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Jhe Dally Sentinel

of

~th a family pany at her home in
.Muon, W. Va. on Jan. 16.
! ~he is tl# 'pddaughter of Gordon
~ Slli8ii'Winebrenner of Syracuse,
~ Fred and Juanita Daugheny of
~int Pleasant, W. Va. Her great·
·.Jrlllldmothers are Maggie Winebren·
"lli:r of Sytacuse, and Ernestine Zus~ of Mason, W. Va.

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..F10m 1937 to 1939 fighter Henry

t : :.trong won 46 consecutive

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DANIELLE DAUGHERTY •

CHA1TER CLUB
CHESTER COUNCIL MEET·
Janice
Fetty was hostesses for !he"
lNG
February
meeting of the Chatter
A soup sup~r and games will be
featured at the March meeting of Club.
Dinner was served by the hostess
Chester Council 323, Daughters of
and
names for secret pals were
America, to be held at the hall. .
drawn.
Plans were made to go out
At a recent meeting it was repon:
and
have
dinner every month club is
ed that Bob Harden of Guiding Star
not
held.
124 is in Riverside Hospital, Colum·
Games were played with prizes
bus; and that Elizabeth Hayes is not
well. Deloris Wolf and Joann Baum being won by Isabelle Couch, Ruth
were installed into their respective- Youn$, Mary Myers, and Brenda
offices in the Council. Goldie Fred· Bolin. Ruth Young also won the door
erick councilor, conducted the meet· prize.
Membership was discussed. Next
ing which opened with the flag
r.,ceting
will be held at the home of
pledges, scripture, the national
Delores Whitlock in Syracuse.
anthem, and the Lord's Prayer.

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HOSPITALIZED
£LIMJNATION DINNER
Brian W. Keams, son of Brian and
An "elimination" dinner will be
Sharon Keuns of Mason, W.Va. and held March 16 at 7 · p.m. at the
grandson ofcarr011an4 Eva Teaford, Reedsville Volunteer Fire Depa1ment
Racine, is a patient at the Ohio State with proceeds to go to the Olive
University Hospital, Room 737, Sev- Township Volunteer Fire Depanenth Floor, Arthut James Cancer ment. Tickets are $10 each for the all·
Center, 300 West H)th Ave., Colum· you-can-eat spaghetti dinner. A $200
bus. Cards may be sent to Brian at the prize will he awarded. In the event of
hospital.
inclement weather, the dinner wiU be
held on March 23. In order to win, the
person must be present.
HOSPITALIZED
Maxine Dugan of Mulberry Ave.,
Pomeroy, is a surgical patient at
Terry Bradshaw, quanerbac!. for
Riverside Methodist Hospital, Room the Pittsburgh Steelers, threw nine
7130, Columbus. She will undergo touchdown passes in Super Bowl
heart surgery Tuesday. ·
play.

•Sweetheert Baskets
•Freeh Flowers
•ArtlfiCIII Flowers

•Sneck Baskets
•Singing Telegreme

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Pick 4:

4168
Buckeye 5:
7-17-32-36-37

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~ ~1. 41, NO. 201
~ ~Sec:tlona. 24 Pegee

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Pomeroy-~lddleport,

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Ohio, )'Vedneaday, Febru,ary 14, 1996

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StflrtU.e Your Ohio Bm,.,. '
••••• ~l..etion ••rlllf our
lnl~,o~ueto~ •••· .

Gar.ters • Ll•••• •rtapkl••

See ourl996 SUJeeth6ar1 Bmket!

.tERSON·'S ·

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i :ProJected cost to replace 68-year-old structure $25 million

pavl ng pro).eCt

Upcoming applications for block $3.781.28; sewer debt fund,
grants to be used for paving project $2.562.89; replacement fund,
in the village of Rutland were dis- $18,721.97.
cussed by memllers of. Rutland Vii·
lage Council at their regular meeting
In other mauers, council:
Tuesday night at the Rutland Civic
· village maintenance official Dale
Center.
Hart reponed that the two-inch trash
Council stated that they plan to pump at the treatment plant is down
apply for the block grants, in con- because parts are needed . Council
junction with the Meigs County Com- approved a motion to make the nee·
missioners office, for paving work on essary repairs.
village streets within the next sever·heard from Republican candidale
at weeks.
·for County Commissioner Judy
Councilman Dick Felly stated that Williams, who stated there needs to
the streets in need of repaving include be a sense of cooperation between the
sections of Larkins, Nelson, Bryant, villages and county government. She
and Mulberry Streets.
.
also stated that if elected, she would
· The date of Saturday, April 20 at work for the betterment of the viilage
8 p.m. for the annual Phil Din and the and the entire county.
Dozers concen at the Rutland Civic
• approved motions for reimCenter was rescheduled due to a bursement for state training seminar
booking connie! with the group, fees for the new village clerk. and
according to Mayor JoAnn Eads.
overnight hotel accommodations for
A new date for the Phil Din show Eads and council woman Judy Denhas been set for Saturday, April27 at ney who will be attending state train8 p.m. at the civic center, with all pro- mg.
~eeds to benefit the civic center
·civic center chairman Rose Mary
Improvement fund.
. Snowden Eskew stated that she is
Mayor Eads and council remind- ' checking into a grant for replacement
ed all Rutland vtllage restdents that of the civic center roof. and will be
the $24 fee for leak insurance is due obtaining estimates for the roof and
again, and must be paid at the village an economical heating system for the
offices at the crvrc center by Marc.h I. building.
Council approved the following
· app[oved motions 10 order tickbalances fo~ January : general fund, el&lt; and posters for the April 27 Phil
$425.47; crvtc center, $883.48; pollee Oirt concert at the civic center.
food. ( -$564 .11 ): law enforcement Approved the Rutland PTO to handle
fund , $287.33; street fund , $1,682.29; concession duties at the concen.
1 1e h'•g hway •tUn d• $3 .797 ·08 ; water
sa
· set their next mectin• for Tuesfund. $5,352.39; utility department day, March 12. 7 p.m.. ate the civic
ftlnd, $8,167 .21 ; sewer fund , center.

ODOT discusses
new criteria for state
highway projects
By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel News Staff
Ohio's new criteria for major highway projects will not show favoritism
to urban or rural areas . and will not
be based on any of the so-called
"political deals" that have been mentioned in past years. an Ohio Dcpanment of Transportation official said
Tuesday.
The major new project selection
criteria. to be officially unveiled Friday in Columbus, was discussed by
Gary Joseph. chief deputy director of
economic development for ODOT. at
Tuesday's Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce monthly luncheon at the
Trinity Church in Pomeroy.
Joseph said that the focus of the
criteria is toward completion of the
state highway corridors, panicularly
the US-33. US-35, and US-50 corridors.

The new criteria is pan of the reorganization or funding for stale highway projects under the administrmion
of Gov. George V. Voinovich. and was
initiated by ODOT in April. 1995 w
evaluate and select highway projects .
for the four year State Transportation·
Improvement Program (STIP) .
Joseph stated.
Area prOJects. such as the Athens
!0 Darwin section of US-33 and the
state Route 124/Ravenswood Con·
ncctor project. could likely move up
on the new priority list for constru1:tion with cost revision s and points
allotted for economically distressed
areas of the state. Joseph stated.
During a December meeting, the
·slate project selection advisory committee adopted a policy to award
points to projects which were reduced
in scope and cost. The amount of cost
Continued on page 3

Voinovich defends school
funding system, vouchers

son

UllJPON

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Rutland seeks

Meigs spelling bee winners

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35 cenls

A Gannen co. Newepaper

!New.Pomeroy-Mason.
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: ·BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
l Sentinel Staff Wrher
The 68·year-old Pomeroy-Mason
,....
bridge is currently scheduled to be
replaced six years from now, in 2002,
at a projected cost of $25 million.
That announcement was made
Tuesday by the Ohio Depanment of
Transponation (ODOT), District 10,
Marieua, Nancy Yoacham, public
information officer.
According to the announcement,
over the next few weeks survey
crews for ODOT will begin placing
!Tiarkings on selected road and street
. intersections in Pomeroy and Mid· dlepon and across the river in Mason,
: W. Va.
Those markings will be used as
BRIDGE TO BE REPLACED- The Pomeroy·
ment In 2002 by the Ohio Department of Trans·
.: ground control points for aerial pho- · Mason Bridge hea been scheduled for replaceportatlon.
: tography to take place in the spring.
The aerial pictures will be used for headed by Deputy Director John a "for major bridges only" :fund, Mason and the bridge at Little Hock·
. topographic mapping to be used by Dowler, began a search for a consul· administered by a Bridge Manage- ing belong_to Ohio. The Washington
; consultant engineers to study alter~ tant to assist in the preliminary engi· men! Subcommiuee in Columbus. All Street Bridge in Marietta is main, native locations for a new Ohio Riv- neering process and select a location Ohio River bridges owned by Ohio tained by Washington County, but any
: er bridge.
for a new structure. However, (there are four including Pomeroy· major repairs would fall, at least in
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The Pomeroy-Mason bridge ODOT's lack of funding became an Mason) are in that ~~tegory.
part, 10 ODOT, as well as to the coun: replacement project) s scheduled to issue and the project was temporari·
ty. The other bridges belong to West
· receive $1 million in funding in fis- ly put on hold.
District 10, whtch mcludesAthens, Virginia with ODOT responsible for
: C'll! year 1997 for a consultant to '
Now, explained Dowler, ODOT Gallia, Hocking, Meigs, Monroe, maintaining the on ramps from Ohio
: _ifetermine the best location for build· has undergone significant changes Morgan, Noble, Vinton and Wash-. and some other shared maintenance
ing a new structure, it was reponed. wit~ t;egard to financing. Each of ington Counties, has 10 major _cQS~,
·Right-of-way purchases are pro- .ODOT's d2 districts now receive bridges-. jected to start in fiscal year 200 I, and their own allocation from which to
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$25 million has been earmarked for fund bridge projects. However, reha·
Those 10 include the Pomeroy- 20 ~~ ~~~:.r::;;;-:,~i~tni~r;~~eg ~~~
construction in 2002, it was bilitation of one major structure alone Mason Bridge, the Silver Bridge at
announced.
could consume district's entire bridge Gallipolis, the Ritchie Bridge at through the years has been closed
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Ravenswood , I he parkersburg· 8 e1pre several times, each time creating an
In the past severnI years there have a. ocatron or a year, an some
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rep acement projCCts wou . rmpos·
n·dgc. the"'
nashi ngton sQ'eet Bn'dge adverse economic impact on both
been severa meetmgs o • oca an
state officials along with ODOT per· sible to fund, it was noted. For that over the Muskingum River at Mari- sides of the river.
sonnel regarding a new bridge. Three reason , Dowler said, the decision was etta; a bridge which was recently
It was last closed in 1987 for nearyears ago, Meigs County Commis- made to define "major bridges" and closed over the Hocking River at Litsioner Fred Hoffman, then mayor of fund them separately from district tie Hocking. the Williamstown-Mari- ly four months while the deck of the
Middlepon, organized an area-wide bridge allocations, just as ODOT is etta Bridge; the 1-77 bridge at Mari· nonherly span underwent a $1.4 milmeeting where ODOT was asked for now funding major new highway etta; the St. Mary's Bridge at New lion repair job. A ferry was used to
. a ~ime-line on construction of a new construction separately from dislrict Matamoras; and the Hannibal-New transport area residents back and
fonh across the river.
bridge.
highway construction allocations.
Maninsville Bridge.
SoonafterthatODOTDistrict 10.
Dowler- said that there now exists
Of the 10, only the Pomeroy-

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.VALENTINE SPECIAL

Pick 3:

Heppy Valentine Ids
(Page 11)
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SAVE

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Pet Valentlnn
(Pages 8-9)

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C O UPON

Ohio Lottery

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Happy
·Valentine's
Day

------S-ociety sc'rapbook.--~-

.. liD and Paula Winebrenner-Daugh~. celebrated her third hinhday

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Tuesct.y, February 13, 11M,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

~!hird ~irthday
...celebrated
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~ ; Dalllellc DauJherty, daughter

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ud Mn.
Thoene, Pomeroy,
'waa the winner of the Meip
Counly Spelllna Bee held Thes·
day night l!t Southern Hl&amp;h
School. Runner-up was Josh
Clark, son of Penny Smart and
· R01er Clark, Lon&amp; Bottom.
Pictured rl&amp;ht, I to r, John D.
· Riebel, Sr., Melp County Supe~
.Jntendenl ot Schools, presents·a
'trophy to Thoene, a Meip eighth
arader, and Clark, . an Eutem
senath grader, recei"es a trophy .
from Kitty Ruler, talmted and

lifted c:oOnlinator.

The two wOI lake pat1 thlr
sprin&amp; In lhe auual Herald· .
-Dispateh SpeUina Bee.
SchOOl wlnnen partidpatlna,
I to r, front, Mindy C!JaMey,
Syrae~~~e; Jennl Priddy, Rul·
-lud;
. Brittany
Tolllvet,
Rlvea~lew; J•h aart, Eulem
JHS; Thoene, Melp JHS;
LeAna Marcinko, Thppen
: )'lalns;· and Kayle Davll; lei; Harriloavlle; Am•nd• Bud· . · RnsseU, Salllbury; Lindsay
· Pomeroy;
back,
Brittany dlaton, Porllalld; ShHna
Bolin, Salem Center; Ryan Stu. 'Hauber, Chester; Derrick Fack· Muuel, Soiltheril JHS; Clay
bart, Middleport; Suba Collllls,

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Letart; and Emily Story, Brad·
bury. (Photos by Charlene Hbeftlch)

COLUMBUS (AP) - Using a
group of students and parents as _a
backdrop, Gov. George Voinovich
gave a State of the State speech that
defended the state's school-funding
system and criticized his education
opponents.
Voinovich, who has protected the
state's nearly $1 billion rainy-day
fund from legislative raids, said Tuesday for the first time that some of it
should go to offset a loss of federal
money for education .
The current federal budget would
reduce funding for several Ohio education programs, including those for
disadvantaged students and the Safe
and Drug-Free Schools program, he
said.
" If funding catfoot be found in the
current budget, I am recommending
that we look.hard at usi~g rainy-day
fund money to guarantee that these
programs continue next school year,

and then put them into the education
· mix when we develop our next bien· nial budget," the governor said .
He did not recommend an amount .
. during his annual address to the Leg- .
l islature, ~ut fe'der;~l ooucation cuts
. were expected to cost Ohio schools
J about $70 million.
Voinovich did not mention a pend- .
:ing lawsuit before the Ohio Supreme .
·Coun in which most of the state's 611
,school districts want the current systern declared unconstitutional. ·
But he renewed suppon for a pilot
voucher program in Cleveland to let
parents use public money to send .
children to private schools.
"For the life of me, I cannot
understand why the education lobby .
is lighting our scholarship program in .
the Cleveland Public Schools,"
IVoinovich said.
. "To those who would stand in the ;
· •way, I say: Give those ·parents a • •
lchoice,'' he said.

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Wedaeaday, February 14, 1996

,:commentary

Wedn•adlly,

WASHINGTON '-- At ·a time his . ~ountry'£sta6fisfrd in 1948
when many former Cominunist offi- men
were
cials in East Germany are going ·plugging away
free, a man who freed thousands of in their tiny,
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
his countrymen from tyranny before unreliable Tra614-992-2156 • Fax: 992-2157
the Berlin Wall fell could be headed bants.
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to prison.
For. his secWolfgang Vogel 's crime is that he ond marriage,
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made
a fortune helping his fellow .Vogel ·.fell in
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BL
East
Germans
escape to the West' :. a love with a
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
fact that he never hid. Today, many beautiful,
and lch•el Blneteln
former East Germans are grousing younger West
ROBERT L WINGETT
because the homes they once traded Oerman woman who ·now lloes his
Publlaher '
to Vogel in exchange for their free- driving and translates English for
dom are worth 10 times or more him. Vogel met the lovely Helga, a
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
MARGARET LEHEW
what they were under communism. · member of a West German swim• · Generel Manager
Controller
Several weeks ago, the 70-year- ming team, when she came to him in
old former spy-trader and super- the mid-1970s to arrange the emilawyer was convicted in a German gration of an East German swimmer
court of perjury and of cheating five with whom she was , in love. She
former clients out of money and ended up marrying Vogel instead.
property. He was order¢ to pay 1
A lawyer by trade, Vogel first
$65,700 in fines and received a sus- carne to Western attention in January
pended two-year prison term. A sec- 1962 when he wrote an American
ond trial, on related ~harges, is official in West Berlin asking if the
West would be interested in a swap:
scheduled for March.
· Vogel was one of communism's Franc~s Gary Powers, the CIA pilot
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most fascinating characters during ' who had been shot down in a U-2
~ Time
the height of the Cold War, a conIn regards to the increase for customers of the Tuppt;rs Plains-Chester stant topic of conversation among
' Water, it seems the lillie people are gelling the short end of the stick again. spies, dissidents and Communists in
· · The sick. the lame, the one person households and the elderly will be the Eastern Bloc. Were his actions
borne of convictions? Or was he
. hurting the most.
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, I think it's time for a change of personnel at the water company and get merely a man trying to earn money
Gome people that have §Orne compassion for the ones narhed above that can under the rigid constraints of Soviet-least afford a rai$e.
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· · style communism?
The answer is, a mixture of both;
I say let's all start a letter campaign to the water district
Elmer Bailey Vogel was motivated by conscience,
Shade but he also enjoyed the,perks money
could bring him in Eaiit Qerlin. CIA
sources kept us abreast of Vogel's
activities for more than a decade,
''The Concerned Citizens Committee, the three C's group, formerly known . and Vogel sat down with our associas the county home support group, are asking everyone to remember to get ate Dale Van Atta to examine these
out and' vote in March. If you're not registered to vote, you have until Feb. questions.
20 to register, and March 16 t~&gt; vote absentee.
His waiting room alone bespoke
Remember when our county commissioners wanted to auction off the a man who had close friends in the
county home without a public hearing or debate. People called and wrote let- . tpp circles of the East and West
·-ters to the commissioners.
Unlike ·the usuar bare offices with
· To get the commis~ioners' allention we held a protest at the Poll)eroy pictures of Lenin. Vogel's was filled
· courthouse. We ·need commissioners that will listen to the people without with plush rugs, leather-bound
· have to hold protests outside the courthouse.
books, tasteful antique furniture and
It's time to put your party aside and vote for the person. We can make a knickknacks. Dressed immaculately
~ifference if we stand together and get out and vote. If we have a poor in a tailored, double-breasted suit,
turnout at the polls especially with I 5 people running for two commission- Vogel traveled East Berlin in a yel·ers' seats, the same commissiOners could get back m office.
low Mercedes-Benz at a time when
If you need assistance in getting registered or transportation to the polls,
please call Jean at 992-6959,.
Jean Grueaar
Racine

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;Letters to the editor.
for a change?

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Board OKs construction
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Today's weather forecast

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.' "I hiwe IJHrd ilboilt l»in(i ·~ OUt fii11* after ·
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Cora Hilton Michael

Pentagon closing more
guard, reserve units

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Imogene G. Walker

·ODOT discusses...

Meigs EMS logs 7 calls

HEAD LETTUCE

39c

Syracuse taking
pool lifeguard
Announcements applications

Buchan~ri's yo~r· guy

By TONY SNOW
Buchanan thunders thl!l foreigners are swiping public believes the country is moving in the
Creatore Syndicate ,
our jobs, for example, even though imports from wrong directiqn); but the economic messag~
If this is yotJr winter of discontent, Pat Buchanan low-wage economies constitute less th&amp;n 3 per- seems oddly out of synch with. the times and the
is your guy.
cent of our gross domestic product.
l!lessenl!$rThe affable journalist jazzed up the RepubliHe points an accusing finger at big business:
Most caodidates' positions reOect their lives ~
can primaries whe~ he upset Phil Gramm in moaning that the . fort~ne 500 are hiring fewer stories. Yei there seeii)S little in the fllCord to jus.;
Loui~iana last week .•Bucl\anan's victory not only
people. This is true: .Small companies generate tify Buchanan's bellicose pessimism.. He grew UP.
snuffed out the most expensive, clueless cam- most of our economic growth, and overall a child of relative .privilege, ros.e .quickly through
paign in recent history, it also thrilled folks who employment is near all-time highs.
.
: the journalistic ranks, worked for three presidents:
long for the day when a man of vengeful princi_ple
Every politician looks for a couple ofsignature ·in ·Ia' 12-year span, married a wonderful and sup-!
will occupy the Oval Office.
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issues,·and Buchanan has settled upon the Wide- portive wife and has legions of admirers.
·Writers have searched for historical analogies spread fear that America no loo,ger is !he land of
Thi~ may explain wily Buchanan looks uneasy!
to describe the crusade: ~s Buchanan another the free aod the home of the brave ,. it Is Loser in his role as the rigliteous rebel.
:
Eve"! his manneris'l!s seem .contri-ved. He;
Teddy 'Roosevelt? Franklin Pierce? Father Thwn, a little enclave under sine from greed- .
Coug~lin? George Wallace? Ron11ld ReaJan? .mOJlgCI'$. criminals and sickos.
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. spelks with the manic res~iJlt of a robber whoj
None qf the above: Try a Kno~ Nothing version
_· this i·sn't a novel apptoai;h. ·Nativi~ have ·assures his jlrey, "Sijly calm-and everythinJ will.
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of Bill Clinton.
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thumped the ·drum of fel!l' since the days of the .be OK." Sometimes, he moves both arlllS up and:
Buchanan is, lhe'.(lllly man on the political American PartY (the so-called Know Nothinp)ln down 111 right angles, as if lifting something. At;
scene who can match Clinton'§' !&amp;bled ability to" the 1850s. Like previous attempt to restore other-timeo1,he emphasizes his syllables with. soft·
, . . feel other people's pain.
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national purity, Buchanan's "America' First" plat- kat:ate chopJ. The effect is oddly mechanical: the:
1
He e~cels ar cJefending the dowrlrp!lden, espe• , . fOI'II) is.opef\ly nostalgic. He wan!S to recreate the , martial•arts version of the Energizer Bunny.
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cially the unborn. He promotes a ' new politics of lllmosph~re of the, 1950s by wqing war on ene- r _. Meanwhile, his nostrums sniack\of paranoia. If:
life" that is far more prQfound ·and appealin1 ltlan m!es abroad and provoealeurs a1 home. As Justifi' Ronald Reqan looked upon our COU!Jtry as a land ·
m'ost of his opponents ulll\erstatid.
cation, he recites the funiliar litany of Jecent gov- of promise, Buchanan sees us as a bunch of juve~ ·
Yet his voloanic ' empathy also undermines ernment 'failures , froiD risins illeJitimacy to pub- nile delinquents.
·
Ironically, Pat Buchan has befome a_victim ,
. him. Sometimes in life, misfortune oecurs and lie schools' inane decision to outlaw even. the
of his virtues. Every man ho views politics as,.a
.thet:e is,nobody to blame. Yet tbere.always must meritipn of traditional religion.
· be a villain in the Buchanan canon, and if reality
This appeals to the si~ proportion of Amer- 'form of ministry inevhably comes to think of ·
doesn't provide a bad lilY·~ candidate ~ill jiB- lcanl who think the 6iiJon is helded down the himself as a messenger of God rather than a ser-,;
Jer the facts until t. finds one.
· tubes (according \o recent polls, 60 percent of die vant of the people.
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Sandra B. Worcester .·

Today's livestock report

CAULIFLOWER

93C

BROCCOLI

·· Stocks

69C

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Hospital news

SWEET ONIONS

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I•

Deputies probe accident

Despite new mo11ey-making schemes, Duggan said that PBS can't surBy Morton Kondracke
.
Even as a new study proves that violence is a domihant staple of com- vive ·without public support and shouldn't be asked to allow full-blown
mercial television, two developments offer some hope that the steady dumb- advertising, as some Republicans suggest. "That would be as unthinkable
and unworkable," he said, "as asking the public libraries -of America to
ing-down of America isn't inevitable.
•·
One is the apparent decision of Republicans in Congress not to kill off become so markei-oriented, so commercial ,- that they would suddenly
public broadcasting, as they once planned. The other is the creation of a new resemble .. . bookstores."
company run by former Rep. Tony Coelho, D-Calif., designed to make pubIt would be ironic, Duggan pointed out, for politicians who abhor sex and
lic schools more technology-friendly.
.
'
violence on TV, e&lt;tol "family values," and condemn existing children·s proEven so, the United States is far from figuring out how to ensure that all gramming to let PBS starve or make it sell commercials.
commt~nities, schools, libraries and families have access to the. Internet, as
A·n exhaustive. new study_ comniissioned by the cable industry that was
well as the hardware and software necessary to take advantage of the infor- released recently demonstrates that "violence predominates on television,"
mation age.
with 57 percent of dramas, comedies, children's programs, movies and
House Speaker Newt Gingrich. R-Ga., once suggested providing every music videos containing depictions of violent acts, in many of which the
schoolchild with a laptop computer, but so far Congress has gone no further perpetrator gets away without punishment.
·
than to guarantee, in its just-passed telecommunications bill, that rural
While PBS and its supporters want the federal government to guarantee
schopls and libraries will get discount telephone_rates for high-tech hookups. access to high culture and ,high technology, Coelho is launching a company
Congress has put public broadcasting on a downward funding slope, but called ETC wltci, a subsidiary of cable giant Tele-Communications Inc .. to
key Republicans who previously favored "zeroing out" federal support now distribute computer\;, software and educational training to ·school systems.
support the creation of a federal public broadcasting trust fund to keep it Coelho, who made millions in investment banking after leaving Congress in
~iN .
.
1989 and sits on TCI's board, says that the new venture can "make public
A crucial controversy still exists over whether such a trust fund will have schools relevant to'their students" by allowing them to use the best in new
the $2 billion endowment that executives of the Public Broadcasting Service · edu~ational software.
·
think is necessary to supplement private fundmising, which raises 86 percent
ETC wltci will contract with school systems -- at S26S per child for its
of PBS's funding.
'
premium service-- to wire schools for technology and fum ish hardware and
In a '-ecent speech at The American University, PBS president Ervin Dugsoftware so that every classroom has computers and a telephone and teachgan called on Congress to fund "lanes for education on the information . ers are trained in how to coach students.
superhighway" the w·ay past Congresses created land-grant colleges in the
Coelho said that the added cost for the first district to try the premium
19th century and set ~side a third of the broadcast spectrum for non-comservice,
in Muskogee, Okla., will be only Slip per pupil because ETC wltci
mercial and educatio.nal U$es.
can
save
money otherwise spent on school bus trips and days off for trainDuggan favors using some of the proceeds from federal auctions ·of new
ing.
The.
benefits
of computer technology for education were demonstraied
space on the broadcast spectrum -- worth more than $100 billion by some
estimates-- to endow public broadcasting's trust fund and help communities in a TCI pilot study in Carrollton, Ga., where use of compute.r programs
reduced the failure rate in ninth-grade algebra from 38_percent to 3 percent.
and schools pay for educational technology.
But·a report prepared for the Department of Education by the consulting ·
Sen. Larry Pressler, R-S.D., chairman of the Senate Commeree, Science,
and Transportation Committee, and Rep. J11ck Fields, .R-Texas, chairman of firm Mc~insey &amp; Co: suggests it. won't be cheap. To 'ive schools across
the House Commerce Telecommunications and Finance Subcommittee, both America full technology services -- with a networked computer available for
have come around to the trust fund idea, although Fields wants to fund -it every five students and teachers trained in their use -- would require tripling ,
with sales of unused public broadcasting bands, which he claims will raise · current spending on education technology from about $3 billion to$~ billion
$1 .5 billion but which other experts think will net only $200 million or so, per year,
The guestion remains: Who is going to pay for technology, and will highfar too little to do the job.
.
Duggan asserted that even while PBS was struggling with Congress over tech access be available only to those able to afford it? It's a national queswhether to keep the system alive, it had cut costs, created,_partnerships with tion lhal should be addr.essed in Washington.
prjvate media companies, and laun~hed revenue-mising schemes allowing a . · (Morton Kondracke Ia exiCutlve ectHor of Roll c.JI, the MWijllper o1
C.pltol Hill.)
.
$52 million, 30 percent increase ip programming for next year.

