<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="9122" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/9122?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-19T12:55:24+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="19551">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/02763d495a927c45f44aafa6d664990e.pdf</src>
      <authentication>220ae62fafe4d76e04a01e6788bd1e1a</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="29333">
                  <text>•

'

~

••

.

Plge 10 • The Dally Sentinel

••

Tuesday; February 27, 1990

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Ohio Lottery

•

~Program seeking 4-H alurtrni benefits state foundation
: The Ohio 4-H FOWtdation will
)enefit from a special program in
~ &amp;b Bv1111 F111111 lllld 4-H uc
~ up to locate 4-H alumni.
: • From Feb. 26 through March 31,
;4-H alumni may sign-up at any of the
•137 Ohio Bob Evans Restaurants. In
:COnjunction with the program, l!ob
:EVIIU Farms will make a donation to
:1he Ohio 4-H Foundation for each
-person who signs up.
: 4-H has always been a part of our
~y.• said Dan Evans, chainnaD.

of the board and chief exec:utive offi- pare itt, v.olunleer qr donor. There are
ccr of Bob Evans Farms. "We strOng- currently 4S million 4-H alumni
ly believe in the high standards 4-H nationwide.
sets and the self-confidence it instills , "So many Ohioans have been a
in our youth. Bob Evans Farms is part o( 4-H and we want to followproud to help Ohio 4-H locate the · up with them because they know betpeople who have been impacted ·ter ihan anyone about the value of 4through the years by this Ohio- H," . said Kirby Barrick, assistant
founded organization."
director of 4-H youth development.
One out of every six people in "Unfortunately, until now, we have
Ohio has been or is currently never had an lipponunity to locate
.
involved with 4-H youth develop- our alumni."
ment programs either as a member,
Kick-off for the alumni search is

~adies . Missionary
:

The Victory Baptist Church in

~iddlepon Ladies Missionary Fel~OW$hip meeting was held recently at

Abe church.
• Praidcnt Betty Barker opened the
meeting with Linda Keesee giving
1xayer. Barker announced that an
~nvitation was received from Calvary
:Jiaptist Church regarding its confer-

.

in celebration of Ohio 4-H Week,
Feb. 26 through March 3. ·
4-H is a non-fonnal, educational,
youth development program that is
offered to youth '-ge S to 19, regardless of their race, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, national origin, gender or handicap. .
Bob Evans Fanns owns and operates 386 restaurants in 19 states and
produces and disuibutes food products in 29 states and the Disuict of
Columbia.

Pick 3:

111
Pick 4:

5760

Sports, Page 4

readings and the theme evolved
around "Loving One Another" and
"Love Never Faileth." Angela Hall
shared a letter with the group from
missionary Sherry Classien explain;
ing some of the activities in the mission field. Classien expressed appreciation for continued monetary sup-

•

.a I

.

•.
port.
The closing prayer waS' given by
Margaret Nunn and refreshments
were served by Molly Johnson and
Helen Jane Brow'Lt,e&gt;those named
and Patsy Cornell,l'hyllis Hudnall,
~isa Johnson, Margll£et Nunn, Jane
Snouffer, Myrtle Q11illen, Wanda
Ashley and Jennifer Ashley.

VoL 48, NO. 211
3 II adona, 28 ......

nrug

quickly.
The Diasensor "is certainly the
hope for the future," said panelist Dr.
Joann Boughman of the University of
Maryland. "But the future is not here
today."
Dozens \lf diabetics who pleaded
with the FDA panel to let them buy
the machine were bitterly disappointed.
·
"You know nothing about this,"
Gail D'Vortez of Fort Lauderdale,
Fla., shouted at the panelists as they
outlined their concerns about the

Diasensor.
· The panelists said they were
moved by the pleas, but insisted diabetics deserved better evidence than
manufacturer Biocontrol Technology
Inc. provided that the machine works.
The company studied 23 peoplt for
a month, but the Diasensor was sensitive enough to test just eight of them
accurately at least half the time.
"I will apologize to every diabetes
patient ... in this room that I cannot
be more enthusiastic," said panel
chainnan Dr. Arthur Karrnen of

Albert Einstein College ofi'fledicine.
MR. AND MRS. DORES ARNOLD 1
"But hopefully what you want to get
is the right answer" from a diabetes
test.
~·
The FDA is not bound by advisoDores and Mildred Arnold of Patricia Hysell and Janet Jeffers oC
ry panel decisions but usually follows 33823 Hiland Road, Pomeroy, will Pomeroy; Robert Arnold of Poin
them, and FDA medical device chief observe their 59th wedding anniver' Pleasant, W.Va.; and Jimmy Joe an~
Dr. Susan Alpert immediately asked .sary Friday.
Henry, both deceased. They have sev..
Biocontrolto meet with her this week
The couple were married on eral gran~children, great-grandchil!
to figure out how to proceed.
March I, 1937 in ~eigs County by dren and great-great-grandchildren ...
There are some 16 million dia- the Rev. Alonzo Stark.
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold have
'betics in the United States. Their bodThey are the parents of six chil- Meigs County residents all
ies cannot regulate glucose ill the dren, Mary King of Long Bottom; · lives.
bloodstream

Arnolds to celebrate '59th

WHILE SUPPLIES
LA T

NO RAINCHECKS

UMT2PLEASE

39c

Sib.

aal.

Umlt 1 Please

u.s. #1.
Russett Potatoe.s

$ 29

Banquet Fried ·

10 lb.

25

oz.

Thank You

Breasts

Cherry Pie Filling
c
oz.

c

Ground

Del Monte Squeeze

Chuck

Catsup

c

28 oz.

:..o. ouble Cheese Pizza Eagle Potat
$ 89

A Gallia County bulk fuel mar- Prosecuting Attorney Brent A. Saunketer pleaded not guilty IO a charge ders said in a written statement
of theft of more than $100,000 in issued after the arraignment.
conne&lt;:tion with an alleged phony
Following an eight-month invesinvoicing scheme durihg an arraign- tigation, it has been alleged that
ment Tuesday in Gallia'County Com- Miller hilled the Ohio Valley Elecuic
mon Pleas Court.
Corp.'s Kyger Creek Power Plant at
Larry E. Miller, who operates a Cheshire for fuel that was never
BP bulk plant on Pine Street in Gal- · · delivered over a 10-year period,
lipolis, was secretly indicted on Feb. resulting in a loss of $260,502.08 to
5 by the Gallia County grand jury, OVEC.

2''

39oz.

c

Reg. $1.49 size

.•

Zesla

·~~~:::~:~s~~ - Gallipolis bulk fuel dealer

Larry Miller, left.
w
as attorneys consulted following Miller's arralgnmen•
Tuesday In Gallla County Common Pleas Court on a charge of
theft of more than $100,000 In connection with an alleged phony
Invoicing scheme. (Tribune photo)

Crackers

89c

lb. box

.

By MIKE FEINSILBER
Noting that Forbes spent $4 milAssociated Press Writer
lion on TV ads in Arizona and won
In a GOP presidential contest that some 111,000 votes, Buchanan said,
scrambles every time the voters "Clearly our momentum is not
speak, anti-Washington sen)iment tri- enough to overcome $40 a vote."
umphed again with Steve Forbes' vicGrumbled Dole : "What he does ,
tory in Arizona. Forbes' rivals uied to when he spends all that money, it
make his free-spending ways an issue helps Buchanan and drives me
today, but the publisher insisted his down ."
.
message, not his money, was carrying
Replied Forbes: "You spend the
the day.
money to get the message across and
Bob Dole managed to keep hope the message carries you .... Senator
alive with his dual wins in the Dako- Dole has spent far more money in this
tas, but he still hasn't won outside his campaign than I have."
native Midwest. He said he'll prevail · Forbes is paying for his campaign
in the first test of Southern sentiment, from his own pocket and so can spend
in South Carolina on Saturday.
. all he wants. His rivals take govern'
A week ago, Forbes looked like a ment money and must live under govOash in the pan, his Oat-tax idea under emment spending limits. Dole spent
fire as a gift to millionaires, Now, sur- so freely early that he's running into
prisingly, he.leads all contenders in a problem.
early-state delegates.
With nine more GOP contests in
Commentator Pat Buchanan, the the next seven days, the ·rivals turned
other anti-establishment figure in the immediately to solidly conservative
Republican presidential race, was a South Carolina, which conducts a
big loser in Tuesday's primaries and stand-alone primary Saturday.
blamed Forbes' deep pockets. So di1
The Palmetto State's mix of disDole.
placed textile workers and conserva-

Morton offered two pieces of
advice to the newly reorganized
Meigs County CIC:
First, "Land isn't worth anything
until someone is willing to pay for it.
Next, "A bean field is not an indusJ
tri.al P!lfli..:wAib&lt;?!it &lt;!lti!i\il:i)pn·si~e."
"YOu've got ·tb liave sqmething
special:· A sign ih the middle of a
bean field is not it."
Currently the Hocking Valley CIC
has real estate assets of $4.4 million
and cash assets of $400,000, Morton
said:;To date, the CIC has assisted in
the creation of2,000 to 3,000 jObs in
Hocking County since 1960.
.
The Hocking Valley CIC is a private corporation consisting of a ISmember board of trustees that also
serves as the chamber of commerce

Saunders said the the investigation
'!'as conducted by agents of the Ohio
Attorney General's office; the Bureau
of Criminal identification and lnvesligatiQII, assisted by auditors from
American Electric Power Corp.;
OVEC and its security; and auditors
from BP headquarters in Cleveland.
Judge Joseph L. Cain set Miller's
bond lit $50,000 and a pre-uial hearing has been scheduled for 10:30 a.m.
on Thursday, April 25. Miller, who

WASHINGTON (AP) - House
Speaker Newt Gingrich is expressing
fresh hope that congressional Repub.licans and President Clinton can
make a budget deal, possibly in the
next few weeks.
Gingrich, R"-Ga., said Tuesday
that "the failing Clinton economy ..
has renewed interest in an agreement
to balance the budget in seven years
ana cut taxes.
"America needs a balanced budget agreement to get lower interest
rates," he said. "America needs a bat-

Deter ent
C~ips

·Repord high temperatures
are.reported across state
By Tbe A.aoclated Press

.

298 SECOND STREET
POMEROY, OHIO
PRICES EFFECTIVE FEBRUARY 28, 1 - ON,~Y

.

tive Christians could provide a sympathetic hearing to Buchanan's anti abortion and pro-tariff themes . But
the entire Republican hierarchy in the
state has lined up behind Dole .
Next Tuesday, the pace intensifies
with eight primaries in Colorado,
Connecticut, Georgia. Maine. Maryland, Massachusetts, Rhode Island
and Vermont.
Forbes said in a pre-dawn new s
conference in his native New Jersey
that he's pinning his next hope on the
March 7 primary in New York, which
awards 93 delegates. "I think we have
a very good chance of winning New
York."
Dole, once the man to beat, professed satisfaction despite his loss in
. Arizona and predicted he would prevrul in South Carolina, dominating the
headlines over the W\'Ckend.
"My view is I' II be the Republican nominee," Dole said. "It may
take a bit longer than we planned." ·
Lamar Alexander, who fini shed
fourth in all three' of Tuesday 's contests , hoped his campa1gn of "new

r

ideas " would catch fire in some of
next Tuesday 's primaries in states
with moderate voting traditions. Of
the top four, he is the only candidate
without a victory. He says he must
have one soon to remain alive.
Because the field isn 't winnowing
and no clear leader has emerged.
some Republicans suggest the nomi nation will he settled by the convention, not the primaries.
.
"If no one's running away with it
and you ' ve got people taking turns at
one-two-three in the primaries, ·il
appears to me that there's a real
chance no one would go to the con- .
vcntion with a majority," said Gov.
Mike Leavitt of Utah, who suppons
Dole.
. Tuesday's results "(ere especially
bmer for htgh -Oying insurgent
Buchanan, who was left empty-handed despite drawing enthusiastic Arizona crowds over lhe weekend . He
sounded subdued: "I believe we won
the bailie for Arizona's hearts and
minds. We had the fire, energy, enthuContlnuect on page 3

board of ·UUstees, a seven-member
executive committee and one paid
executive (Morton).
The advantage of a private CIC is
that it provides the privacy many corporations require , he explained. A private CIC is.op~ bqund .by law to disclose its dealings as public corporations are.
·
··
; Julia Houdashelt. county economic development director, gave an
update on Hlluse Bill440, part of the
Jobs Bill Ill package prepared by
Lieutenant Governor Nancy Hollister.
HB440 calls for a revolving loan
· program, a private/public partnership
and other provisions to aid rural counties. Part of the measure, awaiting a
signiuure by Governor George V.
Voinovich, will help rural counties
create indusuial parks and buildings.

posted the bond, was represented at
the arraignment by Columbus attorney Thomas M. Tyack.
While the investigation continues,
il is suspected that at least one other
OVEC employee, now retired,
worked in collusion with Miller 10
allegedly defraud the Kyger Creek
Plant, Saunders said.
Saunders said a second arrest in
the case is expected in the near
future.

C.t.C: SPEAKER- Hugh Morton, director of the Hocking County Community Improvement Corporation, addrened the Meiga
County CIC at Its meeting Tuesday night In Pomeroy. Morton
explained lhe hlatory of the Hocking County CIC which hie, since
1960, acquired $4.4 million In real estate asaets. ·

Record hign temperatures were reported across Ohio on Thesday,
the National Weather Service said.
The ~ords were reported in Dayton, Zanesville. Columbus, Cleveland,· the Akron-Canton area, Mansfield, Cincinnati and Toledo.
.
The. highs at Dayton and Zane5ville reached 70 degrees, surpassina the mlllk of 66 ·set on this date in both cities in 1976. In Columbus. the high of 71 broke the record of 6S set in 1896.
The high was 65 degrees in Cleveland, where the previous record
was 64 iit 1976; 65 at Akron-Canton, where the mark was 62 set in
1976; 6&lt;7 in Maallfield, breaking· the record high of 60 degrees set in
1976; 71 in Cincinnati, breaking a 100-yew-old mark of 70 degrees
and 66 in Tolec\o, one degree higher than the 1976 record.

anced budget agreemen~that includes standing bill or legislation - needRoth 's committee is writing a
tax .reduction for job creation and a ed ·by mid-March - to raise the welfare and Medicaid bill based on a
tax deduction for working mid4le- nation's $4.9 trillion debt limit.
comprom1se offered by the National
clllss families."
His optimism about lhc prospects Governors' Associati&lt;fi\!!ealth and
Gingrich and Senate Majority for a speedy deal ran counter to a Human Services Seotetary Donna
Leader Bob Dole, R-Kan . planned 10 more cautious tone in closed-door Shalala was prepared to tell Roth's
meet today to work on budget strat- discussions among 1'-opublican sena- panel today that the administration
egy. Deep differences remain tors. Sen. William R~th, R-Del., opposes parts of the plan but sees 11
between Republicans and Clinton on chrurman of the Senate Fmance Com- as a good starting point, according 10
how to cut taxes and wring savings . m1ttee, told them 11 would be.dtffi9ult a source familiar with her testimony
from entitlement programs such as · to draft an enutlement-spendmg o~r- :.---Who spoke on condition of anonymi·..J
·
Medicare, Medicaid and welfare. ' haul acceptable to Congress an'lr ty.
'
Gingrich said the vehicle for the Clinton in ti~e for it to be paired with
Sen. Pete Domenici, R-N.M. ,
balanced budget could be a free- the debt hmtt btll.
Continued on page 3

House moves to close loophole in state's ethics law
By JERI WATERS
Associated Preu .Wrlter
COLUMBUS -The House has
moved to close a loophole in the
state's ethics law regarding the disclosure of gifts to legislators.
Representatives approved the
amendment to the Joint Rules of the
Legislawre by a vote of 97-0 on Thesday:
·
The amendment requiring lawmakers to disclose all gifts totaling
more than· $75 a year from a single
lobbyist was proposed afteradrafting'
error in the 2-)'ear-old ethics refonn
law allowed the $7.S disclosure limit
to be applied per gift, not per year.
There was concern that could
allollf lawmakers to receive frequent
gifts valued 11 $74.99 or less without
disdQsing them.
In other action, the House:
·- Passed
a bill 64-34 )ll'otecung
'

employers from lawsuits over things
they say in job references. The Senate passed the bill 20-13.
- Voted 83-11 to retain highway
speed limits at current levels, with
some limited exceptions.
- Passe&lt;' a bill 98-0 prohibiting
the ·improper handling of infectious
ageats.
.
'I1!e sponsor of the employer-reference bill, Rep. Roben Corbin, RCente~il.le, said .employers were
~ompl~ntng ';hat tt was beco~Rtng
. tncreas1ngly difficult to check references because of the fear they would
be sued.
Not only an: employees suing for
defamation, but new employers are
filing la~suits against com~ies for
not ~amtng them of potential p'rob-o
~ms when they. hire a bad employee.
Under the bill, employers would
be protected
. from lawsuits unless it

can be proven they intentionally proAn emerge~cy clause was also
vided information that was false, ·approved to allow the bill take effect
given in bad faith l,lr maliciOus.
~ before March 3, the deadline for pasPeggy Chavez, II lobbyist for the sage under a federal law that permits
Oh io Education Association , said she states to set their own highway
. did not think the bill was necessary speeds. 1be bill goes to Voinovich for
hul was pleased the wording in the hi s signature.
·
original version had been changed
Rep. Otto Beany, D-Columbus
and was more Cquilllble to emp.IG~es. won passage of llis bill to prohibit ~.
"It will at least give employees the person from possessing an infectious
·
opportunity to challenge if there are substance.
evaluations or recommendations giv1be state had no law against posen that are not accurate,IIJII the.hi~h- 'lsessing disease-ca11sing substances
er standard would have made tt v1r- and was forced to charge a Lancaster mari fast year with receiving stolen .
tually impossible," she said.
l:fouse Transportation Chairman property after three vials of bubonic
Sam Bateman, R-Milford, won pas~ plague bacteria allegedly were found
sage of an amended highway bill. at his home.
•
·
Bateman's bill would retain existing · The bill mak~s ·p oueuioi) of an ; .
speed limits but allow a study of cer- inf¢c:tious substance a a'ime JIU!Iilh-• '
lain highways where ~ might ,able up to · JO ¥ears in prison lad' a, · ,; : ·
increase from S.S mph to 6.S mph.
Imaximum fine of$10,000.
-. . ~ •

--

.

.

I
. l

35cenll
Co._.....,..

House Speaker Gingrich says budget deal possible

Tide

•

79c

A Gannett

Area bulk fuel dealer is charged with theft ·

21

Chef Boy RD

·48 oz.

Chicken
$ 99

Chicken
LB.

LB.

By JIM FRf.EMAN
"ACIC allows achamberto put its
news staff
money where its mouth is," Reed
Fifteen uustees for the newly res: said. A CIC can do anything a private
urrected Meigs Coanty Community business can except lend money, he
Improvement' Corporation were expl~iried .
apllf'Ovec! at I! CIC meeting Thesday
People say "Why don't 'they' do
niglt at the Meigs,CoUnl)l Senior Cit- something?", Reed commented.
· ' .....,n..,..
,.,~ ·~·
•
"We .are 'th.ey'," he lidCfed: ·
tzens
.
1\P.P.Qinted were: E11gene FacemyGuest speaker for the meeting was
er, Bruce Fisher, Horace Karr, Nan- Hugh Morton, dtrector of the Hockey Campbell, Joe Bolin, Roscoe . ing County CIC.
·Mills, John :Musser, Jennifer Sheets, --. · Morton explained the Hocking
Steven Story, Chris Tenoglia, Paul County CIC ~ formed. in I960.
Reed, Judy Williams, Roben Wingett, Since then, it4las built and leased·
John T Wolfe and Dewey Horton .
buildings and sites to companies
CIC president Paul Retjl opened ·such as Goodyear, Lockheed and the
the meeting, attended by about 45 state department of health and envtpeople •. by explaining the difference ronmenlal protection agency.
"We created assets we leveraged
between a CIC and a chamber of
commerce.
into other assets," he explained.

