<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="9457" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/9457?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-17T09:54:18+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="19891">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/2dcfe80579b6fe529251d9593b655818.pdf</src>
      <authentication>084994466dc63a69254f60542874f317</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="30343">
                  <text>Ohio Lottery

Meigs

Pick 3:
177
Pick 4:
7466
.Super Lotto:
6-8-15-17-18-40
.Kicker:
745002

girls top

Eastern
Page4

Low tonlghtlo 20s. Pal'IIJ
cloudy. Frldey, · - nurrtet,

high ID

upper~

•

..
'
•

•
.Vol. 45, NO. 194

'Survey work underway on
-Tuppers Plains sewer project .

PAGE EIGHT

RIVER CURRENTS FOR SENIOR CmzENS

FEBRUARY, 1895

,--------------~--------~~~~~~~--------------------~~~

Medicare general enrollment period begins
.

with no penalty' for delayed
enrollment) for workers age 65 or
older and for people under age 65
with disabilities who have group
health coverage based on their

by Carol Irwin· Carter
Social Security Manager
in Gallipolis, Ohio
Did you decide not to take Part
B of Medicare when you were
first eligible? Or did you have
Part B o.nce and then drop the
coverage? If you fit into either of
these situations, you'll have &lt;~.
chance to .sign up for Part B
during the annual enrollment.
period that runs from January L
1995, through March 31, 1995.
This three-month period offers
another opponunity to those who
._ did not enroll when they were
first eligible and those who
dropped their coverage in the
interim. If you enroll during the
current · sign-up period, your
coverage will begin July I, 1995.
If you did not enroll when• you
' first were eligible, your Medicare
Part B premium will be I 0
percent higher than the basic
monthly premium for each
twelve-month period you were
eligible but not enrolled. For
1995, the basic monthly Medicare
Part B premium is $46.10. There
are special premium rules and
enrollment periods (generally

own or tht:ir spouse's currenl

more of work covered by Social
Security but. not enough to qualify
for benefits, the amount is
reduced to $183.
If you have low income and
limited assets, the state may pay
some or all of your Medicare
expenses, including buying Part_

employment: Part' B cove~age,
also called "medical insurance,''
helps pay · for doctor's services,
outpatient hospital care, and other
medical services.
· ·
If you're· age 65 or older and
not eligii)Ie for Medi,c are's
by Carollrwin,Corter ·
premium-free Hospital Insurance
Security Manager
Social
(Pan A) coverage, you can buy
in
Gallipolis,
Ohio
this coverage along with Part B
Are
you
approaching
retirement
coverage during the annual
age?
Are
you
working
·in a job
el'rollment period. (People
entiiled to Medicare Hospital that you enjoy and don't want to
Insurance through the Social retire? You may dec-ide to
Security or Railroad Retirement continue working full time for a
systems or through government few more years.' If that is your
employment do not pay this decision, you should know· that
premium.) Your monthly your Social Security benefit will
premium will be 10 J)ercent increase the longer you delay
higher than the basic 'amount if retirement after 65.
There ~re two ways your
you delayed your enrollment for
will increase after you
benefits
12 months or more after you were ·
reach
your
65th birthday.
first eligible to -enroll. In 1995,
If
you
delay
your retirement,
the basic monthly premium for
Part A coverage will be $261. For you will receive "delayed
individuals with 30 credits or retirement credi.ts". For example,

.

A coverage under the Qualified premium under the Specified
Medicare
Medicare Beneficiary (QMB) Low -Income
program. If .your income -is Beneficiary (SLMB) program.
slightly above the level to qualify · Contact your stale or local
.for the QMB program, you may medical assistance (Medicaid)
qualify for state help in paying agency, social services office, or
you.; Part B (Medical Insurance) welfare office if you think .you
qualify.
.'

(NAPS&gt;-11 may be love .at fil'!!t
sight when you first lay eyes on
that adorable little puppy, but
properly caring for a new bundle of.
rur requires using your head, not
just your heart. A happy, healthy
animal can mean many years of
loving companionohip and a quality
life for your dog if you know ,.hat is
involved in caring for your pet.
Wheth-e-r you recel.v ed your
puppy as a gift or adopted him
from a local shelter, there are
steps you can take to make your
"puppy experience" a good one .
Unfortunately, many puppies end'
up back at shellers after the novelty wears ofT (and patience wears
thin) and ownere realize that car··
ing for it
more effort than
HaviJig,a ·puppy join
ranks .can be a reward·
if you:
Homework .. Learn
what you can about your _particular
·breed of puppy- its characteristics,
temperaments and needs. Call a
reputable b.r eeder .or .do som.e
research at the· li&amp;rary. How large
is your puppy likely to becom e?
How mll:ch space is ideal? If y~u
adopted your puppy from a loca l
animal shelter, a shelter represen·
tative should be able to help ,you
answer nio.st of these questions.

l

loves! In HeaUhcare. All
dogs need preventative medicine.
·Annual veterinary check ups and
immunizations will h e lp protect
your puppy from eostly, perhaps
fatal , diseases caused by viruses
end bacteria . Immuni zations dur·
lng your puppy's firilt year of life
are the mo st important for
ipcrea si ng its natural ,de fenses
again1t disease.

-

EARLY SPRING? • Handler BUJ Deeley bolda Punxsutawney
1'1111 blgb early tbll morning on.Gobbler's Knob In Pu.Wutawney,
I'll., after tbe cllubby groundhot: failed to see bls sblldow for only
the lOth or lltb limo In 108 yolll'!l. Ao:clll'dlng to legend, tllislndl·
catenprllll Is Jwt 1roand tile ~rner. (AP)

Care Requires More Than TLC

Ging will arrive early

·

___roundhog fails .
to see his shadow
new .....or=tKe

neutering your puppy can
. positive
health benefits while helping to
red uce the pet overpopulation
pro-blem . Early neutering preventR testicular cancer, a com mon problem in dogR . And female .
dogs who are s payed before ·
puberty are effectively imm une to
breast r;:ancer. PETsMART stores
have veterinarians on statT who
Can provide addi tional information on the medical advantages of
sterilization.

Commit To Obedience
Training. Obedience probl ems
are the primary reason why Pf'LS

are aba nd oned, put up for adop·
Lion or len at shelters. In addition,
untrained pets cnn he n hazard.
There are t ech niqu es yo u can
learn to belp yo ur puppy develop
good habits from day on•.

you can
your
dog effectively , you may nee d
some trei1Jing yOurself. Invest
in an obedience cl ass or two .
PETSMART stons, ror example,
offer obedience training on the
premises . Re member , it is fe r
easier (and less "s tress ful in th e
long run) .to take the time up
front to tea ch a dog what is right
or acce ptable , than later to con ·
tinually reprimand him for the
things· he does wrorlg.
Jhe time you put into caring
fo,.ahd properly training your
puppy will more than pay ofT in
terms of the joy having a pet as a
part of the ff\mily can bring. There
is a tremendous payoff for th e ani ·
mal os well - a long, hea lthy life
in a nurturing , loving e nvironme nt·. What else could a puppy
ask for?

i=t ''

Don't Miss Out
SeeThe· New·
95's Today At...

State Capital Improvement Progr1!1Il- fonnerly lssoe Two.
· With Ibis sum, the project bas
been pledged more than $1.2 million in state money acquired
through the efforts of local, county
and regional officials.
Other funding included $75,000
for engineering in Issue Two's
round seven, $500,000 in round
eight, and $360,000 in a low,interestloan from a state water development office, Lyons said.
The district hopes to acquire
additional funds this spring through
an Appalachian Regional Council
grant. Lyons said.
The ARC grant will defray the
cost of connecting the lines 10 the
houses along with removal and
destruction of old septic systems.
Currently, Ibis connection is estimated at $2,000 a household, be
added. .
Tbe sewer board also must.
acqu_ire easements from property

PUNXSUTAWNEY, Pa. (AP)- Tbegroundliog bas spoken:
Sj&gt;rl1111 wUI como early tbll year. Of course, In many Jl"rls, winter bu pever reaDy arrived.
.
Punxsatawney Pbll, tbe world's smallest and furriest weather
forecaster,. failed to see lill shadow as he WIIS hauled from his
burrow today, Indicating according to legend that spring Is just
around the corner.
Tile chubby groundhog was taken out or his man-made burrow by ..ndler DIU Deeley at 7:19 a.m. Deeley kissed the anfibal
and placed blm on top of the stump outside Phil's home.
Altllougb they don't like to discuss It, the members of
Punxsatawney Groundhog Club's Inner .Circle actually decide
In advance wllat tbe groundhog's forecast will be. Nonetheless,
a crowd estimated at at least 7,000 cheered loudly as the
announcement waa made.
·
·
It IS tbe 10tb or 11th f:1me tbe groundhog has predicted an
early spring since 11187, depending on wb- count you .believe.
The Ja.t time waa In 1990.
.
'•
·
Tile National Weather Senlee near PIUSbllrgb bas Issued Its
own prediction or above-normal temperatures for the next few
weeks, In keeping with the relatively mild trend Ibis winter. .
"We haven't bad winter yeL Spring feels like It's already
bore," slid meteorologist Bob Reed.
. Tbe Groundhog Day tradiUon Is based on a Gennan super·
stltlon that an animal casting Its sbadow Feb. l - the Christian
holiday of Candlemas - Is an Indication of bad weather to
come. An ol!! Sl:~h saylllfl renecc. a similar belief• "If CandleDIBI Day Is bright and clear, there w1U be two winters In the
year."
.
.
,
· PliO ordinarily llvu In a boated, glaased-ln butch near the
town's Ubrary with two other groundh_ogs, Philomena and Bar-

De&gt;:·

--'-li' MiiltliiiiCIIi Inc. Ntwl(llpet"

owners, Lyons said.
Johll Lentes - attorney for the
sewer lloord - bas started searching coun flies for land descriptions,
be added.
A public bearing will be held in ·
Marcb or April to discuss the project's status and begin easement
acquisition, Lyons added . The
sewer board will bold its monthly
meeting at 10 a.m. Feb. 14 at the
Tuppers Plains-Chester Water
Department office ..
At the spring bearing, residents
will be asked to sign easements for ·
the 20-foot-wide placement of the
lines.
A mess will be created. but contractors must return tbe property to
its original stale, Lyons said.
.
The sewer district stretches onP.balf mile from the intersection ol
stale Routes 681 and 7, serving 200
households . Anyone within 300
feet of this line must hook up by
state law, Lyons added.

A SIGN OF PROGRESS - Surveyors tontlnued work
Wednesdey on the Tuppers PIBins Regional Sewer District. Portt.nd's Josbua Codner pinpoints property cornen along a farm off
slate Route 681. Codner works for C~ 'Thonuu Smith and Associates. The sewer district hired the Radi.e-based ftrm to. designate
the boundaries of this 87-acre farm, Smith said. (Sentinel photo by
George Abate)
.
·

'Correction'
day plan
offered by
Gingrich

The inove prompted most major rates tied to the prime rate. With
banks to increase their benchmark the average card carrying a 17.99
prime lending mtes from 8 .5 per- rate, many Visa and MasterCard
·
cent to 9 percent.
users will see rates rise above 18
. The Fed wants to slow the econ- percent, according to RAM.
omy to the point where inflation is
Tbe last time rates were tbat
not a threat. Slower consumer bigb, consumer groups and lawspending is part of tbe fonnula, and makers accused banks of gouging
by raising rates the Fed is pushing customers. Hearings were held on
tip interest charges on credit Cllrds, Capitol Hill and many banks, fearmortgag¢s and car loans for mil- ing ra1e-cap legislation, lowered
their rates. ·Competition also
lions of Americans.
A credit card bolder with a spurred issuers to lure consumers
$1,700 balance will pay another $5 with special no-fee; Iow-rate cards.
tbis year in interest charges
Some banks now may introduce
because of tbe latest increase, .rate caps to keep consumers from
according to Roben B. McKinley, . switching cards, McKinley said.
president of RAM Resc;arcb Corp.,
"The good news is that rates are
which tracks credit card trends.
still below the levels they were
three. years ago, when the)' were
Factorin~ in the impact of all
seven rate bikes, the average card- around 19 percent," McKinley
bolder is paying $50 more in inter- said. "The bad news is that tbe sceest charges compared to this lime nario is now set for rates to actually
last year, RAM said.
exceed 19 percent and bit even 20
Most credit Cllrds carry variable percent by the end of the year."

WASHINGTON (AP) - Starting in March. tlie House will
devote Tuesdays to passing "a.rcction bills," undoing the
''dumb'' or ''destructive·· or

"aberrant" things that government .
does, says House Speaker Newt
Gingrich.
Three times this week Gingrich,
R-Ga., has spoken publicly of bis
idea - to pass bills to stop actions
that even bureaucrats know are
unnecessary but s;~y they are compelled 'to do by the Inflexibility of .
tbe law.
He says be expects tbe Hoose to
pass "20 or 30 correction acu a
month" - narrowly drawn bills
that would address only actions
alfecting a single situation.
· And he says President Clinton :
endorses the idea, in principle.
As an example of a situation
that would be corrected, be cited a
water trealment facilily tbat the
Environmental Protection A-gency
m;~y require San Diego to. build to
LOS ANGELES (AP) - · He of June 13, after Simpson bad been Simpson attorney Johnnie Cochr.in stop raw sewage- from be.lna
said he loved OJ. Simpson as a interviewed by police, Simpson Jr. said that even if Shipp's claim dumped in the Pacific Ocean.
friend for 26 years. He breezed into questioned him about bow long it were the uuth, "wbicb it is not,"
The requirement would make
. Simpson's estate wi!!l a press of the _ would take -to conduct DNA tests _dreams were not the proper subject sense if San Diego were on Lake
gate buzzer. As a policeman, be on a bloody glove found outsidi\liis for a trial. Erie, Gingrlcli said, ..bill the Pacific
"What about all these wonder- is big and "every oceanographer
even ran license "plates checks for mansion.
him.
Tben, Shipp says. Simpson fuldreamslhatl'm sure OJ. Simp- says tbis is a nonsense require- ·
~-~
But now, Ronald Shipp says, be brought up the dreams. .
son must have had in the times he menl' '
can't~liev~tbat. Simpson. would~
"lie jokingly said, 'To be bon• Iovro his wife?;·· Cochran said on ~The EPA s~id San Diego .
lie aboul a conversation they bad est, Shipp. I've bad some dreams of NBC's "Today" show. "It doesn't already as applymg for a waiver
under a provision of tlie law that .
the nigbt,alter Simpson's ex-wife killing her,"' be said.
_
" make any-sense."
-and-ber friend were munlered.
--~ · Simpson's lawyers said the con· As for Shipp's claim that be was exempts oceanside cities from
"This is rtally sad, OJ.," Shipp versalion never took place; .Tbe a friend of Simpson's, Cochran national :-vater treatment standards.
5a!d ~ednesd&lt;ly as be withstood a judge barr~d Shipp ~rom 1elling said Shipp "was asked to stop
~l•stenng cross-examJDabon, star'Jurors that SIUipson S81d the dreams coming back· so much" to Simp- Huntington mayor
mg at b(s old friend across the were wby be didn't want to take a son's borne. Cochran did not take Jean Dean endorses
courtroom.
lie-detector test.
.
part in cross-examining Shipp
riverboat gam~llng
Shipp testified that on the night
In an interview Qroadcast today, because they are cousins.