Disco.ntent? Pat

Berry's World

I

A 25-year-old Portland man was arrested Tuesday evening by deputies
of the Meigs County Sheriffs Department on a warrant chargi ng him
with fai lure to pay old fines.
Jeffrey A. Coon also faces felony theft by deception charges, according to Sheriff James M. So ulsby. The charges are in connection with
the alleged writing of a bad check for a 1987 Chevrolet Blazer from
the Bibbee Motor Company, near Tupper&gt; Plains.
He is being held in the Meigs County Jai l.

Man ford Harold Bauer, 76, Point Pleasant, W.Va., died Monday, Feb. 12,
1996 at his residence.
..
Born Aug. 4, 1919 in Leon, W.Va., he was a son of the late Vallie and
Elizabeth Durst Bauer.
He was also preceded in death by two brothers, Vallie Bauer Jr., and SidMansfield !27•
ney E. "Perch" Bauer.
A retired employee of the state of West Virginia, he was a veteran of World
IND.
War II, serving as a corpoml in the U.S. Army. He was a member of AmerNo injuries were reported foll owing a one-vehicle accident on Sumican Legion Post 23., Point Pleasant, where he was past commander.
ner Road near Chester Tuesday evenin g.
~ longttme member of the Pleasant Valley Hospital Auxiliary, he was
Michael W. Roush, Skinner Road, was northboun d in a 1993 Ford
chanman of the Point Pleasant Bloodmobile. He was also a member of the
pickup, failed to negotiate a sharp curve and skidded off the ri ght side
Disabl~ American Veterans, Veterans of Foreign Wars, a life member of the
of the road, according to a report fr om Shenff James M. Soulsby.
West Vng1ma State Fann Museum, and :be Mason County Fair Association.
Roush and hi s paSsenger, Chad Griffith of Tuppers Plai ns, were not
. Surviving are his wife, Evelyn Gleason Bauer; two sons and daughtersinjured, according to the report. The truck sustained heavy damage . •
m-law, Manford L. "Butch" and Rosita Bauer of Point Pleasant, and Samuel
H. and Pebbles Bauer of Rutland; three grandchildren; five sisters, Clarice
Jones ~d Garnet Schwarz, both of Poi~t Pleasant, Marjorie Costanzo of
Wheeling, W.Va., Gladys Chapman of Huntington, W.Va., and Lorena Aoyd
•
I
of Manetta, Ga.; and three brothers, Chris H. Bauer and Mack G. Bauer, both
of Point Pleasant, and Merald Wayne Bauer of Huntington.
Services will be II a.m. Thursday in the Crow-Russell Funer~ Home,
Point Pleasant, with the Rev. Louis A. Hussell offici~ting. Burial will be in
The Ohio Power, Siting Board has struction of the transmission line will
the Baden Presbyterian Cemetery, Mason County. Friends may call at the
approved
construction of a 25-mile, require a I ,600-foot span across ihc
Crow-Hussell Funeral Home from 6-9 tonight. Arrangements are by Chap.$8.4
million
electric transmission Ohio Ri ver and the clearing of 3J 3
man's Mortuary, Huntington.
.
line
from
the
l!el)eville
Hydroelec tric acres, i nclud ing~ small portion oft11e
: American Legion Post 23 will conduct military graveside rites.
Plant in Wood C.ounty, W.Va. to the Shade River State Forest in OU vc
Rutland Substation of Ohio Power. Township.
The line and the hydroelectri c
A public hearing on the prop o~ect
plant are projects developed by Amer- construction was held in Pomeroy last
Cora Hilton Michael, 81, Portland, died Tuesday, Feb. 13, 1996, at her
Chance of snow 50 percent.
Southeslem Ohio
ican Municipal Power-Ohio (AMP- December. The 11-membcr si till'g
residence.
· ·
Extended foreast
Today... Partly cloudy. High near 40.
Ohio), a nonprofit wholesale power board is composed of members of the
Thursday night...A chance of . A vegetable grower and homemaker, she was born March 23, 1914, in
West wind 5 to IS mph.
supplier and trade association for 77 Public Utilities Commiss ion of Ohio
Roaue County, W.Va., daughter of the late David and Eva Schoolcraft Bloss- of Ohio's 84 municipall y owned elec- and representatives of the state
Tonight... Cloudy with a chance of snow. Lows in the teens.
Friday... Snow likely. Highs in the er. She was a member of the St. Johns Lutheran Church and was active in
tric utilities. .
departments of agricul ture. na1ural
light snow. Low in the upper 20s.
the'
formation
of
the
Meigs
County
Senior
Citizens
Dance
Club.
She
was
a
20s.
Northwest windS t6 10 mph. Chance
The 42-megawau hydro plant at resources, health and en vi ron ment~!
Saturday and sunday... Frigid with member of the Meigs County Senior Citizens.
of snow 50 percent.
the Belleville Locks and Dam on the protec tion, fou r members of I he Oh io
She is survived by her husband, Sam Michael of Portland; a sister Melin- Ohio River is scheduled to begin gen- General Assell)bly and a rcpresemaThursday.:.Cloudy with a chance a chance of snow. Lows 5 below to 5
da
Christy
of Middleport; a brother, Lawrence "Jake" Blosser of Little Hock- erating in .November, 1997. Con- tive of !he general public.
of light snow. High in the lower 30s. above. Highs in the teens.
ing; three stepchildren and several nieces and nephews. •
She was preceded in death by her first husband, Charles Hilton, and'by
II brothers and sisters.
. Services will be held Friday, II a;m. at Ewing Funeral Home in'Pomeroy
With the Revs. Dawn Spalding and William Middleswarth officiating. Bur• ial will ;ollow in Bald Knob Cemetery, Portland.
Friends may call Thursday, 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. at the funeral home.
WASHINGTON (AP) - The sharply, now stands at abou i 1.5 mil Pentagon says nearly 16,000 posi- lion.
Here is a breakdow n of the 1996
tions in Army, Ai~ Force, Navy and
Imogene G. Walker, 80, of New Haven, W. Va., died Monday, Feb. 12, Marine Corps reserve .forces from National Guard and Reserve cuis
cpast to coast will be eliminated and announced Tuesday:
1996, at Julia's Personal Care Home in Clifton.
Army Reserve - Reduce 9lio
hundreds' of units closed in the next
She was a homemaker.
positions,
to 211 ,500.
Born Sept. 2, 1915, in Hartford, W. Va., she was a daughter of the 1ate- seven months.
Army Nati onal Guard - Add
The reduction s are the lhird in a
Ralph Gibbs, Sr. and Zelia (Gower) Gibbs. She was also preceded in death
series of five major cutbacks designed . 800 positions. 10 416.000.
by her husband , Richard L. Walker, who died in 1974, and a sister, Mildred
Na,al Reserve - Reduce 4.400.
to adJUSt the military to new defense
Elias.
•
·
Surviving are daughter and son-in-law, Phyllis and Sonny Haggerty of requirements in ihe aftennath of the to 11 2,400.
Marine Corps Reserve - Reduce
Milton, W. Va; four sisters and brothers-in-law, Ernestine Werry of Pomeroy, Cold War.
"In the future we will have a 400, to 42,200.
Martha Jane and 'James Staats ·of Point Pleasant,.W.Va., Mabel Jamison of
smaller
fo rce structure, but it will be
Air National Guard - Red uce
Point Pleasant, Pally and Marcellus Waid of New Haven; two brothers and
5.700
to 11 3.600.
sisters-in-law, Jake and Edith Gibbs of Worthington, Ralph, Jr. and Dorothy one that is highly ready and wellCRITERIA DISCUSSED - Ohio Department of Tranaportatlon
equipped," Defense Sec retary
Air Force Reserve - Reduce
Gibhs of New Haven; five grandchildren and nine great-grandchildren.
·ofllclai Gary Jollph polnta out delalla of the new method of state
The funeral will be Friday. II a.m., at the Foglesong Funeral Home with William Perry said in announcing the . '5 ,300, to 79,400.
highway funding crlterl1 at the Meigs County Chamber of COmcutbacks Tuesday.
Perry said the reduclmns will free
Luther Raine officiating. Burial will be in Gmham Cemetery.
merce monthly luncheoo Tueaday In Pomeroy. The criteria, to be
National Guard and Reserve up money and ot her resources fo r pri·
Frieods may call at the funeml home Thursday, 6 io 9 p.m.
officlllly unveiled Friday, could bl favoreble toward complatlon
forces, which peaked al 1.2 milli on orilies such as troop pay and benefi t ~.
of mejor hlghw1y projecte.
people in 1989. arc to be cut by about family support programs and troop
'
15,900 this year to 975,100. The Pen-- trainin g.
tagon's goal is lo eliminate another
The changes will affect al l 50
Sandra L. Boothe Worcester, 50, of Tariff, W.Va .. died Monday, Feb. 12, 21 ,700 by Oct. I. 1998. to reach a .states, although no! all will sec a ncl
'
·- .
Continued from page 1
unemployment rate higher than the 1996, at Charleston Area Medical Center -- Geneml Division, Charleslon, final force of 953.400.
decrease in Na1i onal Guard and
reduction is counted as a local con- state rate of unemployment. Up to W.Va.
The active duty force, also cut Reserve posili ons.
Born March 21, 1945, in Spencer, W.Va., daughter of Woodrow B. Boothe
tribution in the bonus category of five extra ppints can he awarded for
of
Tariff
and the late Orva Hill Boothe. She was a retired teacher and librar. PubliciPrivat«. Local Participation on economic distress. Meigs County
ian
at
Southern
Local High School in Racine. She was a graduate of Glenville
new' highway projects.
will score five points on, the new
State,
C
ollege,
Glenville,
W.Va., president of the Roane County, W.Va., HisPlanning for both the US-33 and scale. On this ·new criteria, five points
COLUMBUS (AP) - IndianaCattle: un eve n. 50 ccnb lower tp
· state Route 124 projects has been can be a significant difference in the . torical Society and a member of the Hays Fork Community Church in Lin- Ohio direct hog prices at selected 1.00 higher.
den, W.Va.
redu~ed from four-lane p,rojects to
ranking of projects," said Joseph.
Slaughlcr slccrs: choice 59()().
In
addition
to
her
father,
she
is survived by her husband , Larry Worces- buying poinls Wednesday by the
"Super Two" projects. According to
The category of economic develU.S.
Department
of
Agriculture
Mar64.00:
sclcc1 55.00-59 .50.
state officials, the "Super Two" pro- opment, which includes: job cre- ter of Tariff, and a brother. Ronal B. Boothe of Burke, W.Va.
ket
News:
Slau
ghter hc~ rers: choice 58.00·
Services will Friday, I p.m. in the Sin nell-Taylor Funeral Home, Spencer,
jects will include all right of way ,and ation, job retention, economic disBarrows
and
gilts:
mostly
stead
y;
65.00;
sclec
l 53.00-59 00.
preliminary work for a four-lane tress, cost effectiveness, and level of with the Rev. Leon Strickland officiating. Burial will follow in the Clover demand moderale on a moderate
Cows: uneven. 2.00 lowe r 10 1.00
highway, with two lanes to be built investment, will account for 30 per- Cemetery near Spencer.
supply.
highct;
all co ws 45 .00 and down.
Friends may call Thursday, 3 p.m. at the funeral home.
instead of four adding the possiblity cent"of a project scores.
U.S. 1-3, 230-260 lb s. 46 00Bul ls: steady l o 1.00 higher: all
of future,expansion to four lanes.
Transportation efficiency, which
48.00. few 48.50: plants 47.00-49.00. bulls 4 7.00 and down.
Under the "Super Two" reductions, includes corridor completion, highVeal calves: 7.00 lo 8.00 lower;
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lb s. 41.50the US-33 Athens to Darwin project way importance, and traffic volume,
46.00.
cho1 ce 147 50 and down
has been reduced from an original fig- will account for 70 percent of project
Sheep and lamhs: 2.00 10 5.00
Sows: under 500 lb s. steady; over
ure of $97 million to a revised cost of scores. .
Units of the Meigs County Emer- Michael King, Holzer Medical Cen- 500 lbs. weak to 1.00 lower.
:higher; choice wools 72.00-90.00. ·
'$54.1 million. The state Route 124
Bonus categories, which include: gency Medical Service recorded sev- ter.
,
U.S. l -3, 300-500 lb s. 29.00·Ravenswood Connector haS been unique regional impact of new conSYRACUSE
33.00; 500-650 lbs. 33.0()-36.00.
en calls for assistance Tuesday
FRESH SOLID
:reduced from to a revised cost of struction, and public/private/local including three transfer calls. Units
12:23 a.m., Union Avenue, Laura
Boars : 25.00-26.00.
:$43.5 million, from the original cqst participation which allows state fund- responding included:
Cleland, Veterans Memorial Hospital .
Estimated rece ipts: 40.000 .
estimate of $117.6 million.
ing to be augmented, will account for RUTLAND
TUPPERS PLAINS
Prices from The Producers Li vcThe l)ew criteria could very well 25 points, for a total of 125 points for
II :58 a.m., state Route 7, Charles stock Association:
2:34a.m.,
state
Route
143,
Aldcumtt3 .
·see the Ravenswood Project 11111k high project scores.
na Welsh, O'Bleness Memorial Hos- Bartels, HMC.
·on the state list of consll)lotion pro"With the first phase of the pital;
HEAD
·
jects, due to the fact that the project Ravenswood Connector project being
8:48 'a.m., motor-vehicle accident
:has the second biggest savings in completed this spring, we feel that the at Salem Street, Brent Myer and
SNOW WHITE
·revised costs of any project statewide projects in this area of the state will
($74.1 million) and will receive bonus rate favorably on the new project cripoin.ts for being located in an eco- teria," Joseph stated ..
nomically distressed area.
Along with new highway criteria, Board to meet
"The economic distress factor a complete list of upcoming highway
Lifeguard applications are being
The Meigs County Public Library
HEAD
uwards points to areas which have an construction projects by ranking is Board of Trustees will meet Feb. 22 accepted for London Pool in Syra.'
expected to be also be announced by at I p.m. At that time the architects cuse for this coming summer, it was
FRESH GREEN
state transportation officials Friday in will present proposed plans for the announced today.
!
Submit applications, including •
library at Racine.
The Daily Sentinel Columbus.
training and experience information, ·
CCL
to
meet
(UIPS ZIJ.M)
Husband's night will be observed to Janice Zwilling, village clerk•
l'llbUihed evay ~ Monday lh&gt;.....
when the Child's Cbnservation treasurer, at the Syracuse Municipal
Friday, Ill Coort St., l'1XII'"'l\ Ohio, by llle
BUNCH
Am ~ Power ..
441.4
League meets Thursday at 6:30p.m. Building.
Ol!lo Valley l'llblllllins eon.,"'Y"'"'""' Co.,
Akzo
.............
,
..........................
56
Those
persons
whe
presently
have
Pomeroy. Ollio 4~769. Ph. 992-2ts6. Se&lt;:ond
at the Rock Springs United Methodist
Ashland 011 ...........................38\
cllw ,..,.. poid • Pometoy. Ohio.
no lifeguard training, but would like
Church.
(All Kinds)
AT&amp;T .....................................&amp;&amp;\
to
enroll
in
a
course
to
become
cerM•bcr: The AasoCiaied PR~~. aftdthc Ohio
Benk One ~ .................
-39'4
tified. are asked to contact Syracuse
Newspaper As&amp;Ociaaion.
Bob Evans ............................15\
1015
Councilman Larry Lavender.
Borg-Warner ••••••••••••••••••ou••••••32
POSTMASTER: Send ocldrell\ correction&amp;10
ChamPion Ind.........................16
Veterans Memorial
The Dail)' Sentinel, Ill Coon St .• Pomeroy,
Clllrmh1a Shop ••....••...•••••••....3\
Ohio45769.
Tuesday admissions - Henry
Carpenter, Middleport.
City Hotdlll8 ..
SUBIICRtmON JlATBS
Federer
Mogul .. - ...................18\
By Carrier., Meter llolttt
Tuesday discharges - none.
Gannett ........... ~ ....................61'1.
POUND
Ooe~ ................................................. $2 00
Holzer Medical Center
Ooodyeer TIR ......................49~
One MO!Mb ................................................ $8.70
Discharps Feb. 13 - Margi
One Year ............................................... $104.00
~~·rt oo•ooooooooo tooooooooooooooooooooo~u7'A.
SOLID
C
tai1da End ...............................15
Adkins, Checyl Browning, Mrs.
SINGLB OOPI' PlUCK
.
Utlllted
II"'C.
""'""'"";.
............
11\
William Craft and daughter, Mary
LB.
Dlily .;,,,,, .. ···-· ··~···-···-r:. ......-.. ,, ....... l5 Ceall
... Peopl•• Bancorp.................. .23 Oiler. •·
Olllo Valley Blnk ...... ,...........38'.&gt;
Sul&gt;o&lt;ribcniiOI cleliri"' N&gt; t&gt;OY
&gt;Uy
Birth - Mr. aod Mrs. 11tomas
retNlll ..v.r.c:e dimct to 11le Daily Sentinel
One Valley .............................32~
RUBY' RED
Calvert,
son, Gallipolis.
oo alhrr.e. 1ill or 12 mondl bail. CndiC will be
ROckwell ..............................62}. 1
.
.... qonier- "(('l- '
If'C?bblnS
• M
M_,.,._..................29l•' · . (hblllbed with permialon)
.
~qyal D!ltchlllllll ;............. t4n
No aubsciiptioa by mail ~Ued In area
·ShO~IIftC.., .•',,,.,_..................I
,...,. hoope Clll'ler ....tee I• .,ollable.
BeniC ••- ••!".......~·····-··········Mf
'
All
MAIL~
Wertd\1 tnt'l ............................19:t.
siZe.
CASE
·-MoiPc-, .
Worthlngton Ind.....................2~
13'Meb................ ................... .............. m.JO

ove( Russia the previOUJ ye.ar, for iimply the price owed by the prisonCol. Rudolf lvanovicb Mlel, a Sovi- " ers for their training or the loss of
et superspy imprisoned in New their future productivity. Our
York. A month later, the two spies sources estimate that more than .$1
passed each other on the Glienicke billion was paid for these prisoners,
Bridge between West ·Berlin and most of it laundered secretly through
Potsdam -- the first in a series of Protestant churches.
Cold War spy swaps (all engineered
Vogel told us he once dreamed of
by Vogel) that made the bridge . being a priest, and his long career
famous.
helped satisfy -some of that urge. The
Vogel spent the bulk of his time dissidents confessed to him, sought ·
as an intermediary b_etween the East solace from him, and depended on
German and West German govern- him to free them. He often personalments arranging the release of more ly drove them to the West to ensure
than 33,000 imprisoned dissidents their safety. h thfilled him to see
who tried to escape East Germany their joy at stepping into the West.
by climbing the Berlin Wall. The
He was a perfect bridge between
deals, which began in 1963, and East and West because he never real•
released an average of 1,500 a year, ly fit comfortably in either society.
had to be conducted irl secret. Any He was a !lumanin and a Marxist.
publicity, the East Gennans warned, · He even had his daughter confirmed
and the deals would be off.
in the Roman Catholic Church in
The East German leadership 1964, when this · was virtually verrequired the West German officials boten in East qermany. To top it off,
to secretly pay for the prisoners -- he asked an Amtrican diplomatic
sometimes in consumer goods, other , official to be her godfalher.
,'
times in hard currency. The CommuJack Andereon. end MlchMI
nist officials reasoned that it was Blnltl!n 1re wrllllfll for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

America's 'dumbing-down' not inevita-ble

!'JY The Aatoclaled Prell
·
, Today is Wednesday, Feb. 14, the 45th day of 1996. There are 321 days
left in the year. This is Valentine's Day.
Today's Highlight in History:
. On Feb. 14, 1929, the "St. Valentine's D~y Massacre" took place in a
.Chicago garage as seven rivals of AI Capone 's gang. were gunned down.
On this dille:
In 1778, the American ship Ranger carried the fe!!cntly adopted Stars and
Stripes to a foreign port for the first time as it arrived in France.
•
In 1859, Oregon was admitted to the Union as the 33_rd state.
In 1876, inventors Alexander Graham Bell and Elisha Gray applied sep.arately for patents related to the telephone. The U.S. Supreme Court even'tually ruled Bell the rightful inventor.
,.
.
_"· In 1895, Oscar Wilde's final play, "The Importance of Being Earnest,"
opened at the St. J~mes's Theatre in London.
.
In 1903, the Department of Commerce and Labor was established. ,
In 1912. Arizona became the 4!!th state of the Union.
. In 1920, the League of Women Voters was founded in Chicago; its first
president was Maude Wood Park.
· In 1945, Peru, Paraguay, Chile and Ecuador joined the United Nations.
In 1962, first lady Jacqueline Kennedy conducted a televised tour of the
White House.
.
In 1984, 6-year-old Stormie Jones became the world's first heart-liver
transplant recipient at Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh. She lived until
Jllovemtler I 990.
· In 1985, Cable News Network reporter Jeremy Levin, who was being
held hostage by extremists in Lebanon, was freed .
: Ten years ago: The government reported that collapsing world oil prices
~nt U.S . wholesale prices plunging ~even -tenths of I percent in January
!986.
• .
.
.
. ..
, Five years ago: Iraq charged the bombmg of an underground fac1llty the
day before, which killed hundreds of civilians, was a deliberate attack on an
air raid shelter, a charge denied _by the United States. Two San Francisco
men became the first couple to register as "domestic partners" under a new
oity ordinance.
: One year ago: A federal judge rejected the Justice Department's proposed
antitrust settlement with Microsoft Corpomtion; U.S. District Judge Stanley
Swkin was later .werruled.
·

· Manford H. Bauer

MICH.

·

·Today in history

'

Man arrested on wa"ant

AccuWeather• forecast for daytime conditions and

The Daily Sentinel East German spy-trader n~~ faces jail

.

Local briefs

OHIO Weather
1nbursday,Feb. 15

F.axu.y 14, 1M

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The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

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The Daily·. Sentig..
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VVednelday,February14,1996 .
•

·With double-digit offense from Pullins, Cleland &amp; Yost,

,

••

'

.Meigs boys record 74-52 victory over Point Pleasant
By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correapondenl
Meigs opened up a 22-13 · lead
after one period and coasted to a 7452 victory over Point Pleasant in
boys' high SGhool basketball action
Tuesday at Meigs High School.
The win by the Marauders

avenges a 66-62 loss to the Big
Blacks on Dec. 30 at Point Pleasant,
W.Va ..
Meigs jumped out to a 2-0 lead on
a bucket by Cass Cleland at the 7:45
mark of the first period. Jay Rey. mond drilled a three pointer gave the
Big Blacks a short lived 3-2 lead at

the 7:23 mark of the period.
Paul Pullins answered with a
three pointer of his own at the 7:10
gave the Marauders a 5-3. BJ.
Buchannan scored to tie the game at
five with 6:51 remaining.
Meigs increased the lead to 14-9
with 3:24 on a bucket by Cleland

with 3:24 left in the period. But
Buchannan hit another three with
3: I 0 left to make it a 14-12 contesi.
Brad Whitlatch hit one of two free
throws to give the Marauders a 1512 lead, but Jeremy Buskirk
answered with a bucket for Point
Pleasant to cut it to 15-14 with 2:25

·,

LAYUP TIME comas for the Melga Marauders' caaa Cleland (15),
who gets paat Point Pleaaant's Jeremy Buskirk {behind Clflland) and
B.J. Buchanan (right) during Tueaday night's game at Meigs High
School, where the f,llaraudera won 74-52ln part because of Cleland's
13-point effort. {Sentinel photo by Dave Harrla)

.

,,

BASELINE SHOT - Meigs postman Travla Abbott (00) takH a
baaelllll jump ahot In front of two Point Pleasant defenders during
TuHdey night's game near Rock Springs, where thp Maraudera ~·on
74-52. Abbott finfahed with nine polnta. (Sentinel photo by Dave Harris)
·
.

left
But Meigs answered with a buck-•
et by Travis Abbott, a three pointer
by Pullins and a Mark Mills bucket
to take a 22-141ead heading into the
fimil period.
.
The Marauders increased the leid
to 14 at 29- 15 when Whitlatch
drained a three pointer from the top
of the key with 4:47 left in the half.
Meigs increased the lead to 16 when
Cleland scored from underneilth with
2: 13 left in the half.
·,
Poinlanswered with four in a row
to pull to within 33-21 with 'S9 seconds left. But Abbott's bucket in the
lane with 43 seconds left gave Meigs
a 35-21 lead heading into the locker
room at the half.
In the first half Meigs hit 15 of24
from the floor including three of five
from long range for 63%.
The Big Blacks battled back to
pull to within ·11 when Buchannan
hit a pair of free throws at the S:31
mark to make it a 41-30 contest
Meigs then increased the lead to 5133 with.! :54 on two straight baskets
by Pullins with I :54 left in the third.
After Buchannan hit one of two
from the charity stripe with eight
seconds left to make it a 51-34 contest, but Donald Yost hit a short
jumper from the paint with one second left to give Meigs a 53-34 lead
heading into the final eight';ninutes.
The closest the Big Blacks came
the rest of the way when Bucannan
hit a three pointer with 3:35 left to
make it a 64·48. But M.~igs was ab,le
to pull away for the 22 point victory.
Meigs had a balanced scoring
attack with three players in double
fi,gures, led by Pullins'l6, Cleland's'
13 and Yost's 12. Meigs hit 30 of 62
from the flOOr (48%); including five
of II from three-point range. Meigs
went to the line 18 times hilling nine.
The Marawjers pulled down 34
rebounds with Abbott grabbiJig II
and · Cleland 10. Meigs had IS
assists, with Pullins getting six and
Abbott four, added eight steals, with
Abbott, Yost and Brent Hanson get-

•..•

•
ling two ~h . Meigs committed sev- '
en turnovers.
'Point Pleasant hit 16 of 56 from :
the floor (29%), including seven of ,
23 from three point range. The Big •
Blacks pulled down 25 rebounds ••.
with Jeremy Buskirk grabbing eight
and Andrew Nichols getting seven.
J. D. Holstein had seven of their I !i :
assists and they had nine turnovers.
"We had a great defensive effort."
Marauder coach Jeff Skinner said
after the game. "II was a good win; ~
we had a lot of consistently from the
starters and tbC bench."
.n
Reterve notes: In the reserve ~
game Meigs ran its record to 16-2
with a 48-34 victory. Meigs opened
up the game in the fourth period
outscoring the Big Blacks 14-4 in the
fourth period.
:.
Collin Roush and Daniel Hannan ,,
,led Meigs with 12 points, Jeremiah '
:Bentley added nine and Matt
Williams chipped in with seven .1
points and 15 rebounds. Mike Stan- '
ley led Point with nine points.
.
The future: Meigs is now 11 -7· •
on the season and will travel to Bel- •
pre to take on the Golden Eagles on:
Friday, before returning-home for the; ~
regular season finale on Saturday· :
against Wahama.
:
Point Pleasant drops to 6-10 on : ·
the year and will play Wahama on ' :
Thursday.
' ,
~•mrbbU

Point Pleasant.. ....... l3-8-13-18=52 ; ,
Meigs ...... .'.............
22-13·18-21=74
' •
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.

POINT

PLEASANT :""" Jay : ;
Reymond 0- 1,4=4, Mike Stanley 0- : •
0-J=I, Jeremy Buskirk 1-0-0=2, B.J. . '
-'Buchannan 2-5-5=24, Andrew . .
Nichols 1-0-1=3, Mark Oliver 5-00= 10, J.D: Holstein 0-1-2=5. Totals: ·
9-7-IZ.SZ
.
MEIGS.- Brad Whitlatch 1-1- .
I=6, Cass Cleland 6-0-1 =13, Mark .
Mills 2-1-1=8, Paul Pullins 4:2. ·
2=16, Donald Yost 6-0-0=12, .Tim : .
Lewis 0-0-2=2, Nick Haning 1-0- : ;
·0=2, Brent 'Hanson 0-1-1=4, Josh ; .
Witherell J-OJ6:2, Travis Abbott 4- ' ,'
0-1=9. Totals: lS-5·9=74
.

fn Top 25 college .basketball;

Virginia Tech edges Liberty; Georgetown &amp; Iowa also win
.