Sent!MI

Sugar
$ 69

Lettuce

I

~

Mei9s CIC OKs ·new trustees

Domino
HEAD

en Ine

Forbes 'back in race

FORBES WINS ARIZONA· Steve Forbes celebrates his primary
tlectlon victory In Arizona Tuesday with daughter Sabina, 22,
right, looking on. Aa winner, Forbes will gamer all39 of Arizona; a
deleglltes. (AP)

.\

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, February 28, 1996

.fDA panel says no to blood-sugar testing device
•
· lty LAURAN NEERGAARD
. ~IOCI8tecl Preu Writer
. • GAITHERSBURG, Md. (AP) ~
biabetics will have to wait to get a
• ilain-free ,way to measure blood sug)r while the maker of a controversial
Jlucose test figures out how to prove
i\ works.
! Diabetes experts told ~ Food and
Administration on Monday that
1he Diasensor, in line to become the
:C.rst non-invasive glucose test, must
lle studied more before it can be sold.
:J'hey urged that research be done

Windy and cold
tonight, lows In the ~­
Thuraday, partly cloudy,
high In mld-30s.

Buckeye 5:
2-3-12-15-37

Fellowship reports on ·mission activity

ence scheduled for Man:h IS and 16.
Devotions were presented by
Verenia Barkman from Juanita Purcells book entitled "Be Patient."
• Barkman also gave scripture references from Galations, Jeremiah,
Gospel of John and I Corinthians.
·Various members shared in scripture

.

No.1
Kentucky
tops Auburn

�Wednesday, F~ruary 28, 191¥

I

:;'Commentary

· page2
Wed~y,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

. The Dally Sentinel• Pege 3

.----Local briefs--

OHIO Weather

February 28,·1996

Thuralay, Feb. Z9

storm outages reported

AccuWeidher• forecast

The Dail){. Sentinel

•

•

'BttmBsfwi in 1.948

•
•
••

'.

111 Court St., Ponwroy, Ohio
614-992-2156 • Fax: 992-2157

•'

.·! lr

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
·•

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

3110-.

Lottora to ltJfllldifor,. - -· 11Niy lhoukl I»,_. thM!
Allar• IUII/0&lt;1 to tdllfiJf IIKf mull I» 1/gned ondlncl..,. _ _ ondiW,.._n..,.
ber. No unolgnlld ,.,.,. will I» pub/1-. 1A1rw.. • - I» In flOOd •ddru•lng IIIUN, not ,_...,MIIU.&amp;

.
~Letters

.

to the editor

:Kids. need your help on March 19
Once upon a time, I heard an old saying • "You can't teach an old dog new
: trjcks." This plausil'&gt;le saying perhaps has a dual edged meaning.
• # 1) Some of our old dogs aren't learning any new !ricks, (or are unwilling)

and

#2) It's easier to teach a new, young dog new !ricks. A third assumption that
did not figure in the "double edged sword scenario", simply because lriedged swords aren't common place is
#3) to take the saying at face value: if you wait 'til the dog gets older, it's
harder to teach him new tricks.
• Even dogs, by natural instinct, take care of their young. Most animals naturally do this . The distinction between man and animal according to the
Bible is that man has the ability to think.
· . "[ suggest that everyone that has a non-house pet dog exchange sleeping
arrangements with the animal in the month of January. In other words, put
the dog in your bed and you sleep in the doghouse (Writer's note: !Jiankets,
portable heater, nor clean straw are allowed in the doghouse). If you have
larger animals that require a bam, try doing the same thing? Then ask yourself, after nursing frostbite on your appendages, "Does the building make a
difference?'' The answer is clear.
·
· . Voters of both the Eastern and Southern Local School Dislricts have a
very important choice to make on March 19. Will the thinking voters take
care of their voun~. or pass the buck on to their child's ge_neration to worry
about? I urge all votets to take care of their young.
Yes, the building .does make a difference. Pride and self-esteem, among
other things. Is a building the only key to education? Heck No! We all know
that is not true, but the bond issues are for something much more than a buildft&gt;g. These buildings will be fully equipped with state-of-the-art science
equipment, computers, library facilities, and gym facilities. Right now, our
kids have very little or none of these things. Many of the things they have are
ancient. Some of the equipment my dad used in school, I used in school, and
now my kids are using. And we are preparing our kids for the 2 Jst century?
. 1 have a personal computer at home that has everything that I purchased
for around $2,000, not the quote one disgruntled voter quoted at $3,500. My
kids, .ages 8, 6, and 3, all work on the computer. I'll admit my 8-year old
qaughter is the most advanced and my three year old son is learning, but
what he can do is amazing. Perhaps, I should take R. Weaver's advice
('1/22/96 Letter to the Editpr) and keep the computer away from them until
they are in high school or college. Bull! My kids can use a mouse, load and
use CD software, and create documents on word. processing software.
Shouldn't all the kids of Meigs County be entitled to this as the IOds in
Cleveland are?
,
.,
.".
·I have heard a lot of disgruntled voters complain about ho~&gt;~much a "levy
would hurt them, but they never say anything about how.it·wiU. he~ the kids.
B~causc I am a teacher, the son of a teacher, a former schoofboard member,
and voter, I have seen what its like on both sides of the fence. Unless. yoiJ've
been on both sides of the feoce, I don't think one can adequately disperse
cl!iticism unless you really know what its like.
· As I tell my sports teams, there is no "!" in team. lbere is no "I" in "we,
the voters:·, but "I" should be investing in my kids. If you're an "I" person,
and had you traded places with George Washington at Valley Forge, I'm sure
w'e'd all be playing cricket and speaking with British accents today. ·
· Yes, we must do something about taKation. We firstileed to rally together at a state and national level. It's easy to fight the kids, ·because they can't
talk back and it is on matter we do have say in. The problem with taxation·
is', not at the local -level. If you have a gripe, voice it to the capital. Vote no
a&amp;ainst the levy, then tell your state representative: . "Yes, we sure showed
y,ou didn't we. And we have nothing to.show for it too."
'
· : Be Smart, Be a Thinker, VOTE YES! And get the dog a new dog house.
'
Scott D. Wolfe
Racine

a

Urges passage of of Eastern levy

•

: The Ea5tern Local School District has an opponunity on March t9ih to
ttJake a major advancement in our community. We can leverage a.relatively
small investment·· $1.614 million·· into an $8.75 million school facility·
_' a major upgrade;tO the current high school building and a new, co-located
facility for K through 8th grades. The bulk of the investment •• $7.136 millions .• is available now, as a grant from the state of Ohio.
As a former substitute teacher in each of the schools in the dislrict, I can
attest that the buildings, especially those at Chester and Tuppers P-lains and
the High School, are antiquated and grossly over-crowded.
Teachers and adminisl~iilors are using every innovation to deal with tbe
limitations. Inadequate classroom space force the use of nooks, closets, coal
bins. gym bleachers, and stages. Heating/ventilation·systems are unbalanced
and unpredictable. Wiring systems are inadequate to accommodate modem
teaching equipment, especially cpmputer on-line systems which our students
must experience to be competitive in today's job market.
·· There are cracks in floors and walls, and some of the roofs leak. In sum~ary, our schools are showing the symptoms of facilities that were once
models Of eKCellence, but have bee~ OVertaken by time.
: I have lived and worked among youth worldwide, and I can assure you
tllat we have the finest youth in the world right here in this area. I am honored to be assisting in their educatio~. I love these kids and will do anything
to help them be successful in life. 1be best insurance for that success _is a
quality education .•• one that prepares them to compete for pos1t1ons 1n a
highly technical, computer-based work place.
. We cannot let this opportunity pass us by. It's an investment in our youth,
it's an investment in the future of our great community. 1be proposed new
school facility will be a source i&gt;f pride for us all.
. .
: I implore you to not let this issue be lin~ to personalities, ·'? peisonal
prejudices, or other personal agendas. It all bod~ down to what IS the best
aild right thing to do for our youth. It has been satd that no one stands so tall
~ when they reaeh down to help a youngster realize a dream. Let's stand tall
"7ten we go to the polls on March t9th.
·
.
.John H. Taylof
. '

Ouynllle

for publication of
• .elec~ion. l f ! t t e r s March 11 _·

· ·o e.a d , i n e

(.In the interest of fai.Uw. no election ·!Ctten will

!Je:accepted after'12

,niiOn on·Monday, f,farch ·u. ,
'
'
·
· ; Individuals shqlild adCimB isSilei ..W nql periOM)itiea. ~PurelY

el)donlng ciJididatel will not be ~.Letters thoukl be 300· ~ elf leu,
' ~ferably. ty(!e\1. A,llletters are IUbject .to edltin1 lllld lllld niUit be slpeci
~lh name, llilldreas and telephone 1111111ber. lelephone ~ben will IICJC be
· •ptblished. No UllliJM(i lcacrswill !Je published~ ~should be in gOod

1. ~te.

Buchanan public enemy· No. 1 in Mexico
· MEXICO CI'IY - Patrick J.
Buchanan's surge in the OOP presidential race has sent earthquake-size ·
tremors through government and
private circles here •• which have
long feared Mexico will become the
favorite scapegoat iii the U.S. pi-esi- ·
dential race.
"We'd be happy if we were never
mentioned at .all by any presidential
candidate, including President Clinton."" one top gdvernment official
here told us. "But we realize that is
really dreaming."
·
Of all tbe candidates, auchanan
is public enemy No. I in this capital
city. "He uses us very well to gain
popularity," a Muican inl4:11ectual
told us. "It plays well in Peoria and
Manchester ·• and that worries us, of
course."
White House advisers know that
Clinton's relationship with Mellico- specifically tbe North American
.Free Trade Agreement •• is a key
point of vulnerability. While Clinton
has not changed his rhetoric publicly, his administration has privately done things to shore up that
,
potential election breach:
•• Clinton unilaterally reneged ··
for the first time -· on implementing
a NAFfA provision. NAFfA is a
complex document, and many of its
provisions are enacted incrementally
over the course of as many as 15

·more access to the southwestem
border.states.
Not wan\lng.to annoy two critical'
electoral states •• California and
Texas •• Ciinto.n caved. The administration thought Mexico would bC
happy with the indefinite postpone- · ·
ment, because there was speculation
that Mexican drivers were also worried about unemployment. But the
Mexican government quietly repudiated the American move as ''unillitera!" in a letter Commerce Secretary
Herminia ~lance sent to U.S. Trade
Representative Mickey Kantor.
Blanco called the action "inconsistent with U.S. obligations under
... the NAFfA." Blanco was correct,
but the Clinton administration cannot afford to go al!ead after NAFTA
failed to achieve all the promised
new jobs Clinton once touted that it
would.
-- 1be Clinton administration has
quietly turned down unofficial Mexican requests for new loans to bail
out Several Mexican banks. A Mexican negotiator revealed to us that
U.S. officials confided that the primary reason is that "Clinton cannot
afford politically to loan Mexico any ·

more money until after the November election."
That's why die administration sent
signals to the Mexican government
that, at all costs, it had to repay $1.3
billion in short-term lOins that came
due several weeks ago. Thanks to a
Ointon-engineered rescue plan last
year, Mexico borrowed another.S12.S
billion from the U.S. and billions ·
more frol!l other creditors. Mexico
did repay the $1.3 bilfion on lime ••
primarily from bOrrowing in European and other capital markets.
-- At a time when most U.S. government agencies .are having their
budgets slashed, Clinton signe(l a
bill in January increasing the budget
for the Immigration and Naturalizalion Se.rvice by 24 percent, this year.
1bat's a direct shot at Buchanan,
who wants. to build a security fonce
along America's 2,000-mile border
with Mexico. Taking a page from
Buchanan, Clinton's INS is building
a new $4.3 million fence this year
along the border near San Diego.
Mexican officials complain that
this is an increased "militarization"
of the border, and unbecoming of
friendly neighbors. Privately, they

Lora

worry that if
the
United
States is successful
in
stanching the
flow of illegal
aliens sparkedby Mexico's ·
worst
,, ...... _
. . 60 recesond llchool 11-n SIOn 10
years,
the lack of that
steam valve wi11 cause even more
difficulty south of the border.
U.S. watcbers in the government
here never believed the failed presidential bid of California Gov. Pete
Wilson •• who used illegal immigration as a populist issue., would 'seriously diminish the thetoric in the
GOP race. lbey ·are now beuil!g,
however; that Buchanan will not be
the Republican nominee, and that
the anti-Mexico thetoric will be curtailed during the general election.
If not, they warn, the relatively
hannonious relations between , the
Clinton administration and Mellico
will sour.
'
J1ck Ander1on and Mleheel
Blnlteln ere writers for United
FNture Syndicate, Inc.

OF TIIQSE

One of these provisions, due to
be enacted last December, was supposed to have allowed both Mexican
and American trucks to operate
beyond the ·current 26-rnile border .
limitation in each country. But key
Democrats in the border states
recently hammered the Clinton
administration with safety and job
concerns.
They pointed out that one out of
every four MI(,Kican trucks, many
carrying hazardous materials, do not
meet U.S. federal safety standards.
Mexican truck drivers, working for
an absurd $10 a day, have no limitation as to how many hours in a row
they can drive, while American drivers are limited to 10-hour stretches.
U.S. labor unions, which are
planning a multimillion dollar
advenising l!litz on behalf of Democratic candidates, were also pelting
Clinton with protests about the
American jobs that would be lost if
Mellican truckers were allowed

V.

Anderson

Lora V. Anderson, 70, of Clifton, W. Va., died Tuesday, February 27, 1996,
at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Born November 24, 192S i11 Hallwood, W. Va., she was a daughier of
the late Charles G. and Eva V. (Stewart) Varian. She was a homemaker and
attended Middleport Community Church .
Sbe was also preceded in death by her husband. James A. Anderson, Jr.;
. three brothers, Charles A. Varian, Sr., Harry T. Varian, Sr., and Franklin D.
Varian; and two sisters, Rose Dill and Pearl Jean Varian.
Survivors include two daughters and sons-in-law, Kandy S. and Bill Hammack of Clifton, and Rhonda K and Morris Neal of Pittsburgh, Pa; four
sisters, Joanna L. Council of Langsville, Ida L. Council of Benton, Ky, LauraM. Oark of Kirkland, nt, and Carol J. Lee of Columbus; a brother, William
E.. Varian of GallipOlis; four grandchildren; and one great-grandchild .
Services will ·be Friday, March I, at II a.m. at the Foglesong Funeral
Home, Mason, W. Va. with Rev. Samuel Anderson officiating. Burial will
follow in Clifton Hill Cemetery:
·
Friends may call at the funeral home Thursday from 6-9 p.m.

IND.

Hersc~el

Minor eleclricity outages were reported following thunderstorms that
swept through the area Tuesday night.
·
Lightning struck an eleclrical rec:losure around Letart Falls around
8 o'clock resulting in the loss of electricity for about 90 American Elec_lric Power customers, according toAEPdislrict manager Ron McDade.
Later, a tree fell on a power line on Osborne Street in Pomeroy around
10 o'clock affecting about four of five customers, he added .
1be outages were brief, McDade said.

Deputies probe incidents
. Deputies of the Meigs Co~nt~ Sheriffs Department are investigatmg two cnmmal damagmg InCidents recently reported to the Meigs
County Sheriffs Department.
Ruby Rife , Middleport, said arock was thrown through the window
of a house she owns on Leading Creek Road, Sheriff James.M. Soulsby said.
_Perry Kessell, Gold Ridge Road, reported Monday that during the ·
noght someone put sugar in his gas tank and sliced the tires on his 1981
Subaru. ·

Monday accident sends three to hospital
Three people were injured in a one-car crash Monday on State Route

•Hickey• Roush

f 24, the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol reported.