Witness says 0. J ..told him he
had dreams of killing ex-wife

INFORMATIONAL PICKET- Local
memben or District 1199/SEIU Health Care and
Social Servke Union held -an lnfonnatiOMI pkk·
et Wednesday alk1noon In froat of the omce of
Dr. Harold Brown, Pomeroy. Union members
employed at Overbrook Nunlng Center, who

voted to join the union oo Nov. 10, 1994, state
the nursing homo continues to appeal the reaulu
of the election and baa refused to hire •ddlllonal
certified nurse~' aides to fill vacancies . Dr.
Brown Is a partner In the business.
I

· HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)
- Mayor Jean Dean endorsed
riverboat gambUng, sayin~ it would .
help Lhc Obio River city s econo- ·
my.
--::River casinos woul'd cre11le
· 1,000 jobs in Huntington directly
and 1,198 jobs indirectly, Dean
said Wednesday. Citing a study by
Economics Research Associates of
Chicago, sbe also said gambling ·
would bave an. impact of up to :·
$137 miUion on the city. ·
Laura Grimm, chairwoman of :
the ·Cabell Huntin~ton Area Chris- .
!ian Coalition, d1sputed Dean's ·
claims. ·
"It is not economic development at all," Grimm said of gambling.
Dean noted that gambling
already exists In West Virginia
through the state lottery and the
state's ';log and horse IIBCks.
"
. A b1ll sponsored by the, West
Virgin@,Rlverboat Gaming Associ·
ation is pending in the Legislature.
A similar bill died Iost·year;---

. I'

'

'

'.J

I

~-

•

Feds approve seventh
interest rate hike :in a yea_r
NEW YORK (AP) - When
credit card rates hovered above 19
percent three years ago, consumer
·groupr·accused•b'iUiks ·or gouging
customers:
'
Don't look now. Interest rates
on many credit cards and other
consumer loans are heading baCk
up following tbe Jatest hike in
sbort-term interest rates, announced
Wednesday by the Federal Reserve
Board.
\
In the seventh increase in a year,
the centtal bank pushed up two key
rates to their highest levels since
.
early 1991. ·
The discOWll rate - tbe Interest
the Fed charges on direi;t loans· to
commercial banks - was .raised ·
f(Q!Il 4.7S percent to 5.25 percent
The target for the more important
federal funds rate - the interest
that banks charge each other went up by a half-point, to 6 per-·
cent.

taking your benefits, or you reach
age 70.
If you are over 65--evcn
beyond 70, receiving benefits,
and working, your hen,efits are
aulomatically recomputed ·each
year you have earnings and are
entitled to benefits. The more you
earn, the higher your benefits
when you retire. Many people
have their highest earnings in
their later years when ttiey have
peaked in their jobS.

On
Pf.lppy

Tbe project may be sold by the
. By GEORGE ABATE
end
of Ibis year with the current
· Sentinel News Staff
flllldS available for this $2.6
state
· Tbe Tuppers Plains Regional
million
project, Lyons said. By the
'· Sewer District is taking another
tangible step forward.
end of 1996, the project could then
· Surveyors began plotting tbe be completed. Lyons said.
About 50 acres of this farm may
:boundaries of an 87-acre faJDI out: side Tuppers Plains this w~k. said be Sold to the sewer district, Lyons
Lindsey Lyons, president of the said. This area is located west of an
, sewer lloord.
old silo. The silo is located on the
• This farm - wbicb is located edge of this plateau region, wbicb
~ about one-balf mile west of the
forms a natmal bowl.
West of the silo, the ground dips
; center of this community - may
ibe the site for the lagoon, Lyons and rises once about 100 feet away
'said. The farm owner bas not sold
and then continues to faU down to a
· the property to the sewer board, ravine and larger valley below. Part
;pending the survey work and sign- of this land is a corn field, wilh
some wOoded areas farther west.
·ing of a deed, be l!dded"(Tbe property owner) bas
Earlier concerns about arrow~named us a price and we've accept- · beads foWld on this site have been
resolved, be added.
~ed it," Lyons said of the potential
Four _pump station sites also
'Ia~_ site.
, Wilen the sewer project is com- must be procured, but this is conpleted. ~ore dian 20 years in build- tingent on tbe lagoon site, be .
·
mg bans imposed by the Ohio added.
"We're moving along as fast' as
,Environmental Prolcetion Agency
will end, Lyons said. Tbe state we can to get financing and
-stopped all construction near this approval to dQ this," Lyons said.
• In January, state officials
'unin&lt;x&gt;rporated community because
of potential bealtb hazards from announced the sewer district won
$275,000 in the ninth round of the
run-off sewage.

Retirement benefits grow_with age
if you were born in 1930, Social
Security will add 4.5 percent per
year to.your benefit foi each year
you delay signing up for Social
Security beyound your full
retirement age.
, You could consider these
credits a bonus for not receiving
'benefits during years when you
were eligible. These increases are
added in automatically from the
time you reach your full
retirement age until you start ·

1 Section, t 0 Pegn 35 centa

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Ttlursday, February 2: 1995

Copyrlght1895

•
II

·-·-

~

I
..........

-- -·- -

.

'

,,

�-C ommentar

•

11 1 Court Street

The Mexican loan guarao tee
package is in better shape in
Congress than the headlines sugges~ but making sure it gets passed
will require an all-out push by
President Clinton, who will also
benefil politically from tbe effort. ·
Clinton' s State or. the Union
speech utterly confounded Beltway
denizens.- not just pundits, but
many members of Congress, ton by being a bit out in the councry
rather than an endless ordeal. So
Clinton survives politically. But. to
prosper, be needs to get things
done, and Mexico should be Urgent
Taslc No. 1.
Tbougb vital on its own, the
loan guilmntee epitomizes two bigger challenges for Clinton: (1 ) bow
to work with a.Congress controlled
1\y Republic ans and produce a
record or accomplishment when
Democratic leaders are conducting
a strategy of obstruction. and (2)
how to convince the country to take .
up the economic challenges of
world leadership .as they did the
military challenges of the Cold
War.
·
So far, polls indicate, the administration bas uuerly failed to convince the country of the stakes,
involved if the United Stales does

Pomeroy, Ob!o

.f'U.lMDIA,NC.
ROBERT L. WINGETI
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Man.ger

MARGARET LEHEW
Conlroller

U!Tll!RS OP OPINION are welcome. Ttiey abould be less than 300
wordJ lon&amp;. AU letten are Albject to editing IDd muat be signed "{iib name.
lddresa ~ tde~oe oumba-.-~'!. ~good letters Will be publilbod. Letters
abould be 1D sood Iaale, oddreu mgtllllOI, 1101 ptnODalities.

Peso politics
ByTOMRAUM
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Facing eroding suppon in Congress for bis proposed $40 billion Mexican loan-guarantee plan, Pre.sident Clinlon decided
·w cut bis losses and go it alone wilh a plan not requiring congressional
·action.

.

· : For a president long lllmlented by aiticism for being unfocused and

indecisive. it was a step lbe White House could hold up as a sign of action
and wbicb leaders of Congress of bolh parties could greet wilh a sigh
of relief.
- ·
liis move - bypassing Congress completely - was Ihe fu-st example
of an•cmcrging White HouSe sirategy under wbicb Ihe president intends to
make wider use or bis executive aulhority iD dead-end confrontations wilh
·Congress.
.
CliDIOD aafted lbe Mexican aid package fran a combination of executive orders and by persuading lbe International Monetary Fund and other
· .
intemalional lenders 1o up their slakes.
• • And while the action provoked congressional criticism - some
:accused bim of panicking, others complained be was misusing a fund
:designed lo defend the dollar _ bis critics had no immediate vehicle for
-smppios the president's pian.
.
: For the most pan. congressional leaders seemed to be filled with grati:tude lbal Clinton bad taken the pressure off them to act
• And Cll!l1011 was allle to avoid wbat.would have been a bruising battle,
:particularly with members of bis own pany who overwhelmingly opposed
1be Mexican rescue plan.
: "It raises tbe question of why didn't he do it earlier. But it alS9 shows
leadership, which was badly needed. The president was able to force
yolitical points," said Lawrence Cbimerine, an economic consultant wbo
. Jollows lr8de issues.
. .
: Cbirnerine· and some other economists raised concerns that the new
Clinton package puts more U.S. tax dollars at risk than would have the
:original Ioao-giJa!aDtee package.
.
.
: But Ointon showed be wru; able to move - even at a time when bis
' dout on Capilol Hill bas never been lower.
·
·: His decision 1o act decisively was a good tonic for a White House still
:numbed by the November Republican landslide and overshadowed by the
-energy and the activity of the newly empowered Republican majority on
lbe Hill.
·
.
-: Clinton "went through all the proper s1eps of crying 1o involve the
(congressional) leadership," said Sen. Christopher Dodd, D-Conn., Ihe
.hew cbalnnan of the Democratic National Commillee. •'We in my yiew
):lropped the ball in not responding to that calL'' .
·
. : 11tis tinle Clinton was able to pick up the bail and run with it.
: Even so, there are limits 1o bow oflen be can govern through executive ·
flat- and how much be can accomplish . .
•. And the sleps he tooll: carried sriuie risk and oontroversy, especially
· lhat of encumbering the U.S. Exchange Stabilization Fund by up to $20
. pillion to help Mexico. That's the 6Q-year-old fund used. by Treasury to
. defend lbe U.S. dollar at times of currency instability. Never before has it
· been used 1o shore up a foreign currency.
.
1
: "We don't have any illusions," said White House press secretary
•Mike McCurry. "We Icnow we will have to argue the case that the presi. tJent had 1o do this.''
: • And the move .did nothing to keep Clinton's harshest critics from keep. log up !heir attack.
:: "There's no doubt that Ointon's goins 1o look bold. But so did Jesse
:James,'' said conservative commentalor Pat Buchanan, a 1992 GOP presiilential contender, calling the action a "backdoor raid on the American
taxRRYers."
__
.
-: But his move won the support of t~o Republican leaders. House
Speaker Newt Gmgncb and Senate MaJonty Leader Bob Dole, both of
~hom bad previously accused Clinton of a lack of leadership on the issue.
• "We believe thai the risks of inaction vastly exceed any risks associated with this action," Gingrich, Dole, House Minorily Leader Dick
~phardt and Senate Minority Leader Tom Daschle said in a rare joint
sQ~~emeot late Tuesday. "We fully support this effon and we will work to
ensure that its purposes are met."
. And that enabled Secretary of Sr.ate Warren Christopher to crow:
"This is one of those moments of executive leadership. ... So the president did what presidents oflen have to do ·- take the responsibility for
protecting Ameri':811 interests."
,

not guarantee Mexican loans.
The likelihood is.lbal a financial
panic would occur, enveloping not
only Mexico but the rest of Latin

rights and immigration.
Sources said the bill would
ensure that, in lbe event of a Mexican defaul~ revenues from sales of
Mexican oil in the United States
Morton Kondracke would go to the Federal Reserve,
- - rather than back to Mexico.
America_an~ so-called " emerg.iog
The bill also was to contain a
econ~mtes e lsewhere, burtt_n_g system whereby the president
U.S. mvestors and workers. Pohu.
.
cal chaos in Mexico can't be rukd ; would ceJttfy that Mex•co bad .P!"'·
ou~ either.
_
7 sued .fiscal ll!'d ':'lonetary_pohctes
So far, the administration bas cons~stent w1th Its prom1ses, and
made its case 1o Congress, but not ~a! tnstallments on the total $40
to the public, which is opposed 1o b•ll•?D guarantee pack~e w~ld be
the guarantee by 80 perce t t 13 conttngent on those certifications.
.
n
The second pan of the package,
percent. according to a Los Ange- sources said, is a "side letter" creIes T101es poll.
ti
'ode de
. .
In Congress, there is encourag- . a ~g an 1 pen nt comm•ss•on,
ing progress. The task force headed akin to ~ o~ that Sen. Bob Dole,
by Rep. Jim Leach, R-Iowa. work- R-Kan ., mststed upon as part of
ing with administration officials GATT ~:Oval. that would repon
and lbe Mexican govemmen~ was on ~elli&lt;;O s progress on labor and
very close to having a filial pack· UDougranon.
.
.
age ready to unveil for selling 10
O~':C the. package •s unvetled,
ranlc-and-file members.
admi~IStrauoo sources and c~nTbe package reponedly bas two . gressiOnal sources .0~ both p~es
parts: a guarantee bill including say Ihey are optuotsuc about w~n­
provisions for Mexican oil rev· mng support from rank-and-ftle
en'ues to serve as 'collateral and· members. • .
.
ledges
that
Mexico
will
p
t
.
But
there
s
sull
considerable
P
.
.
u 115 nervousness, espectally among
economtc bouse 10 order, plus a Republicans whose freshmen are
supplementary document on non- subject to populist and nationalist
economtc •ssues, such as labor

°

-

'

.

.

'

EDITOR'S NOTE- Tom Raum has covered the White House for
The AJ!Ij)Ciated Press since 19g9 and frequentl)' repurts on ew'nomlc
issues.
· · ·

Berry-'s -world

Friday, Feb. 3

..

'~-

•

,..
? • c 1995tJr~.
~
~.
"At school, we're moving toward - 'EDUTAJNMENT'I"

II

Theft of guns reported

•

appeals and who are worried that

Democratic leaders are less than
fully behind President Clinton.
Anti•U.S. agitation by the leftist
opposition in Me•ico .is also likely
to fuel resentment here.
Republicans say the guarantee
package currently stands far short
of the votes needed to pass the
House. GOP leaders are especially
peeved that Minority Leader
:Richard Gephardt, D-Mo., while
·formally for the package, bas been
virtually silent about it.
Clinlon •s tricky task during the
next two years is to cooperate with
Republicans enough so that he
enters the 1996 election with a
record or accomplishment and yet
doe~ not completely lose support
among fellow Democtats, who are
engaged in partisan warfare with
the Republicans and want to
obsuuct GOP progress.
Had voters out in the country
judged Ihe Sr.alii of the Union the
way Washington pundits and many
politicians did, Ointon would have
lost all clout with bolh parties.
- But while Washington judged
the speech on its length, voters listened all the way through, and 86
percent said they liked what they

Two injured in brawl

CI?AC\&lt; SMOKING,
ABUS'ED CHICASO

woMAN WHO BECOMES
ONE OF TilE WEALTHIEST ·
-ENTERTAINERS IN ~
TELEVISION ...
TODAY ON

~
,

Two-vehicle accident probed

Ice'

•

. Some conservatives are crying to
"zero our" and "privatize•• the
Corporation for Public Broadcasling (CPB) and it's grantee, the
Public Broadcasting System (PBS),
which receive 14 percent of their
funds from the Feds . The grants
help pay for many uncontrovcrsial
programs like .."The Three
Tenors,'.' and " Barney," as well as
some-, ontrovcrsial public affairs
prog!IUJIS that eonS~aUYCJ say are
egregiously lilted 1o the left.
The Zero Option is misguided.
Conservatives favor capitalism.
Conservatives generally think the
media bas a liberal bias. Conservatives think government can act
when the free market doesn' t. Conservatives favor conservatism .
Accord\!lgly, conservatives should
look at CPB/PBS and say: Fix it.
don't starve it
·(I am pers.onally involv«&lt;. Disclaimer below.)
Where can independent televl• sion producers interested in public
affairs commit capitalism, available
to the whole public? In effect, only
on PBS. The three major television
networks preach free speech. They
buy independently produced sitcoms. But news and public affairs

--------~--'--

_.... _,

__
•

..

•

South-Central Ohio
Today ...Cloudy with scattered
flurries ... Mainly in the momins.
High near 40. North winds 5 lo I 0
mpb becoming northeast.
·
. l'onight...Considerable cloudiness. A 30 percent chance of snow
toward momfug. Low in the upper
20s. EaStwinds increasing to 10 1o
20mpb.
Friday ... Rain mixed with
. snow ...Changing 1o all snow iD the
aflernooo. High in the upper 30s.

'

ance of precipitation 80 percent
Extended forecast
Friday nighl .. A chance of snow.
Lows upper teens to mid 20s.
Saturday ...Snow likely north ... A ·
chance of snow south. Highs in Ihe
upper 20s 1o 'lower 30s.
chance
of
Sunday ..-.A
snow .. .Mainly in the northeast.
Lows 10 to 20. Highs mid 20s to
lower30s.
Monday ... A chance of snow.
Lows 10 to 20. Highs in the 20s.

--Area Deaths-William Love

No injuries were reponed following a two-vehicle accident on
the parldng lot of the Paoiida store on state Roule 7 near Pomeroy
Wednesday afternoon. ·
According 1o a repon from Ihe Meigs County Sheriffs Depan. ment, a 1991 Ford owned by Belly Ann Wolfe, Racine, wru; struck
in the rear by a 1991 Pontiac driven by V!oletMorarity. Pomero~.
Morality was hacking out of the parking lot and struck Wolre's
parked vehicle causing light damage to·bolh, the report indicated.

Car hits sandstone
A car driving on Mulberry Avenue struck a piece of sandslone
that rolled off a hill ·ovemigbt Tuesday, according to Pomeroy
Police Department reports.
David Ballard, ofl'omeroy, reponed bis 1 986 Pontiac Trans Am
sustained ligb! damage 1o the front end afler it bit the.rock at I :40
a.m. Thursday, records show. No one was injured in the incident.