'

tor in our victory."

By DAVID REED
BLA'CKSBURG, Va. (AP) Travis Jackson was touchy about the
obvious question after Virginia Tech
rallied from an 11-point.second-half
deficit to eke out a victory over Liberty.
Were the lOth-ranked Hokies
looking ahead to Saturday's home
game against unbeaten and top-·
ran ked Massachusetts, which is
being billed as the biggest regularseason matchup in school history?
. "Everybody else was, but we
·weren 't,'' said Jackson, who had 12
points and 10 rebounds in the 56-53
victory over Liberty. "Frankly, I'm
getting a little sick of hearing ~bout
UMass."
Jackson went on to criticize the
turnout of 7.134 at I 0,000-seat Cassjlll Coliseum, where Virginia,Tech
(l9-2) has won 17 straight games.
llc said fans appear to be staying
hiJme until Massachusetts comes to
t()wn. ·
: Virginia Tech coach Bill Foster
said Jackson's play against Liberty's
leading scorer, 6-foot-10 center Peter
1\lum~, who was held to three IX?ints
In the second half, "was ll key fac-

Marcus White was 3-for-4 from
But Aluma, who is averaging 18 three-point range and finished with
points, is a weak sparring partner 15 points for the Flames, while
·"compared with Massachusetts center Aluma had 14 points.
Marcus Camby, who is tile Atlantic
"We weren't taking them lightIO's leading scorer at20.6 points per ly," said Shawn Good, who led Virgame.
,
ginia Tech with 13 points. "They
Virginia Tech trailed most of the kept passing the ball around, and
way against Liberty, but Damon with five or 10 seconds left on the
Watlington led the Hokies' come- clock, they got a good shot."
back by makirig three straight threeVirginia Tech made only nine of
pointers late in the game.
its first 26 shots and was outre"Our players are human; the bounded 20-10 in the first half as
UMass game is all they have heard Libeny led 29-21 at halftime.
about,'' Foster said. "I thought they
After taRing a 6·2 lead, Virginia
managed to stay focused pretty well. Tech missed 12 of its next 14 shots
They had to be focused to make the and let Liberty keep its lead until Jim
comeback they did."
· Jackson's three-pointer tied the game
Liberty ( 12-10) had a chance to at 44 with 7:00 left.
tie the game at 55 wlth I :04 to play,
Liberty led 38-27 with 15:44
but Barry Taylor's three-point shot
only grazed the rim.
"I think our backcourt grew up
tonight," Libeny coach Jeff Meyer
said. "Our.backcourt was able to hit
some key three-point shots, which
BALTIMORE (AP)- Art Modgave us an excellent chance of win- ell says he cannot afford to conning the game. You have to give Vir- tribute money toward a new $200
ginia Tech a lot of credit. They are a million stadium Gov. Parris Glenveteran team and they ·know how to
finish."

Southern girls keep Miller
winless
by winning 67-44
•
•

I

I

.II
II

steals (Proffiu 1,1Manuel 5. Turley
S); 13 assists (Turley 5, Moore 4); 15
turnovers, 16 fouls and fi•e blocks.
Miller hit 19-41 twos and no
threes, while connecting on 6-10 free
throws. Miller had 27 rebounds
(Darcie Cook 5, Mindy Halasz 4);
two steals, three assists, 33 turnovers
lind 21 fouls.
Reserve notes: Southern won the
reserve game 49-33. Jenny Roush
had 12, Kim Sayre 10 and Eric
Arnott eight for1he winners.- Briteni
Merckle had 12 for Miller.
The future: Southern hosts
Miller in the sectional semi-final at
Alexander High School Thursday at
6:30p.m.
·
Ogartcr lllllla
Southem ......: .......... l5-18-20-l4=67
Miller............. :... ,.... ! 0-ll-9-14=il4
Soilthem - Becky Moore 1-00/3=2, Cyntllia Caldwell I -0-0=2~
Bea Lisle 2-0-015=4, Jonna Manuel
8-2-0/3=22, Renee Turley 8-33/6=78, Kim Sayre 1-0-0=2, Erica
Amott 0-1 fl= I, Brianne Proffiu 2-02/5=6. !fbfBt: b-.5-6124.67 •
Mllir - Steph Merclde '0-03/4=3, Mindy Haluz l-0-0=6, Corhit23.61 fiOII! the fteld ' rie Cook 7-0-lfJoii,fS, l&gt;ircie Coole 3~
J-13 dnei While hiain16-l411 0-212=8, Krilbln l!lant ·~1•8,
' die Ii.e, Soudwn hid 42 .reboUnds ' Krissy Neal f -0-0=2, An_na Braglin
1-0-0:2. ~ 19+6n0oo44 .
~ 10. ¥Mue19, :rur~ey 8); .~

: ·The Southern Tornado girls rolled
tci their I Oth win of the season by
d&amp;feating Miller 67-44 Monday
njght at Hemlock.
·
• Southern ( I 0-9 overall &amp; 8-7 in
t~e Hocking Division) was led in
s&lt;;oring by Renee Turley's 28 .P~ints
. d a complimentary effort from
s nipr ]()nna Manuel who tosse~ in
,
points and grabbed mne
rlbounds. Sen'iors Becky Moore,
· Ilea Lisle and Janna Manuel were
j;laying their last regular sj:BSOn
gilme, ·
~ Miller (0-20 &amp; 0-15) was led by
' Oorrie Cook's 15 points.
' : Southern jumped out to a 15-10 .
:drst period lead, then open¢ up a
~~ I lead at ~ h~lf. Turley ad 16,
he half. ~anuel ha4 six for
•
~m. o.rcie Cooli and Kristen
• ant-each had x for Miller. . . .
; Turley e,.;plodel' for 10 thtrd ~~Cn•
~ points; while, ,M~u~l hn two .
tlit'eel to open upja 20-pomt baiTa~e .
53- 3~ · Southern lead, Come
qook had seven for tdil~r i~ the .
s;nt. .Manuelllad eight pomll 1n the ,
finale to lead Southern to the 67-44

~

t

a!Jd

,,~
,:·aid

•I .

1 - ·

and now we get the chance to concentrate on them."
In other games involving ranked
teams on Tuesday, it was No. 14
Georgetown 66, Boston College 63;
and No. 19 Iowa 62, Michigan 55.
No. 14 Georgetown 66
No. 21 Boston College 63
Allen Iverson scored 24 points as
the Hoyas (20-5, 10-4 Big East)
snapped a two-game iosillg streak
and won for the first time in four
road games. After Iverson made two
free throws for a 66-61 lead, and
after Antonio Granger scored for the
Eagles (15-6, 8-5), Iverson missed
the front end of a 1-and-1 with 7.5
seconds left. Boubacar Aw's steal
then clinched it for the Hoyas. Bevan

Modell says he can't afford to help fund
proposed $200M stadium in Baltimore

],

I

remaining as Aluma, who was being
double-teamed. repeatedly dished
the ball back out to teammates for
wide-open shots.
The Hokies went on a 17-6 run to
tie the game at 44 with 8:39 remaining after hitting five straight threepointers. But Liberty, the funda·
mentalist Christian college founded
by the Rev. Jerry Falwell, kept playing like giant killers.
White's second consecutive basket put Liberty aheatl4g-46 with si~
minutes left, but Watlington then
started connecting from the outside.
"It's kind of, good to get this
game over because now we can
begin to prepare for UMass,"
Watlington said. ''They've been kind
of over our shoulder the entire year

.

.. . .

·nas -

more) Sun on Tuesday. "We're overextended. There is no room for chipping in."
Modell, who got approval last
week to move the Cleveland Browns
io Baltimore. said he plans to visit
lawmakers in Annapolis perhaps as
. early as ne~t week. He said he would
do what is "reasonable" to.oven:ome
opposition to lhe deal in the General Assembly.
3 at Homestead, Fla.
Some legislators, responding to
Rahal· said he 1 and Letterman
public
opposition of the state-fundbegan talking about a partnership
.
ed
project,
are trying to revise
after they met in 1986.
financing for the deal and have pro. posed Modell contribute $24 million.
dening
proposed building in
Baltimore for Modell's NFL team.
"The team has nothing to chip in
right now," Modell told The (Balli-