Transported from the scene by the Rutland unit of the Meigs EMS
Herschel "Hickey" Edison Roush, 83, Racine , died Tuesday, Feb. 27,
to
Holzer
Medical Center were driver Sara D. Neal, 26, and passen1996, at his home:
, •
gers
Christine
A. Neal, 8, and Donald L. Neal, 5, all of 321661itus
Bqrn Jan. 31, 1913, at Letart Falls, son of the late Richllfd and Josephine
Road,
La~gsville.
Rood Roush, he was an operating.engineer, a member of the Operating EngiFlume•
lt:t1
Sunny Pl. Cloudy Cloudy
All three were treated and released, a hospital spokesperson said. :
neers Union Locall8, the Meigs Fox Hunter Association and the West VirTroopers
said Sara Neal was westbound in Salem Township at 9:30 ·
· Vi.t Associated Press GraplllcsNat
ginia Fox Hunter ~sociation .
a.m. when she lost control of her car in a curve, went off the Left side •
• He is survived by his wife, Eileen Boyd Roush; three daughters and sonsof the road, struck an embankment and overturned.
·
in-law, Palricla and John Pape, Sally and Thomas Hill and Tamara and JefThe
car
was
severely
damaged
and
Sara
Neal
was
cited
for
failu~e
frey Hill, all of Racine: seven g\-andchildren; four great-grandchildren and
to control.
'
•
·
Thursday.:.Partly cloudy. High 30 severaf nieces and nephews.
Southeastem Ohio
Today... Windy and sharply colder. to 35.
·He WjiS preceded in death by brothers, Lawrence, Virgil and Darrell
Extended
forecast
' Cloudy this morning. Partly sunny
Roush, and by a sister, Leora Young.
I'riday... Partly cloudy and cold,
: this afternoon. Temperatures falling
Services will be Friday, I p.m. at Straight, Tucker &amp; Roush Funeral Home
: into the mid 30s. West wind 15,to 25 Lows 5 to 10. Highs 20 to 25.
in kavenswood, W.Va. with the Rev. Brian Harkness officiating. Burial will
Sat~y•.. A chance of snow. Lows follow in Letart Falls Cemetery.
; mph ... Afternoon gusts near 40 mph.
Friends may call Thursday, 2-9 p.m. at the funeral home.
Tonight...Windy and cold with a 10 to 15. Highs in the 20s.
DAYTON (AP)- A union leader union's national agreement, which
Sunday... Achance of snow... Main:chance of flurries. Low near 20.
said that no new strike deadline e&lt;pires in September. The union can
:Northwest wind 10 to 20 mph ...Gusts l;y north. Lows 10 to 15. Highs 20 to
would be immediately set by a union terminate the contract and strik~
25.
; around 30 mph.
under certain circumstances.
· Continued from page 1
Next comes Buchanan with 37 and representing 3,000 workers at two
Workers at the two plants went on
General
Motors
brake
plants.
siasm and momentum." But not the Dole 35, while Alexander had 10 del: r e-m p e r a t u r e s t o t a k e
Joe Hasenjager, president of Unit- strike two years ago, idling five 'GM
egates.
votes.
ed Auto Workers Local 696, said assembly plants in Michigan, Indiana,
Forbes' showing in North Dakoia . · Winning the nomination will Tuesday .that union officials would and Wisconsin before the three-day
!a
nosedive this
was solid enough to force Buchanan require 996 delegates.
determine the status of talks between work stoppage was settled.
'.'It's clear that it's a wide-open GM and the local on a day-to-day
:ay The A•"oclated Preae ·
,West.
· .
into a third-place finish there, too.
The plants on th\ city's, west and
1
Snow squalls could leave up to 6
Light snowfall was expected today The two traded placos in South Dako- race," Forbes beamed after support· basis before deciding whether to set north sides make brake pads, boosters cbeered his wife Sabina as "First a new deadline.
iinches of ~now in parts of.northeast in parts of southern Oregon, Ariz(&gt;na, ta.
ers, master cylinders, calipers and
tOhio by tonight.
and southern and northern California.
Later, Forbes underscored his dif- Lady Forbes."
GM and union officials met for · other parts for ami-lock and conve.nIn seven primary or caucus con- about 30 minutes Tuesday bi:fore tional brake systems. The brakes are
I Temperatures will drop to 10 to 20 A strong low pressure system 111as . ferences on trade and immigration
tests, Dole has now won three, while recessing. Talks were expected to used in vehicles made by GM and
!degrees. 1be low temperatureS will expected to continue to mpve e~t­ wilh Buchanan.
,allow the skies !()clear through !he ward across the Northeast, d~ggmg
Without mentioni~g Buchanan·by the two candidates with no elective resume today. ·
other companies.
;day on Thursday, with sun.shine . a cold front southwestward toward name, the publisher criticized the experience- Buchanan and Forbes
Hasenjager said the union's main
Local 696 had set this past Mon•expected especially around Cincinnati the Gulf. Coast.
.
.. skeptics" and "nattering nalivists" - have each won two.
day as a strike deadline at the OM concern is outsourcing, or the proTuesday's voting:
:and Dayton.
'
Heavy rain and strong thunder- who would "hunker in the bunker"
Delphi Automotive Systems plants. duction of parts by outside plants or
-In Arizona, Forbes had 33 per- But workers stayed on the job as both companies. He said OM has issued
" Snow showers will continue in the storms - accompanied by gusty rather than build on the United States'
·cent, Dole 30 percent, Buchanan 27 sides continued to negotiate.
: northeast, and Thursday's hjghs will winds and large hail- were forecast position as a world leader.
outsourcing notices that could affect
·be-in"the 20s across the state.
along the front.
"Forbes scored llis first primary vic- percent and Alexander 7 percent with • The local is· operating under· the 125 JObs at the brake plants.
.; The record high temi'Crature for
Behind the front, temperatures tory in Delaware on Saturday. His 96 percent of. the votes counted.
-In North Dakota, Dole won 42
·:!his date at the Columbus weather sta- were expected to be much colder, and success in winner-takes-all Arizona
percent,
Forbes· had 20 percent,
;~~on~ 65 tn 1955. The record low snow showers were possible across awarded him that state's 39 delegates,
Buchanan
18 percent and AleKander
.•was 2 1n 1934.
.
the Midwest. Dry and cold weather bringing his total in an Associated
:ot possible, he has suggested
6
percent,
with
all votes counted.
, , Sunset.today wd! be at_6:22 p.m. was expected across the Plains states. Press tally to 60, ahead at all rivals.
chairman of the Senate Budget Com· linking the debt bill with a commi)· Sunme Thursday woll be. at7:06 a.m.
Temperatures were forecast in the
mittee, wants to include a~ entJtle- ment to hold an expedited vote A!9'QIS .die netioll ·.
single digit'S'and teens in tlie upper
ment overhaul in the debt b11l. But tf without filibusters- on a balancedThu~torms a_ccompamed by Midwest; teens and 20s in the upper
budget package at a later date .
. gusty wmds and hrul crackled over Great Lakes region; 20s, 30s and 40s
the Northeast and Southeast early in the Midwest' 20s to ·the 50s in New
Meanwhile, House Ways and
today, causing nash flooding in parts . . £A gland and New York; 30s and 40s
Am
Ele
Power
.......................
43~
COLUMBUSA
children
services
agency
will
begin
a
formal
search
Means Committee ajdes have draftof eastern Oh1o and western Penn- in the Northwest· 40s to 60s in CaliAkzo ......................................5511
for.
the
parents
of
a
child
found
abandoned
in
a
hospital
restroom
,
an
ed
tax-cut and loophole-closing
sylvania.
fornia· 50s 60s :md 70s in the midAshlend 011 .........................,.37'4
agency lawyer said.
·
options,
including a temporary $250The flooding began to su~side as Atlantic an'd Te~as; and 70s and 80s
AT•T .....................................64~
The infant was discovered Saturday at Riverside Methodist Hospiper-child
credit and a reduction in the
tbe rain moved to the east of the in the southeast.
Bank OM ..............................35'h
tals,
where
nurses
named
him
"Baby
Carl."
He
was
placei:ltcmporarily
top
tax
rate
on individuals' capital
Bob
Evans
..........
:
.................
16~
rcgio~. Behind a stro!lg cold front
The nation's hot spot Tuesday was
in
a
foster
home.
Borg-Warner
.........................
32'.~o·
gains
to
20
percent,
from 28 percent.
associated woth the ram band, tern- Laredo, TeKas, where it was 95
Champion
Ind
.........................
17
Franklin
County
Children
Services
will
place
notices
in
newspapers
Gingrich
and
other
House GOP
peratures were much colder and some degrees. The cold spol was West YelCharming Shop ...................... 3~
and
other
publiC&lt;ttions
in
an
attempt
to
find
the
baby's
parents,
agency
leaders
met
Tuesday
to
work
out their
light snow was falhng.
lowstone Mont. where it was 28
City Holding .......................... 231.
lawyer
Melissa
Mitchell
said
Tuesday.
The
notices
will
be
addressed
stance
on
what
should
be
added
to the
Cold weather also continued in the below ze~o.
'
Federal Mogul .......................18\
to John and Jane Doe, she said.
debt-liinit bill and planned to present
Gannen .................................67'4
options to their caucus later this
Goodyear
T&amp;R
............
;
.........
UnderaschedulesetbyFranklinCountyJuvenileCourt,theagency
week.
K-mart ..................................... 7~
.
will begin adoption proceedings if the birth parents are not found by
Lands
End
............................
,15'Units of the Meigs County Emer- RACINE
late April, Ms. Mitchell said. ,
Limlted lnc..........................,.1,.,_
· gency Medical Service recorded 12
II: II a.m., Pearl Street, Eugene
The agency ~as ~eived dozens of calls from people wanting to adopt
Paoples Bancorp....~ ..............23
'"'
sd ·
d"
M ·
VMH
the baby, but those people would have to go through the certification
Ohio Valley Bank .........;..........39
!' cal.,.~r assistance Tue ay •nc1u lng
omson,
·
process an.t join a pool of other people wishing to adopt, Ms. Mitchell
One Valley ............,................32/·
·, five calls. Units responding included: RUTLAND
,
"
Roekwell ..............................58:0
POMEROY
4:24 p.m., Mudfork and Cottrill
said.
·
Robbins &amp; Myers ................... 29
1:30 a.m., Overbrook Nursing roads, Wanda Swearingen, VMH.
The child, believed to have been born Friday, waS found dressed in
Royal Dutch/Shell ..............139'1.
, Center, Mary Durst, VMH; .
SYRACUSE
a knit outfit and left with diapers and an anonymous note saying the ·
Shoney'a Inc........................... &amp;\
~ 4:)8 p.m., volunteer fire depart3:56p.m., state Route 124, Harry
parent wished to relinquish cus¥y.
Star Bank .............................. 64~
Wendy lnt'l. ........................... 18'1.
. ment and squad. gas fire on 'Gold Clark, VMH.
Worthlngton Ind ................... 21'&gt;
Ridge Road, no injuries reported;
TUPPERS PLAINS
CHILi.ICOlliE - The city school board and a union representing
7::46 a.m., state Route 248, Oscar
the school system's teachers were preparing for~ possible strike over
6:14 p.m., Collins Road, Mary
Stock reports are the 10:30
Searls, refused treatment.
Weber, St. Joseph'~ Hospital.
monetary issues.
a.m. quotes provided by Advest
of Gallipolis•
., Met"gs a n n o u n
" cements
Unlessacontractagreementisreachedbeforethen,cityschoolteachers plan to slrike at 5 a.m. Friday, the union said.
·
League to meet
dance at the" Old Middleport Legion
With all but 24 of the teacher union's 232 members present on Monv
Hall Friday, from 8 10 11 p.m:·CJ and
day, 73 percent rejected a proposed three-year contract and voted to
Rut Iand .outh League will
slrike. The dislrict has 240 teachers.
;
eir regular meeting Thursday, the Country Gentlemen will per(orm.
A federal mediator, working with teachers and the school board, asked
·
t
the
R
tland
"'
De
.
art
Admission
is
free.
7
. p,m., a
U
\ Ire,
P •
that Thursday evening be kept open for last-minute talks - in case
., ment. Election of Officers for the~
/
one side or the other feels "pressure" to resolve the dispute, said Den. 1996 season will occuf. For more Sele set
,
nis Ray, a spokesman for the Chillicothe Education Association.
infortrnltion; call 742-2209.
A bake and &lt;;~ft sale·will be·held
Teachers have been working under the terms of a contract .that expired
Round and 'Square dance .
by the Middleport Presbyterian
in July. 1be union began negotiating with the schoOl board in OctoThere will fle a round and square 1 Chureh at West~~rn Auto Fnday .and
ber and mediated talks began early in February.
'
·
Satutday,
10
a.m.
to
4
p.m.
Donations
The
school
board
had
offered
teachers
lump-sum
checks
based on a
1
The Daily Sentinel ~ill also be taken on a ceramic Eastpercentage of individual salaries. 1be payoff would not have changed
·
er bunny.
base salaries, which range from about $11,000 to $31 ,000.
. tusrszu..)
Today'a UV..tock RePOrt
' Superintendent Michael Cline said if there is a SJrike, city schools
Publish«~ .-..ry .rt.moon. "'...ay duouah
. COLUMBU~ (AP) - Indianaplan to operate with substitute teachers. A board meeting was schedRepublican
=~~
~==,;.!?~ Ohio direct hog prices at selected
uled for Tuesday night.
Pomttoy, OMo 45769, I'll. 992-21:!6. Second
buylng points Wednesday by the ~
- --~--~----~---~"":"'.- - - - - - - Candidate for
cllllpoaiO&amp;epoidotPornaoy,ONo.
. U.$. Departm.entofAgric41tureMar_ . . , The Auocloted Pr&lt;u, and lbc Olllo .
ket News:
..
,
·
The • 11 ·
1
· sued Rutland, and Carolyn Sue Vincent,
Meigs County
~ Auoclolion. . , .. .
Banows and gifis: m,ostly 50 cents •O owmg coup es were IS
48, Ida May, W.Va.
lower; demand moderate for m&lt;Jder- marriage ' licenses recently in the
Commissioner
POSTMASTBRt Sald - - 0 1 1 1 IO
Meigs County Probate Court of Judge
The Dolly Seotdnet. 1"11 Coun Sc. Pomeroy,
ate to he.avy run,
Robert Buek:
Olllo 43769.
Your Vote and
U.S. 1-:3, '230-260 lbs. 44.75Paris Rufford Hess, 40, Pomeroy,
SUJSCIUPTJOH li'ATIIS
Support il
, _47.00, a few 47.S0-47.7S; plants and Thnya Sue Burt, ·26, Mid"dlepon;
lyC.rrtor·-48
46
Ooo - ............................:.................... $2.00 I
·uSO-s ·~· 230- 260 lb 41 00- Dennis Allan Robinson, 38, and Appreciated!
' Ooo-............................................... $&amp;10
1
·
·
•
•
s.
·
'
Amber
Jeanne
Strom,
28,
both
of
0oo v..... ~..........................:..:,.......... St04.00
H~spital
Pomeroy; John Milton VanMeter, 33,
SJNGI.&amp; COPY I'RICB

•
:Today's weather forecast

GM, union ·officials ·
resume discussions

T111) IS ONE

years.

Debunking. ·t he

MICH.

LAMAR ALEXMDFl

Forbes back in race...

OOESTIONS...

DO VOO -W4t1T
PAPER OR

ev~ning

PLA~TIC?

~n2~~!pa~pea ke!~;

flat~tax · myths

By Joaeph Perkin•
'
One of the reasons common folk look upon Washington with so much
contempt is that almost every time a good idea rears itself in the Nation's
Capital ·· an idea widely supported by the American people - the Gucciwearing lobbyists get (ogether with their pals in Congress or the Whjte
House to kill it off.
'-.._/
So it was with the balanced budget. So it was with term limits. And so it
is now with the flat tax. Foes of the flat tax have resorted to the usual modus
operandi to dampen enthusiasm for the idea. That is: Bombard the public
with all manner of disinformation. But the flat tax deserves to be judged on
its merits. So let us separate myth from reality.
Myth: Aflat-tax system would not really bt simpler.
Reality: Critics make this claim to undercut one of the major selling
points of the flat tax •• that the average individual will be able to calculate
their taxes in a mere 15 minutes (without"the help of a professional tax preparer) and mail theit return to the Internal Revenue Service on a postcardsized tax form.
Critics counter by arguing that, if the average individual's taxes were so
uncomplicated that they could be figured out on a postcard, then far more
tax filers would be using the fairly simple I040EZ. As it is, though, only 16·
percent of tax filers use the one-page form.
But it's not the postcard-sized return that makes the flat iax infinitely simpler than the present system. It's that the flat tax would replace the current
system of five rates (from 15 percent· to 39.6 percent) with a single rate,
while also eliminating the hundreds of exemptions, deductions, credits and

Ohio News in B·rief:

exclusions.
A taxpayer would look at his or her adjusted grpss income, ~alculate 15
percent to 20 percent of that (according to the flat rate), and mail a check to
the IRS. It's that simple.
·
Myth: Real estate values will plummet.
Reality: The National AssQCiation of Realtors has declared war against
the flat tax because mo~t versions ·· incl,.dlng- plans proffered by Steve
Forbes and Dick Armey •• would eliminate the mortgage-interest lleduction.
1be realtors warn that endirig this pet deduction will cause home prices to
fall by 15 percent, which would cost homeowners SI. 7 trillion in equity.
But an analysis by the National Center for Policy Analysis, a Dallasbased think tank, reveals the holes in the realtors' static projections. lntleed1
if a flat tax is enacted, home mortgage interest rates are expected to fall by.
roughly 2 percent. And a family earning SSO,OOO a year would benefit more
from a 6 percent nondedu.ctible mortgage than from the current 8 percent
deductible mortgage.
Myth: The rich will get richer[ the poor poorer.
Reality: This is just the usual class-warfare rhetoric. 1be fact is that under
every flat-tax plan out there, a family of four would pay absolutely no
income tax on their first $30,000 to $3S,OOO. That completely knocks poor
' .
·
Americans off the tax rolls.
Conversely, the biggest ·beneficiaries of the current tax system, with its
myriad loopholes and preferences, are rich folks. This is borne out by an
analysis written by Daniel Mitchell, a Senior fellow with the Heritage Foun;
dation.

Alexander has ideas, Dole doesn-'t
MANCHESTER, N.H. - It takes chutzpah finish, Alexander's forces chanted the slogan,
for Mr. Third Place, Lamar Alexander, to urge for. "ABC --Alexander Beats Clinton," an ide;l
mer front-runner Bob Dole to get out of the GOP exploded by exit polls showing that most voters
presideptial race, but Alexandet is right about still think Dole has the best
this:· He has ideas to run on, while Dole has none. ..chance of any GOP ~3!1diAleunder calls his ideas "fresh," and some of date in November.
·them actually are. Others are downright radical
For his part, Dole is ~so
and could be the basis of a fascinating debate -· living in. a dream world by
what Alexander calls "a vision contest" •• within contending that he is now in
the Republican Party and with President Clinton a two-man race with Pat
in the fall.
Buchanan. Alexander, after
Chief among them, he wants to "rip out of all, trailed Dole. by on!y 3
Washington" all welfare responsibilities and send points here and threatens to
them not to ~tate or local bure.aucracies but to pri- split the anti-Buchanan vote
vate "community charitable foundations," throughout the primaries.
financed by a federal takeover of Medicaid costs
For Dole, the concept
'
'and a tax credit for conlributions to charities that that he's now fighting with Buchanan ~or "the
help the poor.
hel!rl and soul oflthe Republican Party" may give
Alexander also !"ants to eliminate· all federal his campaign an ene1gy that it's so far woefully
education and job training programs and convert lacked, but Dole also needs what Aleunder has:
them into vouchers for parents and workers to use ideas about where he wants to take the country.
in purchasing their own school and training serDole staffers and outside advisers have been ·
vices.
trying desperately for months to get the Senate
He favors a historic diminution_of the powers majority leader to assemble his thoughts into a
of Congress by making it a part-time body and by program for the future, but Dole deems talk of
imposing the most restrictive term limits now "vision" as " phony" and resolutely refuses to
under debate, the 6-year Hoose and 12-year Sen- indulge in iL
'
'.
Dole talks about cuuing ...es, reforming wei. ate constitutional amendment backed by the combative libertarian group, U.S. Term Limits.
fare, and balancing the budget, but even some of
He also favors creation of a new branch of the his top advisers admit that it all comes out soundarmed forces to control the nation's borders and, ing like ''blah, blah, blah."
·
in a departure from the OOP mainstream, more . "He is forever talking about means," one
federal spending to ens!U'C clean air and tkat~r and adviser said. "You never hear him talking about
't!J set aside wll&lt;je~ areas ftlr conservation. · . ends."
. ,
.
. But Alexander's personal siJle is so bllllld and
One option suggested by advisera is fcir Dole
·his· record so moderate that the radicalism of his · to "go the nostalgl1 route," by promising to "jet
ideas Ita$ lqcly Ol(:lped nPilce. Another fiiCtor · America back where we were" ·- before crime
ovi:nhlidowing hit measage: his own pieOccupa- ind illegitimacy n1es began soarin1 lllld educa·lion in speeches lllld interviews on the tactics of lion scorea began plummeting.
the OOP race.
This theme wolikl give Dole the oppoltllnity to
'Campaigning around New Hampshire before collect his proposals for tougher polichig, welfare
the recent primary ..W his 23 percent third-place· refonn and school choice into a coherent package,

'.

advise~

say, adding a forward-looking elemenf
by claiming that the Dole plan is meant to create
a better future for America's children.
The nostalgia option, though, does not Ileal
with Buchanan's key issues of jobs, income insecurity, l!lld trade ·• the so-called "col!servatisni
with a heart" tjlat is giving heartburn to traditiona! conservatives.
.
•
Dole •• and Alexander, too -- needs to do .more
to combat Buchanan than merely labelliim (cor"
reedy) an "isolationist" and "protectionist."
:
Both of them need to educate the•public ab9ut.
the benefits of free trade and the dangers of
depressed world economy·· and to ~onvince vot;
ers they can reignite income growth and improvq
job security for the middle class.
,
· •
Alellander actually' has a jobs program_•• pad
conventionally Republican, part borrowed fronf
President Clinton •• c.onsisting of elimination of
the capital gains tax, tax reductions for individu~
als, portable pensions and health insurance;
incieased government support for research ~
higher education, and job training vouchers.
Alexander ~so favors a "flatter" tax system;
but even he finds it hllrd to explain what loop-;
holes be wants to close when he wa~ts to keep the.
mort&amp;age. interest deduction, expand the charitable deduction, and add a deduction for Social
Security taxes.
,
The problem with Alexander is that, while he
claims on the S\UII)p to be the candidate of "fresh
ideas," his speeches are. in~ariably about his:
chances of' beatin~ Dole, Blichanan and Ointon:
and not about the well-being of the American peopte. As alresult, he comes across as just the kind ot
"phony" that Dole abhors·· a man whose visiOJI
is made up beoau!le a candidate hu to have one.
lben apin, somc vision
no vision Ml' ~ .
day. If Dole doubts it, all he hu to do is remem- ·· '
ber what happened to Georp -Buah.
'·.
{Moi1Cin KandlliCU II u.uttw editor of
RQII call, the MWipeper of Cepllol Hill.)

a

.4\':

bea"

"

Officials hunt for missing baby's parents

Stocks

Mel·gs· EMS logs 1.2 calls

48/s

Teachers, board b(!!Ce for strike

.

