12· 8. 7-3 Big Ten) ha&lt; with a hean problem and Sean Tuck·
won thrt'o consecutive games for the er with a tear of lhe P,tellar tendon
coach Gene Keady said. "Going into
·. fi rst time this season and thc 'thrce- . in his right knee.
the game I wasn't sun: how Brad
time defending conlcrcnce champiwas going to play, but he came out
"It was our inability (to execute)
ons will be challenged in the oomi~g in the second half. You start to rush
strong.""
.
· week to keep the streak alive. The · when you ~et tight in terms of lak, "It seemed the ball was coming

•

•1,

•

\'

STOP.I"AHD

SEE OUR
·sPECIAL ·0".·.
BEER :flrtD "'I
.

•CIGARETTES
•SUPER and INSTANT
. LOnERY
•FROZEN FOODS
.

.

�.~$,1897 .

'

Thurtdlly, Febru8ry •• 1117

Pomeroy •Middleport, Qhlo

: rogram to be offered pn forestry . .
·management; .alternative enterprises

Crazy verdict on attempted murder is better than fiction
County Jail on Friday. Browlllll Circuit Judp Robert Tysoa dismissed
an lllelllpiCd murder chqe against
Antonia! Wolker, 16, who was
arrested in January. Prosecuton plu
to appe.t the rulinz.
"The boy told Sul!rise police
after his am:stthat he had planned to
By ANN LANDERS
kill assistant principal Robert Curcio
· Dear Ann Landers; Here's more and took two weapons, a .2S-caliher
proof t1w you can't possibly make semiautomatic pistol and a .38 calup letters or imagine situations iberrevr•lver, tc.dothejob.
·
worse than the ·truth. I am sending
"The swe charged Walker as aJT
you an article from the Fort Laud· adult, but Tyson · dismissed the
erdale Sun-Sentinel. Here' s the · charges, saying the state had no 'fac. ~tory;
.
·
· tual suppbrt tlw the boy's actions
: "A Bair Middle School student went heyond mere prepilration.'
who allegedly took two guns to
"Walker was upset that Curcio
school to kill his assistant principal called his home whenever he mishewas released from the Broward

Ann

Landers

hived. The eighth-grader's plan was
foiled when a classmate told a
school resource officer and Walker
wu called out of class and

And why is he still in the eighth
grade? These questions need to be

addressed.)

Dear Ann Landers: A few months
ago, I met a beautiful man who Is six
years younger than I am. (I am 35.)
We g()( along wonderfully and had a
Stunned in Sunshine Valley
Dear Sunshine; I guess Judge · lot in common. I knew after our first
'!)son tjJinks it's OK for a 16-year- date that "Larry" was right for me.
Our relationship is strictly plaold to plan to kill an assistant principal and bring a couple' of guns to tonic so far, but .we've grown very.
school to do tlie job, as long as he close. Things went great until Larry
doesn't actually kill anybody.
lost his job and hegan to get stressed
I hope the authorities in Fort out. He's been out of work now for
Lauderdale. will-keep an eye on that three months and is having no luck
kid, and it wouldn't hun to keep
gelling hired.
eye ori Judge 'JYson as well. (P.S. ;
The fact that I'm working and
And how did a 16-year-old get ahold independent has put a lot of press.ure
of two guns? Where are his parents? on him. He doesn't feel our relation-

seii'Ched."
Ann, please comment on this. -

an

1

Meip residents int.erested in aenerating'income'from
.harvestin1 their timber or other alternative income enter~SC,:S can ~ how throu1h workshops at the upcomJRI , Markctina • The Key to Income Opportunities"

Oood luck, dear.
has "IIOihing to offer me." I told
Dear Ann lAnders: lsthere a COPLarry these things take time, bot he reel way IQ put kilchen paper towels
hasn't made any attempt to contact on the roller? I favor the "over the
me in several days, and I miss him. top"' melh9d. but my wife prefen
I am worried t1w his feelinas of the "from the underside" approach.
inferiqrjty wil.l wreck our chances Can you help? - RFC From Clevofor a healthy relationship. Should I land
'
back ofT or give up? I don't want to
·Dear RFC: I'm still trying to
lose this man . I really do love him. recover from the flak I received
Ple~e help. ~-Discouraged in Rhode when I said toilet paper should he
Island
hung so it hangs close to the wall. '
Dear Rhode Island: The ·hest
I'm not giving any more advice
thing you can do for Larry is 10 help on how to hang anything .
. .:
him find a job. Meanwhile, hear in'"''
Send questloas to Ann Landen,
mind that you've known him only a
few months. Don't make any hasty
ton S:rndleate, 5777 W. CeQ·
-decisions. If it's really love, it will tury Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles,
s.urvive the trials and · tribulations. C8llf. 90045
ship. can ao JUlY further hecallse he

"''Cmuaar.

ment

Pan of life is dealing with death.
We Jose a loved one. How do we
cope? How can we help others who
have lost a close friend or family
member'!
It is important to remember that
even though we all mourn differently, there are certain stages of grieving that we tend to go through .if we
are to accept the de~tli. SOI!Ie individuals may go through the different
steps quicker than others; some may
get to a level and then regress or proceed in another order; and others
may never accept the death at all . .
These different stages are true for
any type of loss, whether it be
divorce, ending relationships or
death. '
The first stage is denial or "I don't
· believe it!" The suddenness or shock
of the situation may require 11 long
: time for the person to n;alize that the
loved one is gone. They may ~ven
.; isolate ' themselves hecause they are
afraid to show their emotions.

Following denial, is the. "Why
me?" stage . . The person ·wonders
why this had to happen to them.
They may hecome angry and
volatile.
.
Next, the person may hegin to
bargain. They may say such things
as, "If they come ~ack, I'll he a hetter person." This may he done to
postpo!]e reality or suppress guilt.
· Depression may set .in.. The
remaining loved one starts to realize
that reality cannot be changed. They
should be allowed to express their
grief,
Acceptance of the situation is the
final step. The person ~ay find that
anger and dC!l!'ession are ·no longer
needed. They have allowed themselves to express their feelings.
Acceptance d&lt;ies not automatically ·
mean that they arc happy, but it may
mean that they feel hope.
As a penon goes through these
steps to accept the reality of the loss,
not only do they need to feel all of
the emotions involved. but they also .
need to take care of unfinished business - when they feel that the time is
right. They need to let the person go,
and to find good things to take the :

place of who is gone.
Many times we hear people tell
someone who is grieving, "If there's
anything I can do, lei' me know."
Research indicates 'that the most
important thing to do is to actively

c.....

listen to them. Very few people feel the arm allows tttem to know that
comfortable talking11b0ut death, but you want to hear their story. Using ·
allowing them to tell you abouttheir eye .c ontaci, heing relaxed, and
loss is one way you can help.
cmpathetically putting yourself in
Body language such as leaning · their pi'ICC. will _also help them to
towards them or touching therrt on feel free to talk.

' .

The Appalachian PejiCe and Jus' tice Network and My Sister's .Place
will he sponsoring an "'Aitematives
; to Violence" COIIl'!le on March 4 an!l
5 at the Qual.ity .tnn in Nelsonville,
• tocated one-.quarter~·mile from the
, intersection of U.S. · Route 33 and
State Route 691. '
, This l6-hour course will explore
nonviolent · methods of · resolving conflict. Participants will learn to
increase their options ' when they
deal with violence or threats either
in their community or in their pro· fessional role. It wiil increase one's
ability to tislen, voice their concerns
and ma~age their emOtions when in
contlict situations.
.
"Alternatives
to
Violence"
explores· the dynamics of violence··
on at' levels; Interpersonal, community, national and international. The
coun;e is targeted at public scryicc
professionals in such ticlds as soci~l
service, law enforcement and soourlty. or any citi1.en wanting to increase
their skills for eflcctively ·dealing
·
with violence.
"Alternatives to Violence" .will be

presented by Peggy Gish, program
director of the Appalachian Peace
anc! Justice Network, and Jennifer
N. Schwirian, outreach coordinator
of My Sister's Place, a local baue~d ,
women's shelter.
· ,
·
Gish is a certified trainc!r ·of the
"Ahernatives to Violence" program.
She is a trained ana experienced
m~diator. ·and has nine years of
expe!iencc as a trainer and organizer
of local citizens groups. ·
Schwirian has a,bachelor's degree
in psychology from Ohio University,
arid a masters degree in clinical
sO&lt;:ial work from Ohio State University.
.
The cost of the course is $75.
Continuing Education Units (CEU's)
from the Ohio Depanment of Education or in counseling and social
work are pending. Each participant
has the option of receiving 1.6
CEU's for an extra·$5 charge. Registrations received after Feb. 24 will
cost $85. Lunch will be provided
during a one-hour break on both
'days. Limited scholarships arc avail able for private individuals.

. ' To celebrate the 85th Anniversary
'of Girl Scouting, Black Diap~ond
, Girl Scout Council is searching for
~all former Girl Scouts and volunleers.
Residents who were girl scouts in
''their youth or worked as ·a volunteer,.
' arc invited to join in the celebration
.·~ conl;lcting the Black Diamond
·::Girls Scout Council, Inc., 1-800;,75§-7616', and asking to be put .on
. the mailing list
. In the spring information on
'activitie• and re.unions planned in
. the area wm be mailed out, and for:.
·~ mer stouts and volunteers wiU have
~\.he opportu~ity to join current •vol-

·
It is very important for them tp
repeatedly talk about the person QT
the circumstances of the death. Don't
leel that you have to be corivers&amp;tiona) -just he there and listen. ·

Pomeroy Merchants Sale
-Shop·Historic Downtown
Pomeroy for
Your Valentine

.

"

.

:: · A workshop on. flower arranging
WaS conduced by Betty Dean when
the Chester Garden Club met recent•
ly at the home ofTwila Buckley.
" Betty Dean conducted t.he work·
· shop giving suggestions on arranging and materials needed, She talked
· ilbout the usc of oasis or foam, how
·''to arrange . flowers to he .viewed
from both s1des or only ·One Side, an~
"fo.ordinating c9lors to the room
'Where the arrangement Will he used.
Seven arrangements were made.
A ta~le basket with fruit by Judy·
' "'
'Dunger, a co f'.ee ta bl e arrangement
·· of .blue, burgundy, and Green by
Dean, a 'told urn with peach flowers
· · and dried grasses and twigs by Past
Holter, a tall soringy arrangement by
,
-

·•

·RIUU &amp; GIFTS
'

· 3RD l PEARL ST.

··F,.. Cut

1!!111:&amp;...

949 ROSe (7873)

-1!: .

r&amp;AI unmv.~

' '

··

Amngtimen~

---1100111

•Room AddiUoM

unteers to remm1sce ab!)Ut girl ed States. It serves more than 20,000
scouting ali'd 10 !earn about the girls in 56 counties in West Virginia,
·act'lvilies for today's girls. ·. •
.
Ohio, Virginia and Kentucky with
Girl Scouting was founded . in . the help of over 3.800 adult volun1912 'by Juliette Gordon Low, in teers.
'
·
Savannah, Ga. To date thc•brganization has provided ·some 50 million
. Over the years, Girl Scouting has
girls with confidence, leadership made a concerted effort to develop
skills, fun and .lifetime fri!'ndships . projects and activities that reflect the
From an initial IS girls in 1912, Girl . needs of its girl memhers .. Today,
Scouting has grown to o:.-er three Girl Scouts are involved in a broad
million memhers today; :!!)aking it range of cQntemporary issues. such
the world's Ja'Pgest -volunteer'organi- as prQmoting health and fitness,
zation for girls. '
helping girls face personal crises,
• · ~
preventipg teenage pregnancy, and
Black Diamond Girl Scout Coun- promoting pluralism and literacy.
I
cil is one of 321 councils i~,the UnitI

~lnUng

New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additi.ons • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

•Etc.

Alao Concreta Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
. V.C. YOUNG Ill
• 892-6215
!'omeJoy, Ohio

Cell Anytime

. 949·33~7
591·1197

-

.