Letterman becomes minor
partner in Rahal racing team
By KAREN MATTHEWS
NEW YORK (AP)- Da•id Let·
Ierman, a longtime Indy-car fan, is
· joining Bobby Rahal's auto racing
~am.
' .
"I couidn 't be more thrilled, and
I think we're looking forward to having some fun and winning some
races, .and by the way. thet;e's the first
cliche of the evening," he said Tuesday in confirming that he's a minor
partner.
Leiterman made the announcement, which had been reponed last
week, at a MerCedes-Benz dealership
in Manhattan. He was joined by
Rahal, the team's majority owner
and principal driver, and Bryan Herta, the second driver.
Asked to describe the e,.;tent of
his involvement with the team, Letterman . glanced . at Rahal's shlt:JY
pate and deadpanned, "It's going to
·be varied, but I think as it stand~
now, at the end of every race, I c~k .
Bobby's helmet for hair."
He added: "I'm ·in it enough to
have fun, not enough to get hun."
Letterman, 48, joins actor Paul
Newman and former pro football
stars Walter ~ayton and Joe Montana
&amp;S celebrity part-9Wilers of Indy-elr
teams.
·
i Rahal will field Mm:edes-pow1cred Reynard lnd~ ~
~~~­
'The tean'l, based an Hilliard; Oluo,.
' will begin the 16'race season Mllih

t!D'

• JJ

SHOCK S

fiHE S

. P235/75RX15

•

IW

•

LEGAL NOnCE
The Public Ulilities Commission of
Ohio has set for public hearing Case
No. 95·101-EL·EFC. to review the
fuel procurement practices and poli·
cies bt Ohio Power Company, lhe
operat1on of its Electric Fuel Com•ponent and related matters. This
hearing is scheduled to begin at the
Commisston offices at 10:00 a.m.
on March 12. 1996.

,•
'

'·

· Eastern overcame a 40-36 halftime deficit to overtake divisional
foe 'Aiexander 7S-72 Tuesday night
in boys varsity basketball action at
'Eastern High School.
Eastern (10-8 overall &amp; 8-6 in the
Hocking Division) was led by junior
point guard Eric Dillard, who is just
now starting to peak offensively in
:getting th~ job done for the Eagles.
Dill.ard had 22 points while running the EHS offense. Micah Otto
'bad 16 points, four steals and four
assists; while Eric Hill added 12 and
Brian Bowen, Daniei 'Ouo and Mike
Barnett each had seven.
• Alexander (9-9 &amp; 7-6) was led by
'

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\

',.
••
..•

••

I
t•

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· EASTUN CONFERENCE
AllonlkPh~

.

~

L fa.

Orllllldo ................ J!
New YOfk ............. JO
Wubingron............22
Miami.. .............. &gt;..22
New Jeruy ............ 19

lill

14
16
2.5
27
29

.714
652
.468
.449
.196
Boston .................... l8 lO .17.5
Phillldelphia ........... IO )6 .211

l~

12
13
1.5,$
16.5
ll$

.S

I .S
12.5
16

Cin. Aiken 62. Cin. Walnut Hills 4~
Cia. Elda12, Cin. McNic:hoiM 5)
Cin. Hills Chr. Acmd. n . Miami VIII.

Ceatrai~"Won

au.,.,...................•J s
17
20
21
22
2.5
28
14

Indiana ................ ... ~!
CLEVELAND ....... 27
Atlmnra ..................26
Delroit .................... ll
Clladoue ..............22
Milw~:M~kee ... .......... Ill
Toronco .................. l4

•

.896
.646

12
ll.l
16..5
18.5
20.5
24
29

.m

..553
..511
.468
,)91
.292

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mklwnt Division

Iall

lr L

Sun Antonto ..........JI
Utah .................... JJ
Houston ................ J2
Dcnvcr ................... 20·
O.llu ................... 16
Mimtesota .............. l4

lill

td.

I!II , .674

16

.673

18
28
.11

.640
.417

."\2
Vancouver ..... ........ 10 37

.l04
.2L\

.)40

11 . ~

22

PKifleDI¥Won
Sconle .................... Jl 12 .m
L.A . l..tlken ............ 28 19 . ~96
Saeramentu ... .........24 21 .s:n
Ponland ................ 24 2!' .490
Pt1oeni" ······· ........ ... 22 . 2!'i .468
Golden Smte ......... 22 26 .45R
L.A. Clippen ...... ... l6 ."\3 1 . ~27

7
10
12

B

ll.!'
20

Tuesday's scores
Orlando 121 , Denvf.-r9J
Toron1o 911, Minmi 87
CLEVELAND 110, Cbarlotte 100
New let.:y IOL lnt.liana92
Houston 121 , Dalhas I06
Olicago Ill. Washington 9R
Philadelptlia 104, Milwmubc 101
Utah 114. Slln Antonio Ill (OT)
Seattle 102, Pboenil 98
&lt;Alldcn Stale 99. Pmlnnd 9!1
Boston JOM, LA . Clippers 94
Minnt501a 94. Sacramcnta90

HOT
WATER
HEATERS

48

Gas ·

,.'

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Tonight's &amp;ames

11 Gal. '' $0 GIL

Omari(l, 7 p.m.
Dcn"o"er M Miomi, 7JO p.m.

(.'hicagom De1roh:, 7:.\0 Jl.m.
Washington ot Mttw11ulwe, K:JO p.m
San Anluniu 111 Houston. KJO p.m
OuJ/a~ 111 Utah, '1 p.m.
PbooniJ. al Pt•tla~ . 10 p.m.

NCAA Division· I
men's scores
Eoot
FairflekJ 71 . Luyolu. t.1d. 611
Gavge Wnshintton 77. Furdham 62
&lt;koorgt.'fown 66, Boston CollcJe 6)
H&lt;unpton 67. Mnin&amp;: 66
HoJy Crou KI, Army 69
Ni011.ara 5H, Canisius Sb
Rhode 151and 61. Tcmrle 6:\
St. Donu\"t:nture 74. Duquesne 12
St. Pder's K6. lllh&lt;l ~7
V11. Cummonwt11lth 6~ . Ameri ~tm
Umv 51

Midwest
luwa 62. Michigan 5~
Nolm Dame 77, Piusbursh 6l:t
SW Miuouri St. 67. N. Iowa M (OTI

Missouri 6J. otlllhoma St. ~9

Far West
C&gt;~l

Poly-SUl 90. Olapman .W
E. Wa.~hington 7.\, S:tetu~nto Sl. M
W:L~hins.too S1. 68. ld11hu 59

Top 25 women's
college poll

773·5513

l.ool

W"-:1 lll.w.il

I. Georpio ()91 ........... .21J.2
m
927
2. Louisiaflil T1.'1.'"h .... 1••• 21~1
ti90
l Connt.'Cticut .. ,......... , . 22-~
4. StanronJ ............. ...... IK--2
H44
5. Tennt.'!lste ................ IIJ-4
K26
6. Teku.~Tec:h .............. l9·2 ..1.
714
7. Iowa .................. , ..... 20-2
II. Old Domininn .......... l9-2 699
6)4
9. Penn St.. .......~ ....... I?-$
590
10. VifJini.a ... ............... ll-5
II Wbcor.in .............. 1K-4 l6.1
I:Z.AI....................... IK,4 H9
11. Vonoleftl;h .............. 1H 4110
]4 O.ke ...................... 21J.l o46R
ll. OrcJonSL.............. Il&gt;-4 42ll
16. N. Carolift.'lS! ........ I6-6 3.55
17. Florida .................. 17-l
IM. Color.wJo ................ 2().6 190
247
19, Clcnuon .......... .... .. I 7-4

1
2

J
•
6
1
j

10
12

9

R
l:l
II
14
lb
I~

m

2:16
196
IR2
9~

92
1111

20
I~

IK
22
17
21
2S
21
-24

Wallliftatoo II, K'"'ao II, Middle 1enneuee St. 10, Nnrlhweslftn" ·I~).
OHIO ST. 8. Te"ll AAM 7, C~lon:ldo 51.
6., Mo.ylaftd 6. Miuiuijltli St . ~. Soolhcm
Metlladiit ~. Utah l, KePI 4, 1,
Mkliip• St. 1. NonhC:.ollnal. vm...,.
val.

MASON, W.VA.
"

•'•

42
Wnrerloo 71, W. Branch 56
Wa\"erly 55, Portsmouth W. 52 ~
Waynesfteld-Goshen 90. Indian LAke

66

Wellston 64, Ntw l...ellington 62
W~tfall SO. Richmond Dale SE J2
Wesrlake !i I, Avon l...ale :\9
WickJj(fe 68. Orange S6
Williarrubur&amp; 91, Bethel·T:~te 81
Wooster 58. Massillon fmv 49
1
Worthington Kilbourne 6t Col . St.
C1aarles l8
You. Chaney 82. You. Cmlvmry Ou.
71
You. Christian H. Salem Real Li~e
~8

You. Liberty 61, Newton Falls 51
You. Rayen 50, You . Boordmllll 44
Zanesville RoS«ran s 69, Col. Ready

l2

Ohio B.S. girls' poll
How a stute panel of 1por1s writers
and broadc1111ers rates Ohio hiah school
girls' bas~ballreams in the fiq] weekly
rc:aular·JCO!.Son 1995-96 poll for The Associated Preu. by Oflio HiJ!h School A1hle•·
ic Associntion divisions, w1th won-los t
rt'.cord lhrough games of Ffob. II (flrSI·
plttee v()les in parenlhcses);

Ri~

con

~tennsron

Others nttl'"lftl 12 or mort polnlll:
11-Wonstcr 26. 12-S)'Iwaoia Soulhview
19. J:\.Canton McKinl~y 14. 14-Tok•do
C-:m. Cath. IJ. IS-Sidney 12.

Dirislon II
Iwo

Hubbard 6), Warrtn Chnmpion 47
lOTi
Huhc:r Hts. W.ayne K4. W. CWTOitfon
66
Indian Cr«k ~· S1eu~nville C.ath.
64
Jackson IM. Vinton Co. M
Jew~II-Scio 10. Newwmentown ~8
John Glenn IM. Mora.u~ 60
K:llida 71 . Spencerwille 4.5
Kclh..-rin&amp; Alter 72. Cin. Pun."tll Mnriun49
Kcnering Fainnonl 70, Doy. Skbbins

Ohio H.S. boys' seores
A.deM 56, Hunti,.on ~:l
Akroll Covencryl6. Mopb&lt; 4!

,

R.....ville
R~'llmond

51

75. Ale.,ndoi72

&amp;liiiOO 6S. Bo&lt;ke)O Loool

6-Cin. St. Unub 17-2 . . . . .
?-Olmsted Fall! 17-2 .
fi·Gretnfield McC lain 19-1 .
9-Srrulllen 15·2 . . . .
10-Copley 16-2 . . . . .

. .. 91
. ... l'i I
. . .. 7J
. .. .4J
. . .... 27

DiYisloiJ Ill
Iam

Othrn rcaivinl!li:Z or Mort points:

GETS REBOUND- Southern's Tyson Quckley (44) pulls down a
rebound in front of taemmate Jesse Maynard (20) and Trimble's Doug
Morris (15) during Tueeday night's Hocking Division contest in
Racine, where the Tomcats won 84-82 in overtime. (Sentinel photo
by Scott Wolfe)

11 -Col!.lw:ucr 37. 12-Loudonvillt:! ( IJ H .

D · Uprc:r Sandusky (I) :10. 14·Sugar·
creek G;U"aw.:.y 2... 15- N. Uma S. Range!'
16. 16 UicK'Ic . Villa Ana;elo-St. Jos,ph,
Lima Cent. Cmh. ll

Division IV
Iuaa

l'b.

I·Jack.'\00Cenlrr(l2) 19-1 ...... . .212
.179
:\-Zanenille ROII.'\:ran-' (6) IH-2 . . 171'!
4-0fto\lilk.-(11111· 1 . . . .
. ... 1.\4
.li·E. Canton (2) 19- 1 .... . . , . . . . . 126
6-Bascom Hopeweii·Loudoo 17-1 . .112
7-Dnn vi lk: IK·2 ....... . ........IJ4
M-kali&lt;b 15-4 .
.57
SouthinJinnCha.lker 14-) .... . ... . . ~7
10-Mint.'r',.l Ri!.l~e IK·2 .
. ..... ,. :\1'1
2-S. &lt;:.lKirlesf(ln SE 0117-1 . . . .

Othen rtttivl~ 11 Of" mon poinb:
11 -AshlaRLI Crt!itview (2) J4. 12· Berlin
Hiland 24.

'

Ohio men's
college scores
Mid-Ohio Conreren&lt;e
Findlay 39, Mount Vernon Nazarene

Two Tomcats accounted for
accounted for 46 points. Si•-foot
senior Heath Annbruster led all
scorers with 25 points, while 6-foot1 freshman Brady Trace added 21
points and Mike McClelland added
13.
Southern was led by Spike Rizer's 24 points, John Harmon's 17,
Jamie Evans' 15 and Ryan Norris'
12.
Southern took a 6-2 lead
right out of the box, but Trimble
went on a 8-0 run to take a I 0.6 lead
by the I :25 mark. ~outhem started
its first cold streak after capitalizing
on the fast break early. Meanwhile,
Southern began a string of lackluster defense that allowed THS to penetrate time and time again. Earlier in
the game. neither team had scored
until Harmon's first goal at he 6:04
mark.
A Harmon bucket and live-footer by Jay McKelvey iced the cake in
a 10-10 first quarter draw. The sec·
ond quarter was a see·saw affair that
saw I 0 lead changes. Norris, McKelvey, Maynard, Ri-ter and Evans
took turns on the scoring merry-goround. Armbruster was the main cog
in Trimble's second quarter success.
After a Terry Alfman hucketthal
put THS on top 22-21, Josh Limo hit
both ends of a two shot foul for a 2421 advantage. Dugan, Trace and Alf·
man surrounded a McKelvey lay-in
for a 6-2 run just he fore the hal f.
sparking Trimble to a 31-25 ad van·
tage .
In the second half, Trimble wen!
ahead eight points 35-27, but a Riz:
er bucket and consccu'tivc steals by
Norris and Buckley with goals by
Norris and Hannon cut the lead ttl
35·33. Trimble called time at the
5:00 mark. Norris tied the score u,l
36-all, but Trace retaliated and put
THS hack on top 39·36. Evans, Harmon and Buckley .canned consecutive jumpers and Trimble forced a
turnover, resulting in another timC
out. Evans hit both ends or a free
throw for a 44.39 lead Southern lead.
Southern again went cold and could
not even hit a lay·up. Defensively,
the Tornadoes los1 momentum and
Tritrble went on a 10·3 run for a 494 7 advantage.
A Rizer goal with just two seconds left salvaged some face for the
Tornadoes. Trimble went on a 6-0
run to take another eight-point lead
(55-47). Again, Southern couldn't
drop one in a huckcl and its dcfcnse
faltered, forcing SHS mentor Howie
Caldwell to call time. The score nuc·
tuat~d from 57·49, 57-53 and 62-'3
(See SOUTHERN on Pa11e 6)

LOSE : 10 LIS.
IN 3 DAYS

eu.
..l)l)

I·Helllh lllllO.O .. .. . . .. .
2-Brookville 19-1 .
.1611
.l -Amantla-01."11"\."feek 18· 1 . .
.164
4-Rucky Riwcr Lu1h. W. (I) Ul·l . ICV.
5· P~nlbcrvilk- Eastwood 11-2 .
104
6-Shrfwood Fainiew (2) lll·2 . . . .7tl
7·BELPRE (Ill~ I .. .. .. .. ..
..6"
8-Cin. Wyomina (I) 17-2
. . .:'i6
9-Akron St.V·St. M:wyi.J ~~
... 41(
lO· Bainbridge Paint Val . (II Ul-2 .... 40

(0T)

Midd-. Ow. ~. llttlw1.7 (OT)
Middletown Madison 5 I, Waynesville 4!'
.
Mil~ ,60. BerM: Ullinn 4~
MiPiuinawu Val. 7$, An:unum 47
Mnpdoo: F"~eld 80. Ra~nnol57
N. Adoml66, Poeblea 44
N. Royatlon 71. MIX.Iina Buckeye S5
New Bremtn60, Vetsaillts.59
Newark Cllh. 6l Wallins Memorinl
61(0Ti
.
Nilca 6.1, Yoo. Eaat 60 lOTI
· Nordottia ~. Breckswille 52
· NonlvidJe fi). U..:ul2
Obali1 71. WeiUftltDn 67
Ottawa Hills 70, Tol. Chrillian 35
Parma tt.lly NMM "· Ck. Catholic:
411
'
'"""" Padoa 611, El~a Cal~. 65
PetTy 4), a-Nalley )6
Py""'..U~~~~- ~ Kinlond 57

. .. 161
. .l .J 16

Othtrs ncriwinall or mort puint!l:
11 -Dovt."T 26. 12- Ch~l!rin Fnlls -Ken s10n
20. J.\ . Jcff-=~on Area I H. 14-GAI...UPOI: IS GALLLA ACADEMY 14.

HowlaruJ Chr. 6~ . lko\'a Cot~nly, Pa.

51

4-Cor11nnd..Lakcview 11· 1 .
~-Bedey IM-2 .......

l7

Louis\lillc Al!lli~WAS 109, Canul Futfon
NW77
Lulh&lt;rnn E. 116. Cros•"""" Cllr. 77
Luihmn W. M8. Be:w.:tlwood !\&amp;
Mapk His. 95. GarfH:Id Hll. 61
Marion I!lain 78. Kenton 60
MuOR 75, Goshen :1~
Maul lion Ou. ~ . Flai1h Chr. 4~
Massillon Jlc:kson fi~. Unioatown
Loke 46
M"-ctain 74, E. Ointon 66
t.t ..""COIIlb S!'! . N. "BIIItimQr"C o46
Mc0onnld61, Mathews 4:\
M~aclowbrook 81. S1. CWrtwillt 62
Medina til. Akron N. 59
M(iJS74, PoiiM (W.Va.) ~nt ~2
Minmisbwra 70. Lemon-t.tot.-01! 4.,
Middlef~W ~twdinal71, Lcdaemont

l'b.

1-Lima Ba1h ( I9) 18.0 . . . . . . .
. 226
2-Garfteld HI~ . Trnity (4) 16-.\ . . .. 171.,1
~-Deloit W. Branch (I) 19-1 . . . . .. 171

j9

~ilk 6~

-~

("10) I K-1 ... . ....
2-Col. Brookhavtn ( 1.\1 20-0 . . . . .214
)-You. Boardman 17· 1 .. .... .. . .. 15.li
4- Beavercreek I ~ I .. . . .
I ~0
-~· Barbrrton 17· 11 .
. ... .... . 00
6-W. Chester Lakotn 18-1 . .
. .. %
7-mmonl Ron I&amp;. I .
75
8·Troy 19-1 ........... ... .. . 70
9-MiDmisburg 11·2
H
10-Rocky Riv. Ma11ific:mr 16-4
.. ..:U

Cuyahoaa Val . Chr. 72, Rootllown 10
lOTI
Dalloo 117. E. Canron 42
Danville 51 . Mamnotha Chf. J(J
O.y. C11110U 65. Franklin 47
Dny. Jefferson 67. New l..cbaftoft Di~ ­
ie 62
DeGraff Riverside ts8, W. Uberty
Su5em64
Do)'lestown 64, Cloverleor 57 '
-Dublin Cnffnun 74. M!UJsviUe .W
El)'ria First 8~ . &amp;4, Ckoi. Heritage 41
Fairtk:ld 66. C1n. C.olcmin 54
Fairfield Union lb, Amando Cbn-reek7J
Fairpor1.57, Newbury 41
F.:li,jty 71. Blanchelln 60
Firelancls ~. Elyria W. 5:to
Fisher C111h. 60. New Albany ~J
Fort Frye91, Wa&amp;er10rd 4~
Galloway Wct4t.nd 61, Hilli.W ~1
Ganaway ~1. Malw:n 4ll
Hamihon Badi1 67, Bellbrook 4Y
Hcli1h 72, l...id.i•s Hu. ~
Hill~bon• 7~. Ne~ Ri"flmond 61
Hnpc:wdi-Loudon 78. KaMas Lnllota

King• Mills Kings60, Wilmia&amp;ton ~I
L:tke Rid~te 71 , Elyria Open Oro:.--'"
Luk~klnd 4.,, Stru5burJ ~9
l..akwuod 1 I , Clt:. Mwlhall ~
Lomcn.o;ler ~It W.:,.ef'\'11~ S. 47
l...eh.aonn 71. OxfortiTalaw~M
l~irsic 54, ouoville ~~
Uberly Ullinn 59. Granville 41
Uckin~ Vnl. 61, Coshocton n
Li1...:oln Bapl. ~4 . Lickin[l Co. Ctlr.
A~OO. 41
Usbon 76. Unit.:d Loc11170
Uttle Miami~~ . Ross :ll
Lor.1in Ckliirview 69, Ulrnin Brnok-

AT
RANGE- Southam's Jay McKelvey (24) takea a cloaerange shot at the rim while teammate Spike Rizer (22, with only .t he
second 2 showing) and Trimble's Nathan Dugan (30) watch to see
where the ball might go during Tuesday night's game at Southern
High School. (Sentinel photo by Scott Wolfe)

Di•ision I

•2

Soothwest

Cleoqe

HARDWARE

W. Gcauga59. Ongrin Falls 49
Wam:n Hnrdina 74. You. Ursuline 10 ....
Warsaw River View 68, W. Holme~ ·

.Conland-We\'iew 68, LaBroe ~

OIIMr "eeiwlna wMet: MCMMona .)4,
Arlmnsas 27. ~Paul H Southwe" "Mia·
souri S1. 19, Southern Miuiuippi 17.

PICKENS

Healthy~

72. Leetonia 70
.OlJumbiana Crest ... iew 68. Sou1hc:m
Local JO

Thursday's gamts

21 . Mia.sissippi ............. l5-1
22. Plndu&lt; .................... J~.,
2.\. Stephen F. Ausain .. 1S.. 2
24. Oklahoma St ......... 17-S
25. Notre Dame ........... 16-S

1

Sprinabofo 62. Norw()Od SO
Sreuben\lilte 91 , Mnnin• FelT)' 82
Staw 78, MauiUon 47
Swanlon ~9. Sylvania Nonhview !'~
Teays Val. 64, Hamilton Twp. 51
Temple Chr. 6.5, Wi,lo-Hill O.r. 48
Tipp City M, Piqua 54
Tol. Emanuel Bapt . M. Dmnbury
Lakeside60
Trimble 84. Racine Soulhrrn !12 (OT)
T,.insburJ 66, Solon 56
University 56. Oe. Heights :'i 1
Urbana Grace B.apt. 67 , Northside
Chr. 60
Van Wer1 ~!i. Coldw.ater .~2
Vandali.a Buller 5~. Grahmm 4J
Vincenl Warren 64. Clleshire Rh•er
' Val. :'il
W. Che-Sler Lakota 72. Cin . MI.

Col~

CLEVELAND ot Toronto at Hamilton.

Shaker Hu. 84. Walsh 1csuit64
Shenandoah 72. Frontier 69(0T)
Sprina. Norlhtutem 6~. Greenon ~I
Sprir'IJ. South 96. Day . Meadowdale

64

Col. Whetstone 55. Col. Ccnlennial
Colun1bia ~5. Cuyahoaa His 4!1i

Indiana lll New Jt:rKl· 7:JOp.m.
Ddroit at Plliladelptu:., 7:]0 p..m.
New ,Yodl :at.~otfe, 8 p.rn
Minnesot• 31 Se:Mtle. 10 p.m.
Sao.:ramenlo 01 Vanc;ouver. 10 p.m.
All;~ma n1 L.A. Laken, 10:)0 p.m.
Bmton at Goklen Stale, I 0:;.() p.m.

20. Aubllm .... ..... .. ....... 11·5

Sebrinc47, E. Palnrine4l

Col. lndeprndence 86. Col. South 69
Col. Mifrlin 71 . Col. EAu 64
Col. Wntter1on 69. Sport01 Hiahl11nd

49

Iuaa

r

by dropping an 84-82 overtime game
in boys' Tri-Valley Conference basketball action Tuesday night in
Charles W. Hayman G)· m~•asium.

Cia. Priactioa 71, Hamilloto 66
Cin. Roau Bacon ''· Day. Chaminade-Julie-. 416
Cin. Summit Country Day ~8. Cin.
Seven Hills 48 (OT)
an. Taft 67. Cin. Huahes 60
Cin. Woodward 9J . Cin. Western
Hills 70
Cin:lcwillc60. 8toom.CIUTOII35
O.ilymonr Rl, Indian Val. 69
Cle. lodependence 74. Brooklyn 68
Col. Beeehcroft 74, Cal. Lh•denM,Kintey 72
•
Col. 8ri[I8S 7~. Col. Marion~ Franldin
611
Col. Brookhann 61 , Col. Nonhlilnd
Col. Eas1moor 77, Col. Walnut

I•

I'

19

62

.•' '
l

By SCOTT WOLFE
Unable 10 hit one in a barrel, the
Southern Tornadoes squandered several leads and a last shot victory

ALEXANDER - Lance Rolston 1-1-212=17, Kenny Waggoner
1-0-416=6, Chad Jarvis 8::4-012=28,
Andrew Stump 0-0-112=1, Thomas
Haskell 7-0-215=16, Matt Ross 1-3313=14. Totals: 18-8-12120=72 :
EASTERN -Brian Bowen 20-314=7, Eric Dillard 2-4-616=22,
Josh Cislo .1-0-212=4, Daniel Ouo 30-112=7.Enc Htil 6:0-0=12. Mtcah
Otto 6-0-415=16. Mtke Barnett 1-051&amp;=7. Totals: 21-4-2112S=75

Trimble boys tally 84-82 win
over Southern in overtime

a..._..ss. s. PoioM ~

ll

TI.c Top 2!' 1eam., in ~ Anocia1eJ
women·s l:llllteJI! basketball poll,
with finr-phu:e vute1 in parentheses .
r.:c~&gt;rds throu&amp;h Feb. II, tOtll points
husrd on 25 puinll for u fin1-pb:c VOle
through ane roint rur a l~h-J'II:t!..'t: 1104e
11ntl W1 wed. s rankin(!:
·

•

Mineral Riel ell

Berlin :f1.oo 5,1. R.jd&amp;ewood ~
Be•ley 16, . . . _ .58
llloomfoel&lt;l 64, Windham l8
Bradfotd 71 . Houaon sa
Brookfield 62. Bodp ll
Cllftlbrid&amp;e 7(), Bellaire S7
Canal Winchester 68. loJilft Elm ~
Can1an GlenOak 59, N. Cantan ~7
lOTI
Can1on S. 61, CIUIIon Cadt 39
Carlisle:72, f.daewood67
Cedlnil~ 69, lby. O.i11ian 68
Centcr\lllle, lid., 64, Natianal Tnal
48
Centro.l Bapt. 71, CovinJIOn (Ky .)
Latin 6~
~18:\, Mentor 1...Dke Cmh. 66
ctwdon 65, Ken~ton 48
Chardon NO.CL 67, Hawken 49

P~u :

' '

A\lon ~. Loraia Key1tone 41
llamelville 69, Cadi&amp; !9
Bedford75, Panna 51
Belldonlllint ~ . Urbm144
Bell'"= 88, Nelson"iUe· York 6.S
Benjamin Lopn 60, Fairbank&amp; .57
B=a 67. Potmo Nonnandy ~l
Berklhire 60. Brislol ~l
Berlin Center Wesrem Reserwe 61 ,

NBA standings
Iall

18 fouls.
R-rve notes: Eastern dropped
the reserve game 41-37.
Alex was .led by Nathan Hutchinson's 12 points and Jason Hawk's I 0.
Rickie Hollon had 12 for Eastern,
while Stevie Durst led with 18.
The future: Eastern goes to
Stewart to face Federal Hocking Friday.
Ouarterl2tllb
Eastem......... ......... 21·15-22-17=75
Alexander..... ......... l6-24-14- 18=72

Auslinlown.fllCh $0, You . Mooney

South

••
.t

.
Scoreboard

Eagle outburst. That explosion led for 84 percent.
to a 60-541ead.
Eastern hit21 -47 overall and 4-5
Although Eastern was outscored threes with 21 rebounds. (M. Otto
l7-18 in the finale, Eastern held on 6); eight steals (M. Otto 4); II
for the win. Most of the second half turnovers, 14 assists (Bowen S, M.
was nip-and-tuck for the duration.
Otto 4); and 20 fouls .
Winning coach Tony Deem said,
Alexander hit 18-45 from the
"Defense was a key in the game floor and was 8·16 on threes with a
tonight.
"Going down the , 12-20 night at the line and 27
stretch we really took care of the rebounds (Jarv is 8, Ross 6). Alex
bail . We worked the ball tremen· had seven steals (Waggoner 2,
dously well and were patient in our Thomas Haskell2); 14 turnovers, 18
offense." "When Eric and Micah assists (Waggoner 5, Rolston 4); and
got in foul trouble in the third quarter, our bench really stepped it up
and played big."
One of the keys in the game came
with Eastern's efficiency at the foul
line, where the Eagles hit 21 of 25

Alliance 46. New Pllilldclphi••l

Oa"idson 96. E. Tennessee St. 66
Louisi~W~a Tech 61 , SW LouiliMII ~
VaiJLkortlilt 70. Floridu ~
v lqini:a t~ ~. Liberty !'J

..
..•'

O!adJ~~n~is, who led all scoms with
28 points, while Lance Rolston had
17, Thomi!S Haskell had 16 and Mat
Ross had 14.
Eastern shot out of the game early to take a 21 -16 first period lead.
Alexander then came back on the
coat tails of Jarvis, while mixing it
up inside with Haske.ll. Ross also
had a couple big shots in the dnve.
The second period o~.tburst gave
Alexander a 40-36lead at the half.
Eastern came back in the third
round, behind sc;oring from Dillard,
Otto and Hill. Hill and Otto went
down with foul trouble and the
bench really picked up the pace.
Namely, Daniel Otto and Josh Casto proved to be the spark in a 22' 14

Basketball

''

Electric
•

By SCOTT WOLFE

. ·Sentinel Correspondent

"

~

All interested parties will be given
an opportunily to be heard. Further
information may be obtained by
contacting the Commission at 180
East Broad Street, Columbus, Ohio
43266·0573

:~Easte·rn boys sh.~ke halftime ~ef~cit &amp; top Alexander 75-52

n

30 Gal. to 40 Gal.

Apache All Season

$5995 .

....
•

Thomas led Boston College with 17
points.
No. 19 Iowa 6l
Michigan 55
Russ Millard had 18 points and a
career-high 15 rebounds as the
Haw keyes ( 18-6, 7-5 Big Ten).won
in Ann Arbor for the first time in 15
years. Andre· Woolridge had 20
points for Iowa in its second conference road win this sen.,on. Maurice ,
Taylor scored 16 of his 20 points in
the second half for the Wolverines
(15-9, S-6). who lost for the fifth
time in six games.

By
Braqord White
BATTERI ES

.

.;·W~ed~n~H~da~y~,~F~~n~uary~!14~,~1!~~~--~----------------------!P~o~m.~~!y~•!M~Idd~~~~~O~h~lo~------------------~Th~e~D=al~ly~S~e:n:HnM:::•:P~~g~•~S

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Pomeroy, Ohio
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71

Urf\an•19. Otlio Dominican 60

Non-conrenn« ploy
Skawnce St . 98. Wilberforce 79
Tri-Stare 72, Denanct 62

$195.00 INSTALLED

Ohio women's

college scores
Ohio Athltlk Conference

Baldwin-WaiiU 7~. John Cwt0ll 69
9J,Hinom ~
Heidelberz ~.5. ot,jo Northern~ I
Mount Union ~8. M~UI 5b
MuWIJum 113. Otterbein 80

C~lll

Mid-Ohio Conten-

Fiftdiay 14. Ohio Dominican ~
Mat... 59, c.-;tte 47
Shawnee St . 87, Moun1 Vernon

·- 1 0

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*To qualify for special you must sign up this wee~end for a free estimate

lkbono 911. RIO GRANDE 80
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..

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l-800-291-5600

..

Dli)Ulll 75. Onolnnoli 64
MouN St. Joltph 71 , WihNnaton 60

..

'

'

�Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Pagel• The Dally Santlnel

In theNBA,

.

..

,

.

" We've lost a lot of games, bllt we
play
and make the other team
work for its baskets, and despite our
record we're a dangerous team to
play."
Vernon Maxwell of the Sixen
wasn't so long-winded.
1
" Any win we get, it's like a
championship. We haven 't goc but 10

Iw4

, If the oddsmaken in Las Vegas
hid this parlay on the board. only a
fool would have aone for it.
A four-team combination of Minnesota, Philadelphia, New Jeney
and Toronto - all amona the NBA's
five wont road teams - all won
their aames outright.
wins."
What would the odds have been?
Butch Beard, whose jllew Jersey
1,000 to I? S,OOO to I? More?
Nets ended Indiana's 17-game home
Strangely enough, that bet would winning streak, put his team's vichave paid olt
tory in simple terms.
The Timberwolves, 76ers, Nets
"We did a hell of a job tonight.
and Raptors all did the unlikely What we did was play very good
· Tuesday night. winning their fifth, baskelball. We played smart basketfourth, sixth and fourth road games ball."
of the season, respectively. MinFor the Raptors, the post-game
nesOia sent Sacramento to its season- mood was ecstatic.
high fourth straight loss with a 94"Road kill! Isn't that what they
90 victory, Philolphia edged Mil- call'it?" Carlos Rogers said:
waukee 104-101 , New Jersey
uFor us, it was a great win,"
stunned Indiana 101-92 and Toron- guard Willie Anderson added.
to surprised Miami 98-87.
In other NBA games, Utah edged
"The first game Bfter the All-Star San Antonio 114-111 in overtime,
l!reak is always very difficult and I Seattle nipped Phoenix 102-98,
know that we were one of the last Golden State defeated Portland 99teams Sacnmento wanted to play 98, Chicago beat Washinaton 111after not practicing for live days," 98, Houston beat Dallas 121-106,
Minnesota coach flip Saunders said. Orlando crushed Denver 121-93,

Boston topped the Los Angeles Clip- home game since Jan. 27, .ended a
pers 108-94 and Cleveland beat six-game road trip with two victories
Charlotte 110-100.
and four close losses.
nmbenrolva 94, Killgs 90
" We have been playing well this
Mitch Richmond had three three- whole road trip," Kendall Gill said.
pointers and scored II points in less · " We have been in all lbe games."
than two minutes to create a 90-90
' Rapton 98, Heat 87
tie, but Tom Guglioua hit a jumper
Damon Stoudamire scored 29
with S8 seconds remaining and, fol- points and Toronto ouiscored Miami
lowing a turnover by Richmond, by 24 points in the third.quarter.
Sam Mitchell's two free throws con" It was a bad loss coming off the
cluded the scoring.
break," Heat guard Rex Chapman
The Kings shot 39 percent, the said. "It's a game that if we come out
13th straight time Minnesota has and play well at all, we win. I guess
held an opponent below 50 percent. we learned that there are no auto76en 104, Bucks 101
matic wins."
Max well ·scored 14 of his 24
Jazz 114, Spun 111
points in the final quarter for
John Stockton hit a leaning threePhiladelphia, which entered the pointer with five-tenths of a second
game with the worst record in the left to give Utah the victory at San
NBA.
Antonio.
Vin Baker. had 28 points and 17
"My main focus was not to take
. rebounds for the Bucks, but he and the 3, but when David Robinson
Terry Cummings both fouled out try- came to help, it forced me beyond
ing to contain Maxwell in the open the arc," said Stockton; who finished
court.
with 18 points and 16 assists. " The
shot felt good when I let it go. My
Nel!l 101, Pacen 9Z
Armon Gilliam scored 17 of his feet were balanced and I got a good
31 points in the fourth quaner, and look at the basket.
New lersey'had a late 11-0 run.
Charles Smith and Monty
.The Nets, who haven't played a Williams stayed in San Antonio's

Love is i·n the air at - of all places - the grocery store

••
•

•

T-Wolves, Sixers, Nets ·and Raptors beat hosts; Cavs win
By CHRIS SHERIDAN
AP SpoiU Wrtler

~!~:ed:n:•::da~y~,F:ab::N:my~1:4~,1:~::__-_·-----------------------~P~o~m.~~~y-·~M~Id~d~·~po~rt~,~O~h~~---------------------n.--Da
__I~~Se-nfl
__~
__·_P_~~t

Wednesday, February 14, 19is

.

Ann

locker room in the first half, apparBulls 111, Bullets 98
•
ently due to a last-minute snag in the
Michael Jordan had 32 points:
Knicks-Spur;s
trade.
Spurs Scottie Pippen 26 points and Dennif
spokesman Tom James. refused to Rodman 16 rebounds as Chicagq
elaborate and Smith said jle didn't
improved to 23-0 at home.
•
know what the problem was. Smith
Washington shoe 62 percent in thcl
had seven points and two rebounds first half, but hit just 41 percent in
in the s~ond half.
the second half to~lose its fourth
SuperSonics 102, Sum 98
straight.
Gary Payton had 23 points and I0
Rockets 111, Mavericks 106
assists, Shawn Kemp had 12 points
At Houston, Clyde Drexler had
and 14 rebounds and Hersey 21 points, 12 assists and 14 rebounds
Hawkins scored 21 points and made for his third triple-double in seven
three free throws in lbe hectic final games. Sam Cassell added 31 points
11.6 seconds at Phoenix.
off the bench.
"We haven't played a game in a
Magic 111, Rockets 9J
week, haven't practiced in a week,.
Shaquille O'Neal scored 30
and for us to come in here and get a points in lbe first game since his Mit;
win, that says a lot about our team," Star MVP snub, and , Orland&amp;
Hawkins said.
improved to 26-0 at home.
·
Seattle won for only lbe 17th time
Celties 108, Clippers 94
in 77 games at Phoenix.
At Los Angeles, Dee Brown
Warrion99
scored 18 of his 20poinis in the final
Trail Blazers 98
6:0S, and David Wesley added 22
Golden State scored the final six pcints. The Clippers lost their ninth
points of the game to stun the Trail · straight.
.
Blazers at Ponland.
Cavaliers 110, Hornets 100
The WI!Iriors, who had been 0-19
At Cleveland, Danny Ferry
when trailing enteri~g the founh scored a career-high · 31 points,
quarter, got 25 points from Chris including a team-record eight threeMullin and 19 from l..atrell Sprewell. pointers.

. Landers
. 1.

ere... e.. s '·
By ANN LANDERS

Dear Ann Landers; I'm enclosing
an article I have held onto for a couple of yeilrs. I saw it in the Sarasota,
Fla., Herald-Tribune. It took me back
·48 years.
·
· My husband asked me to marry
him at the Sears where I was manager
of the catalog desk. Not only did he
propose, he gave me.an engagement

;By BRIGITTE GREENBERG .
A11oclated Pre•• Writer
'

The author of the map is
unknown, but supporters believe a
NEW HAVEN, Conn. (AP)- A medieval scribe copied it from
.medieval world map that once was recordsJeft by None explorers. The
denounced as a.modern forgery real- map includes representations of Icely does prove Christopher Columbus land and Greenland, both settled by
was not the first European to reach Norsemen.
Along the left side of the map is
.America, researchers now believe.
Tile Yale University Press on a drawing of an island that resembles
Tuesday published a new edition of part of the coast of Newfoundland.
A legend accompanying the map,
"The Vinland Map and Tartar Reladated
to about 1440, describes how
tion," which explains how historians
' and scientists analyzed the map to leifEiriksson and Bjami Herjolfsson
reached.Vinland, believed to coincide
reestablish its authenticity.
However, there are still those who with Newfoundland, about IOOOA.D.
If genuine, the map would provide
discount the document as ' a clever