Good Samaritan recovers bike

Rutland man injured
A Rutland man was transported Wednesday to Grant Medical
Center, Columbus, with injuries received in a one-car crash on State
Route 124.
.
·
The condition of Ronald E. Searles,-48, 3 S ~24 Loop Road; is
unkown. Grant Hospital officials failed 1o return a call to the Sentinel loday . .
The _Gallia-Meigs Post of Ihe State Highway Patrol said Searles '
was eastbound in Slilisbury Township at I :09 p.m. when his car
rounded a right-band curve and went off tbe left side of the road. ·
The car then struck an embankment at a private driveway, the
patrol said. The car was severely damaged.
·
Searles was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospi_tal by the Middleport EMS unit and was laler transferred to Grant.

Meigs EMS logs 10 calls

Mu.r iel

RU'ILAND

12:05 p.m. , Danville, Amos
Cross S,r., VMH.
'
SYRACUSE
·7:41p.m., state Route 124, Debbie Henry, HMC.
·
TUPPERS PLAINS
10:20 p.m., state Route 7. Lona
Sheridan, VMH.
In addition, transfer units ban!lled three runs.

Stocks

Land transfers posted
The following land transfers
were recorded recently in the office

of Meigs County Recorder Emmasene Hamilton:
'
Deed, Clifford J. and Carolyn V.
Bachner, Betsy E. Horky, Betsy E.
and E.G. Parsons 1o J&lt;1seph R. , A.
Kay and John Jay Proffiu, Racine
lot;
.
.
Affidavit, Ava R. Lutz,

·J1ospital ·news .
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Feb. 1 discharges - Julia Long,
Jap~es Foster, Roger Erwin, Mrs.
Michael Smith and daughter, Lisa
Calandros, Harolcl Willis, Margaret
Aoyd and Lilly Oxyer.
Printed with permission.

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 213-9601
· Published every aft ernoon. Mon doy through
Friday. Il l Court St.. Pomeroy. Ohio, by the
O hio Vnllt:y Publish i ~ Co mpany/Mullimcdia

Inc.. Pomeroy. Ohi o 4576CJ, Ph. 992-2156.
Second cia~~ po~tnge paid a t Pomeroy, Ohio.:
M ~mlwr:

TI1e Asrocioted Press, :lnd the Oh io
Newspape r Auociation.
OOST-MASTER: Send addres.~ corrtclions to
The Daily Sentinel, Ill Cou n St., Po mt..,.-oy,
Ohio '~769 .
~
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By C•rrier or Motor Rouh
One Week ................................................... $1 .75

One ~onth .................. ~············ ................. 57.60
One Year ....................... ,....................... $9 1.00
SINGL~ COPY PRICE
Daily ......- ......................
35 Ccnls
u ....................

Subscribers not desiri ng to pay the carrier may
rtmlt in advance d irc~t to The Daily SentiiiCI
o n a tf'lrtt, iix or 12 monlh basi ~ . Cmdil will bt

given carrier eactt week.
No ' subsdiption by mui l pe~mlned In
Whl=rc: home ~aerier service is nvnilnble.

o.ren~

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
.

'•

lnsidr Mrip County

13 Week&gt; ........................... ,, .................. $23.9'2
26 Wee ks ............................................. $47.06
l2 Weeb .................................................S9'l.l6
Rata Out&amp;Mie Mdp County
13 Weeb ................................................. $25.61
26 Weeu ....,............................................ $49.66
l2 Weeb. .... ........................................... $96.20

deceased, to Evelyn A. and Edith·
Bresler;
Affidavit. Arlen Eugene Blake,
deceased, to Raymond C. Blake ,
Olive parcels;
.Deed, Harold H. and Helen E.
Blackston t8' Bruce Blackston ,
Chester, 13 acres;
Cenificate, Frederick S. Nease,
deceased, to Mary Leona Nease,
Sullon parcels;

Correction ·
An article on Rutland water
problems in Wednesday's. Daily
Sentinel inaccurately reported a
figure . A couple paid $361 for
8,0,000 gallons of water, not 30,000
gallons of water. The error was
made in reponing.

••
-·•••
. .••
•
•
_:
•
•
:
•
•
:

Dances In be held
A round and square dance will
be held at the old American Legion
building Friday from g to II p.m.
C. J. and Country Gentlemen wjll
play at the Gallipolis American
Legion Saturday, 8 1o 12 p.m.

Roy Scouts ready for event
The Meigs-Gallia- Mason County Boy Scout Troop is· preparing fpr
its annual day- long Klondike race
wbich wi ll begin at 9 a.m. Feb. II
at the campgro unds outside
Chester.
PTO.to meet
Harr ison ville
Elementary
School PTO will meet Tuesday al7
p.m. at the schooL A "buy one, get
one free" book fair will he held.

Max Well program sel
Candace Pope, Holzer Medical
Center, Community Liason. Dimetor, will be at the Meigs Coumy
Senior Citizens Center Tuesday at
II a.m. She will be discussing the
· hospital's MaxWe ll 50 program
which is free to persons 50 years of
age (!r older. Additional informa·
lion may be obtained by calling
446-5192.
.
PTO to meet
Pomeroy PTO will meet Tues:
day at 7 p.m. in the school gymnasium. Parents are encouraged to
auend.

TONIGHT
TIM ALLEN
IN

THE SANTA CLAUSE PG
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:3.0
STARTING FRIDAY
MICHAEL DOUGLAS, DEMI MOORE
.
IN

DISCLOSURE R
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
446.0923

RESTONIC

Bank One ............................... .18 3/4
Bob Evans .............................. .lO 3/8
Champion Ind . ...................... .lO 3/4
Charming Shop ..............................6
City Holdln&amp; ....................... :.. .l8 Ill
Fodentl Mc&gt;gul ...:.........:.......... 173/11
Goodyear T&amp;R ......................36 3111
K·mart .................................... l3 Ill
Lands End .............................. 157/8
Limited ln&lt;......... .................... l71/4
Mulllmodia In&lt; . ........ ............ .l8 Ill
Point Ban&lt;orp ............ ................. .19
Reilance Eledrlc ................... .30 718
Robhlm &amp; Myen ................... l7 l/4
][oyaTD•Jt&lt;:h.:...... ,............,.. .. lll 718
Sboney's Inc........................... 11 718
Star Bank ......... ............................ .39
Wendy lnl'l............................ 16118
Worthington lnd.......................... l9

SAllE

ao%to
·50%

Stock reports are the 10:30 a.m.
quotu provided by Advu t o
GaiUpolls.

WiLL LOVE OUQ.
SWEtT r!-tif'JGS!

Mlt'IANIXTM

'$30

MAtnnlllfllf

•

.:
:

-WE HAVE 8£ARS AU DON£ liP FOR
VAU'NTIN£'5 DAY.....:.GOARANT£'£0 TO
WIN YOUR HEART! ·-. . __
The Ohio River Bear Co.
20f N. Second Avenue
Middleport, OJI 45760
614/992-4055.
to - 4
Moo - § at t 1
Visa; MC, Layaway

••
•
•••
•.•

.
.
•

:
•
•
:
•
•

:

•••••••••••••••••••••••••

'\---

Easter!' spelling bee set
Student s in the Eastern Local
School District will hold a spelling
bee this Friday at the high school in
preparation for tbe count y- wide
spelling bee which will be lteld at
7: 30 p .m. Feb . 16 in the Meigs
High School music room.

sor' s home. The meeting will be
held at 28471 Bas ban Road. For
more defa.ils, call 949-3 119.

----

-·-·•••••••••••••••••••••••••
:
'10UI2. 'SWEET r!-!if'JG '
:
.:
:

Le!Jlrt trastees set
The Letart Township Tru stees
will meet at 6 p.m. Monday at Ihe
office building for the regular
meeting.

Medical Center via Grant LifeRight 1! .
Trustees announce
POMEROY
The Board of trustees of
7:18 a.m., Wrigbl Street. Coluptbia township will meet MonWilliam Htrdson, VMH;
day at 7 p.m. at the f1rc station .
9:53 p.m., Court Street, David
Honie schooling 11roup sets
Kline and Carl Stewart, VMH.
A home schooling group will
RACINE
meet
at 7 p.m. Feb. 13 at Ihe spon7:21 p.m., .Elm Street, Jason
Counts, VMH.
COLONY THEATRE

·a. Vogeler

Reg.

RESTONIC EXQUISITE

'

Twin, Ea. Pc.
Full, Ea. Pc.
Queen, 2 Pc . Set
~King ,_ 3~E'c._ SB_
L

$12e

$249
299
799
9 99

149
399
499.

RESTONIC PERFECT REST-stJIIIrMIT

MlffA•DTM

$60sn

·MIIIIY llllfG

:
·
·
·
.
·

Meigs announcements

'

A Good Samaritan found .and returned a Pomeroy child' s pink
and green bicycle yesterday, according -to the Pomeroy Police
Department reports.
.
·
The bicycle was reported stolen on Union Avenue Monday ,
records show. It wru; returned by a neighbor yesterday.

William Wyatt Love, 87, of Gallipolis and formerly of Point Pleasant.
W.Va., died Wednesday, Feb. I, 1995, at Holzer ;Medical Center in Gallipolis.
.
He was a relired janitor for the Mason County Board of Education and
a· former employee of the West Virginia State Road Commission. He was .
a member.of lbe West Virginia Association of Retired School EmployllC$.
Born Aprill4, 1907 in Winfield, W:Va., be was a son of the late Hida
Marion and Elizabeth (Mulford) Love. In addition 1o his parents, be was
also preceded in death by bis wife. Cora Katherine (Gardner) Love; a son,
Kennelh "Kenny" Love; three brolbers, Wayne H. Love, Delbert Love
and George Love; and one sister, Nora Baker.
He is survived by a son, Charles M. "Birdie" Love of Cheshire; a .
daughter, Elizabeth "Libby" Sigman of Liberty, W.Va.; two sisters,
Sylvia Hussell and Goldie Wilcoxen, both of Point Pleasant. W.Va.; six
Units of the Meigs County
grandchildren; and four great-grandchildren.
Emergency
Medical Service logged
Services will be 11 a.m. Saturday, Feb. 4; at Crow-Hussell Funeral
10
calls
for
assistance Wednesday.
Home, Point Pleasant. W.Va. 'with Rev. Louis A. Hussell officiating.
Units
responding
Included:
Burial will follow in SuncrestCemetery, Point Pleasant, W.Va.
.
MIDDLEPORT
Visiting hours will be held at the funeral home Friday from 6-9 p.m.
8:04 a.m., Overbrook Nursing
Center, Freda Carsey, Pleasant Valley Hospital;
9:23 a.m., Mill Street, Myrville
· Muriel Ooodnite Vogeler, 78, of Pllgiam, Ky., died Wednesday,
Brown, Holzer Medic.al Center;
February 1, 1995 at Highland Regional Hospital, Pilgram. .
11:57 a.m., OBNC, Lola Bobier,
Born June 29. 1916 in Mason Connty, she was a daughter of the
Veterans
Memorial Center;
late Charlie and Ruth (Roush) Ooodnile. She was a homemaker. ·
I:
11
p.m
.. volunteer fire depanSurvivors include her husband, Norman Voseler; three daugh·
ment
and
squad,
state roules 124
ters, Donna Shonka of Mokena. lll., Darlene Gillmore of Pilgram,
and
7.
two-car
motor-vehicle
acci·
and Vooa Vogeler of Pilgram. two sons. Pete Ord of Magnolia. and
dent,
Ronnie
Searles.
transponed
to
Charley Ord of MiMesota; a brother, Hoben Ooodnite of Ohio and
VMH
pending
transfer
Io
Grant
a sister, Minnie Harris of Racioo.
Services will .be Saturday, February 4, at 11 ain. at Broad Run
Lutheran Church, Broad Run Community, with Rev. George Weirick offici~g. Burial will be in Broad Run Cemelery.
Visitation will be Frid;ly from 6-9 p.m. at Foglesong Funeml
Home. The body will lie in staie one hour prior 1o service at the
Am Ele Power ........:.............. .34 3/4
Akzo .............................,..........56 ill
church.
Ashllllld ou ............................313/4
AT&amp;T ................ .,....,..............49 3111

•··
.
glcs.
· ·so fortunate. After considerable us who didn't even bother to call ·
Nowhere was this "bowling searching, and even calli.ng her our neighbors who may have needalorie ". theme brought borne 1o me church' to no avail, 78-ycar-old ed us.
better than in the 14-inch snow- . Verna Litton finally answered a · While the weather is good,
newspaper ad. for snow removal. A ~gencies serving the elderly and
man came, and after shoveling her mfltm can easily compile lists of
Sarah Overstreet sbon driveway and walk, charged people willing to run errands, sbov~
her $50.
el snow and help that population in
s10rm that bit southwest Missouri
Not only were we caught off many .ways.
'
in mid-January. My friend Kather- guard by our 14-inch snow, we
Compiling these lists abead of
ine Lederer, a_university professor were caqg!!lwl.th our pants dQwn . the storm allows time to contact
in bcr early 60s who suffers from as regards our elderly and infmo. groups of likely workers, such as
recurrent knee p_roblems and is Many ageneies servhig that popula- · church youth groups, fraternities
recovering from a tom tendon in lion operate when the weather and scout troops. It also advertises
her arm, couldn't fmd a college kid coopeillles, but this time those ser- for adults willing to work and
to shovel her drive and walkways.
vices were as snowbound as the allows time to cbeck credentiais.
She's lived in the same area people they serve. When ice and
The rest of us who are slill fleet
near the uni'versity for over 25 snow blocked even the path 1o safe- enough of foot to negotiate icy
years and this was the first big ty for these people, our shovel palhways should make lists of folks
snow's torm where at least one blade fell.right off its handle.
we know who may need our help
enterprising young college student
Without friends or a service for the next time a storm hems them in ..
hadn't yelled out, "Hey,lady, can I which drivers have been screened, If we StlfJ now, by the lime we're
shovel your walk?'· to make a few the elderly and infmo are in no bet- elderly, we'll have a great network
extra bucks. Luckily, a laid-off ter predicament if they have to · already in place.
construction worker saw bj:r strug- travel outside their homes. AnswerSilrab Overstreet Is Associate
gling with her shopping cart in a ing an ad doesn't assure them of a Editorll!l Page Editor at the
supermarket parking lot. followed driver's credibility, trustwm:thiness Springfield (Mo.) News,bnder.
her hom e, sbovele!lG"crything in or fair pricing.
(For lnfC)rmatlon on bow to
sight and charged ber on!y $12.
We. can do better than this and communicate electronically with
She was one of the lucky ones. should be good and ashamed, from this columnist and others, conThousands pf other area elderly churches, to ,gencies that serve this l!lct AmeriCII OnHne by calUng 1and otherwise lliling folks weren't population, right down to those of 800-827-6364, exL 8317.)

--··

C 1995Accu-Weath8r, Inc.