614-992·7643

'

(No Sunday Calls}

111118711-

ALL OHIO

Easy Pay Auto

INSURANCE
An y C;H
A n y Dr iver
D UI &amp; SR-22
&gt;Discou nts &lt;
Co mput er Quotes •
(G1 4) 992-GG77
P omero y

992·2753

.BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

•Driveways
•Parking Lots

Eleanor Knight, a wood basket with
Twenty bird .feeders made by. the
burgundy and pink by Edna Wood, club were presented to Veterans
and a figurine vase of tinl roses and · Memorial Extended Care, Overdried .g rass by Lula TobaJL
brook Care Center, and Rock
Public Notice
For roll call memher! told what Springs Rehabilitation Center · Jast REQUEST FOR PROfi08AL
they brought to work ·~ith at · the month. Each group also received a ·Notice to Equtp111•nt
workshop. These incl~ wooden bag of bird seed.
~~lwa~ccordonc• with
and wicker baskets, tall~ntainers,
Dorothy Karr announced that a o-.:tlon 307.81 of tM Ohio
flat containers. an urn, dried flowers , rose had been sent to th~ family of tt.vt- Code, -lllil bla
fohage, and stlk flowers .
Mrs. Margaret Weher, a past mem- ;"' :• ~•c::lr•d cby the
Mrs. Toban reported;\~~~ a poin- bCr of the club as sunshine for Janu- c::ml:elon~~:, ~=:!~
settia had been given IQ r•rs. Mark ary.
,
• Houo•, Pomeroy, Ohio
Grueser for . typing t~ program
Members were told the mulch 411,..1, until 1:00 A.M. on
books: Buckley announc-ed that as a should not be put on roses or peren- 'I'Hidey, February 11th,
· ' proJect,
·
1117.TIIebldowlllthtnM
c1v1c
1he ta bl es '"'II
w1 bed ec- m'als .un11·1 t,he gr?un d has firozen opeiMd
and 1'1!ad aloud at
orated for the junior senior prom at down two or three mches.
3:15 p;m. on Tueedlly,
Eastern High School, and will he
Co-hostess for the ·meeting .was F•bruary 1111!1, 1117 for 1M
done with the leaning disabled class Debbie Miller. ·
fo_,ng purehaae:
at Chester.Grade School in March.
.
One ulld 1- Hydi'NIItlo
·
•
Mlf-propttllld ol)lp

• '3

Prices Good thru TUesd8y, Februery 11th .

Lotion arriving in time for Valentine's
Day

Timex Watches

30o/o off
.Cold Pop

\l'e Now £arry Jelly Belly
JELLY BEANS
Ailtiqu~s • Gifts • Folk Art

27¢ Cail

HARTWELL HOUSE.
992·7696

102EatMaln

Pomero

Cassette Tapes

Have A
Heart?
Rings- ~­

·Earrings
·
.
Pendants
'

!Jewelry
.Complete Stock

l/2 PHce
Sony VCR
81~ Tapes :
'

.

· •1.73

BINGO
RACINf, OHIO
AMERICAN LEGION
fl()ST 602
MRYSUNDAY

I. L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

Doora Open 4:30
Game Slarts8:4S
Pey out It eccordlng to.
number of player..
Under now ananagemont
Public Welcome

Um11tone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand

Pul)llc Notice
.andior .aliy pttrt -lhoroof anil
wlll-d o contract to that
·blddor which lo In the btat
~UINiofMelgaCo
•
unty·

Reg. $4.99

ONLY$3.39

985 4422

,....,....,

Chester, Ohio

5

ffalling

Whitman's Candy Hearts
14 7/8 oz. Assort~ Chocolates Jte1• $8.79
ONLY ·$6.29
10 1/2 oz. Carmel Medallions Rea. $5.49
'