-·-·-

ELECT

ERNEST
"IKE"
SPENCER

'i::!",;.

.CoUpleS iSSUed marriage licenSeS

I

23

news

___

.

Dolly ..............:............. :......... ........... 3$ Oenls
•

' '

j

.

Sllblcrlbcn ... dooiriJit .. PI)' lbc

llmil•lo octv- ..,.., ui 'l1lo ·Dolly Seod.oi!
_.....,
.·

•oo • - · ••.,. 12......, bui• Cndk w1n ..

'

.

' ·.

No aubacription by miil pennltted in areas
·whnhome--lomlloble.
'
IILI.tLSUIISCIIliPI10NS

13 -

-Molpc_,.
....:............................................$27.30

.26 - ................................................1!3•12
52 ..........!_
....................................
_
,....c_,. SIOl.:!6

13 - .......,.......................................... $29.2!1
126 ~ •• 1\'""'"''' ''-'".. ''"''' ..'''"'''"''S$6.68
5 2 -............................................... $1®.72

V~ Memorial
Tuesday admissions - Raymond
Lambert, Rutland; Harry Clark,
Racine; Tammy.Stump, Pomeroy.
Tuesday discharges - Arthur
Scholde_rer, Middleport,
Holzer Medleel Caller
d&gt;ilcherga Feb. r1 - · Mrs.
Andrew Russell and son, Ruby ·
Micinski.
'
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Greg
Roach, daughter, Crown City.
(Publlsbed with permission)

· ' .

-11117

I

CHUCIWAGON

$159
WITH FRIES......$2.3

ddleplll'l Dept. Store
Mlddllp 011 91N148

T

.

"'

�'

,:Sports

The Dai}ySen,~J

·'

.

~. ViUanova top~.
:: By The Aaaoclllted Prea

.

Game One without, Kerry Kit-

::

&gt; ties was rough for Villanova, an II -·

·' point loss to Connecticut at home.
•,
The middle game of the senior
:' guard's three-game suspension
;: went a lot smoother, a 76-71 vic•; tory at Boston College on Tuesday
;t 'flight.
: • That leaves the season finale
;: Saturday at .Georgetown, and then
•: Kittles will be back for the Big East
:.: and NCAA tournaments.
Alvin Williams, the other guard
.
·: for the sixth-ranked Wildcats, carne
:: up big against Boston College with
:: a career-high 24 points, including
:· a back-breaking three-pointer with
:: I :61 to play.
. "He's a great, great player. But
;: we have some other guys," Vii: • Ianava coach Steve Lappas said of
.:: KillfS,. who is 13 points · from

UConn

becoming the school's career scoring leader. "You can't be in the top
six lil&lt;e we've been all year andjust
have one guy."
Eric Eberz had 25 points for Viilanova (24-4, 14-3 Big East),
which has already locked up the
No.3 seeding for the Big East tournament.
"llook at it as a chance to prove
I can play," Williams said of Kitties.' suspension for charging
$3,100 in unauthorized calls to a
university telephone credit cilrd.
" Not to score the points lik~ ~erry - I can 't do that. Just to go out
.and ad4 some·things."
· •
The Eagles (16-9, 9-8) have lost
_six straight games to Villanova and
three in a row overall. They trailed
just 65-64 when Williams hit the
three-pointer with two seconds left
on the 3S-second shot clock and

76~71;

Kentucky

I :0 I to play in the g8IJIC.
"We were down one and .Williams hit a big tluee," Eag1es
coach Jim O'Brien said. "I thought
we played pretty good defense
there,' and they didn't have ,anything. Then he pulled up and hit
that shot. "
· Williams then made six of eight
free throws in the last 24 ~onds.
"I think too much l!'as made of
Kittle's not playi_ng," 0' Brien said.
"We didn't feel for one second that
his absence was going to make this
a game that we·automatically were
going· to win." '
Boston College closes its regular season · with a home game ·
against Rutgers and figures to be
either the No. 'S or 6 seed for the
conference tou~amenl..
In other games involving ranked.
teams ·on Tuesday, it was No. I

-

bea~s
..

Kentuc~

88, Auburn 73; Providence 84, No. 8 Georgeiown 74;
and No. 13 Wake Forest84, No. 19
North,Carolina ,60.
No. 1 Kentucky 88 .
Aubum73
.
'The Wildcats (25-1, 15-0 SEC)
won their 24th straigbi and are
within one game of the first unbeaten season in the Southeastern CQn,
ference since Alabama in 19.56.
Tony Delk.had 1 points to lead
visiting Kentucky, which has won
·all but tJNo games in the winning
streak -by at least 10 points.
Franklin Williams Jed the Tigers·
(18- ro, 6-9) with 22 points.
ProYideace 84
No. 8 Georgetow.n 77
The Friars (16-9, 9-8 Big East)
had five players in double fi&amp;UI'!'S, ·
never trailed and closed out the
home win by making eight of 10
'
.
'
'

s

Scoreboard

•,

•,

Cle. Souil184, Cle. Hay 61
Gallow•y Wesdand 8]. Col. South -49
Howland 12. Wttren Harding 64
Hudson 94, Cloverleaf 49
Lakewood 44, Mid view 28
LirMSr. 71 . WipakonccaS?
Madison 62, Eadakc 'N. S5
Mansfield Madisoft 13, Ftemont Roas

B as ket b all

NBA standings
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Adantlt DlviJion

lr L

IaJil

Orlondo ............... 40
NewYork ....... ....... 32
Miami ............. ....... 27
New Jertey ............ 24
Wllllhington ............ 24
Bosron .................... l9

· Philadelphia ........... II

•

62

Gil

I'd.

Jl

.m

22
29

.592

1.5

.482

L\.!1

31 . 4~6
31 .436
36 J4S

16
16
21

43 .204

l9

.lr

J..

Dollos .................... .l8
Minnesota .... .......... 16

.Yoncouver ............. II

41

SllRAtllonio ........... 36
HouAIOn ........ .. ..... .. r!_?
Denver ............ ....... L'

Thomas Wonhington 51. Col. Inde-

Yoo. Wil10n ~7 . Niles 48
Dt.llian II

BellefontAine 72, Spring. Shawnee 43 .
Bellevue 70. Snndu1ky Perkins 66
Cte. Rhodes 70, Medina Buckeye 53
Copley 81. TollmadJe 54
Dover ..3. New Phi1Ddelphia41
Ginrd 72. SCnothero 70
Kcnston 83, Revere 75
·Lakeview 57, Canfetld 48
Marlin11on 41, Groen 40
.
Mefttor lAke Cath. 110, Jefferson S9
Mioervo. SO, Canal Fuhon NW 44 (2

29

3!'!

Gil
I

1.~

14
19

Phoenb .................. 27

27

37

J 27

0'11

.-

-

p.m.
.
Philadelphia a1 Houston, 8::\0 p.m.
Toronto at S11n Antonio, 8:30p.m.
OaUu at De11ver. 9 p.m'.
·
Sacra~ento f'l L.~ . Clippers, 10:)0
p:m. ' .

South

, SoLtllvn 94, McNe..i: St 82

Wake Forat 84, Nor1h Carolina 60
,.

Midwest

61

Stephen F. Aullin 76, NW Louiaiana
/

Far West
CS Nonhridp: 81 , Loyola Marymount
SacramemoS1. 71 , N. Arizona66
Saft DiFiO n, Cal Poly-SLO 1l

Ohlo•n,'s
college scores

I

ilonli• Northern 59, Ada 16

.

PlW~Oiitle 'C

I
-~:J,lll'ioodli7,71!
qP i 7 u t

1

POund .

"

DO·vs· scores

s

FRESH PACK BONELESS

$ 9.9

LB.

STOKELY
TOMATO JUICE
46

•

CALIFORNIA

Strawberries••:•••••

'·

NOT 53799"

Save65%
ONLY 5132991

Ernan~~el

Ouarter

FIIESH'SLVEIIPI.ATTER'

®
··

.s.w ·

eof/Lb.

.

.,1.,
...

ill.

Pork Loln....................--·-···---·--·Lb·

..,

lr!to cbo,-

1.!

299

Woo4 TV Clltlltlf I
NOT'599'1
ONLY

17991

5

4ROLL
PKG.

01.

Tr &lt;'l n sac t1 o n s

' A_.,.... ., .
'

'

,MINNESOTA TWINS:-Aarold to
' ten111 willl Milly CordOva. oudlelder. 'on
a low-your"""""'·
. ' ·
NEW YORlC ANI(!!ES: Aped to
tonill whh Marc: Ronan, calcbcr, 01 ,I
.e-yar COIIIr'la:. l
•
!
.t
SllATll.E MARINERS: Sijitid Roll ·
~ t;iltllor.
. TI!XAS RANGERS: Aped .I ll ton11
•~ llll1oa ~· pitt:J..... -~

r

-·

ss••

1

.

s
G LDEN
WHEAT MAC
&amp; CHEESE
7.25 OZ.

s

ADC

COnONELL
BATH TISSUE

HI-DR I-

79

PAPER
TOWEL

4

ROLL

Bllpt. 72, Tol. ChriMian .

Bu'elialt

Sllced Free

NOT 1599"
Scm SO%
91
5
OIILT.

5aw•7~

l4 Van Burelt 65, ·'
McComb 51
Vanlue60, N._Baltimore 49

.\

-

390Z.

NOJSJJ99"
Save60%
ONLY 547991

$ 19

.MAXWELL HOUSE
COFFEE

w/2R&amp;eli.rs·IIH

Marion Lotal64, New Bremen ~
Miller Chy 54, Colun\bus Grov~t 44
Minster 78, Ridaemom 32
Moplore 60, Bloomfteld 43
Montpelier 91, Edon 59
Nor'wallt St. Paul 85. HopeweiiL..oudon 46
.
Po.ncSonHJilboi3S. Contiacntal 31
Plymouth 61. LucaJ 58
Sandu1ky St. Marya 69, Monroevjllc
l4
Spenec:rville 7S, Uma Temple Chr.

Milk Loldawho, i11ieldlri.

2'•

12 PK 12 OZ CANS

150Z.

Doun

CHICAGO WHITE SOX : An . ~need thl! retirement of Tooy Phillip.,
Oltfielder.
MltWAUKEE BREWERS: Apd •
10 Ierma wilh AQ&amp;el Mi..ada and Scott
. Kut, pilchtn, and f;eraando Vlu •DCJ

f

.

Wadnelday'a gamaa:

Olvl•lon 4 Seclio.-1.1 at .Rio
Portsmouth East vs. SoUthern, 6:15
p.m.
Green vs. lronton St. Joe, 8:15p.m.
Pt. Pleasant vs. Parkersburg South,.
7:30p.m. at L:fin, W Va.
'Tllure 'a games:
• Dlvlalon 3 labict at OU
Zane Trace vs. Minford, 6:30 p.m..
Wheelersburg vs. Ross-SE; 8:15
p.m. '
.
Friday' a games:
Division 2 District at OU
Warren Local vs. Ironton, 6:30p.m.
South Point vs. Greenfield, 8:15 p.m.
Division 1 Sectional
Finals at AHS ·
Chillicothe vs. Logan, 7 p.m.
Saturday's games:
Division 2 District at OU
Rock Hill vs. Hillsboro, 7 p.m.
Athens vs. Fairland, 8:45p.m.

FRISKIES
CAT FOOD

PREMIUM ·

.sugar sweet.·
Strawber:rles

5.5

s-.oott1ielder.

I

RC COLA
PRODUCTS

reauna
Olvlalon 3 Dlalrlcl at OU
North Adams 88 Belpre 86
Chesapeake 67 Unioto 59
T~ecley'a

BALTIMO!IE ORIO!l!S: Aped to ·
la'I'AI wiltt Mark Lee; pitef!cr, and Mark

TUMday'•

(

x-Completad seuon.

Grade
A
Boneless · Largefggs.
ChUCk Roast

Holple 51, Stryker 41
Jackson Center 61 , F:Urla.wn 43
Lake Ri~F 70. Elyria FirM Bopt. Sl
Maiufield Chr. 48, Muslield St. Pe--

Tol.

replar- actioa
Mou'" St. 1o1otJ11 6 t . - . . 54
. . T . . . . . . . . .'. , .

2UTER ·

U..SJ,;A. Cl:fOICE

69

Obio'women's
college scores •

PRODUCTS :

ICROCER

ter's 45 ·

Southwest·

.

1 t662 1228
11514 1214
812451110
6 1245 1192
613321256
61359 1191
71413 t319
913731345
9 1387 1256
912711138
12 1245 1342 121356 1421
t31258 132t
131195 t209
161096 1246
151164 1381
19.1397 1599

7 UP, DR. PEPPER.

LUCKY LEAF
APPLESAUCE .

N. -Adams 60, Belpre .S8
New London 61, CoDins Western Rc~erve :tO
Nor1bWood 69, Ever1reen·S~
Rootlilown 69. S. Ran&amp;e 62
Smilhville62, Tu&amp;law 48
Wntttloo .S6, Streetsboro J9
Woodmore 4~ Ehnwood 42

Fon l!«:ovcry 48, Limo PMy 41
GreeneYiew .S7, Db.ie 48

Michiaan 75, Mic•i&amp;lln St. 46
Mo.•Ka111D1 City 120. :I'roy S1. 95
OnliRobects 61, WichitaSt.60 ,
W. Illinois 82, Cen1. eonnecticut S1 .

.

OP

-

Briato176. Ledaemont 44
Cardinal Stritch 51 •.Maumee Val. 44
Cin. M*ira 80. Cin. Ctuistiii.D 45
Cia: Summit Country Ooy 84, Fayetteville 49
Clinton-Massie 60, Ooy. Oakwood 42
Otlilton 80, E. Canton 66
Edaeno" 60. Hicksville 48
Fort Jenniftp 61 , Ottoville 50
Fon [.onmue 76, Russia 62

KeotU&lt;kY 88c~ubum 73

.•

Wheelersburg ...... 20
Chesapeake ........ 20
Logan ......... ...... ... 15
K-MariBI1a ......... ...15
Greenlleld ........ .... 14
Fairland ............... 14
K-Jackson .... ........ 14
K-Meigs ................ 12
Sputh Point. ...... ...12
Warren Local... .. .. 12
Point Pleasant ....... 9
Southem .......... .. .... 9
K-River Valley .. .. ....9
Athens .... ..... ...... ....8
x-Gallipolis ............. s
x-Portsmouth .........4
x-Vinton County ..... 2

TP

w. &lt;lcaUJa 84, ,Ciwdon ND-&lt;:~45

~2

East
Comc!ll62, B~;~fralo 60
Loyola. Md. 67. Siena !B
Providence 84, ~etpwn n
V,lllpova 76. Boston College 71

NAI• II!•. I Groot Loka Rqlonol
"'
Flrtt t:otJIId "
Central S1. 801Micb.-c..t.ora 6l ,
.
,,

L

WE RESERVE THE liGHT TO UMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU SATURDAY, MARCH 2 , 1996

Van Wert 85, Lima Shawnee 81 (2

Division IV
.
Allen E. 12, Cory- Rawson 68
Arcadia 69, Tiffin C:~lven !1!\
Bett1ville 6J. Foatorit~ St. Wendclin

'

W

99

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

.

41

NCAA Division I
men's scores

Wollh ~1. tJibona Ill

1995-96: All gamea

s

(

Onmd Vnl. 77, Newton Fal116l
Grandview 76, Col. Hartley 6:t
Hill&amp;dnlc 54. Wallinaton 48
Luihentn W. 73, Gilmour~
Madi500 Plllin1 63, JoMthan Alder 43
Marion P1Wnn157. Ridgedale47
Millbury Lake 57. Otse•o !li3
Mouat Gilead 62, Manon River VaJ.

Thursday's games

Toumarilenll

8AM·10 PM

Napoleon ·60, Wauseon 4&lt;1

Canal WiRCtatedi2,.Nortbtidae 7
Catdinol 66, B&lt;rbhi"' 59
Cnrey 62, Mohaw-k 59
Chesapeake 67, UniOIO 59
·'
em tlOrk 64. Ashland Cresl\'icw 52
Col. Academy 56, U~ Uaion 47
Coldwater 62. Riverdt.llc 42
Colonel Crowfortl 56. SeJ~e«p E. 38
Delphoo Jelfe110n 71, Patkwoy 36
Delio 80, Tinora 76
Fairview 57, Liberty Cenrer 50
Fremont St. JolleJ:Il 60, Milan Edi10n
40

OriiUido at New Jersey, 7::\0 p.m.
Golden Stale at Indiana,. 7:30p.m.
CLEVELAND at Milwaukee, IJ : ~O

1\tld.QhloCaofOft~lp

Montlay tin S111day

Cage standings
Team

24 Pl. 12 OL CANS CUIE -

STORE HOURS

Bame~ville

Cbarloll~f 111 Bo.non. 7:30p.m.
Mlamiiii\Orlando, 7:lC p.m.
Ponland a1 Atlanta, 7::\0 p.m.
Detroit .a1 Se4nle, 8 p.m.
Phoenix a1 MinnciOIL 8 p.m.
Wuh i'!f~ Dl Utah, 9 p.m.
LA. 1
ut Vancouver. 10 p.m. ·
New York at Sacrameneo, 10:30 p.m.

•

.

PRODUCTS;·

1
s-hwood~~~~!
Cath35 ~
Caldwell37,

Tonl&amp;llt's games

7l

.

PEPSI .COLA

full recovery.
He was an account execuJive
with Abstract Manufacturing in
Columbus, a maker of steel strapping .•
After his Professional days.were
over, he picked up golf and
excelled at it as well.
,.
Voted to the National Football
Hall or Fame in 1976, he was
selected to the Ohio State sports
hall of fame in 1977.
He had been employed by the
Ohio state auditor since 1986.