evidence that it was discovered by
20th century fake.

Southern .falls. ~~ntinued from Pages&gt;

more I can say about this club. At
some point in the year, I've said it all.
We don't play with consistency and
tonight we dido~ shoot well and
lacked intensity."
'
Trimble mentor . Scott Gatchel
said with a sigh ofreiief, "!thought
we mig~t give it away for a minute,
but our kids didn't break down. We
hit our free throws when they count- .
ed. That's what won it for us. Our
kids didn't get intimidated wl1en the
game was on the line."
Southern · hit 29-63 and 5-2S
threes, while hitting 9-11 at the line.
Southern had 36 rebounds (Harmon
8, Rizer 7), 13 steals (Rizer 3, Maynard 3) arid 29 fouls.
Trimble hit 21-47 and canned 38 threes, with 33-43 at the line. The
Tomcats had 3S rebounds (Trace 8,
Armbruster II); 6 steals (McClelland 3~·. II turnovers and 12 fouls.
Reserve notes: .Trimble won the
reserve game S3-42 led . by Armbruster with II and McClelland II.
Jerrod Mills had 12 and Jason Allen
had eight for Southern.
Ouarter lllflll
Trimble............ I0-21-18-22-13=84
Southem ........... I0-15-22-24-11.;82
TRIMBLE-DougMorris 1-0416=6, Brady Trace 2-3-819=21,
Heath Armbruster 9-0-7112"'2S,
Mike McClelland 4-0-S/7=13,
Nathan Dugan I-0-3/4=S, Terry Alfman 2-0-212=6, Joey Wright 1-00=2, Josh Limo 1-0-0=2. Toflls: Zl-

as Southern made mini-runs ai the
Tomcats.
Caldwell did everything but stand
on his head and put on a uniform in
an effon to spark the Tornadoes.
Nothing worked. Southern fell64-55
and was down 68-59 with about a
·
minute to go.
With S2 seconds left, Doug Mor. ris canned one of two safeties and
Harmon c~nned a goal for SHS for
a 69-61 tally.
Rizer hit a trey with 42 seconds
left, then after a time out Harmon
·canned a field goal and drew a foul
to set up a three-point play. Harmon
missed it, pulled down the (ebound
and drove in·the follow up for a 6968 tally.
·
. Trimble's Alfman hit two clutch
frel: throws for a 71-68 tally with 27
seconds left.
' With 16 seconds l~ft Rizer canned
another three for a 71,71 tie. ArmbruSter shot and missed with just seconds remaining and Southern
rebounded with six seconds left. but
failed to score. Thus the game went
to overtime.
'Rizer put SHS up 73-71, but
Southern then took some unwise
shot.• and went into an 2, II
talliapin that saw Trimble go up 82'-' with 40 seconds left. During that
time Trimble hit 9-12 free throws.
. . ~zer hit with 26 seconds left for
ap 82-77 tally and Armbruster burst
bolh ends of a two-shot f011l for an
84-77 score with 20 seconds left.
Rizer canned another drive and HS .
quK:kly fouled with six seconds left,
the' score 84-79.
Armbruster missed bot!l ends of
thi!foill. Then Evans took a Maynard
·ICed to hit a three at the buzzer,
" Caldwell said, "There's nothing

rushed

'

3-Jli&lt;Q=84

SOUTHERN -Ryan Norris 22-2/2=12,lainie Evans S-1-212=1S,
Jesse Maynanl2-0=4 Spike Rizer 82-212=24, Jay McKelvey 2-2/2:6,
Bobby,Writesel Dilly Sheppard John
Harmon 8-0-113=17, lYSOI' Buckley
2-0-0=4. Toalli: 29-5-f/11....

t \.

- - ..............1"""'-sspqrta

·. , MEMPHIS.
, root•••
Tenn.

.

brleta-. ....;,.._ _

Concriy, '.1110 ,played 'at Mi$sis(AP)- &lt;;barsipp! in 194~ IJid lpin in 1946-47_
after I«Vina in World War n, was
lie •tonerty,. wtiO' hllpeil ·~ die
~. York Oilllll to 11M: I~ NJ'l; , ,. the •NPl;'Rookit Oldie Ye• in 1948
VIII one
bea·q-- uid a tllree-dme all-pro ielection in
his 14-year·ca..r•.He w• aelected
'
of his ~· died of
10 die eotleae Fci'oillall Hall of FIIIIC
~ ftaD'-tiiWJC'Y. He
wu'74..._ ... . . . .· .
jn.l965. '
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Aeeem~llee

that the rejection of the map " has
than 500 years old. "
However, academics continued to been a miscarriage of justice."
Painter, in a 1elephone mt~rview
study the map. In 198S, physicists at
the University of California at Davis from his home in Hove, England, said
performed particle-induced X-ray he believes Columbus might have
emission tests on the ink and paperto even seen the Vinland Map or anothidentify the elements they contained. er like it before embarki ng on his
They concluded that the earlier mission.
"Columbus wasn 'tjust an amaz-.
test results were erroneous, in pan
because their new tests found traces ling navigator, a brave man,, he was
of titanium on many olber medieval alw an e.pen in maps and geograp~
documents, suggesting that its pres- and knowledge of the world. I thir6c
ence was common.
it's quite likely that he actually knew
George D. Painter, the sole sur- of the Vinland Map," Painter said .
vivor of the original team ofscholars
The map was discovered bound
who prepared the first edition of the with a text called the Tartar Relati on
book, wrote in this second edition manuscri pt.

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

Willie Cap&amp;
ROtor5ete

ll•ltdll.

.,

Tomeo
Carburetor
Kit&amp;

..

.,.
'

Gallipolis

0

NewJereey

209 Upper 'River Road

·American
6rake·Pad&amp;

446-3807

'.
"

~

~

from

1271.

New Jeraey

JoAnna Nicole Jeffers celebrated
her third birthday Jan . .13 at the home
of her parents; Don and Jennjfer ~ilg
Laudermilt of New Lima R()ad, Harrisonville.
Attending were her parents, her
sisters, Jamie Renee and' Amher
Dawni her' maternal grandmother,
Joan King, her uncle, Jack King, both
of New •Lima Road;
aunt, Julie ·
King; Dave Reeves and ,a cousin,
Shawn David Reeve. . . all of
Pageville.
.
·cake, Ice cream and chips were
Her paternal~. Donnie
"and Donna Laudelmilt of Rutland served. JoAnna is also the granddaughter of the late Jack King, Sr. .
· visited earlier in tlw; day.

an

--.
. ~.·News
.

llmerlc.~n Semi-

-~=lllc6rake

.~

·.

,.

pqlicy------

In an effort to provide our readership with current news, the Oallipolis Daily Tri!lune'and The Daily Sentine! will not accept wed.,Ungs after
60 days from the ~te of the event.
Ail club meeubgs and other news
articles in the society section must

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Third birthday
celebrated '

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4 97 Exhaui5t or Tall

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Chicago microanalyst, was commissioned by Yale in 1972 to conduct
tests. He found significant amounts of
anatase, a crystal form of titanium
first produced in 1917 and used
widely as a pigment in in~s and
paints. ·
McCrone concluded the map was
produced after 1920, and he still
believes that.
"The Vinland Map is a highly
skilled forgery," he wrote in a letter
to Yale University Press director
John Ryden this week. •" It was produced in a way that announced to a
microanalyst the intention of fooling
the world into believing it to be more

-

•

Quesdon: For the last three years lem itr~our house. Think of a light
lny feet have felt like I had thick that doe!m't tum off when you flip the
socks on, even when I'm barefoot. . light switch. Is the problem with the
They also hurt at times. My family light? \That is )What you notice -- it
4o&lt;;tor said I have peripheral n~u- didn't go offwben it should.have, but
{Opathy and !en~ me .to see a spec1al- the prolem is actually with the.switch
(a neuro1ogtst) 1n the c1ty. He or in. the wiring itself. Your brain
'~~feed with my t.rnily doctor. I've interpret,s the signals it receives as a
tned several medications, ·t;ut none problem with your feet even though
have given me much relief. They say your feet and your brain are fine. The
I'll just have to learn to live with it, problem is in the sensory nerves
•nd I guess that is my only choi~e. themlll!ves, the "wiring" in my analilow. What I don't understand . 1s ogy.
what caused this and why they can't
A neuropathy can be caused by
do more for me. Could you explain many conditions. A direct ·injury to a
peripheral neuropathy so lean under- nerve cail produce these symptoms in
stand it?
,
.1111: ~ of tbe body served by that
Answei': The term "neuropathy" nerve. This type of neuropathy would
tells !bose accustomed to doctor Ian, likely only. affect one foot. Neuropaguage that the problem is in the thy that affects both feet is more C{lm~rves. "Peripheral" refers to involve- monly the result of an illness such as
ment of the hands, feet or both rather diabetes, ,an inherited disease of the
than areas ofthe nerves that are clos- · nervous system, a vitamin deficiener to the brain and spinal cord. cy, or. the sic)e effect of medicines. It
Nerves are very special tissues. I'll try can also be caused by lead or other
to explain enough about them so that heavy meial poisoning, thyroid probyou will be able to understand your lems, alcoholism and several other
condition.
conditions. I'm confident that your
Nerve .cells of the brain interpret doctor and the neurologist checked
signals sent to them by other nerves. for these tonditions and just didn't
For the most pan, nerves in the spinal mention this to you.
cord and the rest of the body either
So what can be done for your pain
carry signals to the brain for inter- and unnatural sensations? Pain medpretation,' or they carry instructions icine usually brings some relief, but
from theo.brain to the muscles to pro- rarely totally stops the discomfott.
duce actions. Those which carry sig- Medicines used to' treat seizures
nals about the' sensations of touch, sometimes give relief. You said in
temperature, pain and the position of your letter .that you have tried medibody partS to the brain do not work cines of these types without benefit.
proper!)' in people who have 11 spe- Unforunately, lbe medical science of
cia! type of peripheral neuropathy, .1996 is just not able to help everyone.
called sensory neuropathy, like you Your doctors are probably correct.
have. You see, it is also possible'to We can't offer more than support and
have difficillty with movement in compassion. We don't yet have a way
some.types of peripheral neuropathy to regenerate damaged sensory
t!lat attack nerves that control the nerves.
muscles instead of those controlling
"Family Medicine" Is 11 weekly
sensation.
column. 10 submit q-tions, write
Your sensory nerves send signals to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio Uni- :
that your brain interprets as tbe feel - · versity College of Osteopathic
ing of wearing thick socks. even Medldae, GrotiveDQI' Hall, Athe111,
though you aren't. This is somewhat OR 45701.
like'having an electrical wiring prob-

Oil Filters

6997~
So:utlon
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'

Europeans before Columbus sailed in
1492.
·
'
Scholars have long believed that
the None were there first, but the
map would provide pictorial proof of
thei,r discovery.
'".This is the first map showing the
New World," said Wilcornb E. Washburn, director of the S'niithsoniap
Institution's program in American
studies. "Nobody doubted that the
' Norse were there. It's just the power
of the picture." ·
The Vinland map was fiQt published by the Yale press in 1965.
With scholars calling for scientific proof, Walter C. McCrone, a

..

John c. Wolf, D.o.
Associate Professor
of Family Me&lt;!icine

Power Flo

397

(J

2. Never yell at each other unless
9. Never meet. without an afle~ ·
the house is on fire.
tionate greeting.
3. Yield to the wishes of the oth10. When you ' ve said or done
er as an exercise in self-discipline if something you know is hurtfu!,
you can't think of a better reason.
acknowledge it promptly and ask for
4. If you have a choice between forgiveness.
·
dl!lking younelf or your mate look
II . Remember, i\ takes two to get
good, choose your mate.
an argument going. Invariably, the
5. If you feel you must criticize, one who is wrong is the one who wtll
do so lovingly, never in anger.
be doing most of the talking.
'
6. Never bring up a mistake of the
12. Never go to bed mad.
past. This small act of generosity will
be greatly appreciated.
Send qu.Stioos to Ann Landers, •
7. Neglect the whole world rather Creaton Syndicate, 5777 W. Centhan each other.
tury Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles,
8. Never let the day end without
saying at least one complimentary Calif. 90045
thing to your life's panner.

'st

fropt

from

mostpa~

• WtJ Tum OrumtJ and RotoNJ

Chilton
Repair
Manuale

tz.88

too .
I'd also like to wish a vel)' special
Happy Valentine's Day to our veterans in Veterans Affairs hospitals
around the country. We will never
forget you. Bless you all.
Dear Ann Landers: I hope my letter arrives in time for you to run it on
Valentine's Day. The column I'm
enclosing ran a few years ago when
I was a brand-new bride. It helped
keep our marriage together. Please
print it again. -- New York Daily
News Reader
Dear N.Y.D.N.R.: Here it is.
Thank you for asking. 1\velve Rules
fot a Happy Marriage
I. Never both be angry at once.

Family
Medicine

• FmtJ TtJtJt.ing

-·-

2 2 97

I

l11tteriel!t, etarter!l. alter1UI~
control.moduleo, ,en~r&amp;

Ac ce ssories

Grant
5teerir1(j
Wheels

Ohio University
· ·
College of Osteopathic Medicine

•

199

4~'
coot
~
:::~

Spark Ptue&amp;

..•

I

present,' ·assistant manager John
Cronin Jr. continued. 'He 's waiting
for you in aisle eight to propose.'
"Robin Howell was met there by
Alon:w Miller and a throng of
friends. There, Alonzo got down on
one knee and proposed.
'"I love you, too,' Robin responded.
.
"Miller said he hatched the plan
because Miss Howell gets her groceries at the Shpprite and will
remember the moment each time she
returns." .
Dear Mildred: What a sweet story -- and just in time for Valentine's
Day! Thank you on hehalf of young
lovers everywhere. And older ones,

Yale revives controversy over map believed to predate Columbus

Steals: 9
TumC!ven: 22 ,
Fouls: 30
Fouled out: Brown, Patch &amp; •
II
.Tabor

Rebounds: 42 (Bostic &amp; Riley 7
each, Smith &amp; Tabor S each)'
Blocked shots: 3 (Winters 2,
Bostic I)
Assists: 18 (Brown 7, Riley S)

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

-nm. srliCIIGaW

Rio turnovers help Urbana women notch 98-80 vi.c tory
Turnovers plagued the Universi- committed far too many turnovers.
Brown 314-013-012=6, Patch 2/3ty of Rio Grande in last night's loss Urbana played a aood game, but we .
RIO GRANDE- Bostic 7112- 010-212=6, Johnson 112-010-010=2,
to Urbana University. The Red- made some crucial errors that really : 010-4/4=18, Tabor 3110-2/6-3/6=15, Layman 011 -0/0-2/2=2. Totals:
women (18- 12, MOC 11-6) lost to hurt us. What we need to do now is Winters 611().00.3/S=IS, Smith 314- 29/53-2/18-16123=80
the Lady Blue Knights (19-7, MOC put this one behind us and regroup 0/0-212=8, Riley 4n-OI7-0I0=8,
Total FG: 31-71 (43.7%)
14-3), 98-80 at Lyne Center on for these last two games.'.' .
Tuesday.
The last two games of the season
: Rio Grande turned the ball over J1fC a~nst MOC foe Tiffin Univer22 times and Urbana's defense came sity and non: league opponent Cum•
e Thtl Guar~~n'tt~M Lowt~tJt PrlG61J
'up with I 5 steals. Despite 14 mis- berland'College. Rio Grande plays at
.,.,, match any advortload prtpe
cues' in the first half, .the Redwomen Tiffin on Saturday afternoon at 2
'
ooly trailed by five points, 45-40. p.m.
eThtJ BtJtJt. NamiBr~~ndtJ
However, Urbana exploded for 53
The Red~fomen return home on
at the beot pnu..
second half points. and broke the Friday, Feb. 23 for the regular season finale against Cumberland.
game open late.
e ParttJ Exprt~tJtJ
· The Lady Knights hit SI.7 percent
That game has been designated as
If we don't have it. we11
of their shots from the floor in lbe Parents Night since Rio Grande has
eet it for you f•et.
second fnme. The Redwomen hit SO no seniors on the club this season.
percent from the field in the first Redwome~ parents will be; honored
half, but were cold in the final peri- and other activities are plllnned.
od.
Tip-off agajnst Cumberland is set
· Rachel Bostic led Rio Grande for 7 p.m. at Lyne Center.
with 18 points and sev~n rebounds. U. 1!111111
.
Michelle Tabor and Megan Winters Urbana ............................... 4S-S3=98
scored IS apiece. Winters also had Rio Grande ....................... 40-40=80
two blocked shots and a steal .'
-•-•Stacy Riley scored eight points
URBANA - Thompson s'/12and grabbed seven rebounds. She 0/0-7110=23, Koenig 7/10-0IIlper qt.
also handed out live assists and had 2/4=16 , Myher S/7-012-6!7=16,
five steals. Tonya Smith scored eight· Nance S/1 0-0/0-6111 = 16, Shirt 2/9Kend.aii10W30,
points and had live rebounds. Shan- 2/4-4/6=14, Downey 3n-l/3- '
10W40 or 5W30 ·
non Brown and Beth Patch each 4/S=I3. 'I'otall: J0/58-31'9-lt/43=98
Motor Oil
scored six points. Brown dished out
'Thtal FG: 33-67 (49.3%)
seven assists.
Rebounds: 42 (Nance 8)
Urbana's Nikita Thompson led all
Block~ shots: 2 (by Nance &amp;
scorers with 23 points. Kim Koenig, ·- Thompson)
Assists: 18 (Koenig &amp; Myher 4
Jaime Myher and Wendy Nance
Limit 12
each tallied 16. Kiya Starr added 14 each)
while Lindsey Downey scored 13
Ste...:. IS (Gentis, Myber &amp;
points. Nance grabbed a gaine high Thompson 3 each)
eight rebounds.
Turnoven: 16
Autolite
Redwomen coach David Smalley
Fouls: 18
99' eale price
said, "W~ played a sloppy game and
-30' mfr'e rebate

ring. We will celebrate our SOth
anniversarr soon. Please print this
article for your romantically inclined
readers. -- Mildred in Venice, fla
"Attention, shoppers! Love-struck
boyfriend, aisle eight.
'
"While Robin Howell and Alonzo Miller were getting some· lastminute pany items on Christmas
Eve in Hopewell Township, N.J., the
voice of the supermarket's assistant
manager came on over lbe loudspeaker. •
"'Attention, please. Attention. I
have a very imponant announcement
for Miss Robin· C. Howell. Alonzo
Miller loves you very much, and he
W&amp;Jlls tll give you an early Christmas

.
be submitted wilbin 30. days of
occurrence. All birthdays· must be
submitted within , 42 days of the
occurrence. ,
All material submitted for publication is subject to editing.

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• Wedn•adey, February 14, f996

VVednesdey,Februery14,199a

Pomeroy • Middleport, O.hlo

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!..[: 1996 Pet Valentines

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By DAVID BAUDER

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new releases choking music stores that many wonhy ones are ignORd
Other holidays largely have gone unexplored. No one really kno;.,s if
Love and all its various permutations provide lyrical inspiration for most l?vers can be enti~ed to open their wallets for sensuous songs around Valen·
of popular music.
IJne's Day, because it hasn't been tried to any great extent.
So it seems strange that a music industry that lives and dies with hype
:·I don't ever rec~l anybod~ e.~er focusing on Valentine's Day as an oppor·
only recently has discovered Valentine's Day, the one day of the year set aside tumty and really gomg after u, saod Adam Block, marketing director for
for lovers.
Sony Legacy.
. "It's been a really tepid marketing tie-in," said Pete Howard, editor of
His label, whi~h specializes in putting old music into new packages for
the trade newsletter Ice, which monitors when new music is made and compact dtscs, tned a Valentine's Day tie-in for the first time last year by
rele11sed. "It carries the same stJ:ength as St. Patrick's Day. It barely regis- r~leasing compilations of love songs by the 0' Jays, Isley Brothers and Frank
ters on the Richter scale."
•
Smatra.
The second of the two "new" Beatles songs, "Real Love," is being
The Isl~y Brothers package has sold 109,000 copies, according to Sound-released to rad1o stat1ons around Valentine's Day, although it won't be avail- scan. That sa pretty healthy sales figure for repackaged oldies, and it encour. :able for purchase until several weeks later.
aged Legacy to try again .
Sony Legacy is releasing five compilations of old love songs this month, . Le~acy 's new releases include a 20-song Billie Holiday compilation,
. trymg to h1t a wtde range of tastes: country, soul, jau and blues.
mclu~ng "All of Me" and "The Way You ~k Tonight." The soul collection
· And two favorite singen among Ioven of ali ages, Barry White and Tony contatns The Isley Brothers' "For the Love of You," Harold Melvin and the
·Bennett, pla_n special interactive events tied to Valentine's Day.
Blue Notes doing " Hope That We Can Be Together Soon" and "Best of My
The mustc busmess tends to focus on one holiday alone - Chrisunas. Love" by the Emotions.
·. Two, if you count Hanuldcah. Record companies compete to have their prod·
The country collection includes weepers by George Jones and Willie Neluct among the thousands of ~ompact discs gift-wrapped during December. ' son. The blues compilations, "Messed Up in Love and Other Tales of Woe"
Some in the industry believe the Chrisunas rush is overdone, with so many appeals to listeners for whom Valentine's Day is a dirty word.

AIIOCt.ted Pre11 Wrtter

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Ownera: Shown &amp; lunno

Owner: Jenn.lfer Nee..

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Owner: Crelg Metheny

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Own~r: VIrgil

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SASHA
·OWner: Joyce MMHey '- • ··

LASSIE

A.J

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DAVIE &amp; HAPPY

OWner: 'Aih~ Klnh•h•

OWner: Waody C.ll

Ownlre: Cllrle • Sllreh Bell

OWner: Don R11

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MOLLY

Mm'ENS &amp; BEAR

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Owner: Mercia Houdaehelt

Owner: Kendi Wlllleme

Ownlre: CI!IY • lobby Stone

CHEYENNE .
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OWnere: Ron • Judy Clerk

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Ownera: Elmo • Dottle Pierce

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AP Medical Writer
CHICAGO (AP)- Fewer than
one in six children who rides a
bicycle wears a helmet most of the
time but the rate is better than only
a decade ago.
A 1991 survey by the U.S.
Consumer Product Safety Commission found that about 15 per·
cent of 26.4 million bicyclists
under age 15 used helmets more
thlln half the time. It is the only

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COCO end PRECIOUS

Owner: Betty Gilmore

OWner: Ruth E. Jolineon

OWnere: Rick.lnd Syndl Uttle

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Ownlre: Deve • jiJdy Elkin•

Owner: Mary Lllhly

PATCI:fES ·
Owner: Di1bre Shelton

Ownlr: Ietty Gllgy

KATIE
Ownera: Tiny WOlle, Betty Ollnlore

telephone requests that night from fans who want to llear a panicular song.
Bennett also will lake requests the day before when he's host of an on-line
chat session on Prodigy.
Then there's the Lord of Love, the Rajah of Romance himself. Barry White
has made a living with pillow talk, so it's expected he will stay busy on the
holiday of love .
"He receives a million requests for Valentine's Day," said Doug Richter,
White's manager. Radio stations, in particular, are eager to hear White 's deep
bass voic~.
·
· Fans will have to settle for keystrokes on a computer. White will be host
of an on-line chat session on the Microsoft Network on Valentine's Day where
perhaps he 'll be coaxed to give advice to lovers.
.
Although such artists as Eazy E, Jackson Browne and the Gin Blossoms
have new albums scheduled to come out the day before'Valentine's Day, ihe
schedule for record labels shows no major releases panicularly timed to the
holiday.
.
One exception is Warner Bros., which might be showing a perverse sense
of humor. The company released today the soundtrack to the movie "Thin
Line Between Love and Hate."

'Sorority
discusses
Founder's
Day dinner

Steve Ok:u of Oku Inc., a grower in
Pescadero .
"But quality and quantity will
be good this year. We're smilingit's nice to see the sun out," he said.
Americans bought 84.5 million
. roses in February 1995 and this
year they are expected to buy 89
million, according to the Cut
Flower Commission. About 1.2 bil·
lion roses are sold in the United
States throughout the year.
Red roses - the symbol of
romantic ·love - are consistently
the biggest seller for Valentine's
Day. About 81 percent of roses giv·
en on Wednesday will be red ..
But other colors have their fans,
their popularity varying now and
then.
"This year for us it is pink. In ·
past yean it's been yellows and
off-whites," Kitayarna said.
This Valentine's Day is a welcome bright spot for Californ·ia
growers, who face increasing competition from their foreign counterpans .
Competition from growers in
Latin . America - along with
urbanization, rising labor and utility costs - have slashed the number of California's cut-flower
,growers {lym about l,OOOJD. fewer than 500, according to the commission.
In 1984, 78 percent of roses
bought in ,the United States were
- growtt dC111Jestically. By 1994, 61
percent of roses bought were
imported; according to the U.S.
Depanment of Agriculture.
Many California growers are
holding on by diversifying, raising
many different kinds of roses and
other flowen as well . Oku, for
example, grows 38 different varieties and colors, and Kitayama
grows 25 different flowers, including snapdragons, lilies and daisies.
But roses remain consumers'-

and growers'- favorite flowe.r.
14

1

John Musser, chairman of

IPomeroy's revitalization project. gave

·an over-view of plans when he spoke
I at a recent meeting of Preceptor Beta

Beta Chapter of Beta .Sigma Phi
· Sorority at Grace Episcopal Church
1parish house.
' It was noted that the chapter had
previously purchased a brick to be
used in the work along the proposed
new amphitheater. Ann Rupe, presi·
dent, presented Musser and his wife
who accompanied him to the meeting, with a plant. .
A soup supper presented by the
-social committee and served to Ann
Rupe, Carolyn Grucser, Jane Walton,
Joan Corder, Vera Crow, Charlotte
Elberfeld, Jean Powell, Velma Rue,
Rose Sisson, Rcva Vaughn , and
Dorothy Sayre.
Discussion was held on the
upcoming Founder's Day dinner,
which will be hosted by Preceptor
Beta Beta, on April 25 at the Sportsman Restaurant in Athens .
A thank -you from Serenity House
for the many personal hygiene items
donated in December by the sorofity
members was read and Mrs. Rupe
thanked the social committee for their
exceptional work during the year and
especially fpr the holiday obser- .
vance.

In other business the state conventi on to be held in Dayton May 31
through June 2 was announced. This
year's theme is "Betas in Toyland."
· The next meeting will be a salad
supper on Thursday, Feb. 22. All
members arc requested to bnng a salad.

SS cards for
newborns
ROSIER ROSES • Juan Navarro gathers cut
red roses in the Oku,lnc., greenhouse Monday
nur Peecadero, Calif., in the San Francisco

0f course," Kitayama said.

Bey area. This winter's sunnier weather has ·
made growers happy, as both quantity end
quality of domestic roses Is higher than last
year. (AP Photo)

national survey on bicycle helmet
use among children.
In the late 1980s, only about one
· in 20 young cyclists donned protective headgear, said Gregory B.
Rodgers, the commission's lead
researcher.
"That showed that a number of
the state and local programs that
had begun in the late 1980s ... were
beginning to take hold," Rodgers
said. "And rates of helmet use
were rising. and probably they 're

higher than that now."
Survey results were published
in the February issue of Pediatrics,
based in suburban Chicago.
Angela Mickalide. director of
the Washington-based National
Safe Kids Campaign, attributed the
.increase in bicycle-helmet usc to
education programs, legislation
and cheaper helmets. They now
cost about $20.
Thirteen states and about 25
communities now require children

to use helmets, Mickalide said .
About 250 children die each
year in bicycle accidents and
another 400,000 are injured seriously enough to require medical
attention, she said. Sixty percent of
the deaths and about a third of the
nonfatal injuries involve the head,
she said. Helmets reduce the risk of
head injury by 85 percent.
The nationwide survey of 399
children or their parents found
that younger children wore helmets

more often than older ones- perhaps because parents control
younger childr!'n better than older
ones, Rodgers said .
Helmet use also was higher on
bike paths than on streets, and
tended to be much higher if parents
had a college education. Helmet
usc also was much higher for children who had ·suffered previous
bicycle accidents that caused
InJunes .

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SPECKLES I
OWnere: 8uMn • 8nid Hllt:IIIY

MINDY
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OWner: Scolt Colwell

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Here's a reminder for expectant
parents. While there arc so many
things to take care of to get ready lor
your new arrival, one thing you
won't have to go out of your way for
is your baby's Social Security number. You can apply for one at the hospital while you're completing the
infonnation for your baby's birth certificate. The information you supply
for your baby's binh certificate is the
same infonnation Social Security
uses to issue a Social Security card.
If you plan to open a bank
account for your newborn, or make
other investments, your baby will
need a Social Security number. And
you'll need to supply a Social Security number for your baby if you
claim him or her as a dependent when
you file your taxes. There's no charge
for this service. And your baby's
Social Security number will arrive by
mai I usually a few weeks after you
leave the hospital.

In Memory of the following pets
who gave many years of
companionship to their owners.

...

RUSTY

Not for Tony Bennett, who will be host to a two-hour live concen on the
Arts &amp; Entertainment network on Valentine's night. The network will take

·Most kids don't wear bicycle helmets most of the time

';·

BOWS

.....

By CATALINA ORTIZ
AP Buelne11 Writer
SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP)
' When roses are red, growers aren't
·' blue.
. Last year's gloomy skies took
·the bloom out of California's rose
·crop, but this winter's brighter
. weather has growers seeing green
· for Valentine's Day.
"Fantastic" is how grower
Dave Kitayama describes this
year's crop of Valentine roses.
. Sunny skies helped produce vigorous plants with deeply-hued red,
pink and peach blossoms.
"The quantity is above average,
but it's the quality of flowers that
' 'is also very, very good right now,"
; uid Kitayama, co-owner of
: Kitayama Brothers Inc. of Union
: l:ity, the natipn's largest grower of
. roses.
"Last year I wasn't really proud
: of the crop.... This year it's differ. ent."