carry~ons

Free Estimates

·

(If 30; (2) 8; :rrc
Public Notice

Public Notice
Hou.., Pomeroy,

Ohio

February 11th,1117 for tho

~~~lio'ndem

..... · - ~·
Dump'Truek with Dump
Body enciV.SOx Sprudtr.
lltllptiCiftcatlono may ·be
pick_. up et the Melga
County Englnter'o Oftlce or
th• Offl•• of the Mtlgo
County COmmloolonera.
The Board .. of Melgo
County Commlnlonere
maY ....pi 1M I-tt bid,
or HlectiMto.t bid for the

-~=:'lh:::;.t:::·~=~
llnlf/Or rajRI any or all blda
and/or My pttrl the1110f end
wiD IWIIrdAI contract to tut
bidder which It In the beot
lnllnlat of Melge county..
Qtorle Ktoeo, Ctork
llciard of MtltJI County
" Comml11lonaro
11) 30; (2) I; 2TC
tlrt

· :. ·
TrOpical Wood Gfftl from Costa Rlci
· . Leenln' Tfll cards
· ·
·
.
. 8IIUmOnl Pottery
1., .
. KAY Pfi()FFIII - J011

Public Notice ·

hi1'11~J ·..... a .,.,._ to
Jlltlilll a 111IH wnlllatton
ehalt within 100 fwt of
M•lge County, Cof14'mllta
Towllthlp Road II and
Sl8tl !loin ID, Ntllnnlng
at tha lnt•raeotlon of
Columllla Townelllp Rold
11 tncl·· - R - . . In
l'racllon · ~~; Columbia
oillo
Colli
Melgl. 18wnthlp, Melt• Countr,
lillie No. I, 1'. ,
X 4t0,
Alhllla, Ohio
, t, d - Ohio. The .propoaed
uvelopmelll . of the
. .

ventilation ehaft olte will

, PUILIC~­

.··'''

,212 EBitMIIIn

.992·3785 .

'

'

J

..•
I I~

••

!

'

IOUTHIRN OHIO
COAL COIIIPttNY •
MIICIIIIININO.I
JO,Q. JtOX-.AniiNI,
0111041101
· f'urauant to !)hlo Cool
Mlallll and Reclamation
llule 1101:tN-CM.Ioulhtrn

m

ltaW no altact. on Ill• rold.

The only dlatul'ben.. to.to.
-duCMd within 100 INI of
Townthlp Ro.a d II and
. _ RIIM Ill will to. 1M
oonelnlofloft of the aDDita
!Old on-'-'! 'l'owl*llp itoH
II and oonatruC1Ion of
tha ef!alt anti -aa•ry ·
appurttncae. Dleturllll""
.of the araa will bt
oeritluotad
to .... adtl• ·01
'
'

Publ!q

SNODGWS'
UPHOLSTERY
At 2 Locations

Rutlllnd, Oh.
614-742·21116

Aacii-.Oh.

814-1141-2202

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
·New Homes
•Garagea
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop,&amp; Compara
FREE
ESnMATEES

985-4473
7122Jtfn

(UmeStoneLowRatea)

WICKS
,H-OLING
Limestone,
Gravel, ~and, ·
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

614·992-3470
AN NOUN CE MENTS

Using lht CIRssifitds
· lsas ERsy tlS .L

:--.=~··o·· I

/llip ffom
Nl&lt;&gt;o - ·Sand
"'" Tails,~
Walko
&amp; Frl•ndohlp.
Ro· . .
plloo To: CLA !JOt, C/o Galllpollo

Dlllv 'l'rlllun•. 1125 Tl&gt;ird Avenue,

Goi...... OIH5e31,

AN NOUN U r.H. NTS

BAG SALE
THRIR SHOPPE
MIDDlEPORT

Valentine Perm Special

FRIDAY a·
SATUI\DAY
MORNING
FURUARY 7&amp;8

'SHEAR DESIGNS,

Notice ·

M11011, WV

773-53;52

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

Gift Certlflclltw Avalllbll

...........rt.
... Dnllly Dnfs .
(MIIII"'S of MCH8
far over 20 yun) .

·

I

..

.

.

!1

WA~..uL~:l\00 .
1-aoo-•~S7eo
EKT: 1818

·r''·

S2.99PERMIN.
MUST BE 18VRS. ·
SER\1-U- (619IS•t.-&amp;o34

•t•

•

,\

~~ ·

PI

~==~~~~~~-IIE&amp;T ~ PEOPI.E lliE FUN
1~·1
WAYTODAY
1-800-U~5780 EXl1818 '
$2.81 Plf' min. Must be 18 Vfl.

I"
t1
(~

s.rv-u (61916&lt;5-&amp;03&lt;.

l•

,:r.

SlngiHI Tlrod Ol Blind 011U?
Call 1·D&lt;IIJ·U3·5780 Ext 28112,
SUD lltlln, 1a Vro Sorv·U 811• ~

. ••• 8134.

40 .•
· 2 Adulr Female Ca11 To

GlvH~

""Y 114-o4,.._231!3A""'3P,M...

way. RotiWelltr 111
WIIBo L119t,

Bo~o~ncl

.,..,,6-08&amp;1

"II*!

.
Adoteble Cllow PuPPIOI, IIIIK

'•
•i
~r
H

In

'•lr

;~

, ~·

'

't

Cell ndW to oclledulo your l•P· ~
perwafe Parry.. Earn trH ptO· .• :
ducta. lt~r· &amp; s~rrra••· 1·100· .. fl '

'1

Ploa~
t
Prog,.nl t.lom,.,. Cat Silo 11u '.t

484-1712 S.Q 2?111.
ffH
Give To Good - :

No Homo, etH4i-7103.

'

.

"\ '

f~'

ColOr, • MaleJ. 2 Fainolu, 5 :&gt;
w.ot~o Old, To Good . ~. et•· 0
UJI IlSI Allor 2:30 ~~~.

)

•:

e WHk Old Pupptts, To GIVN·

'

•L ,

.

GUYS AND GACS

th• at- I'Md eurtaO. of
Townelllp
Road
11.
lnt•reated partt.. may
comment at a public
JWeatlng of the Colulllllll
Townehlp TruotNa ••
Monday. lhroll I, 1817 at
7:00 P·lll· t1 to. IMitl .t the
Colulltllll T•wnahlp 1'11'11
ltatlon, ltete llouw t4:t,
v., l'onl, Ohio.·
1, 1:t; lTC

r:iif
· ·

1........... .

Worth Alai
m

tht CIRssified Section!,

(excluding ept&lt;:lll ,.,.,

Public Notice

....
..,,.,
~

......IIYIITt

L 'l h
· itt t I ings

. Feb. 10.14, Al,l Perms $35
Public NOtice

614-742• 3411

!.====':":-::':"'":·:::

inJure. m.any.fliers

B)"TIM FRIEND
cd for " ovcihca\1 headache" in the
Airlines arc not required to report .
U'A TODAY'
February journal Headache. They . such accidents. but aviation lawyer
Laptop compulcn;, luggage carri· were hil ·by a case of wine. a brief- . Michael Pangia said they happen
crS and briefcases falling from the case and a laptop computer. All suf- daily.
·
overhead bins onto passengers may fcrcd head injuries. All were , itting
"The amount of incidents is staghe the · mo~ common accident ih &lt;lisle scatN.
gering, " said Pangia, former trial
aboard an airline. c~perts say.
.
Evans says the FAA should sur- lawyer for the FAA.
And the aisle scat is the most haz- vcy a!rlines to determine how ~·om- - · Records . obtain~d by USA
ardous place to sit.
mon the accidents arc, how nflen TODAY show USAar settled more
Houston ·neurologist · Randnlph . - tlty cause injuries and what can be than 1.000 claim~ involving falling
Evll)'ls de~cribes three pati~nl~ treat-' don,c.
objects · in a three-year period. ·

'

New Construction &amp;
Remodeling
Kitchen Cabinets
Vinyl Siding • Roats
Decks • Garages

Doers &amp;

n-

. '' .

Construction

1137 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT
812·2772
a:oo a.m.'3:30 p.m.
•R•n•at Windows
&amp;.ages
.
• ~-ws·

II

sUftllt Html

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION

•a.iW

'.

7/10/11n

~,•:R:•:•:•:AM::::"::OIIS===~
101·:':,':.0~~~
Commlaalonera · •
r

s

Buy 1 Ccirlet(f)n Valentine Card
/Receive 1 R.ussell Stover.2 oz.
Assorted Cho~olates Heart
for only_39¢~ No Limit

Body work, car, truck
&amp; truck patlntlng,
minor mechlfllcal.
repair.
Tune-upa, 011 Change,
Wlix, Buffing
Long St., Rutland, Oh.
742·2935, Aak·tor Kip .

SERVICE .

na
Pick up diacardecl
appll•n... , bderlel,
many metala &amp;
motor blocka.
814-1112-4025 a am-8

GRUESER'S
GAUGE

DUMP TRUCK

1----..,..----

.

'N8-R081

oNiwO.ragee
-Electrical &amp; Plumbl119
oftooflng . ,
otnttrlor • Exterior

PETER H. GOn; M.D.
thmg done, he suggested an clast1c
' DEAR DR. GOIT: My wife and stocking. When asked if surgery
·
•
th~ Office of the Melge
34411 Com Hollow Rood
·· I ar~hotiJ.~nM~cjiciiJ;e and (x:lo~g 19. , woul~ 11&lt;; .recwnmendGe,..h~ ~ai"' I;Jc
Cow1IY Coml!lltllon.,a.
'
Ohio 411775
.• •n
liMd: At 65, she has -enlarged · would again .hav.c to cli'eCk with the
I ·
· The Board' oi Mtlga
· ,... -~~~~ BIDS for
r
,
"ETER.
Coun"' Commlaalo1111'11
the conatruollon of
· varicose veins alld swollen legs. The HMO to sec.if they would pay for it.
·r
· ••c•Pf the loweat bid:":~ FITZPATRICK
ROAD
: ~cins have been large and tortuous If approved, he woul&lt;\1 put her to
GOTT, M.D. tll.et tho to.at bid tor th• WAPROJJEERCUNE EXTENSION
, •or years b~l caused no real diS.om· sleep and CUI her leg i~ six places,
)
lnt•nded purpqa•. and
T wiH to. ,_lwd
·
1'11Hrveo 111• !'ltlht to ICCipl by th• L•odlng Creek
: fort. Recently, however, she has suf- - As .he-walked out the d~, he asked
: fcrcd leg .aches, swollen legs, puffi- if she was taking aspiri ..When she
and/or ~eel any or all bla Conu~Ytncy Dletrict 8t the
r
.
end/or any pttrl IMNOI and Dletrlet Office 34411 Com
; ness und numbness around the knees responded to the affirm jve, he told
wlllawerd a contract to that Hollow Road Rutlllnd, &lt;fblo
: ).Yith numbness over the knee cap, . her to stop 'taking it and: .\ialked out
bhlar which le In 1f141 to.at until 5:00 p.m. ~'I llmt
I a,nd a fire-like
burning· sensation without an explanation or an altcmaor
may 1 - t of M•lgaCounty,
02-20-t7 .and th.n at Hid
: down ' lhe iaside of her 'leg. Her tive .
?!
experience more serious complica·
Glorta Kloll, Clerk ollie• publicly OJIIMd and
: kncesgivewayott\mes ..Hardlumps
Wethoughtthesurgeoa.woulddo lions, such us blood clots in the
loord~:~~= '"rh~loud. CONTRACT
sometimes be felt in the veins.
a Doppler test (I read s&lt;imc books) lungs.
11) 30; (2J e; 2TC
'
DOCUMENTS moy · be
The HMO philosophy is often
eumlned
et . · .tho
: ; When the pain hecame · severe or an ultrasoun'd or a n:·;y to sec
Public Notice
ConHrYIIney Dlatrlct...,_
•, ·.· d. aspi~in. did. not oive relief, she . what is r.eally wrong. Wt 1think the "hear no evil, sec no evil, speak no
1
"
· - ·
d
main offlca Ia located · on
Stall Route 124, 1.5 mu..
: . c.1mtacted her · HMO on an cmer- HMO is endangering hi:( life,,- in ·cvt 1:· m or er to preserve bouom: llt'ncy ba.,is. They assigned her to a , addition to wasting Medicare funds. line protits. Your wife is getting the REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL weat of Rutltnd.
, )l!'imary-carc physician (not our reg- How come a primary physician run-around because an· operation Notice to Equipment
Coplao of the CONTRACT
' Ular one). who suggested aspirin doesn't kno.w · anylhing about vari- would be an expense forthc HMp. ~~~,.~c;cordanca with . DOCUMENTS
land
.I~ lets, clastic stockings and leg elc- cose veins'? In this day and age. docs She would be better served, iii my a•ellon 307.18 of the Ohio ::~!~;~~~:: ~~7ce b;
''!'lion. He told her to go home . a~d a patient have to tell adoctp,r what to opinion. by seeing a vascular sur- ReviHd Cod•, Haled bide TRIPLETT ENGINEERING
r.tst. using a heating pad. Well, the do'!
,
· .
gcon ·who. doesn't have a 11nancial will be rac•lwd by tho SERVICES co. located at
ek,tic stocJinos were tml painful
DEAR READER: Welcome. to axe to grind. a doctor who will Board of M•1tJ*' County 110 MACHANIC STREET,
..
e
.,~
Camml~aloner~, Court POMEROY. OHIO
f," r her to wear and thc .heatin" pad. managed cam.
ohjeclively assess her condition and Houe•, Pomero•, Ohio
•
upon
·~
"
..
h
· ·
•
payment of $50.00 for each
npdc the pain worse.
Your wile apparently hf4l severe ~&lt;vc an onesl opmmn.
· 45711, until 1:00 A.M. on aet, which wilt not . bo
, ' • A week hiler after a bad spell, she varicose veins, complicated by
To accomplish this goal; you'll Tllelday, February 11th, ..,.,_ _
: as·ain went to the HMO, saw anoth· recurring blood clots (lhrom- either have to go ·outside the HMO, 1117. The bldt will then M
The ,E119lnHr'e aatlmote
.,.
M-' '
h
HMO op•ned end road aloud ot for the p 1 t 1
: e( ..,.;mary
physician
who
said
she
bophlebitis),
The
extent'
•of
her
revert
to
.,..tcarc,
c
angc
s.
T
-•
•
3 :30 p;m. on
,...
&gt;:
~
ue...ey•. $110,247. !10 ro ••
: ll~d a slight case of phlebitis. pro· aflliction could he determined by a ask or an out-of-plan referral , or February tlth, 1117 for Ill• 01-2M7 ·
fotl-1."11 purchiH:
S.J, F-n Teylor
; :.uribcd aspirin, and when she asked Doppler ultrasound study. a safe. pay the eXJICnSe out-of-pocket.
, ' ~6out seein&lt;&gt; .a specialist. wa.' told . painless and relatively inck'pensive · You shouldn't have to tell your
On•ulld1MorMw•r
· P1'11a.IAidlngCrHk
gradall IICIE
C.-o;;.j;;;O....,ora
o n - Dlatrtct,
· tit~t referral "could be made to a sur· · test that can tell' the doctor~ which · d octor Wh ut to d o, b ut you may have
Excavator,
notHydraulic
to .X..ec!
.~~on. "but a Jot of people become veins are blocked.
.t
to search for a doctor who is more
a,eeo operotlng 11oura.
(ll30; (2J .1. 13; 3TC
.worse after surgery."
.I believe that your wife .,!!lay be. interested in your wife's health than
lid opeelftettl9no mey to.
: A week later she was able to sc.•c helped --even cured .. by an oper~- in his HMO 's profits.
plok•d up 11 th• M•lga
PubliC Notice
.,. .
. f
.
Qounty
EnglnHr'a Ofllee or 1----~;:;;;;;;.;.:::.::.;;;__
1
o~r assigned primary· physician. He tion on her. veins, This could lake the
•O give you more m ormatiOn,
the Offlc• of the M•lgo rREQUEST I'OR PROPOSAL
"'id he didn't know anything about ·form of traditional surgery (a ," vcin- . am sending you a copy of my Health County Commlae-..
Notice to 1l'uclc Dealtra:
The Board , of M•lge
In eooordonce with
, varicose veins, We had to ask him to stripping") or one of the newer laser , Report "Insuring Your Good
~d 'h_er to a specialist. 'He: said he procedures.
.
Hcahh." Other readers who would County Commloa- '"IIY -lion 307.81 of. the Ohio
d 2 1
acc•pt th• low••t bid, or RmHd Code, aHied blda
'k
h ld
h~d to get permission from the
I further believe that your wife's l1 c a copy s ou sen
Pus a aat-.:t the Mat bid for tho wiU. be 1'11colvd by the .
HMOforthat.A.weekpassedandhc · doctors arc playing the " HMO long, ~elf-addressed, stamped .envc- Intended · p~:::·~= Boord of
County
' ·'
Court
gave her a referral. to a vascular sur- · game:· rather than addressin¥ her lope to my attention at P.O. Box
gc'on; who suggested she do nothing. very real health prohlems For 2017, Murray Hill Station. New
