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•

'Page12 • Ttte O.ily Sentinel

...

Wednesday, March&amp;, 1

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Ohio Lottery

TV lets us peek inside Imperial Russia of the.past....,=

Indiana
wallops
OSU73·56

,.

'.

By MIKE HUGHES
Gannett Newa Service
So you think you have trouble
with political correctness?
Just imagine being a school kid in
Russia. Tbe questions remained the
same, Raben Kenner says, but the
answeis changed.
"In 1991, all of the history exams
were cancelled," Kenner says. " People no longer knew what the answers
were."
That's what draws interest in
"Russia's Last Tsar." Tbe film (8
p.m. Eastern Wednesday on NBC)

JIM AADCUFF

'Employee
of month
:named
.
. · Tri-Coumy Community Action;
Agency's Head Start Program has
·named Jim Radcliff employee of the'
.. month for February.
~·
· • Rlldcliff has six year's experienc ·
with the Head Start Program. H ·
graduated fro1'! high school in 1951. .and retired from the Columbus Post
'Office in 1987. He also was a bus . .
· instructor for four years through the: .
·State Department of Education.
He lives in Coolville. He has two
,sons, Jamie, and Terry, who both· ·
·reside in Florida, and eight grand•
·children.
·

captures a period of history that
once was buried.
" It basically just disappeared,"
Kenner says.
Remarkably, the buildings themselves remained. Russia took pride in
its grand palaces - even if it hated
the values they represented.
" I couldn 'I understand how the ·
soldiers (in World War U) could do
that," Kenner says. "Tbey gave their
lives, to preserve those palaces."
Afterward, Russians spent a fortune renovating the buildings. Still,
the stories of what happened inside

was swept away.
"The vast majOrity of stuff just
disappeared into the warehouses,"
Kenner says. " History - both good
and·bad - vanished."
The buildings surVived, Kenner
says, because they perfectly reflected the Russian an form. "They are in
the grand and big tradition."
Look at much of Russian an from choral and orchestral pieces to
paintings - and you 'II see an epic
size and scope. That's the same
appro.ach Peter the Great took, in
planning the grand buildings of St.

Petersburg'. A big man himself (at 6foot-8), he designed epic bu.ildings.
Those buildings may have represented exllimes of a dictatorial soci· .
ety, but even the new Communist
government found ways . to keep
them alive.
"You know what they did with the
cathedral, don't you?" Kenner says.
"They turned il into the Museum of
1Atheism."
I Another question lingers: What
iwas life like for the people inside?
!
With the help of a top Russian
scholar, Kenner saw his opportunity.

l

In '91, when the Soviet Union war:•
'splitting asunder,· those warehouses ·"
became available.
!~
This was a hectic time, when •;
prices could soar or crumble.
::\i
When Kenner asked about the cost;1
of
·renting
a VCR, a Russian cle~";
1
·said that would cost Sl ,000.
~
"{asked her if that was 1.000 dol-&gt;
Iars or 1.000 rubles," he says. "Sbe ~!
said she dido 't know and she'd have '':
to find out.
·.;;:
" It turned out to be I ,000 rubles, •
which is about a dollar. But the amaz- ;?
ing thing is, it really could have been.,;
~
e1t' her one..•
~·~

.

832074

·:s

••,

-Bone Steaks

Dole campaigns in Florida, Buchanan hits Tennessee
•

Master Blend
Coffee
.

99
ASST. VARIETIES

LAURA GUTHRIE

.~Concert

Chuck Roast

'
'

Soup supper,
program
set
.

• Plans for the annual soup supper.
al)d program to be held March 29
\\_'ere made when Star Grange #778
met il) regular session recently,
: The soup supper will served from
S to 7 p.m. and the public is invited
fu auend. A program will follow, with
l.ecturer Vicki Smith in charge.
· : In other business, the Meigs
County Grange banquet was
ll)nounced for April 26 to be held at
!he Meigs County Senior Citizens
Center. Tickets are $7 for adults and
$6 for children. Tickets are available
·ft:om any Meigs County Grange Mas-:
ter. Speaker for the evening will be.
~a Shaner, Ohio State Grange:
Ugisliltive chairperson.
It was decided to purchase a brick
from ,the Meigs County Chamber of
¢ommerce for the promenade in .
Pomeroy.
• Master Patty Dyer presented all
~ond degree team members· with
tlieir silver medallions from the ·ritualistic contest held recently at the
. Fjiendl)' Hills grange camp.
.
.· ; •.Dyer -announced that inspection '
,wiD be held at the next ~~~CCiing and
•
·
. perform the second:
.

Betty Sayre, chairman of the E•ater Trae fund r•lalng proJect
of the Women'• Auxiliary at Veterans Memorial Hoapltal plac:ea
the flrat bunny on one of the three treea which will decorate the
hoapltal for the ....on. The first bunny for one of the INII waa
· purchiiHCI by Doria Adama In honor of Eileen Buck. Ruldenta
al'!l uked to Join In the fund ralaer by making a $5 contribution
to the •uxlllary. The •uxlliary will then place a name on an egg
or bunny ,In honor of the dOnor's fr14!"d, relative, co-worker or
Contrlbtitlonli •nd n1mn may be aent to the Women'•
11.5 E.lhrporlll

BANQUET DINNER MEALS

U.S.D.A CHOICE-BEEF
Boneless

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BUY ONE GET ONE

. ~ - schoo!~ .cl~d

Ice,

8-11' PKGS.

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CRISCO

Skim Milk

Vegetable Oil

99

s

G•l.

99

29
24 oz. ctn.

In The Deli
American Favorite

Asst. Varieties 16 az.loaf

Cooked Ham

Bread

Hearth Farms
Buy One Gel

s 88

WESTOVER
Cottage Cheese

All Purpose Mite

Potatoes
.99
50# bag

$499

6:30

accidein, which was caused by the
slick conditions, the patrol said.
Authorities worked to reopen the
highway before noon.
One to 3 inches of snow was fore·
cast in the Cincinnati area, with more
forecast later in the day from another storm. Some schools closed -Qr
opened late.
About 2 inches of snow had fallen in the Columbus area by midmorning, closing some schools and
' postponing classes at others.
In Meigs County, snow began to
fall at a brisk rate around 9:30a.m. in
downtown Pomeroy, with nearly an
inch of accumulation reported around
t't a.m.
Eastern, Meigs, and Southern.
Local Schools were among the sev-

attorn~y

a

·.iioon.
: Bailey clenched his jaw, spread his
· anns and bowled over an Associated
· l&gt;ress photographer, two TV cameratnen ~d two reponers as he pushed
~is way through the crowd to the
tourthouse. He ignored reponers'
questions.
·:· Bailey was searched, fingerprinted and phoiographed. He was, later
· led oul the back of the courthouse in
handcuffs and shaclcles.' his tie
{emoved, and driven to the federal

. FRE
lb.

. .

-~

ATrv.

eral area schools who dismissed
classes Thursday, due to icy road conditions and the forecasted threat of
heavy afternoon snow. All schools
were closed in Gallia County, too.
Area schooh have been closed at
least nine days now due to snow and
flooding.
Counting today, all Meigs Local
Schools have been closed 12 days
with Salisbury and Pomeroy elemen·
taries being closed 13 and 14 days,
respectively.
In the Eastern District, all schools
have beCn closed at least II days with
students at Eastern High School and
Chester Elementary missing 12 days.
Rive view Elementary has been closed
13 days.

In the Southern Local School district, each school has been closed nine
days so far.
Cancelation decisions on several
evening meetings of organizations
and groups in the c()unty were not
available at press time. If you have a
meeting scheduled this evening, it is
suggested you call to confirm a cancellation before venturing onto the
highways.
As of press time, no serious accidents had been reported by tbe Meigs
County Sheriffs' Department and village police departments. The MeigsGallia Post of the State Highway
Patrol in Gallia County also reported
no serious accidents as of 10 a.m .
Thursday.

F. LEE BAILEY

prison in Tallahas~ee.
Bailey's lawyer, Roger E. Zuckefman, declined to commtnt.
Bailey, 62, was housed in an individual cell for a screening period all
inmates go through to determine if

·they pose a threat to -:- or are in danger from - othe~ in'!lates, prison
spokesman Tony Kelly said. · ·
After that period, which can last
several days, he will be moved to one
of the facility's regular two-man
cells, Kelly said.
U.S. District Judge Maurice Paul
had · given Bailey until 5 p.m.
Wednesday to come up with $2.3 million needed to get the disputed stock
released by a Swiss bank or begin
serving the sentence for contempt.
The 4b0,000 shares of stock in
Biochem Phanna, a Canadian company, once belonged to Claude
Duboc, a drug dealer Bailey represented.
.
It is being held by Credit Suisse,
which won 't release it unless Bailey
. pays off a lien he took out on the
stock. Duboc, who pleaded guilty to
drug charges in 1994 and awaits sentencing, fired Bailey last month.
Bailey, whose clients have included the Boston Strangler, Patty tlearst

and Dr. Sam Sheppard, contends the
assets were for his fee and expenses.
Pr;osecutors claim that most of the
money belongs to the government
because the drug dealer forfeited his
assets as pan of a plea bargain .
The judge had demanded that Bailey tum over the stock while the question of ownership is decided .
Bailey had pleaded with a federal
appeals court in Atlanta for more ·
time, insisting he had a made a goodfaith effort to come up with the money.
• But on Tuesday, the court turned- .
him down. Appeals Judge Ed Carnes
said ilailey had been "clutching .
clawing and scraping" to keep the
assets.'
Paul hasn't said what will happen
if Bailey doesn't produce the stock by
the end of the six-month tenn.
It wasn't the first time in Bailey's
36-year career that he's angered a
judge, but it was the first time he went
Condllued on pace 3

For capital improvements

~eigs Mus.eum.to receive $79,000 from State

I
J

I:.ecturer
a program on

Prices Effective Sunday
March 3-9, 1996

--·HARDWORIING lOW rRI(f~
USDA

Ill&lt; ollglbla foadt only. IIYotnotloo• Ill&lt; design purpooee only. r.. - ·

.'

...! ,

'

'

•

"If you flee the field simply

because the party establishment says
we don't want you on the field than
no real progness is going to be made,"
Forbes said. "We've already won a
moral victory in New York by simply
getting on the ball.ot."
Today's voting will select 93 o(
New York's 102 delegates to the
Republican National Convention in
August. Three delegates are directly
elected in each of the 31 congressional dis\ficts. Nine at-large delegates will be chosen at the state party convention in June.
The ballots feature the names of
the delegates themselves in larger letters above the name of the candidate
they are supporting, giving Dole
another advantage. His delegates tend
to be prominent local Republicans,
including members of Congress and
state legislators.
·As voters went to the polls, surveys gave Dole a strong lead over
Forbes and Buchanan. But the latest
survey showed the ~nate majority
leader and Buchanan slipping and
Forbes gaining.
A new New York Post/Fox 5
tracking poll showed Dole's suppon
. shrinking from 48 percent to 46 per•cent, while Forbes ' jumped from 19
percent to 24 percent. Buchanan lost
·ground from 15 percent to less than
14 percent in the poll of 439 likely
voters conducted Tuesday and

Tbe poll's margin of error is 5' percentage points.
'·
Dole, who captured eight state primaries on TueSijay and led the field
with 290 delegates to Forbes' 72 ahd
Buchanan's 62, had ihe strong backing of the state's GOP establishment,
including Gov. George Pataki and
Sen . Alfonse D' Amato. "He's going
to have a very substantial win in New ·
York," predicted D' Amato, one of
Dole's campaign co-chairmen.
Forbes, a 48-year-old multimillionaire, was seeking to make inroads
into Dole's support with $1 million
worth of television advenising in key
Republican areas. One spot · criticized Dole for voting for frequent tax
increases ; another emphasized
Forbes' ideas, particularly a nodeductions. 17 percent flat tax 'to
replace the current income tax .
Forbes also went on television in
New York City Wednesday night
with a half-hour infomercial that featured an interview, introduction of his
;family and calls from viewers.
Forbes made a flurry of 18St- ,
minute appearances in an effort ·to
capitalize on the endorsement of
Kemp, a former.congressman and pro
football star who is particularly pOpular in his hometown of Buffalo. ,·
And late Wednesday he attended a
$1 ,000-a-plate fund-raiser in Nassau
County on Long Island, raising an
estimated $100,000 to help continue
the

.

F. Lee Bailey sent to prison

. TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) - F.
Lee Bailey couldn't keep his most
imponant client out of prison : himself.
• The famed lawyer who helped free
OJ. Simpson was hauled away in
handcuffs and leg irons to begin serving a six-month sentence for failing
to produce S25 million in stock fwm
drug dealer-client.
: The grim-faced former Marine
bolted from a car in front of the fed_eral courthouse late Wednesday after-

&amp; Diet Rite

meetinJ will be fun niJIU
·

Famous

. 12 pk.

STRAWBERRIES

..

By JIM DRINKARD
and Florida pany regular Jeb Bush.
Assoc:iated Pnu Writer
The Bush brothers'· father, former
NEW YORK - Steve Forbes President Bush, also dubbed Dole of
declared a "moral victory" today for presidential caliber on Wednesday in
cracking the Republican party's lock Texas, one of several states holding
on the New York primary that Sen. "Sur.r Tuesday" primaries next
Bob DOle expected to win in a walk wee .
on his way to the nomination..
Buchanan, who appears on the balWhile an unworried Dole cam· lotsinonly23ofNewYork's31 conpaigned in Florida and Pat Buchanan gressional districts, focused on _pickwent to Tennessee, the publishing heir ing up conservative votes in ihe
focused on New York in hopes of a South. In Tennessee, he trolled for
strong finish here in a presidential supponers of Lamar Alexander, the
race that has become a battle of ideas. former governor who just dropped out
In a party coup of sons, Forbes of the race as did Indiana Sen. Dick
picked up the last-minute endorse· Lugar following Dole's "Junior Thesment of former Rep. Jack Kemp, a day" primary sweep.
supply-side guru from Buffalo, N.Y.,
"We are going to get some of
and a respected Republican who Lamar's votes, I think, from people
joined him Wednesday to defend his who want a change and want dynamflat tax plan. He continued to tout ic, energetic new leadership," said
Kemp's imponant seal of approval Buchanan, dressed in a blue shirt and
today.
· American flag tie. "Some of the lib"I think his endorsement at a time era! Republicans, I think, would probwhen conventional ~isdom says ably go to Senator Dole."
everyone wants to get on the Dol~
Forbes made the rounds of televibandwagon shows that the issues and sian talk shows and planned an afterprinciples of this campaign are bigger noon of radio interviews after private
than the candidate, bigger than the meetings with businessmen and a viscampaign i~J;elf," said·Forbes. "Sev- it to Forbes Inc. headquarters in
enty' five percent of the people have · .Manhattan. He also scheduled a "vicnot yet voted. They should not be ·tory pany" tonight in New York City,
written off."
in pan to celebrate his $1.4 million
"Jack and Steve Forbes are friends campaign and coun fight to win a
and we'll see. how much impact it place on the New York ballot. overhad," Dole said after winning a cou- coming party rules that have in elecpie of key endorsements of his own tions past blocked all but the party
- from Texas Gov. George W. Bush pick.

snow.create bad road conditions

By The Aasoclated Preas
A snowstorm that covered iceladen roads created hazardous condilions today in southern and central
Ohio.
. In the Cincinnati area, accidents
· on the slick roads produced gridlock
. on the city's interstate highways dur. ing the morning rush hour. .
. "It was a nightmare," said Troop' er Tim Patton of the 'State Highway
: Patrol.
'
A collision involving two tractortrailers, a salt truck and a car on the
· 250-foot-high Jeremiah Morrow
. Bndge, Ohio's tallest, forced police to
shut .down 'the southbound lanes of
Interstate 71 about25 miles nonheast
of Cincinnati about 8 a.m.
No injuries were reported in the

HARRISON FARMS

s

A Gennell Co. Ne•opap lr

-Easter trees-- Forbes declares 'moral victory':

MAXWELL HOUSE· 34.5 OZ. CAN .

'

38-

· PomerQY·Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, March 7,1996

1 Section, 10 .....

16th BIRTHDAY CELEBRATION CONTINUES
VALUE PACK
U.S.D.A. INSPECTED GRAIN FED
4 OR MORE STEAKS PER PKG.

Snow tonight, low
around 10. Friday, more
.
anow, high In upper teena. :

Kicker:

Eastman's Ohio Volley Foodlond's

LB.

In observance of Music Appreci- •
.i11ion Month, a concen wi)l be presented at the Meigs County Public '
Library by Laura Hawthorne Guthrie,
on :Sunday at 2 p.m.
: · Mrs. Guthrie is a graduate of Eastem High School and attended Ohio
University. She last studied voice
under Dr. Ira Zook and piano under
Ms. Gail Berenson, both of Ohio Uni- '
versity Music Department.
. She will present a program includ·
iljg contemporary Christian, old
Cflristian favorites, 1940's songs and
a piano solo of Bach's Preludio I.
· ; Laura lives in the Chester area
with her husband, Troy, and children
. Mallory and Seth.
i
: Her program will be dedicated to
Maida Mora, her long-time friend
attd supponer.
'

Super Lotto:
2·7·18-33·36-38

· Sports, Page 5

Vol 48, NO. 217

99

:scheduled
:for Sunday t·,

Pick 3:
280
Pick 4:
0823

•

, ' The Meigs County M~seum will
.The App'alachian 1'\lbli~ Facilities
]eceive $79,000 in ·capital funds Task Force was created by Amended
. wough the state's office of-budget Ho11se Bi11280, which was sponsored
by Rep. Carey.
• . . .
. :management.
. : The funds are pan of $5 million' • The seven-member commlllee
TC!eased by the state Controlling ' was created to make rec~mmenda:Soard for various Appalachian Pub- tions for the use of 81JPfopnations for
lie Facilities Improvement nmjects, the Appalachian re_gion. The funds
·~~ecording to a statement ~~Cased can he used for Improvements at
;......~... ~by State Rep. John Carey, higher ed\lcation; arts and recre:R-Wdbt"~.
ational facilities.

il ·
'

•

'

The Meigs 'projects were pan of a $25,000
~Mackay Tbeater Restoration $580,63&gt;3 package of funding for projects awarded in Rep. Carey's 94th $123,000
•Wellston City Pool - $2,000
Disirict. Other district projects
•Southern Ohio Natural History
included:
•RenovationofFrenchAnColony and Cultural Center - $102,817. .
•Lawrence Co. Center for Cultur·
- $45,000
oQallia County Historical Society ai and Performing Ans • SI 02,816
oQhio's Oldest Standing CoonMini Theater- SIO,OOQ
&lt;Our House MuiCUDl•- 103,000 house - $46,000
•
•Meigs County· Museum oQallia H~ and Bike. Trail
$79,000.

·s

tl

RESCUES · PUPPY • Atlanta firefighter Ken 11011 rncuea
'Shorty' a puppy from a hou.. ln VIne City, Ge. Fireflghtera uHCI •
ellldder truck to naach the animal which was stranded In a flooded houae following heavy ovemlght rains. Late winter atorma
have killed at least seven p~C?ple during the past two dllye In
Georgia and Alabama end other partl of the lOUth. (AP)

Jobless claims up 6,000
WASHINGTON (AP) -

The

numbe~ of first-tim e claims (or job-

less benefits rose by 6,000 last week,
rebounding from a sharp decline
caused by a shorter filing period due
to the President 's Day holiday.
The Labor Department said today
that new applicati ons for ~nemploy­
ment insurance totaled a seasonally
adjusted 363,000, up from a revised
357,000 during the week ended Feb.
24. The increase was smaller than
many analysts had e•pected.
. The 25,000 drop during the Feb.
'24 week was even steeper than the
department 's 23,000 initial estimate.
The rebound last week boosted claims
to the highest level since they totaled
382,000 during tbe week ended Feb.
17.
.
Many newly laid-off workers did

not file in the Feb. 24 period beca~e
of the shortened workweek, analysts
said.
Analysts expect a huge jump in
new jobs in the department's February employment repon to be released
Friday but said it would be related to
weather rather than any significant
improvement in the labor market.
Tbey contend the expected gain of
300.000 jobs or more merely would
be a rebound from the 201,000 payroll loss in January when winier
storms forced many businesses 10
close and temporarily lay off employees.
Economists said a more accurate
reading on the labor market would be
to average the figure s for boih
months, which they maintain would
reflect sluggish job creation.

Motorists due refunds on
bungled auto emission tests
CLEVELAND (AP) - Some
motorists who failed state-mandated
auto emission tests in nonheast and
southwest Ohio are due refunds.
About 5,000 motorists whose cars
.failed ~first or second exhaust tests
are due $!9.50 for each test for which
they paid.
The Ohio Environmental Protection Agency recently learned that the
fee rules in the contract between the
agency and its test contracton did not
comply with state law.
The number of refunds is limited
because people who paid for a failed
test .then returned and passed essen,
tially paid the cOrrect fee .

"'

The problem came to light at a
recent public hearing in Stow, where
a disgruntled citizen who had paid the
fee but failed the test read the law-to
EPA officials.
" A citizen had a copy of ibe 9ftio
Revised Code and read it out loud.
That's whe!l we realized we'd bettCr
. take a look," EPA spokeswoman Pat
Madigan said,
The tests went into effect in the
Cleveland, Akron, Dayton and
Cincinnati areas on Jan. I. Cuylhola
County, which i!ICiudes· ~land•. ·
had a less strict ~tina ,ayatem previ~
•ously.
· . . ·
·

•

•

�l
l.

.
Page a

~ommentary

Thurwday, March 7; 1998

:The Daily Sentinel Respected bullies, liars and
~fisfrd in J.!J48

By a.n wiltt.n-.
"Here comes the liptning
round," says pollster Peter Hart to a
focus group of a dozen Republicans
in suburban Baltimore. "Now, tell me
quickly the fust word that comes to
your mind when I say a IUIIIle." From
behind a one-way mirror several
reporters w81Ch the proceedings. Here
are my rapid-fire notes of the
responses:
Bob Dole: "smart," .. on the
fence," "establishment," "honor•
able," "seasoned," "mean."
Pat Buchanan: "innovative,"
•'extreme,"
..anti-everything,''
, " mean," .,great-guy," uwonderful,"

111 Court Sl, Pometoy, Ohio
614-912-2158 • Fu: 892·2157

I

.!lr

A Gannett Co. ~ewspaper
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publlaher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

MARGARET LEHEW
Control Ill'

Olnerll Manager

_

. . , . -. . .

I

. elfl*l·-· ,_....,17;,..............

.....

-~--..--~ llo .., 'J,Nd lotlloow . . IN PI-""'· ' - - -

, r

I

'l I

"reactioitary," ''~idiot: "

J'ltor-beli.. _ _ _ A/1_

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

be ...

Ste.ve Forbes: "intelligent,"
"rich," "good on taxes," "smart. ..
"innovative ..,
Ross Perpt: "Dana Carvey," "no
Washington expcrienc;oe," "give him
a chance," "not likable."
Newt Gingrich: .. strong," "reactionary, u "leader," "showboat,"

(lfiOfl - .

.• Letters to the editor

"doesn't give up," "bully," "abra·
sive."