-----Weather·.............._ __

beard.

programs are produced in-bouse by conservatives if PBS was as left- sage.
network news depanmcnts, which . wing lL'I they say. The law aulhorizAuthor Peggy Noonan, former
. suffer from a liberal tilt A recent ing CPB and PBS calls for "bal- Reagan speech-writer, got CPB
survey showed that 100 percent of ance." UntillJ:CCntly, I believe that funding for a series coming soon
mandate was unfulfill !i,d. even on PBS. Documentaries were comthough a number of viewer surveys missioned from conservative Fred
Ben Wattenberg do
DOJ show Ihe public sensing it.
Barnes and almost-conservative
the network television campaign or bothered by it "Frontline" and Morton
. Hollywood
repons about Newt Gingrich wl2'e " Point of View," the only two on- director Kondracke
Lionel Cbetwynd ("The
neg ative. Who did it? The three J:Oing p_tim~, timc public affairs Hanoi Hilton") is preparing· a
neiworks, not PBS. 'Ibaiiks for tlie documentary sedes, clearly had a
series featuring Barnes, Kondracke
free speech.
lefty bias. On the otber hand, leg- and Suzanne Garment of Ihe not(On cable television CNN, C· endary conservative William BuckSpan and CNBC offer more hal· Icy hosted "Firing Line" and · liberal American Enlerprise llistianced fare, although they also take "Wall Street Week's" Louis ' tute. A special about the House of
Gingrich will be hosted by conser.
no outside productions.)
.
is
no
liberal.
Still,
the
Ruykeyser
But on public- television most conservative view wai underrepre: vative columnist Don Lam]!Io;
Micbael Pack, a mao with a conserpublic affairs programs are prosented
and
underfinanced
by
the
vative eye, will produce. Much
duced by private cooipanies, fund· system.
more
is in Ihe pipeline. Try finding
ed by public or private sources.
\Yby?
C~nservalives
gravir.ate
to
.that
on
the major networks.
That includes the "MacNeil/Lehrer busmess; hberals like the media.
CPB
President Richard Carlson
.t
.
News Hour, " which cotild teach Few conservatives tried to produce •
IS
a
conservative
who
ran
the
Voice
ihe networks what -fair means.
public TV programs. Tbe liberal of America, appointed by Ronald
_ ~moe conservatives say govern· . F?N
Foundation put up big bucks.
ment shouldn't subsidize any tele- Ltherals see reality thniugh a liber- · Reagan. The new PBS President is
vision. But lbe liberal commercial al len~. That's reflected in pro- · Ervin Duggan. As an FCC Com. missioner (a George Bush
networks get monopoly space ·on gramoung.
. appointee), he criticized the perpublic ai[waves for their sr.alions
Serious change began bubbling . ceived tilt at PBS.
- for free . If these slots were auc- In the early '90s; in 1993 Cong
Ben Wattenber(j, 8 oenlor rei·
tioned at renewal times, billions passe_d I~gislatioo requesting~
low
at the American Enterprise
would be added to Ihe federal trea· exammauoo of controversial prolnaUtute,
II the host or the WC!jfkly
sury.
_grams. CPB didn'I quite deliver, r,•hllc tele¥lslon prnoram
This shouldn't mean mucb to but they apparently got the mes•
'.Think Tanl."
"
•

. Swny Pl Cloudy Cloudy

Vfi Au&amp;lalod ProfS Gtop/ril;oNot

·Lending a ·hand ·c.·o nnects us all " In an article in the Journal of
Democracy, Harvard professor
Robert Putnam discusses bow
membership in organizations such
as the American Red Cross the Boy
Scouts is plummeting . As we
become less and less intertwined
wilh each other's lives even howling leagues are declining, yet peopie still come into the alleys to
howl a few frame~: alo_tle:_ ... · ..
T~e trend of _c oco~nmg , as
predtcted by SOCIOlogists a few ·
years hack, proceeds: In response
to ~ mucb. stimulation in society,
we mcreasmgly go home after
work and pull our "cocoons"
aroun~ us.
· Tbts reluclance to become
involved with each olber bas
become almost a sub-Ihe me to
President Clinton lately . As he
~n~ mon: an!l more Republican
m SOCial pbtl'?sopby, ~e continues
to hold up bts Amencorps as a
~ymbol that '!'e must c;onunue to be
mvolv~d w1~ each o_tbcr. As_ be
repeats camprugn pro101ses lo w1eld
a hatchet to government waste, be
always adm~ntshes. us to stay
aware of ~d linked wtth those who
have legt_ttma.!_e needs and ~ trug-__

SQUELCHING t' IRE - Members of the Pomeroy Volunteer
Fire Department put out a car fire tbat occurred at 4:16 p.m.
Tuesday neu his home on East Malo Street' in Pomeroy. No
Injuries were reported in tbli fire, according to emergency crew
lop. The owner or the car WIIS John Will, reports s!Jlted. (Sentinel
photo by Dave Harris)

W. VA.

ao

OPRAH

Two area man were transponed to a local hospital after an alter·
cation outside a Pomeroy bar Wednesday night, according to a
Pomeroy Police Department repon.
.
Coun Street Grill employees called the Pomeroy Police Depanment at 9:51 p.m. Wednesday when the scufDe started, records .
show.
Roy Neff was cited with disorderly conduct when be tried to
keep police from getting 1o the light, Pomeroy Police Chief Jerry
Rought said.
Con Stewan of Cheshire and David Klien of ¥ iddleport were
taken 1o Veterans Memorial Hospital, records show.
.

• IColumbus l3s• I

One possible explanation is that
while voters reuiaiii glad they put
Republicans in the driver's seat for
the next two years, they want a
viable moderate-Democratic president to balance Congress's potential excesses.
And Clinton came off in the
speech as the centrist thai voters
elected In ·1992, rather than as the
big government liberal on display
d~g the 1994llelllth- care fight
Despile Republican claims that
Ihe vo1ers have signed on to their
revolution, polls indicate that Ihey
not want to abandOn the poor;
back government into impotence,
or get rid of the services governmen! performs.
Olinton finally made it clear
what be' d actually done during his
first two years - . cut the deficit,
focus· on education - and wbat be
bopes to do in the next two, ruuoely, reform welfare, repair government and main lain prosperity.
He'll be judged on what he
does, though, not on what he says.
And in the new world of global
markets, maintaining U.S. prosperity requires avoiding collapse in
Mexico.
(Morton Kondracke Is executive editor of Roll CaD, the newspaper or Capitol Jnll.)

AN OVERWEIGH! .

Three ftrearms were reponed stolen from a Vinton residence
Tuesday. according to Meigs Counly Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
Terry Malbeny reported early Wednesday morning that bis residence was entered during the day Tuesday. A mub-nose .22-caliber
revtilver, a .22 magnum revolver and a Marlin .22-caliber riDe wilh
a scope were reported stolen.
The sherifr s depanment is investigal,ing the theft, Soulshy said.

MICH.

Fix it, don't starve it_.;..._......;.,.,..._____.;..._

•

r---Local briefs----

OHIO Weather

Cli·nton needs win on Mexico package

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sen ti nel-Peg~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Aeeu-Weatber" forecast

•

I

Thursday, February 2, 1&amp;9&amp;
Page--2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, February 2, 1995

$199

Twin, Ea. Pc.
$ 399
Full, Ea. Pc.
449
Queen, 2 Pc . Set
1099
3 Pc. Se t
1499
RESTONIC ANNIVERSARY MEDALLION
Twin, Ea. Pc.
Full, Ea . Pc .
Queen, 2 Pc. Set
King, 3 Pc. Set

-·-

$499
599.
1399
17 9 9

-~--

225
1549
749

M48
299
/

899
898

�•

Thuraday. February 2, 1995

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

The Daily Sentinel

:s ports

The Daily Sentlnei-P~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page--4

Thursday, February 2, 1995

f\lleig_
s
girls
post
66-30
win
over
Eastern
.
'

: Meigs jumped out to a 29-13 three periods with a 16-7 scoring
Meigs turned the ball over 14
halftime lead and coasted 10 a 66- advan(ilge. Jewell' added five more times and Eastern 19. Cynthia Cot10 victory over Eastern in girls' points in tbe period and Vanessa terill bad seven of the Marauders
:r"ri-Valley Conference basketball Compston and Clifford added four 14 assists and Brown bad four of
llction Wednesday evening at Larry • points each. Nicole Nelson scored the Marauders 13 steals. Eastern
R. Morrison Gymnasium.
1 four in tbe period for Easteni.
bad eight steals and seven assists,
•• Tbe Meigs win avenges a 58-41
Mei&amp;s placed seven of the nine no individual leaders were availless that Eastern hande.d the players ·they dressed in tbe scering able.
Marauders on Jan.12. The Maraud- column in tbe fourtb and final periJessica Karr le~astern with
are 11-7 overall and 9-3 in tbe od as tbe Marauders outscored tbe · nine points. Eastern bit 13 of62
)'VC' s Ohio Division . Eastern E~gles 21-7 to post .tbe 26-point from the Ooor fa- an ice cold 21%
and managed only two of 10 from
drops to 5~ in tbe TVC' s Hocking wm.
l:&gt;ivision and 8-8 overall.
Meigs placed all nine girls tbat the line for 20%.
• M · ·
ed t
1
tbey dressed in tbe scoring column.
"When you don ' I rebound or get
· etgs Jump ou 10 an ear y Clifford led three Marauders 'tn
tbe
ball to the open man you will
t 5~ lead after one period. Melissa
Clifford poured in six points in tbe double figures with 16 points, , get beat," a disappointed Scott
period, wbUe Amber Blackwell bad while Amber Blackwell added 11 Wolfe said after tbe game. "In all
flVC, including a tbree-pointer from
points and Jewell bad 10. Meigs bit sports, tllis group of girls bas tbe
25 feet out at tbe buzzer to give 26 of 74 from the floor for 35% potential felt greatness, but they
toleigs the nine-point lead.
including one for ·four from three have to give up their individuality.
: Meigs increased the lead with a point fl!llge. Meigs went to tbe line If they don't, they won't win witb
14-7 scoring advantage in tbe sec- 22 times, biUing 13 for 59%.
consistency. oitd period. Cheryl Jew·e n scored
·The Marauders controlled tbe ·
"The core of this group was 9-5
fiVe in the period for Meigs. and boards with a 60-34 rebounding in junior high and I would like to
Rebecca Evans added five for East- advaptage. Anne Brown pulled in a see them reach that potential."
em, including a three-pointer.
career high 16 rebounds to pace Wolfe added.
. : Meigs posted a 45-22 lead after Meigs. Nelson pulled in seven for
Eastern will travel to Racine
Eastern.

ets

lh MAC men's hoops,

today to face Southern, while tbe
Marauders are off until Monday,
when tbey will bost Belpre.
Reserve notes: Meigs jumped
out to a 14-2 lead after one period
·and rolled to-a 41-27 win. Carissa
Ash led tbe way with 15 points,
while tealnmate Brandi Meadows
adjled 13. Michelle Caldwell
scored seven for Eastern.
.

-·-·-·-

Valentine's 0ale for the Little

/ Eastern
-.(6-7-!1·'7=30)
Amy Redovian 1-0-1=3, Jessica
Kan: 3-1-0=9, Nicole Nelson 3-00=6, Rebecca Evans 2-1-0=7,
'Tracy White 1-0-0=2, Jessie a Rad"
ford 1-0-0=2: Totals: 11-2-2=30

A:ssodated Press Writer
. · Suddenly, Ohio University bas
· found itself in a must-win situation
going into Saturday's home game
with league leading Miami of Ohio.
. : The game bad been billed as a
slaowdown for sole possession of

Basketball
Allllldc Di.....klll

• Iuoa

.

n

a

L .~:&lt;~.

: .QrlaDdo .................. lS

I

.81"
• New Yort .............. 21 · 14 .667
·New Jeney ............ 11 29 .383
• "Botton .................... !6 27 .372
,MIIITii .................... 15 28 .349
• Alilr.delphii ........... IJ Jl .29.S
••WIIIbinjtOD ............ Il 30 .261

6.S
19
19
20

22.5
23

17

• CbJ&lt;aao................22

1.5

.605
. 59~

· JMiua .... ...............lS 17

2

21

.512

·Ali1Dt1 ......... ..........20

24
• Milw.ukee ............ .17 21

.45:5

8

• 'Ddroit.., ................ .I4

.386
.3"1

II
12.5

27

5.5

•

· #.!".......... . . . . Jf It .Wi
14

Jill

.659 ·

5.5

• Ho\&amp;too ................. 26

IS

634

6.S

· Denm- .... .. ............19

24

.442

14.S

: Da11u .......... ."..........17 2S
'Minoeaota .............. IO 33

.405

16

1233

23.,

P•lfkDimklh
• "Atoeaix..... .......... 35 9 .795
Seallle .................... 29 11 .72S
• L.A. Labrt ... :.... .... 26 15 .634
~ -5acramento ............l4 II .571
• Portlilld ........... ..... :22 20 .524
~ Uo1dcn State .......... l2 29
.293
• j...A. Oippen ........... 7 37 .159

4
12

21.!5
28

·

·

•
•
.

4 .500

L

12

8

(owa ......................... 3
Wiacoo.aia ....... ........ 3

S .315 13
5 .31S 9

7
8

Northwatern ........... l

7 . .125

IS

omo ST ................. o s .ooo

S 12
4 14

Saturd!y~s

Aviation 2, M.l.. Kin&amp;fl.PS 0, rorfei l
Cin. Doer Part 58, IndiaD Hill SS
Cin. Finneytown 74, Cin. Reading 57
Cin. Hillaett 98, Cin. St Rita 65
Cin. Lovelllld 64, KJnp Mills SS
Cin. MIWiemont S7. Cin. Taylor 44
Cia. Wyomina4S, Cio, Madeira 41
Col. «tanJey 69. OlenlAfl8Y 53
Copley 80, Doyleslowu 47
·
E. Uverpool 74, Indian Creek 55
Oeoraetown 77, Batavia 66
Orr.cn 12. Akron Sprinu:. 79
·
Kett«in&amp; Altu 59 , Hamilton Badin 47
Maoc:heater 77, S. Puint 67
Nellonville-Yort58, Athens S7
Nortoa 98, Ravenna Sl
Porta mouth Noire Dame 68, Coal
Grove 41
.
10011'\81. Wmhington 66, Gahanna 52

Ohio H.S. girls' scores

Wednesday's scores

Northwcstero 76, moo ST. 71
lllinai&amp; 79, Iowa 74 ·
Michigan 62, Wisconsin !58

Amhent 63, Rocky River 31
Avon Lake 51, Olmsted Falls S4
Bealbville 17, Frontier 7l (OT)
Beavetereek 76, Spring. South 38
BrovUide 57. Cleat\'iew 33
Buckeye Local 60. Richmond Edison
54 (01')
canton McKinley 44. Mao6illon Jack-

gamcs-

lou

Other Ohio men's
college scores

Meigs
(15-14-16-21=66)
Amber Blackwell 2-1-4=11,
-Cyntbia ·Cotterill l-0-0:2, Melissa
Clifford 8~ -0= 16, Kristen Dassylva 2-0-1-5, Vanessa Compston 3~2=8, Anne Brown 4~-0=8, Cheryl
Jewell 3-0-4=10, Ashley Roach 10-2=4, Taryn Doidge 1-0-0=2

·Mid-Ohio Conrerence

38

106

Ohio Athletic Conrerence

Friday's games

New York: at f'l il addpl1ia. 7:30p .m.
Miami al Wa&amp;hington, 7:30p.m.
Milwauleee at Chwloue, 7:30p.m.
Orlaildo allDdiaaa, 7:)() p.m.
Seanle at Alla.nta. 8 p.m.
~la.od at Minne~ata , Bp. m.
Su Antooio at Dallu. 1:30 p.m.
Oucaao 11 Phot'nil, 10:30 p.m.
Denver at LA Lakm, 10 30 p m..
L.A. Clippers at Goldrn Stair, 10 :30

49-45, Toledo defeated Central
Michigan 77~. Western Michigan
stopped Aleron 56-49 and Ball
State routed Kent 81-58.
All five staners Sl:ored in double
figures for Eastern (12-5 overall, 63 MAC) .
(See MAt.: nn Page 6)

38

Edsewood 60, CoDDCaut o45
Fairborn 62, Kertdlna Fairmont 49
Fllinoiew 58, N. Olrmted S4 (Of)
Fll'elandl62. Elyria W. 43
Fort' frye 15. ManrncCe..ttal:59
Fort Jcnllnp60, Colwnbw Orove 32
Garrlcld Htt. Trinity 82, Chardon

NDICL&lt;l

Gmct.uville 52, WaterloO 4.5
lhllnibai Ri-ver 48, D.ridseport 47
Harvey 68, AJhiObul•l4
Hathaway Brown 34, laUI"cl 23

Holy Name 79. ChaDel 38
J.c trmon Area 73, Madison SO
Keyatone 6S, Avon S3
Lake Ridge 43, Andrews 25
LeipSic 54, Ottoville S2
Lorain Adm Kina 4S, Midvlew 27
Magnificat 63, CJe. Heiafits 49 ·
MarlinK{on S2, Akron Spri111. 30
M,ayavil\e 5o4,lohD OI011D 46
Medina 44, Berta V

BaJdwin·Wallace 66, Hiram Col. 64
Heidclberi 86, Onerbeio 84 (l af)
John Carroll72, Mount Union 69
Mlllll:iDpm !i7, Marietta S!i
•Ohio Northern HS, Cap ital 74

12

•

Meigs66, Reedsville Eutcm 30
Millenport 47, Welliagton 39
Minerva 37: Ca.uton S. 33
Mopdare 64, Srreeuhoro 21
N. ildpvillc 43, Lonlin Southview 25
N. RoyaJtaD 40, Bnmswict 31
New Boltou 62, Syl1\l"Des Vall. 47
New Lexlnaton 55, Tri-Valley SO
Painesville Jlivmide 64, Genen 27
Racine Sou'thero 60, Wellston 5S
Rivt:r View .5.8. Crootnille 35 1

• Cups
• Napkins
• Stickers
• Doilies

MAKING HER MOVE - M~igs forward Cynthia Cotterill tl.kes
the ball past an unldenllfed Eastern player durlll(l Wednesday night's
TVC make-up contest at Meigs High School, where tbe Marau!Jers
won 66-30. (Dave Harris photo)

Winnipea .......... 1 4 1

Hockey
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Alla.nlk Oi.-~

N.Y. Islanders ...
TampaBay .......
Acrida ..............
Ru !adelphia ......
N.Y.