Rosdord 53, An1hony Wayne 44
Shelby 4S, Willord l9
St. Moryl64, P~M~Idinl ' 39
SCN!hen 12. Oinud 70 12 OTl
npp Chy 5$, Ommon 47

Tuesday'siOOI't!ll
Miami 9J, New Jersey 90 ·
CLEVELAND 92, Goldec Stille 80
lndiono 101 , Portland 87
Ch.vlone 88, Milwaukee 84
ChiCIJO 120, Minne501a 99
Pltiltldelphiolll, Dallu Ill
Houston 105, Toronto 100 ,
Denver 96, Woahinglon 9~
L.A. Otippen.95-. Su AntOnio 90

6~

Vic Janowicz was the greatest,"
COLUMBUS, Ohio '(AP)
said the late Fesler. "He did our
Vic Janowicz, a lriple·threat star
field goal kicking, our punting, our
who won the Heisman Trophy and
quick kicking, was as fine a singleplayed two spans professionally,
wing left hflllback as I have seen,
has died at the age of 66.
did all our passing and was truly a
Janowicz died Tuesday night at
great blocker. On defense he played
Riverside Methodist Hospital folsafety. He was absolutely great. He
lowing a long battle with cancer,
excelled in every . phase of the
spokesman Chris Verrilli said.
game."
Jano~icz, who played collegiately at Ohio State, also played
He was -the third junior to win
for the Piusburgh Pirates in basethe Heisman Trophy.
ball and the Washington· Redskins
After a stint in the service·,
in football.
Janowicz signed with the Pirates as
Janowicz, a native of Elyria,
a catcher - despite not having
ranked among the top 20 players in
played since his senior year in high
~ areer passing yardage at Ohio
school six years earlier - and
State despite being a running back.·
played in 19S3 and 1954.
: In 1950, he rushed 114 times for
He returned to football in 1954
314 yards, an ,verage of 2.3 yards
with the Redskins and played
per carry, with live touchdowns. He
defensive back. In 19S5 he led the
· also completed 32 of 77 passes for
NFL in scoring until the final day
551 yards and I 2 touchdowns with
of' the season when Doak Walker,
seven interceptions. In addition, he . tbe 1948 Heisman winner, beat him
kicked 23 field goals and 26 extra
out.
points.
Janowicz led the Big Ten ConA near fatal automobile accident
!ference in total offense (703 yards)
ended his football career in 19S6.
~md went on to easily ~apture the
During the pre-season exhibition
season in 1956, Washington was
:.Heisman. He tocaled 633 points in
!J)le Heisman balloting to 280 by
playing the Rams in. Los Angeles.
:Kyle Rote of SMU and 231 for Red
Before the game, on Aug. 13,
:'Bagoell of Penn.
Janowicz telephone his wife in
: A two-time most valuable play-·
Chicago to wish ~r a happy birthJ:r on teams coached by Wesley
day. It was then that his wife, Marlfesler and Woody Hayes, Janowicz
ianne; told him that medical reports
~as an important performer in the 1 · had revealed their daughter Diana
,-amous Snow Bowl contest. of
had cerebral palsy. She would live
!1950 against Michigan.
uptil 1964,· but her deterioration
• In that game he kicked a 27and mountains of medical bills
~ard field goal under blizzard co~­
were a huge strain on the Janowicz
ditions and also set OSU singlefamily.
'game marks for · punts (21) and
punting yards (685). It. was a
Four days after learning or his
blocked punt thai led to the decidaughter 's illness, he was involved
sive touchdown near the end of the
in an auto accident in which he susfirst ~f ofarchrival Michigan's 9tained a · head injury. First diag3 victory at Ohio Stadium.
nosed as a concussion, it eventualFor his career, he rushed 250
ly led to creeping paralysis of the
'imes . for 802 yards and · seven
left side of his body.
touchdowns, completed 41 Of I06
His football career ended,
passes for 685 yards and 14 touchdowns with 10 interceptions. He
Janowicz was moved to Columbus
also kicked 26 touchdowns and 37
and therapy began immediately
under the directions of Hayes,
elltra-points and also played
Ohio State athletic trl\iner Ernie
defense.
Biggs and team physician Judson
"Of all the former Ohio State
Wilson. He worked to achieve a
stars I have seen or heard abput,

Rocky River 34, Medina Hiahland SJ

8
15
16.5
17
18
24.5

.lOO

The Dally Sentinel• Pegel

0o1t Hltli&gt;Oi 66, Norwolk 48

Zl

Golden Slate .......... 26 29 .473
Sacrnmenlo ............ 24 28 .461
Ponland ................. 25 31 .446
LA CUppen ......... J8

01)

21

Pltdflc: Division
Seanle ................-....42 12 .778
L.A. L.ok&lt;ra .......•..• :W 20 .629

'

Tol. Regen 90, Tol. WAite !52
Tol. Scou Sl, Tol. Whihller ~7
Tol. Su.-t 48, Tol. Bowsher 43

14
17
19
20.5
21

.212

'fUI c:oniiKI.

Basketball

A card sbowe,r is being held for Gladys Morgan
Riggs, Po._aeroy, in honor of.her 85th birthday on
Marth 4, ,1996. Mrs. Riggs .til be celebrating.her
birthday- with her ~augbters and sons-in-law: Nora
·and Bob Eason, Pomeroy, and Joanne and Marty
Jobn5on, Atlanta, Ga·., and their families. Friends
may send birthday wishes to her at her home:
43451 Morgan·Rd.; Pomeroy, OH 45769. .

Sandusky 66, Aahlnnd 62 (OT)
pendence 46

I'd.

68S
18 .666
20 .649
~I
.426
16 .m
38 .296
17

MILWAUKEE BUCKS: Sianod

.

IN 3 DAYS'

Medina$9, Akron Kenmore 32
N. Olms1ed ~. Elfria 49 (OT)
Perrysl&gt;ul&amp; 45, MIMimee 4) 12 01)

Mklwnt DMdon
Utah ........... ............ 37

NatlonaiBa*.... ll A.mtlon

NatlonaiF-.ILeopo
ARIZONA CARDINALS: Si1tied
Aeneas Williams. cornerback, 10 a five-

.

LOSE : · 10 LIS.

Musillon 14. Unioatown Lake 63
Perry 73, Kent ~ooscvell

WES'I'ERN CONFERENCE
lam

Football

one-year COlllraCII.

Auburn 88-73

~b~1illon

28.5

Ccnlnl DlviliGn
Chlca&amp;o.............,.... ~ 6 .891
lndi... .................. 36 20 .643
CLEV&amp;.AND ....... l2 22 .591
AIIOIIlo ................. .. 30 24 .556
Derroil ..........:........ 28 2!1 S28
Clwlolie ................ 28 211 .519
Milwau.lu:e ... ..........20 34 .370
TO(Oftto ................. :l4 40 .259

Mike Poptowolti, ceater. r"' the ...,..;nder
o( the aea1oo. Waived Jeny Reynolds,
forward.

ST. LOUIS CARDINALS: AJ....S 10
~ whb John Frucalore and TJ . Mathews, pilchen, and Jose Oliva, iefielder, on

·By RUSTY MILLER

_

-

free throws in the final 51 seconds. • Jerry Braswell 12, and each had
three three-pointers for Wake ForAllen Iverson had 34 points for
est,
whicll matched its season high
the Hoyas (23-6, 11-5), who played
with I 2 three-pointers. Three days
the last 10 minutes without coach
John ThompJOn after he was eject- .. earlier, it went J.for-23 from long
range in a Ieiss to Virginia. Dante
ed when he got his second techniCalabria had 13 points for 1he Tar
cal foul. Austin Cioshere had 18
Heels (19-9, 9-6).
points to lead the Friars •. _who
helped their NCAA tournament
chances tremendously,
No. 13 Wake Fo~at 84
No. 19 North Carolina 60
The Demon Deacons (19-S, 114 Atlantic Coast Conference) won, .
All Nlllul'lll T·Lite111
their-19th straight home game and
With ChiOmlum Plcc)llntllle
moved within one-half game of
first-place .Oeorgia Tech in tlie
league race.
Tony Rutland had 22 points and
. 1124411

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.

JCancer kills Janowicz at 66

Y,lednaclay,·Februlry 28; 1!198

In Top 25 college hoops,

'

Wednesday, February 28, 1996

5

..

oz.

c

4 $.1

GROUND

BEEF

I
I

ARMOUR TREET

r• I

LUNCH MEAT
12

oz.

89C
I

.

�•

.

W•neaday, Februa~ 28, 1996

~

~p·~&amp;·~~~~~~~~~nti~~
... ~
.
~
~
.. --~~~p~~y~•MI~~~~~O~h~----~
· W--~~·~Y·~-·~~28,_1M ~
.

~

Dally Sentinel• Page 7

I

. ..' .

.

"

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.

.

'

-·

..,

'

~

"•

-·

•

--'
-'
"

.

'

..

-.

.

89
. .

. LL

Ll.

BONELESS . ·
CHUC . .
CO BO PAC

.

ILY P C
CUBE-D
STEA

Family Pack•Roast,
Grounci.Chuck

..

.. .·
.
.
.
.

.

•

~

'

.

-.

19

~~~

1.2

·

oz.

. PIG. ·

59 ·.

..
.

.. ·
'

.

•·:

3CT.

SHURFR"E.SH. ·.. ~~­

~:, HOT-DOGS
I

II

,..

'

. ·.

. . ..

. :

WHILE SUPPLIES LAST

PIG.

.'

..

..

.

•

1pound

•

··

Family-Pack

H.N'
BOLOGN

.

.

. o.f ·

LB•

'

"

•

i

i

'
:.··

·;

~

.
'"

t

..

....

70L

Frozen~Assorted

.

I

\

Family Pack

00

,'

·'

...·

..-.....
.. ...·'
.

··. SHURF ISH ·
· ·ICE CR·E·
'

.
'

1\

·tiL

Varieties

.

- .-,

IL41F

SHURFINE
P.IZZA

' .•

.• \..•

c

ASSORTED ·
POR CHOPS\

•

.

LIS. .

ft

•
. •'..
... '.
•

· · ·.FRESH
ANAN. S

•

•

'U-Iiit

'

.,,""
•w

..

.~!

·~

~.~

.

~

):
·t

~;

'

.

.

~

'

.

.

'

gallon jug

·I

.I

..

.:

1%

I

.

c

I
. I
I
I
I

..

I

. ..
.

·.

.

'

.

..

·1 51

•

.
\

' I
1
rI