VMH vital for economic development

'

'

l

I

Dear Editot,
I have met previously with two of
the employees of Veterans Memorial Hospital to discuss the need to
maintain the hospital. It is evident
that changes need to be inade that
will enable the hospital to maintain its
integrity and existence.
Vete~s Memorial Hospital is
the only hospital in Meigs Co)lnty.
We the residents of Meigs County
cannot afford to lose our healthcare.
The loss ofVMH does not only entail
the loss of a convenience to the residents but also the loss of many vital
jobs and also the loss of one of the
keys to attracting new business development to our county. Healthcare is
an imperative factor in business loca'
1100.
The proposed new medical arts
l!uilding, which would use the services ofVMH, would.ensure that our
hospital will continue to provide
healthcare services for our residents

Colin Powell: "respected," "love
him," ''strong,., .. tespec:ted,"
"bright:" "respected." (Amazing!)
Bill Clinton: "liar," "slimy,"

Ben Wattenberg
"slick,,; utwo-faced," ..bad." 1bcre

were also serious insults." However,
one Republican woman did describe
him as "sincere."

The resjlondents were all Republicans. They match national polls in
some ways, but not in others.
Nonetheless, these eruptive emotions seem to limn the outline of the
torrid election year to come. There
are lessohs hCre for all the playen.
Front-runner Bob Dole (who usually refen IQ himself by IUIIIle) should
ron a campaign demonstrilting bis
understanding that both Forbes and
Buchanan bring constituencies and
ideas with them. Ht can acknowledge
that bObdole is no~ the vision-meister of soaring rhetoric, but that the
Republican Party today his visions
galore, including Gingrich's, and th_at

and employment It is understood-that
five proposed sites have been identified for the location of the medical
arts building and that none of the five
would interfere with the activities of
the Meigs County Home.
It is felt by the commissioners and
myself that ·the development of this
project would protect .the existing
jobs at VMH as well as create. new
jobs. Job retention and cre11tion provide economic benefits to all of
Meigs County through existing payroll and new payroll, which would be
the result of the new facility.
We should think each day of the
employees of VMH who have been
there when we needed them. Now it
is time to be there to support them
and the future of Meigs County.
Jnlia Houcluhelt
Melp economtc de~ilpmeat
director
Pomeroy

bobdole can best weave them together. After all, that's what he's been
doing for a living, and for a long time.
The age issue, which hurts him in
many surveys, can be made into an
asset. And obviously: He should piclt
Colin Powell as a running mate, and
not let him say no.
Steve Forbes should keep on
explaining what it is he stands for. He
is a young man with a political future.
He ran because Jack Kemp and Newt
Gingrich chose not lb. He represents
what the labelmakers call the progrowth, tax-cutting, pro-optimism,
less-government, pro-inclusive, proopportunity, pro-international, Reaganaut wing of the GOP. That's a litde long for a bumper sticker. The
movement is embodied by Empower America, the organization that
Forbes chaired. Forbes ought to put
forth a manifesto going beyond the
labels ud, shOwing empowerptent
with a human face. Specifically, he
has to explain how the empowerment
idea goes beyond economics and into
the realm of valiaes. It does.

·MAV&amp;E THEY

sao
CONS'IOER
WEARIN6

UNifORMS, ~-

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•

By Morton Kondrecke

1}1e AIIDCillbd Prelil . . .
,
,.
• TcKJ.y. ia Thursday, Min:h 7, the 67th day of 1996. There are 2.99 days
loft in the year.
• Today's Highlight in History:
.
1.0n March·?, 1965, a march by civil riahts demonstrators was broken up
ia Sol~ Ala., by state troopers and a sheriff's posse.
011 this date:
.
'
·In ·1849, horticulturis' Luther Burblnk was !J0i11 in~. Mus.
; Ill l850, in a three-hour ~b to the U.S. Senate, Daniel Wel$1er
~ !he Compromise-of 1850 Ill a ~~ o( preServing the Union.
• '111 187,, CCli1lpOIIIr M~ce .-vel,wu born in Ciboume, France.
'·
In I876, AleXIIIIdei ~ Bell receiVed a patent flir his teliphone
' In 1911, the United
sent 20,000 .trp0p1 to the Mexicln ~ llil
a pNcaart!oe in .dJI Wllie ot the Mexiclln RevOiulioit.' ·
·
.,
· 1111926, die finlsucc IMI'al tntiiiiAllltiWC: radio-telepboee conWDIII'op
teCFt jllace. benlu~tNow Yorlt lllld Lolidoit.
. .. · .
I
' Ia 1936. Adolf U. Orderocl !lis lrO!IP$ to tillldl· ililo the Rhinelallil.
tbp1eby llifMiill i111 n.q ot.Venaill• anc1 die l..oi:mlo Pact.~ , ·I
In 194,, c!Uriq World War
U.S. forcea C!'Oia,d the .,._ RiY« at
RCma;en. OCnniay. Ulilltlhe·damaaed liutstlllllllble l..lldolldorff B_ridp.

s•

n.

~

.

.

...

.

.

.
keeping duty in Haiti.
Publisher Steve Forbes talks
He's also scheduled to make
optimistically about the growth a trade speech in Ohio and announce
potential of the U.S. economy, but so new progress in getting Japan to buy
·u.s. auto parts. And he'll announce
a new education initiative when he
Morton Kondracke attends the National Governors Asscr
ciation education suinmit on March
does Clinton, citing his dencit cuts 27.
and lower interest rates as the spark
Clinton is. clearly taking
that has created 8 million new jobs advantage of the GOP primary season
during his presidency.
to exercise executive authority and
And in March, aides say, use his "bully pulpit" to build a
Clinton will continue his strategy of record for the fall campaign on the
outflanking the Republicans by meet- assumption that there will be little
ing with and lauding business exec- new business done in Congress this
utives whose companies practice .year.
"corporate responsibility" toward
He will urge passage ofo a
workers -- ·a positive way of accom- balanced budget, capital gains and
plishing what Buchanan threatens to middle-class tax cuts, and campaign
do with trade j!enalties.
finance and welfare reform. If ConClinton is scheduled to gress is willing to make compromismake a speech in Michigan calling esl with him to achieve agreement,
for steps to improve economic he'll sign on and share credit for the
growth. That same week, he swears accomplishment. Otherwise, he'll
in his new anti-drug czar and label Congress "extreme," "do nothannounces new drug initiatives.
ing" or both.
He also has plans to host a
Most of Clinton's actions
White House conference on youth and speeches follow the centrist ideviolence and drugs. On March 9, he ological path trac;ed by his political ·
will commemorate a milestone in the guru, Dick Morris, who is anxious to
process of wiring pp California build Clinton's support among sO:
schools with high tectinol,ogy. ,
called "Swing 2" voters "- moderate
And on March II, Clinton is Independents who lean Republican
scl)eduled to make an environmental but can also be attracted into the Cliospeech in New Jersey and to institute ton column.
a new program to reclaim toxic
. Public polls out recendy
waste sites in urban areas. Cab~et indicate that Clinton is scoring well
officers also will fan out all over the with Independent voren and, as a
country on env!ronmental mission~. · result, is enjoying some of Jtis highLater m the month, he wtll .est approval ratings and strong leads
meet in New Haven, Conn., with fed- over his GOP rivals.
eral prosecutors involved in a special
·
A recent CBSIN~w Yort
iQitiative to ctBCk youth gangs around Times poll shOwed Clinton with a S2
the country. He'll also vi~it with some percent approval .;ate, up ~ points
ofthe last U.S. troops sbll on peace- , since January. Among lndepeitdents,

net.

Speechless

Today in history

·Deputi~s probe accidents

MICH.

(Hart, conducting a year-long
study for the non-partisan "Campaign for America," asked the focus
group whether moral values or eccr
nomics were "most important." 'The
groupies voted about half and half.
The CNN exit poll in South Carolina, however, showed 67-30 percent
for values;)
Pat Buchanan has a choice to
make. He can try to break the crockery at the Republican convention. Or
he can deal with the GOP nominee,
gain respect and standing for some of
,his ideas and many of his followers.
jHe must, however, remember that be
1didn't win the nomination and can't
1call the shots. That probably means
'l&lt;lme. dilution of the abortion plank
(which even the Christian Coalition
is PrePared to accept). If .he goes
along, he too may have a bright political future. .
.
, . Ross Perot may well run again,
but will likely get less support dian
he did in 1992. The folks who don't
like Clinton don't like Clinton profoundly and don't again want to
waste a· vote on Perot.
What about Clinton 1 A typically
mixed picture. That harsh language
reported above did come from
Republicans. But, with less pungency, bad vibes come from many
places. Many in the electorate, however, say ~ is cmng and trying hard.
Withal, Clinton is leading Dole in the
headTto-head pairings. But such
matchups don't mean much now.
During his first two years in
office, Clinton revealed himself as a
liberal leader of a liberal party. Since
then he has played his cards more
wisely. He's for school .unifonns;
guidelines for prayer in the school
and a video ratings system -- posj..
lions previo111ly anathema io liberals:
He says the era of big governtnent is
over. But will he back it·ll(l by signing a welfare bill and a serious bud.l
get deal? Or not, and let his two-faced
.image flourish?
· Some say .Clinton is a shoo-in
inow. That is about as silly as saying
ihe was a shoo-out a year ago. Let the
!great game begin!
,
Ben Wattenbei'J, a NBlorlellow
;at the American Enterprise l111d·
tute, Is the author ola new book,
"VUia Malter Most," and Is the
host of the weekly publk teleYision1
procnm, "'Iblllk Tank." .'

W. VA.

.By the Aaoclated Prell

ings helps expose the fact thai foreign
Creetora Syndicate
pdlicy in the ·Clinton era rests not ·
WASHINGTON -- Don't expect upon a cold and realistic view of the
to hear the Climon administration world, but instead upon two pillars of
boasting. about . its foreip-policy lambllke innocenee. ,
·
accomphshments anytime soon. 'JerThe frnt pillar ia lhi iijCa that our
rorists have demolished once-shim· world contains no unreasonable peo' mering hopes that the ~nt could pie - just folks who don't have all the
~gotiate international peace in our . facts. · ·
ume,
·
.
The chief executive has thrown a
The Irish Republicltt Army · bear hua around once-fOrbidden charresumed the lllaSsal:re. of innocent M:Wn, such u Oeny Adams of Sinn
LOndoneri several
ago, and Fein and even F~l Castro. per111p1
Hamu J9011s have S(lellttwo titollths thinkinl the guys jUst neede&lt;l a little
· tilling hlis with ruthleuneu and iqueeze. The two showed their ant. panache.,
,
itude by.reau,lflina tbelr killing ways• .
These Jroup1 1have one thiag in
SilJiillrly, the adminillrllion bu
COmmon: The White HOUle lias done cut a delibenlely blind eye towlrd
· favors for them. 1he wave of bomb- .~the lldventlnl of Yuser Arafat and

wew

,

Famous

Vandalism, theft reported
:his mailbox off its post.
Howie Caldwell, Racine, reporte&lt;t
•his checkbook and several credfi
'cards were stolen from his vehicle. Ali
investigation is continuing.

.

ne~:~e7t~~;.ednesday

..•

others dispersed.
"This is not over," said DaymOfl.
Hartley, .a striking Detroit Free Press
photographer and member of the·
bargaining committee. "That's what
we're here to show. We have the com:·
munity and the readers behind us."
Kelleher said a few vans' tires'
were flattened by star nails.

..

Today's livestock report

Hospital news

The Daily Sentinel \

I

.

(USPS 213-MI

.
Pllbllohod mry all=oon, Monday lbrootJh. '

...

Miry, Ill Court SL, , . , _ , Oblo, by lllo
0111o ..w~oy ,._.,.~-c
~. Obiq.45769. Pll. 992;1156. S.Oond

(MOJton Koaclntcke itt exetutlve t
editor of Roll Call, the DeWspaper !'

.,.......... jotd .. ~. OblO-

·

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1'081To1ASTERI S..d -

()hlo45769.

Champion Ind ....................... 17~

Chermlng Shop ..................... 3~
City Holdlng ..........................23'1.
~I Mogul....................... 19\
Olnl'litlt '''''''' '''"'uoo•o•u ...,,..,,,68'.4
Q~ TIRooouoooooooooonHooo51\
K-mert ..........................·••••••••••••.&amp;
Undl EM...-................:.........17\
Umlted IM ............................. 18\
"-;''·· Bancorpl .. ,.,.,....., ....23
31,.
OM V•lley .............................U\.

- SVII!iCRIPTION IATBS

. .,c.mor..- -

~................................................ $100

0.. Mondt ..................................:............. .'IO

o.e v................................................. StCH.oo
SINGLB COPY I'IUCII .
Clily ........ ........&lt;................................. 35 Collll

ov . . . . . . . . ·. . . . . ,. . . . . .

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s.t&gt;ocdbon ... cletiriqiO ~,...- ...,
lo llilvMc:o direct 10 The Dolly -oel
.,. •.- . ..... 12 .-bosl ...er..t~~wtn• ·

.

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No IUbolliiptioo by tlllil ponnlttod lo · -

-~.&lt;lfrif!'-l t milalllt.

Royal Dulcii/Shtll .....;, ....., 140'1.

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Sti.r Benk .(.............................83'.1
WendY lnt'l••••. ~ ............,.........11~

-·-·-•re

~~Miflt~

\ ., . . . ,,.,,; ,'._,..,,,_..,.,.,:.,.,,.,.,,.,,.,.$29.25

:Iii- .........:....~ .............. - ............. 156.111

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*orthlngton Ind ........ ~, .... ~....21'&amp;

......~.............,................... :.stM.56

• ....~ - •. •

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• Andersen Tilt Windows
• Stanley t:locn
• 2x6 Exterior Wills, 16ln. On Center
• Armsuona sollrian Floor Tile
• Mnllate Cabinets
• 8 Foot Ceiting
• 2•1 0 Floor Joint, 16 ln. On Center
• Sl Gallon Water H • Shaw Carpels .
• Delts Fauccu
• Muter T-lodt Vinyl Siding With Ufetlme Warranty
• 25 Year Watranty Asphall Shingles
• I0 Year Structural W-y On The Home

Model

-~·· lr.c; •• ~, ••••••• ~..............l~

__.......................:....................$,13.1l

A Few or Our Home Standard Features

FAMILY HOMES ~C.

Rockwell ..............................17\

·

Homes To Fit Your Lifestyle

Our Pllc:a Are Tbe LoWest In The Area.

Robblna I ........... ~~ ...••....30).'

MAIL 8UIICU'TION!I
.
-Miflt~ .
t S -...............................................m .lO

:Iii _

Meigs County Camndsslanar

Borsr-Warner·..........................m

cono&lt;li0111 10

•

li..,,-.*.... !10'*-

John WOllam BlaaHaar

B•nt o................................ 37~
Bob Evan• ............................ 16'1.

The Daily Se•tinel. Ill .~ St.• l'&lt;lmm&gt;y,

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Elect

Stocks
Am Ele Po-....................... 4~
Akzo ....................................... 55'4
Ashland 011 ............................ 31~
A.Ti:T ...~ ..................... ~ u., ....•••• 83~

_...,, .The Auocilf&lt;d Pmt. Alltlllle oblo
"Now- Auoc:illlon.-

!
I

.-driven by Linda Warner of Pomero1,
head-on, as he traveled on Union
·Avenue in excess of 70 miles an hour:
, Elliott made a turn onto Highlanc(
Road and lost control of his vehicle
moments later in a curve, sem,ling th.,:
'vehicle into a ditch. He was treated
.and released at Veterans MemoriaC
Hospital, and later taken into police
custody.
'
He was charged on counts of flee -:
ing an officer, reckless .operation, dri-·
ving under the influence, and destruc ~
tion of property.
:
Units responding were the Middleport and Pomeroy Police Depanments, and the Syracuse squ~J!( of the
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Services.

EMS logs 10 calls

l

.

.. A Pomeroy man was arrested and
Jailed late Wednesday mght after
leading Pomeroy Police on a high&amp;peed chase that ended in a one-car
acctdent on Htghland Road, according to police chief Gerald Rought.
According to pol ice reports,
William Ellion, 24, was seen travelmg through the gates of the Beech
Grove Cemetery onto Mulbeny
Avenue at a high rate of speed shortly after I 0 p.m. by Pomeroy Police,
who were in the area of the Village
Green Apartments.
Elliott proceeded to flee the officers in his 1979Ford, traveling southeast on Mulberry Avenue then turning
west onto Union Avenue. Elliott narrowly avoided striking a second
Pomeroy Police cruiser and a vehicle

Detroit newspaper strike ·
protest results in 23 arrests

Meigs announcements

•

and II :45 a.m.
,
The second accident occurred a)
7: IS on Blake Hill Road. Danny 1t
Salyers, Pomeroy, was driving a 1986
. Ford Aerostar van and struck an4
. killed a small deer that jumped off 1111•
embankment into the path of the vehi;
I cle.
'

Man jailed after accidenf.

Up to half;;.foot of snow
forecast .f or parts of Ohi~

the nascent "government" known as engineer" Ayyash, ~h.om . ls~ael 't
the Palestinian Authority.
bumped off for hts. parttc1pa11on 1n .a,
Arafat continues to exalt great and ,aeries of bombings.
·
.,
.Clinton aides explain th!fl Westmurderous martyrs, past and pre~ent.
He ,I so refuses to renounce a cr-. sflouldn 't blame Arafat. whol
scheme, first crafted 22 ·yean aao, to must hold together fractious con-~
destroy bntel tllrouall.alona. patient ,stituencies of his own. (They,don't,
procen of violence and negotiation. offer similar leeway for Pat•
The idea was to strike moderate po.; . Buchanan, however.) Some Strate•'
1 es long onoush to win concessions
gists even caution against "aimplis·•
for~ in the West Bank, Oaza Strip ~ tic': attacks on Hamas, explaining··
1
.and Golan Heights ·-and then IWI!IRP ; tbat the White House has been·trying 1
the Jliwish population with their to deal With "more modenle" mern.
superior numben.
ben of this faction.
., .
:[
Arafat's old allies have not pven
·.
. .
• &lt;
up their love of murder.
ter·
Write 'lbay S.OW, C~S)• ;
~ at last count .hl!d killed S4 dleate, 5777 Welt Cealary lhd.;~
l11110hs and wounded more than 200 S•lte· 180, LCNJ Aagehl, C.uf •J
sioce the Jm. S death of Yehia "the '11045.
·
.
· ,• '
'~ '

u.nw

Deputies ·of the Meigs County
Sheriffs Department investigated two
motor-vehicle accidents Wednesday.
No injuries were reported.
The first accident was reported !ll
II :48 a.m. Melissa L. Howard, 24,
Pomeroy, reported her 1993 Pontiac
had been backed into by an unidentified vehicle sometime between 9:30

. mph. Chance of snow 90 percent.
Southeastern Ohio
Friday.. .Snow showers likely.
The following incidents were
Winter storm warning today and High in the upper teens. Chance of
investigated recently by the Meigs
.tonight.
snow 60 percent.
County Sheriffs Department. .
Today...Freezing rain and sleet ·
Extended forecast
1
Norman Baum, Texas Road,
changing to snow this morning. Snow
Saturday ...Ch~ of snow showl
reported
Wednesday morning that
accumulation 4to 6 inches.' Temper- ers ... Especially northeast. Morning
duri~g
the
night someone had beaten
. atures falling thorugh the 20s. North lows zero to I0 above. Higbs in upper
. wind 5 to 15 mph. Chance of precip- ·teens to mid 20s. , ,
attorney.~~nt~ued from page I
italian 90 percent.
Sunday... Fair. Lows 10 to 20. ·
• Tonight...More snow. Storm total Highs in the 30s. ,,
.accumulation 5 to 8 inches. Low near
Monday... Fair. Lows in the 20s. to prison after a courtroom show- was suspended li:om practicing law in
down.
New Jersey for a year.
10 above. Northwest wind 3 to IS Highs 35 to 4S.
In 1968, he wrote a letter to New
In 1970, Bailey came close to
Jersey 's governor accusing the pros- being disbarred in Massachusetts
DETROIT (AP) - City Council
ecution of bribing or otherwise pres- after he an~ered a judge by criticiz- President Maryann Mahaffey and
suring witnesses in two murder cas- ing a client s conviction on the John- Roman Catholic Bishop Thomas
es. The media got the letter before the ny Carson and Joe Bishop TV talk Gumbleton were among 23 protesters
governor, ·who was furious. Bailey shows.
arrested after they blocked driveway s
during a rally to support striking
By The Alaoclated Prea
Across the nadon
mom1
Ohio may be blanketed with a coat
Thunderstorms pounded the
of snow ranging from 2 to 6 inches in Southeast early today. Freezing rain Committee to meet
imuin of 80 girls will be accepted for ing were placed on a police bus and
depth by tonight, forecasters said.
and snow fell in the Northeast, OurThe Eastern Local Levy Commit- the event. A wide range of activities taken to the gym at pohce headquar.
ters, where they were 1ssued t1ckets
. The snow was to come on top of ries dusted the Midwest and bitter tee will meet tonight, 7 p.m., at East- .ts p1anned: games, dancrng,
crafi.S, · 11 ·
d' d 1
nd
'd
a slippery mess resulting from freez' cold gripped the P!*ins.
em High School. All interested par- food and more. For more information a egmg tsor er Y co . uct, sat
ingrain on much of the state WednesThe storms that moved through the ents and residents are urged to attend. call 992-6679. The event is open to Deputy Execullve Chtef Benny
·gtr
. 1s fro m sunoun d'rng counnes
. also. Napoleon.
day night.
Southeast for a second day brought
M h ,...
The National Weather Service pre- high winds and large hail overnight in Easter Egg Hunl sel
as part of the celebration of Girl Scout
a auey and Gumbleton were
w.
k
·
among 600 people who congregated
dieted snow today would accumulate southern Alabama and Mississippi.
The Middleport Fire Department
ee ·
outside The Detroit News building
2 to 4 inches in the southwest and 3 Rainfall across the South has ranged will once ~again sponsor the annual
about
7 a.m. Wednesday. Those
to 6 inches central all!l east. Else- from an inch across Arkansas and Easter Egg Hunt Sunday, April 7, I Meeting set
arrested,
mainly religious and comwhere, a mixture of freezing rain, Louisiana to over 4 inches in parts of p.m., at General Hartinger Park in
The Meigs County United Fund
munity
leaders,
had linked arms and
- -sleet and snow was expected.
Alabama and Georgia .
Middleport. Members will be asking will meet March 13 at 6 p.m. at the blocked two driveways leading into
The snow "\,ill taper off tonight,
_'[Qt;nNS.I'JI'!Wned by_the storm for your support for thfs project.. Ji'or Senior Citizens Center. Oes~&gt;erts 'wUI
the downtown buildina;J
·~: except ill the nbr111Cjts1, where 1ake .· WedneSllay .k)Jieij seven people in · more information, call 992-7368..
be "Served. Awards will be given to the
''I'm glad they didn ·~nd out the
•.•
effect siiow could·accumulate anoth- · trailer parks near Selma and Mont- Activities planned
various organizations.
Pope,"
Napoleon jqked after saying
gomery, Ala.
er 2 to 4 inches.
Pomeroy Cadette Troop 1180 is
he
was
uncomfortable arresting the
Lows tonight will be in the single ·- - Colder air movipg into the North- planning a day of activities .for
Youth league signup
bishop
and
nuns. '
. digits with some teens in the far east had already put ice and some Brownie and Junior Girl Scouts in the
Harrisonville Youth League will
The
protesters
chanted and·sang in
south.
snow on the roads early tOday from area on March 16 from 10-2 p.m . have signup Saturday from I to 4 p.m.
support
of
the
workers
who went on
CloUJis ":'ill persist into Fri&lt;lay as Boston to Philadelphia.
Cost of the event is $4.50 per girl and at the fire house.
strike in July. Napoleon said the ralmoisture flows off the Gre,at Lakes.
Snow began to develop overnight they should· register through their
ly was "very peaceful" despite the
Snow showers will also co.ttinue across the Ohio Valley. Early accu- troop. A minimum of 30 and a max- Youth league signup
arrests.
with some additional accumulation in mulations were light in . Cincinnati,
Racine Youth League will have
After clearing the two driveways,
the northeast near Lake Erie. Highs Indianapolis and Louisville.
signup Thursday, 6-8 p.m . and Satur- police officers took the places that
will be 20-25.
Very cold air had the Plains in its
day, I 0-noon, at the Racine 'Kinder- had been occupied by protesters.
The rerorrl-h'!~ temperature for glip this morning. Much of the area
Units of the Meigs County Emer- garten building. New panicipants
Some 200 protesters later marched
this date at the Columbus weather sta- . awoke to temperatures from minus 5 genc ~ Medical Service recorded I0 should bring binh certificates. Cost
several blocks to a union hall as the
tion was 77 degrees in 1983 while the to minus 20 degrees.
.
calls for assistance Wednesday $15 per person. ·
record low was 4 in 1960. Sunset
A sheet of rain ~nd freezing driz- including two transfer calls. Units
tonight will be at 6:30p.m. and sun- zle that moved throUgh central Illinois responding included:
Antique Club to meet .
rise Friday at 6:54 a.m.
early .Wednesday snarled traffic
MIDDLEPORT
The Big Bend Farm Antique Club
2:34 p.m., volunteer fire depart- will meet Monday, 7:30 p.m. at
ment and squad, motor-'vehicle acci- Meigs High School Library.
dent at state Route 124 and Bailey
Run Road. Jayson and Mike Parker, Election day dinner sel
Boars: 25.00-28.00.
COLUMBUS (AP) - lndianaRyan Baker, Veterans Memorial HosRacine United Methodist Church
Estimated receipi.S: 40,000.
O~io direct hog prices at selected
pital.
will have an election day dinner with
Prices from lbe Producen POMEROY
buying points Thursday by the U.S.
serving to begin at II a.m. To include
Department of Agriculture Market Livestock Associadoa:
3:56a.m., North Second Avenue, soup, sandwiches, desserts and bevCattle: 2.00 to 3.00 lower.
. Herbert Rose, VMH;
News:
erages.
Slaughter
steers:
choice
59.00Barrows and gilts: steady to weak,
II :03 a.m., Liberty Lane, Ruth
Carr, treated at the scene; ·
some 50 cents lower; demand light to 64.00; select 54.00-59.00.
Slaughter heifers: choice 55.00moderate on a moderate supply.
12:SO p.m .. Pomeroy Cliffs. Rev a
Mullen, Pleasant Valley Hospital;
U.S. 1-3, 230-260 lbs. 46.50- 61.50; select 50.00-55.00.
Holzer Medical Center
Cows: steady; all cows 38.00 and
4'8.50, a few 46.00 and 49.00; plaots
I :02 p.m., Pomeroy Police DepartDiKharges
Marc:b 6 - Sula Fry,
down.
·
48.00-49.50, a few 47.50.
ment, Mike Mulford, VMH;
Linda
White
and
Patricia Fraley.
Bulls: 1.00 l9wer; -all bulls 38.50
U.S. l -3, 230-260 lbs. 42.004:50p.m.. West Main Street, Lori
Births
March
6 - Mr. and Mrs.
and down.
Burbridge, VMH.
46.00.
·
David
Casci,
daughter,
Middleport.
. Veal calves: steady; choice 62.50 SYRACUSE
Sows: steady to 50 cents higher.
9:29 p.m., Dusky Alley, Troy
U.S. 1-3, 300-500 lbs. 30.00- and down ..
Veterans Memorial
·sheep and lambs: steady; choice Zwilling, VMH;
March6
33.00; 500-6SO lbs. 33,00-35.50; a
wools 88.00-92.50; choice clips
I 0: 19 p.m., Hiland and Union
few 36.QO.
Admissions: None
90.00-94.50; feeder lambs 94.00 and avenues, John Elliott, VMH.
Discharges: Leo Morris, Rutland
down; aged sheep 41.00 and down.