.
W,hen s)jc insisted ~he wanted some· example. without therapy, he~, veins York. NY 10156: '

.,_ftyGiftl.
Amllh-CI'Iftld Pie Safe

.

CARPENTER SERVia

Too Small · ,
•Any and All of Your
Home Repair Needs
· .Call Today tor Your
Free Estimates

992-!i535

SNOW
REMOVAL

YOUNG'S

:'I"

Country &amp; Oldles

'JVIGVN.Qf AND BRASS
..

. We will work within your budget.
Ph. 773-9173
FAX 773-5881
101 Porn1roy StrWt
M11ort, WV

11':.1-·

·

\

"No Job Too urge or Too StMII"

..

eNo

-New Homes
•Remodeling
-Garages
oOeckl

. Learning the. rop~s{of HMO garri'e ·:-=Ji~;: A~=ENT 5~."'~~:,7~~:~
.By
DR "GOTT'
~::E:In~r!:O,:.~~~
eon':=:.... ;~:;"p.~~ r:~d ;~O.:~~~

In an effort to pruvide our ,readership with current news. the Sunday
Times:scntincl will n\ll accept weddings after 60 days fr&lt;)m the date or the
· Weddin~s suhmillc'd after the 60-day deadline wi II appear during t.he .
week in The Dail.Y Sentinel and the Gallipolis Daily Tribune.
All club meetings and o1hcr news articles in lhc society section must be .
submitted within 60 days of occurrence. All birthdays must be submiued
within 60 days of the occurrence.
·
All material submitted for publication is subject to editing.

Authorlttd AQA Dll1ributor
', Welding Supplies • Industrial Gases • Machine Shop
Servlcea • Steel Selea &amp; Flbrlcation • Repair Welding
• Alumlnum/Stalnl818 • Tool Dressing • Ornamental
Steps • Stairs. Railings, Patio Fumlture. Fireplace
Items, Planter Hangers, Trelllsea &amp; lots of other stuffll

:.Gardeners enjoy flower arranging clinic

- · - -.·_·News policy--I.!VCUt.

•

: Scouting to observe·~5,th anniversary

'

'

•

Nte~A- !fa,A-

One •Alternative Ilnterprisc" workshop will feature
Ruth Moore of Middlebourne, W.Va., wbo will explain
how she expllllded Ita' dried flower business to find a
profitable niche in the wedding market. "Dried Flowers
for Weddings• will also be useful in illustrating possibilities too.,.-ospective weddina·PI!II'ners. Other Alternative Enterprise workshops include "Catering" and "Back
Yard Greenbouse Marketing."
, Other workshops deal with "Marketing Strategies"
for prOducts, resources and services, and "Risk Management"-- liability insumnce and legal concerns essential
io any small business owner.
·
For more information contact Bob First at (614) 373,
·7936, John Carr at (304) 679-3639 or the Marietta College Small Business ·Development Center (614) 3764832.

.

Course teaches alternatives
techniques
.to violence
.
'

•

'n

it.

· With !I total of 16 workshops to choOse: from, the
.seminar will run from 8 am. to 4:30 p.m. on Saturday,
.Feb. 22, at the Holiday Inn in Parkersburg. ·
' In the Marietta area registration forms are available at
)he Buckeye Hills RC&amp;D office oo St. Route 676 across
f~m the Washington County Career Center. Registrations are. due on or: ltefo~ Friday, Feb. 14 "' Lillie
·-K,anawha RC&amp;D, · Route. 2 Box 56, Waverly, W.Va.
.~6184. Cosqs.$25 per person and includes lunch. .
" . Forestery Consultant John Bell,of Pine Grove, W,Va.
will present a workshop on selling timber. Other
,;'.f orestry" workshops will focus on firewood, fee hunl.,-:ihg,
. Christmas tree operations, and woodcrafts for prof-

Time out for tips on the grieving process·, helping others through it
BECKYBAER
Meigs County Extension Agent
Family and Consumer Sci·
itncell Community Develop-

Pomeroy •Middleport, Ohio

�N:IA Cronword Puzzle
ACA08I

1.._

PHILLif
ALDER

1~~
14~t~·~·

,....,._
11CI!We .. 7

FrH puppi•• ta good nome.

"Dancers• Sourhfork Inn. Call afMrian Husky &amp; Collie m••ed , e ter 6pm We d thru Sat 304-575WHiill otd , 1omt 1 blue &amp; 1 5955

Goora11 Por•bf• Sowmll, don't
haul your loga to tno mill jut1 till
304-075-1857.

'

1DSI7· U•80 w/Giemour bath .
$17Qimo. Free delivery &amp; set-up.
onl~ at Oak Wood Homes. Nitro
3(14.755-5885.

304-57lH!:l28
::;:;.,:._::,::..:;::_::.::_=:.._--1
AVON I AII A.t e as I S1'1 i rle~ · Ltale CNA Will S11 W;tl'l Eldtry

Frtt p"ppiet, 112 Oa lmauan . Spears, 304-875-1 429.
300-4175-17211.
- - - - - - - - - - 1 A Great Opportutnty Cl1ock This
Gerrn~n Sl'lepnerdiCotll&amp; pups to Oul! If Your Not Maki~·~ Atlt&amp;lt

To .50
CallIHr.
K1nlYou
lollOwe
FteeIt ·lTo-888·432·
S8
Voursert
Grllln Cerpel Enou~ For 2 Sffiall 7378·
Rooms, fair Condition, 614·446· Abl8 Avo n Aepresentauves
0175.
needed. Earn money for ChrtSt·
PI
wk
Be
mas b1lls at home/at work. 1·800·
1 3
5
m~':~l4-98~
41316 _ ~nlhs . ag1e gg 2-6356 or 30-4 ·882· 28•5 . Ind .
S14ol43-5421
good home, IS. weeks old, WOI'mecl,

Rep.

Slid ing glass door · • Ira me,
screen door
with glas&amp; &amp; Ira me~ ' oaob,.iner nee ded 1n our home.
(br CMf1I • •u14--•• 9· 26P2 ah• 7pm. 1 t
1 calls onl~. 304· 1S75·

wv.

OJiy Or Nig nt Nursing Home l
Home Heal1h Experience, Rte-

1 Bedroom Unfurni'thed Apert·
ment, No Pet&amp;, $H15tMo., I tOO
Depotit; lncludea Weier, Ne8d

sonat* Rltet, Cell Anytime, 814·

2 58 1 290

~ ~~.~~·~§~~~~~

Roloronc ... 81 ...*31117.

TrM S.Mce, Stump

Etllmetttl In·
Ohio. 814·388·

8048

•
Prote 111onal Tree S.Mce, Stump
Remova l, Free Esrimetell In·
aurance, Bidwell, Ohio. 814-388·

1sr Time Buyers) E-Z Financing 2
Or 3 Bedrooms, frtt Delivery/

8648. 61•·357·7010.
Truck lor hire . Moving, pick-up,
delivaty.CaU304-805-33S..

Business
Opportunity

Sti ll toal: male Dlack cat near Computer Usen Needed . Work
Union Avenue, small wtli te spot Own Houri. 20K To $50K tVr. 1·
on nedl ·, 814-992-5710.
800·348-7)86 X 1173.

. 70

Y11rd Sale

Easy Woikl Exc:eltent Pay I As·

Gallipolis

aemble Product&amp; at Home. Call
Toll Freg 1-80D-481· 5S6tl EXT.
12170.

&amp; VIcinity

Full lime Tax Administretor el"ld
All Yard Salas Must Be Paid In full time Water Clerk poailiol"ll.
Advance. DEADliNE · 2:00p.m. Send resume to Village of Pomertne day befo~e tne ad is to run . oy, Ann: Clerk , 320 East Ma 1n
SYnoay edition . 2:00 p.m. Friday. Slr&amp;&amp;l, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. Ap·
Monday edi1!9n • 10:00 a.m. Se~:t· plications accepted un;1il jobs are
filled. EOE
urday.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
All Yard Sales Must Be Patd In
Advance. Oeadlme: 1:OOpm tht
day belore the ad is 10 run, Sunday &amp; Monday edition· 1:OOpm

Friday.

•

Public Sale
and Auction

80

. Aucrion, 1 112 miles, Rt. 2, Sout11
Ravenswood. Thursday &amp; friday,
Feb. 6· 7, 7pm , Howard Beasley
1470.

lemley'a Auction Serv1ce; Leslie
Lemle~. Aucnoneer. Hou,ehotd,

Etrato, Farm Sales. Call 814-4466241, 814·388-9443.
Rick Pe,.raon Auction Company,
lull lime auctioneer, complete
IUCtlon
sefvice..
License~
t6&amp;,01'1io &amp; West Virginia, 304·

713-5.7850r3CM-713·5447. _1

go

Wanted tO-a((y

GrOwing, Heatil"lg Air Company In
GalliPOlis Is Seekmg An E •peri·
enced Service Man . Send Reaume To : 728 Third Avenue. Gal·
lipolis, OH 456~1 .
Guitar Plaver lookipg for a counU) baM. Call 304-675-6402.

C.rtdlt uno. 1·800·261·5070.

2 Bedroom api, in GalhDOiiB
ry,WV. 304-875·2548.

3 Tr~lers tor 1811,304-4175-1071.

2 Bedroom Brick Townhouses
Acron From Cineme Thea1er

3415.

J &amp; o·s Ac'i iO Parts. Buying
vag• vehicles Selling pwts. 304·
773-51)3:J.

.. Wanted To BuY Used Mob ile
Homes. Call : 814 -446!.0175 Or
30cc:_4·;:.87-'5-·596~5-.:--,---:-,-:Wanted To Buy : · "'xa· 2 Man
·samarn.· Roar Fa~r Pncca. 61.4·
"46·285fl... - - . , - - - - : -Bu-"&lt;-ng: inlique FurAIIufC . Calleeiableu; Records, QU il ts , &amp; Old
,.
Advortis~,g Items, 6 14· 446· 761 2

~ To Bu~ : Ll)lle Tykes
KI!Chen Set, Work shop. P in~ hOust, f1osSJble Ant Othm Utile
Tyke Tot~s. Please all 614 · 245·
887

5

'

Wanted· To Buv : We Buy Junk
Cars 61~1·•46·7278. Or 514·3889082
·

:: .

l .•1PLOYMENT
SERVICES

Welgl Coun1y CommislkH\eft at
tl'lis addresa : Court Houll. 100
E8st Second Street. Pom•roy,
Qnlo ~7811 .
. •

sorv~~olhce ol a lortu'ne 500

comta
reer

AI. a

has an tmmtdtate catUMitV .
'
.
.

.

r of the brAnch team
to sales 1"d ser,v ict,

commi
' 1M Ill ~ 1nd111idUII t1 raspon·
tiOit 1o Hlling retl tl18re and
P.,son Joint, •ntu,anee produJCii, . .l.ng credit de~ • ••ona
withitl .._., authouty, recom·
, .,...
.._.uaans 10 delinquent
~ eCcouf'IIS, Hrvic:tng account~.
ltllttint thf ~on&lt;h manager on
aa11c Quttnel&amp; dtvttopmenl,
twanch ~·'ll•lrillton and train·

Ina.

Postal Jobs 3 Polittone AvJII·
.abkt, N~ E~peritnn N.-ury,
For lnfDnMtlon, Call 1·81.714·

£till""-

110 n, Apply In Person: Acqulsl uona Fine Jewtlr~. 151 Second

A""""t. OIIHi!IOiil. 81 Mill s,..~

Middleporl. No Phone Callt
,......
.I
•

.

•

~~....-.. l'lfl hlvt 1 Womocf. 10.....,0 11 )lfoy lht orH 1 dl 1 , . 01 oquovoltnl r.. . 9811 or piano II IN Fhti Beplltl
P.:.,...,.... dtolribl•· · . Church. Porntrop, Qllio. Sal•rr
. . . . ~,... .....lly rolllod
.... 11&lt;1o112'7oll4.
1o1r• ....-:tt-tn nltt •nd 170 MilOt.._......,.

.ilrfcl·

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

trt ~; et CUI..mtr Nnl·
. . . , _ -nlclllon tltllla.

Ntllltt IIi illllln end ,_,,. 111H

.......... """'PC-II~ hlnf.
, ..,.,,,,...,. •uential. Muar

· -~--

......

AH real es1a1e advertising ~
thiS newspaper IS aubjed to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
of 1968 which

makes It Illegal

to actvertlse M
any preference.
llrnilatlon or discrimination
baSed on race, COlor, religion,
sex familial status or national
orJgln, ot any_intern ion to
.make anv such preference;
limitation or diSCit'!llnatlon.•

. This newspaper will not •
,

knowingly aCcept:
·
advertisements tor real estate

which Is In vlola110n ot the
law. Our readers ars tweby
lnlorme&lt;J that au dwe"ings

"Bdvet1ised In lhls newspaper
Bra available on an squat

.opportunity basts.

REAL ESTATE

-·-

Homes
~
304·3l2·~00. ' •

W81t Ripley

Ntw lank Repo't l Only 3 left,
owner linancmg ava flable. Wilh
apprD\Ied ~red11. 304-755-7,191.

Phone 614·245 - ~4 79

3tO Homes for Sale

Wi1h Washlr &amp; ·Dryer Hoot~;. Up,
StoVe, Rftrigeretor Furnished,
Weier, Sewer, trastl Included,

S295111o., No Pelt, Depolilt Re'
quired, For Applications Call t1 14·
448· 0008, 814·448·0057 , 814·
.41 · 1818.

2 Bedroom Unfurnlsntd Oupl•x
Rt. 588. Carpeted Thro.ughout,
Fully Equ•pped Kitchen, Central
Heat &amp; Air Condiliomng,
Garage, t.llus1 .See! 8

2602.
2bdrm. a pit., 10111 et.ctric, ep.
pliancet lurnished, laundry room
facili1ies, close to schoOl in IDWn.
Applications available at : Village
GreeA Ap1J. 149 or call'S "·902·
1. EOH.

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRIC~S AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 WestwOod Drive
from $244 to $315. Walk to shop
&amp; moVies. Call eu - ~•6 - 2588 .
Eqoal Hou~ng Opponunny.

1878 CIIIYV Dump Trucll $4,ooo:
1879 GMC $8,500; 111t0 OMC
Fuel True~ 12.500: 3 Ofliu Troll·
oro: OM 48 Inch PUll ~Pt Aoler
IIUOO; llllc. SIMI S.mt 12 Fl
Long To 57 F1. Lona: 814·84G·
2!118 Ah• 4 P.M.; 81H43-1018.
814-11~3·2300 ..

Si~ rooms and batn, 2 112 acres,
big re&lt;l b;am, 1 1~2 m ile~ on New
Lima Rd. &amp;14·1'412·2757.

610 F11_rm Equ lpment

Two 1 bedroom apartments fot
aale wilh sJora""e b ld 1nn Will
·
"
ut
.. .
Hll on land contract, 614 -992·
5858..

12xt5 101•. new LA and hall car·
ptl, lncludlt's appliances, very
c:onditlon: 1750Q. 614-~C9·

080814-~1~.

W¥.304-4175-7421 .

I 2
Q J 12
Q J 10 I 1

TRANSPORTATION

710 Autos for Sale

Co11Cf11 love ,_, lor Nle, good
conditiOn, I100, 81 .-.182•781111 al-

'78 Ch evy Ma I1bu, mce
. snape,
.
need to sell 1mmedi~tely. $1300
;:;-:::::::::-~-:-:-~-=-1 080. 614·742·3509.
.
Earl¥ 70'1 Rowe Juke 'Boxet
9 79 D
o
1
6 Piece. IU-U3·2018 Attar
odge iptomat, 28 mpg,
·
runs great. S1500 080. 11~·892·
P.M.;814-843-1018.
7133.
...

.

Farm RaiMcl ff'Mz« Bee!' or Slle
11.10 PWr lb. Cllll14·256-l240
for Sale: Cut Slab Firewood S20

..
=

.

Prop, Jack Plitt, Hor Foot. Cua-

350 Lots ~ Acreage

Middleport, 1br lurollhod opt Deposh &amp; relerence1. 304·882·

$13,80o. 81H45-G381 .

5 lou f100&gt;250f · · (150-325)
$8,500 . Call 304 ·675·5108 after
4pm for.Information.

several 5-acre par-cets
remote , beauhful land: Me1gs
Caunly: Sc1p1o Townsh1p. SA 692
(just atf SA 143), Owner linanctnQ.

1994 ,Siratos

me~eaomenl,

760

Old Ath Villaot 8th I .~ 51.
Now HaYen. WV 304-882·3718. .

$1500 per.. acre. Call tor good
, Nice 2 Bedroom Fu\' nlahed,
ma~ 614-593-8545.
Kitchen, AH Eloc1ric:, Near Sf!rlna
Valley No Pets, Water &amp; Glrboao
RENTALS
Paid, $3551Mo.; Plut O.pool1,
8i4o446-41157.

410 Houi;es ~or Rent

LOSER

,

,

''

.

~

/1\lit..c,ti..V£-:.ifE, '1'00 1\Trui.I'Ta&gt;lO
Ht.Y, I (f\~t&gt; MY NNI£-(f[j.J..LY!
·- .
r.&lt;mCOCT 1\ Blf-&gt;1~'.&gt;. · .
1\ OCC£1TFUL AAD

1

l

t

TransmiSSions., Clulctles fly· ~
wncets, Overhual Kits. 814·245-

!

5677
'
New gas tankS, 1 ton truck !,
wheels &amp; "radiator"D - lR 'Aula, , .,
Rtplet. WV. 304·372-3133 'o r 1· 1
800·273·9329 ..

H11/ , S250rmo plus cepos11 and
reteren'c"s . GU-9 4 9·2&lt;199 alrer
·

6~m.

1::=-,--,--..,.,--,..---

. bedroom' ho~.ts9. c;upeted