Ranam ....

2

2
3
4
4

1 17
6 18
6~ 17
S - 14

I
0
0I

so

New Jersey ... .. l J 1
Washingtoo ...... 1 J I ·
North~ut

Pittsburgh .........
Quebec...... ...
Buffalo..............
Bosloo .............
Hartford .......... ..
Monlteal

•

.!!: 1. I I! fA l&lt;l. ·
J
3
3
1

17
18

4

18

3

6

It

3

H

14

6 0 0
S 0 0

12 27
10 22

1B
7'

3 2 I
·3 2 0
2 2 2

1 .15
6 9
6 12

IS
6
10

2 2 1·

S

12

12

2 13

22

WESTERN CONFERENCE

:rum

Ccnlnl Dl'ri•kln

w L I .If: fA l&lt;l.

Detroit. ............ 5
St: l.oui'
.... 4
Chicago ........... 4
Torunto.
·J
DallllS .............. 3

2 0

2 0
3 0
2 2

2 I

10 26
8 27
8 27
8 20
1 21

.

u

IS

16
18

II

4 I 0
3 2 I
3 4 o
2 S 0
I 3 2
1 4 1

15
14
16

Cle. Sl. Joseph S5, Warre"osvillc 53
O overleaf 61, Mkl()ati. 48
Coal Grove 62, Perumouth W. 48
Col. DcSalea 57, Col. Ready 40
Col. Wattenon 62, Newwk Cllh. 42
Crestwood 49, Ravenna Southeast 48
Daly. Dunbar 93, Day. Belmont 36
Day. Mellldowdale 47 , Xen ia Wilson
Day. Patterson 65 , Day. Colonel White

·

Ottawa a18oaton, 7:30p.m.
Tampa Bay at N.Y. Rangm, 7:30p .m.
Quebec at New Jersey, 7:30p.m.
N.Y. lslanden at Philadelphia", 7:30

30% off

Friday's gam011
Chicago at Calsary, 8:30p.m.
Toronto at Edmonron, 9:30 p,m, .
. Detrail at Anaheim, 10:30 p.m.

SALE $79

-==----,--

•
Wake Forwt 69, N. Cat ali na St .·61
• • Wiadva-Salcm 74, N. Caraljo.a A&amp;T
Wiathrop 76, Co•tal Caro lina 62

•

Starting

Mldw•l

;

M...,-ay St 13, SE Mia10wi 79
Notre l&gt;l.nxi 7i . Jooa 58 ·
OtllhoP Sl. 12. Nebruk:a 6S
· _s.mi..l&amp;.l l. :ru~ao 1•~- . ~-.. -

-

Soutbw..t

• · . B1ylor 92, Mo.: Kant• C_i~ 19.
• Hou.atoa lOS, Tuu 96 {Uf)

Louiliao• rod16S. LanPr 60
• otlahoP79. low• St. 71
~
Oral RobaU I I l,llulto11-TiiiOtiOa 86
• • y..,. Tech 66. lll&lt;e 63
•

.

.

4

ONLY$5.69

ONLY$5:89

f ·1f2
·~

91 Mill St.

l'sl...l!:L

•

THIS SPACE
$12.00

•

t-

• In store repair in
. Gallipolis Store
• Financnirig ·
Available

DIAMONDS!

with

Women's
Colognes
Complete Stock

Dcllgblful, l'teob llowen
tn o hrlgbl nd bud vue,.
We CIID teld one
•oywbere.

• •r

I

I.
l'

~:
•

1•...
~

:.

l'

'•••
·~·

'I

Nature
Made
Vitamins

31elefiont

• POMEROY FlOWER SHOP

:,s: •·

......................M,...

992--6454

JrJt·········a
•.••.• ······-·.,
··:.-···~··
··
-···•·..p

•· ~ ...- ~··m

· it~clt'"~ }rWtrry 1l0rti

CLEAN SWEEP
SALE
.

61~
Wt
Qr;/6/alef
..................... . .

.

\

AT CHAPMAN'S
SHOES

~
fi

I

. S15 00 pr

- ....

or2 pr 52500

THIS SPACE
---'--"- I- - -$16.0,u.O~~
Men's &amp; Boys L.A. Gear
1/2 Price .
Take an Extra 20% off

FOR- ~ORE

··~

•.

Group Womens
Dress Shoes &amp; Flats
Connie &amp; Soft ·
Spots

•••

Group Childrens
~ Tennls_Shoes
1500 pr or
2 for '2500

25% SAVINGS

~-

ON HEART DESIGN JEWELRY ·~·
~S. P&amp;1t'f).«7S..~· · trll/l'if9!tS
.
STOP IN FOR OTHER SAVING.S STOREWIDE!

.Women's Connie Group Chlldr'e_na Shoes &amp;
Womena Grasshoppers &amp;
Dress Boots
Garden Spota
1/2 price • Take an
pr.
extra 20% off .

992·21·-s-6

.

l:.

20% off 30o/o off
SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY

...

-

~

Price

S.l••r
.

•
•
\ t· ...

Reg. $7.99

rrWay,

,

•
•
••
•••

lib.

f

~

I
•

heart.

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

$1000

CHAPMAN SHOES

INFORMATION

..

.

I

Pomeropy's Quality Shoe Store

• Visa; Discover, M/C
• Free Gift Wrap
i Free Parking

.'

Say it

·•·:e

992·6250 .

o..r.a

~~-44·

Middleport, Oh

·.

SAY "I LOVE YOU" WITH

106 BUTIERNUT

$13000

JLcquistionS

)fAC men's standings
.119 13

$8.00 .

.-"-----' IOK • Motlie-rs"'Ring- Heart-Band· 2-7 Stones

Pomeroy, OH

_ POMEROY,_OHIO • 992-2284
Open 9 to 5 Monday thru Saturday

Buy 1 Carleton Valentine Card Receive 1
Russell Stover 79ft Pecan Delight Candy .
Bar FREE No Limit

1rhntS ..

THIS-SPACE

1f;2 Price

Whilman's Sampler Heart

~

---.~

Earrings

Russell Stover Red Heart
Assorted Chocolates
I lb. Reg. $7.49

Complete
. Stock

CALL
NOW

The diamond heart pendant
Reg. SALE
$299 $179
1/&lt;tct. tw.
112 ct. tw. $549 $329
$999 $599
I ct. tw.

992-5177

THE FABRIC SHOP

Valentine Candy

.•••• •.

.

• • yt.COifiii'kloweallb 93. Radford 66
·

7¢can

'

·- .

.... -.$

• 65

Cold Pop

Timex
Watches

p.m•.
Montreal at Aorida, 7:3Q p.m.
Buffalo 111 Washin&amp;ton, 7.:30 p.m.
San J01e at Dallas. 8:'30 p.m. ·
Sl. Louia at Wi~ipea. 8:30p.m

I

South

100 E. Main St.

In a 5
County Area

Sale ends Feb. 15th

Valentine's Day, Feb. 14!

1

Alabama 6S, Auburn 63
O;ippia St. 67, Morpn St. 42 ,
DtPINI63, Ala.·Bi.rmi naham ~8
DeltfSt. 71 , M!ll. Valley_St ~ §.9 _ .. ·~
Florida Sl. 13, N.C.-Gretns6«o 65
Oeorae Maaoa 92, Richmond &amp;6
QeoraiaTcch I O,C ien.ou 50
Howard 74, Delaware St. 1)
Kcli.uciy 90, So!Ah Carolina 72
Matyland 71, Viraioia 62
Middle Tepa. 9J. Vandetb il190 (Of)
Milliuippi St 70, Fluridll 47
• N.C.·Wilmi oK{on 66. William &amp; Mary
. 47 .
~

OIILY ·

BUTTONS_&amp; BOWS

TD!Ilght's games

AVAILABLE
IN .THE
iuti:b~

Selections still
'Good! Plenty of
cold winte.r days

~··

: Major men's
. college scores

Cule (lnd affordable!
Diamond and pearl ring.
Reg.$129

SAVE EVERYDAY ON
"SINGER"

. Wednesday's scc;pres

I

,.

30% • 50% OFF
FALLPAGENT
DRESSES

Pittsburgh 4, N.Y. Rangct! 3
Hartrord 2, Ottawa I
DaUBS 9, Anahtiim 2
Calgary 2, Detroit I
Chicago 7, Edmantoil 0
'foronto 4, Vancouver 4 (tie)

• p.m.

A.muic:an Uni Y. 84, James Madison 78
Army 12. Lehigh 66
Colpte BS, Fordham 69
Hatatrl72, Vermon169
Holy Crou 9 1, l.alayette 76
M~P~ChUJetll74 , St Jo5eph'1 62
Navy 68, Bu.clalell 59
Providence 80, Seton Hal l17
VIllanova 78, S!. John'162

50% OFF
ALL WINTER
COATS

22

~:~ Amity Billfolds

NOW

Ask about our
Quilt Classes

20°/ooff

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

30
25

Quilt Batting - 1Oo/o off

Fashion Fabrics

112 West Main Street

I 14 10
1 17 ' 16
6 18 31
4
4
J

·Plates
• Dye Cuts
• Picks
• Balloons
• Banners

Office Service and Supply .

21

23

East

'

SauJoae ... .........
Caii"Y ·· .. ,""""
Anaheim ...........
Edmonlon .........
Vancouver ........
los Anael« ......

~0

21
17

Dhi•l.-.

Ott.awa .............. 0 4 2

1.5

Patine Dl•blon

NHL standines
Ium

l

Quilter's Calico - 20% - 50% off ·

at
BUTION8 050W8
40%-75% OFF
WINTER
MERCHANDISE

BULLETIN BOARD

Carey 62, McComb 41
Carrollton 70, Canal Fulton NW 35
Centerville 55. Xen ia 42
Chardon 43. Chagrin Falls 30
Cle. Cathollc Sl ~ Mentor Uitc CiiUl .

Findlay 9!i, Malone 86 .
~~Vunon Nazarene 107, Urbana

CLEVELANf&gt;at Deuoit, 7:30p.m.
Selltle at Orlando, 8 p.m.
Utah aLHoUJtaD, 8:30 p.m.
Otk:llBo at SacmneDto, 10:30 p.m.

~·

lndiana ............. ........4

n14

MichJpifSI. at Minnesota
Northwesttrn at Purdue
Ohio St. at Iowa
Wi~eonsin at Nortbwestern

Tonight's games

~

Ohio H.S. boys' scores

12
14
14
12

·

Wednt*lay'sscoret
Olarlotte 100, Bo5too 93
New Jersey 95, Milwaukee 77
Philadelphia 98, Wuhioston 89
Miami 98 , Octroi! 15
AUaula Ill , Golden Stare 99
IDdla.na 101 . CLEVELAND 12
Dall• I04, Minne*lta 83
Uta~;\ 129, Denver 88
· Phoenix liB, L.A L..aien 109
• .San ADtouio Ill , Portllllkllrn

.

Wilmin&amp;ton 75, WaaRter 61

2
5
7
6
6
4

7.5

10

:11: L l&lt;l.

I .157
2 .750
2 .7SO
3 · .625
3 .625
3 .571

Obio women's
college .scores

Defiance 114, Manche~;trr, lod. lOl

Onrall

Michigan. St ............6
Purdue ..................... 6
Michiaan ....... ,. ........6
Illinoil ..................... 5
Minncsota ........ .. ..... .S
Pen.nSt. .................. .4

Wooltcr 78, Ashland 71

Non-conference action

Kent at Bawling Green
E. MlchiJao. 11 Akron .
Cent MichliJan at W. Michigan
Mlamlat omo
Ball St. at Toledo

Ium

Mldwe.tiH•Won

• ,Sao Antonio ........... 27

Mi•mi 49, Bowlin&amp; Grun 45
Toledo 71 , Cent. Michigan 60
W. Miehipn 56, Akron 49

Big Ten men's
standiJijS

• . WESTERN CONFEREJ:!ICE

Nob-conferellce acllon

Kent 106, Ball Sl. S8
Miami BI,BowUnaGrc.en6l
OlllO 80, E. Michigan 70
Toledo 12, Cent. Michigan§\

Ball St. 81, Keol58

E. Mlchiaao as.omo 79

Cont.

The Eagles got 17 points from
Kareem Carpenter and defeated
OU 85-79. The loss put the Bobcats, the overwhelming preseason
choice to win the conference, a
game back of Miami.
Elsewhere in tbe MAC Wednesday, Miami beat Bowling Green

Mid-American Conl'eren&lt;e

Wtdoeiday,s scores

Sttpnlay's games

•
Central Dl•ll'on
• •Ow'loHe .............. :.28 16 .636
• CLEVELAND ......26

4 .556 II 6
4 .S56 II 6
4 ..5.56 10 1
5 .444 . 9 8
6 333 7 10
1 .222 ; 12
9 .000 3 14

Bowlina Oteen ., ...... 5
TolcOO ....................... 5
Ball St. .. ..................'. ~
W. Mith ................. .4
Akron ......... .,.......... 3
Kent ......................... 2
c. Mich .................... o

· ~BA standings
•

first-place in tbe Mid-American
Conference. Tickets to tbe matchup were at a premium. And OU
fans bad been looking forward to
tbe game since Miami defeated the
Bobcats 64-55 on Jan. 7.
But Eastern Michigan changed
all that Wednesday night.

8w~ethearu

Valentine's
Darty 8upplies
10% off.-.x~

Miami's win &amp; OU~s loss puts 'Skins in first
By JOHN SEEWER

Fabric! Fabric! Fabric!
SALE! SALE!

•

...............~···············~···············~·····························-.-:
.

.

'

'
•

I

).'

.

.

.

..

•

i

�•
Page

6 The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, February 2, 1996

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

:1n Top 25 ·college hoops,

The Dally Sentinei-Pag&amp;-T

_

~UMass win~ despite losing Camby and Roe; UK beats U_
S_
C

lh The A.'ISoclated Prus

left the&amp;ame clu!Chlng his left knee
. The ]"o. I team lost ils No. I . with 5: lert.
and No.2 players.
The ailment was later diagnosed
. - · Marcus Camby and Lou Roe as a thigh cramp, but Roe didn't
; were hurt Wednesday night in top- retom to the game.
: ranked Massachusetts' 74-62 victoUMass, wbicb trailed at half· ry over St. Joseph's. How long they time for only the second time this
: will be sidelined remains to be season, came out aggressively in
· seen.
the second half and toolc the lead
·
The Minutemen (17-1, 9·0 for good, 34-33, on Roe's short
· Atlantic 10) extended their winning bank shot. ·Roe made nine of 10
streaks to 16 overall and 41 stmight shOts, scored 19 points and bad five
: on campus, both the loogest in the rebounds and three bloclcs.
. nation, but !be victory didn't come
"Lou Roe was basically unstopcheap.
pable," Calipari said. "lf we could
· · Camby, a 6-foot-11 cenler who have got him the ball five more
:·iS the team's top shot bloclcer and times, be probably would have
·:No. 2 scorer, will be out at least scored ftve more times."
two weeks with a pulled hamstring.
The Hawks (11 -7, 4-4) cut the
If a re-evaluation today ftnds a tear lead to 43-40, but Massachusetts
.in the hamstring, Camby could be ggt tbe next eight points on a basftnisbed for the season.
ket by Donta Bright and consecu''Marcus will be out two to live three-pointers by Carmela
three weeks. That's what they said Travieso. Tb~ spurt gave the Minnow," coach John Calipari said. uteme n a 51-40 lead with 9:34
"It could be worse."
remaining. Tbey led by at least
Roe's injury was not believed to eight points the rest of the way.
be as serious. Tlie leading scorer
ln otber Top 25 games, No. 5
and rebounder for Massachusetts Maryland beat No . .15 Virginia 71-

, No. 6 Kentucky beat South
c62atolina
90-72, No. ~ Oldahoma

At Lexington, Rodriclc Rhodes
bad 19 points, six assists and five
rebounds to lead the Wildcats (143, 8-1 Southeastern Conference),
who took control with an 8-0 run at
the start oflbe second half.
South Carolina (5-12, 1-7) got
within nine points with 8:52 to go,
but Kentucky answered with a 10-2
run.
· No.l4 Oklahoma 79
No. lllowa State 78
At Norman, Prince Fowler made
two free !brows with 4.3 seconds
remaining to secure the victory for
Olclahoma after Iowa State rallied
from a 15-floint, second-half
deficit.
Dion Barnes scored a careerliigb 22 points, and John Ontje s
bad 12 assists. Ernie Abercrombie
scored 14 points for the Sooners
(16-4, 3-2 Big Eight), who banded

beat No. II Iowa Slate 79-78, No.
14 Wake Forest beat North Carolina State 69-61, No. 19 Villanova
beat St. John 's 78-62, No , 20
Alabama beat Auburn 65-63, No.
21 Georgia Tech beat Clemson 8050 and Mississippi State beat No.
25 Aorida 70-47.
.
No. S Maryland 71
No. 15·VIrginia 62
Joe Smith, the all -America
sophomore center. bad 29 points,
21 rebounds and seven blocked
shots - his 28tb double-double in
50 college starts _ and called it
the ''most complete game I've
played."
"Ordinary name, but not an
ordinary game," quipped Maryland
forward Keith Booth, who bad 15
points for the Terrapins (17-3, 7-1
Atlantic Coast Conference), now
12-0atbomethisseason.
Junior Burrough led Virginia
(12-6, 5-3) with 25 points.
No.6 Kentucky 90
South Carolina n

Iowa State (17-4, 3-3) its second
stmigbt loss .
No.14 Wake Forut 69
N.C. State 61
At Raleigh, fresb~pan guard
Jerry Braswell broke N.C. State's
triangle-and. two defense with a
career-high 13 points, all or them
in the ftrst6:03 of !be second half.
T.im Duncan bad 21 points and
14 rebounds for the Demon Deacons (13-4, 5-3 Atlantic Coast Conference). Fuller !tad 16 points and
11 rebounds for N.C. State (10-8,
2-6).
No. l9 ViDanova 78 .
St. John's 62
At New York, Kerry Kittles had
24 points, 11 rebounds and five
assists and Eric Eberz added 23
points for ViUanova (14-5, 7-2 Big
East), which bad a 16-2 run in the
second half to open a 70-50 lead.