~~~._~~~~~~~--~~

~~~~~~~~
· ~
· ~--~~~~
'

~;

'

.

'

cans ·

. "~

t
••
"

I

"

•

..
.

\J

.

~

�.

The Dally Sentinel• Page 8

Wednesday, February 28, 1896

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

.

60 Loet ll'ld Found :

·:Friend is passport to decent life for n·eglected-boy
,Ann
Landers
1995, U.1 Anadet
Tunes Syndiclle IIIII C~ ·
aton SyDCtic:ate.

Dear Ann Landers: Several
"!Celts ago, my best friend, " Bryan"
·(he's 13), had an argument with his
_dad. His dad hit him on the back and
· rnade a black and blue mark. Bryan
left home and ended up at our house
Jar the night.
'
• · The next day, Bryan called his
·&lt;lad. and they straightened things
•.out. He seems OK now, and I don't

·.:UMW hold
·meeting
'

neglected. but it doesn't sound as if
think his dad has hit him again.
Bryan's parents don't give him he is being physically abused. Please ·
much supervision, and he gets to keep on befriending him. You and
stay out as late as be wants. My par- your family are his passpon to a
ents like Bryan, and they take him decent life. Bless you. And P.S. If ,
everywhere with us. His parents Bryan_'s fatl;ter hits him again, Bryan
never send him with any money should talk to the school counselor.
when we invite him out to eat or to a
Dear Ann Landers: This is for all ·
movie. It seems they don't care those grandparents who never hear
where ·he is or what he's doing as from their grandchildren throughout
long as he's not bot\lering them.
the year -· not even a letter of appreDo you think Bryan is being ciation ·in response to a gift. I offer
abused? If so, what should I do? Is this suggesiion: Next time you send
there anyone I can contact who a check to those ill-mannered grandwon 't tell his parents that I was the children, OON'T SIGN IT. I guaranone who called? Do you think I . tee you will receive a letter in the
should stay out of it? I need your next mail. -- John in Tequesta, Aa.
advice. ·· Florida Friend
Dear Tequesta: What a splendid
Dear Florida: Bryan may be suggestion! You have hit on a sure-

ners, or put the phone off limits unu1
the kid knows how to use it properly. The call could ~ an emergency
or an expensive lang-distance mes~ge. Most 6-year-olds who race to
answer the phone have no idea what
counesy is - about. It takes . the
patience of a saint to stay cool under
these circumstances.
There is enough frustration when
attempting to reach'business establishments with "press I for this" and
"press 2 for that" without being
forced ~o listen to little darlings on
the other end of--the line who can
barely talk.
If you print this, Ann, I'll bet a
few million families will get copies
in the mail. -- Frustrated in Seattle

Dear Frus.: You're singing my
song. I know of few things that
annoy rrie more than trying, without
success, to convey a telephone message to a preschooler. To those parents who are wondering if you could
possibly be I'Cferring to their children, the answer is yes.

In an effon to provide our reader. ship with current news, the Gallipolis Daily Tribune and The Daily Sentinel will not accept weddings after
60 days from the date of the event.
All club meetings and other news
anicles in the society section must
be-- submitted within · 30 days of
occurrence. All birthdays must be
submitted within 42 days of the . .
occurrence.
.
All material submitted for publication is subject to editing.

'

SlllfH'S
CONSIRUCIION

I

Calif. 90045

SPECIAL

Klck.Boxlng
Training ·
At Big Bend
HeaHh &amp; Fitness

Scores Point
Spreads and much
more.

$466

Call992·3967
for Otttalll

·oNIONS
lAG

$119

(Ume Stone-

IATTDITIOII SINGUStll

LowRalee)

No MertiW Datell

WICIS

Silplycal
1·90H56-2600 Ext.
3836, 2.99,.,. +
11 yn., . . lstn "
111~11 locatecl II~
pnfletllelnelves.
Strv-U
'(619) 645-1434

HAUliNG

...

·BROCCOLI

;
{. &gt;

.j

Lola Hanlaon of Rutland, Ia serenaded by
Denver Rice, John Van Rieth, Mike WIHong and
Gerald Powall, members of the French City
Chapter of SPEBSQSA, In honor of her 81et

·c ard takes
places first
atFFA
competition

birthday Feb. 14, Valentine's Day. Harrison'•
children are Jack Harrlaon, Elaine Quillen and
Don Harrleon, of Rutland and Ada Scott of Point
Plea..nt, W.VI.

-Community calendarAssociation Lenten service, Pomeroy
Church of the Nazarene, 7:30Thursday. Rev. Lamar O'Bryant to speak.
MONDAY
RUTLAND •• An indoor camp
meeting, sponsor~ by the Meigs
Area ·Holiness Association, will
beheld from March 4-9, 7 p.m. each
evening, and March 10, 6 p.m. at the
Rutland Nazarene Church.

The CommunitY Calendar is
published as a free service to non-

profit groups wishing to announce
meeting and spe.:ial events. The
calendar is not designed to promote
sales or Cutid raisers of any type.
Items are printed as space permits
and cannot be guaranteed to run a
specific number of days.

TRACY CARD
such as pepperS, tomatoes and cabbage. She made boxes, hoed weeds,
·drove tractor, and perfonned other
duties as required.
Card's activities in the FFA
include team decision making,
forestry, soils arid environment. She
has served as reporter for three years
and has worked with the Meigs
County Junior Fair Board. She is a
member of America's Pride.
Future goals include obtaining
the State FFA degree, serving as
chapter officer her senior year, and
taking a run at a stale FFA office. She
plans to attend college upon graduation . Her agriculture education
instructor is Aaron Sayre.

WEDNESDAY .
RUTLAND ·· Evangelist Oerald
Harding of Columbus, speaker at
Believers Fellowship Ministry, 7:30
rfm. Wednesday.

Limestone, ·
Gravel,-Sand, .
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

...... ,...

~our

lUNCH

69

614-992-3470 .

c

eareneeds.

Fu~

&amp;

Ext. 6057
$2.99 per min.
Must be 18yrs.
Touch Tone Phone
Required
Serv-U (619) 645-8434

IN1mo.

LYagasPick
Updatacl ~;very 15 Min.

No Willing direct

menu.
1-1100-776-0100
ext. 7823
sue Jill' min.
Muet be 1a yre.
Ser-u-118 145 8434
rmnrno.

wlflt IIHt ,_. • HfYice

PICKENS
HARDWARE

to belr It up

Serving S.E. Ohio &amp; Wat V1111nla
Toll Frw 1.aoo-e72-5187
448 9418
80 .

MASON, W. VA.
773·5513 .

H&amp;H

.SAWMILL
Portable

Public ~le
and Auction

.

. IDCftOI

BllltdsiiWMIII

••,., 111111:11,
IO:•L•.
'

.PORTLAND -- Th~ Lebanon
Township Trustees, 7 p.m. Thursday,
township building.
POMEROY-- Pomeroy Group of
Alcoholics Anonymous, 7 p.m.
Thursday, in the basement of Sacred
Heart Catholic Church, Mulberry
Ave., Pomeroy.

To place •• ••• call

Senti1el Classifieds

32124 Happy HOllow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy Brlckles

614-742·2193

.Located at the Auction Center on Rt. 33 in
·Mason, W. V. Having ·sold the house, the estate
of Ardenls McDonald' has been moved &amp; will be
sold at the Auction Center in Mason, W.V.
2 pc. Contempary (Norwalk) LR suite (like
new), Recliners, Broyhill swivet Rocker, 4 pc.
I Bs1sSe1tt Cherry coffee table &amp; end table set
Queen' Ann style,._G.E. 25" color console TV,
G.E. 19" portable TV. (remote), desk, rocker,
small l)ydabed, Virginia' House cherry D.R. SUite
pc. Hutch, Round table &amp; chairs (nice), 8
tladd~•r back chairs, 3 pc. french prov. BR suite,
lm11ple chest, two twin beds, full bed, sewing
~mllchiine, Kenmore frost free refrigerator, Amana
r.c~1e!lt freezer, Lg. sharp microwave Oven,
I.Ko~nrrtore washer &amp; gas dryer (like new), ~ears
l1e,,erc:ise bike, lamps, glassware, CQrning ware,
(:cctke . glasses, press glass; Homer McLaughlin
&amp; meat platter. goofus glass,
I:S1·em1.vare, Fenton •. oil lamps, canning jars, small
appliances, antique wooden bowl,
Revere ware Pots &amp; Pans, iron cookware,
'
tetephon~s. stainless steel bowls, dolles, towels,
linens, several tools, small air cornpressot;
garden tools, B &amp; 0 grinder, hand tools, B &amp;
belt sander, drills, rototiller, lawnlloy mower Etc.
~OQd Selection
·
Auctioneer Note: Extra Chtan Auction
Auction/ Conducted By

TfN

.

Public Notice

HMC Maternity &amp;
Family Services
Brothers &amp;
Sisters Class
March-3

1-3 p.m., ·ages 3~12
Infant/Child
CPR classes
- all ages
•
4-6 p.m.
Both in Room 300
Walk-ins welcome
Call 446-5030 to register

Temporary TutOr neeited for
1oth grade~ at

M.H.~. InteG~ Math·&amp;
Algebra. Cl!lll 1$2-8215

·F'ubllc NoUca

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Sealed propoaale will be
rtCtlvtd by the Board .of
Education of the llelge
Lccal School Dletrlct of
Pomaroy, Ohio, at the
Treleurer'e Olllca unlll 1:00
p.m. on Thu1'11day, llan:h 14,.
'tee, and at that time
opened by the Tnaaurer oil
eald Board .for five ") new

be oblllnld at the olflce of
the Treaaurer, 320 E. Main .
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45711
or by calllng (814)1t2-5110.
paeaenger handlcepped
accaotlble
bue.
By order olllelga LAical.
llo.rd of Education
Cindy J. Rhonemut,
Treaourer
.(2)7, 14, '.1, '·28;. 4TC.

!

dltMI echoot bueeat -and
one (.1) now elxty (10)
lpeolllcetlont
and
lnatructlone to bidden mav

Public Notice

-nty-one (71) puaenger

'

In

•New Oaragea
•Eiectrteat a PJumDlng
•Rooftng
•InteriOr a Exterior
Pelntlng
Aleo Concrete Work
IFREE E8nMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
1182-8215 .
Pomeroy, Ohio

I" memory of

WANDA
GUINTHeR
. •p•n•d8WIIy
IFtb"*Y 21. 1987.

.GOne but not

fargoa.
........dl

... ,.,..,.

2&gt;-1810 CMvrolat lmp~jiM
4Dr=llld-t-1
'-rd 4 Dr itlft IIIII

eeoo

You wiD alwaya stay
within our helrts. We
love and mi.. you.
Michael

•,

30 AMOuncements

Card of Tha.nka

'

8P·PCBUIIA
'S Lin -

1

..

DAVIS

Debbie, Pamela,

. PUBUCAUCtloN

Qjllo.

In memory of
FREDA and MERLE

Not responsible !Or accidents or loss ol property.

Tilt lolltl'wlng Ullcl
Vllllclll wll be up lOr ....
·by pullllo auotlon ...10:00
a.111., lalllftlay, MINh 10,,1M, 11 1M parklne Jot
~· 1111 111111 Ceunty

lnllemory

Executor; Rick Janes

'

..

. JICk M. Brllloy, Sr.
Jln. 20, 1M1..Jah.
19,1888
Unlnllnllonally loft
out of lhe CMI of
- lhenka .... hll

Foster Parents N~ in Kentucky and
Ohlolll YDCA will pay up to $40.00 per day
for'keej&gt;lng child.In you~ home. If you are
Interested In opening your home to

a

.....,,Gloria
Oeynelt Stevena,
Ortha 'Snldttr l!lnd
Jim Ollpt)ant, Bllt
Ohlinger who
holpocl PMtor
Stinson move us
from 130 Launll 8t.
lncl•l who helped

a child, ~se caH 1·8Q0-331·9989.

t-1• Cllewrotetlnlpalll4
DR 111n IIUIOO ·
. , 1·1· Ponl lrctiDO I Min

......

•1
'

'•"" 1 laurnald AI
The vehlolee w!ll be
evallellle lor · lnepMtlen

.

'.::tt11i£:'.:........
IIIHand

'

lnanyny.

Wh,lkwldlllalllf

Mother, Lucltlt

Ill a; "' 1,1; lTC
•·

r .

FREE ESTIMATES
Take ••• Jlela IIIII el

•Annlvlll'8lrill
oCouplel (Engtlgi!Mnla)
-Groupe ofamlly
otndlvlduat

Jlelell~t.letmeda

It for JH.
VIIY IWOUILI
HIVE IEFIUIICIS
61f-915·4110 •

oSenlor Plctum

C8111192-7747

w..kcJaye- ett. &amp; pm

~M. 1600 McCorm&lt;i&lt;

Weekend•anytlml
.
3/Jrn,..._

212811 mo. ~-

-.&gt;.'. ···~

Authorized AGA Distributor
• Welding Supplies • Industrial G1158s • Machine Shop
Services • Steel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
• Alunitnum!Stainless • Tool Dressing • Omamental
Steps -Stairs, Railings, Patio Fumiture, Fireplace
items, Planler hangers, Trellises &amp; lots of other stuH!!

12 Rutland
Room &amp; board for
Hnlore &amp; dlubltld.
Stqtellcenucl.
Lola of TLC. Family
home atmoephere.
Rneonable Rates

"No Job Too Lsrge or Too Smsll"
We will work within your budget
Ph. 773-9173
FAX 773-5861
108 Pomer Street
,
Mason, WV

992-5042 or 742-1120

....

RACINE
New At Jntles lleetronies
GUN CLUB ladle lbaeli Dealer
GUN SHOOTS Your favorite artist
.
SUN. I PM
on Tape or CD ·

All Yard Sales Mu.st Be Pa id· In
Advance. Deadl ine : 1 :OOpm the
day before the ad IS 10 run . Sun·
day . edition· 1:OOpm Friday, Mon-

day edition 10:00a..m. Saturday. ·

Boggs Au ctio n Service, 614 -4'46 ·
7751J.

"'"mo.

Mt Alto Aucuon . Everv Fr~da~
7pm. Every Sa!Urday 6pm. R1 2· 33
~ crossroads" . Grocenes . new

merchandise. Ed Frazler 930.
Rick Pearson Auction Company,
full t1me aue1ioneer, complete
aucti'an
serv 1ce .
licen,ed
M6S ,Ohio &amp; Wes,t Virginia, 304 ·
773'5785 Or 304-m -54•7.
·

Antiques, collec tables, estates,
Riverine Antiques, Run Moore,
owner, 61 4-992-2526.
Clean late MaCiel Cars 'or
Trucks , 1990 Models Or Newer,
Smi th Buick Pon tiac, 1900 Eastern Averue. Gallipolis.

J &amp; D's Au to Pans. 8uy1ng sal \lage \lehicl es. Selling p3rts. 304 -

liNGO

773-5033.

Racl1e A•erlca•
L..loa Potl 602

EVERY SUIDIY
Doars aptll at 4:30 , .....
Lucky Ball $200.00 and
Ralus $50.00 INICh
wk. Pay according to
the number of players.
Keep ad tor FREE card
11311111D.

J.D. Drilling Company

Wanted To Buy : Standing T1mber,
Arf(

JIIUOYAIIIJIAUI

~ew

""',_, w.m·
hi
rv&amp;vw..

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

lpsptdiM lit f Ik

614-992-7643

A...,

"'- (3041 615-1651

-c10mWE

Help Burned Out VIctims
Socks $1.75 par pair
Pluo so c.nto Poll8gl
~.25 -ytlnler to
11q1r 120, GrUbbo, Alt. 72431

.

J. E. DIDDLE, OWNER

849-2512

RACINE HYDRAULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.

1-900-288-9155
ext. 3912. 18+
$3.99/mln.

Co.

(602) 954-7420

lOBEII IISSEU
CONRRUCTION
•New Homes
•Garages
•Comp~

•

Re~ellng
Stop a Compllre
FREE ESnMATES

985 4473

$-WANTED-$

DELUXE
Finders of hard to
find auto parts.

1200 ·$500 Wk[y. Assemble Pro ducts, No Selling. Pa id Direct. Ful·
ly Guaranteed . No Exp, Neces sary. 7 Days 407 ·875· 2022
Ext.0526H06.

61
ANNOUNCEMENTS

005

$35.000 !YR. INCOME Polential .
Reading Books. Tolt Free (1) 800·
898-9n8 Ext. R-2814 For Details. '

Persona Is

Guys &amp; Gals Your Area , 1.goo.

990-3737 Ext •206, $2.99 /Min.
18• Sen,·U, 81~645-S.34.

Princen Video New Shipment
Adull Video' s

814· 446· 2 50 1.
1380 Eastern AYBOOe, Gallipolis.

REDUCE: Burn off fat lasL Talc&amp;
&lt;lure!ic.
A"'a•lable Fruth Pharmacy, Middleport

~L 111111e!s and E-Vap

30 Announcements
Evan Rossi, MAGICIAN. Parties.
Churches, Schools. 304 ·875-

11147.

IJDUULIC REPAIR
$32.00/HR.

Racine, Ohio 45n1
(1114) 8411-3013 Phone
1814) 841-2018 FAX
814 584-2008 NIGHT

Giveaway

1 Female Puppy, Cute, Playfu l,

Grea1Wilh l'eol)le 614·258· 1527. .
2 adorable &amp; fluffy tan colored
Pl'ppie•. 61•·992·6315.
Approx . 208 wide mouth Miracle

Wl'ip jarL 30H75-3&lt;S4.

'
~.~r:6rpv
~;/1:- ''·~·-···

AVON 1 All Areas
~ars, 304-675·1•29.

.
.
·
·

:

! Shirley
•.

Able Avcrl Represenrau'tle 's ~
needed. Earn money for Chr is tmas bills a1 home/at work. 1·800- . ·
992·6356 or 304 ·882· 26-45, Ind ..

Rep.

.

APPOINTMENT SECRETARY • • :
TELEIIARKETER
•
NEEDED IMMEDIATELY

4 People To Se!" Appts. Fo, local :
Oist. Pay &amp; Bonus. Call For Inter- •
VIeW'.

61.1l-414\H975.

:----__;_.::___ .
Babysiner needed lor seventeen :
month old, prelerably in the Rock· . spungs area. Call 614·992·2292 · •

after 6pm.

•

Certified MIG. Welders rieedect.·: •
Immediate openings in sensillvt . ··
siluation. Huntington area. Lodg. · .
. mg pro'tlided. Apply 1n peraart: • ~
5-407 MacCorkle Ave., SE, Char. :·
leston, WV. Tues 2127 thru Fri ':.f/ .

985-4198

Water

~'U.._~

Equ1pment

Diltnbuted by

1'11•STID Willi SYSIEIIS,

·
IIIC:

The water treatment cOmJ*1Y cordllllly Invites you • to
)lll(lclpata In 1 " " · no obllgttlon, comprehenaNI wller

ooalytla. WI WILL TEST THI POU.OWIHQ:

TDe, lllntrtt HaniMH, Iron, PH.

. . . _ oeHII.oirtSojllllt2-44711 Dl' 1-100-1013313

lOIII

'ATTN : Poirll P1easam'(qc(
Postal Positions . Permanent lull -time lor clerkisorters. Full Bene.'
!its . For eum. applicat io n and
salary inJo call: 708·264-1839 EKt ·
3670, Bam ro 8pm
·

. 1. 9am-5prn 304-925-•747.

Fraa Eltlrnatee
35 Vert Exp.
RIIIOMbll Rates

Beef and
Bui (304) 882-:2756
Res. (304) 882-3328
West Columbia WV.

Free (11 800 -898 -9778 E" . T--

•

FeeCl Stlaton

40

$40.000 /YR INCOME Poion11al.
Horrye Typists /PC Users. To l(
2814 For listings.

or

The French City Ct1ild Care Cen ter, Convenient Hours. And loca tion Far More Information Call
614·446·4467.

28583 BASHAN RD.

Help Wanted

10 people who need to lo&amp; e
weight &amp; make money, to try new
patented weigh!-loss produc t.
304·773-5083 24ho-y.

SWM 33 likes Dancing, Movies,
Quiet Evenings At Home. See~s
SWF 21 -43 With Same lnlerests,
Write : P.O." Bo11 533, Gallipolis,
OH 45631 .

...

Something from the
· honeys
Live girls 1-to-1
conversations

Procall

.

. 'I

.

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

11 0

tn111n

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

IJ Snlct

Amounl. 614-386-9906.

I

For Fr• Eotlmeteo

Racine, Oh. 45n1
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

a.

Wanted To Buy: Gaoel Used Mo·
torized Treadmill. 614· 446 ·31 37.

Wanted To Buy : Scatrling Iron
S~illets, Clacks, Packet Watches
Knives , Tools. Furni ture, Tracto ;
Equipmem, 614·379·2160.

P.O. Box 587

llrl &amp; I ' Jtrfrl
Sttnr&amp;DI*

Wanted to Buy U sed Mobile
Hames. Call : 614-446-0, 75

992-4405

'

Its¥

u .sed 1urniture· ·antique s, one
p1ece or complote estates, Osby
Mart1n. 814-992-74.41 .

Wanted To Buy: little l ikes Toys,
Sand Box , Picnic Table , Play
House. 614-245-5887

HouH Repair &amp;
Remoclallng ,
Kitchen &amp; Both
Remodollng
Room Addition•
Siding, Roofing, Patloa
Reaoonable
lnoure1'11 • Experienced
CoM Wayne Nett

992·2825

Top Prices Paid: Old U.S. Cains,
Silver, Gold, Diamonds, All Old
Col lectibles, Paperweights, Etc.
M. T.$ . Coin Shop, 151 Second
Avenue. Gallipolis. 614-446·284 2.

Wanteel To Bur: Junk Au tos Wilh
Or Withou t Uoto rs . Call Larry
Lively. 614-31!8-9303.

NEFF REMODELING
SERVICE

1131Mn

DRAIN QEANING

Wanted tQ Buy .·

90

12 Gauge

106 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport

PubliC Sale
· and Auction

80

Call 992-3967
1
for Details.

'

Factory Goke Oaly

fload.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VICinHy

of Earth Work
-All Kinds
992-3838

1/l/lln

Mason, W.V. · Terms: Cash or checlc w/10
Res: 773-5785
Auction Center 773-5447

~

lllerltl'e Olftol, Po-roy,

-Room Acldftlone

Advance. DEADLINE : 2:00 p,m.

Inside Sale: 4 Rooms , Full
Clothes, Chairs !Misc. , Thursday,
Friday, Saturday, 9:30 A.M. -5:00

-Nifiollfl,.._..

TruclllngUmeatone
Bulldozing and
Backhoe
Services
House Sites and
Utilities -

IIUIIOI-Emllot

belween 6 a.m.-8 p.m.
Mon. - Set

Lunch

.

Occetfo•?ll

OWeddiRgiiRewpllolll

-Call 992-4025

Rick Pearson Auction Co. He
_

.

washers, dryers,
hot water tanks,
furnaces, batteries
and any metal
materials. ·

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

Howard hcavatin

LINDA'S
PAINTING

~,

FREE
Pick-up discarded

'

CHE€K THE CLASSmEDS FOR AU YOUR NEEDS!

2122/TFN

Polly or Chris...,

All Yard Sales Must Be Paid In

At Big Bend

11 Mlclclleport

Sparts httrttiJt•• Ill

All equlpmeilt In stock

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

Gallipolis
&amp; VICinity

urday.

WEI&amp;II LOSS
PIO&amp;II.Il

Middleport

Yard Sele

70

the day before the ad is to run.
SUnday edition • 2:00 p.m. Friday.
Monday edition · 10 :00 a.m. Set·

" 802 854-7420

992-3894

1-soo-ns-01 oo

Mobile Home Heating &amp; Cooling

'

$3.99 per min.
MUll Be 18 Yre.
PROCALLCO.

Health &amp; Fitness
' 87 Mill St.,

Entertainment Line!!

-BENN

Lawn Tools!

tt%7 N1llllach A.._

(Special Price on Aluminum Cans
from March 1 thru 29)
·
Bring In minimum of 50 lbll. of aluminum cane to
reglltlr for Bum Col!Mmaker to be given away.
Drawing will be held on March 29th.

Sports Edge Sports

for llllllllldlate lnetlllallon.
Frw Elllrnatae
IWV010212

Grass Seed

PAtmSiWG NISSAH INC.

Middleport, Ohio

Give Yourself The

~A~Ir~~eo.~:"ICII:~~n~~~~~~:=t=.red Housing

THURSDAY
LETART FALLS -- Southern
Local Building Committee meeting
Thursday, 7 p.m. at Letart Falls Elementary School. All local residents
encouraged to attend.

Filii ......, ..,•I• ...

503 Mill Street

month old female, 8 14-992-5275.

COIYERSAnON
OlE· ON· ONE
1·900.484-2100
Ext. 2074

Lowest Price~

-~-~:" MANLEY'S 11'J:t~,
•~'t RECYCLING CENTER . "''"

New Five Star

lawn

a. Water

loat Saturday morning on Hysell
Ru n, Beagle/ Blue Tick mix, 7

uno

Nwan Headquarters

II I W:l• 10 iiW • llftCI

.

.-.n-

IIISUIDIISTOODU

992-3954 or 985-3418 , .,. ••••·~======~WV~H~to:t~..~~~==~::

lftin . Must be 18 yrs
Touch-Tone Phone
Req.
Serv-U (61S) 645- 8434

Clliisea

dock·Gallipolia Ferry area. 304 675-7815.

WE HAVE A-1 TOP SOIL FOR SALE

1-ooo-n6-01oo
Ext. '7830 $2.99 per

&amp; Adult

LOST: Llllge malo ohopllord !ype
dog, ~n wtblack markings, Uo-

WE OFFER GENERAL HAULING
Um11tone, Sand, Gravel, Coal

--

Sports Fun!!

Chll~ren

POTATOES

1

I

JIIIY!III·

Addison Township, SSO Reward I

e1-4--446-6343.

POMEROY, OHIO
. Trah Removal - Commercial or Rttldentlal
S.ptlc Tanka Clanecl &amp; Portable Toilets Rented.
Dally, -'ely &amp; monthly renal rlttt.

,,

Send quadons to Ann Landen,
Cruton Sylidicllte; 5777 W. Century Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angela,

5 ll~

CURl'S CAl CO.

Cualorn lullclng l l l r CdII t
0.0..:
·N-Homee
.
tt.ny l Don1111 CIMtc
•AddltloM
Starting
Sun. thru Feb.
•New S~r~~gH
29
Sr.
Clllant
Special
•Remodeling
'Fee for day rune.
;Siding
$1.00 per pmon to
•Roofing .
•Painting
P~y &amp; Middleport
FREE ESTIMATES
Daye: 541-1124 (local)
~~14) 802-5535
,I.
Night.: 11112-2741
814) 882·2753

.

To Peach, Vicinity: Po18CIIt Road,

MODDI SUitlftOI

TAll

I

Gem of the Day: Guidelines for
successful relationships are the same
as for fishing: Keep the good ones,
and toss the others back in the water.

SO LB.
BAG

Loat: Gold llale Labradot -Baonn Hound, 5 Yeara Old, Anlwefa

.. .

~~~~B~hdaygm------- -News poticy-

Frances Goeglein and Iris Collins
_ [10stcd a meeting of the Rock Springs
· ·united Methodist Women's meeting
·. neld recently at the church.
.
. • There was group singing of hymns
. ~nd devotion s by Mrs. Goeglein. The
program consisted of readings given
by members dealing . with Lent;
-domeslic violence, children's min.istries, stewardship, old friends and
_new ones. using the telephone as a
·miss1on tool, and church history.
· Officers' reports were given and a
repon on the sale of cookbooks was
~g iven by the treasurer, Hazel Ball.
. &lt;;ookbooks arc still for sale:
· . ; Projects for the year were select·ed and plans made for a soup dinner .
1o be held on Primary election day,
March 19, at the church.'
. · It was voted to continue the world
1hank offering. Discussed were the
spring retreat, reading programs,
label s for education, and Christian
.g.lobal concerns in the meeting con•
ductcd by Rita Radford, president.
Prayer concerns were given for the
sick in the community with Nonna
Baker giving the prayer.
· Next meeling will be March 12.
'N!rs. Baker read a poe1n "'Til we
Meet Again" and Dorothy Jeffers had
dw closing prayer.
1

· Tracy Card, daughter of Paul and
Sharon Card of Racine, recently took
lirst place in the reporter's book in
[)isnict 10 FFA competition, and I Oth
spot in ihe state. ,
- In recognition of her work, she
will be presemed a trophy at the'DisttWot FFA banquet to be held this
~ing . Card will receive recognition
10!- her reporter's work at the state
PFA convenlion on May 3 to be held
at'the Ohio Stale Fairgrounds.
. As pari of her duties as reporter,
she keeps a scrapbook containing all
a,rticles written during ihe year and
piclures of FFA activities. She is in
charge of writing articles and taking
many .of the pictures.
She also took first at District 10
competition in the proficiency area of
frvit and vegetable placement. Her
supervised agriculture experience
project consisted of working over
1.000 hours at Sayre Produce as a
fru:m worker. Her responsibilities
include picking and packing produce

fire idea that will definitely produce
results.
Dear Ann Landers: May I say a
word or two about parents who
allow their young children to answer
the telephone? They also think it is
cute to have their 2-year-old record
the message on the answering
machine.
Too few children have been
taught telephone courtesy of_ any
kind . When the recorded message is
incomprehensible. the caller isn't
sure he has reached the right number. This can be one heck of a nuisance.
Please, parents, let your children
know that the ppone is not a toy.
Teach them good telephone man-

LOST: lomole Dalmolian, on ~k­
ord Chllptl Ad.. ,.an-• 10 "Berona•, hu blua collar. 30•·675 8404 or :100-4175-1331.

free

FiriiWCOCI. 30&lt;1-6 75-e720 .
Free Puppies, can Lonnie Of Sue,
614·4&lt;1B- 944ll.