~~~~~!:,~~1i9~n;.i~.jggcts, deposit
420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

1987 ,,.ll70 Schultz 2 ·~room,
loc•ltd in
11ceareo. 304·773-5351 . .

Appliances :
Reconditioned .
Walhero. Orytro, Rangot. Ralrl·
gratora, . 90 ~ Day GuJrentHI
Fre~ch

City Uaytag, 114-4141·

7795.
Country Furniture. 304·875-1820.
Rl 2 N,' 8m1111. Pt Pleasant. WV.
Tues-Sare-e. Sun 11·5.

~~~:W=a~ah~•:•·::D~ry=e~r
,
~
V:C~R~,
I

Microwave, 814 ·

GOOD • USED

Wa~t1er1, dr~era,

APPLIANCES

relrtgeretors.
rangea. Skaggs Appliances, 78
Vine Streel. Call 814-4&lt;48.7391,

Site on Clrpet lltms In Stock.
Mollohan Carpetl b14-4~- 7..44

520

Sporting
GoOds •

2 Ml· Mlht,

3 Bedroom Ttai ... 2 Ba1hl, 814·
~.0722 Col t\f1lr 5 P.t.l.

out b20 "add on room. '12.000
'""""'' - . 1113,000&lt;Willi 104&gt;m.
304-417H3111111&lt;BI"I'

Nict 2 Bodroo!11~1 U251Mo., a 2 Sera of Gall Clubs, right h'and.
Mllta Down 218, Nlct, Rolerenc- 1 set $150 other. ut 1100 , 304·
tt, O.polit Roqulrtd, 614·448· 675·-·.
8112, 814-258o&amp;H1 .
Small two

btdroom mobile-nomt

lorrW'ItinRKi,., l1o4·D02-503D.

530

Antiques

Buy or ttll,. RIYerlnt Antlquea,

.1124 E. Main $1'"1, on Rt 124,
Pomero~. Hours: M.T.W. 10:00
. to 8:00p.m., Sunday 1:00 ID

1112 · t4X72 Wingalt; 3 Ded~
roama; 1 112 balhs ; ntw oJk van·
lly end medicine
in full

Two bedroom mobile nome 1h Mi·
ner•vllle area, deposit 1nd rtftr·
nce1 requirtd. CJll 814·812-1777 .
p.m. 814·112-25~, Rua•
ahtr 5pm.
~~~~~_,,.,........:...;._..-

ing: 10110
Hltl:
1111 back
central air and
mual lit movtd. 11
171-41010.

·mitt out of Runand on New Lima
Rd., 814 · 7•2· 2803 or 114·741·
2&lt;21 .
.... .

~·n•!.~~[~w,~,:~a~i'·:-1 Two btdroom, oil olec1rlc, IW~ 540 MlscelllntOUI

11183 Cllf10II mobilt hOmo, '""
11 J opn' ,lifO lvl bill&gt;~ $18.11110,

mobilo ,.,.,., 81.o4o18·0S811. ·

For ront: 2 !*room unlurnilhtd

.,...-.-

440

_-., ..7 t4 -~ bath, tall8r , .

Apa'lll'lllltl

tor Rent

- . .·Clll
··
wl111
a""rovO&lt;I ar-uo
-;;;:;;;;;:;;;;~f,"J;;;;;;;;;;
.
!·--1
4777.
liyina. 1 and t iltdooom

!lel)9r and
Aivtrso,.. .,.,.,.,. In liilddll-

lfll'"'*'!l II V~ ...

~=~=~~w~

CELfFBftiTY CIPHER

.

-:::' sca'\\4!1A-~~~s·
:.o::
lolliool.,

. Merchllidlae

.

.

iltd, atroDtr, tWi!IG,
- t - . . :DW?S--.
BI~J

·.

~ ol 1ht
four ............. _,., to.
liw, ........ four . . . .

. .•

....._

••

AY'Il L El

'.
...
:
. ·~

· ...,

WRPOL

I~

;::·~I:;1~t~I:. ,· ·

One not so smart College'
~ulie lo another: ·Marriage becomes two me's searching fof ·.
--·-·"

I ) '

8

CompJete the chuckle qualild
by lllling _.,, 1he missing
you de~elop from
No. J

,.

··

sso.

Building
Supplies

Btock, brick, sewer pipes, wmd·
ows, linttN,s. etc. Ctaua, Wll'ters,
Rio Grande. OH Call 814 · 245·

512f .

Pets for Sale

560

A Gtaom Shop -Pet Grooming.
F!!tatur~ng Hydro Bath . Don
Sheet~~o .

313 Georges ,Creek· Ad .

..

61•·440·0231 . '
AKC Chow Cnow "for Stud Service

11 ..·4-46-9547

'

10gel tank set up sPectals. fltn

.,... 304-075-755:;

.

OL:TSUE

Houstho~

2 bedroom mobile home in Po·
meray, Condor Slieet. $150 per
month, lotal elecJrlc, pirtidy fur· . 1 ·~-3:.90.

,.,t,

.

•

790

304-773·5051. Ml_, wv.

GOods

Two -bedroom h01JS8 on Un.coln

'

Sleepmg raama IIIith Gooking.
Also trailer space on river. All
hook - up~ . Call aner 2:00 p.m.,

510

1!-.....a'a
Archlblld
12 A Scott
11 o.p of yora

Jourdain is a keea 1nalyat wba
·
- . .br
Lur.. campos
.
_ _ _ ., ....... _
"""""'
·lovee ClliiiPiex endings. However, lbla
.
Ediialliln._ . . . . . . . . . . . . .. Todt~Q.Ie· C~F
prnenl
deal from the 1911 match between
Walel and EnglaDd featunie a single• 8 V F
E LX M U
co· w 8 F • MP B V F
lllil combination. How lbould you play ·
· a trump suit of K-3 Ia the dlllllllll' opMH .
DHOG
DIFJL
FKMPBFHUF
BV[..B
posite A-10·1·7·5-4 in your. band far
ODiy oae IDler?
.
EIIXV8 _ UDHUF , M~LTOO · vtzF
T FFH
i.
With everythint~ else solid,. South
.
coulcjllfford one heart loser. If tbeJive
UDEIDPFS . TG
! l O S , ' - HFZIIOOF
milling cardlloere apHiting 3·2, any·
t
, •
·
•
lblng
would
work.
But
Jourdain
Pl'!l·
1
r·
·. , . dueed .a beautiful safety-play: He led • ULJ"SWP .
OlAAUIN(&gt;l'QRAR}TIW"£~
the JOfromband. ' · .
·
~\W. TO~ .
If West had plllyed ·the nine or an
PREVIOUS SOI,.~ION: "Ta inake an apple .pie from Scratch, you mUst firSt honor, declarer would have won with
fiiii~J&lt;l'V~OU. - (AIIrnnomerl Carl Sagan.
·
_
h [:0C~'r ~IT '100 duJ1U11Y'S king and returned the two,
.·
.J&lt;A..il,!l R)i:. FUJ
covering ·East's .card as cheaply aa
eN THE
poasible. When Weal played low,
QAT I. I'OIIAN .....;:..,_;__ __
ST~ 1
Jourdain called lor dummy's

MERCHANDISE
al!er6pm. .

'

G.,_.
canwr ·

.

N1ce three oedroom hOuse in
county, no 1ns 1ae pels. $3001mo.:
Cleoos 1t reau1red . 614-742-2427

v

•

.

·Auto Parts &amp;
Aqcessorles ·

BudQet Pnct Trar~lmiaaians,
Srarl"'fj at $99.00 and Up, Utad I I
fla~ulll. All Typeo. Ov•r 10,000." 1

Fram Galhpohs On SA 588 Cen·
tral Air, Oepos1t &amp; References
Required, $3251Mo.. $250 DeposIt 614-446-341 3.

'

Whea Eul Contributed the single·
I"
too nine, Joilrdaln leapt from bill chair
•
with a cry of triumph!
·
.
.
At the other table, ill the same coaL----:-Il-.U,..:.-:...L..L_.J . traet and after the same opening lead,
the English declarer, David Burn,
mjnM his moment" of glory by falling
to run the 10. However, after being
~n to tuk by his erudite perlner,
David Price, Bum cWmed that he wu
hoping to make the contract even If
East had alerted ·wJtb Q·J·9•x of
beartl, via a tnunp coup. hir -.cb.
but 1 IIJea Bum is itilllddiac blm·
self.

~

112 M•les

. 1

~~;~~~~0~

___ i

"'"'Re-

7Piill8parl
I Young Ill[
• Alt;.'l ella.
. 10 l..lb .. balio ...

•

:::::f.'•

long. black exlerlar, cerpeled in· lerior, 14800, 814·94g..2217.
.
_..:..;....::.:..:.:.._..:..;...;;;

2381 .

Newty 1emooe1eC1 3 oearoom, 2
baths, central heat &amp; a1r, 2 car
oarage, rent plus' depo&amp;it w'1ll rent
or soli on land contract. e 14:992·

. .

"'19"9"'a"'u"'s-."'c.:.:
a_ra-o-,-.-,-,,-lri'"ta-r-.-22-· ·.:

2 &amp; 3 bedroom house tn PomerOy,
re nt $275, plus $300 depos1t rBqu~red . no pets, day 614·9.91·
1

· r- .

-~~~

HUD vouch*'l acceplediEHO.

lnlllala

.

Uaitner' 9.1hp oul bcMird
Uinkora trolling motor, ·bOih' HUti .
new. $1,850. Call belWNrt 8pm- •
npm. 304·Ef75·5724 .
· . ~·

l1undr~ faclllt~.

=..

..

21 Ft. i9115 Cenwr1 And Trl. 1.0 .
Cuddy Cabin 280 HP 814·378·.
2515.
.
.

Newly retllavated 2br, all elecrrlc,
appliances . furnisned, on site

5

&amp;Tall-..

~Cipllor_

2~5 Pro XL Wllh ~ ·

tom Cover, Tournem.nt ·Aiadyl

1 Modern 1. Bedroom Apllnment,

.

!ian. '

150 HP, Evlnrude Intruder, SS .., .

814·446-o3110;

4...,.,... __

lbaa 50 1!1iie1. IIIII tWice for Seatland
wbeu on a'ja!l alsigDmilftt in
Now be 1'11111 1 bridge club iD
1J!11 edltl. lbe 1110111bly Bulletin of'the
· · latemalionll Bridp Pres&amp; Anocll·

I

'

750 Boats-~ ·iofOiots - :
tor Sale.
'

2568.

. lllu""-

3 . !!fuY,~

~ la~forWIIlelmore

~ ~

3!145

1 112 Acre Ld'tl Cora Mill Roi 6

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

1 Exhort
2 Unit Of

Y"lterday; I 'l llealioaed tbe ex·
clta~le Patrlek ~aurdlla. Be baa

1991 KB....ki 220 Bay~:u, tar ··:
aaleor-.:le,814f.tt2.eW. .
::

QUire&lt;!, 814·446·1519,

.