California, with its favorable
: climate, produces nearly 70 percent
· of the nation's roses. with most
: nurseries concentrated in Santa
: Cruz, Monterey, San Mateo and
• San Diego counties.
The state last year produced
nearly $62.6 million in hybrid tea
roses,- the favored elegant type that
makes up vinually all cut roses
consumers buy, according to the
California Cut Flower ·Commisston.
I
And Valentine's Day remains
the biggest day for roses, so grow: ers keep an anxious eye on the
weather during the critical seven or
~ eight weeks before the flower. are
: picked for the holiday.
'
Winter storms·last year hun the
• crop. The rain itself didn't bother
• the plants, which are grown in
1Jreenhouses, but the gray skies
· didn 'tlet enough sun reach them.
' The roses had rangy stems and
• 1ess-than-vibrant blooms.
·
"Last year our production was
probably off 30 percent," said

•

BRUTUS

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

.Better weather ·
·:makes for rosier
·Valentine's Day crop

•

BO

Ohio

;·Love, business finally intersecting in popular music world

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Pomeroy • Middleport,

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�Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

flednesday, February 14, 1996

Wednesday, February 14, 1996

The Dally Sentinel • P$ge 1 ,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

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PEPSICO LA

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298 SECOND ST.
-POMEROY, OH• .'
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT YO LIMIT QUANnniS GOOD THRU SATURDAY, FEIRUIRY 17, 1996

TIDE
DETERGENl
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The Daily ·Sentinel presents
·Valentine ''Love Lines''

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VALENTINE'S TRANSPLANT • Noreen
McGuire hugs har hullblnd, Mlchaal, at their
home In Santa Clara, Calif, Monday. Nore,en II

ELLE
BATHROOM
.TISSUE ·

don811ng
her ki~~:=~~:a_~ Mlchaalla
on
Valendne'aone
Dayof
81 Stanford
suffering rrom kidney failure
to diabetes.
(APPhoto)

Couple to celebrate Valentine's
Day with kidney transplant
By CATALINA ORTIZ
Alaoclated Presa Writer
SANTA CLARA, Calif. (AP)
- Noreen McGuire has already
gi'len her husband her heart; So for
Valentine's Day, she's giving him
one of her kidheys.
. "We. thought that would be a
nice gift," she joked: "I told him
that's all he's getting this year."
Michael McGuire was scheduled to receive one of his wife's
kidneys this morning at Stanford
University Medical Center.'
"It's a humbling experience,"
he said Monday, resting after what
he hoped would be his last dialysis session. "It's a big responsibility to donate - and a big respon·
sibility to accept a gift like that."
Most of the thousands of kidneys that are transplanted each year
come fr!Jm donors who have just

died. Blood relatives are the first
live donors dbctors seek.
McGuire, a diabetic, rejected
his sister's offer to donate, fearing
that she, too; might develop dia·
betes and eventually suffer from
kidney failure, one of the disease's
complications.
But Mrs. McGuire, 45, turned
out to be a good match.
"!love him1and ·he'd do it for
me, if the shoe was on the other
foot,·: she said. "I' want him to feel
better. We 'II be able to do more
things together like we used to."
McGuire's kidneys began to
fail last summer, forcing him to
undergo dialysis three times a
week to cleanse his blood.
While the procedure has saved
his life, the three-hour sessions
leave him exhausted and ,-force .
him to stay within a day's ~rive of

---Co~_munity

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I

SUPERIOR

the clinic - or to make elaborate
arrangements at other clinics if he
travels.
"The biggest thing we mi.ss in
our lives together is ... spontane·
ity," said McGuire, 48. "Before,
we could drop everything and go to
Carmel for the weekend .... Now
everything has. to be planned."
The McGuires hope to be
released from the hospital in about
a week.
While spouse-to-spouse kidney
donations.aren 't common, .a study
· ~ublished I.St year found they can·
be quite successful. Researchers at
UCLA say the three-year survival
rate after such trimsplants Cllf! be ·as
high as 87 percent. The rate with
organs from dead donors is 70 percent; with identical twins it is 90
percent.
·

Th~ Co!Dmunity Calendar is penter, "The Glass Lake." .
published as a rtee service to non·
profit groups wishing to announce THURSJ)AY
STIVERSVILLE •• Revival
meeting and special events. The
calendar Is not designed to promote Thursday through Saturday, 7:30
sales or fund raisers of any type. each- evening with evangelists
Items are printed as space 'permits Charles and Wanda Hall, at the
and-cannot be guaranteed to run a Stiversville Word of Faith. David
Dailey, pastor, invites the public.
specific number of days.

REEDSVILLE-· Olive Township
MIDDLEPORT·· Middleport LitTrustees,
Thursday, 6 p.m. to go over
erary Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday, home
of Mrs. Eldred Parsons. Mrs. Dewey flood disaster information and paperHorton to review, "Let Me Call You work at township hall.
Sweetheart" and Mrs. Wilson' Car·

BIRTH ANNOUNCED
Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan Brockert
(lana Jude) are announcing the birth

of their first child. a son, Cody Lee,
born Jan. 27, at O'Bieness Hospital.
The infant weight eight pounds, 12
ounces and was 22 inches long.
Maternal grandparents are Flossie
and Mike Jude. Vada Smith and
Lucille Jude are maternal greatgrandmothers. Paternal grandparents
are Debi and Joe Brockert. Nora Nitz
is a paternal great-grandmother.

..

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P/S and all my
1
other kids too.

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Love Momma Etta.

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SALMON

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14.75 oz.

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Bradley &amp; Benjamin
'The times we spend,
together are so
precious tQ me.
I Love You both
always
Love, Daddy

I

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Margarine••• ;.~...... 16

COUNTRY CR~CK

CAMPBELLS CHICKEN
NOODLE SOUP

FEBRUARY
RED TAG SALE
FABRIC

3/$ 1

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MORTON
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WAVERLY
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WALLPAPE. 111
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Happy Valentine's
Day
Jason Wayne
Thanks for making
my life and my
Valentine's the
greatest ever.
I Love You, ·
Jennifer
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Love Always,~ ~
David ;t
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. Mark,
. Have a happy
' You still owe ~
Valentine's
mea
Day.
"Twinkie"!
With Love
Your Daughter
Stacey .· •
'
Nancy Whaley

· Th11nk you for "liking
the leaf six yeare the
happiest of my life.
You have ·given ·the
world love a whole new ·
meaning..
Forever Squirt
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i 1 love'you with ani
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;;}We have a son I

To Dad and Mom

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Just wanted you
to know that we
love you very •
•
much.
~Lorie &amp; ·Melanie &amp;i

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·,You have showed ~ ·
me what true love
can be and 1 love ·
:you so much for:
. It
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Cowboy

Snuggle Bug
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Be my
Valentine
.. Always •'

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land daughter t'o !I
;JS~are our love~
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Sheme
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to·m,y Valentin•
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Daoitl HarriJ of · .. , Thank._ for ALiguat
·4th' a.nd Joyaori, the
The
Plalrt8
I
LOve
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love 1'ot . my life.
f
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Youl Boxltr Joe •
You're one
pf. ' my
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beat frltnda. ·
Heart'a.silre
f:lti
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Happy Valentine's
.
· Love
Day, •. · ·
. The .bater Bunrw
·•
·Janice
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Roses are Red
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~ · 'Sure glad there's only
· ·one you.
'
· I love you
Mama Haye
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· 12 oz.

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Violets are blue

Bob:
· ·
·
Nana Be Papaw, . ·
~ ·, Valentine Day . · ·,Grandma &amp;
•f wouldn't be .t he · Grandpa tool
; ·• same without ~ ~ Oh, how we sure
:
you.
:
love you!
;.
Love . .
Gracie Anna
f. ·
Betty
•
Colton~

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Elmo

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WALLPAPER

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Bob,
•
• When I'm with you~
everything's all-right, I
especially when we •·
, cuddle at night.
•
Happy Valentine's Day,
Sweetheart
'
Love Nancy"

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LARGE SHIPMENT

Cole

Jesw was our substitute when He died
• on the cross. His shed blood, death,.
burial &amp; resurrection was for ui. That~ • whosoever b,elleveth In Jesus should not.
· perish but have everlasting life. ·
:·
Trust In Jesus, that:s what matters.
~
That s Love!

.'
~.;.~'~~
[ . Penny Hysell
· · Usa
~.
To the most
~
, Thank you, Girl
Friend for the
:.
wonderful a"d
greatest ten years
~ · l9vlng wife In the
'
•
of my-life.
'
·' ·
world.
I love you.
r
I love you.
'~ · ~
HI Shelby
David. •
•
Love Bob
•
~

Burr
Love you
Always.
•
Now and
Forever
•
Cookie Man·

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CAMPBELLS TOMATO
SOUP

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BY THE YARD
In Stock

• Your babiH oh 10 sweet ·
' are here- A girl a 1 boy, •
'IO'delr.
• We love you more thlln
, words can aay but we •
hope thla makea for a
happy day! I
Love Mommy, Gracie a

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To My Valentine
MDH
Thought of you
make everyday
•
specla'l
~
Love always, .
Your Valentine. ·
.
CAH

o.ddy,

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:, o our "Litlle
:
Prlnceaa"
~
we All Love you very
much
·t HAPPY VALENTINE'S ,
DA~om &amp; Bill
: •
Dad a. Pam ·

70Z.

cheese! ·~ova you
In fish talk·
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Your Strawberry
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Baby,
Tome you are
definitely the head

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. To McKenzie,
On your First
Valentine's Day
You are Nanny
and PaPa
Whobrey's
Pride &amp; Joy

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FOX DELUXE
PI·ZZA
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POMEROY ·· Naomi Baptist
Church, Pomeroy, guest speaker Suoday, 10:45 a.m. service, Rev. Arius
Hurt of Gallipolis. Public invited.

I

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SUNDAY '

AI!

Heather,
'

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RACINE -· Racine Post 602,
American Legion, Thursday, 6:30
p.m. with dinner to follow.
·

D/1
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POMEROY-· Pomeroy Group of
A.A. will hold an open discussion
meeting Thursday, 7 p.m. in the b~­
ment or the Sacred Heart Catholic
Church.

.

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Hot Dogs-••~.!~:f..e~••~ ••S9----1-,N-EY_P....IN....

WEDNFSDAY

APPOINTED
Bruce Me Kel vey has been
appointed a Lebonan Township
trustee to fill the unexpired term of
EugeflC Long, who resigned·.

.

calendar-.- -

-Society scrapbook -

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Zach,
!To Squirt:
·,Just thought I'd let . . You are very
~You are so precious
you know how
Jto me. I will love you~
· special to me.
special you are to
~forever and ever. ·
Miss you tons.
: me and that I Love •
Happy Valentine's i.: ~Remember I'm the: .
You!
~one who loves you.
Love, Kelly, ·
Dayl
'
.Love, Gimp ~

February 14th

f

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Bell

I'm very proud of
you. You're so
, spec,lal. Always be
good and remember I
love you bunches.
Mom

...,.._.Q\011,1,..

""·~-ii!':--

Janice &amp; Dianne
· You are two of my
best friends and
hopefully you will
be forever.
Happy Valen~lneis
Day
Sherrie

..
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Birdie,
.
Everytlma I sea
your beautiful
smile, you make
my heart feel

warm.

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.......

I Love You 1·

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Sunshine,
The last 441 days.·
;1 have been the
:rll'm so happy 1 haver~
jyou.
Love you,;:
·;
Your little Angel~

best!~

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jToWoody,
i, My honey, my Valentine, On this special

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~day
!.
~I know I'm not red &amp; my names not A.J. ~
'Remember though he's a dog Be I'm your •fi
, wife.
~
·, He's gonna be gone but I'm here for life. ~
.

.

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To Mom and Dad;

·
. Even though I'm far from home, I think; ·
of you everyday. .·
.' Thanks so much tor ,everythlng you do. :
I love you both and I'm proud to have .
such super parents,
·
Happy Valentine's Day from Germany. . ·
Love, Darlene

,,

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Love
Melanie

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�to make the meetings more effective •
through more Christ centering. Plans
·were made to wear Easter bonnets to
the next meeting. Cards were signed
for Anna Shuler and Mildred Smith •.
announced "Ladies Day" at the ~~
Athens Church on April 16.
.
For the program where was a skit
by ·Kathryn Johnson and Anii Lambert. Bonnie'Amold read "Valentine
to My Children from.Our Heavenly
Father," and Mrs. Johnson had a craft
session where each ·members made ·;
an angel.

.

-

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE:
2:00 PM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION!

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

.

:·-Three
:!..brides for ·
ahree

- ~brothers
••
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••

:,

FRESNO, Calif. (AP) - For
the Carpenters and the Wests, love
; is .all in the family.
: One by one over a I 0-year peri; od, Sandra, Lynda and Joyce .Car: pen rer married Jerry, Larry and
• Max West.
i It all started in 1966, when San!dra and Jerry met at a party. Four
: months later, they were married.
.Larry and Lynda, who met the
,same night, exchanged vows three
,years later.
,
.
When Joyce's first husband
died in 1976, her jlappily married
sisters once again turned to the
West family, Joyce and Max West
were married later that year.
' The Wests and the Carpenters
have 13 children and 16 grandchildren among them.
" We fill up half the church,"
said Larry West, 47. "People look,
and they always ask, 'How did it
happen?"'
With only two families to consider, the Carpenters and Wests seldom fight over who to spend
Christmas with, or worry that their
i·n-laws won 't get along.
: And they fonn a solid voting •
l)loc.
"When there 's an issue, you
know, we get people saying, 'We
want you on our side,"' said Lyn&lt;)a West, adding, "We (all) grew up
in the same area. We dealt with the
same things. We had a lot in comrilon."

\
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'

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Procall Co.

1

.ANTIQUE
AUCTION

a. . , . .
"",.,.,~

SATURDAY, FEB. 11, 1996
10:00 A..M.

FURNITURE
i Massive 3 pc. B.A. suite-High back bed wlmatchlng
~ . dresser &amp; washstand w/mlrror, outstanding (1920'a)4
! pc, waii)UI french style B.R. aulte Must -11 8 pc~
walnut O.R. suite- table &amp; 6 chairs &amp; china, 9 pc.
: inahogany D.R. suite, beaut~ul 4 pc. mahogany poater
' B. R. suite, oak roll top desk, oak 4 drawer spool
cherry VIctorian chest, fancy oak dresser,
spoon carved oak ice box, oak &amp; viet.
tiger maple rope bed, tall walnut llk:lorlan
cherry drop leaf table, oak drop leal table, round
table, square oak table, ladles drop front
cherry wardrobe, pie sale, ·oak serp. high
victorian tables, stack oak book case's,
superior cigarette &amp; matches 25¢ vending
sets of chairs, oak rockers, wicker swing &amp;
Hooser style kitchen cabinet, lall store
prim. type cupboard, oak chest, large
ball lamp lable, round walnut table &amp; 6 cane
&amp; back chairs &amp; more.
GLASSWARE
Flo blue "Louise' saucer, Flo blue bQwl &amp; plaUer,
Cambridge· dish. attica milk glass dish,
'
collector plates, R.S. Germany plate, several
of Fenton, fluted white coin dot vase, Bristol
white frosted hand painted Victorian pitcher,
glass bunny, 6 spade blue 9' china dishes (al
royal daulton 'Siamese Car signed, Jobes
Franciscan ware apple pattern, RosevilleBasket-Florentine Vase-Zephr Lily
;1~~=:~~~ht~ Rose Creamer-Sugar-Freesia Blue
:1·
Peony Teapot· Yellow Peony-Creamer~ ~=~:Cit,meta Bud Vase, Stone jars- Bee Sting-

Cola or ·
Diet Rite Cola

TYSON/HOLLY FARMS

'

en ·Breast
Tenderloins

'

.BUY ONE GET ONE

.

FREE

. COLLECTIBLES
•
McCormlck-Deering-_lntemational Ha~t &amp;
with rille shooting a bear,
u•~fn.?s::ft picture, reverse ·painted movle stars,
o'
'teddy Bear fully jointed- wool &amp; colton,
made twig baskel, '1936-Music game-cards,
fighter pedal car, metal fire chief pedjll car,
metal Murray pedal traclor, Chien Windup duck,
Greyhound bus, Wolverine brand ·Chielct's adding
machine, •sunny Hours' story book copyright 1898,
~Ion's ·Banjo clock plus other clocks, small rell road
. adv. tin slgns·M·K· T-Katy lines-Rock Island-Atlantic
Coal!,t Line- Great Western Rail Way- Southam ,PacHic
Lines plus other, Daisy Chum, Silver Tea Set-Tiay,
Creamer·Sugar &amp; Tea Pot, soap dish wlbrass legs,
Remington cast iron trap thrower, old .books, old
wooden fishing lures, Coca Cola Musical Santa, Toy
'Hot Shot Band' Drum Set &amp; More Coming ln.
Auctioneers Note: Very nice selactio.n of quality
antlqll&amp; fllmlture, glassware &amp; collectlblea, Come and
spend the dayll Heated building, plenly of seats, &amp; lots
of par1dng. Motels near by.

64 Oz•.Ctn. Reg. or Homestyle

Field Trail

Foodland.
Orange Juice

DOG FOOD

'

Now Is the time f6r g-r-r-r-«Jt ·
: buys In the dosslfleds

AUCTION CONDUCTED BY

· ··

RICK PEARSON AUOION CO.#66
LUNCH
MASON, WV. Res. • 773·578$
. BUSINESS: 304·773-5447
AUCTIONEER: RICK PEARSON
Not Responsible for accidents or loss ol property.
Licensed and Bondetlln Ohio &amp; West VIrginia 166
Terms: Cash or Check with Pos~ive Identification.
· NO EXCEPTIONSII
Out of State buyers musl have a current bank letter of
credit.
·

Public Notice
201BAG

GENERAL SOLICITATION
STATIEIIENT
Tho Private lnduetry
Council· (PIC) and Service
Delivery Area Number 24
(SDA ~24), which Include•
(Athone, Gallle, Hocking,
Llvmnce, Melga, Parry and
VInton) counllu" are
eollcltlng propoeale tor
eorvlcot to bo provided to '
· youth (TIIIo R-B and Tltlo II~
C), adults (Titlo II·A) and
.dleloceled workera (Title Ill
EDWAA) under the Job
Tnilnlng Partnerehlp Act.
Thou ..rvlcoo will be lor
Progrem Year 19M (July 1,
1t98 to Juno 30, 19t7) on 1
county b..ls. Eech RFP
· must Identify a county. It •
proapoctlve
aorvlco
. provider wlehoa to bid on
·mara then one (1) county, 1
· aeperate RFP mull be
..Ubmlfttd lor each' county
Identifying the county.
P.rograms operated d!!rjng
Progrem Yeer 1t98, which
·meet
contrlcte·d
perlormence etanderds,
mey be extended far an .
liddlllonel yaar of operation.
Thi •ppllcetlon proceae
require• lhel tllbmltlod

:

,
1,

·
:
·;

''

FAVORm

VIRGINIA HAM

·Potatoes

$199

propoasl••

''

(1')- Contain detollod,
eccurlile and complete
p~remmatlc and budget
hlfdtiiietton. ·
.
(2) i'anow ,thl preacrlboc!
toririlt.Jl*dlfkod In lhl RFP

.,

peelc,t.

•

TURKEY BREASTS

c

69

or

SLl. AVG. SWIFTS
PL•P NTENDER

Foodland

BREAD
·•I

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Uoltlfit: ·
. ·
• hrviCI o.liv_.J ANI ft4 .
lrolll!lfi•L.IIwreiiOI CO!IIItj
CAO,'• ~ l'lf!h hMi,
ftoftltll; QH ••••• ~14)
,
,
,.
· (1111~ 1J; ,oe; ~ ,e; nc · .

....
'

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All Ohio
l~V

l.,~&lt;i' 111\.r'

•New Homes
•Garag"
•Complete

f) cl\' !\_:')

•

Remottellng .
Stop &amp; Compare

FREE ESnMATES

f'!l'l Clr

•\rr'/ I lr r • :

llUI &amp; :.;11 ,';,
. [)•,,
Cll t l

1

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SKIM MILK
9'9
pl.

SALE.
Clll
614·949·2512

Dim 1p11 II 4:30 p.11.
Luc:ky Blill $200.00 and
Ralaea $50.00 allCI)
wk. Pay llCcordlng to
the number of players.

Keep ad lor FREE card

.

-

COREY
HENDRICKS
February 14, 1977·
November 25, 1995
Valentine's Day Ia
suppa 11 d to be fun,
But we- not thrilled .
IIIIa v-r.
11'1 hard to be reel
happy,

.~.,;:: =~;o:

I "'

no (11 .ftew· alxly :~
lellnttr hiiUIIOI"
·
•• ee 11111•1 •
Ill
pe.lfl'o•ll•n•\ . and
~==·
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if lllildiiS
tw ~
o,t

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tf.llr
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41711

(114) MZIIID

By t¥oc1 Crace

durthg her
.
·
nt .,... ..,
.,ct,r -lUI.
"our kind-·
Wltil' ~--·
. '

bu.•-' .

-.., paeu~~g~~r

HeppyValln
Bh tlttlii18'e Dey CIQIIf

conalclei'atlon

J~· lin!l at -that limo
••IIOCIIIJ 1110 ~II''Mr of
lloard hlf llvl (!!) IIIW

...ell

bent.

·- .

Publ... Notice

r;n f'

- ....................
'• -,
8olrd 'o tl'l:r
Cindy J. . . . _..,
'INIIU,.,

(117,14, ~~. ,21; 4TC

.· Sadly mlaMcl by
Did, - . . Glnllee.
. . . your flmlfy

llldfrlilllll.

RllaonebiO

for Detella &gt;

882-5535

~ew

Homes·· VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614-992-7643
(No Sunday Calls)

A·C UTILITY
New At King

CONSTRUCTION CO.

'lhe _ ~tame

Overhead &amp;
underground
utilities &amp; lighting .
Bucket, Digger
Truck Services
Service Pole
$2.50 per ft.
J·614-371·9801

eotnet
Picture Frame, Mats
&amp; Framing Accessories.
405 North Second Ave., Middleport 992-5020

1/1&amp;198

New At l..,les lleetronfes

lladle lhaeli Dealer
Your favorite artist
on Tape or CD
106 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport

MISUNDERSIOODII
LIVE II
comRsAno•
ONE· ON · .ONE
1·90G-414~2100

Ext. 2074
$3.99 per min.
Must Be 18 Yra.

992·2825

PAOCALLCO.
(602) 954-7420

MODERN SANitATION
POMEROY, OHIO
Trash Removal • Commercial or Residential
Septic Tanka j::ltantd &amp; Poruble Tollats Rented.
Dally, -.idy &amp; monthly rental rates.

.

WE OfFER GENERAl HAULING

WE HAVE A· I TOP SOIL FOR SALE

992-3954

or 985-3418 ",.,

Opening Feb. Jst

614-992-4060

.

Umeatone, Sand, Gravel, Coal &amp; Water

Finders of hard to
find auto parts; ·

WICKS
· HAULING
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

614-992-3470

GUN CLUB
Pcunpered ,_, rcun111 Pel ·lite
271 North 2nd Ave. ·
GUN SHOOTS
Middleport, OH. 45760
SUN. 1 PM
AKC Reg. Pupplea, Kittens, Birds &amp; More
3 Experienced Groomers • Financing Available.

CHRISTOPHER
COREY
HENDRICKS
On His Birthday

J.D. Drilling Company

"I'll lend you lor a little while,
A child of mine, • he said.
"For you lo love, the while he lives.
•
And moum when he is dead.
• " may be is six seven years, or 22 or 3,
But will you until! call him back,
Take care of him lor me?
He'll bring his charms to gladden you,
And should his day be brief,
You'll have his lovely memories
As solace toi your grief.
I cannot promise he will stay,
Since all from earth relum,
· But lhere are lessons taught down lhere,
I want this child lo learn.
I've looked this wide world over
In rey search lor teachers true
And from the throngs that crown life's lanes,
I have selected you.
Now, will you give him all your love,
Nor think the labor vain,
Nor hate me when I come to call
To take him back again?'
I fancy that I heard them say,
"Dear Lord, thy will be done.
Fqr all the joy thy chqd shall bring,
. The risk of grief we'll run,
We will sheher him with tenderness
We will love him while we may,
And lor the happiness we have known
Forever greteful stay.
But should the angels call for him,
Much sooner than We have planned,
We will brave t11e bnter grief
That co'mes and tty to undersland
By Edpr Gue11
milled
Mommy

(Lime StoneLow Rates)

RACINE

In Loving
Memory Of
My Son,

211417711/25/95

or

\

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

"Supplie• for aU yoW' pel raeeda "

In Memory

of CHRISTOPHER

---

·N-Homn
•Addhlona
•NewGaregea
•Remodeling
•Siding
•Roofing
•Painting
FREE ESniiATES

lneurara - Expst14rlemne&lt;cediCI
Cell Weyne Nell
11112-4405
Far frae Eatlmetn

SPORT'S CAR
DELUXE

In Loving Memory

o.y,

~Building U01010d1N~

1f311ltn

Boa 120, Grubbt, Ark;72431

Wlahlng you were

for thllr

2IW1 mo.

11t111 mo.

Socka $1.75 per pair
Ptuo 50 Ctntt Pottage
Send MJ!SIIonoy Onlor.to

our eyee c:lo11d,

an ··-·,

Ow non:
Harry &amp; Donne Clark
Stanlng Sun. thru Feb.
29 Sr. Clllzena Special
Fee lor day runs •
$1.00 per pinon to
Pomeroy &amp; Mlddtepon
Days: 541·1124 (local)
Nights: 992·2741

CIIAIITY SAU

So, In atud of haan
lhlpecl c:hocolatea,
Or a Htlllmark card
lhlly.er,
We'll be the with

would .II....._ to
th ·k -one

washers, dryers,
hot water tanks,
furnaces, batteries
and any metal
materials.
Call992-4025

Help Bumed Out VIctims

CN8111,

Remodeling
Kitchin &amp; Beth
· Remodeling
Room Addlllo!ll
Siding, Roofing, Pllloe

Call992-3967

FREE
Pick-up discarded

1/1-

No preeenta or Ice

Hou11 Repair &amp;

Children &amp; AduH
Cl11111

TFN

!1112-2m
Office Houra: llon.-frl
8:00 e.m.-3:30 p.m.
VInyl &amp; Alum. Skiing,
VInyl Rapl~~:emant,
Windowe, Bipwn
Insulation, Slon:n
Doors, Stonn
Windows, GIII'IIQM.
FreeEIIImiiH

11'1 Memory

Kick Boxing
Training
At Big Bend
Health &amp; Fitness

614-742-2193

MIDDLEPORT

Thai thla family hll

ThefamHyof

Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy Brickles

537 BRYAN PLACE

Stick built on your lot. To view home

Velma Herrick

32124 Happy Hollow Rd.

J&amp;L INSULAnON

Thla will be the
aacldeat Vatentlne'a

: · NOTICE TO BIDDIRS
: Seated proposals will ~
received by the l!loerd of
~duoe~lon of the llelge
Local Sohool Dlalrlot of
~. Ohio, , et '"'

Bands11wMI

legl01 Post 602
EVERY SUNDAY

AllEN BELL CONTRAcnNG
3 Bedroom·, 2 bath, 2 car'gardge, full
front porch, 1288 sq. ft, Price $59,500.

Cllnl of.Thlnkl

1

BALES OF

v-r, .

Call (304) 882-2379 wv WV003452

Portabfe

TUI
CURl'S CAB CO.

But there's no cake
!)n the table this

(Special)

SAWMI~L

liNGO
IICIIt AMerican

away.

: : $329

H&amp;H

ROUND
HAY fOR

NEFF REMODEUNG
SERVICE

~----------~~~~·-~ ~--------~~ ~----------~--~

between 8 a.m.-8 p.m.
Mon. · Sat

yourbl~.

LOW FAT ICE CREAM ·

Call 992-3967
for Details.

Pr;r 111 ·111\

You would have
closed your eye•
and made a wlah
And blown our hearu

..d.

_,,.,,,,.

985-44~3

nineteen,

Public Notice

r.

•

.

ROBERT BISSELL
. CONSTRUCTION

It would have been

on Filbi'Uitv ,RO,

, 'y~~·
- I .·

$2.99/lllin. 18+
Touch tone pllon8 required.
s.~ 61N45 8434

bent.

' p,,nt.. ,,...,
' . ; , ......,. will be gtve~- .." ' '
1 , 1· tit t~~~a· tiiM&lt;. ~ pra,l plltlve ;~ t .
,, atrvl~• , prO.V Idlrl who ·
. • Woi.Jd·tilce tO aubflllt,MI f!l!l' , '
~ must b8 prelltll at .thl •
ltld-.ra oonf~rtnce). All ··
. · 4· RFP ~lclfll will lie duo
• ·,
11eroll zz. 1!111/,Z:po
~

lfiAnllllr
TVUWro
• I rdfrdi r 'lr
,._ (JHI 61s-T6S1

You would have been

Then. will be e bldli•"

c~~

· Call
1-901-656-2600
IKIIIIIOI 3012

WMn you Cltnnot be

United/Valley Bell ·

s

, I

$.-l.lr*

!

·.R(

11111mo.

At Big Bend
Health &amp; Fitness
87 Mill St.,
Middleport

TRI·STATE SEWER &amp;
DRAIN CLEANING Lonely Again
,, If , I.
hftl

I•

I

(AI iiWI'IOit SIIGUSII
NollortiWDattsl
SlllpiJal
1·900-656-2600 hr.
3136, 2." , . . +
11 yrs.. lllllsftl to
Alglnlondlll
.. --.ow.
.
proflellletntlvts.
Sn-D
(619) 645-1434

,.,, •.

(602) 954·7420

Locietecl at the Auction Center on RL 33 In
MeiCifl, w.v.

~·

Something from the
honey's
Live girls 1-to-1
conversations
1·900-288-9155
ext. 3912. 18+
$3.99/min.

B. Jolene Rupe/Owner

P.O. Box 587

12 Gauge

(614) 992-6244

Fadory Cho1ie Only

R. L. HOLLON

TRUCKING

Racine, Oh. 45771
James E. Diddle

Trackhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
Jackhammer, Available 24 Hrs.
We dig basements, put In septic
systems, lay lines, underground bores .
For Free estimate call 949-2512
JIUIONAI' If BARS

Limestone • Gravel
Dirt• Sand

985-4422
Chester, Ohio

·-

lll(lln

·C7!~r; ~~;- ,,!!~:;.,

l:7\e.v:._U~

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

Are Youleadr
For Love?

C•ll Nowllll

Equipment

1·900.255·2700

Diatributed by

Ext. 9402
$2.99 per min.

TRI·STATE WATER SYSTEMS, INC.
The water treatment company cordially invites you to
participate in a tree, nO obligation .. comprehensive water
~natysis. WE WILL TEST THE FOLLOWING:
TDS, Mineral Henlneoo, Iron, PH.
Ploooo coli R"inSojlot !lt2-4472 or 1-aoo.eo&amp;-3313
to sol up your lroa wetor anolysle.
1111!111n

R

s Cttsr•
hrdteritg

Beef and Hog
Bue (904) 882-2756
Res. (904) 882-3328
West Columbia wv.
J . E. DIDDLE, OWNER

SPRIIIISOFI
CIHaw.t'erlyllf. . .

Du's Water Rtllllsd
New Haven, wv
304 8R·211116

Mull bo 18 yra.
Tfiuch tone phono
. required.

Serv•U 619-645 8434

111-

ftN·WIY
MINI STORAGE

882-2996
ConipniiiiS..I Prll:aa
111.., . ....

949-2512

·UCIIIE HYDUULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.

YOUNG'S

•

CARPENTER SERVICE

It

•Room Addlllona
•New Qeraaee
•EiectriCitll Plumbing

•Roofing

;

, ,I

•Interior &amp; Exterior
· .Painting
Allo Concrt!At WOrk

I

, (IIRI!e E$~TES)
~.e. YQUNG 1!1.

·
..

·I

I

· ' tt2-1211 ·

Po!MrOv• • '' .

'I;;

'

...

~

1

�Wedn11dly,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

-

•

Febru8iY , 1996

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page 35

:::::ir

~ A~;(,I~.E;Y;:O;O:P~----~--~.~-~.~------------~--~~----~::::::::::::::~:::::::N:E::A:C:r:o:s:~::o:r:d:P:u:z:z:l:a:.
PHILLIP

ALDER

-.ACAOSI
OAnlfll"aorg.
48'"• lm·
1 n 1r " ~~~~~n~-.nc~
_ .. - . .
47 RIWII if cae
7 ::_...

· KIT 'N' CARLYLEe by Lerry Wrtpt
Houao &amp; Lot FO( Salt, Pomeroy
ArH , 2 lledrooma. t Bath. Low
Down Paymen t. Eaay Term1, I·

fi00-44N908.

Nice home in Racine, large buildIng will houot imall bu olnoll,
also a one car aarage, ftnced
yard , out of flood area, aaking
..7,1100 814--2804.

fleduca : loH weight
kay. Tau OPIIL lablllll
Yap Dluroclc. Available

Pt•"•l·

Thr• bedroom home in country,
~~~~ HI Ad., Rutland, ono boll,
in11round .... 814-992·5067.