Male canary in cage. free to good
homo. 304-675-12911.

I. Socre1ary needed . Co'l'Pl'l' : ·:

er sk•lls required. Sand retuma ~· ~ • .. ...
Boll R-27, %Pt Pleasant Regislef; • • • .. .

200 Ma in St . PI Pleaaonl W\1 • • •
25550.
•
~ .-1

•

Looking tot licensed electtlciana · ~ :~. :
painter•. &amp; dry waller• to give ·•• ~

t&gt;ds on apart'l'.,tl: Conlact.Tf(

,. • '

of Nu-'l'ech lio¥aing!"l,• •) "

...... ·'

Si1 Wlch

..

it·.: :; '
a.. · ....'
.•'- r

�•

.page 10. The o.Jty Sentinel

'

· Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

:;.Wednelday, Febtuary 28;-1996
'

w~. Februlry

The ·oany Sentinel• P~gel1

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

ALLEYOOP

..

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDOII:

'

• CAOSS \

PHILLIP
KIT 'N'·CARLYLU b7 ~ Wrlabt

Rent

Piumbera &amp; Pipeflnera L.U. 1577 ·
llflll Be Oiotrlbutln~ Approntito
ICidona e.g1nn~ng February

1ee.. ford Rang&amp;&lt; 4•4 4 Crlndor
4 Speed, Exe&lt;~llent Condition .
23.000 Mlltt, $12,1100 Firm, 814·
37'i-9885, Altor 4,

V0&lt;1 largo aPortmont In Pl&gt;m.;oy,
all utllltloo peld Jncludlng trash
pjci[·UA ~. 814-Ni-4250:

18118 Th«&gt;ugn March 1, 181111.

llcatlo.na Can Be Picked Up

il.t 1238 Galia Street, Pl&gt;rllmOuth,
()tilo From 7:30 A.M. Until .,00

450

~- · 135.00 Application Fee.

94 Ford F-150 4x4 XLT, loaded,
t6,20o mlea. exe&lt;~Uent condition,
asking $16,900 814·31!7·0288 or
614·840·2481 aher 8pm

Furnished

Rooms

~~.
l'botal l Gov't Joh $2t IHr +

,

EEK&amp;MEEK

454 35.000 Miles. PW, PO, AC.
TW Crulsa, St7,000, 614·245·
5193.
' '

Jl!!'

kales Rap For Snap On Tools,

l:Oe. 806-928-11128.

Rooms for rent • week or month.
Starting at $120fmo. Gallla Hotel.

s:ecre'tary /Receptionist F.or Poinl ,

0

"•
460 ' Spac~tlor Rent

26101, Ann: Ills. Saunders.

\

740

Motors:y~e•

1g76. Harley Oavi!fson Sportater
$4,000, .814-387-Q142.

Roseville Umbrella S\llnd Floren·
tinec.,a24 $-400, 814:446·145&amp;.

1963 Oi\ey Davldlon FLH. filii

dre

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
West Nonb East
Soalll
Pass
tNT
Pass. 2NT
Pass Pass
Paas
3NT

et; excellent condition,

21
mitt, St5,ooo. Mriouo lfl.
'. q res only, 814-99~.

$35. 304-875-231 s

ytimoQAHWA.

Babysitting in m~ home, reasonable rates, 614-992-3925.

9.

4WD. 814-742-2357.

Need A Place To Hotel "'"~nos.
' ShOwero, Or Private Plit••? Call Smith corona portable electric
81"-245-5882, 814·245:5588 An. typewriter and caae. ••c. cond.,

180 Wanted To Do

••o

For aale or partial trade· 1Q87
For&lt;f Bianco II, V-8 automatic,

0

61H.8-9580.

Pleasant, Mid March. Patl· Time
To Start. Very Detail Oriented A
Must Will Prepare Reports, Do
:Tracking &amp; Report Aesu lls To
Home Office. Mail Reaume To
AOW 328 112 Seventh Street,
Suite 18, Parkersburg, WV

1984 . Honda V-65 Magnum,
· tt ,ooo~ ,. winditlllold, very _gooct
cond., $2,200. 304·782·271111.

MERCHANDISE

.

'

610 Farm Equipment

.

10% off ali tractor engine overhaul kits, if\ February. Sider's
1985 Malley Ferguson Tractor,
Very Good Condition, Run a Excellent, 614·742·2457.

614-4.. , · 1449, 614-4Hl584..
, 991 Rocket Chauli race car, 811
new~ in "9. 1, Wilwood, best of eote·
rything, weiCI, _!h[ee .wheetr. li~n. ·
Neal pedals, fuel cell, on. ·board
fire sysrem, rolling chaasis. SS800
2879, 614·849 -2045 cr e14-9926193.

ty. Model 4660 4WD 52 PTO HP.
Each sale pri&lt;e $19,900, 5.9% fi·

EMcenent Condition, $14,800 After

$20,~00. Keefer's

Service Center, St At 87, Pt

P!eaaant &amp; Ripley Rd. 304-895-

3874.
Gehl B5 Grinder Mixer. ·1830 Oa·

814·245-5193.
Factory Has 2 All Sieel Quonset

BuiiOings For. Immediate Sell, {1)

CO~O. N«tver Erected . Will Take
Bllara Owed. caa Bil: ·

800-581·584;1

560
1bedroom Bll&amp;rtment·, furnished ,
clean &amp; nice in Pt Pleasant. No

pels, 30o4-67S.f386.
2 bedroom apartment, $350 a
month, utilities included, $200 de·
poslt, no peti, 614~9lil2·5724.

30" gas range, almond color. Wall
furnace 100,000BTU. Entertarnm&amp;nt center. :Jl4·675-3768.

Baby bed, sWing, stroller, car
~. high chair. 304-675-4548.

FINANCIAL

210

Business

Opportunity
-~

•

!NOTICE I
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommends that you do busi ·
ness with people ~ou .,know, and

NOT to send money through !he

m~ll

until you have investigated

the oi1l!ring.

·

New Growing Espresso Cappuc·
cino Bar On Rio Grande College

Campus 'Call 814·245-5882, 61"245-5568 Owners Relote,ting.

Price Buster ! NeW 14x70, 2 or
3br. Only $995 down, S19!&gt;'month.
Fre e deliVery &amp; setup. Only at
Oakwood Homes, Nitro WV. 304·

755·5885.

Scnult Factory Rebate: Receive
$1 ,500 Reba te With Any New 2bedroom, partially furnished, tJtil Schuh Home Ordered Belore ities mcluded, single or double
occupancy. Security depOsit i'e·
Marth 20, 1996. Single Or
qulred. 304· 773-90011.
Section. French City Homes.
Gallipoti~ OH 61"-446·934(1.
3 bedroom apartment or rent in
Pomeroy,
no pets, B14-992-5858.
350 L.ots &amp; Acreage
Five acres,
aerator, ·near , 35 West 2 Bedroom Brick Townhouses, 1261 Jackson Pike, Gal·
Racine,$16,000 can finance
lipolis, Across From Cinema,
hell-.,, 614·~9·3J2S
$295/Mo. + Deposit, Rental lnlorOne Acre Flat Prol&gt;'rtY In
I · mation, 814·.446-0006, Or Wri te.
P.O. Box 994, Gallipolis. OH
polio, Perfect For Mcbila Home

BAHAMA CRUtSE I 5 days/4
nights, Underbooked l Must Sell! Old,

Wanted A.pproJCimate Acre Level
Lot Prefer Already Developed
Within 5·7 Miles, Galllpolla, No

Relkic:tioo' 6H46.1J034.

~nee;

RENTALS

on race. color, religion,

limitation or da&lt;:rlnjnatJon.'

...

•Thill

-per wllll101

-irVY
_..._
.......

ac:capt

I

·.~-•tn -tton ot t11e

,OIIrreedlrl118~
inlon'nld lhlt .. ~

·a dwdled In tl'llt ·ne~••r8P8f

are-a011an-l

· ~-·.'

REAL ESTATE

Beige Flexsteel Reclin8r, Good
ConditiOn, $50; Technics Stereo
Receiver With Remote, like New

$50, 614-448-1155.
Boots By Redwing, Chippewa,
Tony Lama . Guatantead Lowest
f'litos AI Shoa Cole, Gallipolis.
Concrete &amp;' Plastic Septic Tanks,

300 Thru 2.000 Gallons Ron
Ewans Enterprises, Jackson, OH

sso. 614-14&amp;-3821 '

AKC Bo11er, fawn, female, 7mos.,
hausabroke,n, al'lota, lowes child·

~lendly. 304-675-5089.

'

.''

Couch And Chair, Good Condi·

AKC 'registered Coohr Spaniel

NH T hay blne. Owa1onni r hay
bine . Gehl gr inder/mixer. 12'
transport disc. All good condition.
304-273-4215.

Livestock

16 ·f&amp;eder calves : s ,steers &amp; , 1
heifEtrs, mi~ed bread, weighing
~etween 450·800 lbs., 614-742-

porte d &amp; complete, angle plugs,

814·992·3463 or 61•·892-3696
Todd Smith.
Man~ cars Urld&amp;r 14000. All are
checked over, br.-kea, belts, etc.
Mark' s Auto Sales. 814-992-

Traitor In Gallipolia,.81 ..,.46·1!e.9 No pet1 :104-675·5162.
For lnlor,..tlon.
·

Furnished 1 Bedroom Apartment,
2 bedroom house, dean, luly
Second Avenue, GalliPolis, Uppeted, fenced, in yard, no pers, stairs, Utilities Paid, No Pets, Ref·
deposiJ &amp; ref,rehc,es required, erences, 6; 4-~523. ·

car.

61-4·992-309:). '

Furnished 2 Bedroom Apartment,
2 Bedrooms, Downstairs DUplex, Across From Park, AC, No Pe11,
t.S Vine Street, GallipOlis, Near References, Deposit, $350/Mo.,
River, Garage $3501Mo. Water 81H48·8235, 61H48-0577.

Paid, Deposit; References, 614·
446·2419.
. Furnllhad

Downstairs,

2, 3 BedrlJOm Homoa, Rodney VI~ Clean, No Pets, Reference. ·
lago II Deposit Required, Vorr.' posit Required, 614-446-1519.
Very Nice. Leave Me11~ge. 614·
Furniahed Elficiency All Utilities
446-1543.
Pai~. Share Both, $145/Mo .. 910
2bodroom housa, 2219 112 Lin· Second Avenue, Gallipolis, 814coin lifo.· 304-875-1301.
4-0e-3945.
Nice cteon 2 bedroom. In Pl&gt;merI'
oy, lor rO!Jt· or ·teaso wl)h Op!IOfl to
buy. HUD a&lt;eepted, J300 per
month with dopoail no peto, 8t•·

1902.

JET
AERATION MOTORS
R'IIIOired, New &amp; Rtbult In Stot:ll
CoH Ron Evona, 1-800-537·8528.
Lazyboy Rocker Recliner Like
New, VInyl Cowering $160, fJH ·

258·1838.

'

Like New Nordictrack Pro $250,
Juon 400X Telescope With

Stand $50, 75 Gallon Tall Rot·

tangular Flah Tank With FJiter .

$125, Little Tlke Pla~housa 150,
16 Ft. Fiberglon S.aro 3-SaatAor,

or304-773-0107a..,Spm.

1988 Honda ,.·Ttax 250R, rebuill
'from ground up, everything ~.
$2,800. 304· 675· 5815 or 30•·
89,5-3237.
I

3011 :

·. · .

$3.800. 61.,~58-1138. • ·

t

$1 ,450, OBQ, 614..,.C1·1584.

;

750 BoltS l Motors {
for Sale

:.

Charolaia Bul!s For Sale. Pur-'
ebred. Polled, And Registered 1978 Ford t/2 Ton V·8, 302,
Bred For Calvil"!tt Ease, 614·379- Runs Good, $1,200, Neg·. 614 ·
256·9309. 614·256-11205.
2844, 614·446-Q771 .

6.40 · Hay &amp;
Hey

Grain

1979 Jeep CJS, new •258 moto r~
top, shocks. rotors &amp; brakes, "X·
tra doors, 5 new rims on 35" tires,
lift kit. 304-875-5089.

•

Never wet, round bales hay ror
oalt. 304-8112·3:!77.

••

•

A~sorles

81 4·245-5877

car detailing· the best, by •P"'
polnunent after 4:00pm or all d.,.-

Saturday. Calf 81"-1192·3011
time:
'

anj·

NeW gas tanka, ooe ton truCk
wheels, radia.,., 1loor mAll, etc,

Clmpers&amp;
Motor Homes

5193.

81..,245~

.

·ttL AAJE. t-.. ~.

...

OGEPr tD LIKE MU5ThW

lr.lEU. t::'CtE, ~Ill\

I~TEN&gt;OF J(.Eit)U..

:Pia,LE~, 00l().l

DOWN

--

1 Arrow potaon
2 8110pping

8 Tllankl - l .
7 - Gpl• Secret

out
t--on tiM

• DlppN

beck

3 LWwftuld

. 4 Klcllclll tYPe
5 Roedl

10 !!'lined
~

11 --.!the '
tpetdol
11 Dltllll

.:e.-

21 Spol!en

:=m••aura

28 IIIIUJ'IJ' ·.

garment
77 U!llt ol

I

1988 Bronco V·8, Auto, Air, AwA ,

810

m

. Hf-lnellon

30--·.
21 Daaarwe

-

331Aiveout
315 Retln-

produclng

50s

N0

'{QJ fa.. WI~

(:J.1'( OR 50ME1l\11-1' 7

. points.

I I PI

I I 1· I ...
ARTHEW
,--1 e

~D~lOO?

l-ol';5-rl-,lr;6:_,• •

I

C-pleto thO chuckle QUOlOd

by filling in the milling words
.__._ _.._..__..__.._,. you develop f•om stop No. 3 below.
.

OH, nlD M.f.
IT ~L»\ IWE.1

lli.I-\NIE. me:~!

I~,

"Of course I get exercise ,
from walking." one cutie told
her friend, ' I have to get to the ·
.------=--:--:-:---,-·····don't I?"