• o.........

bOWN

I)' Pltllllp Alder

BBL., Full Size Bed Wim Tool Box,
MotorcycleS·
Don't Let Tnls One Slop ByU Smoll
AERATION MOT~$
4 New Tiftl, New Gas Tank.
One Bedroom WHh LoiS Of E•· R~, New &amp; Aebuillln StoCk. Workal'laulit. $800 , 6U-"i48·
1G87 Honda 125 4 Wheeler, '
1ras. Washer, Dryer, Stove, Frig Call Ron Evans, 1·800·537·9526.
7215. •
Runa &amp; Lookt Good. 11.200 814- :• ·
Include~ . We Pay Warer And .
-':-:-::------ jlll7o0584.
.
.
:
1 985 Monte Carla SS S" .200.
Ga rllage. Very Clean
No
lilt Chairs, Electric Wheelchairs, 304-875-3118 Afte~ 4pm.
Smo~~s . No Pets. S300 O&amp;posit.
1001 Yam1hl 350 Warnor Rae- ·•
S3501Mo .. 614 ·448·2205. 814 · Stair Uha, Van Lifts, Scooters,
•ng ~ Wheeler With U•nr N. . ::
1987
Mercu!y
Cougar
XR·
7,
Now
!Used,
Bowman·s
H
e.
446-asas
·
Ptr11 And Ex~I'I · WIII Sell Or ,,
814-448·72113.
. $4500 000. 61 4·'99:&gt;·2209
Trade For Ulili~ c WhHIM, .,._ ··•
Elfteienc)l. New pamt, carpet,"
3SNl3~2.
':
etc. Rtlerences. Deposit. No
Furnished 3 Rooms &amp; Bath, No
Pets, Reletence And Deposit A•

Croup Of eight

41--~10

54

A
of the game

Yin ;·

1181 CIIIYV Attro Eat M!ni
83,500 Miloa, C•11omtztd •
1984 Cadillac Sedan DeVille $10,500 E - ~ ~illilr
RunJ G"O.•. Clean AC, Leather &amp;. 81..-4041 .
'

petS. 304-4175-!M62.

~

~~
TV..,._

,

HIOO Chfty Astro van. 141001•
814-1182-22011:
;

oeo.

.,.___
......

......... vlllliln

Dealer: Eaat

2 Ton PU , 3 Speed, 350 V·8 4

JET

Bedroom trailer for
$280/
mo + depatlt. Galllpolil Feuy

.

1885 F·150 414 AOO CNito. Nit, ~
140.tlooK $3,500, 814 4!8:

...._

33 ,._ Ia ...,.

........

11 l!l[lft (2 WilL)
54 kiiMIC

Vulllereble: Both

!nteltt&gt;r, 1800 Or. Best Oller, 614·
Pick-Up LOIId, Herlhberoer's 388-8140 Ask For leQn
~Stt:b-283Well0f14,1 ,
1985 Mercury Grand Marqu11,
Gerth Brooks Tickets For Sale Automahc. 302. V·B. RemanutacFebruary 13th, Great valle!' 1 ,,~.,1 ·ltured Eno1ne Has Only 30.000
Gillls.t0tfer, eo1487-4 11
Miles, Fl.lll Power. Alum,num
Wh&amp;el&amp; , Snarp Car $2,500,
Grubb'e Plano· ·tunihg &amp;. repairs. Dodge At rea SW, Automatic.
Pfobltmt? NMd Tuned? Calllhe 4 Crlinde-r, Runs Groa1; Good
piano Or. 814·&lt;448-4525
.
Wotk Car, St ,500; t97S Chevy .11

AKC· Mini ,Oacnsnund. Himalayan,
Pef11an. and Siamese Killen•

1989 14xtD 2 BtdrOO(lll, 1 112
Bathl, 112 Ac. lot. Dick, Gerage
For Appoln1ment, I1 .. SU-1711,
Or614-441.0054.

1984 Oodgo Rim ptckup 414, :
kyl, aul&gt;, 1 •.~.100. ·
875-3240.
•

32~ ·

...... lcl1oloit

• KJ 4

I

lifloit.

,

to a 1

tK

565L

.~14·2455786

•KQ7
• A

Rocky, Ton)' lama. Guaranteed

•

lloottll

•

"--I Prieta A1 Shot Co,., Gal·

llr Spm.

••

.• I 4
· · Q 18 • • •

7 5

8oo11 By Rodwlng, Chipptwa,

1982 14xro Mob~e Homo On 1.6 "oiled. 814.fl8'2-2034.
.:..:..:.:;_::.:..:....:.:....._ _ _ __
·Acres, Porches. S1 5,800, 5 I 3· ·
Mtcrowave. dOut!te: kitchen sink.
574-25311.
2 Bedroom Mobile' Home, t285 oven, exhauat lanflight, 11ove,
Month lncl"dtl Wa1er and weight· bench, lraf11Jafine, rowing
T~ 1211! !lopoait441·0000.
machine. 304-875-7119.

tD85 Skyline 14170, 3bedroom.
t wt . .rile~ ..Ub, -underskitring, central 11r coftdnionlng. ~10 IW'aUable w11h or with-

+A I 6 S 2
• A·3 2
llu&amp;
• 10 I 5 I 3

BAHAMA CRUISEI 5 dlyl/4
Fllllhll. Unar-•&lt;11 Mutt Still
IHIICoupl•. limil•d Ticketa.
(800) 835 18118 W 85111.

Concroto I PlatdO' 8ojltic Tanko,
300 Thru 2,000 G1llon1 Ron
E\ll.na EnttrPriiH. Jackson, OH
1.aoo.S:l7·852l

J. .

9 K 3

Hydraulic 011 $12.'50-Sgat pail.
Siders Equ1pment, Henderson.

Furnished Efficiency .all Utilittes
pa1d share Bath 1145 Month 919
Second Ave Phane 614 -448 ·

2 full batns, fireplace.

HUll 12185 C,hamp1on Mob1l1
Home Par1ielty Furnith&amp;d S1 ,500

·• A

IX), ~ - 576-2571 .

Going business lor sell· Second
Stteet.· Rt. 33 in Mason. 304- 773 ~

3000.

SOmerville Realty 212·5th St. •
"'We Are In Need Of lislings•
Please give us 1 a call or stop ~y
our office if interested in selling
your property. Thank You ! 304·
675-3030 (Office) 304-675-3431
~-~ Cls~Do Agenl).

I

1888 Fon1 F1SO 4wd. !llpd. 11n ,
Chev J&gt;O&lt;'u~ 1121on. 188S Tom· ·

1105-Sih St in New Haven, lol
170X200, needs repa1red. Sell as
Upper level 2br, apa~tment, kitch·
is $13,000. Call even1ngs 304· · 205 112 Poplar St. 2 Bedroom,· 'en appliances irte:ludad. Conven882·3358 alter 5pm.
,. k1tchen turnished, lull basemerll. iently located . Call 304-175S2751mo. 304-675·3812.
2100. Deposit ·&amp; references rt·
2 Bedroom . $69.000. 304·675· ·
qui rod.
3 To 4 Bedroom Uouse, Cheshire
2722.
•
Area. S4001Mo .. t-teat Included 450
·Furnished
Home a1 642 M1ll Street, Middle· Oepos1t &amp; Aererences Reqwred ,
Rooms
port, Oh., owner wan11ng to move. 614-367-7893.
pr1ce reduced from $29 .500 to
312 Wezgar3 Beorooms. Pomet· Rooms for renl ·week or momh.
$2.1,000, 614·992·5S14
oy Area. S359 1Mo .. l)cpos1J ~t~ · Startmg at S120lmo. Gallla Hot...
614·446·9580.
House tor aale in Rulland. 614· QU!riMI. 513-5711 ·2539

992·5067.

'

.,

WeSI Ripley Homes. New 2fb:48
Sectional $341,900, looters, delivery, set, air. 304"372-3400.

2 Bedroom House

11018 E1t1015.
Ru RHIIUrlnll Now Hlrlna All
Shiill. E1poriln&lt;Od P-..cl, Hot
Heces..ry, fli1tible Houri PoMf·
ble, Shift Su,.rvitor, ·Apply A1
1500
GolliOOI&amp;
RMI Jtwtfry S.ltl" Flirt And Full
Time Potltionl, M~rl Loca-

Now 3BRI2t&gt;olh 14i70
S877 down, 1172/mo~
Includes Delivery &amp; Sar

340 Business and
Buildings

odiiCition "'"' txpor ..... rtll1td
·
fo~ .Sale
10 economic ~ in your . ...,.....,....,.,.....-;;.,.,,..........,...,..-

wili"'l10 Dt&lt;Oma a - . Send
resume to tl'le attention or ll'le

A '1ocat Consumer Finarletal

Professional
·Services

~~U:~!f:':~r=...
~--= 320 Moglle Homes
rtsume, along with the aalary
~ you would require 1111 ac:c:tpl
lhll poslrlon. Uuat be ·either •
resident ol Weigs County,or be

Must tell· 1187 141t70 thr.. bedroom, lndu~ 6 mornhs FREE 101
rent. Only 1165.57 per rrl)nrh with
$995 doWn. CBII1;800·1137-3238. ·

&gt;A

enc:e. 30C-675-2145.

5

velapment at approptlete r114tel·

wv.304-755·5885.

Very n1ce 1985 1.. X70 Wtlh 2
baths.' Large tsland kitchen with
pabo door'. Call 614-385·9621 alk
lor r-Atke.

A+ . Salary- commensurate wlex perience . Send
r•aume to Box G- 1, %Pt PI Reg~~ ~~ Main St., P1 Pleasan 1

••PIInd theu operalionl or ll'tiUre
-o·r continued viabilo·w. Thlo ,.__
"..
.,.
....,.
10{1 will represent the county In
men.,• related 10 eeonomic dt·

month. Free delivery &amp; s,e1up.
Only 11 Oakwood Homes, Nitro

LiYingston•a basement waler·
proollng, all 'basement repairs
done, rrea estimates, lifetime
gu•rantee. 10yrs on job expert·

Medical Bilhng Clerk. Full-lime,

promote economic Md communi·
tydiWBiopment wifin 1M county,
locate and proptrlf apply for
llho'se funding aourCjel 1hal will
facltltale implemll'ttation Qf theta
plani, be capable of ·administerln.a such funding 11 may be obtained, be responsible lor locating
new businesses end industry Will·
ing to locate in the county and Insuring that th&amp;y receivttwtw.teYer
as&amp;illance is reQuired 10 do ICI,
provide &amp;lliisling bulineiiH VJiiith
anr aSSIStance required to &amp;ilhtr

3br, 2bafh, 11799 down, $2701

i 1987 OakWOOd ux76 Tnree
Bedrooms. Two Bathrooms. Heal
Pump Equ1pped, located On
Rental lor At Trc:oan la_ke,

I ~:~:~~·!~~b•~:n~e~f~il!1ptan, electronic:
I'
1
andlor coJiec~

Meigs CouniY is accepting appU·

Limhed·Offerl 1997 doublewide,

HARTS MASONARY . Block.
brick &amp; stone work, 30 years ell·
perience, rea1anable rates. 30•895-3591 after 6:00pm, no JOb to"
small Or!O BIG. Wlf.0212D6

Pt Pleasarn. wv 25550.

cation• until February 18 from
persons qu•llfled to be ill Eco·
nomic Development Dire-cmr. The
ayccessfulappliCIInt ror lhil poll·
tlon must be able to develop and
administer the plana required ro

5885. Limited Offer. With aD·
proved credit

3200 Ext 51150.

230

2 BedroOm 'Apertment. No Pets,

614·-2072.

Lerge profit polenlial from .Steel
Bldg Butlneu Naln, Ca. award Ing dealership in open. market
Sales or con~lruction. (303) 759·

Local comp~y seeking applications for diflerent levels of retail
management 1nc1ud1ng manager
and as.sistant managers. Send
resume to: Boll CW-4 C/O Point
Pleaaant Regu:oter 200 Ma'1n St.