Clinton's
foreign
_
p
olicy
in
trouble
.
By TONY SNOW '

4:

Raymond Watkins, 73, of Ravenswood, W. Va. died Monday, March
. 1996, at Jackson General Hospital, Ripley, W.Va.
Born Nov. 18, 1922 in Iron City,·Tenn. , he was the son of the late Gillis
. Watkins and Martha Lard Watkins. He was employed at Kaiser Aluminum
and Chemical Corporation, Ravenswood, in 1956, and worked there as a
cold roll mill operator. He also worked at Jackson General Hospital as a nursing assistant.
He was a U.S. Army veteran of World War II and Korea, and he .attended the Kaiser and Douglas Church of Christ.
He is survived by three sons, Hershel of Ravenswood, David of Falls
Church, Va., and· Jeff of Ravenswood ; one brotherr Elmer Watkins of
Sheffield, Ala.; and six grandchildren.
·
He was preceded in death by his wife, Maxine; brothers: McKinley Harris, Levi Watkins, James Watkins, and Bob Watkins; sisters: Becky Collier,
Blanche Walton, Mary Howell, and Doni Perry.
.
Services were held Thursday afternoon at the Straight, Thcker, &amp; Roush
Funeral Home, Ravenswood. The Rev. Rick Riley officiated and burial was
held i.n the Ravenswood Cemetery.

.Today's weather forecast

11

of Capitol Hll.)

Randolph

Raymond Watkins

•.

his rating was 48 percent positive, 38
percent negative.
'
The
CNNIUSA'
Today/Gallup poll showed Clinton
beating Dole by S6 percent IQ 40 per-'
cent-- his biggest margin so far-- and'
attracting 31 percent of 1992 Ross,
Perot voters in the process. Among
Independent voters, 75 pet:cent have'
a favorable attitude toward Clinton,
compared with 41 percent for Dole,
.• 26 percent for Buchanan, 27 ""rcent'
I"'
I
·for Alexander, and 25 percent for.
· •
Forbes.
The Pew poll indicated that
Clinton would beat Dole by 52 per~
cent to 44 percent and would cany
Independents by 49 percent to 42 percent. Clinton leads Buchanan by 59
percent to 36 percent and by 64 percent to 32 percent among Independents.
'
Significantly, when Pe,..:
asked voters to provide one-wonf
evaluations of candidates, the top
mentions for Clinton were "good,"•·
"'trying," "OK,·~ - "fair," "honest," '
"wishy.washy" and "leader," far
ahead of "slick," "crook"" and "I.tar." '
The top mentions for Dole were ·
"old, "conservative" and "too old,"
and for Buchanan, "extreme" and'
''radical:"
··
Of course, Clinton has not
been under attack during the primary season, and Republican candidates'.
have been savagipg each other. That I ,
situation will change when .the :
Republicans finally have a nominee, l
but Clinton is making savvy use of '
!he time aiven him to gloss his
tmage.
·
I

Ferr,~l

Ferrell Gene Randolph, S9, of Mulberry Avenue, Pomeroy, died
Wednesday, March 6, 1996, at Holzer Medical Center.
Born March 5, 1937, in Gallia County, son of the Mildred Smeltzer Randolph, Gallipolis, and tHe late Elmer Earl Randolph, he was a self-employed
pamter.
In addition to his mother, he is survived by his wife, Rosa Kiser, at Evergreen, whom he married July II , 1992; a son, Michael Randolph, Evergreen;
a daughter, Heidi Randolph; three brothers, Carl (Paula) Randolph of Gallipo~is, Dale (Diana) Rand?lph of Gallipolis; Elmer (Jiggie) Raftdolph of
Balnmore, Md.; and three ststers, Deloras Baker of Harrison Township, Galli a County;Linda (Clyde) Ward of Bristol, Va. , and Janet (Larry) Rathburn
of Columbus.
·
Services will be 2 p.m. Friday at McCoy-Moore Funeral Home, Vinton,
with Rev. Ted Glassburn officiating. Burial will be in Campaign Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral home Thursday from 6-8 p.m.

Clinton h·ones ·image while&lt;GOP wrangles ·

While his Republican rivals
struggle for the White House nomination, President Clinton is developing a 1996 record designed to get
ahead of them before the general
election campaign. Polls indicate that
the strategy is working.
On crime, drugs, jobs, welfare, taxes, the budget, education,
immigration, trade, and the environment -- just about every issue that
will come up this fall - Clinton is trying to occupy ·the center while
RepubliciU)S scrap with each other on
the right.
Last year, for instance, Sen.
Bob Dole, R-Kan., tried to win support among social conservatives by
criticizing sex and violence in
movies. But recently, Clinton actually got top media executives to agree
to a rating system for TV shows and
to support the V-chip system giving
'
parents more control over the pro'
grams their children watch.
•'_ Dear Editor:
the upholstery was in terrible condiPolemicist Pat Buchanan
• 1. was getting out of my car the tion, the roof leaked, and the win- promises to build a fence to stop illebthe( day when I heard ·a Southern dows would not shut properly. Fur- gal immigration, but Clinton has
J:ocal School District resident call my ther, his daughter was about to 1wrn doubled the U.S. Border Patrol,
ti(UIIe. ltumed to see him as he was · 16, and he just couldn't stand the deported SO,OOO crimjnal aliens, and
(ecking the door of his car and I thought of her trying to learn to dri- is instituting new programs 10 prevent
touldn't help notice that it was awe- ve in that old car. He certainly gave 1llegals from getting jobs in the Unitsbme. I told him that I didn'1 realize m.e far more reasons that I needed to ed States and to require companies to
~ho he was because he had tieen dri- buy a ne~ car.
hire American citizens instead of illeYJng a much older and rathe~ dilapi- .. As I. turned to leave, he said, "Oh, ·gal aliens.
dated ·vehicle. His other car was at by the way, make sure to tell every- ·
Former · Tennessee Gov
!tat 10 years old and had none of the one Y?D see to~ against Southern's Lamar Alellander proposes to use t~
el'joyable'"m~rn conveniences."
~tldtng levy. Astll!'ts~, I asked presidency to improve education at
, I asked him why he finally traded h1m why. He replred, We.ll, of the local level, but Clinton has been ·
IIICI he said that the old one inade dri- c~. we can get ~ong line wtth lhe busy promoting technology in
Ving a chore, was an oven in the sum- butldrngs we have. Fot once, I was schools, and on Feb. 24 won a testimer. due to no air conditioning, .the speechless!
monial from Microsoft's Biii .Gates
el.gine needed overhauled therefore
Carla Shaler that Clinton bad inspired him to
· IIJI!dn. the car extmnely inefficient,
Lona Bottom donate S10 million to hook up all
Washington state sChools IQ the Inter-

..-

OHIO WeJt het
Friday, Mardt I

showboat~

~jFee/s Cremeans hurting the poor
·:: Dear Edilor, .
.
billion tax cut for the rich.
::: Recently,' Congressman Frank
He would vote for a $270 billion
cut
in the Medicare bill.
· ~rem\lQRS made·it public that he bor:]'owed $450,000 to get elected, howHe would vote for a S182 billion
:Qer he did not tell us about tiic thou- cut in the Medicaid bill.
He would vote to cut children's
.~ds of tax free donation~. IBrF and
,)mall, li:om the citizens of the sixth school lunch.
He would vote to cut the unearned
;)ii'.'JGstrict of Ohio.
•: The people of the sixth district tax credit.
i.tould like to know how much did it
He would vote to cut the home
~st to be elected?
. -heating bill for the poverty-stricken
•: Now we the people realize that poor.and senior citizens.
ffr. Cremeans earns $137,000 per
Mr. .Cremeans made a promise
~. a congressman's term is two
that would vote to cut the above pro):l:ars, which means that he will earn . grams.
f274,000 for,the two years term, but .
Mr. Cremeans' concrete company
~~t we the people don't understand
could come up with some governb why would a person spend so much· ment contracts for concrete work
'Jtioney for a two year job? That is such as highways, bridges, dams and
r174,000 more than the congressman other buildings, giving the congress~II earn in the two years. There's man a very high income. Now the
)omething wrong with this picture, picture starts to·look different.
flOw will the other$174,000 get paid?
·Now we understand why Mr. Cre~re must be some very good fringe
means has abandoned the needs of
benefits that are not available to the the people of the sixth district of
wverty, stricken people from the southern Ohio.
dxtlt district of Ohio. What ki~d of
On Oct. 19, 199~. Mr. Cremeans
f(inge benefits could help the con- voted to cut the above programs, but
t!essman pay off this large sum of on March 19 you will have a vote to
tJioney?
.
cut his heahh care and his earnings.
• If the congressman wanted a large
.
Abb Hatfield
tax cut for his ready mix concrete
Hillsboro
company, l_le could vote for a $245

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

AceuWeathe... forecast for daytime conditions and high

r-----~------------------------------------~ /

•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Stock report•
the 10:sol;
a.m. QUOlle proillded by A
I
of Qefllpolla.
. 1
'

Ya•r ·vale and support·
'appreciated.
Paid for by the Committee to elect John ~

a._, Located at

.

Intenedloa of Rt,.. 7 &amp; 33
Pomeroy, OR 614-992-2-478

Model Home Vlnilllloula I;oo;S:OO p.m.
1\le. - SIL or by iljljdiMr 111 .

•

�..r

I

•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

'Thul'8day, March 7, 1996

'

•

The Daily Sentinel
'

PageS
Thursday; March 7, 1996

:: In NCAA Division I basketball,

~: Colgate returns to NCAA tourney; West ·v irginia loses

..•. By The Assoct.tecl Preu
.

~

1995 ASPIRE

1995 ESCORT LX "SPORT"

1996 MUSTANG COUPE

4 cyl., MT, great gas mileage.

AC, cass, loaded, spoiler.

AC, Cass., V-6.

MSIP TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS
$8750.00

MSRP TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS
$13,165.00

MSRP TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS
$16,7.00.00

'I

1996 CONTOUR Gl SEDAN
AC, cass, cruise, POL, rear defrost.

MSRP TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS
. $16,195.00

11,491

8

00

*

1996 TAURUS Gl
SEDAN
Air, full power, loaded.

MSRP TOTAL IEFORE DISCOUNTS
$20,750.00

17,81&amp;•*

8

'

.

::
A day before most of the big boys
:: • started playing, Colgate got into the
:• ·NCAA tournament for the second
.: straight year.

....••••

The Red Raiders.just15·14, beat
Holy Cross 74-65 Wednesday night
to win their second consecutive
Patriot League title.
Adona! Foyle had 22 points, IS

rebounds, I 0 blocked shots and a
personal-best six assists.
"'I pride myself on my defense,"
he said. "That's how I really first
started playing basketball, was at the

'•
'•
'·
'··

'·'·
\,

..
'·
'•

By RUSTY MILLER
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - All
sea5on long. Ohio State has tried to
make do without a true center. But
Indiana wasn't fooled.
Exploiting Ohio State's skin ny
and undersized front line. Todd Lindeman muscled his way to a careerhigh 28 points as the Hoosiers
brushed aside the Buckeyes 73-56
Wednesday night.
""They were much too physical
for us... Ohio State coach Ranily
Ayers said. "They saw where our
weakness was. Obviously, we did
not have the matchups from a phys·

.'

••
•.
.,

•f

~1
·.•..

:..

1995 THUNDERBIRD LX "¥8"
All·power, AC, cass., VS.

MSRP T01ALIEFORE DISCOUNTS
$19,675.00

YOUR CHANCE TO BE
IN BRISTOL MARCH 31, 1996!!

••
•••

..
. .•-

19,

8

.
.
'
.
'•

.

day night's Big Ten matchup In Columbus, wh«e

the Hoosiers won 73-56. (AP)

• Poodles

SEE SALESPERSONF OR SPECIFIC DETAILS.

MSRP TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS
$23,120.00

8

11~119•*

1996 TAURUS GL WAGON
Third seat, loaded, full power.

MSRP TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS
$22,165.00

18,

8

•
•••

1996 PROBE GT
Auto., loaded, full power, CD.

MSRP TOTAt BEFORI DISCOUNTS
$21,430.00

1814 ESCORT WAGON, AUTO., AIRuoououu..uuoMIOOUUI~IIIIUIIIIUUUooUOoMool.ooo$8149S,OQ
1994 F250 4X4, AUTO., XLT, LOW MILES, LOADED ................................$19,495.00
1994 F150 4X4, SUPER CAB, AUTO., LOADED, LOW IIILES.................$18,995.00
1994 F150, XLT, ,.,UTO., VB, LOADED ................................................~ ...... $11,895.00
119r4 RANGER, Xl.T, ONE OWNER ...............................................................$9,995.00
1984 F250 4X4, Xl.T, AUTO., LOADED ...................................................... $18,115.00
1993 RANGER 4X4, XLT, V6, LOADED..........................:.........- ........,........$1.1~495.00
'
'
1993 PROBE. ONE OWNER. LOADED .......................................................
18.195.00
1993 THUNDERBIRD LX, AUTO., LOADED, ONE OWNER ....................... $9,995.00
1993 PLYMOUTH GRAND VOYAGER, LOADED, LOW MILES ................$14,495.00
1993 LUMINA Z34, A.UTO., LOADED, BRIGHT RED ................................ $12,900.00
1993 S10 BLAZER, TAHOE, 4 DR., LOADED .......,................................... $16,995.00
1992 OLDS REGENCY EUTE, YOU MUST SEE THIS ONEII ...................$13,995.00
1991 F150 4X4, XLT, AUTO., LOW MILES ................................................$11,995.00
1991 GMC SONOMA, V&amp;, AIR, NICE mUCK..............................................$6,900.00
1989 AEROSTAR, EXT. LENGTH, LOADED................................................$7,900.00
1994 MITSUBISHI ECLIPSE, AUTO, ONE OWNER .................................. $11,995.00
1994 T·BIRD LX, AUTO., AIR, LEATHER, LOADED ................................. $13,995.00

17,915

8

00

*

XLT, Limited slip, 265 tires, loaded.

MSRP TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS
$22,102.00

18,81900*

8

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'I

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'-

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•
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1996 AEROSTAR XL1 WAGON

---------------BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE:
::
2:00 PM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION! ::
--Would you like to
=
LOSE WEIGHT AND
FEELBETIER?
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Now Open at Big Bend
Health &amp; Fitness .
-Informational meeting Sat. •
--=
March 9 at11 :00 a.m. and
Mon., March 11 at 7:00 p.m.
---March Special: $10.00 Off
Ph. 992-3967 or aao•. "''-~'-'
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MSRP TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS
. $20,197.00

17,

8

VEHICLES, SEVERAL MODELS IN STOCK.

ER

•- --~----------.Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
FORECLOSURE OF
MORTGAGE
Common PIMa Court
llalge County. Ohio
Cue No. 85 cv 107,
: National City llortgagt
•Company, plaintiff, vo .
!Raybon R. Wallace; Jr.,
•Extcbtor of lht Ellett of
: Raybon R. Wallace, aka
·Raybon R. Wallace. Sr.• at
jal., doflndMtl.
.
, Tho aatata of Laona E.
tWIIIaca and the unknown

•
,
·•
'

!apouae, helre. devlaeea,

"

1996 RANGER 4X2
4 cyl., MT, rear bumper.

\

1·808-964·3673
RIPLEY, WV

MSRP JOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS
$10,935.00

•a8asoo·
'

tbeneflclarlaa. lagataoo,
!admlnlatrotora. axacutora,
:their aUOCIIIOrt and
aaalgna of Leona E.
'WIIICI, whoM lltt known
f.ddr••••• wart unknown,
,upcn whom ltiVICt of
:aummona cannot bo mada,
,lllelutt tho roaldanct ond
)Ill olhor addroaoea of aald
;dofendanto art unknown
..nc1 cannot with roaoonabfo
Jllllgenco be atcertalnod 1
_.,. htraby notlfltd thai on
:Deetmbtr 7. 11115, the
.plaintiff flied 1 complaint In
-G!a Common Ploaa Court,
)lolga County, Ohio, In CIH
.flo. 115 CV 1~7 agalnot
ybon R. Wallace. Jr.,
acutor of th' Eatato ol
, .~n R. Wallace, Sr. ond
,._,., R. Wallaca, oocuted
iind delivered to Wealam
Javlnge Kaooclatlon, 1
~romlooory nolo, which
promlaabry note wu
llilalgrlld to North Central
tlortgago Corporation, nka
)lallonal City . llortgage~OIIIPiny on lily 25, 1171;
Jha! dofencla.nto. the ootate
bon R. Wlllace, aka
II. WlllaM, Sr., lnd
Wallace havo
ad In lila payment of.
~kl nolo and owo to
alntlff $11,552.13 with
It thereOn from May 1,
II 1.7ft par annum;
It 11 aacurlty for tho
ymont of oald nolo,
fodanta, R•ybon R.
llaoa, akl Raybon "R:
, Sr. and Leona E:
llaca, tli:ICI!Iad and
llvartd to WHttrn
vltlga Aaabclatlon •a
rtgaga doad , which
rtga a . dead wao
to lloful Central

t

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Pampered PCIWI family r.t Store
271 Notih 2nd Ave.

(614}992-6244

Oh 45760

Quality Prescription Service
.at Competiti~e Prices. ·
Kart A. Kabler, E.A.
"Enrolled to P111Ctlce Before
the Internal Revenue Service. •

We honor most third party
prescription plans. Your Swisher
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Ken &amp; Ron are here to fill your
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7

JURY DUTY
PAY

Q.I was recently called
jury duty. I continued to
receive my pay from my
employer while I served, but
my company required me to ·
tuni over to them the jury duty
fee I earned. What are the tax
consequences of all of this?

Dual air, full power, loaded.

FRESH SHIPMENT OF FACTORY REPURCHASE·

WOULD LIKE TO INVITE ALL OF HIS PREVIOUS
CUSTOMERS TO VISIT HIM AT HIS HEW LOCATION.

.,.,'Il

.,

*DEALER RETAINS REBATE, TAX, "ATLE EXTRA

1996 RANGER SUPERCAB 4X4

•I

.'

-\ .

1994 RANGER SC, 4X4, SPLASH ........................................................l •••• $14,495.00
1990 RANGER, XLT, AUTO., V6, LOADED .................... ~ ............................. $6,995.00

SERVICE
"MIKE Bl

.••

----------------::
::
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---

• Birds
• Fish
•Sm RepWes
•Grooming

• Chihuahuas

:! 11111111111111111111111111111111111111111 ! IIIII! 1111111111111!,;

1995 MUSTANG GT, ONE OWNER, LOW MILES, LOADED .................... $15,995.00
1995 MUSTANG LX, V&amp;, AUTO, LOADED, LOW MILES...........................$14,995.00
1994 MUSTANG GT, AUTO., LOW MILES, LOADED................................ $14,995.00

the ball inside, he hit 14 of 16 free
throws to go with 7·of.J3 shooting
from the field .
··we came in hoping to take it
inside on them," Lindeman said.
"We tried to pound it inside and get
them in foul trouble. That"s just what
we did."'
He said practice was the reason
he suddenly became a marksman at
the line .
"'I've been working on a different
shot the last couple weeks," Lindeman said. '"All that work paid off, I
guess ."
If Lindeman wasn' t killing the
Buckeyes underneath. Brian Evans
was ei ther keeping them honest oulside or faking and Ihen pumping lhe
ball inside to Lindeman. The Big
Ten's leading scorer, Evans had 18
points - but only six in the last 29
minutes. He scored 12 points as lndi·
ana built an early 25-11 lead .
"'They came in here with a solid
game plan," said Ayers.