EN0 H y

mE. Plc.Kl.£~
~~(:£Xl01,

I G

~~~ ..

.

~~""'?'J
~TITUTE
'I
(£111J(.C. »&gt;D

_

_

_

_

_

A PR INT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
~
THESE SQUARES

BIG NATE

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

SCIIAM-UTS ANSWERS

Home '
II'!1Pf'OV8fll!lllls

the

BASEMENT

Sovinrs You'll Find In the
ClossJ(Ied Section.

WATEIIPROOF~
~ncondltional lifalime gu,rantte~

Local relerthees furniahed. Call
16141 448·0870 Or {814) 237'
0488 Rogers Waterproofing. Esr

IWEDNESDAY

ll~ilhed1875.

And Sarvlce: All

FEED &amp; SUPPLY. 814-11112-411114.

Golden Ro~i..., Puppies AKC,
$200, Shptl &amp; Wormed. 9F. .
Ready to go. B1"-31'i·21181 Alter
5Qm,

laguana. 32'" long; 20gal tank wl
hood, largo heat roc:k 1 vita ighl
S21l0.304-117S.1082.
Male Seal Point Siam11e

· V.ormed And Litter Trained,
' 81&lt;1-3117-7123.
mi .... ihl.ro oar,
' \

ASTRO-OR:;?~H

Rowboot$50081~1-.

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

898-7244.

and you'll lind II. The Mlro · Graph
Matchmaker instanlly reveals wltich signa
are romanllcally pcerfect for you . Mall,_
$2 .75 to Matc;hmaker, c/o this newapa·
per, P.O. Box '1758, Murray Hll Station,
New York, NV 10156.
AIIES.{IIariiii21·Aprll1t) Keep an eye
on your behavior today, ...,.. !filly when
interacting with family members and rei!'·
ttvea. A atncere, lactful approach wil be

....,...,
11110 DodQf Cam011 No,r Front

Gitatl V-II 3.0 LMr, t4.100, ,..._,
B1H45'07 j7.

...

'

.oc:,nditiona cOat naturally.' R&amp;G

Tire1. Br1~11 &amp; Belts, lookl

·

21 ........

311:11 ...,;ngo•,&amp;weekends.

bale aitaeo. t 700nb bales,
AKC Registered Ron Wtiior Pup- ·Round
$35. 304-675-4308.
pies, CJ'tatnplon Bloodline, Ger-

'

23 parlotl .
olllml

38 Wnh'ndMicoml•
In international bridge events ,
llllbr.
Englis.b is the official language. 'h,.-t--141
WlaeHowever, during the auction, you
43 DIHnterly .
make your bid$ silently, using bidding ibJrl-t-+boxes. This avoids the problem that
46
ian
47BIInd•-confronted Fran Lebowitz: "No matter
48 w. Cout con.
how politely or distinctly you ask a ·
49~
'
Parisian a queslion, he will persist in
··~·d
answering you in French."
·
twol• •
Today's deal saw good play by lr:-r+-;51 ClaM group
Frencb experts during a match
52 NYC-.~
against Sweden at the 1994 NEC lonc+-158~..
World Bridge Championship in
Albuquerque.
How would you have tried to make
three no-trump against a low spade
lead?
You start with seven tricks: three
spades , two hearts and two clubs .
Assuming the clubs can be estab·
lished for four tricks, you will be all
ysu .
WYT
ZL
•p I
SLZJPSK
J Y E F
right unless the opponents can cash
four diamond tricks when in with their
ZJVZ
p
YSU
PZ I
WYTPSK
YH
club' winner. Is tbere any way to cloud
the issue?
PW
BLFZIIT.'
OLJS
IYKF.
The Swedish declarer wQn the first
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "The billareat tears Shed over graves are lor words
trick with the spade king over East's
left lllSilkl and daed8 left undone.'-· Harrlal Beecher Stowe.
·:
10, played a club to dummy's ace and
another club, ducking when East
played the queen . He hoped East
WOII
TUTDAILY
would return a spade. However, Alain
PIUUI
Levy found the lethahlwitch to the di·
amond live. West, Herve Mouiel, won
with the queen and returned .a dia·
' mond, so the contract went one downc
At the other table, after winning the
· first trick, Michel Perron immediately
led the diamond 10 from his handl
When West played the four, the suit
was blocked. Even if East returned a
low diamond to his partner's queen at
trick three, declarer could ensure that
J
W!lllt won the defenders' club trick.
Perron came home with nine tricks,
giving France 12 international match·

SERVICES

ents on prornl101, S200. 614·992·

24 tennlepro
Rod77 flo* • bll!e
31 High Oiti'd
32Honey. . . .
bini
34Cqo
315 CiiJarat beer
37- Blllnc

e.g.

rcw:ro roc:.

q;

rate bed &amp; bath, loaded. eac .
concl., 304-875-5S.t alll!r 5pon

Wf\~T,

foK&gt; C.CU.D I

WCI-Illl" \

I

Oodga Engine. 35,o0o Milol, Ex••
._
tei~ten-:-:tCCindtion:-·- · ....;_
' e_t_4·:..258_
'·1:..20..:2:... ....;.,.,
1993 Dutchmen 281t .. ""· sepa.

puppies, bQrn 1/17118, both par·

Cf.E.'(·

·'•'

FuiiW' Contained, ~ool , Air, ,...

l966 GMC t500 6.2 Doioal, AU·

.THE BORN LOSER

0

.

1985 Dodge one ton dump lruck,
-44,000 ·originaJ miles, one owner,

tomaric, Runs E•cellenl,

s
I

.. ,,

r

0 &amp; R Auto, Riplor, WV. 304-372·
3933 or 1·800-273-9321.
••

~,9='7::6:-::-W::-1n~n~e-:-b-og-o~M:-o:-to-r"'.Hi-o..m....;e)

.

. ' ,,,,,

·Budget Transd!iasions. Und IR
~ullt. All Typea, ·Accesaibla:
Over 10~000 Transm1ssro .

614-444H556 After 8 P.M.

For Sale: Round And Square $3500, 514·002·31~.

a.r.s, e14·245-5t93.

-~-

,

Parts &amp;

Valley81 N.C. college
82Dni-

23-Ungue
lelrllne)

....

COFFE-E co.

2445
•

Auto

..

ZP.PPo

W
loaded 110 MerCiuiaer 120Ht
Garage Kepi. Like Naw, 81 + 4
1988 InVader 17.5 Ft. Open

760

1077 Ford Tri·A•Ie ' 19. Fl. Alum.
Bod, etv&gt;ne: 6t4-~56·6325..
~

7458.

7410 .

8205.

720 ,oTrucks fof Slle
'

814-245-5084. Afier 5 P.M.

~

Rare Find 1886 Horide 350x ll
Wheeler, RQna Groat! Socratic!,

Black 350 With Shift Kit, $3,500 .7347or61..o.&amp;-2879.
Neg., 614 ·256·9309 , 6t.f·.256·

3 Year Old Angus Bull. 614-379·

·

For dessert we had
doq food d Ia mode.

growinq up.We had
doq food every day.

'

1993 201 cPro XL, 20' Strut
baas boat, 200 XPHP. 614·66~

3:!86.

2882

I was for.tunote when

~
.
,
Trailer, 614·44e-244~ Ask F r

Paul

80Herper

..,rl-+-

:. PEANUTS

1993 Honda Goldwing t8,ooh
Mile- Loaded, With' Match!~

Sharp! Ht72 Monle Carlo Red 1

o

Howard commercial freezer; T&amp;f·
ramite back hoe: Commercial
corner lot with building; 614-7&lt;42·

1gsa Harley Oavida9n, 88:) c~•·

tom deluxe. $5,200.304-773-5155

_10_6_9_·- - :·- - - - - - - · · 1982 18' Glastron, 351 inboard,
•
Itt prop $3 500 111
id
Chevrolet Dart II. steel heads,
• •
· w cone Y
amall boat for 1rade. 814·99at

Two black and whittdaced heil ·
era: one herefOrd .heifer : one
black Ang~s bull and one hera - 1983.Biack Chevy 4x4 Duley 8.2
ford bull; cow aod calf; 814·992· Turbo Diesel PW, POL. $6,500.

AKC ~eg . ·R.oltweller, male, ap·
prox.: 1yr oiCI, goad · blh~vior~

\

JO 18' Disk 1700 NH 469 He1·
bine $4,000·, NH 849 Roundbalet
$7,500, Andy Adams, 614-379 -

male: AKC Shetland sheepdog.

Call 614·1192·624• days or 614·
742·2654 altor 7pm.
·•

.

Ullmann

22-Molnee

45~=-

Windstroan Asking $2,700, 814·

Equipment Used Cars. 304·458-

Registered Angus Bulls For Sale.

lemale; AKC Cocker Spaniel:
AKC Sthlpperke's, mala and le·

1987 Kawasaki Ninja: 800 Helmet.

Pipe, POHahed Wh~ala, Tinted

51a3.

AKC Chocola:re leba, male and

AKC regiatAored ChineN St.reot.

614-446· 7283.

nanting avon il you have b4uin
turned down elsewhere. Up ton

Grain led beet. S1.25 per lb.. you 1978 GMC 1 Ton Pually, Good
f*Y lisugltter lee, 614·742·2274. Condition, $1,100. 81"-37Ht22.

2 b'ack female pups; large Cfoga
..... 81"-11411-2128.

Electric Wheelchairs /Scooters,
New /Used, Scooter !Wheelchair
lilts, Stairway Elevators, Lih
Chairs, Bowman's Homecare.

Equipment Saloa And Service.
Altizer ·Farm SuppJy, 614 ·245 ·

AutO loana. bea1er will arrange ti·

ran, $300. 1360 W/konnel, 304·
675-5788.

1·600·537·9526.

tiol\ S50, 614·446·8652.

tion ADS. Loaded , Sunroo!, Mint
Condition, 25,000 Miles, $12,950
wa"apty. 614:24s.9o:i7.

Efficiency. References. Deposit

Scenic Valley, Apple Grove.

meJqoany IUCh prele....,.,

9am-t0pm.

Stale~ 814·245-5193.
Gehl Round Balers, Mower Con·

dltioners, Disc Mowe:ra, Disc
Mower Cor\ditioners, Forage

1987 Honda 70 tour-Wheeler, U·

cellent condition, cell 814·992·
3253 altor 5pon

441-0MS:"

)cnglool

By Phillip Alder

. 1995 .4•4 .Yamaha Tlmberwo~ . .

2 . Bedroom Houae, 2 Bedroom

et ~ -8592.

beautiful 2ac lot11, public water,
Clyde Bowen Jt., 304-578-2336.

•• t.rnllial Olatus or national
' qitjjl!l, or.'any lnl8ntlon 10 '

304-n:t-5904.

256-1539, 614·254HH69.

:410 Housea for Rent

~lnanclng,

Hlllegal

~125.

1993 Da~tona trot, V-6, 5 Speeil,
Air, lilt, Cruise, AMIFU Caasette,
43,000-Milel, $7,000, 080, 614·

Alarm Sjstem, V·8C 16.800 080;
1990 Chev. Cheyenne V-6, 5
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT Equipment Trailer 7-112 Ft. Wide man Backoround, Sire OFA Certj· Wanted To Buy: large Round 5!-d.
PB. PS, .$8.500 080, 61 ,._
18
Ft.
Length.
Duel
Wheels.
tied, Parents Excel.lent With Balas 01 Har &amp; Square Bales.
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
882-o839.
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Drive Loading Ramps, S851l, 6t4-U6· Children,. 111 Shata &amp; Wormed, 614-446·1052.
$350, 61"-245-043:1.
'
'
from $244 to $315. Walk to shop 2528, 614-446·'7418.
1988 Ford Ranger XLT V·6, 5
&amp; movies. Call 6U-UB · 25~8 .
Speed, High Miles, Well Main ·
Gao
Cook
S•ove
$100;
Old
Quilt-'
'
TRAN
SPORTATION
AKC
Registered,
Show
Quality
Equal Hou ~ng Opportunity.
rained. 82,800, 614·388-829~. '
ing Frames $45; Antique Oak Li· Uale Cocker Spaniel Puppy~
brary
Table
$t60;
Otd
ExC&lt;&gt;ptionat
Good ~oodllne, Excellent MarkClean One Bedroom Furnished ·
teGO Dodeo Dakota p;q-up, lono
Apar.tment In Middleport. Refer ~ Sa&lt;retary Desk {Unusual) 614· Ings, Block !White &amp; Tan In Color, '71
Autos tor :Sale
bed, s·tpeed, 4 dr.. 55,000 mite.,
ances And Oepoait Required. 245·9448, {GaNipolial.
Dote OJ Birth: 8131195, Houaebro·
cai81"-Eie7·3301 .
ken, 61~79-2728.
'88 Cav8fier, automatic·, air;
8275 Montllly, 614·992·707~.
Hot Springs Portable· Spa (hot
milao, $9600 ; '90 Olds
Country Side Aplrtmenta, Nice 2 tub), seata two, redwoo~ aiding, 'Get a jump on ftaa1. Supplemem ~~!~~~·· 6
I
·
no
plumbing
required.
Call
614·
Bedrooms, AC, WID, Water, Sewmonthlr ~oa f"9grams with HAP·
..
er Garabga Included. $350!Mo. 985·3805. •
PY JACK TABLICKS. Reptil
Deposit Required, 513·922-0294.
adult fteu ·on dog's &amp; tata, and

Down On Blacktop Road, Owner

Houllng .let

2bdrm. apts., total electric, appltances furntshed, laundry
facilities, close to school m town
Applications available at Village
Green Apts. 149 or call 614-992·

371 t. EOH.

Double Wide $10,000 With $500

All ""'lealate edYeltislng In
this
is subjed 10

.

1 ).Kc Golden Retriever, male,
6 Rait Terrier Puppies, 8 Weeks

2 BedrOom Furnished Garage $279tcouple. limited tickets. 1Apartmeot. Very Clean. 614·446- . 800·4 14· 4151 ext 6589 Mon-Sat
0001,614·«6-'2404.

Groom Shop ·Rat Gro&lt;im(ng. fee.
turing Hydro Bath. Julie Webb.
Cilll6t4-448-0231 .

~M. st•·&lt;41 ·0738.

1994 Toyota Corolla Lu11ury Edi·

630

Pets.lor Sale

1992 Lincoln Continental leather
Moon Roof Keyless Entry loaded

walt Mixer, Feeder Wagon With

2744,

R£PO BUILDINGS

neg. Catl SC9tt.Wol!e, 81.4·949 ·

Agco -AIIIt tractors with world
famoua alr cooled diesel englnea.
1ix3 syrichromesh trans. dif lock.
radial tires. 1 double spool valve,
-4yr or 4,000hr drive train warran'nancing price

Metal Roofing And Siding Gat ·
vanized, Garvalume And Painted,

Loaded,

Equipment
.
304-875-7•2 1.

Fork, Deharners, Tractor Bait;
614•367•7902 .

· Grande, OH Call 614·245·

croslca

12.100 OBO; 11185 Chloly Celebritr Wagon, loaded, $1 ,\00, 0110,

9N Ford Tractor Brush Hog, Bale

Block, brick, sewer pipes, windows, lintels, etc. Claude Winters,

1989 Chevy

'

I PafOifti ·
12 Mill
46 OWn (Soot.)
13 Tlloo.- . .~Dim
411181!10.. .._
Edlton
14-llel8"11 - Wllllllat .
enda well
54 Pointed~
58 CllrullruM
57 Cllum
58 Fahlonlbll
18 Dexterity
beech'-'
20 Singer
5t Jump

Let the cards speak

And
Looka Vor1 Good S2,200 Hog.
614·250·9308. 814·258-8205.
'

Al!los·fOr Slle

40Citylll
. lllctlg1n
42'T'nleol--

Opening lead: • 7

&gt;988 Honda 250 2wheel driwe,

~~i~~i:,'::,~H~~~;:;=::;:::::::~:rr=;;;;;;~;;;:;;i· s,1987
..oo. 3o..s'l8-2865. ,.
350 ·Waqior Runs

• -~uu--;2~

I c.Mrol

sa:l:.:':I'Jas

NORTH
02-Z&amp;-86
•4
•K 9 6
•8 7 6 3
•A 10 7 5 4
EAST
WEST
•J 9 8 7 2
53
•10 8 4 3
•Q 5 2 .
tA K J 5
tQ 4
•Q 3
•J
SOUTH
•A K Q 6
•A J 7 '
uo 9 2
•K 8 2

Chev-r Silverado 1T Dually 414

!Jinelita, No E•P - Will ,Train, For
And tnlo 1·800·536·3040,

A.-. tD PIC41D.. Pulllil

·= .....

ALDER

.

•Fnltl M-'1
- Pa I tGhleli

....

.'

TIM~~·:· Fib.
·
29, 111911 , •
'l'lort)anql wtl·fiiOMOITt ior P*- na!MI

II" ~r a;,ew. ~tladlld people
·INIY flr\d a ...,. ........, ina!•lld coup1e1

•In

'l lfll tlr.nglflln 111M lionda, and othlrl
rn1g111
old flame. · :
.

r""'tdle.,

TAURUS (April 20 ..., 20) You tend to
w•ar your heart on your aleeve, and
loday aomeone you love may take
advanta• of this and hurt you. Keep
yair flleflriga to yout'llfl Kpoulble,
Gil. . (May 21..,._ 20) H you are In
the company d a aenlitlve friend loday,
don't embarraaa him or har by recom· ·
mendl~g an ectlvlly you know your pal '
can, IIford.
CAHCIR (June ~~-"~ •1 You uSUitlly
can
even ~ It il 6n
you. "':~~=~
or ego mlgbt

01her. critical elements of your affairs
could be allected. ·
VIRGO (AU!I- 23 Sept 221 Do not let a
misunderstanding over something trivial
develop between you and a close friend
today. Keep your vatuvs In proper per·
spaclive.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 231 It you leel
ambitious today, steer clear of UMlOtivat·
ad comJ)Ilnions. Their lethargic behavior
I
could Influence
you to' emulatetttem.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 221 You may
not b8 industriouS or task-oriented today.
Even thini!S you love to do will get ptJt on
the back bumer for now.
S~GITTARII!S (Nov. 23-0.C. 211 You
may take time out from your serious
dulles to engage in frivolous. activities
today. If you play now. you wtll have tQ
ply later.

CA"IICORN (O.C. a:i.Jin. 18) You may

iiKif'..,•• rwganllng a

1104 ICitieve the · - you deelre today

r you•,. 100 lu or

lliiUeiiOn that reqult'lla OOIICift.d lflorl.

AQUAIIIIUI (Jan. 10-Peb. 11) Anoc·
'PIICI. ~ Ill 'I I .... JD1 Y- ~
talft will analyZe 1t11 lincerfty ol your
· Wlllnl m1g111 nat .,. ~ tOday anc1 ~*~~~. rau
.;au may 1104 OI'IIDOcl m' go fnlril ...- ~ {.luiJ ~...
You nlllll 'iltti i:ol!lltleiits loday. " you·,_. to flattery
you tll*ld on .boll!
and ~ , .file PfiiPit .,.._ .,....,...n reallly and ·to convince them, you~ eolfMOu• may
·blea. ICftow where 'to foo!1 for romat;!GI ~ todiiy. " ~· oulwelghs the -you.

Ia!...,._

.

•'

•

\

Climax · Graft· Wafer • Hourly • FALL FOR

A philosophy professor posted this sign in his office
"Be Bold In What You Stand For And Careful What You
FALL FOR.'

•
•

�•'

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

: Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

~ Hall. ey

.l'

Wednesda,, February 28, 1980'

Society scrapb·qok obscrveher85~hinhdayMonday.~

gradua~es

VE'J'ERANS VALENTINE PAR- American Legion Auxiliary Unit 39
TY
were Mary Martin, Loretla TiemeyThe Amencan Legion Auxiliary er and Jane Snouffer.
Deparunent of Ohio provided the
funding and sponsored a valentine SMORGASBORD
Bradford Knisht Halley, grandson
party for the veterans of AppalachiThe Bashan Ladies Auxiliary met
·of J;.ar1 and Kathryn Knight of Midan Health Cate Center. formerly recently and made plans to have its
dleport, has graduated with honors
lcnown as Southeast Ohio Psychiatric first smorgasbord din11er of the yeat
front Ball S1are University"in Muncie,
Hospilal in Athens.
March 24. Serving time will be from
.Ind:
Seven veterans of this facility II a.m. to 2 p.m.
He received a masterS of science
wer~ given valentines with three
in information communication sciBRADFORD HALLEY
dollars in cash for each veteran. The BIRTHDAY CELEBRATION
ence. This degree is only awarded, at
A party in celebration of the birth.
.
.
veterans played games and were .
.B&amp;II State and Boulder University in Ohm u'mvemty.
.
awarded prizes. They 'were also days of members was held recently at
Colorado.
In In~ta~a to attend the graduation issued cigarettes and candy after the Heath United Methodist Church
Following his graduation, Halley and fesuvtttcs were R~n. Sue and . enjoying pizza and soda pop. Those . Middleport.
, was honored at a luncheon given by Paige Halley, Upper Arltngtlln and a attending and participating from
Twelve tables, one for each
. the dean of the college. He was pre- friend, Katie Craig of Chagrin Falls .
sented with a gift in ..honor of having
·received all A's.
He is now employed by Anderson
"Consulting and resides in Chicago.
~s
wasfrom

. with honors

month, were decorated in the birth '
month of the celebrants and each
group presented a skit pertaining to ·
the event of their particular months.
The dining room featured balloons, flowers, flag, shamrocks, book
and candles. ~le ribbons were prescntcd to · June, July, January, and
Februaryforthemostoriginal in dec-oration and skit.
The group enjoyed a carry-in dinner, singing and fellowship. Appreciation was extended to the Rev. Vernagaye Sullivan for originating the
idea for the joint birthday celebration.
BIRTIIDAY OBSERVANCE .
Gladys Morgan Riggs will

family cele!Jratiotl will be htld thi~
weekend with Risss' daupters alld:
sons-in-law,·Nora and Bob Easorror.
Pomeroy, and Joanne and M~
Johnson of Atlanta, Oa. and thetr'.
families llucndi~g. Birthday cards~
may be sent to Riggs at 434S I Mor-:
gan Road, Pomeroy, 45769.
~
NUTRITION PROGRAM
•
Free nutrition classes wtll ~:
offered to Meigs County ~sidents ·~:
March through the Metgs Cou~ty~
Extension Office, Sharon Smith,:
AEFNEP educator.
:
Smith should be contacted at
6696 for more infonnation or tO.:
enroll in the class.
;

992-:

(Sold In 3 lb re-lable zlplock beg)
Individually Quick Frozen

Flavorite

Boneless Skinless
Chicken Breasts

Asst. Varitles

LB.

5 Lb. or·More

Tenderbest Quality

·California
Cauliflower

Groun Bee
(

(

Starkist Chunk

ASST. VlRimES

YUBIYOGURT

Tuna

$1

sl

Chocolate

$2~.

4 CT. PKG.

ASSORTED VARimES

c_Northern
Bath nssue

c

Jif '
· Peanut Butt.er
I

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="384">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9756">
                <text>02. February</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="29335">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="29334">
              <text>February 28, 1996</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="604">
      <name>anderson</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="100">
      <name>roush</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="155">
      <name>varian</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