Need Employees Familiar Witn
ver And GOld Co1ns," Proofsets, Winclows For Shan &amp; Long Term
Diamonds, Anttque JMeiry, Gold -AS91Qnmen ts. In Gallipolis Area .
R.ngs. Pre- t930 U.S. Currency, Must Have Data Emry &amp; Swtt,cnSterling, Etc . .t.cqunlilions Jeweky board E•p{mence, Must.Be Will . t.t.T.S. Co.n St1op, 151 Second ing To Onve To Huntington For
Appomtm&amp;rll. Calf' Todat'. 614·
Avef'lue. GaNipolis, 1Jt41-448-2842.
.448·4511, Kelly Ten'JI)Orart' Senl·
A.ntiquOt. furnitUre, glasa; China, ices.
coins, toys, lamps, quns, tools,
estates: also appretaala, .Otbt · 0'¥'erorooK Center has pos 1t1on
open for lull time 3-1 1pm AN Su Martin, 614-99~- 7441 .
pervisor. 2+ years long-term care
Clean Late Madel Can Or ellioer~ence preferred . Ventilator
Trucks. 1990 Modell Or Newer, ellipenence a plu&amp;. Stop bv to lill
Sm1th Bu1ck Pontlat, 1900 East- ·out application or mail resume to
ern Aven~e. GalliPOlis~ ' .
333 Page Street,.Middleport. OH
45760. .
.
Wanted to bUY· l urn11ure . baby
1toms. call 614·992-3725, Pamer- POSITION AVAILABLE FOR
oy Thrill Shop, 220 Easr Main ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT 01·
Streer
RECTOR
· GooCI u!lect h•gh cha tr and stroller. 304 -882· 2798 or 304 -882·

mail unlil ~ou nave Investigated
the offenng.

HOME TYPISTS.
PC users needed. 145,000 tn·
come potentia.!. Call 1·800 ·51 3·
4343 Ext B·9368.

AbiOIUI&amp; Top ODIIa'r· Al l' U.S. Sil·

'

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommends that ~au do buti ·
neas wilt1 people you know,. and
NOT to send money through the

2 btdraom apartmtn1, ·Pomeroy,
1170 per monlh, $100 deposl~ no
pef~ 814.U7-30113 """ 5pm.

Setup Paypjien11 Around $2001
Uo., No Payments Till M1y 19D71
Tradt-11'11 Welcome. Call TM

Will l'laul trash or juMk away, $35 IT'S BIG. !997 4BR , 2BATH
OOUBLEWIDE . $1,949 DOWN,
a load. 304-675-5035.
S310rMO. FREE DELIVERY &amp;
· SETUP ONLY AT OAKWOOD
FINANCIAL
HOMES, NITRO, WV. 304·755·

210

1 lnd 2 btdrOom •rrmema. fur. 111811 O.H Cat 154,000, 1N5 215
ni thad and unlurnlthed, leturity·
Cat $38,000; 1188 411 Cal
deposit reQuired, no Ptll, au.· 123.000: 1888 211 Cat 150.000:
992·2218. .
• •

•

11WWI11-20 .CriJnoan
21 .......... _
211.."*-l .. ID
31Ywllaw ......

..........
• &amp;"'*: I:".)

814-381-7705
Ba~sen Hounds· I yr old, Semalt·
Stmit otd male, 304·458;2588.
.

Tank
&amp; Pet Pleasant·.
ShOp, 241330-i-675Jackson
Ave . Potnt
2083.
Chr•sry·a Pets
211 fol. SOCOI&gt;(l Avs"'t
M1ctei1P0rl, 01'1
8,4·992·4514

rM A ORANOMAII
.... boy
Groomu1g IPtCIJIIII· "'' Silt
AniiQiands, only $ 10; ear canata,
on~ '10: nail c1~• 1110:
- · · $10;_IItt d&gt;PIIin!l. $10;..,.
diliclnin!! or oil .._1a, 110.
Heir dipping or 1Ci110r c:uta.
~,. 1&gt;181 albo"""ft all
a - . S:ll.llll. fa'lor an.,:
poin'""'"' · Special rates lor

long t&amp;m'l.c.tte.
Thank 1(1\f, CIWII1)'.

fopirn 212tn7 ·
Pert Plus .. S11ver Bndge Pllll.
.14-441·0770.·
.

MUIICal
. lnttrumentl.

62 3

~~;~~;~~~~~· Fmancmg
~=·:~:""~'
720 ll'ucks for !3ale
1980 Model Ford Pldt·UP Truck.
.ean Alter 8 P.M. 614·~~11-32~3 .
1986 Cl\evy Bl•zer S-10 4•4 2.8,
V-6, Athoma~ i c , Hiq~~ Mileage,
Contal!l: Harold Geoigil G14·U6·

5345 8:30A.M. To 5:00 ~M .

1987 Ford R!lnnr XLT V-IS Auto,
·~. 500 614·3111·2527

WI-.

1987 rod FOOd F150 XLT
auto. ac. cas·
tellt. pw, pi, $8 , 50~. 304·t75·

es. 700r\'lil*',

v•.

UJ02.

•

itl7 S·1D Elt•ndod Cab,

'•u·

tom•~ c. PS. P8; 11r, 1&gt;4&lt;1 cover
~ lintr,l320o,l14ofl82·3212.

tQ88 Chevro/111 Silverado Truck
.l.oadtd, E•c•llent Condition, 4

WD. 53.000 MlltO, 814·448· 11118

Btteuun !51, 9 P.M:

•
IU8 For&lt;! Rano- EXT

Call. XLT

P!'9 - 2.11 Y·&amp; Sspo ltd. truck 11
oUI of GA. Never """" o~ oalt, 1!1

r.uac. Atk&lt;no S3.500. 304·875·
11440.

.
DRYWALL
Hong, finill\ ·
l
Ceilings textured , plaster rftpair.•
Call Tom 30H75-41!Ifl. f, •rllliro •
exporin:e.
.
,
. 840

·.

''•

RSES CERTIFIED j)EALER
t.AWRENCE ENTERPRISES
H•lc Pumpo, ~lr CondllloQintl, 11 · •
~ Don'l Call Ua Wo BoiH loHI,.Fr• Etlimltes, 1·100·2t1 -0018,
814-~ wv 002145
AIIMIInlill et Comn"MMrCIIII Wifing,
new llf¥iCt Gf repairs. Ma11er Lt·
censtd ,eJectnc .. n. Rtdenoul

e1oc:trl0a1; WV000308, 304·875·
171111. .

Relkttftllal Ot CQmmerc1al Wir· ·.
eng, New Stfllict Or Repair.• , l•· .:t
ctnltd Electrlc1an. Welsh Eltc-'.~. ...

lrlc 114·U8-8850, Oolhpolit '•
OiD.
'
. ·~

·850 General HIUitng

ASTRO•ORAPH

••
••

Jlt~NiCE·
·BEDEOSOL

tloot todly

by 11111Ui1g $2 .ad SASE IO
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mlgl1l offer yo~ a lantallzlng - 1
llldly. II wtll ,aund ·goOd 11 fl,.f, but
l'lllore you .... 1111 jllunge, talk ~ Over
·will! alnlllld -

·

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AMi (lllnllllt. . . 11) TOday, 11Y Ia

Interest ai heart.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You !rill !'!ave
l!!8"Y .good idiU laday, but ul1iiM you
enll8l , . help ol ~ JCIII , . not be

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' etpldelly f you 111100! lillY lillelbaut ~
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people (n !Mgl&gt;-rank·
lng,poeltone. You Will 1111101 good lucie
when you- up..., ..... people. .j. • makl dlctl.iOM for you. You muet lhink
TAUIIUI (April..., 101 When olhn for~ lllhilllme. .
ICOIII'IO (oat. ,.....,, Ill) Try Ia avqid
.... Ia you ....... ldiU ~. iolleP
Frklly, Feb. 7, 1•1
an open mlnel .and be 1 good 1111*1". ftktlllout btlllvlor ltKIIY· E¥111 If you ..
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llotrour*"'*IDdlf,lllaM•good IIIII,_ ~.but you CCfiU[d
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1111 h'gl ......... n,ltiaui 1111- Ill I IUIIII llllklr ... you IOIIIIIIII!Jt
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SCRAM-lETS ANSWBS
Apogee • Musty· Rouse • Muscle • COMPUTERS
1believe that the real danger is not that a computer
wifi ·think like a person, but people willlhink like COM.
PUTERS!
.
.
.
.
. ..
•

. ·'

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"·
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�Ohio Lottery

Meigs girls
hand loss to·
Wahama

Pick 3:
7.().8

Pick 4:

4-5-5-4
Buckeye 5:
2-6-16-3D-33

Spoi ta on Page 4 .

•

·a •

e

•
'*"'

2 Sectlona. 12 Proget. 35
A Gannett Co. Newspaper

· Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, February 7, 1997
.

'

: : Magic ,.· · ~

Trash buildup
irks Syracuse
Village Council

· .form~ut· a
?
.
·:Clinton's budget
.:smoke &amp; ·minors, .
.DOP m•tntalns
:ay MARTIN CRUTSINGEA