~Oftunea
AnnouncemlntS
will bt n.c.. new MLM

r
-IIIICII&lt;Ino.
- ...1011%
-11'1111-.
·-

320 Mobile Homes
tor sale

HIDIHI70-51117.

:s

1971 Schultz 3 Bedrooms, With
12118 AcfcUon, 814-388-9355.

adorabla mlxtd puppioo, to

goad-304-e~

1872 Buddy 14x60 Good Condl·
tlon, 18,800. 814-843-2918 After 4
P.M.

5Old Malo Brinan, Spaniel,
Col 114-l!M-1315.

1887 14X79 Oanviile 2 llodrooml.
2 Baths, CA, 814·448-8374, Ahor

a.g;. f'\lp, Sheila, WOrmocl, 8144o411-2311 .

5 P.ll.

Ill xed Slbe&lt;lan.Huoky 'upplto,
11-2-eDT:s

1'1/ppiel, pari ClwM,

part Gorman

Shephard. 31J4.1754452.
T.V. Doei1'1WOik,114 418 g5117.

11 o Help Wanted

180 wanted To Do
Biorhera ConauUctlon 1 Home

Earn up to 11,000 - l y etuftlng

Improvements,

Ot~~~~~~~:!;~-~-pal
II frH
home.auppllea,
Slart ,__
NO .
eaperlenc::e.
lntor ~
60 Lost and found
monon. No obligation. Sand aell

Con-.ct

~

small black Spaniel,
pampered pet, vicinity of Wendy's·Pt Pleount814-44H 148.

014·388·89e7

s- Or 811.

Electrical, Plumbing, Concreto
addre1Md ttamped envelope to foundltlort1, OarafH, Room Aa.
Express Dept 38 , 100 EAII · dltions, Remodeling, David, 814Whitntone Btvd., Suite 148-345, 258 8949,/Aoger 81-9178.
Calor Pork. TX 781113.
Experienced Caregiver (NonHome Typlsta. PC users needed. Smoktr) Good Care Mon -Frl'a
$45,000 income potential. Call 1· Dar•me, Also Light Houee Work,
Reasonable Rate1, 814- 448.:.
800-513-4343 Eld. B-0381l

Lost- set ot 4 112' to s· long car
trailer rampa, vicinity of Tuppers
Plains. Would appreciace their re·
..:•u..:rn.:..,6:.1..:4-..:843-5261...:..;.::_..:
· ----,---,-·1 lila Gua(d Applications Are . B•
Los t: small Chihuahua , black· !no -Accepted For London Pool.
brown-white. ma~. 1/4ml on Eck· Submit Applications, Including
· ard Chapel Rd, 2·8·88 bolero Training And E-lenct lnlormo·
nobn. 30-1·8751873.
tlon, To Janice Zwilling, Clerk ·
:;::=:..;..~="':-~---1 Treaaurer, VUiane
. Of Syracuse,
70
Yard Sela
Municipal Building, Syracuse,

3504•

General Maintenance, Painting,
Yard Work Window&amp; Waohed
Guuors Cleaned Light Hauling,
Commorlcal, Aesidontlol, Steva:

814 318 0421.

===:~~~:==:I Ohio 45779.

Gaorgea Portable Sawmill, don't
haul your logo to the milt just call
304-8751957.

Local Financial lnsitudon Seeking
A Computer Operator. Prior Ex·
-:-:-:-::--:-::-.--:~:-::-~~':':'I peritnct With A System 38 tAo · Get ready for Spring, call814·
1 400 Preferred. Full Time Foailion, 992-2335 Spring cleaning servAdvance, DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m. II ·f. 12:00 ·9:00 P.ll. For hnrne· ice.
the day before the ad is to run. diate Consideration. Send At- Private Leaaona - Perc:uaalon.
Sunday odldon . 2:00 p.m. Friday. aume To: CLA Bo1 373, clo Galli· Beginning Bran. Beginning I'll·
Monclay edition . 1~:00 a.m. Sat· polls Dally Tr ibune, 125 Third no. RHaonabte ra1e1. RefwrencAvenue, Gallpois. OH 45831 .
H. Cal Jon 81 304-875-41273.
Amarlcare Home Inc., A Otvlalon
'
01 Regency Health Services Ia Profetalonat Tree Sarvlce, Com·
..
M!dd po"
S&amp;ekng Quallly Minded lndlvldu· plate Tree Care, Bucket Truck
&amp; VIcinity
ala For Tho Following Pooition. Sarvlce .SO Ft - · Stump ReTho Jtckson Agency Ia JCAHO moval, Free Eatlmateal In·
All Yard Sales Must Be Paid In Acorodlted, Well Eatablllhed ourance, 24 Hr. Emergency Serv·
Advance. Deadline: 1:OOpm the And Faat Growing, Serving Jack- lea .Call And .Savel No Tree Too
day before the ad 11 10 run. Sun- son, Vinton, Pike, Gallla, La· Big Or Too Smalll BidWell, Ohio.
814-381 8843, 814-387-7010.
· day edition· 1:OOpm Friday. lion- _,.., And Sclo10 Countloo.
day edition 1D:OO..m. Saruodly.
Aeglatared l!urte Will Babysit 2
R.N . Full -Time, Clinical Supor - Doya a Weak For 1 Child In My
80
PUblic Sele
visor, Minimum 2 Ytara Homo Home, 814 448 3375.
and Auction
Health E•poritnco, Management
And Strong Acute Care Back· Sun Vall~ NuraerY School.
Chlldcaro IH 6am-5:30pm AGII
Rick Pearson Auction Company, grouncl A PIUL
2·K, Young School Ago Durlng
full time auctioneer. complete
auction
service.
Licensed R.N. full -Time, Case Manager, Summer. 3 Daya par Weak lllnf·
166,0hio &amp; West Virginia, 304- Minimum 1 Year Acute Care Elll· muml14-448-31157. ·
ptrionco Or Homo Hootth Expori·
77.1·5785 Or :104·773-5447.
ence AI A Regia- NurM.
FI~J ANC I AL

::.:::z;..__Po.,_m-181'--0-Y---·1

90

wanted to Buy ·

Antiques. collectablea. ealatea.
~Riverine Antlqu11, Ru11 Moore,

'

Levtl II Medical Records Clerk,
Part .. Timl, Minimum fJ ~ontl11
Experience kl A Health Related

owner, 61•·992·2528.

Field.

Clean Lata Modal Cara Or
Trucks, 1GI7 Model• Or Newar,
Smith Buick Pontiac, cgoo East·
am Avenua, Gal~'·.

We Provide A Compo
.. titiva Wage
And A Var)ety Of Btnellll. Please
Submit Rnume By Fabruary 23,

J &amp; D's Auto Porta. Buying sol·
v&amp;ge vehicles. Selling parts. 304773-0033.

Clwiaty Shay R.N. DPS
Americ::are HomeCare
731 E. Main S•ott

......

Top

Pr~ces

Paid: Otd

~ . s.

11198To:

-·Olio

456-40

Coins.
Silver, Gold, Diamonds, All Old
MEDIA SALES
Collectibles. Paperweight&amp;, Etc . H you t1t0 curntndy in mec1a II .T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second or hove previoua media e1pori·
Avenue, Gallpol' 614-448-2842.
once, we want to tolk to you I Ca·
ble One neada an experienced
Uaed furniture- antiquaa, one aaleaperaon In the P( Plaanv
place or complete aatataa, Oaby Oalllpolla market 8rea. Oui acMartin,81~2-7441 .
executive• an}Oy an excel .....,......,.
________ I count
lent dra'!ll, commislion attuctunt, ·
1979 Dodge AI~ and benollto. Coil Anno llcCIOI·
lo~~~~·~:IOol~-41~7~5~84~110~-~::-1 kay ot 1·800·32e·8351t ext 1052
lor -Ito. EOEIIIIF
Wtntod To I!&amp;Jy: Junk Autos With
Or Without Motors. Call Larry NHd 5 Lacln To Sell Awn, 814LiYoly. 814-381-8303.
448·3358.

\

.:.
W.:.an.:.tod_li_o_B-uy-:-LI-td_o_T_
Iko_o_li_ay_o,· l
614-2ol5-5887.

NEEDED IMMEDIATELY

210

1gB8 14x80 Trailer, Land And
Storage I!&amp;JIIdlng, CA, Gil Hill, 2
Bedrooms, 1Ox20 Covered Porch,
Excellent Condition, 119,500 Arm,
814·388-8117.1 Leave Melllge.

Creak. 31J4-.453-22A4.

Llmltod Ollorl 1988 doubtewldo;
3br, 2bath, S1 78D down, $275/
month. Free delivery &amp; aetup.
Only at OakWood Homea, N ltro
304-7555886.

wv.

Price Busterl New 14x70, 2 or
3br. Only IV95 - . . II g5fmontlt.
Free delivery &amp; setup. Only at
Oakwood Homoa, Nitro WV. 304·
7555885.

350 Lola &amp; Acr~~~ge
2+acret, improved land, 3mi. out
Mijoano Ad. Dritlod Willi, red born,
out liuilrfing. S13,000. Call collocl
815·0051098 or locally 304-675
5752.
f ive acre1.
aerator. n81r
Racine,$18,000 can finance with
holfdown. 814-949·2025.
Scenic Valley, Apple Grove .
beautiful 2ac Iota, public wa1er,
Clyde Bowon Jr., 304-578-2338.
WANTED TO BUY: 100 acrea or
more. Must be remote, ridge-top
land with good acces&amp;, lots of
road lromage, woods, pasture and
viowi. Call814-583-8545.
Wanted- 15 or more acrea In
Meigs County with or without
house, muat have some pasture,
614-992-41534.

41 o Houses lor Rent

tiOfiCEI
nell with people you know, and

Commercial building lor rent In
center of doWn town area Middktport, 2000 sq. ft., call 814-DD2·
24511.
For Rant: 1271 Ea1tern Avenue,
Gallipolis, Suitable For Small
Buainess Or Offices, 614-•484423, 814-446-8585.
Tanlng Bed Bu1lne11 For Sale,
located At Flneat Hair &amp; Tanning
Salon. Call Anytime. 614 -3870812.

2 PilAT-TillE SECRETAJW;S

3 Bedroom Houae Near North
Gallia High School S400111o. $400
Depo~~ 614-448-8495. .

3bedroom, 2 story In Hartford, unlurnlshed, ni ce, porthes, basement. $250/mo. References. Call

Mi

Nice clean .2 bedroom, In Pomaray, tor .rent or lease wilh option 10
buy, HUD accepted, $300 per
month with deposit, no pets, 614·
898· 7248.
Unfurnished 3br. house wlgarage,
$350/mo. Alao, 2br. furnished
trailer, $200/mo. Camp Conley.
304-6755595.

Unfurnished two bedraom house,

Very nice home in Pomeroy lor
,.,~ 8 t 4·9112·5858.

Er. I f'L :)Y r.l FtJT

~~t_zg_al Street, Pomeroy, W/0 ,
135()1f.f0. Depolli!, 513-922·02!l4.

~,FP'JICES

420 Mobile Homes
lor Rent
12x85 1972 2 Bedrooms, Clean,
Minute&amp; Fram Holzer Hospital,
10x16 Storage Buildlno. No PelS,
Deposit Required, After 5 P.M .
614-446·3838.

~eople who need to lola

t&amp;moloamoney,IDtry·p aientod weight -lou producr.
3114-713-1!083 241Ytlldly.
Plumbers I Pipafittoro l.U. 1577
$1,0Dq Weekly Proctulng Mall Will Be Distributing Apprentice
Application• Beginning February
Fr" InfO. Sand Seii·Addrolled
Sfllmpt&lt;j Envalopo: Exprooo t9, 1998 Through March 1, 1988.
Dept."'· 1qll Eaat Whltntona Appl ication• Can Be Picked Up
Blvd .. Sollte 141-345, Cedar Park At 1238 Gallla StrM~ l'llrtomOUth,
Ohio From 7;30 A.M. Until 4:00
TX 78113.
P.M. 135.00 Application Faa.
EEO.

llA Alltllllltl18 edY6rllting In
thiS _,..,.r IS IIUbjeCI CO
lha Fedlral Fair Houllng l\c1

ol 1988 wlllch makH H ltlegol
co adWrliSe •any !)r11erence,

llmttatiOn Of c:Htct'riilt!Yition
baled on race. color, religion,

... famlllaillllul or nlllontl
oriQin, or any lnt8nllon to
make any auc:h pro~erence,

lmil8tton o r -··

Tl1loltnowtlt9\IICCIIJI
- - wll ""'

forn~~tlelllate
Wl1ictlll tn.-ton ol the lew.
Our roedtrl 1111 heNI)y
lrlormld that 11 ~·••nus
- l n ! N I - I'll'"'
arvevallble bn an 4KJ181

~-RIAl lSTAH

310 Homes tor Sale
31iedroom houee, 12. 64acrll,
double gl&lt;OGO. acr. .ned porch.
2r!!IIH out .far'lcllo Rd. 304-417!14575.
3bedroom ·houae, ~.oooaq 1:
building, At 33, Mason, WV. 304·

2 Bedroom Unfurnished Mobile
Home, "'o Pets, $210fMonth Including Water, $100/Deposit614·
448-3617.
2 bedroom, 2 miles out New Urre
Rd. Rutland $250/mo. pluo uiHiioa,

gas hoe~ 814-742·288:1.

2badroom, clean, nk:e, porch anc1
yard , near school irr Hartford.
1225/mo. Call 304-882-2389.
2bedroom, total ~ecuic, no pets,
1 child. $275/mo. includes trash
pickup. $200 deposit Now 1995
2bedroom, no pats. 1 child. S300r
mo. $300 deposit. 304-675·8277
afler 5pm.
3 Bedroom~ 2 Full Batha In .Po"
or Arta S275/Mo. You Pay De·
posit I Ulilitles, Reference Raqulecl, 814-388-gf82
3 Bedroomo, Aa Electric, You Pay
Electric , Trash, 1300/Mo. Plua
Deposit, Aeloroncu, 218. llor-

oervh,

814~78 .

-oom. al tloctric 14x79, Gaf.
flpolil Ferry. $200/mo. No peta.
Dapo~t ' u••- 304-87540811.

Two

and three bedroom mobile
homaa, ataruno at $240 ·$300,
• - · wattr and traah Included,
814'e02·2187.

440

APII1menti
' lOr Rent

111!-2M7• .

882-2211.

.

•.

.

1 bedroom apllr!lr1lnt In llldcl•
por~ IVIIIII!ft Dtctmbor t, aU
For "'"'"'" On r o.a"""oilt.
TIM, lf""'l, RED'I. Your Arta . urtlidll paid, 1210 per month,
Toll Free (t) IOO·eH,I771 En e100 dtpoali. lam 10 !lpm 114·
112·7101.
H-2114 For~ Lil*1gO.

e

One bedroom furnished apart·
ment in Middleport, 614· 448·
3091 , 114·882· 5304 or 614·992·

2178.
Small One Bedroam, Excellenl
Condition, eounry Selling, Washer, Dryer, Stove RefrlgaraiOr, Non
Smokers. $300 Dlposl~ $35Mio.
Applications At 1743 Centenarv
Road, Gallipolis, 614-le2205.
Three Room Apartment, Next To
Library; $350 Par Month, Deposit
Required, No Pets; Contact Judy
At Bossard Library At 814· 448·

7323.
Twin Rivers Tower, now accep~ng
applicatons lot 1br. HUD subsid·
iztd apt. lor elderly and hendl·
capf)ed. EOH 304-&amp;7!XI679.

Unfurnished Opartnitn~ I) 8 1/2 E.
llaln StrHt, Pomeroy, $1751mo.,
814-902·7511 .

450

GE

17.6cu . l~

rofrJu;:ror, frost·

frat, $100. 304-875-

•

Gravel Hill Choahlre Primo Lots
$200 Par Grave Including Corner
Stonn And Parpotuol care, 814-

367-11214.
Hi·Eifet:lency LP. Or Natural Gas
92% Furntcn 100,000 BTU. 1·
800-291 · 0008, 814·448-8308,
Duct Syslema And Air Condilion·
ers. Free Etdmlllt.

510

King wctod &amp; coal etoye, uted
vary little, asking 8200. 304-.675-

5373.

·oo dining."""" lablo, hlrtd!, •

•

chalra; walnut dlnetlll oat wllh •
chalra: couch I love tta~ and
tablta; dryor; dlok
chair; 814·

a

Stair ~~- · 1oo. Foldlbla exar·
135-llodr by Jake hlp &amp;
thigh mactini 111. 3114-e75-3087.

dsa tike

15ft upright freezer, ·~· · cond ..
$200. 30-1-4175-3991.
Appllancoo :
Recondltklned
Wuhara, Dryera, Rtngea, Atfrl·
orators, tO Day Guarante·e l
French City Maytag, 81•·448·
ngs.

11l'tfo oflall ~actor engine overhaul kito, In February. Sider's
Equlpn-.304-8757421.
1985 Mu..y Ferguson Tractor,
Vary Good Condition, Runo Ex·
-U14-742·2457.

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Galton
Uprlgh~ Ron Even• Entarprlees,
Jackton. Ohio, 1·800-537·g528.

Sword, laney colteciOr's item,

I•OO: Marlin model 81 22 rille,

1100; Bearcoi scamor, $00: 614·

992·25113.

814-448-3158
Oualiry HouHhold Fumilura And
Appliancot. GrOll 0..11 On
Cash And Carryl RENT-2-0WN
And Ley- Also Availeblt.

FrOP Doiiwry Within 2511ileo.

530

Antlq\181

Buy or sell. lliverine Antiques,
1124 E. Main Street, on At. 124,
Pomeroy. Hours : M.T.W. 10:00
a.m. to 6:00p.m., Sunday 1:00 "10
8:00p.m. 614·992·25211.

540 MIIICIIIIaneous

Merchand!N
'23 T· Bucket kll car SIOO. 351
Clevalancl mo.,r bulh ., nu. Holland square baler. 304·812·
2821 .
.

Supplies .
BloCk, brick, lOWer piptl, Wind·
ows, lintels, etc. Claude Winter1,
Rio Grande. OH Call 814· 245·
5121.

560

Pets for Sale

Groom Sltop ~~ Grooming. FM·
turing Hydro Bath . Julie Webb.
Call614·446-9231.
8 Month Otd Mtnoth Jock Colt,
$500, Hall llanoth Jack Colt
1400, 81•·2-504.
AKC English S,rtnoor Spaniel All
Sholl 6 WormOd $200, Call Alltr
5 P.M. I14-258-11381 ..

HAVE YOU GOT TIME

FER A LITTLE

SNACK,

630

•

1990 Dodge Ram Van B-250 . •
72,000 Milos, 16,000, Can Be :
Seen At :' Gallipolia Daily Tribuna, ..
825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis .;.

~

!

1881 Nisun 4•4 XE Bo&lt;linor, Ex·
1ra Low Mlln, Slidino Ralr Wind- ....
ow, Very Welt Taken Care Of,
Ll&lt;e New, 814-446-3100.

140, 81-2-4«17.

prom.- ..

i

.

..

Purebred . Poggenburg Goat 2

YNrsOid$50, 614-387·8708.

1-::-::-:-:::---:-=-::----

FI~T Q\01(£.

~-e~n~
West led the heart four. After only a

moment, South called for dummy's
heart tin&amp;. Calmly, Fox-Shelnwold
pla.yed her two.
Rather th1111 commit himself imme·
dlately, South ran first his diamonds,
then his clubs. Fox-Shelnwold threw
the heart seven.• two clubs, the spade
tO and the spade three.
Believing the spade signal, South
dlacarded dummy's spade queen on
hla l11t club and led a heart, losing
two rric:ka in the suit for one down.
To find out how thla encounter end·
ed, buy the book. But- I will just say
that I hope your valentine proves
stronger in the heart department.

The Treosure You Sul

You'll Find In the
Closslflefl Sectlorl.

Sovinrs

IWEDNESDAY

"•

Improvements
•
1---==:::::---- •
BASEIIENT
WATERPROOFING ·
Unconditionalllletime auarantee.
Local references lurnlahed. Call
(114) 441·087.0 Or (614) 237·
04U Aogora Waterproofing. Es·
tablllhed 1875.

·

'
;

,
,•
:
·,
4
•

.:
•
•

.:

111111 Aockll Chaalil- car, all
,
,... in '11, WMWood, bat of
C&amp;C General Home Main- ·
IY1hlna. Wild, thrH Wheels. th·ea. tenance- Painting, vinYl iliding,
Neal Pedale, fuel cell, on board carpentry, doors, windows. be.ths,
lire ayaltm, rolling chulio. $5800 mobile home repair and more. For
neg. Cofl Scott Wolle, 814·940· ~" oaflmote call Cho~ 814-992·
2870, 814·94g·2045 or 814·1ig2. 8323.
1193.
1 ----:DAYW=
~~=L---

9raph

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

-.m

a.

Bale

:':..C::: =tolo":d.:'..~

and lttktentia~
r••· 35·
Yt.ara .. ptrltnca, B&amp;B ROOFlNG, ~14-gt2·2364 or I ·B00-118g.

ninof

I

Thurlday. Feb. 15, 181111

"E~Ieallnd

Joint endla~ could pr'Otlldl .... grNI·
J18t ~In lite ,_ltl)led. Kpeoo
jill you ...... lf1CI ..... ~ 10 you
wll!l Pl'llll i I t!J,....,. .... Nllfullr.
AGUAMIS (.lin, It M. 11) C.rtUI
develajii"Mnta mlglll malta you * l U
though you're praaied Into li COI'J!tr

,:

.r

~ 'Pu
.
••
~t
rllpa, A~ Conditioning fl '

I

'lllu Don't Ooii Uo We 8oth Loiet ~
Froe Elfll!tlltt, 1-100·291·00111 ~
81444llloe,
0029-41.
:, :r

wv

Rtild•• • • co...-1 Wiring

178!1.

'

~
lie on

wv

==-r.m=

dey might lawn· 811 )'OU today.' Let
~~ygonea b1 IIYOOMIIIICI dlsmlla .their

- . (lllnh 21-Aprttttl

ROofing and guhero· comr!llrclai

' RMr-IOn
. . . .~~ ...

ravNII

PISCO (Fell. aQ IIII'CIIIIO) Frlendl who
dldn' to liaVe lime for )IOU YM*lriMarity.

Ron's TV Serv)ct, lpiCiaUZing In
Zenith alao serviCing most o~Mr
brandt . Houet calla. 1·800· 797·
0015,
3114-576-2:1116.

,o....;::=;:::::ii;i=~~-.

lnatantly

sillon, New .York, NY 101158:

1-'""ct.

840

.

which algnl are ~ ~:*feet for
you. Mil $2.15· 10 Metc:tcrMker, r:lo thla
new81J8per, P.Q. ,Bolt 17;18, Mtlmly HUI

ASTRO·ORAPH

111113 "Diytoita lroc. V-11, 5 Spaoc!, ~ f1nlah, rtllllr.
Air, Til~ Cruise, AIIIFM Ca-ne: Coihngo textured , pleolor repair.
-43,000 MIIH, .7,700, 080, 814· Call Tom 304-417'1-4118: 20 years

31la.

.

Herahlaer
·
47 At tha drop : :

of - 48 Unfla ol

..

SOUnd

49

-

lncliln

51 Permit
S2 Serve

.•

perfectly
•
54 Mao - -t•no ,

;c

' Z I K
G

HE

AHRK

ZX

VK

HAU

Z X K

ZH

XJII

I J C

YP" L K . ' -

p

c

HE F

II I! 0 K· F L P W P J A

Pll

WHSOJFKU

JC

IJAK

YPAA

AHRK
L H F

.'
.'

' ZXJZ

XPM

H AU

UIFJCZ.

PREVIOUS sOLUTION: "Being an old maid is like dealh by drowning, a reallY. · :
~lfulaenaatlon alter you ce- to struggle.• - Edna Ferber.
· • :. ;.
t

1

0

::~::~' S~ltcil~-~£!rs·

WOlD
lAIII

ltllrd )y ClAY I. 'OUAN - - - - --

..

R.orronge

four

letters

~erambled

of the

"

words be-

low to form fovr words.

S NA B H I

..

...

I I I PI I.
ROCDH

E WH L I

. '·

1
&amp;

I. .I.

17

I

~

~

PRINT NUMBFIIED
LETTERS

I'

FORI

e•

bill..,..

IOIIJ¥. You 1Mr lll,•but dDft' Wf!Y, You ,
wl pl!lluln• II ,aut:
your lllak
11

pgiq Ill ....... !&lt;.- ....... 10 look
1

I·

j,

e..._.,_

and eltp8C:t8110n1 todey. Luck wll
your aide I you l8ke bold ldlona
and ,.,.... pcllillw.
TAtiAUS (April l'•llay 10) OpporII!DIIIw wllllbound todly, but l1ay ,oould
blllleiiiiO. You w11 lllve to tiCI C(L1IO,IdY to
capblln o n . _ dlval..,..lll. Do nol
dllllllllllOr IOO'Ijlng.
GilliN! (lllj' l1..1uM 10) TOcray you
wllllevelhllblty to,lrlllpQ Olhn 10 do
llilgl1111y IWIOW.rhaY do, but !MY,
llliWII!dUIO .. oourajjl ot mollu iltl I to
10 lhlm In lhe p1111. ·
C 'UClA (.111M 11-.lulr II) K )IOU t1y 10
rli$01111 an ~•CIOIIW• ,........ todly, you
rMI1a llftiiiiii'U pettiM IW oommllld to lite aiocc 1i'a ollhe aur-~LaO (ollllr . . . . II) Sttc:k 10 ptajada
I

' ,·

lhan long, concerted ellorta. You may
' - niOrnentt ol brilliance willl inlermil·
tlrll relapeee today.
VIRGO (Aug. 23 Sapt. 21) You will tak~
risks In arM1 UIUIIIy ewided tiy olhers,
llld u a relllltl. you might reap greater
dhridtndtl. However, don't prea your ructc
100 lar.

LIBRA

(Sept. 23- 0ct. 23) Do

nol

llecon!t dlecouregell today when purau.
lng your OlljeCII-. You may fiDI 111ft oil
ttrong, buf you wllf make graat stri&lt;MJ

doWn the 111.*11. Go lor the gold.
ICOiti 10 (Del. 14-Nov. 21) You can bl
--

-

bo

~ IDdly ln.-roe-

.... "wlich you flaal antlluaiJ18tlc.
1101 ap1n your wliHia on endlavorll

... dOn't . . . you.

'
IAGITTAIIIUS (I:M¥, 23-0111, 21) f'nil.
'anlfV, you lfM, the IIJIMiy 10 ,...,......

your llnlnCitil ...... and rneMe ..........
tlaf profltl. The end raauna wlll .aetlaly

yoU.

..

•

Ck IICOAII ~· INIII. 11) ~
you rri(lhl.,. latllil*d 10 Clo Olhtl uill, •
.
. lieyoullllltodly.
l1lllei 10 - You
· can do a I-*·
11on1
job .... '{Ol/IIUriOQIIM.

""*""' ......

. ...

.,

. '' •

·"

"'

I I I I I

SCRAM-I.m ANSWERS

t

19118 Cl)ryaler Filth Avenue, load· ' - - - - - - - - - .Appliance Parts And Service: AU
1881 Plymouth Aclalm Auto, Alii Name Branda Over 25 Years El·
FM Stereo, TMt, CruiM, PS, PB, periance All Work Guaranteed
-Tlrea, 13,1100, 814-3117:7251 . French City l.laytag, 614· 448:

2511-1&amp;111, 814·25fl..e188.

love

45 B-baller - :

I

11184 Torry 31' dual ultt, ac, _,.
ing, Jacko, many axno. Must to appreciate, $8,000 firm. 304· ,
8112·2e 18.

.ld. t1.500. 304-e75-1e51.

w•

, ,
sound a
39 Arid
expenae
42 Pfgs' homes . '
43 Hat holders :
44 Zhlvago'a

.,. UNSC
. RAMBLE
W ANSWER

dames 24Ft., 11173 Holiday Ram- :
tier 23Ft. 197.1 FloeiWing 17ft. ,
81 ........ 1511 .

nas.

38 Healtatlon

8

1~1::8:::7-::
7 ~P~ro~w-.-le-r-:2:::0-:F~t.-,-.-1'='97"'1"w=u.

Home·

·

u- a metal .~

.._....._...__,..._....._...__, you de~o~eiop from step No. 3 below .

__

1-:-~--~-----

.......,

acceaeory

37

t-1--ri_I,,_G'Ir~:-I,..I,~o'-TI~~--~~i~i ~~:~~:h~~~i~g ~:d~

1:----------

81 o

,•
·:
transection '
28 Concerning · :
(2 wda.)
:
29 Electric
;
fllhol
:.
30 Edltor'a note ·
. 34 Man'o

My favorite science professor gravely told my clas s,
.
. . .. "What people decide to see
,..--:--::--:------., may depend on what they are

Parte
Acceuortes

SE RVICE. S

· '

Its capit al
26 Bank

I

a

a lmpleton

22 Perch
-:
23 Guldla
.
24 Small weight •
25 Ilea Molnea li

....._
I CGila dot
10 Wl'lllr

~

tor .Sale

1

•40IIIila
Qlale......