'•

.:•• .:ana's Nell Reed during the first NIH of Wedn....

AC,.full power, loaded.

ical standpoint."
The victory vaulted the Hoosiers
(18 · 11, 11 -6 in the Big Ten) into a tie
for second place in the conference
with Penn State, which lost at Wisconsin.
Lindeman was an unl ike ly star, at
least in tenns of free-throw shooting .
He came in shooting 50% for lhe
season at the line. In his college
career. the seven-foot senior had
never scored more than 21 points ,
shot more than eight free throws or
made more than six foul shots in a
game.
But with the Hoosiers pounding

all your pet

•
PUSHING IT UPCOURT - Ohio State'• Don
:: Jentonlo (right) pushee the ball upcourt pelt lndl-

ED SPECIALS

from Long Beach City College
before the 1994-95 season , scored
six points in 24 minutes, but had
been ruled ineligible earlier in the
day.
It couldn't be detennined whether
NCAA, WAC and UTEP officials,
all in Kansas City to discuss the case
Wednesday afternoon, contacted the
UTEP team concerning .the ruling.
(See HOOPS on Pqe 6)

'•

'

1996 CROWN VIC. SEDAN

half.
Most of the major conference
tournaments started today. but there
was one weird tum Wednesday. In
the first round of the Western Athletic Conference, Texas·EkPaso beat
Hawaii 77-69 before announcing it
was forfeiting for using an ineligible
player.
Don Beal. a 6-foot-5 forward
from Los Angeles who transferred

lnd·iana pounds OSU 73-56

-'•'•'•·

-.' •

EIITER NOW FOR I CHANCE
IT 2 GUNDSTIND TICKETS
I AND FORD UCING GIFT
• PACKAGE.
DRAWING WILL BE MONDAY,
W,! MARCH 25, 1996.

defensive end, so it is easy for me to
slip back into that role at any time
during the game. I knew I was block·
ing shots. I didn't know how many
I was blocking. It is just something
that comes natural to me."
i\t Hamilton, N.Y., Holy Cross
( 16-13) made just 20 of 76 shots as
it lost for the first time in nine games.
"The Crusaders went without a field
. goal for the first 6:30 of the second

\ F150 414 ILT, Eolo, XL

F350 CREW CAB. DIESEL

nLL LINE OF ·nuCK$ AID SPOR7 .f tiLift.VEHICLES IN S,.OCI

1:::
e1

Corjiomlon, nki

iOtllonal City Mortgaga
O...ny onllay.a, 1171,
,._ !Itt re81d-t at Rt. ·a

Public Notice
1Wp. Road 75, Pomoroy,
Ohio, akt 33710 Hiland
Road, Pomeroy, Ohio,
conveying the following
deacrlbod
promlooo,
altuatod In the T-nohlp of
S.Habury, County of Melgo.
and Stole of Ohio, ond
bounded and doacrlbtd ••
followa, to-wit:
Baing M 1/2 rods aaot of
tha aouthwoat corner of
Fraction 31; thence north M
1/2 roda; lhanco eaat 54
rods; thence aouth 42 1/2
rods; thtnce woat I rode;
thanca north 14 rode;
lllance weat20 rodo; and 18
llnka; thanco aouth 12 rodt
and 11 llnko; thence 0111 9
rode; thanco south 21 rodt
and tlllnka to lila aouth uno
of aald fraction; thoneo
wut to the place of
beginning, containing 17
Hrte, mort or leta.
EXCEPTING from tho
above 17 acroo, mort or
leaa, the following
daacrlbad reaf 11tato
altuated In Sallabury
Townahlp. County of Melge,
and Stitt of Ohio, being In
Fraction 31, Town 2, Rango
13, of lhe Ohio Company'a
Purchaeo; beginning 11 1
poll with 3 notchea, btlng
the corner of the Guy F.
lltldln and Dniallla F. llartln
and Oren Jonat farmo on
the-tllna of the Richard
Wlfllamoon farm; ·thence
alii 110 1/2 faot; thonco
aouth 2-3/4' watt 701 foot;
than~o weott !50 ftat to the
Una of tho Catholic
Camatory; thenct north 231
teat; tlltnct watt 342 root;
thonoti aouth 201 feat;
thanco north a8-3/4' wast
2411 tut to a locuat atake;
lhenct north 31 1/2' wall
211 foot to 1 otaka In the
ONn .ronal ond Martlr• liN;
...,.. north 40il 112 foot to
tha placo of beginning,
containing 11-111100 acroa'
••otpiing coal and othtr.
mlnarala eold by Jamaa
lllftln lnd 11. J . llartln, hla·
witt, to B.D. Horton by dud
dlttd Januooy 31,
and
racordtdd In Volume 54,
P198 813, of the .Racorda of
Mtlga County Ohio With 11
rlghtt na;111~ry or
conftnlant to the mining
and working of the aame
wt111out lnoumllrtnce to the
•""-· · ,
M 11 the Intention of the
,..

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Public Notice

Public Notice

r-~-----------------------,
COUPON
I

1
.former grantor herein to W 128.13 feet; thence N 55'
I .
convoy to tho grantoo, 6.52 35' 34"W 157.10 ftttto tho
acroa, oxcoptlng tho coni placa
of baglnnlng
Up to $5.00 off any prescription
ond tho right to mint tho containing 5.1338 acreo,
o1m1 aa told to S. D. Intending to convey the 6.07
Limit 1 per Customer per prescription
Horton and ••corded In acre tract convoyed In the
Volume 54, pago 813, of tho Mel go Co u n t y Deed
Doed Recordo of Molgo Recorda Vol. 259, pago 755
County, Ohio.
and Vol. 258 page tOt.
Further oxcoptlon from
That the dalendanto, the
I
tho abovt rool ootate tho htall of Raybon R.
I
Expires 3-31-96
following: Tho following roll Wallace, aka Reybon R.
a8tlltt btlng In Fraction 31, Wallace , Sr., and Loona
Solr.bury Town~hlp , Molgo Wallace havo falltd to poy
County, Ohio, and boundtcl aald note according to tho
and doocrlbtd ao followo: torma and conditions
leglnnlngabout Mt/2 rodo thereof, thet dofendanto,
0111 of tho oouthwoot Raybon R. Wallaco, Jr.,
corner of Fraction No. 31; Executor of .the Eotote of
thonco north 184 lett to the Roybon R. Wtllaco. aka
contor of Rood No. T' 75; Reybon R. Wallace, . Sr..
Kenneth McCullough , A. Ph. Cha~es Riffle .,R. Ph.
thonco oouth 53' 30' toot Raybon R. Wallace, Jr.,
Ronald Hanning, R. Ph.
157 foal to 1 point In the Naomi Black. and the Molgo
Mon. thru Sal. 8:00a.m. to 9:00p.m.
center of oald road; thonco County Troaouror, mey
Sunday 10:00 a .m. to 4:00p.m.
aouth 44' 15' oaot1!21.1 feet claim to havo aome Interest
PRESCRIPTION
PH. 992-2955
to 1 point In tho center of In uld rill proporty;
E.
Main
Friendly
Sefllice
Pomeroy,
Oh.
aald road; thonca wool therefore, plaintiff demando
Week
'11119
216.4 Itt! to tho place of )udgment . agalnot
beginning. containing .45 defondonto, tho ootate ot
aero.
Raybon R. Wallace, ako
Excepting . from tho Raybon R. Walloco, Sr., for
abova·deocrlbod tract of $15 ,552.83 with lntereol
Rccbok
land tho mlnoralo which . thoreon at 1.75" per annum
ware pravloualy aald.
from May 1, tt95; that ool1
Dead rtftrtnct: Volume mortgage be forecloood; ·
259. page 755; Molgo . that tho amount of llono on
County Racorda.
tho property be marahallod ;
It 11 the lntontlan of tho thot the roal proporty be
• Basketball
erantora to convey all tholr told and tho omounl duo · ·
• Cross Trainers
right, title and lnte,rollto tho pltlntiH bo ptld from tho
above de-llltd &amp;.52 acroo. proceodo of the ule,
A flald eurvay of llld togather with coato herein;
proporty lndloatu tho that defendanto, Raybon R.
pro_porty daacrlbad totolo Wellaco, Jr.• Executor of tha
only 5.133411Crtl. Said flold Eatatt of Raybon .A. Wollaca
Iurvey doacrlptlon It ao aka Raybon R. Wallace, Sr.•
followa: .
Raybon R. Wallace, Jr.,
Commencing at tho Naomi L. Black, and the
• Baseball Cleats
Southwaot corn or of Malgt County Troaouror bt
Fraction 31 thonct Eaot M required to ut up lhtlr lleno
• Sotlbllll Cleat1
1/2 rode (1,Dt7 .25 foot) or lntereot In oald rool
• Running Shoe•
along lila ooulh line of Hid proporty or bt foreve r
fraotlon; thence North 184.0 barred from aooartlng the
• Track Splkel
feat to a railroad oplko Hme and for lltomaya f found In tho cantartlno or and coata.
.Townahlp Rood .75 and tho
The dafandanle flrai
IOYS REEIOI PIIIP+TIIIl
place or beginning of thla harolnaiiOvt ~amtd 1 ,.
•
•
Sizes
tract; t~ N 0' 04' 411" W ' turthar notified ltlatlllay are
501.23 feet; thenet S 31' 24' require to anowar oald
iet-s79.9S
... '47.95
04" E H7,H flat: thence S complaint on or before Apttl
II' .tO' 01" E 247.77 foot to I 11, , _ which lnclucloa 21
00
corner of tha Catholic daya from tho lall
11C1W
Cometary; thenco S It' 51' publication ilr judgement
NOW
31" E 1411.2tl flat with tho may ba rendered. ••
Una of eald comallry; dt!llandtd lhartln.
." '-811'011' 411" W 356.15
BRICKER a ECKLER
"your athletic
foot along lht Una of ~·It!
KHnalh c. Johnaon,
comotary; lhanca s It M
Attomay
footwear
31" w 335.14 teat leaving
tao South Thlnf rnsource"
oald ci-try Uno to tho
Cotumbua. Ohio 43215
centtrllna of tho Townthlp (2) 15, 22, 21;
Road; thotiCa H 44' 21 ' 01" (3) 7, 14, 21; I TC

1
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Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy

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A.

You musl include in
income both your wages and
lhe jury duty pay. You may
deduct the amount you lumed
over to your employer,
however. What's mo{e, you can

II
I

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deduct this amount even if you
do not itemize deductions.

SWISHER LOHSE
Pharmacy

SPRING FOOTWEAR

..,--

Arriving Daily!

MENS • Womens • Kids

BOYS MIKE SKY lAID
Sizes lOY. • 3

2-6

529

1

519001

•Aerobics
•Walking

Sbop our ''SIIIe "Room"

••
•
•

· For Everyday Barpins
.'
More shoes In store
marked down

up to 40% ·SAVE!
119 N. sec-t

MkkUepon .
992-5627

•••

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hge 6' • The O.lly Sentinel

Thursday, March 7, 1916

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

. Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

1

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- ~oHegehoops.~·~·&lt;~co=ntin=~~~=m~~~ge~~&gt;____________~------~--------------------------~.
• "It was confirmed this afternoon
.,Y the NCAA that Kevin Beal was
ineligible for academic reasons,"
said Jeff Hurd, an associate com·
missioner of the WAC.
Hawaii coach Riley Wallace was
surprised his team advanced to a
game against No. 10 Utah.
"I've never heard of something
like this," Wallace said. "It was
al!nost as if it was meant to be."
In the other WAC game, San
Diego State stopped Air Force 80-69.
At the Big East tournament, No.
I 3 Syracuse beat Notre Dame 76-55
and advanced 10 a quarterfinal
against Boston College, which beat
Pittsbuqh 70..66. Seton Hall beat

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West V'trginia 80..78 to move into the
quarters against No. 3 Connecticut,
Miami beat Rutgers 77-67 to earn a
matchup with No. 6 ·Georgetown,
and Providence beat St. John's 80.. 7~
to advance to a game against No. 9
Villanova.
In the first round of the Atlantic
10. Xavier beat Fordham 61 -54, St.
Bona venture defeated Dayton 72-60,
St. Joseph's downed Duquesne 8072 in overtitne and Rhode Island
routed La Salle 8S-S9. .
In Southland Conference openers,
Texas-San Antonio edged Sam .
Houston State 6o..58 and Stephen F.
Austin beat McNeese State 94-91.
And in Conference USA, which

doesn't get an automatic NCAA bid,
Saint Louis beat Southern Missis·
sippi 6I ;44, South Aorida topped
Alabama-Birmingham 73-57 and
DePaul defeated North Carolina
Charlotte 66-60 in first-round games.
In other games involving ranked
teams, Wisconsin took No. 16 Penn
State 64-62 and Minnesota upset No.
19 Iowa 72-64.
Big East-at New York
No. 13 Syracuse 76
Notre Dame SS
The Orangemen (23- 7) withstood
a second-half run by Notre Dame as
John Wallace scored 32 points. Wallace got sick at halftime, but
still scored 20 points in the second

half. He added II rebounds.
The Irish (9·18) pulled to S8-53
with 4:52 left when Wallace started
a closing 18-2 run with two free
throws. Lazarus Sims' tluee-pointer
with 2:57 left to made it 63·53, artd
the Orangemen made eight free
throws before Sims closed it with
· another three-pointer and a-dunk.
Boston Collqe 70
Pittsburgh 66

Antonio Granger's only points of
the game~ a three-pointer with 77
seconds left - helped the Eagles
(18-9) move into the quarterfinals.
Pitt (10-17) trailed 61-49 with
nine minutes left but went llhead 6665 before Granger got the lead back

Scoreboard

.,

Basketball

..

NCAA Division I

Ohio women's
college scores

men's s~;ores

NAIA Dlvidon 11-llnt rouOO
Shawftee Sl. 76, Holy Fwnily 70
St. Ambrose ~2. Mouru St. Joseph .58

Mklwnt

lndiiM 73, Ohio St. .56
MichiJaR 11, Northwealem SO
Mictlican St. 77, 111inois 67
Minne10ta 72, Iowa 64
Wiscolllin .54, PeM St . .52

Tou...monb
Allantlc 10 Caartnnce-llnt nllllld
Rhode
85, La
59
Sr. Bon.ayenturc 72, Dayton 60
Stlooeph'o 80, llloqueone72 (OT)
Xavier, Ohio 61, Fool!am 54

blond

Salle

Bit EUt Conrtftn«.ffnt round
Boslon Colle&amp;e 70, Pinsbur&amp;b 66
Milll1li 77. Rutps 67 '
Provideace 80, Sr. lohn '•72
Seton Hall SO. West VirJi nia 78
Syracuse 76, Notre Dame S5

ConferenCe USA..ftnt round

!7

Henry

Tournaments

Recular·seuon play

DePau166. N.C. OJarlolte 60
Sollh Florida 7J, Alu.- Binninaham
SC. Louis 61, Southern Miu. 44

dutmplolllhlp

Pltriot LcCoi&amp;Ale 74, Holy Gross 6~

Saudtlud Confenna-llnt ...,nd
Stephen F. Aus1in 94. ~cNCCIC St. ~I
TeJUis-S1UI Anronio 60. S~:~m Houston
St. 58
Wttllem Alhletk Cdennct
Finl ro..nd
San Diqo St 80. Air Forte 69
Hawaii defeall Tew-El P•o by for·

Bcuver Eastern go. frllllklin FurnllCC
Green75(0T)
Cardington 66, Millersport .52
Fairfield 66, Ponsmourh E. ~7
.,.
Hearh 65 , Danv ille~
Mlrion Locol66, St
64 (OTl
Minslt:r .57, Delphos St. John ~2
Richmond Hts. 12, KirtiMd 38

Ohi'! H.S. boys' scores

Ohio H.S. girls' scores
Tournaments
Division Ill

Tournaments
Division I
Cllrnon GlenOaK 69. 'too. Boardman
5~

. Cnnton McKinl ey ~7. Massi11onJa.;k-

son 49

't

ae. Collinwood S7. Euclid S4

Cle. Heights 119, Maple His. ~8
C1e. Si. lgnatiu1. 74, Brunswick 50
WD.Ish Jesuit 58, B;ubenon 56
Strongsville 71, Lakewood 67 (On
L4kewood St. Edward 71, Amheu l
s...1e 52
·
Division II
Belliire 61 , Dover 59

Akron Hoban .56. You. Mooney 44
Brookfield 69, O.agrin Falls 49
Cin. Wyoming 56, Kenton Ridge 50

GQI'1lway 6!1, Wt'l~:elersburg 64
Uricn SO, GeorFtown 39
Point VIlli. 64, Henth 56

Cwuon S. 50, Minervll 43
Cle. VA-SJ 67, Mentor 1..4ke Cath. 62

Copley 67, Field 6~

Uma Bath 74. OTegon Clay 7"!1 {0T)

Olm.ued Falls 79. Firelands 41
Orrville 89, LouisVille Aquinas ~8
Ottawa-Glandorf 60, Roufoid 54
Polllnd62. Yoona. Chaney 39
Warrensville H1s. 71 . Twinsburs S8

DMslon Ill
Miami E. 62, Cin. N. CollegC Hill s~
Norwayne S~ . Loudonville 43
Ripley 56, Chnton-Massie 44
Venailles 55, Valley View 54

Pt'liladelptlia ........... l I

33

NAJA I l l • - ll·ftnu-•101

Wal~ 92. 0...• Mountlin 83

LEGAL NOTICE
The Public Utilities Commission of
Ohio has set for publichearing case
No. 95·101-EL·EFC, to review the
fuel procurement practices and poll·
cies of Ohio Power Company, the
operation of its Electric Fuel Com·
ponent and related matters. This
hearing IS scheduled to begin at the
Commission offices at 10:00 a.m.
on March 12, 1996.
All interested parties will be given
an opportunity to be heard. Further
information may be obtained by
contacting the Commission at 180
East Broad Streel, Columbus, Ohio
43266·057~
.

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air, all

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I

ERNEST

l

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:SPENCER
' ''IKE'~

,,1 •

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Republican
·~
,.C andidate for
' Meigs County
CoJDmis@io~er