· By KATHRYN CROW
l)as requested that council purchase •
· :AP Economlca Writer
·
Sentinel
Correepondent
.
lbe water board's half of the new .vii• WASHINGTON - President
Syracuse
village
officials
are
"fed
lage truck. Council agreed with the
, Clinton says his new spending plan
up" wilb the collection of refuse and request
· .contains the magic.formula that will
garbage piled on private property.
Councilwoman · Kathryn Crow
· .balance the bu~p:t not only in 7002 .
Mayor
George
Connolly
and
.
reported
holes on Colle~ Street a~d
bui for two decades~- But to
council
feel
"enough
is
enough"
and
on
the
road
· leading to Snowball
, -Republicans, the Clinton calculus is
at
Thursday
nighl's
meeting,
council
Cenie!ery
in
need
of repair. .
.more snake oil thaq miracle cure..
gave first reading to an ordinance .it
' Connolly said the village would
•I
In the eyes of the GOP, .Clinton
hopes
will
bring
an
end
to
unsightly
take
care of College Street and added
. loaded up his $1.69 triiHon.budget for
and
unhealthy
situations.
·
that
he
will contact Salisbury Town-1998 wilb a host of gimmicks lbat ·
The
Se'Cond
and
third
necessary
ship
Trustees
about Snowball Hill as
· .provide the illusion, blat not the realreadings.
'will
be
given
following
it
is
a
township
rooo .
.ity. of achieving budget baiiUICi:s.
approval by Village Solicitor I. CarCouncil discussed the operation of
. .. "It is disappointing to me lbat he
son
Crow.
·
the
ball lield and the concession
didn't show more polilical courap:,"
Connolly noted he has received stand. Councilman Mony Wood said
• .J8id senate Ml\iority Leader Trent
numerous calls.from .residents lodg· . he feels council should run the entire ,
. . Lou, R-Miss.
ing complaints about trashy areas in operation. Council will give the mat~ · Republicans 'attacked Clinton for
1818 fiiCel year budget. The pr..ldent, vowing
. the.villagec
.
.
ter consideration.
: .putting off nearly two-lhirds of the
to put the r.deral government In the bleck for
Council
approved
its·
annual
Council also discussed a water
· ~ough spending cuts until 20()1 and
two cteeetln, ..nt Cimgres• at $1.88 trillion
appropriations
ordinance
for
1997
in
problem
in Rose Valley 1hat is.under• -2002, after he will be out of office.
budget. (AP)
the
aniounl
of
$242.369.
The
break;
mining
the
road, and insurance on fire .
. • They also chargeillbat the ~i­
down per fund is as follows: gener- trucks and equipment they do not feel
For his pan, Clinton professed billion in 2002; ihe target date lbat
,!lent was .(\ffeiing Jlllpular middle · · In,ail. \he president's b~¥~~et ~
street construction, main- is adequate .
· . -class tax cuts - suCh as a $500 per posed new fees or increases 1n exlst- . optimism that 1997 will be the year · both he and 1be Republicans have al,.$65,100;
tenance and repair, $45,000; fire,
Tim Gillilan, police chief, rcport:Child tax credit and tax breaks for col- jng fees totaliRg $47.3 billion over Washington finally 'arrives at a plan promised to achieve balance for the $24,000; water. $63,275; pool,· ed that various signs are needed and
· Jege education- expenses - bu! five years.
·
to eliminate budget defiCits. He said first lime in three decades.
$30.000; cemetery, $94; guaranty council agreed and placed an order
But to ·make lbe numbers come
· .employing a trigger mechanism.lbat . In addition to auacking this his program would achieve bal11nce
meter,
$4,000.
for the signs.
..
. ~ould mU,e the tax relief disappear approach as 11 backdoor tax increase, not only in 2002 but until2020, when out correctly in 2002 while still
Council members Lany Lavender
He reported serving one sum.&amp;tier 2000 if the budget deficits bal· Republicans· said powerful interest further adjustments will be needed to offering popular new programs, Oin· and Donna Peterson noted that cable mons, issuing 30 citations and invcsloon higher lban current forecasts.
groups have successfully· lobbied · handle a flood of baby boomer retire- ton adopted a now-you-see-it-now- raJI!s hi.d increased and· they have ligated one complaint and two trartii: ·.
yoU-don't approach.
· : Even on tax cuts, the GOP com- Congress to defeat many of lbese. ments.
reeeived numerous calls from resi· acciilents during the previous month.
"Based
on
lbe
projections
"{!'
.
·
•
~ p·~~~:.;rs~~ bj)lio~ jr. "'tief ideas:~~ the paS!.f¢. ~~likely'?. ~o
d~n~ al?olltlhe in~~.l!'e .
..
. ,. .· Clerl&lt;lfrcasur~r Janice. Zwilling
..,.,:!'or~~ndiv , II!!! .~ ~~~ · w,P'~~~~lA~':,S~ill ~ ~VJI~\I'."·~~~ve...w~~~:'1'~in~ • ~. Two of his ~w ·opendi~· prp- "; eiiuntO 'i'nCmbCrs.said they were •ssued the tollow•og financ1al report:
.
· ilg&amp;jn . 'ttl~ lliW~ •nJill
-~ ~~~'ie to 1oof' else~~re ,to,'.f'ind ilie tain Ullanced bUd"aet fur ti\ore·,tllan grams - federal suppi!rt for school unaware.there..:o\!~~ .B?in1l.. !~ i1e ra.t f.. gener~l •. (-$1 ,584.77); stre~t con- ·'
prilriaply ~ cotpdrations, nch money to make Clinton's deficit pro- two decades," Clinton told r~porters consiruction and . expanded health increase; however, 111s believed that structton, $26,134.41; hoghway,
. investora ~ \irlirie;travelers, 1eav- jections come out right. ·'
.
after sending his 1998 spending blue· coverage for workers between jobs council does not have control over $9.419.'43; fire. $3,674.79 ; water,
lQg only' $22 billion -. a nei redllc· . _ · Even~ unhappy as Republicans print to. Capitol Hill. "This is not - would simply disappear in 2002, CableVision's decision.
$10,111.41; pool, $3,081.23; guaran· ·
' lion in ~ felleral tax burden.
- were at .what they saw as budgetary going to be a one-time lbing."
the year he wants to, achieve a baiContact will be made with the 1y meier, $3 ,104.14; cemetery,
Clinton's bii4J~et also employed an sleight of hand, they were c~ful not
That forecast, if it ~dines true, anced budp:t.
··.
company about the rate increase.
$95.65.
.
old ·Ronald Reagan trick of snea!cing to attach lbe dieaded DQjl. Jabel on would cenainly represent' a major
Gene Sperling, heild of Clinton's
Lavender noted that Larry Ebers·
Also aucnding wen: council mcm·
.• ·tax increases in under the guise of Clinton's new budget.
legacy for Clinton, given the gov- National Economic Council, defend- bach; president of the water board. oorsEberPickensJr. and Bill Roush .•
~ "user fees."
.
"I will not consider it &lt;lead on emrnent's track record. It has ~J~an- ed this ·budgeting idea, saying ll)e
• There would be new fees liD food arrival," said House Ways and Means aged just eight balanced budgets in . construction program was designed
·processors to pay · for Clinton's Chairman Bill Archer, R-Texas. He lbe past half century.
·
10 jump-start local projects, not be a
stepped-up food inspeclion program said that he had been assured by top · · Under Clinton's five-year pro- permanent federal program. He said
. and on drug companies for approvals Clinton o.tr.,:ial~ that the budget rep- gram, the deficit will remain above · eliminating the expanded health cov- .
. of new treatments, plus new fees on . resented . only the admi~istration's last year's $107 billion for the next erage program would allow law.
.
: employeryto help payihe cost of cer- first offer in what_ is _shapin~ up to be three years and then drop dramati- makers to review lbe new program to
: !ifying foreign workers.
an arduous negohatmg pnx;~ss.
cally until achieving a Sl!rplus of$'17 determine whether it was a success.
A tanker truck carrying an estimated 8,500 gallons of gasoline overturned :
Thursday 11n State Route 681, forced the road's closure for more than ei~ht ,
hours and led to the evacuation of several nearby resldents,l)le Galha-Me1gs .
Post of lbe State Highway Patrol reponed.
. .
. . The tanker's driver, RogerT. Fisher, 27, 16007 SR 7 South, Crown Coty,
'" '
hold.
eral valve~.
was·not·injured in the 11:35 a._m. accident, but was.transported to Veterans
•:· Racine Village Council met in re1- the Green Thumb project.
Memorial Hospital by the Me1gs EMS. accordmg to Lt. Wayne McGlone,
"ular session Monday evening with
Hill will check with lbe Green
·Hill reported he is collecting back
Hill reponed that Councilman commander of the local patrol posl.
.
.
. ~ayor Scott Hill ~in g.
. Th~mb supervisor, noting lbat. v_illage fines. He turned in $1 ,279 for Janu; John Dudding, former May11r Frank
Fisher .was later treated and released,.a hospnal spokesperson sa1d,
: Hill reported he ts gmng to contact finances will got permit the h~nng of ary, with $340 going back to the state, · Cleland and former·Clerk Jane Bee·
Troopers said Fisher was driving the tanker. owned by City Ice &amp; Fuel . •
;the Ohio Municipal League to get a any additional workers at this_time.
Council approv"cd the purchase of a gle have donated flags for the munic- Point Pleasant, w.Va., eastbound in Olive Township, two miles from SR 7, · .
:quote and information on lbe wor~Council approved contmumg new docket book for the mayor's ipal building. He indicated 'thlittwo · when the rig went off the right .side of the road, into a dnch and ov&lt;;numed.
:~ compensation program !hat 11 using the bin from Modem 'Sanita- coun.
Ohio flags are still needed.
No fuel leaked from the tan~tcer. but McGlone sa1d four to five gallo~s •
tion,
following
a
pn:sentation
'by
Mr.
Hill
reported
he
has
been
in
touch
Hill
and
Dudding
attended
a
meetspilled
from lbe fuel tank of lbe tractor hauling the tanke!.
· ·.
:sponsors.
·
•· : Tina Neigler gave a'report on the ·Zuspan.
·
·
wilb the Buckeye Hill/Hocking Val· ing recently regarding the forthcom- . The accident drew the Ohio Department ofTransportat1on.the slate Envl· ,
:(ire depanmentlailies auxiliary. She
Because of the curbside recycling ley Regional Development District ing sur.vey under the Ohio Rural · ronmental Prolection Agency, a Hazmat team and 1he Thppers Plams Vol- ,
.reported the group is· saving money program in Racine, the amount of about the fil'ng of grant applications. Enterprise Project.
.
.
unteer Fin: Depanmentto the sc~ne, in addi1ion to the patrol and the Meigs .
.for supplies and other items for the refuse collected by the · vill~ge has
He indicated interest in connecting
The information obtained can be County Sheriff's Department.
.
: .
. .
·
been reduced to $200 a week.
waterlines along Vine Street and Yel- used with grant applications forfedAs a precautionary measure, people hvmg near. the accident were evaciiew .fi111 station.
. ·
· ·
Counc 1'1 will review the matter at lowbush Road to give additional · eral and state funds; as a promotion- uated unlillbc scene was declared safe, McGlone sa1d. ODOT closed·lbc sec- .
Junior Heater. 1 Green Thumb
~orlter, approached council about~ · the regular June meeting. . . · · volume and pressure [or Yellowbush altoolto attract small businesses; or tion of highway shonly after the accident and it reopened to traffic around
Road residents.
by the. village
or community
service 8 p.m., McGI one sw·d.
-.
: i&gt;ossibilil)' of beinll hired by the VII·
• Council members indicated they
.
k
.
·
.
lage for additional hours. He cur· wanted to maintain trash seryice in
Council members suggested the orgamzabons to wor on projeCts.
Damage to lbe tanker was listed as severe by the patrol , and the acc1dent :
· (l:ntly works 20 hours and is paid by · the village at $6 a month ~ housep~ro~~ect~sh~o~ul~d:inc~lude~re::p~lac~l~
·ng~se:v:_-_~(~Con~~t;l~nued~
. .~on~Ptge~.!3!_)..__r!,!;em!!!:81
~·n~ed~u!!!;nde~r~~-~~~.

97.
.... ·....... .· '
~

Fuel truck overturns;
residents ·evacuated·

....
---

~

:Racine mayor ·t o check on workers' .comp
.

:\

•,

• Y·&amp; ENGINE

shell SettleS

~Car seat .company strike
:clos~s three Ford plant~
.

· . DE'IROIT (AP) .....:. A strike at a
• company that makes car seals has
· shut dOwn production at three Ford
• Motor Co. pi!IJIII lbat ' rely on the
1'dl'lng 6' BOO workers·
·&lt;
' parts,
· Ford ciOSOII the plants Thursda}
·. ,night as negotiaiQn for the seat sup· plier, Johnson Controls ~nc., and the
·· United Auto Workers un1on sought to
· tesolve a walkout by about soo·
: workers· 10 days aao.
' ·
.
• The decision idled 4,000 workers
··a·t 8 ttuck pla"t 1.n Wayne., 'Mich.;
. · . 1 soo at a plant in Lorain, Ohio, and
. _. t '300 at an assembly plant in Avon
; Ltke Ohio, Ford spokeswoman
'.
: Fr.in~ine Rom.ine-MacBride Jaid

011

;I'

..

::.~od;j~ and wtnpany officiala were
. unavailable to common! on the
1 be 'k
., progross of talks to reiO vc I . stn e
:·. tt the twO Joh(IS()n. plants.
· . · &gt;. Earlier. Jeff Stetner, a apOkeaman ·
' for Milwautee-bucd Johnson Con&lt;tols. said lhC t11rea1 of 1 work sua- '
.. pe~ 111 the Ford pi~ had lidded
.. , ap I!I'PIICY to the aea•';l"'· . .
·-: ''Our positi011 remams u It wiS

•

·-

•

.

'

•

'
last week- we're working hopefully for ·a quick resolution,'\ ·Steiner
said. "The ·pressure has been there
since before the strike began.•,. ·
I.JAW spokesman Karl Mantyla
decl1'ned to comment on the effect of
shutdowns. "We're obviously aware
of the impactlbe situation is having."
he said.
'·
Some JOOiworkers.have J 'n on
strike since Jan. ~8111 a Johnsotl plant
in P}ymoulb, Mich., ·which 'llakes
se'ats. for the Ford Expedili9n, and
·
ork
·oo... I'
200 striking w ers at an 'l"r m,
Ohio, plant produce ~~~ for Econoline vans: Ford has n~fused to install
seats millie by nonunion workeh.
Ford workers qualified u~the
national, agreement wilb the . w
wQuld get paid lbrough a work 'I!Qppage, Ms. Romine-MacBride. -~d.

The majoril)' of workers wouN be

covered, she said,
r.
· Roas RobortJ, a viee preaiderii of
Fan!. said that Ford had 8,601,) BapediticJIIS and 6,500 Econoline1 •Jiait·
in1 ·seats.

·-

·plant fire suit
for $2.1 million .
PARKERSBORG, W.Va. (AP) - ..
Hous10n-based Shell Chemical Co. ·.
has agreed to pay $2.1 million to lbe :
family of a man killed in a 1994 Shell :
Chemical Co. plant explosion in Bel· '
pre. Ohio, according to Wood Coun- :
ty court documents.
·
:
Shell reached lbe agreement last ·
monlb wilb the survivors of GiirY :
Reed, 41 , of Williamstown in the :
May27,1994,explosionandfireihat -:
destroyed a unit at the plant, kica~ ·
on lbe Ohio River across frQm Park- ~

I

'ersburj, w.Va.

~I

'

'

.~

l.'

Shell declined to disclose detalrs :·.
. . of the settlement, but Wood County ':
ICin:uit JudJC George Hill rocendy :
ruled that details of the scttloitl1at ';
would not be sealed, Thc.Paibilbtlsa ·.
INews rqKXted today.
·
·
It previously 1 waa reported dill ~
SheD hid ~~'reed 10 pay 111r1 :
.I' $2.1 million to t11o _liunU_
ioa of
ocher wotbn killed mlhe o!!Piol1011, ,
'I

I

!wo .:

;Oeorae Nu!kir. ~. of ¢oo1Yillc, .. •Ohio, aiiCI Mille Huria; 1'36i .of ~
Reedville ' Ohlo.
· ' ·. '
. . (Cont,lnutkl
on Page I)
.
1

' •

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