Central (3-14, 0-9) led at halftime. But Toledo (11-6, 5-4)
outscored the Chippewas by 20
points in the second half.
' ' I won't tom down a win. but it
was obvious !bat Central Michigan
was much more prepared to play
than we were," said· Toledo coach
Larry Gipsi&gt;n.
Scoop Williams scored 15
points, while Kevin Baker added
14 and Bobby Krahulik 12 for
Toledo.
·
Vince Edwards led the Chippewas with 28 points.
Jason Black and Joel Burns
scored 18 points each as· Western
Michigan defeated Akron.
Three. Akron players fouled out.
. T,)le Broncos (9-8, 4-5) capitalized
a.t thJ: nne. Western bit 22-of-37
free throws while Akron made 5of-5.
·
'Tron Jenldns led Aleron (7-10.
3-6) with 17 points.
.
Marcus Norris scored 15 points
to lead Ball State past Kent.
With Ball State already up 10 in
the second half, Randy Zachary's
three-pointer sparked a 14-0 run by
the Cardinals that put the game out
of reach.
Kent (5-12. 2-7) couldn't find
the shooting range, making 28 per-

nd

James Scott, malcing bts seco
season, points.
led St. John's
) with
(start
• •or_the
Felipe
18
98 27
boo
Lopez added 14 on 5-for· 18 5 ting.
No.lO Alabama 65
Auburn 63
At Tuscaloosa, Lance Weems of
Auburn got .off a falling jumper
tbat banked in, but the offici:lls
ruled that it came after the rinal
buzzer.
That gave the win to Alabama
(15-4, 6-2 Southeastern Confer-.
ence) , which has won 25 of 33
meetings with its intrastate rival.
No.l1 Georgia T~ 80
Clemson SO
Travis Best scored 29 points and
w~nt5-for-6 from tbree-polntraDge
as the Yellow Jackets (15-6, 6-3
ACC) improved to 11-0 at home
Ibis season.

~----------~/ p---~--~--~

Dill'S
IPPLIUCI
SIRVICE

cent from tbe field.
Ba)l State (10-7, 5-4) had four
players scorein double figures.

Spaghetti Dinner

Mason Bowling
League results

Lodge#107
N
FOUNDATION
FUND-RAISER ITALIAN NIGHT
Saturday, Feb. 4, 1995
Spaghetti Dl1111er 6:30-8:00 pm
Auction 8:30 pm
Dance to D.J. "Super Sounds"
9:00 pm to 1:00 am
Couple $15- Slngl&amp; $10
Paid Foundation Members- FREE
to Elks and lh&amp;ir guests .

$10.00 tor two.

&amp; Garlic

Salad

Bread

Add~ Order

· Of Breadsticks
To ~r Pizza o~er.
Olily 9.9¢

PubliC Notice

19" S_u preme
Only $12.95

Includes

or

5

HappyAdl

Pana &amp; Service on Moll
MttkH Racine Mower
Clinic

I.Hdtng C'"k ConHrYanciy

Dlatrtct olftce.
The work covered by the
Contract Document• hat
been 11parated Into the .
following contracu:
Contract A • Water Main
Replacement Along Red Hill
Road . Thle Contract ·
Include• tnatallatlon of
1,200 feat ot 18•tnch
diameter polyethylene pipe,
1,000 teet of 12-fnch'
diameter polyethylene pipe,
a amillt quantity ot l-Inch
and ·4·1nch polyethylene
pipe, a email quantity ot
ductile Iron pipe and ITitlnga
aa well aa all' other Hama
llated In the Bid Schedule.
Contract B - lnatallatlon of
Precautlonery M11aur11
and Repair of 250,000·
Gallon Elevated Wiler Tank.
Contract c . Temporary
Pr11aure Tank. Thll
Contract
lncludaa
lnatallatlon
and
maintenance ot a 12,5CIOgallon ''"' preuurt tll'k
•• well aa all other Item•
llatad In the Bid Schedule.
Contract D • Painting of
Elevatod

ADVERTISEMENT
FOR BIDS
LaadlngC,..k
• Conaarvancy Dlatrlct
34411 Com Hollow Road
Rutland, OH 45775
. Separate aaalad Bide will
• bo racolvod by Loading
~ c .... k Conaervancy ·Dtatrtct
. at the omca ot the General
. Malllltor, 34481 Corn
· Hollow R011d, Rutlond, Ohio
, 4577~, ulltll 12:00 p.m.
·· (local lima), February 10,
• 11185, and than atuld omce
' publicly opened and read
~ aloud. A prabld contaranca
· will be held at 1:00 p.m.
(local time) on Wednellfi!Y,
Blddere may Bid on
; February 1, 111115 at the any one, ·ony number ol, or

16''Pepperoni Pizza

$5.95

Do YOU Need To Make A
· sTATEMENT

?
.Let Us Help
Banners, Vehicle Lettering, Magnetldt
Signs, Menu Boards,.Cl'mmerdal Signs, Warning
.~ ~D.b. Slgnage, Logos Designed OR Reproduced,
DOT Numbers

FAST!

Ask About Our
. Superior Shirt,
Hat &amp;Jacket

February 10, 188111a:
. Contract A $212,000
Contract B 81,000
Contract C 33,000
Contract D
Allemotlve A Ste,OOO
Allernotlve B 140,000
Allernetlvo C 73,000
· In addition to the Contract
Documenta, proapectlve
Blddera are required to
oxamlno the tollowl~g
aupplernantary motarlale:
1. Suboldenco Study of
Loading C'"k Conaervancy
Dlatrlct Woter Syatem by
Burgtll lo. Nlpte, Limited,
Auguat111114.
2. TonM lnapectlon Report
by CT Servlcea, November
18,111114.
.
3.
250,oon-Gallon
Elevatod Wator Tank
Orlglnel Dr-lnga.
The Contract Documonto
lt'nd
aupplam.ontory
matorlala may be exomlnad
at:
Leading
Creak
Cona,rvancy Dtatrlct, 34411
Com Holt- Road, Rutland,
OH45775
Burg111 &amp; Nlplo, UmHod,
5085 Rud Road, Columbuo,
OH43220

B. 81.1010
Pllrrrlll

' No Doc Fees

$8,688*~

~a:r

992·5914

No Doc Fees Oellve!ll·

• Floom Additions
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing
• Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

Mobile Welding
Diesel Injector svc
Injector Pump SVC
Tune-ups

.985-3879

&gt;I&gt;JIIn

FIBERGLASS RUNNING BOARDS

..' •

..

'

'

• Eltended Chass1s
• Ou"ver Srde All Bag
- • Anh·loek Brakes
• AH Condrhon
·· ·
· Automahc Qverdrrve
· Vrsta Bay WrMows. ·
• Power Steenng

• Power Brakes "
• Ti~ Steenng
' • GrUise · -"
• AMIFM Casselle
.· Power Wrndows
· Power locks
· 4 Captarn Chans

·Sola/Bed •
• Indirect lighting
- • F!remium Wf)Od Pkg.
• Full Conversion
• Frberglass Aunnriig Boards
·Loaded'
· · Sport Pillrj

·
Scheme~

BRAND NEW FUU SIZE RAISED ROOF
3/4 TON CONVERSION VAN .·
.

BRAND NEW '95 CHEVY
-S·SERIES PICKUP

·. 350 V-8 POWER, REAR AIR/HEAT

• Dn~er S1d.e ~1r Bag ,
• Anii-LOCI&lt; Brakes
· • Raised R®l • 350 V-8 Power
·Air Con druon
·Automatic Overdnve
• Vrsta Bay Wmdows

·Color TV
· PIS, PIB
·Tilt Steer1ng
• C:rurse
• AMIFM Cassette
· Power Wrndows
• Power locks

• Rear Anh·Lock Brakes
• Power Steenng
• Power Brakes

• 4 CaPta1n Cha1rs
· Sola/Bed
· lnd1red l1gh1mg
• Premrum Wood Pkg .
• Alumrnum
Runnrng Boards

.. Sale Pra lnOI.desGMAC FIISI
Tome Bu)'t'f lrcen~ye II Ou~l•ill'll

• loaded!

..' .-.
'94 PONTIAC SUNBIRD LE
,.

'

• Arr Condrtron
• Automahc
• PIS. PIB
• Power Door LOCI&lt;s

·, Power WinOOws
• Rear Dehoster
• AM/Ff.t Sle&lt;eo
• Console

'95 PONTIAC GRAND AM
• Power Brakes
· Power Door l01;:ks -

• Steel Belled Tires

·Custom Cloth Buel&lt;et se.a\S
• loaded! '
·-'M.fMc~~ AYa~

"·Sale Proee
ll"(:ll(les Pollt•iiC

UrW 30 rncen1rte

BRAND NEW '95 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE SE
· · Arr Condrtron

·Uual Arnatj·

• Anh-LW 81akes
I

II

"Ouailfte&lt;l

• Powet B1akes
• • Cru1se Control
• Powet Door lOCks
• Delay W1pers
• Power Wrndow~
·Custom
• AMIF MCassette
Cloth lnlenor
• T1ll I r
• Loaded 1

..

'94 CHEVY K-1500 414 PICKUP
·· Power St~r1ng

• Crt.Jse Control

·Two Tone Pamt

·Automat~;:

· Power Brakes

• Custom Clotn Seat

• A'-\IFM Cassene • Rally Wheel$
· Till Slering

Avad;t:.le
·Well Eq.~~1

• A1r CoO!IrtiOn

ttl Dot Fte. DelnoerM·

..
• Crt.rrSe Control "'
• Custom Cloth I
· • Loadecll

• A&lt; Condition.
• Automatrc
• Dual A1roags
• Power Stakes

• ,. Power Steerrng ·
• Power Door locks
• Af.l/FM Stereo

• De~y W1pers
• Custom Cloth lnlenor
·loaded!

• 1111 Sieenng

.' .

• Arr Condition

• Power Steen~

· 3800 V-6 Power

• PoWer Brakes
• Power Door Lock&amp;
• Power W1ndows

• Dual A1rt&gt;ags
·Anti-l ock

• AMIF!.\ Slereo
• Ht Steerrng
• Custom Cloth lnterror
• Loadedl

TOLL FREE 1·800·822·0417 ·~72·2844
344·5947. 422•0756

· ~'''""
• 4X4
• 350

'94CHEVY SUBURBAN 4x4

v.a Power'

·Automate

350 V-II POWEMI.VBIAIIII

·"Rear A1r!Heal

• AWFM Cassen6

frozen

·Fully

• Pr'S , P/8
I
• Till, CrUise
L"oar:led'
·Power Door LOCks • Trarlenng Package
I

Monday • Saturday: 9 am - 9 pm
Sunday: Noon - 6 pm

· Ta.oces. rags, n~e Fees ema Fleolne inCkJOecJ 11'"1 sale PfiCe ot new ve"-CCe
'•

••

.,
•

,I

'I

. to

20

992- 3954
lmcrqcncy Phone 9ClJ·J -l1 8

'

The Stale Certified
PawnShop

PubJIC Notice

Shrubs Shaped

1-6

Coploa ot the Contract
Documonta may be
purchaudat:
1
llurgoao lo Nlplo; Umlted
15015 And Road, Columbuo,
OH 43220
upon payment of $40.00,
None of which will be
refunded.
•
Proapecttva BIDDERS
may addreaa lnqulrlll to:
Mr. Torry Brackenridge,
Burg111 &amp; Nlpla, Limited,
15015 Reed Road, Columboll,
Ohio 43220, (614) 49-2050.
A alta vtoltatton can ba
arronged by contacting Mr.
Bronl l!lolln, 34411 Corn
Hollow Rood , Rutland, Ohio
45775. Taltpnon• (11 4) 742·
2411.
Tho Leading Creek
Con11rvoncy Dlatrtct
reaerveo the right to reject
ony and all bide or to
lncre••• or deere••• or
omit ony ltam or Item•
ond/or aword to the lowoat
and baot BIDDER. Each
prapooal muat contain the
lull nama ot overy pareon or
compony tntoroated In the
oome. Each Bid ahall be
delivered tn' a ualod
enveloped marked "Bid for
Laodlng Creak Conaorvancy
Dtatrlct Wotar Syatam
tmprovamento ." The
Loading Creek Conoorvancy
Dtetrlct raoarvoa the right to
wolve any lnlormoiiUea or
l,:,.gulorltloo In tha Bidding.
Succeoalul Blddora ohall
be required to comply with
oil Iowa portolnlng to

and· Removed

mlnmum

wage

Misc. Jobs.

1111 Slack
992·2269

992-2080

"""'mo

"We Loan You Ca$h on Anything of Value"
1·6= 1 mo . pd

Graded Benem Whole Lite is now abailable . The
·plan offers coverage of up to $10,000 with no
· physical e•am and rio health questions asked on
the application. Ages 40-BO

ROCKY R. HUPP

J&amp;L INSULATIO~

!f:lg BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT 992·2m
Office lfoura: Mon.-Fri.
8:00 e.m.-3:30 p.m.
Vlnyllo. Alum. Siding,
flootlng, VInyl
Replacement,
Wlndowa, Blown
Insulation, Storm
· Doora, Storm
Windows, Garages.
Free Eatlmateo

'

. ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
• Garages
.
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FAEE ESTIMATES

. 985-4473

tit Min

American General Life &amp; Accident Ina. Co.
P.O. Box 189
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45760

614-843-5264
Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fi re
Health • Accident • Aonu ity • IRA • Mortgage

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

,.