4

Auto
&amp;
'87 Ford Tempo, 4 cyl, automatic. 760
AIC, air bags, caaHtte, looks,
runs goad, 11200, 814-247-4292.
::-~~-------..,.~--~ 1
Budget Transmi11ionl, UHd ~
"88 Tt&gt;un-d SC, two door, 3.1 b~ilt, All Types. Acceaslbla To ;
litre, V-e, elite model turbo , PS, OVer 10,000 Tran1mtulon.
P8. AC, 5 tpeed. power seats
81&lt;·245-5877
and lockl, "Groat Car; S6500
nfl., 614·992· 7~ 78 or 814·949- New gaa tanks, one ton truck
2879,
.. radillorl, lloor tnatl, ....
.
D I R Auto, Ripley, WV. 304-372·
1970 Dodge Dart Swinger, 2door. 31133 or 1·800·273-9329.
han top, 6 cyl, ps, auto, 1::~:;....;..;:::;.:;;.:.::::;;;...
3~. 5c9m,illl , garage kopr , like 790
Campers
- · 12.800. 304-s7e-21H17.
Motor Homes

=~~~-~~~~------

.

'

WT [ ·.PtOO'T f&lt;Nll..l ~~~
eliW&gt; PITT... _.., f'IJCNE:. t-1~

IN&lt;:A..A.., M,"(

,.__18 &amp;.u-to·750 ...,.
..,. '"

TRAN SPOR TATIO N

2511-fMD

m '" IIH042.

-~

1998 Hondl 400 Foreman four·
1
Polled Hertford Heifer 8 Monthl wheeler, green, ai• weeks otd. l
Old
258ehowroom condition, $5500 firm; 1
.814·
1385.
...-blaclo,l350:8.14-142-3802. I

;;;1~~=Do;.;.d:-g;.;.l'::Shad&lt;M=~E:;;$.;_4_C_~-

a .....

YOIJil L.lfe6P AN: ·
GOULI&gt; USf A
LITTL.i MO,e L.lff
ANP A ~OT
L.i~$
__.-:.,...., 6PAN!

-er •

PltppiH- motlllr Clllll...._, II· .- • • . . . - cWI, Itt &lt;rp 11 putt , _ - • Or rlpiiro. ..._ Ll: ;:
·lh•r Reg, Pomeranian, will bo any tt811er, one ton roll deck, , cenaed ... ctrlclan. Ridenour ~'
1111111 hOII..,etl, .-dy fall. 25, $11,200,11+4112--llpni. Electri cal. WV00030e, 3o.t-875- •

Brand ,_ ~ tiue

I~~~====~::~~~~~~----~------~----------------------------,
FtlANr.LY, ·~ T"INIC

l

Gorrnln_,, 011513--2822.

3Go . .

.. IClnccino eMit
I Ao Ia II
S 8 I 1C8
urtl111dll)t
7 .._ ........

Eut
Pau
Pau
Pus
Pass
Pau

When looking for a deal for
Valentine's Day, I turned to Patricia
Fox-Sheinwpld's boot, "Husbanda and
Other Men rve Played With." It con·
tains one of my favorite passages In
any bridge book, which is sadly too
long to reproduce in full here. Fox·
Sheinwold met a "gorgeou~ hunt of
man" during a mixed pairs event.
They were in opJI')sition on this deal.
With that North hand, I would have
rebid three no-tnunp rather than four
clubs with such poor trumps.
Ironically, though, six clubs Is the best
slam, a spadl! ruff in the South hand
being the 12th trick.
.§Wl!.t'UQWGfl !Ill hll.lll:IIW-m in six
- · .,;_no-trump tn no ttme.1h0Ufcl he play
West for the heart ace, heart jack or

1

Dtnlat .Auatln !ltnual Troadmlll
Digital Rtlcf· Ou~ 2 llo~lha Old ,
..,, 814-44&amp;-3113.

Boots By Rodwlng, Chi-a,
Tony lama. Gua.ra~~~ Loweat

MA'AM I

2 Aegillered Angus Bulls. 13 740
MotorC""IeS
llonlha01dll4-381-9798.
I-------•·--- :
-/lJ=:HE::N:-:-S~Lt:-::-:-VE:::ST=()CI(-:. ~SA1.--E-S- 1969 Yamaha 300 Four
Special Sale: 'Sa!urday, F•bruary 04 Big Bear Goad Condition, '
17th. 1 P.M. SeN1ng: 00 HNd 01 $2,800 080. 614·367.0239 After :
Cows, Some With Calve a, I 5 I·S~gj=
· -:-::-:-:-:-:---:-- :--::-Yearling Sto~ro. 8 Hellero. I 1 1g80 LT·IO Suzuki 4 whoaler,
~~-M~I~Th
&gt;
Ill Sold! All Conoignmento Wt!· ~,~·.:"t""'· $!300,, 81 4- l
come, Trucking Available , 014·
1991 2sox Honda,' 4 Wheeler,
!ill2·2322.114-8118-:s531 .
Hay Bought And Said, Horot And ~50, 6l 4·448-IIU5. 814-448·

Dairy OuaMty. By The Semi Loads,

PDtl!"l(lllllr.)

2 lloutltaon bNM

llllnga
,......
• Alllcla of filth
33 !xpacl .
• Alllhar .
Glcdnel

By Phillip Alder

18,200 miles, excellent conclibon, :
asking $17,200 &amp;14· 367·0285 or
81H49-2481ahor&amp;pm.

LivestOCk

~

The day
for bridge lovers

Concrttt &amp; Ptutlc SepliC 'tanka,
soo Thru 2,0!)0 Gallona Rtin
e..na Enterprl-. JilaiiOn, OH
I-IOCHI37-8121.
•

Barbie battery powered. Jeep,
185: largo boys botttry pojoored
rucue Jeep, 1120: exctlltnt
conclltlonl, 814-~5453.

ON, YES(

PARSON?

AKC Atglatared Black I White .
..-4
Paklngaao Pupa, Will Be Atlcfy Ooon ·Auto, Air, Tilt, Cauettl,
For Thai Ya!endnt'l SWH-r~ 27,000 Milt1 Alklng 18700 814·
$175 Eacll, 114-2511 8QII8.
01' 114-251-e487.
AKC Roglatered, Show Oualitr ~Au-.,
~~--:Diaf~ltlr~wl.:.l.;.l...:.,.
rYingt
. ...,.-ft.
Malo Cocker Spaniol P.up~; nanclnt IYen lf .10UJhaVI been
GQi&gt;d - " ' · Exctlltnt Marll· turnejl down elo.tWhtra. Upton
lnga, rWhllt a Tan .In Color, Equipment Uaed Cars. 394,-458Dolt Ollllrll: 1/SIIH. kin, 1210. 114-318-2728.
'
lin~ Financing Guaran-. Wl1h
Gtt a j~ on fiHI. Supple~ Minimum
Down &lt;&gt;r T,.da.ln. c;a11
i)'lonthly 101 prwarr10 wllh HAP- ~114-441-2117
.
•
py JACK TABLICKS. R . t ~-___;_;._..;,._
tdult .... on doga
tind wu~t aalh 1984 Qocrga s~lrl~ 4
condition• coat n'turllly. .RaG · eyt ...- .
ooridltliln,
FEED I SUPA.Y, at...-..114.
Si1D00 ...-1 NL 11 .........- 1
..,...
· ..,......, ·
Golden Retrl--::..=111 AKC, 720 1l\lc:U lor
.100. Sl!oto'
114-'78·
.
·
21111 ~ flor!l, ...
'

2 good heedng I!OYOI. Also 1870
~- ..... 304-87551158.

Sou..

BARNEY

I

·

Two Peevey S.P.· 1, Mork Ill Ser·
1977 Pontiac Ventura, 4 cytinclor
Counrry Furnlwro. 304-11758820. ies, 150 watt speakers with YaAI 2 N, 8milos. Pt Plaa ..n~ WV. ·maha 8 channel 290 wau pow- motor, auto transmlll!on, goad
ered mixer with ca1e, make an cond.. whole car 1100. Call 30•·
Tua•Sat 11-8, Sun 11·5.
excellent sound ayatem , $750, 4511-1042.
Do II Youroell &amp; Save On Carpet 304-8112-2283.
1979
Toyota
Crelllda,
6 Vinyl Floor Covering, Mollohan
73,000r:nilea, top cond l11on,
U~iiY
lraller.
tinglo
axle.
14"
draa,
Corpeto, Rt 7 N, 814-448·7444.
8 112 X 4 112 bod, $250. 30-1·175 12.500. 304-875-41132.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES 25811.
1982 5.0 HO, Muatang. 4spd.
Washers, dryers, refrigerators,
Violin, cur•lna, canning auppliea, candy I!IPPie red, exc . cond. lnrangeo . Skagga Appliances , 78
iido I out 31J4.175-15M.
Vino Srroet, Caii814·448· 73DS, picturn, dreaMra, mirrors; 1988
Cougar. g3,000 milea. excellent
1·800-499·3499.
1982 Cadillac, needs battery,
condlon, 114·992·3244.
S300. 304-4175-41512.
LAYNE'S FUANrruAE
Walhor &amp; dryer, $75 lor bolh, rid·
Complete home furnishings.
1ng lawn mower. S200. 8149·992· 1983 D!Mfge Aries. Call 304-675·
Hours: Uon -Sal., 9-5 ..' 614· 448·
.3307. :;
2143.
0322, 3 mlloo out B•levillo Pike
Freo Delivery.
Wooden Kltcheh Table &amp; 4 19S. Monte Carro, now 300 on·
Chalrt, Good Condition , $150. gine, n'ew tite~ and dual exhauat,
PICKENS FURNITURE
new paint, Iota more, liking
614·379·2728.
-lUted
$3300- or call Gary F. Hyaoil,
304-8751450
814-092-53111.
Building
550

VIRA FURNRURE

Dealer: South
West Nertlc
It
Pus 1•
2•
Pau 44
••
. Pau ••
·4NT
Pau 5 t
&amp;NT
Pau Pan
Opening lead: •

8~9 NH RoU:nd Ballf 489 NH 1990 Dodge Caravan New Front ;
Haybint, Both Excellent Condi· Tires, Brakes &amp; Baits, Looka1
lion, Antl1 Adami Dairy, 814·379· Groatl V·6 3.0 Llror, $4,1100, 814-~

Hra.&amp;14-367-71102.

1

Vulnerallle: Neither

-:-::-:---:--:----:- '

..

.

24- R*l'r
rt Uo a~

•A K Q to

v-e

Ohio.

., . . . . ,Ill

.10 g 8
tAKJ!09 ·

111811 Ranger 4•• Super Cob,
automatic, air, fiberglass topper,·
17500, 814-992·70611aflor Spnt
c••n Cheuy s.co 4 WD, 5 =·~
Bedtiner, New Tires, New rana- :
mlation, $5,500, Coil Between 0 t
A.M. ·9 P.M. lion ·Sat, 114-258- •
1443.
.
I

245.0717.

11 - tty

41 Femlla
........

••

Aopaired, &amp; Robult In Slock. . llusey Ferguson 250 Dleleil-":"'-.,_---~--'- •
Tractor With Loader With 700 94 Ford F=cso 4X4 XLT, loaded, •
Ceil Ron Etlln~ 1-100-537-8528.

modiclne-. 304-117!&gt;M7~.

Houaehold
Goods

610 FamrEqu...-nt

AEIWKilrIIOIOAS

Circle Motel, Gallipolis, OH 6 1 ~ - 5157~
446·2001 or 814-367·0812. Eflo· Ralrlgeratoro, StoVOI, Walharl
clancy Rooms, Coble, Air, Phone, .And Dryora,- AII R-ndltlona~
MICrowave &amp; Rofrigera10&lt;.
And GauraniHdl ftOO And Up,
Roomi for rent - welek or ri'lonth. Wll~. l14 eetl441 .
Stlrdng a1 1120/mo. CHllla Hotel.
Remington 1100 · 18 Gage 2 Bar·
611-4411-g580.
roll Very Nlct, AuGer 10.zz fi:SS:
Sle8ping rooms wUh cooking. RuQtf 91111 $285; llarlln 22 llag.
Also trailer 1pace on river. All S135: Morlln 2:t Semi·AuiO Rille
hook-ups. Call after 2:00 p.m., 189: H&amp;A 22 Revoiver 189; Hun·
drods 01 Dolloro Worth 01 Moe
304· 773-5851, llaaon WV.
Toolo. Dovo'a Swap Shop 8129
S.R. 7 N. ChHhlra, 011 814·11117·
460 Space lor Rent
7108.
For Rant: Total Electric, Empty
Mobil&amp; Home Lot, Concrete Pad, Aomodollng, 7 intorior doorl, .4 Illfold door~. 2 elCterlor I 110rm
No Fell, 814-387-7436. .
door~ 2 baCh vanitlollolnk 2

MER CH A NOISE

SOUTH

.w..r.

·~~-=~~~--------=- 4WD, topper, now point, gooa
Fender Squire Stratocuter &amp; lhlpe. 304-876-5624. ,
Sidekick Ampllfter, Good Condi· I-:..:.....:--::--- = -- - , tlon, 1225, Coill14 448 0070, Af· 1985.S.10 . 304-87548!59.
tor SP.II.
.
111811· Ford E150 Convorlion Von,
Auiome•c. Crulu, 4 Deluxe Cap.
tains, Oueen Size Boncti Foldou~
Enellent Exterior I Interior
$5500 814-448-2847.

a

Rainbow awtepor wtall attach·
...... al&lt;. oond., $-425. 304-713-

Rooms

•• 3

King alzo bed $100; U lsuzu,
run1 good, .body's rough, $1 2"50,
88 Mazd• runs good, 5 ap.,
$1CH!O, 814-992·7141 .

2744.
lntertlwm &amp; lllllor llobllo Home
Furnacaa. Gat, 011 a Eleccrlc In 04 Catapljlar Dozer With Wench
Stock. Large Dfttributer Bur Out 15,500, OBO: Fordaon Tractor,
ol Now Mobile Home Furnac.._ 12,500, 080, 814·258-1252, 181~ ·
Bank Flnanplng Avatlabl_oJ..Call 258-1118.
BenntHI Mobile Home H1G
CLG At 114·448·8411 or 1·800· · Gehl ·grindlt' mixer, NH 7ft haybine, Dwantona 7h hayblno, t2h
872-51187.
tranaport dlac. All good c:ond.
3()4..273-4215.

1148-2248 afltr Spm.

Fumlshecl

Prlcee AI ShOt Call, GafliPOIIa.

•

I and 2 boodooorn lplfb!llnll, lur·
nllhad and unlurnlllhOII, ucurlry
d'"ait requfred, no pelt, 11 4•

GOV~ FORECLOSED Hom.•

N. 3rd, Mlddoport. ~bodtoom, lur·
ni shed.' Deposit &amp; refarencea .
304·612·2588.

31J4.882-2388.

nice and clean, depo111 requued ,
no inside pats. 614·992-3090.

Wonlld To Buy: S•nding Timber,
-~ 814-381-11908.

Electric Wheelchairs / Scooters,
New lUted, Scooter IWhHichiolr
Lilts, Stairway Elevators. Lift
Chalra, Bowman·• Homecare,
814-le7283.

RENTAL S

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommend• that vou do bull·

...._ Anytime. 614-387.()812.

Furnlohtd Elllclency All Udlltlaa
Paid, Share Bath, 1145/Mo., 91D
Second Avenue, Galllpolia, 814·
448-3945.

2

.743

-57-0-...-Mu-ak:l-1-- 730 Vans l 4-WDI
lnltrumentl
187g Ford Custom 250, 4apd;

Di1ney Area 5 Day, • Hotel
Nights, UM Anydmo, Paid $310,
Soll $100,614-470-27118.

5

EAST
· •ao t 7 3
•AJ72

at&lt;:. 304-ll82-21l21. ,

540 Mlscelllneoul
Marchandlee

&amp;

tQ. 7

Ira a cfaulc l 1079 Chevy 112ton
·short bed•. almo't t ~mpt.lteft reltored Including new palht. Real
boaury, 4 - drive, IIIII now Inner, outer tenders, bed, doors,

•

01!-14-tl

6J 8 G

(lito -1$10,1100, ell-441-41173

Downatairs. Utilillea Furnllhed,
Clean, No Peta, R•ler4Hlce, 0•
poalt Required. 814-4411-1519.

ruOities.

EEK&amp;MEEK

1885 Ford Aangtr X~ ca~mon

GrMn, Auto, IW, Sltreo,

s-

Ntw Bank Ropoo. Only 4 left Sill
In Wltrr&amp;n!y. 30-1·75571g1 .

NO
aA Q
•K Q

· l'1llllon

·= ,. AII.Me'.
,,.._.._

19g2 Chevy Extended Ctb With
Mark Ill Converaion, Loaded I A
Real Head Turner. Ju1t 37,000
lllloa, 814-448-0571.

Country Side Apartmenll, Nico 2
Bedroom~ AC, Will, Water,
er Garabge lnoluded, $350/Mo.
Deposit Raqu lrpd, 51:J.g22-0294.

Rlvertldo Apartments In Middleport. From $232· 1355 . Call 814·
992·5084. Equal Houling Oppor-

5586.

11 'IIj ... , _
-.... II ........
lee Mllilllld
"
17VW
57 sua 1111

1981 Ford F : 100 4x2 E xtandeq
Cab 8' Bed No Ruse, No Dlntl,
AC, Tilt, Cruiu, Dual Gal Tanks,
18,500,614-318-2171 .

BEAUTIFUl APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES . 52 Waatwood Drive
lram $228 to 1291. Wolk to shop
&amp; movies. Call 614 · 4~8· 2588 .
Equal Houalng Opportunity.

Grac:ioua llvinQ. 1 and 2 bedroom
apartmenta at Vlllaga Manor and

1ogo Ford .F250 HD 4x4 truck.
XLT Lariat, 351 enelnt, w~lce

87~.

2bedroom opartmont, partially fuf·
nished, uliUties included. 18Cluily
&lt;ltpoeit required. 304-773-9009.

lllllrltilr!ll-

"''ll..

11 : ' or fa ott •

per to matcll !ruck 1250. 304·

2bdrm . aptl ., to tal electric, appliances furnlahed, laundrf' room
Jaciii~ea. doH to achool in town.
Appllcallona available at: Village
(treen Apta. 149 or call 8 1 &lt;\~992·
37 :1. EOH.

t4 -

1 • 5-10 1 5pNcf, Air, So!nrool,
\1-41, 11........,.737 Alltr 5 pll.

opoloa
- $8,500.
.. botl Fl'*llfall
- · 1oQOIIW,
15,000rri.,
top-

2 lloorN, Furriohocl EHic:iency, AI.
Utllltlel Paid, Downttolra, 9!8
Second A-.ro, Oallipo6s, $185/
llo. l14-441-31145.

14xll0, 2 or 3betlrt&gt;om. Only
meu 2 payrnencs to move in. No
payments alter 4yelll'a. 30-4 · 755-

Opportunity

Carol King's Finest Styling Salon,
Seeking Business Partner. Exc:~­
lant Location, Very Good 8uai-

~7.

Duplex, 2 bedroom, in Racine, no
pots, S275 per month plus dopot1181 trailer, 14x70, 2br., electric1 i~ 614·882-7843.
hell~ ill porcll, loclltd on 18 Milo
Furnished 2 Rooma &amp; Bath,

Buslneu

NOT to send money through the
mail until you have lnveat[gated
the ofloring.

1 B.clroom Neer Holzar'a Su~
Nic., 1218/Uo. Plus Utilltiel ,
LUll /Dtpoalt Requi red, 114·

13 Weak point

10 Lobe
13
:::-""'

Dreamy - Evoke • Inlay - Mikado - MAKE him MAD
My old Grandfather is fond of a famous quote. It reads
' To obtain a man's opinion of you,MAKE him MAD:

FEBRUARY14l

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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wedneedly, Februllry 14, 1991 l0

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

McVeigh's
sister says FBI tried to. scare her·during questioning .~
.
: • OKLAHOMA CITY (AP)- The
;sitter of bombing suspect Timothy
:McVeish says she broke down and
tified about him after federal
l qents threatened to prosecute her.
~ , '"They were trying to scare me,"
' leMifer McVeigh said in an interview
: ~roadc~t Tuesday on " Dateline
·NBC." "Eventually I did end up talk·
lng to them. 1 don't think I really
~·wanted to, but I did, only because I

. ' If

l

was broken down."
Ms. McVeigh described an inter- ·
rogation {OOm plastered with "big
posters with my picture on it, right
alongside my brother's pictures, and
all these list of possible charges.
against me, with everything ranging
from five years to ti]e death penally."
The agents also showed her ptelures of the death and destruction

caused by the bombing of the Alfred
P. Murrah Federal Building, Ms.
McVeigh said.
Ms. McVeigh testified under
immunity before the grand jury that
indicted her brother and Terry Nichols
in the April. 19 bombing that ltillei!
169 people. At one point during her
testimony, she dashed out of the grand
jury room in tears.:.
\ .

iCollins
·:gets to
Jceep book

·'

Federal officials have refused to
discuss her interrogation.
Ms. MeVeigh said sbe expects that
the prosecution will either call her as
a witness or let an FBI agent testify
about her statements. Stephen Jones,
McVeigh's lead lawyer, says he may
.call her as a defe~se' witness.
Under advice from her brother's·
lawyers, Ms. McVeigh would not talk

during the 'interview aboUt the case
against her brother or an)' recent correspondence between the two. •
Concerning her brother's love of
guns, she said she did not think i.t was
unusual ·when he once asked her to
send him 700 rounds of ammunition.
"No not my brother because he
'
'
shoots guns
he works gun
shows, 1'
she sai~.:.. _:_ .. ~~

Ms. McVeish, 21 , said ahe looked :
up to her brother, who ls six years old- :
er, even though at times the family ;
wouldn't even know where he was :
·living. ·
.:
"I l9ve my brother to death and I :
want nothing more th1111 to support ~
him," she said. "He's not some inhu· ~
man monster. H'
e s a normal person "..
like you and me."
:

DERSO 'S

~Jidvance

: · NEW YORK (AP) - Random
ijouse must shell out hundreds of
~housands of dollars for a Joan
:l:ollins manuscript it called unread)libleuash and won't be getting back
'4 $1.3 million advance.
! • : A jury on Tuesday found that the
·.h-year-old actress had finished one
lltearny novel promised to Random
. :aouse but failed to deliver the sec:OQd.
~ The split decision means the for'Uier "Dynasty" star can keep the
: advance and should receive more
•money from the two-book, $4 million
she signed in 1990. The contract .
" was divided equally between the

Blizzards, Floods, And Sn~w Storms
Took.Their Toll On·January Bu~iness.
We Need To Make Room For New Merchandise
So We're Making Huge Price Cuts. ·
'

aeal

,books.

0

,·

"

:

"I'm happy. It ended two years of
· ~bsolute hell," Collins said outside
;.the courtroom as she pumped her fist
;ifr the air. :
: ;' Random House had rejected both ·
:manuscripts and sued for return of the
:aclvance. Collins had countersued for
;the rest of the $4 million.
:. Her lawyer, Kenneth Borrows.
;said Random House should owe
·Collins hundreds of thousands of dolRandom House lawyer Robert
·callagy agreed that the publisher
,\Vbllld have to pay Collins more mon:;ey,1but did not know how much.
~, · The weeklong trial focused most~ly' on whether the novels, "The Rul:ing Passion" and "Hell Hath No i
Fury," were se•y potboilers or ;
.unreadable trash.
.
: Random House argued they were
:Unpublishable. Collins insisted her '
;contract - done by the late, leg~¢ndary agent Irving "Swifty" Lazar
:- guaranteed payment on delivery,
·regardless of quality.
· "Nobody beld a gun to Random
House's head to pay me $4 million,"
Said Collins, who wore high-heeled
~eather boots to court. "They were
:begging for me."
:' During three days of testimony, Collins described herself as the
~~queen of the adjectives and
f!verbs," but admitted needing lots of
editing.
::~· On her previous best-selling nov~. "Prime Time," her editor spent a
l'Veek working with her. Collins teslified. This time, Random House was
':Jbling to avoid paying off the balance
'Of her contract and provided no such
help, her lawyers maintained.

Whirlpool Dryer

* Ex-Large Capacity
* 7 cycles
* 4 temperatures

'Iars.

!:

Reg. 409.00$

Sale

~k in time to the wild, wild west.

C;With the power of a court order

Glider/Rocker Sale

.Sale $269°0 '

,••"''I!J• '289

..

.

.

* 18 cu. ft.

* Twin Crisper ·
* FREE lcemaker

Desk Sale
Reg. '449

RoUtop Se_cretary .. Sale 1249"0
Knee-hole Desk .... Sale 133!}00

Reg. '259

Drop-lid Secretary Sale 119()00

Reg. '599

Computer Desk ..... Sale 1419"0

Reg. '339

'

.

' '

.

~

'

Serta
Mattress Sale
· All Beading On Sale
AU
CURIO

• Great for extra storage
• 4 drawers
• Hickory Finish

I·

i

CABINETS

25o/o

off

·,

FREE

· No Payments
No Interest .
For 12 Months*

DELIVERY
FREE REMOVAL OF Oi.D

APPLIANCES &amp; BEDDING

'S'
..
...
i
l
DIRSO
'

Open Mondar. 'lilB:OO

The•. ao Soa. til 5:00

.,

!f 11.1:~ Dlarict' JU!Iie

"J\

'489

Chest of
Drawers

..-ea

I,

1n.e6 .

'

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' i!!tfi'Ctly .legal.
,( court clerk gave the go-ahead
. lawyers to collect the mone.y after ·
art failed to post the required $2
1111Hipn bond in an age-discrimination.
)~suit Company officials were out-

C. Clyde
kl rme d ~ verdict to
...... ll,yee1' and court

'429

'229fH'
'259fH'
1339fH' ·
'38g00

'

~i ]'he raids were unorthodox but

,
I~othm.

JU"'8•

Glider Rocker....... ~ ••• Sale
Glider Rocker•••• ~ .••••• Sale
Glider Rocker••••••••••• Sale
GlUler Rocker.~ ......... Sale

.• 1 .!. 1

. Sale $599°0

'

?!'1·would have to ihink our federf;manhals would have'other activi!li;i they could be atten!ling to rather
~ thi• charade," said Shawn Kahle,
~e~wom1111 for tile troy, Mich.. Ji;ied department store chain .
•:. In f&gt;UJust, afederal jury awarded
tlfte fomJel' Krn.rt pharmacists in the
i
$2.17 million •in back pay
d11111pa. The jury found ' that
'art enpaed in qe discrimination
,.
it bopn ~ pj:Oirarn to bring in
-~ manqemcnt team to fill
• ' ; polltiOI!I ,of phirJnflcists, Jtore

···"I!J• '319

Whirlpool

pind them, U.S. marshals ra1ded
~~ stores in Hollywood and Davie,
l~ing $45,000 in cash from the reg1£ters. They left behind the coins and .
~ks.
~:.; "Jesse James held up a \rain and
fou nts his money in the JWoods.
~se guys counted it on the counter
tp the front of everybody," said Eso,
;t3. who was shopping with his wife
lil the Hollywood store. .

,"(

. 00.
3 7 9.

* 4 cycles
* Energy Saver

Collins, whose sister Jackie is a

:E
MIAMI(AP) - For Lo~is Es~, a
SIOpptng tnp to Kmart was hke a nde

Standard Pine Bunkbed •••• Sale 1129"0
Heavy Duty Pine Bunkbed.Sale 1229"~
Book Case Pine~ Bunkbed .. Sale '299fH'

Roper Dishwasher

1Nriter of popular potboilers, had one
;iiher best-seller - her autobiogra1iliY. "Past Imperfect." The sequel
;will conclude with a chapter on .the
"ial.
·

:Feds raid
t e.gisters at
f(mart stores

·Bunk Beds

APPLIANCE SALE

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Dawatawa Pa•arar
.

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