Your. Vote and
Support il

22 .633
25 . ~9
26 .SS2
26 .552
30 .483
:\7 ·.J6i
4~ .2S9

~~~
1 9~

20'h.
20 ~
24~
31~

Jn

WESfERN CONFERENCE ·

Dlvlsioo IV

Adlntk It Confe,.nce-ftnt Roond
St·Bon.o.ventun: 72. Dayton 60
Xavier61, Fordlwn $4

~

.190

Cenlr•l Diwlsion
ll-0\ico.go .............. 53
6 .898

Toumamenll

f

17

18
20
23

. Ohio men's
college scores

'

32· .467

.450
New Jersey ........... 24 34 .414
Bo11on .................... 22 38 J67

feit

''•

10~

Wmsttingron ............ 27 33

lf14iana ................... 38
CLEVELAND ....... J3
Arlanln ............... .... J2
Deiroit... ................. 32
Ow.rlotte ........ ~ ...... 28
~wookee ........... .. 21
Toronto .... ............. .IS

4

1984 POijTIAC
BONNEVILLE
Dr, VB, auto,
cruise.

~.................Jf I~

!

San Antonio ...........40
Houston .................40
Denver ................... 24
21

Oallaa .....................

18 .
20 ,667
34 .414
37 .362

Minnesota ............. .19

Vancouver ............. ll

40

46

.322
. 19~

Paclnc Dlvilion ,.
l3 .780
l..A. Ulken ...........J6 21 .632
Phoeni1. ..,. ............. ,.30 28 .SI7
Golden Sl41e ..........27 32 4S8

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Weat Viqinia (12-IS) pulled to ;
65-64 befure Donnell Williams led a •
10-0 run to give the Pirates an II· •
point lead.

- Miami (F1a.) 77
Ratpn67
.
Kevin Noms cut short a Rutgers
comeback by scoring II str~ght

Res. (304)·882·3328
West Columbia WV.

(UmeStone-

:

LowR.-)

;
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•
Adrian Griffin scored on a drive
with one second left to lift the
:
Pirates (12-15). He finished with 18 119int;s ~-o~~ . the_stre!~h_f~ _M_!_am• ,

Our Entire

Lfmestone,
1 Gravel, Sand,
(Top Soli, Fill Dirt

-

~:.=~~:.:::::::::::
:~ ll
L.A. C
lippen ......... 2Q l9

Stock of

'

Training
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' At Big Bend
Health '&amp; Fitness
' Children &amp; AduH
Clanes

I

Call992·3967
tot Dellllla :Jt1/1mo.

9

~ew Homes • VInyl Siding New

•New Home•
•Addition•
•New Garage•
•RtrnoclellnO
•Siding
•Roofing
•Ptlntlng

Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
, FREE ESTIMATES

BENN

FR£E ESTIMATES
(814) 9112.SS35

0 off

TCJ111ght'• aames

TAll

with ,,. ,.,.. " ·~ to beclr It up
Serving S.E. Ohio 6 Wwt VIrgin..
Toll Free 1-800-872-5987 .
448 M18

Owntrt:

.•~'' RECYCLING CENTIR _,,,
Middleport, Ohio
(Special Price on Aluminum Cans
from March 1 thru 29) ,
Bring In minimum of 50 lbs. of alutnlnum cans to
ntglater for aunn Cotfeemakar to be given -Y·
Drewlng wfll be held on U~reh 29th.

Days: 541·1U4flocll)
Nights: 982·2741

11111mo.

Dallal Ill CbMIOUe, 7:30 p.m.
Atlmnta at CLEVELAND. 7:30 'p.m.
De1roi1 at Cflicngo. ll:JO p.m.

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

l

.,....,
.ktA..wlt

Jane Huffman
Tanya Holter
Jackie Starcher
Bobbi Hatris
Tabby Swearingen
.· Megan Clark
· Robin Haning
·Ruth Riffle
Carol Jean Adams
Dr. Wilma Mansfield
Dr. Anthony Sola
Mary Ann Allen
Roger Roush
Linda Holter
Helen Corsi ·
Don Beegle ·
•
Unda Hudson
Judith Cart
Cecelia Lisle
Tamara G. Anderson
Connie Tucker
Joyce Redman
Gweene Welch
Abbie Stratton.
Linda Jones '
Roland Durst
Samuel G. Stewart
Sharon Pratt
Lynda Fraley Cullums
Janice S. Evans
Teresa Stewart
Howard Newmark
E. Loraine Venoy
James Daitev.·
Lois Clelland
Dr. Dutta
Mike Sharp
Troy Sigman
Debora Staats
Evelyn·VanMeter

Gary Lee Smith
Julia Qualls
Karen S. Clark
Sue Stone
Rae Gwiazdowsky
Edna Triplett
Bonnie COnde
Betsy Weaver
W. S. Lucas
Sally J. Savage
Karen S. Roush
Debbie Finlaw
Bill Prater
Glendine Johnson
Tara S. Clark
Laura L. Harrison
Herman Dillon
Dr, Douglas Hunter
· Kim Shamblin
Angie Mayer
Margaret Corsi
Bess Darst
Pam Ables
Virginia Michael
Jack L Lyons, Sr. ·
Julia A. Will
Katherine Musser
JoyC$ E. Manuel
Libby Fisher ·
Vinas Lee
Betty Sayre
. Doris lhle
Bob Hoeflich
Donna J. Aleshire
Bonnie Kelly
Rhonda L Dailey
.Sue Zirkle
Ruth Spaun
· George A. Hoffman·
Ralph Fisher
Michael l-laiwnh

(1)1,): 1l'l2 /l).l(J

, _ (3041 6Ts-T6S1
AmtmoN SIIIGI.ES)U

No MoreiW Dates!
,
Slatplycal

~ 1·900-656·2600 bt.
'
-

i 3836, 2.99 per .... +

•·-

: 18 yn., ..t lst• to
[ s'wgles locatltl'w Olllo
, . profile IM!nselves.
'I - Strv·U
(619) 645·8434

--

•

f'.li1H'IDV

Sports Funll
Scores Point
Spreads and much
more.

.' '

~ntertainment

' t

.\

Ltf:
f '

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trouch Tone Phone
·
Required
!Serv·U (619) 645-8434

_...A-1180~

~1 Mlddlepolt ~
· t2 Rutland
Room a board for

Sllite llcenMCI.
Lots of TLC. Family
hoiJMllllma.pherl.
R-llllble R.-

. 992-5042 or 742·1120
Polly or Chl'l\,. _

NEFF REMODEliNG
SERVICE

!•
',
'•
'

Hou•e Repelr &amp;
Remodeling
Kitchen &amp; Beth
Remodeling
Room Addition.
Siding, Rooflng, Pllloa
Reeaoneble
tnaurera · Experienced
Cell Woyne Noll ·
992-4405

for Free Eallmllea

.,.

$20.00/HR.

H&amp;H
Bllllllsaw Ml

32124 Happy Hollow Rd.
Mlddlepo[!, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy Brickles
614-742·2193

'

Distributed by

Phet..raplter for
Year S_peclol

Howard Extovotin

oWtddlngsnltceptiona
-Annlv-rlee
oCouplel (Engqement8)
oGroupe oFemlty
olndMduat

Trucking·
Umestona
Bulldozing and
Backhoe
Services
House Sites and
Utilities
All Kinds uf Eorlh Work

oStnlor Plcturas

Cllll992·7747

WMkdtlyt • lfllr 5 pm
WMUnd8 • enytl11111

'J/2711-.

-

New Five SJ•
L Vagas Pick
Sports Enttrt•••t

(602) 954-7420

1··900-776-0100

SUMMER IMAGES
TANNING

ext. 7823
. $2.89 per min.
Mutt be 18 yra.

16 Sessions For

-Howard L Wrltelel
ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downapouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

12 Sessions For
$20.00

Slr..U-41111 645 8434

$25.00

lmNmo.

Open 9:00 to 3:00
4:30 to 10:00 P.M.
Ownt111: Pitt 6 Dla111
Hendricks
Pho111: 814-9e2·2487

~11

'

''

$3.99 per min.
Must be 18yrs.
• Touch· tone phone
required.

mo.

' '

~

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PUBUC NOTICE
Tho vtllqe 91 Pom•ror
will be ecceptlng blda lor
...
IItty (!10) omomen111 tlf"l
lights end seventeen (17)
· breckett lor ptdtetrlen ' ROIERT IISSELL
tullng. Both Item'
reterance era IMIIuftlclured COIST,U(nON
by Texas liellllltldl*tM•·
•New Homes
Bid quentlty aheete ere •Garages
IVtlleblt II !!It vtll..e of·
•
Pomeroy City Hatt..-cl mull •Comp~ete
be obtained to be
Rem~ellng
coneld•l'ld •• 1 wild bid.
ltd opening will be held "
Stop I Compare
10:00 a.m. on Monday,
Merch 11, ~ ... et' th• ' FREE ESTIMATES
Po~ Ylllqt Hell, 320 E. ' '
985-4473
Mlln.h ett.
(2) l!lr (3) 7;.1TC
. ... ·.., .
~

'

1·9()().255·0300
ext. 5488

·w· ..·"·.

:::

5.'16J94 TFN

Live Psychics
1 on 1

~,,.,.,-

Call 992,3967
for Details•.

94&amp;-2168

3.'111 mo. pel.

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

1'

Procall Co.

992-3838

Updated Every 15 Min.
No waiting direct
menu.

'·.~.

$~.99/min.

Serv·U
(619) 645-8434

· •R_,.. Addltlone

•NewOirtgea
•Eiectrlctl &amp; Plumbing
•Rooling
' •Interior
&amp; Exterior
'
Painting
Al10 Concrwte Work
' (FREE ESTIMATES)
I
V.C. YOUNG Ill
'

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982-41215

1-

Pomeroy, Ohio

.

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The following used veMicles

.!.'
ww-

1

be up for sale by public auction- •
10 :00am. Saturday, March ·S. ,.
1996 ., lhe parking lot be•id81he •
Meigs County Sherifrs offi ce,

meroy, Ohio.

Po· :
•

(2} 19QO Chevro let Impalas . 4 :

door. minill'Alm bid, $800

, 4
~. ~= Ford 4 door, min 1mum :

( 1) 1985 Chevrolel Impala, 4 ;
door. minimum tMd, $500
~

•

Vehicles are sold AS lS I
The vehicles will be available lo r
inspection Thursday and Friday
one
hour pnor to tle sale.

STAR
GUITAR

IN

:
t
.,

90

Wanted to Buy

owner, 614-992-2526.

'

I Car's Or
~·"-'muu&lt;o»
l Or Newer,
1900 EastJ &amp; D's Auto Paris . Buy ing sal vage vehicles . Selling parts. 304 -

773·503:3.
Non -Working. Washers, D r yers .
Ranges. Refrigerators , Freezers
Air Conditioners. Co lor T. v_ ·s'
VCR 's, Also Junk Cars, 614-256 :

1238.
Top Prtces Pa1d : Old U.S_ ~1ns
Silver, Gold, Di-amonds, Al l. Old
Col lectibles, Pape rwe 1g h1s, Etc.
... .T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second
A¥8nue, Gallipolis, 614-4~6· 2842 .

Ext.1277

u.sed furn itur e- antiques, one

Mutlbi1Byra.
Touch-Tone Required
s.rv.. (819) 1145-8434

ptece or complele estales . also

...

•
•

do appraisals, Osby Mart1n. 614 -

~

992-7441 .

•

Wan ted to Buy Used Mobile
Homes. Call: 614-446-0175

a..c• IIIIth us fer
MarchSpedalsf

.

An tiques.
I
. estates,
Riverine Anlique s, Russ Moore

--

I•IN€J.f4d

HAND

?73-5785 0• 304-773·5447. .

614-367·0302

$3.89 Per Mlnulll

:

Rick Pearson Au ct ion· Company
lull ~ime auct1oneer . complet9
serv1ce.
Licensed
186,0hio &amp; West Virginia 304 .

Lessons for
Plano, Dr•••
&amp; Guitar
Guitars •79 &amp; lp
Also Accessories

Free Eat/mates

:

~

Wamed To Buy: Junk Autos Wi1h·

Asbab~n~·s

Nman Headquarters
Lowest Prices

Or Withou t Mo tors. Call larry
Lrvely. 614-388-9303

Silver Bridge Plaza
614-446-4462

Wanted To Bu:t : Little Tikes Toyi, ,
Sand Box . P1cni c Tabl e. Play' ·
House. 614-245-5887
~ ~

Prom
Dresses
Levi's

Wanted To Blly . Sand Slone ' ·
roundation Stone For Landscap~~ ·

BuL PbaDt (3CM)4t5.e541

Toll FNI

mg. 614-441-101 3.

Any Amounl, 614.:31J8.9006.

Persona !a
Guys &amp; Gals Your Area. 1-900·
990-3737 Ext. 4206, $2 .99 /Uin.
18 + Setv-U. tmJ-645-3434.

Princess Video New Shipment Of
Adul t Video's

614-·U6· 2501,

·

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
110

ANNOUNCEMENTS

·

Wanted To Buy: Slanding Timber

Mon.·Sat. 1o-&amp;

Help Wanted
$-WANTED-$

10 peop le who need .to lose
wetght &amp; make mo ~. to try new
patented we ight-loss produ ct
304 -773-5083 24hrS/day.
1

•

• '

·

Ala.ska Jobs, Earn Up To 30K In Uonths, Fishing, Construct ion - .. ·

·

Oil Fields, -+ More .

7- ,:

Days. 407 -875-2022 Ext. 052 - · 1
6A10.
, '•

s2oo-sgoo

Veal IO"nd &gt;.:

· CO • ......
CLJIG.
I D
.... W

Open Sunday's NOw Noon · 10
PM

weekl\.1.
1
positions. H1ring men, wom..en .' . It
Free room , bo ard . W ill train . 7 ,

SWM 33 Likes Dancing, Movies,

days. 407-875·2022 ext 0505C10.

Announces Customer Appreciation
Days during the Month of March
Do your pan for our environment. Bring us your
alum. cans and .other rt~Cycables and register to
_...
wln I hI ndc••ned
IOI!d WAlnut and cedar lined
blanket Chest Vllutd at $800 to be given away
March 30th. Trl. Co. Rtlcycllng open 7 d.aya I week
to Ml'Ve you.
9-6 Mon.·Frl; IJ-3 Sal. &amp; aun. Located corner of
SL Rt. 143 &amp; 7, Pomeroy, 814-992·5114.

Quiet Evenings At Home. Seeks
SWF 21· 43 Wilh

r-~~:"""------------""1

1380 Eastern Avenue, Gallipolis,

·..

New At 11111es lleetronies

ladle lllaeli Dealer
Your favorite ·artist
on Tape or CD
106 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport

992·2825
11'3111fn

, :

Same lnlele&amp;l&amp;, 'AITN:Po•m Pleasanl'[qcj
.:
Posla l Positions. Permanent lull - . ,
t•.m• lo• clerkiSo&lt;leiS. Full Bene : '
fns . Fo r exam. applic alion and " ·
30 Announcements
sala•y mlo call: 708-264·1839 E&lt;t. • :
36 70, Bam ro 8pm
; •
Freezer Beef Sale. USDA Choice.
Custom cut. wrapped A lrozen. AVON ' All A&lt;eas t Shirley: ''
$1.29/lb. Crawlo1&lt;1o Grocery. 304 - Spea&lt;S, 304-675· 1429.
: :
67
5-S404_
Able Avon Replesenlalives. :.
40
GIVeaway
n·eeded. Ea1n money 1o1 Christ· : '
mas bill s at homelal work. 1·800 · .. '!
Ge•mon Shephtld puppies to 992-6356 or 304-882-2645 lnd . I
gNoaway,614-843·5421.
Rep.
' .
Write : P.O. Box 533, Gallipol is,
OH 4563 1.

Male Beagle, 614-742·2532.
Mill breed , black , friendly with
children, 1 yr., besl in counJry,

614-643-5286.
Rabbi! Beagle

AMe&lt;9RM.

Dog,

814-441 ·1 917

Small milled Beagle CIQQ, good wl
chil d ren. house pet'l only , 6mos

Babysitter Fo r 2 Children. Non Smoker. No Teenagers, FleJC lble
Hours, 614-446-35-45.
Dental Hygenuu For lmmed 1a 1e
Po_s nion In Progress 1ve Oll lce
Onented Toward Preve nti ve Care
And SHA . Please Send Re sume .
CLA 376 cfo Gal lipolis Daily Tnb une! 825 Thtrd Avenue Gallipolis

OH45631 .

'

'

old, welllrainecl. 304-675-4650.

60

Lost and Found

Found: mixed breed female N•p,
I"'I riendly, good with klds , Noble
Summit vicinity, 614 -992- 7559 ,

Ftlben OtVBISilied Employment
I~.~~n'v;h~a:~•.,;a part- l i me (a s
1- in
~ th. e_
for a job coach
Th1's

pos tUon will be
1
for
prov iding. on - 1he-j~~ support lor
people wtth dlsab1hties. Experi FoLrld: set of keys In Ru~and Ele· ence with dtsabili ties preferred .
mentarw school par king lot, s 14_ Contact FOES, 304 -522·3337 no

Kris~.

Isler 3-22-96 . EOE .
lool on HyiOII Run, Feb. 24, 7 Home Typisi.S, PC"'"" noedod
""'"111 Old, lelrele, Beagle &amp; lllu.. $45,000 income polontiaLCall 1:
tlduri._ 8t4.fl92-5275.
800·513-4343 E&gt;t. B-93118.
lost bloci&lt; ... cup Poodle, Meigs lmmedialo Openings Avai lable
Jr. High Ylctnily, 81&lt;4·992-3 714 _
For. ~ertthed Nurse Aidea . Com penuve Weges, Oille•enlol Wi 1~
742-21168.

FreeESIImetM
35Yers Ellp.

R_,.ble Ret11

IS CAR
S'OR'
DE LUll
Flnde- of hard to
••
find auto parts,
614-992-4060

985-4198
;=======~~==::::::::=::I

YOUNG'S
; , CARPENTER SERVIa

PUBLIC AUCTION

Cheater, Ohio

OWner: Ronnie Jones
Chethlre, Oh
(614) 367..0266

20 Yt&gt;ars Expt&gt;rit&gt;nce * Insured

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

:

(1) 1984 Ford Bronco II, minimum •
bid SSXl
~

Need Direction?
Love
Buslneia
Family Mattera
Allow Your
Personal Psychic to
Assist You
1·9CKH88-8600

PAIDIS:iuaG NISSA!tiiNC.
18%7 Manlocll A...
l'arltenbq. WV %8101

'

Mt Alto Auct ion . Every F~riday.,
7pm . Every Saturday flpm. Rl 2-~
~crossroads~ . Groceries, new •
merchandise. Ed Frazier ~·

Dirt •Sillld
985-4422

analysis. WE WILL TEST THE FOLLOWING:
·
TDS, Mlnerel Herdnen, Iron, PH.
Ple111 Clll Rui.Sojlll 892-4472 or 1-IQ0.606.3313
to all up your free weter enelyole.
1"""'"

IMdA

7750.

ha"

Top, Trim, Removal
&amp; Stump Grinding

PARKERSBURG

::::-~.:..all.:..d:.;A,:::u:.:ct:::lo=n:....__.

•!..,

JONES' TREE SERVICE

SM-2008 NIGHT

-

Boggs Auction Service 61 4- ~8-,

The water treatment company cordially lnvHes you to
participate In a free, no obligation, comprehensive water

WEIGHT LOSS
PROGRAM

~:

81

TRI·STATE WATER SYSTEMS, INC.

TfN

Public Notice

(814) 941J-2018 FAX

'
Water
~,u!. ~ · Treatment
~'!.Z~
Equipment

Portable

'

(814) 949-3013 Phone

$32.00/HR.

SAWMILL

...

28563 BASHAN RD.
Racine, Ohio 45771

HYDUULIC REPAIR

·Occa•ran?ll

· eenlolll &amp; dlubled.

t

WELDING &amp; FABRICATION

Serv-U (619) 845-8434

Line!!

' 1·9Wn6-01 oo
' ;;E~. 6057,
~ $2.99 pef min.
I Musi be 18yrs.

CHEAPER RATES

Req.

Sports Edge Sports

..

RACINE HYDRAULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.

Ext. 7830 $2.99 per
min. Must be 18 yrs
Touch-Tone Phone

: Give YourseH The

949-2512

Call 992-4025

Sawrday.
Public sale

so

'

We will work within your budget
Ph. 773-9173
FAX 773-5861
108
Street
WV

.... ',

1·900· 776·01 00

7.

"No Job Too L.srge ot Too Small"

992-3954 or 985-3418 , ..,. ;j
J. E. DIDDLE, OWNER

I

,_

All Yard Sales Mu st Be Paid In

SERVICE
Limestone • Gravel

Authorized AGA Distributor
• Welding Supplies • Industrial Gases • Machine Shop
Servlces • Steel Sales &amp; Fabrlcatlon • Repair Welding
• Aluminum/Stainless • Tool Dressing • Ornamental
Steps -Stairs, Rallinga, Patio Furniture, Fireplace
ltetnS, Planter hangers, Trelllsas &amp; lots of other stufft!

POMEROY, OHIO
Trash Removal • Comm~trclal or Residential
Septic Tanka Clea111d a. Portable Tolletl Rented.
Dally, WHilly &amp; monlhly rentll rat11.
WE OFFER GENERAL HAULING
Umeatona, Sand, Gravel, Coal 6 Water
WE HAVE A·1 TOP SOIL FOR SALE

C• llllli&lt;k 011c.l ,,,

,'

6 VIcinity

Advanea. Deadline : ~ :OOpm the'
day before the ad is to run, Sun·,
day edilian· 1:OOpm Friday, Monday edition !O:ooa.m.

PHONE
614·245·0437
%

I

2122/rFN

MODERN SINrfltiOI

Dl.;(/'11'-1::, .

TV&amp;VW..

(Janet Howard, Robert Hartenbach, Fred Hoffman)

F\1v ;\Jt,_J

:\11\ I)I tVt:l
IJ UI ,', Sf~ :•:o

Hlf' PoWff' Wn

All of us at Veterans Memorial Hospital sincerely thank tl)e Meigs
County Commissioners for their signed pledge issued on Monday.
They have vowed to do everything within their power to make l~nd
avail~ble near our hospital for the construction . of a medical arts
building. We deeply appreciate that display of support.
That pledge was the ideal answer to 124 hospital employees and
volunteers who signed a letter ·requesting · that the Commissioners
take positive action to improve the situation at Veterans Memorial
Hospital. ·
Veterans Memorial provides not only excellent healtb~re for
residents of Meigs County and adjacent territory but it .is a · pt imary
e,mplpyer in Jhe county. The h9$P!J~. p.j_yroll is.. i!l) eco11omic;:, ~~~~J to
tne business sector of the county and Pomeroy Village benefits
through a one percent income 'tax paid by employees.
There is much dialogue these days in Meigs County on economic
development and at Veterans Memorial, we support such
development. However, by the same token, it is imperative that Meigs ·
County retains the assets it already has. The hosp.ital is an asset not
only from · the standpoint of providing medical services to the
community
but economically.
It's the ' old story of "A. Bird. in the
.
.
,
Han d .....
So many of your neighbors and friends are affiliated with Veterans
Memorial as employees or volunteers. Here are the names of the 124
persons who signed the original letter requesting the.granted support
from the Meigs County Commissioners:
Mae Nelson

d~,v

lrl',tli.!!H't'
1\lly [ ~:11

a.-.,s.rm

THANKS, MEIGS COUNTY COMMISSIONERS I

Teresa A. Wilson
Tina Story
Claudia Thomas
Amy Baker
Marty Meadows
Brenda Cunningham
Sharon Stewart
Sharon Vickers
Garcia Adams
Lorene Goggins
Edie Roush
Beth Roush
Suzanne Henderson
Nancy Griffith
Stacy Tyree
Paula Brown
William Call
Christina J. McGuire
Mae Hupp
June Kloes
Linda Russell
Bonnie Dailey
Sandra Peyton
Paula Eichinger
John Kerns.
Sherrie Roush
Kathy McDaniel
Lisa Pauley
Amber Bennett
John L. Arnold
Teresa Simpson
Diana Herdman
Karen arozac
Doris A. Mertz
theresa M,; Bing
Tina Neigler
Debbie Smith
Jackie Fields
Leanne Cunningham

All Ohio

992-3894

28 YL·,l! s Expetic ncc
1 800377 .J.J77

Middleport

. washers, dryers,
hot water tanks,
furnaces, batteries
and any fl)etal
materials.
between 8 a.m.-8 p.m.
Mon.· Sat.

SHINGLES • SIDIN G • W INDOWS
RU IL T UP 1: R URRER ROOFING
POLE BARNS AND GARA GES
RE SIDENTIAL &amp; COMM ER CIAL

503 Mill Street

Pomeroy" Middleport

FREE
Pick-up discarded

R. L HOLLON
MIKE MARCUM
TRUCKING
ROOFING &amp; REMODELING CO. DUMP TRUCK

NOftCI• llftCI• IPftCI
· -~~":,, MANLEY'S ,:~,,,

Herry l Donna Cllrk
Starting Sun. lhru Feb.
.29 Sr. Citizens Spacial
FM for dlly ru1111.
$1.00 per pe1110n to

Pomeroy,

liCtriSED &amp; BOrJDED
FREE ESTir.lf,fl-S

PHOFES;;IrJIIAI
SEHVICl

CLARK'S CAl CO.

luiiiMIW &amp; ',..,,
Stww&amp;llralt

81 MHI Slnllt
151 a-nd S1n111t
Mlddlllpolt, 011 4miO .
Oh 41131
81

Sunday

Mobile Home Heating &amp; Cooling

19

'TRI-STATE SEWER &amp;
DRAIN QEANING

614-992-7643

il14i 8112-2753

~~ ~

MianeSOia 103, Philadelpl!la 90
Woshing10n 99. Seatde 88
Snn Antonio 100, Denver 90
Uuili 101 . 1ndi.llill.94

Roush

Kick ;Boxing

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

Cullom Building. ~ng

;. • • 'IIIII

American Made
Crystal an4 Brass
Giftwear ·

:.339
!n -~£26

Terry ~~ermllt

SMITH'S
, COISTRUCTION

614-992-3470

~

Seatt~ -,.. ............... 46

&amp; VIcinity

Beef and Hog
Bus (3041882·2756

'

1

New York 89, Toroato 82