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
7/W94

Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

BINGO
Racine American
Legion Post 602
Now having Bingo
every Sunday Night
Starting 6:45 pm
Doors open 4:30pm
The more people
playing the bigger
the pay-off.
Save ad for 1 free card.
949·2038 or 949·2044

and

dlocrlmlnotlon of paraono.
Jf tho Contract Ia to be
aworded, the Owner will
the aucceoahll Bidder o
ottca or Awlrd by
February 17, 11185.
(1) 28, (2) 2, 8; 3TC

• Craftsman Tools
•Toys
•Guns
Loads of Misc.
Buy..SelJ..Trade

'

"We. Are Now Open . For Business"

Light Hauling,

SMITH'S
CONSTRUOION

COMMERCIAL ~nd RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

Custom 8ulldlng 1 Remodeling
• New Homes
• Additions
• New Garages
• Remodeling
• Siding
· • Roofing
• Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

614-992-7643
(No Sunday Calls)
21' 2192/tfn

MORRISON'S
&amp;COOLING

(614) 992-5535
814 992-2753

EPA and RSES Certified

Klll'l IPPLIIICI
IIIIICI

-Foc:tory Authorized Porto

&amp; Service
•All Malcee -42 Yllfl
-Fut Reliable Senllco
•Waahere - Dryera • Rangel

-Rotrtg8ratoro •Fr....ro
oOiohwuhera
oH.W. Heotero
...lcrowavea •DII~HII
•Thonko Mllga &amp;-

Howard L. Writesel
ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FRE(: ESTIMATE$

•Cuttom Mido
•Solid vlnyl
. riplaeomont
wlndowa
•Froo Eatlmat11
•$200 lnatallicl
Call for Detail•

Your authorized ,
. American Standard Dealer
Low Rate Financing Available
Call992-7434 for more information.:
1f2sis

-·Kenny's Auto Renta~
Kenny's is the place to come
when you need a car rental~
We Ha11e Cars anll Vansl
Kenny's A~to Center

264 Upper R1ver Rd.
Gallioolis, OH . 45631

. 1 -800-486-15~0

Bus. (614) 446-99'11
,..,.

15

·HAULING
Umeslone
&amp; Gravel

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS

.,

ded

Tel. (614) 992-5846

,_,.,

.~1_8,988

ud&amp;B

Ope mile out

Remembering the animals in winter

AUTOMATIC/V-8 POWER

• Automatrc
• Voo8 Po~er

Ll

143 from Rt. 7
Tues.· Wed. • Fri. · Sal.

WICKS
HAULING '-

.

WE HAVE A- I TOP SOIL FOR SALE

'"SWAP SHOP

. 1S

\

· ·Cu stom Cloltl lnterror
• Steel Betted Trres,

Limestone, Sand, Gravel and Co•l

"Your Neighborhood Lender"
115 W. 2nd St. - Pomeroy, Ohio

DAVE'S

CAl!fORNIA TANS

NEW CHM AS1RO EXTENDED CONVERSION VAN

POMEROY, OHIO
Sepllc tanka cleaned &amp; portable tolleta rented• .
Dally, weekly lo monthly rentalretee.
Job oilll ' Camp Sites ' Family Reunlonl I Plllltl
NOW OFFERING GENERAL HAULING

No'{els, romances, mysteries, b11ck to. the distribution center. ·
Mail boxes in rural Meigs
Count.yc are receiving a special westerns. and·other boots to read There is no ·charge to the reader for Surrounding Arua
(614) 98S..l561 or
949-2168
delivery this month In the form of a for enjoyment are available for this service wbich is funded jointly
992-5335
free service called Books By Mail loan. Information books such as a by Library Services and Construc5116194 TFN
· 12.11Wn
provided to area residents from the biographies of Tonya Harding or tion A Title I funds provided by tbj:
Meigs County Public Lib!llfY and Patsy Cline, cookbooks for the State Library of Ohio and by the
tbe O~io "Valley Area Libraries health conscious as well as the 50 Meigs County Public Library.
(OVAL).
.
Best Oatmeal Cookies In the World
WHALEY'S AUTO
Established in 1973 as the first
Come ran With
Books By Mail allows people to . DI3Y be borrowed. Books for chil- state-funded regional public library
PARTS
MeAt
borrow books from their borne and dren are also available in addition system 'in Ohio,' today OVAL
Specializing in Cuslom
helps those who have difficulty to special boob in large type for works' with local public liblaries to
. Frame Repair
getting to the library. CiTy residents those who have dirficulty seeing. provide a variety of programs
34110 Sugar Run Rd.
can receive a catalog by caDi~g the . and a section on easy·to-read boots designed to improve and extend
NEW &amp; USED PARTS FOR
for
adults
just
learning
to
read.
services to local residents .
. Library at 992-5813 or calling
ALL MAKES &amp; MODELS
Long Bottom, OH. 45763
A post card order form is proOVAL atl-800-759-1537.
OVAL is made up of public
992-7013 OR
Thousands of books are offered vided in the catalog.
libraries in Athens, Hocldng, JackSessions 5 00
Anyone interested in checking son, Lawrence; Meigs, Pike. Ross.
992-5553 OR
in the 40-page catalog in addition
to specialty catalogs. The service is ou' a book fills in their name, . Scioto and Vinton counties. The
TOLL FREE 1-800-848-0070
All Lotions ~ OH
like a public library in that patrons address and the title or the book on OVAL · Board of Trustees, which'
DARWIN, OHIO
borrow the books ror a fe\\1 weeks the car, and drops It In !be mall. In CQ~lsists of one trustee from each
949·2823113111 mo.
713 1191 TFN
and then retom them. The only dif· a few days a nylon mailing bl!ll member public library board, deterference is that it all happens containing the boob will be deliv- mines policy, controls finances,
through the mail, and borrowers ered by the local postal carrier.
and makes ftnal decisions on what
When borrowe., have finished services will be offered.
(Lime Stone Low Ralesl
'oon't have to leave !heir IKmes to
receive the service. ·
· .
~g them. the books go baclc In
Tbe Meiu County Public
All postage costs for sending the mailing bag and are sent back . Library is represented by Wanda
.•
and returning the boob are by the to OVAL. The postage is paid by Eblin .
·OVAL to the borrower as well as
!lervice.
(Speclllze In driveway
spreading)
Reasoaabla Rates
Limestone,
· Jo.• N. SaJr•
Gravel, Sand,
SAYRE TRUCKING
snow is around (as, alas, it baS been engine.
By ADMfWAfiT
.
Top Soil, Fill Dirt
lately) is essential. Dogs may play'
Remember to tighten container
Meigs County H~ty
614-742·2138
614-992-34
70
.One more thing to
bout. in and roll In the snow and even · ·caps and .store them in safe places.
.
In addition io anxiously wai · g for bite at it. But snow reduces body Etbylene gl~col, which -is lbe mai!l
. - !be ov~rdiie fuel delivery. woooer- wariiftllaiid doesnolbing IQ q\iel!c!! CQJIIJH!De.DI J!Umtifreele. tastes..... • ....;....;;;;...;,;;;;;;.._ _ _..,_ _ _ _ _ _,.
ing wbether the car will start on their thirst. Make sure that the sweet to both cats and dogs and it
Monday morning, and managing waier supply is not frozen by can and often does cause kidney
all the additional details required checking it and replenishing it failure if ingested.
when malting"it through a particu- twice a day.
Afler walking your dog , wash
larly cold winter, there is stiU more
That blanket thrown in Lady's her or his.paws with warm water to
to fret over. The animals that we doghouse can, because of a lealc:y, remove salt picked up from icy
humans have taken on-as com- drafTy doghouse. become
to sidewalks and driveways. l:)ogs and
panions, security, or hunters the ground. She can't mate a nest cats perspire through their paw
cannot manage the winter on tbelr . and her attempt at conserving beat pads; salt seriously interferes with
own. They have been domeslicated, is wasted. It is necessary to provide this process.
.
Finally, on very cold evenings,
wbicb means that they depend on clean, fresb bedding. Straw, bay,
to look after their health and enstm: shavings, blankets and pillows all bring all your pets in witb you.
their survival. They need us. ·
provide exua warmlb.
Dogs, in particular, are pack aniMany people may not knoW, Cor
Whether Uvlng Inside with you Dials and wiU deli~bt In being with
exam'ple, that pets that spend a or in the bam, your old tabby may you in your "den.' Plus, if the temsreat deal of time outdoors may have the peculiar habit of crawling perature drops In !be bouse, you'll
need more food as tbe weather 1into the engine compartment- not find that an extra cat across your
• •vtSff OUR SHOWROOM•
grows colder. These fur-bearing to ~y you but to take advaotage legs can mate all the difference. ·
creatures wort barder to maintain of the engine's warmth. So before
For information about the soci110 Court St., Po!Dflroy, Ohio
warmth and so may requ~ addi- starting the car or truck, tap on the ety's activities or to become a
"Look for the Rtkl and White Awning"
tional nutritional help.
hood or sound the born' to warn me~ber, contact Dorothea Fisher
992-4119 AI Tro•111, 0wlllt' I·BOG-291·5600
Water, even when plenty of · him tbat you are about to start the at 992-5427.

DEALER WJTH OVER 300 l'.O_CHOOSE

9888

992-2927

MDDIRI SUI'rAftDI

TREE TRIMING
AND REMOVAL

Books by Mail catalogs delivered
V~N

&amp;sbts For All Occasions
Hysell Run Rd. Pomeroy

949-2804

11211115

conatructlon coat •• of

. Custom Duirrud Gift

Oregon Chain Saw lara

614-843-5285

PubliC Notice
all of tlio above Contracta.
Tho work will be aworded
baoed on the lowoat ond
ball Blda recelvld.
Tho
eatlmatad

BASKETS

"In Stock"

Horold Peraon

Happy Birthday from
your si&amp;rers
Now that you 're
THIRTY .

J J ClASSIC GIFT

YOUIIG'S
CIIHII'III SEIYICE

814·1143-5192

P~RTER
My aren '1 you prelly

MAGGIE'S CROCKPOT
Clifton, w. Va.
304-773-51112
VALENTINE SPECIAL
Dlnnor For 2
Bilked Chicken $1 US
5 oz. Rlbeye S14.te,.M

50% off

32361 Dewitte Run Roaod
L.Qng Bottom, OH. 45743
Portable Walding
Aluminum &amp; Steel
up to '/..Inch.
Call Anytime
John Krider

PubliC Notice

Every Sat: &amp;Sun.
Starting· Feb.
202 N. Second Ave.
Middleport, Ohio
8:00 am. to 4:00 p.m.
Dealers Welcome
$7.50 a day or

5 lb. of Pizz(l

League - Early Wednesday
Mixed
·Team standings - Mei~s Golf
Course (26-6), Captain D s (2012), Thunder Alley Cats (18-14),
Chainsaws &amp; Roses (16-16), J&amp;L
Insulation (12-20), Court Street
GriU (12-20), Tony's Carryout (1022) and Banks Consb'Uction (8-24).
Team blgh series - Thunder
Alley Cats (1951)
'feam high ga!lle ,.:.. Thunder
· Alley Cats (683}
Men
Individual high series - Larry
]1.1organ (548) and Chet Wigal Jr.
(524)
Individual high game - Mor·
gan (211) and Roger Carpenter
(198)
Women
Individual bigb series - Opal
Wigal (525) and June Mowery
(493)
.
Individual high game -Mowery (185) and Wigal (179)

1cYI1Afn

Kerosene
Heater
Repair

"You CNUia lt. . We Fi..lt'"

Why Buy 2 .•. When
1 will do!!

(Results as of Jan. :ZS)

ForAIIMalor
Brands
Used Appliances
for Sale
Call
614·992·5515

G~~~

INSIDE
FLEA MARKET

MAC games ...__&lt;c_o_nu_nu_ed_rr_om_P_a~ge_4&gt;_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Meanwhile, OU bad trouble
5booting. The Bobcats hit just 29of· 76 shots fr!Jm !be floor, including nine-&lt;lf-27 three-point attempts.
"When you can bold a team like
· · Ohio to 38 percent you've done a
· good job on defense," said Easll)m
coach Ben Braun.
Gary Trent led OU (16-5, 7-2)
with 25 points and 20 rebounds.
But his coach wasn't impressed.
''Gary put up some numbers,
but he struggled mentally in the
game. This just wasn 'I one of his
better performances," said coach
Larry Hunter. · ·
The Bobcats committed 15
turnovers during !be game.
Miami (13-4, 8-1) wasn't much
better in its victory over Bowling
Green.
. · 'The Redsldns shot just 33 per. cent from the floor, bitting 18-of: 54 .. Jamie Mahaffey scored 17
: points and hacj lO rebound s as
: Miami got by the Falcons 49-45.
.
Dowling Green (1 Hi. 5-4) also
: had a rough night. maldng.l7-of-47
: for 36 percent. Floyd Miller was
: the only Falcon in double figures
: with 15 points.
Craig Thames scored 27 points
: ·and three. other Rockets reached
: double figures as Toledo beat Cen. tra1 Michigan.

Thursday, February 2.1995

1orl11Mftfn

Vacuulll Cleaner Service Special ·
Special offer includes:
1. Clean motor
2..Grease Roller Beanngs
3. Clean &amp; check agitator
4. Clean all moving parts
5. Clean &amp; check filter system
6. Check Belts
7. Check.electrical system ·
B. Replace filter bag

All for only $14.95 plus parts
One year warranty on work performed
Valid on all nationally advertised
brands only
.
We service most makes &amp; models

MR. VACUUM CLEANER
368 W,.

M!lln St. .~iply WV.

304-6144

�•

Thurwday, February 2, 1995

The Dally

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, February 2r 1995
ALLEYOOP

NEA ·Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

45
46
Canine cry
49
Talk·ohow host 53
- Oonohut
54
Supplicated
Alps, o.g.
56
(abbr.)
,
ACROSS

1
4

PHILLIP
ALDER
BEATIIE BLVD.® by Bruce Beattie

Announcements

3 Announcements

Real Estate
Wanted

Apartment
f&lt;H: Rent

tOOoc. form, - o d In
llooon Co. or botw-llooon •
Jockoon Co., WV. ~1.

Fumlohod Aportmonl, 1 Bodo
noom,I07 So&lt;ond A - 0 .
Mpollo, Utllltloo Pold,
114441 4411 Allor 7 P.M. .
Fumlohod EHiclonc:y All Ulllllloo
Paid, Downololnl fllllllo. t18
Second Avenue, Galllpoll~, 114441-3945.
Oroclouo living. 1. ond 2 bodo
room apt~rlmentl II Ylltaae

+1-

THE 1'1\MPERED CHEF
"Tho KKcllon Ilion Thill c To Your Door," Ll&gt;cal ConouHanl
. Avolloblo AI:
~-~
:•
· LMvoM-o!·i:oJI For lnlonnollon On Onlor.... K - Porlloo or For luolF-

.

:-

Rentals

._unllloo.

·-tole.

41 Houses tor Rent

.! 1 .Giveaway

~
:104~

2124

..... I'

••""•tee
I
you poy

tyr. old, molo, Huoky, to aood
cauntry hom•."304-e15-1Df.

a

......h.

~~ Woob .Old Lab lllud
, Blocll, 114-3tU'711.

Pu

3 Sm1ll Brwd M1l1

I

Bodo-ooo, Z Stooy 1200
PIGII!o. 71 Hubbonl
!II, Qelflpollo,
Dopooll,

"OK ... Who blincltolclecl the groundhog?"

llooillo, Fno For A ........

114-4-.

...

F-lly Onl'f 114-245-1308.

Lost &amp; Found

11

FOUIId ' Boyo Coot, Vlclnfly: Ado
Uvllle School, Found 1114115.
Coli To Identify, 114-3e7-o238.
Found: Male Beagle 3-1 y..,.
Okl, At . 35, Felrgroundt, 114318-1367.
lrN,

,... ..

lo~:er, If found,~ .... caii ·I'J4..
llt2·2045, reward.

a.r-

Loot: Brown Dochohund,
,..._ Rei., .,...,.. to ·Rowdy" I
chlld'o pol. 304-87&amp;-1715.

Loot: Young llolo A~rwdolo1
BloCk 6 Ton, ~T-• .........,
Tvcaon Lau, $10 -on11 awzU.el52.

Yard.Sale

18 Wanted to Do

HelpWinted

I Hove Hood Of Ono Rolloblo 01 rpe Portable Sawmill~ don'1
O r o u n d - - . w :::;:':J:l:'.,.._~~o ltw m II luol
You Don' Hovo A OoN Troalt
Emf'loyniOI• Aoc:ord, Don'l Colli
lntertorJexl..tor,
Thlil lo A Full n . . Job WKh Pllndng
Benefits~ C.ll Mr: L.eontrd. 114- drywall,
~
· .,.....,
446.0823.
work,ernall }ob"e. llaht Mullna. · ·
30t-tll-3e30, 304-1"71--1111• ll'J..
Lady n..ud to -llv..&amp;n w/~ ' 75115.
lady,

refenl~ ~\ollred .

.

7~~~~.

.

~;,.~-

re•r.nce

lochri:!:l
f'I&lt;IUirad.

rnume: 8u R-t, c/o Pl.
PI-nt Roglolor, 200 Mlln 91.,
PI. P - , - -.