Boston ll 0, L.A. Clippcn 91

.S76

47

'

Mldwtll Dhlolon

potntl.

WICKS
· HAULIN'G

Wednesday's scores

EASTERN CONFERENCE
:rum
ll'. I. f&lt;l. l:ill
Odandoc....
..45 ll . 7 ~0
Miami ................... 28

.

Seton HaQ, 80
West Virpnla 78

•-clinched playoff spoc

NBA standings

New York.. ............ J4 2S

•

for BC.
Keenan Jourdan led BC with 19
points and Abrams had I 8points artd
II rebounds. Jason Maile had 23
points for Pitt.

.•.•

GIIUpollt

Lo11 : lemale Golden Retriever
ci nnamon color, namea Cinna:
mon, l•ther c:.oUar, Meig1 Mint
viclnlty,lt.__211 15_ ·

Eliperience. Sign On Bonul
Available Equal Opportunity Em .·

'·
:~

''

cJ ,•

pi oyer. Conracl The Assislant 01,
recll&gt;l
Of Nu,.lng, Pinecitll
•
LINDA'S
loot:
long
haired
whlle
&amp; gray llpolls. Ohlo 45&amp;31 814:.4 '
maJe c:al, 1111 ..., iuncdon Crab- 1.112..
·, . ~
croek &amp; JimHill Ad. 304·875·
•' -.·,
large Cons !ruction Equipmo ~ \ ;
PAINTING
P.o
Racine, Oh• 45n 1 JGe:l.
. • Box 587
Dealer Locally InJl!ckaon OH · ,
llniiOI•ImiiOI
James E. Diddle
Lo•t: Yollow Lab,·e Month a Old Lookl~g For AField s.nk1 ,.. I&lt; ' •
FREE ESTIMAtES
Mulll Colo•ed Collar. Lui Soan chanlc. Uuot Have Ai(;'ufrent-• : •
.
Trackhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Tnick, Burl&lt;hwJ llno. Rowardl Q14·4ote· COL And Minimum 01 Throe ,· ;
Met•• ...... el
Jackhammer, A:"alla..'* 24 Hrs.·
::07115.:::::..------v.... C~torpllla• Exper'enc.- ..,
..laflllt. Let n .. It
·•
""'
7CJ
Yard Sale
·
To T•oubloohooJ. Diog,' ~ 1
.......
......
We
d""
baiemanta,
put
In
septic
'
·~noN rilopal~. CAT Equipmtnl
,_ 1 - ·
'111
EnQtnu Go"!( j::9m- I·
YIIY IIMM4MI
ayatams, lay lines, undtr"i'oUnd
bores.
lmuonlcoulonI And
Written Skill•
•
...,....
Ta Kttp Accurat• ,
lllftllfiiiiCU
For Free eatlmate Clll949-2512
&amp;VIcinity
Records And Roporto. S.nd . ~
"'-ti•-"'IIO
IU!M To: CLA 374, C/o Gollipotia
61 .- ..-.
:I ____.,.!•~I~"~..,.~~:A~I~U~·~.A1~~&amp;1~--!-=:.JI2t
8rookalde Drive, Wo!ch For ~~~bune,
825 Tl!lrd A1!!1nue,
· ,
..__ _ _ _ _
J/2fl/_tmo.OOii:Oil !'
Slgno, - · Tlur&amp;
OH -41!e3t.
,_,,. · - ·

J.D. Drilling Company'

a.·-..

Center, 170 Pinecrest Drive ·

l

I• 1'

�~~

.. .. .. .

._

. ..

•'\.·

.

' • 8 • The DillY Sentinel

ThUI'Idlly, March 7,1981

I

iThursday, March 7, 1996

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Stntlntl• Pal:• 9

NEA Cros.-wo.r d Pu·z zle

BIIIDOJ:
PHILLIP
Apalb1WI1S

lor Rent

: ' Do you hive room In your lloert

• : nlnlng Jn wour area, 24 hour

•...ppq~~. compoUm rtlmburat: ............. -'lni1Y 10 .....
, •a _.,.. In 11e lila ol o child.
·~wMtlo know more? Call AVC
; FoWLYf1ESOUACE CENTER at
' -1400 ~~Am.
'

-Y

: -&amp;m 110001
otufflng en. Mlopeo at homo. Be your booo.
"Start , _ No up., !rae oupplloo,
-Info., no Hligldon. Send S.A.S.E.
·to Prndgo Unit Ill, P.O. Bo•
1gseog, Winter Spring a, Fl
:SVtD.
~orkl

E•cellant Pari AaPtoducta at Homo. Coil
Toll Fr" t -800-487-5!188 EXT.
t'

313.

t 992 Chevy Astra canvoralon
van, 41,000 mlloa, 4.3 v-e, auto.
loaded, 4 captain - • &amp; bench,

Furnllhld t BtGroorn Apanmtnt, Cheat type freezer . . 30•..e7S·
SOcond A.. nua. Galllpollo, Up- 1275.
llalro, Utllltlaa Paid, No Pt-. Rtf·
Cofllo table with two matching
......., eu 448 0523.
end tableo, ..rr good condition,
Furrtlahod 2 Badooom Apartmant, ti4-DII2-2215. '
Acroa1 From Park, AC, No Pete,
Rtforancao, O.poolt, 1350/l.!o., Concrelo &amp; Ptaadc Stpdc Tanke,
300 Thru 2,000 Gallono _Ron
814-44&amp;-8235,81~77. '
Evana Enterprlaea, Jackoon, OH
Furnlohod 2 Rooma &amp; Bath, 1-800-537·11528.
Downotalro, Utllltlu Furnlahod,
Cl-. No Poll, Reforonca, De- Dlanar aroa. 5 doro. 4 hotol
politRaqulrod, lt4-448-t510.
nlghll, uot anytime. Paid f3t0,
Furnlahed Efficiency 2 Roomo.- j;ooi~I~I00~.304-~!353~9~13~t;_,.---~
Share Bath, 1195/Mo. Utllltlu Eloctrlc Hoopltal Beda, For Solo
Paid, 507 Second Avenue, Galli· -Or-Rontii14-37D-2720, AFTER e
poii, _8 1HI8 1118Aitor7P.II.
P.ll.

;-...... aProltMianaiT.-t
• ' Pararu and Join our team. Froo

'

Merchandise

'·

, ;IIIII ,_ lion-. ... a rwodJ c:l\!ld'l

ALDER

KJT 'N' CARL\'LEe by Larry Wriald

540 MIICIIIneout

0

•

"

•••

new lirn. garage kept, mull ...

•
••

asking $10,DOO, 114-040-2411

a~

... Spm .

•

t U4 Jeap Cherokee Sport 4
Door, 30,000 Miln. GorOQo Kop~

Excellent Condition , 614-448·

" EEK&amp;MEEK

7825, 814·992-7075.

.

NORTH
03-0HII
•A 7 5 4 2
•A 54

'.

., 8 2

Sport C~rAvf.n

•&amp;3 /

Call Alter 5 P.M.

EAST

•Q 8 6

•K J 10 9

•KQI087

U96 32.
• 73

tS
•K J 10 5

SOUTH

.a

740

.

---

.A K Q J 10 6 4

''

°

•Q

tg83 Hondo V-45 Magna to,ObO
lllloo New Tires, ea111rr Runa.
Lookl Greatl Aoking 12,500, 81444t.Ot88.
.

320 MObile ttomes '
fOrS61e
570

MusiCS I
Instruments

710 -Autos fOr Slit

Story &amp; Clark console piano,

$2000, 614-742-2375.

tD88 Red Trans Am, 14,'100, 814-

FARr~

Food Buolneao For Solei Alford-

able,· low Overhead Operation

With E•clllanl Location And Incomo Po..,..lli, Full Training, Ongoing Support &amp; Adverdling ProYidod. Good Torma. Some. Financing Poulblo. Undor 25K,
Ground FIQ- ~ni1Y To Join
Hunllng.,n BaNd Company Wllh
t8 Fronchloaa In WV, KY, OH &amp;
VA. 1·600-lln-82110.
Toning Bad Bualneaa For Sale,
Located fll Flnoot Hair I Tanning
Solon, Call Anytime, 814-387Polloi &amp; Gov't Job&amp; $21 /Hr • 0812.
Bonollta, No EIP- Will Train, For
Appl And Info t-880-538-3040.
Sec::retary /Receptlonlat For Paint
Plueant, Mid March, Part·Time

To Start. Very Detail Oriented A
Muot Will Prepare Reports. Do
Tracking &amp; Report Raaulls To
Ho'me Olflc::a. Mall Resume To

AOW 328 112 Saventh Street,
Sullo 18, Parkersburg, WV
211101, Attn: MI. Seundera.
Socill Wortllta, NOw Hiring 123/
Hr + Benofill. On lite Jab Train~ Apply fn '~Wr - . 1·100-

460 Space for Rent
_."""•'""In

Allreal081ate ~··..-·-.
this neMpopor Is sUljact to
the Federal Fair Houolng Ad
of 1D88 which makes" lleglll

~:!!:=:;.· --,..,.-,..,.----:-IJtoadvelllse'anypreleranoo,
1 50

S1)1ill Ntedod With Managon AI.
Llau'o River View, 814·448·

oMIIIO.
Wanted: Someone who epeak1
Condnental PanugueM to a11l1t

p.. pla going to Portugal in the
baolca of tha language. 304-874-

llmltatton or clscrimlnotton
bosedonraco,color,rellglon,
- origin,
temlllal
aiatuo
or no11ooa1
or any
Intention
to
make ..,y auch preference,
..

llmltadonordlol:rimlnatton.
This - p a r wtlf not

--

180 WantldTo Do ,
2 poraon-doanlng team. 1 Uma or
regular aarvlce. E•porlanctd.
Have rtfl,.nctl. For rat11 call
304-1175-1053 before 5pm, 304-

...__..,......,"'accept
edvelll';',;;;;;'!orrealeotate
whk:hlslnYiolattonolllelsw.
eur readera 8111 hOIII)y
lnlonnad lhalall .......-s
......... "'
edvertt&amp;odln lhl&amp;

Mobile Home Space For Ront, .
..Fot:.,:lnfoo::;rm::•=tton:::;:_·- - - - - Centenary Area, Green Local
-2 bodruom houae, aeon, ful~ car- Schoola, 814~
pettd, foncod In yard, no poll,
dopoalt &amp; reforonceo required,
::81~4-9D2-..::~30DO:::.;:;_·- - - - - , __...;._ _ _ _ _ __
4 bedroom, newly remodeled, 510
Household
fence yard, wtd fUrnished, $450/
·
mo. plua utilities, 614-992-6886
GOOdS
8
::"":::"'::.::pm=.- - - - - - - Appl iances:
· Reconditioned
Freahly decorated, new carpet,
paint, etc. 2bedroom, full base·

mont. Referencn Depooit. No
pots.304-875-5t82.

Nice clean 2 bedroom, In Porner·

buy, HUD accepted, 1300 per Tuoa-S.t 9-e, Sun 11-1&gt;
month with deposit, no pets, 814Do It Vburaelf &amp; Seve On carpet
:898-::.:7.::244.::::...- - - - - - - &amp;
Vinyl Floor Covt.ilng, Mollohan
Smol Houoe On Raccoon Crook · Carpota, Rt 7 N, 61~7444.

n..-.- BHr Run Road, Shelter House,
Boat Dock. Large Docks, OvorBrothert Conatructlon &amp; Harne l•••llii••••••llooiVng Creek, $325/Mo. Plus De·
tmprovomanta, 814-388-8887
pooit No Pets, 814·25!H!t 12.
87S-5865aftlr5pm.

araavalableonanequaf
opportunltybaoll.

Contact- Or 1!11.

Electrical, Plumbing, Concreto
Founda-. Garagaa. Room Addldono, Remodeling, DIYid, et4· 258

s~t. 1Rogar 81 ~ 1 78.

3 Bodroorna, Wetzgal Slroo~ Po·
moroy, WtD, $350JIIo. Deposit,
;::51~:H=22~-o2D4=::::·_ _ _..:,..._

310 Homes for Sale

Gtneral Maintenance. Painting,
Yard Work Window• Waahod 108 Hilltop Drive, Golllpolla, 3
(Mtora Cleaned Light Hauling, Bodroomo, LR, Ki~ 1 112 Bolh Gos
1 1 R11id0 ntlol Stave· Hea~ CAir, Vinyl Siding, 7 Veara
et":'~~'
· Old lncludoo ·72'x30' Polobarn,
~..,--:-:- lnt.Finiahed, Insulated, tO' Ceil-

c
:::::=:=:=:___

George• Portable Sawmill. don't
haul your Joga to tho mil juot coil

Quallfllld, experlenc.,-J. CNAI

•

f

HHA, ablo., care tor lht tldotlr
In ttt•lr home, pleua call 8U·
llt2-»t1.. SANDiE'S hit -lng for your
child. Ptey_room, moalo, onac~a.
mr
8t'-

-·ct-.

420

Mobile Homes
for Rent

14•70 all olocvlc, 1250/lno. +Udiitlea, Galllpollo Ferry. 304·675·
:40::88:·-------2 Bedroom' 5 Mi., s., 218, 12751

s

lng will houae email business,

aloo a one car garage, fenced

l:rd, out of flood area, asking

1,000 et4-D4D-21104.

~133:::.1·:,___ _ _ _ _ __
2 Bedrooms, Small, Furnished

$2l51Mo. WBier Paid, 920 Fourth

Avenue, Gallipolis, 814·446-4418
After 7 P.ll.
bi
.
Nice two bedroom mo Ia home

430

In

Farms fOr Rent

440' : ~partments
for Rent
for Sale
tg12 2 ilodroom, Storoge, Wlllh-

,_.__

PICKENS FURNITURE
Nowi\Jttd
30-U75-t450

610 Ferm Equipment
'88 G.II .C. 2 112 ton olnglo axle
Cabovor Dleool, 5 &amp; 2 opd. 22'
dump, grain &amp; llvootock oldoa,
37,000 one owner mlloa. A~klng
$24,900, 814-992-5072. Pomoror.
Ohkl; oloo g tDn 24' tri-ulo tiallor,
pintle hitch, $3500..
1985llaaoe~ Ferguson Tractor.
Vory Good Condltlon, Run a Ei·

. $8,900, 814-258-8215.
1995 Whool Horae tractor with 8 . 1992 Grand Am. low miles, block,
apoad t 2 horae 38' mowor, uaed CD player, """ nres, $7000, 614-

le•• than 50 houra, S1400, 814·

992·7358.

gas or cylinder 15,500. 304-875- ~::::...
· -------27d.

Farmall M. "'OOd runniN'I condi·
•
...

lion, $1200 firm, 614-985-3902.

Spreadera, Hydraulic Lilt Trailer,
Disc 3,000 Gallon Plaatic Tank,

Inch PTO Groin Augar, Manure

814·245-5588, 814-24S.Ii882.
JO 18" Disk 1700 NH 489 Hoy.
blne $4,000: NH 849 Roundbalor
$7,500 , Andy Mams . 814-3792744.
UF 135 Oinel Tractor Restored,

14,9a5: 35 IIF, Sharp 13.795: 65
IIF Now Motor And Tires, $3,995,
1080 MF 14,995; 814-288-8522.
NH T hay bino. Owatonna T hay

SPRING SPECIAL: Central Air

bine. Gehl grlnderlmllllf. 12'
transport disc. All good condition.
304-273-421 ii

Ton $1 ,205; 3 Ton $t,3D5: 3 112
Ton $t,595; 4 Ton St,895: Pncoa

Two 12hp Mt 0 mowers. One
1•hp wheel horn mower. One
16hp Sears mower. Two rototill·

Above Include Normal lmnalladon. Full 5 Year Warranty, Free
E&amp;tlmatoo, t-800-2Dt.009S; 6,.-

ers. 304-882-2548.

448-8308.

with backhoe. Call 814-8114-7842.

630

Tan Sofa With Brown Flowers

2 112 Year Old Mare Green
Broke, 112 Quarter Horse, $80Q,

$150, Green Chair $25, Lazyboy
Rocker Recliner, $25, 814-446 RelrlgoratDr, 18 cu. n.. lroll fiN, 9747.
good cond,_:jp-1-~37-3570 or 304937-aa&amp;.
.... ,..,
Tandy 2500 RSX Computer,
' .•.
Monitor, Dot Matrik Printer, to Refrigerator Ammana Side By eludes. Windows 3. t E•cellent
Sicta ' Microwave, Color T.V., C!&gt;nditlonl $7!1), 814-387-7055.
Wuher,. Direr, VCR, 8 14·2581238. '
~. .
TUXEDO RENTAL SPECIAL ,
place order by MarCh 27, Save
VI'RA FURNITURE •
15%, for ust anytime thi1 year.
~14-448-3158
PAINT PLUS 30~75-4084 .
Quality Hou- Furnillre Attd
Applloncao a...• Doola On
550
liJUIIdlng
CUh Attd Corry I RENT-2-CJWI:I

. Supplies

Block, brick, I sewer pipes, wind ·
ows, lintels, etc. Ctaude Winters,

. Rio Granda, OH Call 814·2455121 .
!ilotal Roofing And Siding Gal vanized. Gahlaluma And Painted,
' 614-245-5tD3.

Pels lor sale

10114 CBR 800 3,800 Mllao, Uka
N-. Purplo, Blacli, .Vollow. With
Matching Helmet, 15.350, 614-

1g71 t4x70 Schultz 1978 12•28
Vemco Add Room llatfy Extraal
Excellent CondiJion, Price Re-

clucodl 814 U8 11034.

A JOB ..

720 lhJCks lor Saie
1988 Chevy ·c10 Truck , looks

And Runs Good! 11.500,814-

r

I

.1gg3 201 Pro XL, 20' Strut••
ball boat, 200 XPHP, 814-68V7347 or 8t4-D4D-2870.
I

9 Year Old "Gelding Good Trail

Broke Horae, Good Depondable
Horao, 8t4-258-t43ls

.

t

a.

tt.ma

34 En1ilr1alner -

Sumac

35 Cry of pain

37 - lollobrtgldtl
38 Prong
40 Profit •nd 42 POtllc lime
llllday
43 Fund (a

i

5 Naftl

1 Rtllgn

=rlclgll

2 Govt. fllnn
3

. .

~

,· ~

-;;~,TI\f.(.()(o\fAA'( NE£1:1.&gt;

OO~t-.151ZIN6 N'OI) '100

,.

.

.

-

...

oc ecff.&gt;J.lJID &amp;r&gt;~~,erut!JS7
-

1\~1£ eff,NI T/&gt;J:L£1ID

I
r

to()

~

BIG OCN..... IJ£. l&lt;Jf&gt;t-115 ME. TO
60 ON~ DIE.T

I I' I I

...,.I~: . . ;.Ej,. .u_:.1. ..;Tfri·1!
~~-=~-=~-=-=~-=~~.:,~

I

DR E EN F

man's best friend Dogs will aIways wag their tails and not
ltheir ----- --

1--.1-.J_.JL.,__L.,_..J......J

8
SERVIC[S

0

Complete the chudde quot•d
by Idling ·in the mining words

vou de..-elop from step No. 3 below.

P~INT NUMBE~EO LETTERS

IN THESE SQUARES

001'! NO, NO... YOU'RE

NOT WMAT l'i'1 LOOII.-

Home

iNG. F~ IN A TIJT"OR .
TH.O.t-IKS&gt; A.NYWA'(,

Improvements

SCIIAM-I.m ANSWERS

Sovrnrs You'll Find In lhe
. Classified Section.

Medley· Posse - Tempt · Tingle - SPEND IT .
"I've found the best way to save money." my gi)Od
friend announced. "I just keep too busv to SPEND IT!"

ITHURSDAY

perience All Work Guarant"CI,

Fronch Cily llaytag, 8i4-44819g5 GIIC I 500 o4x4 Looded, l705.
13,000 llllol, E1CIIIont Conclldon,
8to4-388-852t.
C&amp;C General Home Mail?tanonco- Painting, vinyl aldlnQ.
Crossbred otters and -heifers. 2 Chevy Trucko, 1074, 1878 614- carpon11y, doora, win-. belh'
500 to 700lba. 304-8D5-33ta.
448·3243 After s P.M.
mobile ....., "f&gt;aar and mono. F
liN •••mate coil Chat. 814-DD
Threo t yr old Nubian BlUr Goata. 730 Vllns 8o 4-WDa
8323.
t io A-grade-&amp; priced on inol&gt;oc~·· Polled, And Roglatored
For Calving Eaae, 814-37021144, 814-448-0nt.

don. 304-578-2381

Grain

Square bale1, second cunlng
orchard
hay ; ear corn for

or•••

llio: 814.8112-3853.

Tobacco Planta for oole. Taking

'V .

order• for Floatbed Tobacco

Plonta. Call Dannr Dlwhul'll 3048D5-3D54 be_'"'"" 7pm-l~.

TRANSPORTATIOrJ

I 986 Toyota 4•4 , Air, PB, PS, 5
Spotd, Flbt/liiUI Bod, !fow
Peir&lt;, Red, Sharpl814-2!8-t011 .
I 987 Chevy S· tO Blazer o4x4,
looka lhorp. runs good, rnlnr u tru. $4,000. 304 .. 75-3511 after

teao Dodge Ram V~n 11-250,
72,000 Mllao, $8 ,000, Can Bo
Soan At: GaiiiPOIIa Deily Tribune,
825 Third · Avtn~a. Gaillpolla

I've discovered why dog is

-X

~-..,,.:...;rr-::.,.:1:_:,;.F,....:..-.,--1

1994 Jaop Grand Charokoo Limited, Loodod, 81~· 74110.

--

II I I I P

,..

1gg3 Ford ~ngar XLT AI!J. Alit
Fll· Storao, 5 Speod, t'rlco:
$7,000, 8·5, 304-578-4583; Afllr
810 .
5 &amp; Woalwndo, 614 311 0408.

0

8 Actor Montancl
7 Halr lltlallcentar

L:or+-+lz..-1-+--+-

Cherolala Bulla For Sale, Pur·

Hay&amp;

4Coa~

DOWN

How should South 's thinking go on
this deal when trying to make his fivediamond contract aner West has led
the heart Iring?
South was nervous about bldding
five clubs because his diamonds were L.....L-.1......1so much stronger. Yet it was possible
they had a slam in clubs, so he risked
showing the suit.
After South won the first trick with
by Luis Campo8
dummy's heart ace and discarded a
Ce6II:Jrit-, Cipwr
Cf'IMtd ffom Cll bltl • ~ lamout people, pMt r.d ~
eacn llnli
ear lnOlhtf. r~ ca.: F aqu~~~ u
club, his immediate reaction was to
play a cl,uh. That would work line if ei' NR
I L F J 0
YH
BNGH
RL
ther the clubs were 3-3 or the defendPHZA
ers had an allergy to trump leads. But
DLTHLBH
ZGGNOHBRZJJW
with this layout, it should fail . East
IPNDRJH
plays his club nine and whichever deDLTHRPN8E
fender wins the trick switches to a diaLU
TN B H,
DLTHIPHAH ,
mond. When in with the club ace, East
KFDR
plays his remaining diamond. Now
LBOH. '
J H _l:: B Z A 0
South can get only one club ruff in the
dummy and must lose a third club
VHABDRHNB.
trick.
PREVIOVS SOLUTION: " House Beautiful' Is the play lousy." - (Theater
Declarer saw that he needed a
relliew by) Dorothy Parlier.
·
·
backup plan. He started by cashing
dummy' s spade ace and ruffing a
WOlD
spade high in hand before leading a
IAMI
club. When E•st won with the nine
and switched to a trump, declarer won
Reorrange lottoro pi tho
with dummy's eight, ruffed a spade ·
four
ocramblad words behigh and exited with another club.
low 10 form lour -da.
East returned his last trump, but
South won in the dummy, ruffed anTICGAN
other spade, ruffed a club in the dummy and cashed the established spade
seven as his lllh trick.
Adlai Stevenson accurately pointed
out that shouting is no substitute for
S AI S 0
thinking. On this deal, South kept his
mouth shut and round the winning
line.

J

dioon Pilot.

640

ahrull
13 Approxlmelaly
(2 wda.)
114 lliltdnda
15 South 1111 Neb.
11 Prertatltl home
87 Coup d' 11 HeaHatlon
aounc1a .

0

BASEMENT
Incentive Fund AQHA Filly, Big 1094 S-tO Eaondar:t Cob, tg,ooo
WATERPAOOFtiG
95 Appendix Filly, AQHA Cham- miles. 4 crt. 5 opaed, 814-1185- Unconditional llfttima guanant"'
pion Stallion, 814-288-e522.
local reference• lurnlahed. C.tl
3817.
(114) 448-0870 Or (814) 231.AnlENS LIVESTOCK SALES
1895 Ford Ranger E•t. Cab, 4 0488 Rogora Wallrproofing. EiSpecial 'Faada&lt; Call Solo: Satur- Cyl. , 5 Speed, Foe. Air, FM/AM '"'*"""'1975.
day, March Oth, I P.M. All Con- C11aotte, Carmon Grn.. Bodllnar,
)
signment• Welcome, Trucking 13,300 Orlg . Millo. Ona Ownor,
Applian~
Porta
And
Sanolco:
,IJ1
Available, 814-5e2-2322, 614- $12,400, Or Best Ollar 814-4oUI4564 can Bo Soon AI. Rt. 7 &amp; Ad- Nama Brando OVa&lt; 25 YNra E,.
_8D8-3531 .
92 Western Pleature Gelding,

31 Hlrdwara

check

Easl

Livestock

614-388-9194.

-=

Scallop, e.g.

11uyeN
114~(11)
5I Hold In
60 Lily genua
52 Cone-burlng

_TIA_,_•~_:_;~_'_;S~@~~~L-,!p~S•

11115 Sttatoo tilL, t50 EYIMI
1111 than 10 hours. aU occa
1979 International Dump Truck, .... ...,..__304-875-25JV. . .
Cat Oleoal, g· bed, hydraulic
lnl&lt;aa 814·992-4111. '
7eO
Aulo
"-ta
• '
I
'
•
t983 s--m ••4 . copd, good V8
AcCHIOI'III
engine, good body, long bed, 4 American Racing a!umtnu11
. 1 II ,OOOmi., $2,600. 304-675rima &amp; tirai- 2 ,__ 235-SR-14, :'2
3882.
front, 205-R-14, $300, 114-g4o•
1986 Ford Ranga&lt;, 4 cyl. 5 speed, 2741 .
runs good, price 11600, call 814·
Budget Tranomi11ion' Uoad tRe948-2388.·
bullt, All Typoa, Accualbla lb
1g88 Nl11an 5apd, 2wd, 4CJI, Over 10,000 Tranamillloti,
61 ,500ml., with to-. - tirtL 614-245-5877
$3,000. 304-875-422flaftar !pm.
387-7047.

15 ~ Luplno
11~
parson (al.)
17 Amoroua look
18 Weada
20 WNUn .
22 Wiele ahoe aiZII
,23 .... 25 Show ~m

CELEBRITY CIPHER
cfYPkiOI•••.,.
1n,......,..,.

1g05 Pro 17 bau boat, 40
17,250. *-3013.

11180 S·tO Billzor- 4Wd, Excoflont
Condition
$8500 814-245-5512
·~:;;:::=::------6t4-245-!le02.
'
' or ,.

Chihuahua puppy, fllwn color, 7
wka old, "'lth paper-1. 304-87$- · tg88 Chavy Z-24 Caviler Good
~.
IH~"~•m•
71112.
'
•
Condidon, .1 ,500, OliO Or Tride
1gg1
Chov~
S-10
4x4,
AC,
PI,
Famala Guinea pig, ••: part For Oldll M-. 114-245-5748.
PS, Tilt, Cruioa, 5 Speod, Rod, ExSlamau lemalo cat, 135, 814· ta88 Ronaull Alliance 84,009 c:lllont Contfionl ,14-2!8-1024.
1182-21101.
..... 100.81~-.1991 Ford Ellflloror Sport 4•4, ...
· cr uloa, power wfndOWI I dOOr
lod&lt;t, oun -~ r::t.. I nlco, 814N-2411 ~ l5!r\l.

'

COULD ee ..

•

7755.

(

TllAi'LL BE
M'&lt; JOB ..
WATCHIN6 Tl/..

1078 Thundar cralt 180, 70hp
Credit Problems? We Can Helpl oldor
llorcu,., moiOI, good cond.,
Eaay Bank Financing For Used 'radio, trailer, $1,400. 304 ·8 ~5Vehicles, No Turn Downs Call easo.

11188 Ford Brvnoo 15,000 Mllaa,
A· t Shape, U,SOO, 814·387-

.. '

1-tERE, WRITE
DOWN WHAT
I{()U TIUNI&lt; 'lOUR

tf.

Spm.

j

WE'IlE A FAMILY,
AND IN A FM\ILV
EACH PERSON l-IAS

f·~~~~~~~~~~

er/Oryer, Very Good Condition,

L•• llouoga8t4-448·toWO.

;,~PEANUTS

.

HonciiTraN DO, • r good oonjj.,
llrm ,. Alao 5 lt. bruoh hag

Ruth, 614-446-2897.

47 Pronto (--)
4t0vw .....
12 Notvy lhlp pm. so Hlilr4tyllo.
13 lowlbdlon lnlla.
p
14 1111 • ahlp 52 OfV. tor home

49
Allpa.os

"something"?

tgoe Honda 3110 4-whHior, .._.

'

or
nde

In a lecture given at Harvard
University in 1934, Adlai Stevenson
said that something "is not a substitute for thinking. " What \Vas the

prean. eoc, cond., $3.800. Sori;,~

era Inboard/outboard. 128

North
I.
5t

-

By Phillip Alder

4-wtl nhr. riden
lnqulrloa only,

814-992-3132

,.
Pass

.

Find the aHematlve

-441~ .

lnqulrloo &lt;riy: -5-3013.

Wesl

I t

. .

1 tra

_, ... -

8 ? 4 2

Used 5010 dilch wiu:h arencher

Uprlghl, Ron Evan• Enterpriaea,

Jocluon, Ohio, t-800-537-9528.

stan, used about 5"hfl,

oima eo now. St ,400. 304·8752074.

.·1993 Ford Uuatang LX, 2 door,

108 9

Rldint .lawnmowar Turf, $500

Conditioner• 2 Ton $1, 195; 2 112

. electric

t

.,.. '

Opening lead: • K

I'D ee
GLAD TO,
SNUFFY!!

ILVINIY ··CAN YOO
GIVE ME A LtTTLI
HAND WHILE MAW'S
LAID VP..:.?- ../-~:;.,......'

992~71C 1Mtnlngs.

Dozer 310 case wl•·way blade, . Equipment Used Car&amp;. 304-o45B-

Grain Benda, Grinder Mixer, 8

814-3118-11708.

1U4 Honda 200 ·Big Rtd 3wheattr, ahalt drlva. ravorae, ·

Sou&amp;h

s.

l

And Gaurantoadl 1100 And Up,
Wll~. 814 88D8441.

DC Motor 0· 10 Miles Per Hour,
Step Control, Auto Incline, Elltended .Strive Under Warrant)' I

~-BARNEY

Two -tar go cart, like now. 3CNhatchback. V&amp;"f low miln, 4 cyl. 875-1275.
'
New Helland Uowlng Machine 7. automatic, $200/mo . payment,
Fl: Now HoRand Hay Rako, 6 FL · 81 4-992-411'1.
'
750 Baets .. Motors :
Bulh Hog, 2 Fuot Tonki: 300 Gol.,
fOr S.lt
'
t25 Gal., On Skldo; 8 Ft. Heavy Alltll Loans. Cooler wtn arrange nDutr_ Grader Blade, 814-245- · nanclng oven If you havo bean
SUS
· turned down elaewhare. Upton 'fill Barllnor anc1 trollor, t r. - -

2 Rubber Mold wat .. Tonka, 45 t

Altizer Farm Supply, 814 -2455183.

Sears Ufestylor Treadmill 2.0 HP

lliioa. 814-379-2858.
·t99t Rookot Ch. .ll raca cor, II
now In '91 , Wilwood, boll of ....
th '
--~d
•--• 1 ·•reo
rytng,
- , tht aow~.•,
Nool. pedala, fuol coli, on board
1"' oyatem, rvii'\chaaola. 15800
no• Call Scott olfo 114 g49
287e, 814-940·2045 or 81..:082:
_et_93,;.._ _ _ _ _ _~1902 Blue Chevy Luminla, E.colle~t Condition, 80,000 lllloa,

cotlent, 614-742-2457.

·Rafrlgeratora. Stoves. Washers
And Dryer1, All Recondittoned

Fi'm, aod 0Ry 1 Soaoon e ... ~
lent Condition, •1 4-441.01113.

"'

1DOt . Carmaro Sharp, 31 ,000

'

Huntior groan wi-t~ c:llalr, like
now 175. Full ttlze breaa bed wt STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon

Mlddiopor\ 814-992-5858.
And~Aioo-.
Ront Ill mont" frH. ta1t 2bedFrto Oellvory Within 25 lliloa.
• $3001 mo. + $500 deposit·
ro.m.
304-758-RENT.
520
.Sparling
TM~t:Jiodroom trallll' in Rudand,
Goods
t4r10 'With 16•30 addition, go,..vo,·.8W992-e928.
Two and three bedroom mobile
homo.~, starting at $240-$300,
•ewel", water and 1ra1h Included,
6t4-992·2t67.

Six rooms. lialh, laundry room, big 11 tcall horH bam + 20acres lor
rod bern, .,. Now Lima Rd., Ru- loaat, Rt 2; Crab Crook Rd. 304·
tlancL 2 112 .....,814-742-2757.
7~REHT.

320 'MObile Homes

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wuhera, dryara, relrlgoratora,
rangu. Skogga Appllanctl, 78
Vlno Stroot, Call 814·448·73118,

frama ISO. 304-875-8053.

lng. Concrete Floor, Apprx. 1 Mo. 125 Deposit, Total Electric,
Acre La~ $75,000 OBO 614-446· Water Included, Porch, 814. 256-

304-875-111!17.
'4&lt;155.
Lady will cora for !lldlfl~ In lhtlr 'bedroom, 2 bathroom houu,
home, dlv 01 niDht shift. relerenc-- new heat pump, Hartford, WV.
H, 8t4-llli2-2785.
130,000. 304-882-3737·
Mothll' Of -4, Will Babysit Small Four bedtoom house ortllulbarrr
-CIIIIdran And Will Woll:h Children Helghta, o~ulpped kitchen, full
Bttor.e And After School, 81-4· bailment, heat pump, nice lot
251! rat'
cloM to ochool and hospital, one
-~·~nol ~r" ~rvico, Com- .._r garego with btoozoway, 814,.,.__
"
992·3 t t a - moomga with an-.
Plott· Troa Cara;' Buckel ·Truck
SaMco -50 FL - · Stump Fit- ~ IOIYioa.
moval, 'Free E;otlmatoal Inbedroom, lWO bath, 14136
oulitnCO. 24 Hr. ·Emorgoncy Slrvroom, 2592 oq. h., ono car
leo
.Call
And
'SI.vel
No
Tr"
Too
~
-~~~·!_
· 9~ac~r~e~•-~'&amp;"~S~yr:•:•u~s~e,
Big Or Too Small I Bidwell, Ohio.
814-992-5882.
et4-31!1"41, 614-387-r.ltO.
.
Nioo homo In Racine, largo build-

Country Furniture. 304-675-6820.

448-4818.

Gehl. Round Balers, Mower Con·
dltloners, Disc Mowen, Disc
Mower Condilionera, Forage
Equlpmenl Sales And Service.

Ruger Singlo Six' 22- 22 llog.
$185. Ruger P-85 S11inless 9 1111
Washers, Dryers. Rangea, Refrl- $315, 20 Gage Single Shot $59:
gralora, 90 Day ·Guarantee! Older Heovl Duty 112" Drill
French Cit~ Maytag,' 614 · 446· $17.95; Dove a Swap Shop. 8t2D
7795.
S.R. 7, Chotlhirt. 614-367-7108.

·~lor ront or loaat with option ID Rt 2 N, 8miln, Pt Pllaunt, WV.

SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

white. one '.black , and acce11o·
riea. One aummar Wl4dlng gown.

304-875-57111.

1988 Ford Taurus atatlonwagon,
run1 goad, .n••d• aome ·work.
$2000 0110, 614-9112-5347.

hit

-

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

· 1883 RM Suzuki 125 Dlrtblka
Wotor Cooled, Comptataly Gone
'lllrwll880, 814-441-8806.

Lonoaborgar Baaklta: 05 Pumpkin Combo •70; g5 Tulip Combo
$85; g5 Falhtr'a lloy Combo $80;
85 Hope Combo $80; 05 All
American Combo 155; 92 Dlocovorr comboa •eo: Other Reurod Boaiotta Aotallablo, 8 t 4-3888744.
Twin Rl'lera Towor, now accopdng f:.;_;;_ _~----appllcatlono for t br. HUD oubald- MTD riding ll*n - · t2hp. 38"
lzed apt . for elderly and har'!dl- cut, $460. 22• puah mower, , yr
capped. EOH 30~75-8870 .
old $75. Craftaman garden tillar
1100. 304-875-1550.
wanted: EmpiO'Ied Christian Lady I:.:.:.:.:.:.:.;..::.::..;.:.:.;;____
Share Apartment And Ex- PAINT SALE. Plnaburgh Coiling
Buil41ng 111M with road fron11go, To
penses Noar Library, (Galllpoll.), Paint $t0.8111gal., Flat Wall Paint
back of New Haven, ,rural water, Reforoncoa, 814-446-4335 (6- $11 .99/gal., Somi-~lon Paint
and financing available. 30ol-882- IIP.M.) ·
St2.9111gal., Introductory Oflor,
28811.
Now Slkkana Interior Wood
·Furnished
Stalno anc1 Flnloh 20% alf rOQUiar
Five· acres,
aerator, near: 450
Rooms
price, Deruato White or Black
Roclne,$18,000 can finance wlthl
::::--~~~~::-:--~-:::-~~I Enamel, (Spray Can) Bur Ono
hal doWn, 81-1-11411-2025.
Circle Motot, Gallipolla, OH 814· Got Ona Frao. PAINT PLUS 304Scenic Voller,, Apple Grovo, 448-2501 or 814-387-0812. Effe- 6:.;75-.:....:4084::.::·_ _ _ _- ._ __,
1
beautiful 2ac ota, public water,
dency Rooma, Cable, Air, Phone; Picnic Table&amp;, latt Vear1 Hold
Clydo- Jr.. 304-578-233!1.
lli-&amp;Relrigoralllr.
ovora Dlacountod 8' 1105: 6'
wanted to buy· 15 acre• or more, · Room• far ront - waok or month. 180 ; Hobby Horan 145, 814wlrh or withoUt houae, In Meigs Starting at $t20tmo. Gallla Hotll. 387-7512.
Coun1)1, 814·992-853-1.
814-446-11580.
.Pro Form Croll trainer, oomplete
Sleeping rooms with cooking. weight machine, like new, over
RENTALS
Also trailer space on river. All 1800 invested, Bltl for $500, 814. hook-ups . Call after 2:00 p.m., 992-3537.
304-773-5851 , t.laoon WV.
Prom dre&amp;IBI, one. green. two

.

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•

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• R~• .,.

27

WEST

=·Ill

ACROSS

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:l' I;Joll.o.ll~- the influences !hal govern you In tho yN/1 ' opposition is doing.
_ _ _ _ _ _..;...._ _ _ _~· .ahead. Send for your Aal,ro-Graph pr8dlc-- · VIRGO (Aug. 23-lapl, 22) 11 you under. lions today by mailing S2 and SASE to take an ambitious poojeclloda~. you may
ASTRO-ORAPH
Aatro-Graph , c/o this n.Wspaper, P.O. lack some organlzationallkills. However.
Box 1758, Murray Hl1 StaiiOI), New York, once you stan to roll, you may achieve
NV 10156. Make sure to state your zodl· Impressive results.
ac sign.
.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Your 11rtllldeas
ARIEB (118rch -21 -Aprll 11) You ~an might not be your besttoda~. so prepare
BERNICE
achieve substantial gains In financial - to make adjustments In case they don't
BEDEOSOL area Wyou dtYelop the available oppor- work out. Your second thoughta could
tUniliea to the grealelll eltlent poseible.
provide the beet solutions.
TAURUS (April 20-M•r JO) Generally' SCORPIO (Oct 2'-No\1, 22) Do not biJy
lpelklng, thingl should wOrk out well lor ~ today. Take time to do 10me
you. tocltly, but you wHI need more th•n . comparioon !tltcpplng. There are real barluck. You muatutlllze your Intelligence ! gains outthare, but it may tal&lt;e eome digand llkllla.
. glng to unearth them. ·
GEMINI (May 21--.hlne 20) Even though . SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) In your
:you might feel un•aay about a 1avor · one·to-one relatlonahipa today , col someone will do for you· today, try to • leagues will lake their cues lrom you. If
. . .
.
.
stand back •nd Ieithia pe11011 UN ltfa or , you act abraalvety, lhey wll too.
··
Soiveral
contacltl. you've diWI- , hlr·own melhoda. Do not lft!8tlere.
· CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-.IM. 11) A lriend .
oped- ·the jialt lew ~re Wll - " to CANCER (June 21.Julr . , Do not 1\11· ·: who would rather engineer a loan than
~ biMIIt In 1!)t year llhlld. Tt-Y «;an :• ~ In alince Wv:ou need ~ 1rom • repay one might eaten you off guard
open doora ~ you whlcll were ~ : . otllenlloday. You ..... ~ conelder· ' toda~ and t,Y to lap your reaourcoa. UN
pmiOUIIy. ·
. ' I: ate friend~ Who
try to mai&lt;a your life ~ caution.
·
r•_tu·pr.~t. . . . _.alii) Do not~: ; eilllr.
,
,
,
, AOU_ARIUS (Jan. »&gt;'eel.11) PutfrllnO.
to conct~ btltn
have all
LEO (.luiJ 11-Ailll- ~~Try to ,re!'llllln ship above peraonal ambition• In a
IMI ~Y- The prellminl!ry klfotmlllon •. oplim~ In COmpetitive daValoPmenta · career ailuatlon tOday. Do not c1o eny· ·
1 ~- You•!ill have llle tdgl. M COli· , .' *!II that OOU!d CIIUM lhla per10ri to 1oM
oould b'a .... lmlla\l or
• ~- Gtt a •jump on life by_
I '*"*on
and not on !Wha!'the , rettpee1 lor you.
.
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Ponwoy • Middleport, OhiO

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Ohio Lottery

Boyfriend m.akes mark permanently with -tattoos, body-piercing ~·

..
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_
-Ann .
Wlnders
.........

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By ANN LANDERS
Dear Ann LAnden: My 38-yearolcl daughter and her third husband
split up, and I am now the legal
JIIUdian for her two children. The
boy, who is almost 18, is no trouble
at all. The 16-year·old girl, however,
is a real handful.
"GRta" hss been going with 1
20-year-old boy for several months,
.
. .

i
f

llld this kid is a real nut He is into
WlDOS llld pien:ing in a bi&amp; way.
ThiJ is 11011e of my businesa, llld I
don't care what he doci to himself,
but he 'has tattoOed a bi&amp; heart on
Gteta's end -arrows, initials,
his llld ben, the whole bill
Even more upsetting is the piercing. GRta now has rings in her ears
and nose, on tier tongue, 11reuts and
navel 1111d one down south, if you
lmow what I IIICIII.
thal these
.
metal
. rin'"
1 w......
~-··•
•·
might ca111e some seriOIIS problems
later on. Greta is not the leut bit
concerned. Wdl you please check
this out and let me lmow? --Worried
Grandma in Oklahoma
Dear Grandma: 'l11e ~or risk

involved in body pien:ing is infoction, but apparently, 0Rta has
escaped tha1. As for the tattoo on
Greta's rear end, sbe is going to have
that for the RSt of her life unless she
has it removed, which is eiiOI'DIOIISly timo-c:onsuming and costly.
The piercing causes no lasting
problems, but Greta's going to find
~rself virtually
unemployable
unless she removes several of those
rings. Body pien:ing is quite a fad
now, but this, too, shall pass, and
lbose who have gone in for it are
destined to be stuck with some holes
in unwanted places.
Dear Ann Landers: Movies and
television often portray men as luy
idiots who can't manage to gel a

Class has western :.
themed dinner party

l
'

~~

..

~',

A western theme was carried out
in dress and food when the Golden
Rule Sunday School .class of the Mid·
dleport First Baptist · Church met
recently at the Holly Hill Inn,
Pomeroy. Members bl'!lllght western,
covmd dishes for the dinner.
June Kloes conducted the business.
meeting. Officers named WCR Mrs.
Kloes, pesident; Randall ~avis, vice.
pRaident; Sis Van Maire, ~Rasurer; :
and Glenna Riebel, se=tary.
'
Adiscussion was beld on building'
SUJM!ay school classrooms. Thank~
you cards WCR read from Mark and:
.
'

Vicki Morrow, Darla Thomils, and
Glenna Riebel.
Mrs. Morrow bad devotions. ·
LaWRnce and Barbara Bblin sang
·several songs to his guitar accompa· ·
niment. They were joined for singing .
of several western songs.
·
Alllellding WCR the
Mark and
Vicki Morrow. June and Manning
Kloes, Marilyn and John Fultz, Dale
and Mlljorie Walburn, Lawrence
and Barbara Eblin, Randall and Carolyn Davis, Pbyllis Young; and a
guest, Marc Fultz.

Rev.

.

·.Garcjen club ·supports
Eastern school levy

beer from the frid&amp;e without their from the fridae. niae their children
wives' help. I just want people to and have a 'complete and happy life
lmow there are.exceptions.
without a wife. The only thing I
When I was married, I did my missed wu havina IDOCher adult to
share of housework -- cookin&amp;,laun- hold the sheets at one end so I could
dry, cleaning and changing diapen. folcl them property. --Self-Suf&amp;ient
After my wife divorced me, I had in Norlb Miami, Fla.
.
custody of our two children. I
Dear S.S. in N.M.: Yoia sound
w~ed 12 hours a day, seven days a like a real c:atch to me. lt's surprising
week, at a hotel. I took my children thal nobody hss snagged you. Fm.
to school every day, picked them up glad you didn't give me your
and did ALL of our cooking, clean- address becauae a lot of wmnen are
ing and laundry.
goins to uk for it, and I'm able to
I did everything to make those aay I dOn't lmow.
cbildRn happy. They were very
Dear Alin Landers: Please lei me
good students, well-adjusted, with lmow ifthete is any state in the Unitno behavioral problema.
·ed States ~I idlowa fint cousins to
I just '(l'anted you to lmow thal marry. We .te aware of the aenetic
some men can get their. own sodas ·;. consequenCes of loeb a union and

do not intend to have children&gt;-Anxious in Arbnsu
·• '

Dear Arkansas: There

Vol. 46, NO. 2tl
t Section, 10 P811M

.

·ances in Pomeroy in the 19SO's u ·
part of the annual broiler festival
entertainment Too had thal more
,YOU didn't have the opportunity
talk to her off stage. Oft' stap she was
·• completely different person-soft
:spoken. pious, interested in people
;and obviously quite inteiUgent.
: · It was quite an accomplishment to
.have a performer of her magnitude in
.Pomeroy--a really nice lady.

••

1994. FORD
'
T·BIRD LX

1994-MERCURY'
CAPRI
Canvwtlllle, 4 ql,
AJC, PI, PI, PW,
orulee, AII/I'II-

N, auto, A/C, tilt, CruiM
AII/I'II All, PI, PB,
PDL,PM'..Lfll27tl

I

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', I

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• I
I

apeclftc: number o1 daya.
THURSDAY
. SYRACUSE ·- Southern Local
Building Committee meeting Thurs·
day, 7 p.m. at Syracuse Elementary

Community calendar-----

sored by Meigs Ministerial Nsocia- : ~· Rac,ine, 6:30p.m. meeting with
lion. ·
·
dmner to follow Thursday.

School. All district residentS Utged to
attend.

By KATHRYN CROW

CHESTER
Chester
BasebaiiiSoftball Association first
meeting of the 1996 season Thursday,
.6:30 p.m. at the ru-e house. All parents and coaches are welcome and
encouraged to attend.

.

Chester Council D .of A finalizes plans for spring rally
Plan$ for the sprin&amp; rally t" be on · that inspection will be held at Belpre , Goldie Frederick

April27 at the Senior Citizens Cen- · . ~March II, 7:~~:m. Thoseane~ .
ter in Pomeroy were announced when . ·mg are to wear white. Darlene FredChester Council 323, Daughters of ' erick is hospitalized in Belfontaine, it
America.' met Rcently at the hall. · was noted. Potluck will be held at the
' · A pnK:tice at the Center wu .next meeting in observance of quar- .
IIIUIIiunced for Ajlirl 21. It was noted ! terly birthdays.

Halialist DeniseAmolclwas guMt
lfJ'Iker when.the WildwOC/(I Oanlen
ClUb met,~ at the Meip
. ty Public Librlry.
:
AmoJd !lescribcd scentedloo

Coon-!

*

a«.Jums nocecl for their exotic·

nnie

'.

af fr11r1nm ltlldtilutpes as one
of the 111011 ~ plants to pow.
TbiiCillt. she~. II Rle4ied by tbe
leiiW.. 5be ra1kec1 about their 1110 in

I..oral

a teaspoon of epsom salts to a gailon
of water.
.
She diaplay~ lea~ from ~ever~
~of her 1!'-ts mcludin~ m:se• ~·
!tme ~1-~nted VarietieS, IJIICY
acea~ like gmpr and nutme~, ~
the Jlllllpnt· olkleaf vanetiel.
lbere_~re over a ~und(N varieties of;
88flllliiiJII, she~ She~ aant-: .
plea ~r peppcmuat .-uum tea and.· .

; r"; ~ ~~flavOring~: ~:~yn Holtoli, .~ at the.
~$ist
'Aid 11111 ia tha' bull••• llllillll pvi~Jf devotions:
"Ida•
N~--JIIII!I-: entided ~~· for O.dw.en."

aiilllcJiiJt~aoihittbelldlea' ~ ~IIIIICallmemberuanclftowert
~t~~t~~lliuiti·.,YtheiR"h•l lllheii'!Nddiap. ·, . . · '
'· ..w. ;;,.lltii- la·kliOih. lltli' , MrJ. llODali '9DO'IIICid IIIII the r .
. - 'T'
.
.
'
........ hal tile ·club wll tefrelbmellll • the: '
Jll4
pall
,W ._..
' ·
' u...,.._ ni...,. 10~
111 · . ·· . ·
·
• · • ·COUilJ' mfl •na '''"-r ..... --

a. a Mil-• aIY~·'II•4tbec~plaat
lkri!w bid or doa• a..• pill·

··'fl-.llillidt."'""al!ei&amp;l'*-

ltclltl 111o • • ,..,
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pR~ided

at the I
:meeting which opened in ritualistic '
'form. Attending were Ethel Orr, Jean
Frederick. Marcia Keller, Virginia
iLee, Doris Grueser, Joann Baum, ·
:Laura Nice, Kathryn Baum.
Damewood, Ruth Smith, Opal!

Garden club members
learn about herbs at meeting ·
'

~.

llr cond,
cnal•, PS, PB, AJIIJA
4 cyl,

CIIH. ·

POMEROY -· Pomeroy Group of SATURDAY
.
Alcoholics Anonymous, open. disRACINE -- Russell Spencer and :
cussion, Thursday, 7 p.m., basement the Gospel Tones will be at the Felof Sacred Hean Caiholic Church.
lowship Church, Racine, Saturday, 7 ,
p.m.
RUTLAND ·- Rutland Township
· Trustees, 6:15 p.m. Thursday, RutHARRISONVILLE ·- Youth
POMEROY -- Lenten Services, . land Fire Station.
League signup, Saturday, I to 4 p.m.
St. Paul Lutheran Church, 7:30 p.m.
at fimhouse. Take a copy of birth cerRev. Charles Neville, speaker. SponRACINE :_American Legion Post tificate.
·
.

:

Eichinger, Everett Grant, ,l:istner,
Smilb, Mary Barrin11er,
:Wolfe, Erma Cleland, Goldie fRd.
erick, Elizabeth Hayes, Ella Osborne,
Thelma White, Sandy Wbite, Opal
Hollon and Charlotte Grant

I

I

- , PS, PB, PW,
tilt, cna••• etc.

$8,4~9

991 LINCOLN
TOWN CAR
VI, auto, AJC, tilt, crui1N
AIIJFII caaa, PS,

PW, POL, Loaded,

. li91 FORD
TAURUS WAGON
I

e

cyl, -.to,. air
AIIIFII cua, tilt, cruiiM
All pc;Mr, low mi.

MIIM.

58,449

I Dr, 4 ,oyt, turbo,
air cond, P8, PB,
. POL, tilt, ON!•,.

.'

Aa commissioner I will be a fUll tinMt .8rript0yee for
the people of Meigs County, I
l'lpi'IHnt the whole
county by having Township Meetings In each
Township and Village. Each area has a need, and
80f1rtetillnd to offer. We must find Qut .what tht need
.181
I have·
the expe rlen. ce and k' n'f'~
.
...'-v""' V..ou must
go after.
you
· rnaeds. Youcan'twalt. forltlocometoyou.

wll'

..::a.:..:I:·~Ft:·:·:·:-:.:-:c:•·~·

or
... mtnation Qf ... Custw . · I~-~---.;.---~f'l~llld;IDr~..,~
Ou1hall,l

1· • J..

4 Dr, 4 cy1, auto, AliA

$7,249

lOft

,......
c.._
c..........., .

'

From AP, Staff Ritports
. Areas of nonheastern Ohio could
· receive up to a foot of snow today as
·. a winter slonn continues to move
across the state.
. Snow squalls expected in Cuya~oga, Geauga, Lake, Lorain and
Medina counti~s could dump up to a
. half-foot of snow in some areas,
· l"hile another 6 inches was expected
later today.
A stonn that staned in southwest. ern Ohio and moved nonheast on
. Thursday left icy roads covered with
snow, causing accidents and traffic
delays.
In the Cincinnati area, accidents
·on the slick roads produced gridlock
on the city's interstate highways during the morning rush hour.
"It was a nightmare," said Trooper Tim Patton of 1he State Highway
Patrol.
·
Locally, lhe Gallia-Meigs Post of
the State Highway Patrol reponed it
·investigated three accidents Thursday
~ one in Meigs and two in Gallia,
none of them apparently serious.
An accident involving two tractortrailers, a salt truck and a car closed
tlle.southbound lanes of the Jerer:ni·

Seritln•l COrreapondent

1992 HONDA
CIVIC EX

Mlfii'OOI'

'4,9.49

. *5

A Gannett Co. New lpepet

.

Unemployment
posts dramatic ,
decline to 5.5%
·

e .,

WINTRY WRECKAGE- Jo Nelson of Huntington, W.Va., was removed from her car by
rescue peraonnel Thursday after losing control

· In the Ice and snow on 1-64 near Huntington.
She was taken to a hospital for treatment. (AP)

•

ah Morrow Bridge on Interstate 7·1
near Cincinnati for almost four hours.
The collision, which the patrol
blamed on slick pavement, occurred
about 7:55a.m. on the 250-foot-high
bridge, Ohio's tallest. Workers
removed the wreckage and the bridge

reopened aboutll:45 a.m.,the patrol
said. No injuries were reponed.
• Up to 3 inches of snow fell on the
inland counties of northeastern Ohio,
including the cities of Canton, War·
ren and Wooster, the National Weath·
er Service said.

Snow is expected to leave the
region by Saturday and the weekend
will be sunny and cold, with lows
reaching from the single digits to the
teens and highs in the 20s. Wanner
weather with highs in the 40s are projected for Monday by the NWS .

.CJJrhslde-tecyc_
ljng .set-for Syracuse in April

19,2 FORD
ESCORTGT

:IS-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, March 8, 1996

-Snow still
threatens
north end
:o f state

by Bob Hoefl,ch
I

Snow flurrlea t0111lglilt,
Iowa around 10. S81turcllay,
flurries tapering
near 30.

•

Beat of the Bend ...
That nice Edna Evans of Middleport reports that Lula Mae Quivey
will be marking her 90th birthday on
Tuesday, March 12.
. Edna is Rquesting her friends to
: send LuJa Mae a little note or card to
'let her know that you all love her
eve!' though she's not able to get olft
much. Edna says ,that Lula Mae .is
"one of the de&amp;Rst ladies who· waa
ever born."
. Notes and car$ may be sent in
·care of Kalby Mi!Qhell, Box 21, West
·Columbia, W.Va., 2S287. wh= Lula
·Mae is now Rsidiilg.

Pick 3:
1-1-5
Pick 4:
1-Q-2-9
Buckeye 5:
2-4-20.24-35

Sports, Page 4

indeed, stares thal have no prohitlition qllinst flfll cousins marrying.
The closest one to Arbnw is Tinnesset.
'
•~
•
·Gem of the Day (Cmlit Gmudio
Marx): I must say, television is vei;y
educational. The minute somepile
turns it on, I go 10 the library llfld
find a good book.

---News policy

The Commuaity Clllendar 1a
·publllhed u a
1enice to - proftt &amp;niUpl willhlq to 111-DCe
medlill ud special eveall. The
akaclar il not ~ 'prJ to promote
llllla· or fuDd railen ol uy type.
lteDIIaft prillted U lpaee penaltl l
and caaaot be auuuteed to I'WI a ·

..

af!l,

.

I jaunted to the Lancaster
over the weekend. 'I normally on such
trips see saloline lots and lots cheaper than we're offered at the stations in
'.
Herbert Plrkinson of Buffalo, · Meigs County. However, !heR wasOhio, will like to linow if there .A: •n~ all that great a' difference Ibis time.
any descendants of Joseph Van 1AR we getting equalized er what? .
John Riee talked on the Eastern
An auction was held with Mary: Mater, Civil War veteran, around I
Local School District's proposed Alice Bise as the the auctioneer. Fruit't Meigs County these days?
I ran into June Ashley this week at
building project and urged suppa11 of -!baskets were filled for the sick ,and · Van Matre is buried in Mi\ldleport ·the parking lot of Fanner's Bank.
the bond levy to be on the March 19 elderly of the area. The baakets will 11 Hill Cemetery. He was cited forbrav. ·
In case you didn't know June has
· ballot at a Rcent meeting of the be delivered by the members. Mrs~ cry at Petersburg, Va., and was had knee replacement operations on
Whitehead reported that a Oow
awarded the Congressional Medal of both knees but is getting around a bit
Riverview Garden Club.
After Rice's talk, the club went on' arrangement was delivered to NeU Honor.
·
now with a cane..She Rcently fell
record as supporting the bond issue.. Wilson at the Arcadia Nursing Cen-•
His grave does nOt signify his her home and thal was traumatic, but ·
A Valentine theine was carried out ter at Coolville.
· accomplishment, Parkinson Rports, you lmow June. She's hanging in
Refreshments, using the Valentine: and it is his goal to see that this is cor- there.
at ~ meeting held at the home of
Maxine Whitehead. Marg~Rt Gross- theme, were served to the above .reeled. Parkinson plans to do·this at
And a note to Marie Boyd of the
niclde and Marlene PUtman served as named and Pauline Myers, Nola'· Ihis own expense· as he has done in
co-hostesses.
.Young, Janet Connolly, Delores ,several other Obio counties. The Racine area. I do have the lyrics to
' Janice Young pRsented the devo-· lFrank, Grace Weber, Theda Haskins, :process is to obtain a permit to place the song you telephoned about-lions which included "Wby February , 1Marilyn HaMum, Ella Osborne, a special marker, Older the marker, set theR's a whole bunch of 'em, but rii .
14 is Valentine's Day." and "To A !GiadysThomas,NancyWachterand it,andthenholdadedicationservice. .be getting them 10 you in short order.
Seed Merchant" A short business Ruth. Anne Balderson. · Mrs. Rice Van Malle was~ the honor on Like June, you just gotta hang on.
meeting was conducted by the pR!- . received the door prize. Each mem- .May 12 and Parkinson hopes to have The old l;&gt;oy doesn't move all thai fast
ident, Frances Reed. Roll call was ber Reeived a Valentine heart made the ceremony at the Middleport
I think it's been a long, hard wincem~ry to coincide with that date,
responded to by showing a home by Mrs. Grossnickle.
ter. I'd like to ~nk that come March
made Valentine exc!_lange.
The next meeting will be at the but that's not firm.
· Guests were Mary Kautz, Ullian Reedsville Church of Christ with
Til= is no expense to the family 20, the fmt day of spring, we are
Pickens, and John and Anna Rice. ·- Nola -Young and Nancy Wachter as but Parkinson would like for.descen- miraculously. going to have nothing
dants to get in touch with him. You but blue skies and sunshine. But that's
hostesses.
can write him at P.O. Box 164, Buf- ·the kind of thinking that some of us
falo, Ohio 43722-0164.
have as we go through life. You
-know. Believing that once you hit 16,
In an effort to provide our Rader- : be submilted within 30 days of . The entertainment industry has 25 or 37 your life is going to make a
ship. with current news, the Gallipo·' occurrence. All birthdays must be :lost another star in the Monday death big tum for the better. And it just
lis Daily Tribune and The Daily Sen- · · submitted within 42 days of the ·of Minnie Pearl of Grand 01' Opry doesn't happen that way. Guess
tinel will not accept weddings after. occurrence.
·fame.
·
there's no magic · formula fOr the
60 days from the date of the event.
All material submitted for publi· . Many of you will remember that weather or your life. But whatever, do
All club meetings and other news! cation is subject to editing.
:Minnie Pearl made several appear- ~eep smiling._
-artic-lesi-nthe-soc-iety_secti-onm-ust__ .

Cincinnati
posts NCAA
victory

Recycling using residential curbside containers is expected lo get
underway in the village of Syracuse
:oy the middle of April, Meigs Count~ l.iller Prevention/Recycling Directpr Kenny Wiggins told Syracuse Vil·lage Council Thursday night.
.: Wiggins explained that the grant
fl&gt;r a pi191 program will provide for
a; recycling trailer,~ used three-quarter ton truck, salary for a driver, fuel
and 400 recycling containers.
: .The recycling containers will be

distributed to residents who will be
notified of the various items lobe col. lected. Pickup will take place at curb·
side every Wednesday. It was pointed out that lhere will be no cost to the
village or the residents.
Wiggins said that he hopes to
apply for an annual grant so that the
recycling project can be continued in
Syracuse and initiated in Racine.
Donations are now coming in
toward the construction of a new con·
cession stand and press box to be
erected at the Syracuse ballpark.
Council member Donna Peterson
'

was named chairman for the concession stand committee. Donations may
be sent. to her at Box 505, Syracuse,
or conlributors may contact her at
992-6955. Work on the block structure is expected to begin in April and
be completed in about three weeks.
It was noted that applications for
the London Pool manager and life
guards are being accepted. Council
will interview the manager applicants
on Thursday, March 14 at 6:30p.m.
Councilman Larry Lavender discussed the Community Improvement
Corporalion, and Mayor George

Connolly will confer with Bob
Wingett, grant administrator, about a
grant to upgrade the park.
In other business, Councilman
Bill Roush noted that a culvert is
needed at Rose Valley. Mony Wood
discussed a culvert on State Route
124 which needs to be cleaned since
water is spilling out onto the highway.
Council member Eber Pickens Jr.
suggested that steps with railing be
put into the pool to provide sa(er and
easier access for older patrons. Tim
on Page3)

Buchanan, F9rbes vow to press
on despite Dole's·growing lead

of local board

Florida. Afterward he said he would
By JOHN KING
challenge Dole in the big Midwest
AP Political Writer.
states and then California at the end
NEW YORK - Bob Dole won a
landslide New York primary victory
of the month. He contrasted his
Thur5day; opening a resounding lead
"vibrant visiort of the future" with
in the Republican presidential race
Dole's "politics as usual" but would
and declaring it was "time to stan the
not say how much more of his perfight for November." Even so, rivals .
sonal fortune he would pour into the
Steve Forbes and Pat Buchanan
race.
vowed'to battle on.
Forbes blamed his resounding
. New ·Yorkers voted for delegates
defeat on the New York GOP estab-: not directly for candidates - and
lishment - led by Pataki and Sen.
Dole supporters won at least 92 of the
Alfonse D' Amato. "It was stacked ,
93 spots. Forbes led for one delegate
against us," Forbes said.
and Buchanan was shutout. A voter
Pataki said Dole's big margins in
survey showed that across New York,
recent primitries gave him plenty of
53 percent favored Dole, 30 percent
leeway to choose a running mate who
Forbes and 14 percent Buchanan.
supported
abortion
rights,
· "When it comes to picking the
Buchanan 's protests notwithstandPat Buchanan
Republican nominee, it's over- it's
ing.
Bob Dole," said Gov. George Pataki,
"I don't know where these people
a Dole panisan.
chilly rain to vote, and many had a live - but clearly not in the real
Dole casr his win as an "over- humdrum attitude about a race thai world," Bay Buchanan, her brother's
whelming statemenl of Republican · was without a front -runner less than campaign manager, said in response
unity" and said it was time for a week ago. "Yqu pick because you to that, promising a vigorous conRepublicans "to defeat Bill Clinton have to, but it's not much of a • vention fight if Dole took that course.
lind feturn conservative leadership to choice," said Maria Avellino, a 22Only Forbes and Dole were on the
the presidency."
New
York ballot statewide. Buchanan
year-old mother of three in Brooklyn
In an interview, Dole said it was- who votc!d for Dole.
competed in two-thirds of the state's
n' t for him to tell Forbes and
Dole's delegate bonanza brought 3 I congressional districts but didn't
Buchanan to quit the race, but sug- his national total to 382, with 996 get any reward for his tenacious effon
gesied they take a long look at the needed to clinch nomination. Forbes to overcome New York's arcane ballopsided New York results. "Let's had 72 delegates and was leading for lot access laws.
move on and recognize it's time to one New York delegate by a thin marThursday's victory capped a eli·
start the fight for November, " the gin. Buchanan was stuck at '62.
mactic week for Dole, who saw the
Senate majority leader told The Asso'If the others want to stay in, they . nomination he has coveted so long
ciated Press.
ought to focus on Bill Clinton and not finally come within reach. Dole won
· Buchanan has cast himself as the kick me," Dole told All from Flori· a I0-state sweep Tuesday, and then
only Republican candidate able 10 da. Speaking via satellite to a New saw two rivals quit the race and
attract Ross Perot voters. In an inter- York victory rally, Dole chastised endorse him Wednesday, leaving just
view, however, the Texas billionaire Clinton for vetoing GOP plans 10 bal· Forbes and Buchanan in his path.
to,ld the Washington Post "his mes· ance the budget, cut taxes and refonn
Buchanan appeared in no mood 10
sage is.not mine," casting Buchanan welfare.
get out of the way.
as ·t!lO belligeRnt in criticizing U.S.
· Campaigning in Tennessee as he
But his rivals weren't willing to
ttldina partners. "'e said he saw no quit, even as they acknowledged the scoured the South for a symbolic victory, Buchanan said Dole "waftles"
similarities between himself and long odds.
Forbes and did not offer an opinion
Forbes said he would contest the on abortion and labeled him "the
ofDole.
·
Super Thesday primaries next week, biggest taxer in the history of the
~ew · Y'l,rkers· braved snow or
and his schedule was dominated by Republican .Party."

John Rice, Coolville, and Jon
Karschnik, Pomeroy, were recognized recently by the Meigs County Board of Commissioners for
their service with the Meigs County Board of Mental Retardation and
Developmental Disabilities.
Commission President Fred
Hoffman presented the two with a
plaque that stated: "For service and
commitment unto the enhancement of the lives of Meigs County
children and adults with developmental disabilities and their families, it is with deep gratitude that
this token of appreciation is
offered." ·
Kars.;hnik ·and Rice, along with
five other board members, provided leadership and oversight for the
various programs provided by the
board at Carleton School and
Meigs Industries, located in Syra·
cuse, according to Director Steve
Beha.
Carleton School and Meigs
Industries programs include an
early intervention program,
preschool classes, school age multi-handicapped classes, physical ·
therapy, speech therapy, adapted
physical education, health services
coordination, case management,
supponed living and individual
options waiver services, respite
services, Special Olympics, and
numerous other services.
The commissioners appointed
Micli Howell and Bob Titus 10
four-year tenns to replace
Karschnik and Rice on the board.
Five board members are
appointed by the commission will!
two being appointed by the juve· ·
nile judge. Other board members
incl.ude Chairman David Weber,
Vice Chairwoman Linda Warner,
SeeRtary Nora Rice, and Mirtie
Shprt and Jean Weaver.

il

.'* t

~-

By MARTIN CRUTSINGER
AP Economics Writer
WASHINGTON- The nation 's unemployment rate improved dramatically in February. falling to 5.5 percent. The country shook off the effects
of the January blizzard and added an astonishing 705 .000 jobs, the biggest
monthly increase since 1983.
The Labor Depanment report today is the strongest evidence to date that
an extended period of economic weakness, worsened by bad weather last
month, could be coming to an end.
AnalystS had been looking for a rebound, but this far surpassed their expectations for job growth of around 300,000 for the month.
"11Je January soft patch has suddenly turned into a hard spot. This report
is a shocker on the positive side," said Robert Dederick, chief economic consultant at the Northern Trust Co. in Chicago. "Let the good times roll."
Analysts said widespread expectations that the Federal Reserve would ease
interest rates for a founh time in eight months when they next meet on March
26 probably would not colll\ true now.
·
The stock and bond market, which had been hoping for further rate cuts,
plunged on the good employment report. The Dow Jones fell more than 100
points in early lrading . Prices of 30-year Treasury bonds fell sharply with
yields, which move in. the opposite direction, shooting up to 6.66 percent,
from 6.46 late Thursday.
Even with the adverse market reaction, some analysts argued that the February repon overstated the strength in the labor market. They noted that pan
of the gain was a bounceback from January, when businesses shed I 88,000
jobs and the unemployment rate jumped to 5.8 percent.
The January report, coming after extremely weak growth for most of 1995
had raised fears among some econom~&gt;ts that the country was dipping int~
a recession because the Fed had raised interest rates too high in 1994 as a
pre-emptive strike against inflation.
Other analysts argued that Federal Reserve Chainnan Alan Greenspan had
read the economy exactly right, pushing rates up to ward off inflation and
then beginn,in&amp;._to cut rates last .!uly to prevent a recession. The economic
recovery from ~he 1990-91 recession begins its sixth year this month, mak-'
ing it the third-longest expansion in U.S. history.
The drop in the unemployment rate to 5.5 percent returned it to the level it had been in October. Since the end of 1994, the unemployment rate has
' been fluctuating in a narrow band around 5.6 percent.
.
Katharine G. Abraham, commissioner of the Bureau of Labor Statistics,
said that much of February's strength represented a bounceback from the
severe weather in January.
"The largest increase in employment over the month was in the services
industry," she said, noting an increase of 287,000 jobs. She said some of the
biggest gains were in private education and amusement and recreation ser. vices, which simply reversed big weather-related drops the previous month.
. Employment in construction ·industries rose 121,000 in February, the
. btggest monthly mcrcasc smce a gam of 122.000 in February 1984.
Even manufacturing. which suffered heavy layoffs for most of 1995 as
fact!lftes cut back production to work off an excess of inventories showed
improvement in February and rose by 26,000 jobs.
'

Co.u h''v hai)s

ex-membe~

BOARD MEMBERS RECOGNIZED - John
right In top pholo, and Jon Kllrachnllc, Pome!O)', ' · lion un
photo, former IIWII . . . . of the Ml'lga 90uniY BIMini of Ill 1W
Relard!dlon 11\d DtYIIOfiiMit181 D!faUIII•a;-. rna.gn'lad
recently by the
County lloerd of Cclmtilltaloi•• ~
ml11lon Preeldent red ttorronu pr•ulll II Ill p1•111111.
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