21

Business
Opportunity

recommends that you .do bull-

Public Sale
,&amp; Auction

•

Rick PM,... Auction~.
full Umt auctioneer, ~,._,
•uciiDI'I
atrvlct.
Uc~
11166,0hlo I WHI VIrginia, 304773-5785.
AuctlonHr Col. Osctr E. Click.
LJc.nse I 754·84 &amp; Banded
:104~85-3430.

Auction•

'

every

Thureday-

Frtdoy, 7pmi...lll, Allo AuCIIon,

Rt.

11'_...,

2·33 'l.ironro.de"",
Price, Bill lloon

Ron

pluololo m.,.l Ed i!roZJor 130.
How A.,pentd on our Ngutar
nlght•l
Auc:tlono
overy
Tliurodoy·Frldoy, 7prn, lit. AKo
Auction, At. 243 -croe....-,
Ron Prlet, Bill MooN, amctr1ea.
pluololo morel Ed Frulor no.

9

Wanted to Buy

, _ wtth poopto y&amp;anow 1nil
NOT to teiKI monty Uwoug~ ~h•
...U until you ...,.ln...,ogoood
tho ollorlng. .
·
l.o&lt;:ol llodlctl SU!li&gt;IY Compony
now
occeptlng Vondlng: Won' Gel Rich Quick.
retumMiappliclltlone tor the fl». · WIH Ool A S t - Cooh me-.
-ng j&gt;orl~lmo pooHion: Ill~ Prlcod to Soli. t-4CIG,8~353.
!!1efAccountiCoUoc:11on
Aopr8-lllvo. Alll&gt;llcont m,.
Real Estate
pr1or modal billing ...
porlo,_
CPT ond RCFC
cocllng. ~omlllor wMh DOS ont1
Zenllr comput.,., Good comrnunlc.tkHI akflle •• t mu.t.

Mullt be able to work uneupenr'-d and JIOii- lhll __.

_ ...
.. · - tor workl~
hfrod
will
1111.,rnp
analllla
with account reciiiYtbl• In thil
coUectlon n.kl. Wafl• are ,....
gotlabla wflh ex.-rlina hawa

oro lloxlblo (II&gt;IM'OX.

24

por 3 Bedroom~, 2 a...., .....
COft.. Pump, Gu Fu.,.oo, 1 Aaro,

WHk). s.nd NSUN' IO:
tlnulty of Carl Inc., P.O. Box
388, Pomeroy, Ohio 45168.

Looking let ono lull~lmo ont1
one part-time per100. Mutt
know how to dNI wKh ttw
!:bile,~~=~
bo

......

o.:.":iu.t:- lie.
MVIJ:~:.!:

=:=.loon-. ....

v-.

Wantod To Buy: Bab¥ C11b, lillr
Condlllon,l14 441 lln't.
Wontod To Buy: Junk Autoo
Wllh or WIUtcKl llot.,.. Colt
Larry Uvoly, - - ·

Top Pold: AI Old U.S.
Colno, Oottl A"*., SUn! C&lt;o1no,
Oold Colno~ II.T.Io. Coin Shop,
m socona A-uo. O.lllpotlo.
.Wonted To Buy UMd llobllo
Horne, C.III"M ... 46-0'175.

Available In Ttw Wnt ytrglnla
Army · Natlon.l OUIIrd. l,lt Ua

Provide You WKh A llonlhly
Paycheck educotlonol Aulo-

tlnce, A

Or-.t

Rltlrwmenl: Plan,

Owlib'ook Center • now ao-lng O.Pfll!'*llonto let CNA'o
ltnd LPN o. Anyorw lntorootod
plelee eOIM In 1fid pick ~P an
1ppUcatiort Or contACt- SMIII
Plckono, DON ol 614-tn-&amp;472
"lr mo.. lntormotlon. E.O.E.

advertisements tor real estate
which I&amp; In vjolaUon of lhe law.
Our .readers are hereby

Plrt time bookkMper computer

••~rlertell MCeiSII)', 1"14-112·

11140.

a.

Rooponolblo, Committed, Will·
lng To Ba t..lnod. 5ond
AVON I AH - · 1.\ Shl~oy A-mo To SCCS P.O. Box !138,
·' ........ SOWll-&gt;121.
' Kerr, OH 415143.
AVON to buy ,...,., llo~ttn. lnTruck Drlvor Nooclod, COL Ro-rr NAillt "'P- 30f-882-2d48 or qulrod,
""'~nmo, Locol Driving
110011t21311.
And Sorno Bono!Ko. 5onc1
AVON SELLS ITSELF
A•pon• To: CLA Bo.1 345, Clo
Cooh lor Winter · Btno? Gllllpolie Dilly 'Tribune 825
Avenu., Galllpoui, .OH
- - Sl415 ot Work-- Third
Torrftory ODIIonol. lndop. Rop. 1· 45131,·

.

81rtendlt IW1ft,.a W.nted 1
Call114-441-4'751.

·

origin, or any Intention to

nlake any such preference,
Umltatlon or discrimination.

SmoU Loco! Firm Sooklng Full
Tlrne JOn Clll Cleaning "Tech~
nklan1. IIIUIII
Deptndltbl.,

HalpWanted

to advertise ~any prefererlCe,
limitation or dlscrlminatioO
based on race, color, rfltlglon,
sax familial status or national

A Trip To GEAIIANY AUO 85,
And ll..,h lion. Your Ex~- to lmoortont To Uo.
u 3fM.81S.I8:J7, 30C-175-3150,
or In WV, HIOCHI42-311t,

1

Employment Servtces

2773.

42 Mobile Homes
tor Rent
2 Bodr_, llobllo 1250/Mo.
S250
Oopooil,
Aeflrencet, 1"14-o387-0132.
2 · Sodroom llobllo - .
AoloronCO!', Dopooft, No Poto,
6-111&gt;1.

77 Ford Pickup With To-.
Automatic, Run• Great 1100,
114-379-2511~·- ---·"-- .. -·
1175 Dodge, 318, 4 op, Club cab,
314 ton, 2 rww front 11,... ..-pump, ,_ duolnlta,.,
1185, 614-247-4282.
1t77 Ford F-100 plclt up, 1 cyt1 .
1uto lookl • Nflll good. ,....

bodn&gt;0111 . oport_,.,
utiiKioo pold, prlvolo porltlna.

Two

river view, n&amp;Wmo.1 taG~
dopoolt, no poto,I14-H2-1121.

LA,.,...,
WIZ-IC:rtn"

;;o;;d
lntorlor,
··
ao;; .u•
some ·
oU, $HI,-114247-4282.
.

0 1QISbyNEA.Inc

FurniShed
Rooms

45

-lor-·wHkor_,h.
91orllna ol fiZOimo.HOiol.
114 4..,:0110.
stooping with ciooltlna.
Aloo tniltor on 11vor. All
-~po;__Coli 2:00 p.m.,
304·77WNI, ..._ wv.

Mobile

1.•1-

homO- lor..,. In

country. QIF~, ...., lnd
Wiler lnc:luded, cabfe IYIIIable,
$851mo.1 Juet 10 min~• 11om

Alllono, 114-11112-:1117.

Antiques
Bur • .... Rl•w"••

53

.Ant..._

1124 E. IIIIo 11-. on Rl. 124
-.y. Houn: II.T.W. 10:00
Lm. to 1:00 p.m., Sundlr 1:00
to 1:00 p.m. 114oiii2-25:M.

EIJiJ COJ!IiCL,1l1t (RIM~

A 10763

J04.17J.6021 or ~1'824.

BlU., lfJ£ t::I&lt;UG ~.
etu:ATIQlJ, ftXJSIOO ,
THE Wo/lfi!C1JI/IEI.JT.. .

v••

t., ·-CF'"-

Mqbllt hom• In the count~·
Wlter, garbage and ..ww In~
eluded. Jwt 10 mlnutaa from

I

This- newspaper will not

knowllngly accept

infonned that all dwellings
advertised In this newspaper
are a\lallable On an equal
opponunlty basis.

44

Apartment
for Rent

COUNTRY FURNITURE
Codor Bod_, SUHo, $711.
Mott,.o Sot, SIO up. 3pc. ~E
Toblu, $88 up. Zpc. Living
Room Sutte, $261 up. T1ble, 4
Cholro, $14t up. Curto, 4 &amp; 1
o....r CMOIJ.. $44.115 up. ltnl.
AI. 2 Nollh, 1"1. -.
I'IWIZO.

o.e.

ttoovy Duty - r •
Drvor1 Workl 0 - PliO !Both,
114-2•5 . . ..

~

Boot tho srng Ruehl Gel
trlmrnwa

~

=:"'·~:=

.-

.. .

Wolaht ......,. -.Jicflox
World ClooL LJioo 1100
114 ue 0123. 114411 oe1i

32 Mobile Homes

55

for Sale
Block,

1

Building
Supplies
brlcll. -

Dlpoo, wln-

.._, 11nt..., etc. ct.ude Win--

..... Rio Orondo, OH Col 114241.ftt.

CLASSJFIEDS ...
Your Key to Great Buy•

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

"=

l'Ooc., MS,OOO, Oolloolfo.
3 old otructu- off . .In
114tnl. ~7217.

388~311.

64

Wef,l-

2314.
Hoy lor

948-2121.

.

'II 11 ..... ry 4 ey11.-, 4 Spd.,
No RUII, Groot Gu 1111-

1100, 114-379-2181.

SNOWMAN ~

YOU CAN TALK
TO Tf&lt;E MOON . BUT
SUN WON'T LISTEN .

AKC
. ~lotCoeUr
Sponlolo FOr Adulo a
Plipploo, 114~-.
AKC
RoglolLallolflo- pu-· 7 - o l d ,
~bloocfl ..... S171,
AKC Yollow Lab Jlupo, Wormod
&amp; Arot Sltoto, ROO, ew-ae:
6331 BoiDno 1 A.ll. or Allor 1::10
P.ll.
.

,.

Pass

2•

Pass

Pass

5•

Pa ss

.t NT
6•

All pass

- ·
n

lOANS

OBO; 1885 ChoVJo' Co-.

run• gi'WI_!J1200 080; Cllll 814!

,112~111

evenlngt.

11110 Chov. llonto Corio, 1100,
runo good. 304-875~708.
ti86 Dido Cutlooo Supr.mo 2
Door, Futu,. Cl..to, lllnt Condition, Don' llloo Thlo Onol
- . . , Allor I:GO P.ll. , , . _
3511 Bob Soundoro,
1112 Tr1na Am, 11,500, 1 • e.
..... $1,000,1~·-·
18114 Buick Rofllll 2 lloO&lt; Auto
v... Now Tl..., &amp;houot, B11101J'
Well Kept. $1,H5,114-245.o318. '

,;

1181 M1rcury ~r. V-11
autometlc 1 air, loab Md run1
- · ,..ucod to Q410 114141-2879 or 114-MI·2045. '
1188 . LX Muslang, 5.0, 75 000
•x~lenl

1

MuC~

Nt~P.

~'L.£.

.

SO

L-ET'S MAJCe

IT Al'l tV~N

The players are sorting their

Diane

Keaton , sav s. ··Alert." Wes t.

CELEBRITY CIPHER

dummy. Voiee·over by Woody. I
· The trum p lead is annoying. Wolhoul
it, I could hawe ruffed two club los••r s_in ·
the dumm v. But ma ybe if the trumps
are 3-1. the person

with th e singl eton

1 will have both l op club honors."

I

Arter winning the fi rs t trick, Woody
i lead s the dub qu ee n from hi s, hand .
However. West wins with the king and
return s a second heart. IClose · up or
Wood y, bead s of perspirati on forming

on hi s brow

Anoth~r

BORN LOSER

.

P'

&amp;.. :)Tt.X:J(

ICE

,.

yOO t&lt;la:D TO C£T Ot&lt;E
OF~ R)JR-1-JIW..

I~ Ill£

N-!D~W , EI-\ .

~T£V£?

· t::41.1VE:

. ......-:;..._--...._

VffitCL£!&gt; 1

2·2.
THA.VE5

the · dummy , ruffs a di a mond in hand.

I'I&lt;\ 601 r-IG TO
C£T ,_ ZNo\OONtl

IJKIV•I

dummf s s pade two I . leads the spade
jaCk tn·dumrny's queen a nd ruffs a third
diamond in h1 s hand . lA slight s mite
crosses Woody 's ra ce .) He leads the
spade king to dummy's ace and cashes
the J · IO of diamonds. on wll i,ch his last

two clubs disappear.
Cut!

up . and decided to be a kid forever , playing games .M-

Antomo Banderas .

T::!:~;~' S@~~lJ\-"t~Ss

WORD

GAMI

lcUt•d ltj&lt; CLAY I . POLLAN

Reo.rrange .Jeners of
0 four
Ktombled words

the

be·

low to form fo1,1r words

I' I I I I' I
SINSAG

I' I

I

ARNYI

I" I

:'.:~

IN

SAB A E

•

1 16
.

_

o

"Thatguywiltgowheretheeasy
bucks can be made ,.. one fellow
mumbled "Yea," another man
laughed ,
everyone has

MA NA p A

_

.
•
.
.
.
by tollin g 1n the~ m•nmg word \
L-....1.-..L.~L....J._.L~..J __rou develop iro m step N_g 3 b_elow.

OF lliE G~ OON 'T

-TrockorProllilo.Uood Vory Llttlo 35 HP llltn:ury

SCHOOL CAfETERIA IN A
TVXEIX&gt;. Ll''iTEioi\NG ·TO
~\': LAME DT.&gt;

PRINT NUMBERED
lETTERS IN . SQUAR ES

LE':oS
EXPENSIVE ,

AND &gt;'0\J

UNSC RAMBlE fOR
AN SWER

STILL &lt;&gt;ET

TO WEAR
COOL SHOE"''

4 ToyOio P225/75Rtarotlel tiM
whh olock -lo, Q25, coli

=

Sout- PlcltolJp Porto llodli,

Cobo, Dooro, Foridora &amp; !lor!,
- . 4x4 Drlvo Troln Porto J

IIIIM South Of Oollpotlo AI Ji.o.
lion AI. 7 I Rt. 211 lEW
PHONE NUIIBEA: ~I ·

Services
,.,.

.

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

llolnlcac ·-ontl-llotollo llor!!o .
......... For~- OOillmolllo!M ChOt,l&gt;l-tiiZ-3.
• . ...,

today by m~1lmg $ 1.25 to Astro·Graph ,
cJo this newspaper. P.O. Bb)( 4.465, New
York , NY 10 163.- Be S!.!.re

to-sta te your

ZOd iaC Sig n .

PISCES (Feb. 20·March 20) Today you
may have a certain knack for ke"ep1ng
your own se-crets while elCtract1ng Confl ·
dent1allnformat10n from oth~rs

Aon'o TV Sorvtco -'"1111
In ZonHh aloo oOrvwng
olltor lnndo. Houoo Cillo, 1·

::3

----WY~.,
82
Plumbing &amp;
· Heating

C'Your .

F,__,.• -lng And Cooling.

W'Birthday

conciUon lrtoloflollon And - · EPA
loodod, $5500 OBO, 114-1112! Carttftad. Anldalt'-1,
cto~ Ol14-2a-1111.
:1142.

Cola••=

Friday , Feb. 3. 1995

Electrical &amp;

Good beginn•ngs are often essential to
happy endings Take th1ngs one st~P at a
time and build a firm l ounda ttOn to
strengthen your material pos11ion 1 ~ the

P•r~knte,

Rata, loftblrde
Cocklllolo, ole. Floh Tonk I Poi
Shop, 241• , . . _ ,AVL Point
Pluunl, 304-171-2013.

year ahead.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 2Q-Feb. 19) The lavors
you do lor others today mighl not be
I .

w;t h a d•lflcull dec•s~on . seek adv •ce
today from a close fr1 end wh!) !}as ~coun ·
sel~?d y_
ou w•sely 1n th e past.

VIRGO (Aug . ~3·Sepl. 22) You may
hav~

some new •deas aboul your queer
today . but keep them under wraps for ttl e
11me be1ng . It would be wtse to lesl them
belore re~eallng anything

1\RIES (March 21 -April 19) Ma1n1aon an

LIBRA (Sept . 23· 0CI . 23) Try to d)Siin·

ophmiSIIC ou tlook today regardmg your
matenal status, but don't push for tl"ungs
wtlen you sense the tim•ng IS wro ng .

gu1sh between be•ng rationally proteCII\18
and merely bemg possesstve ol the one
you love . II you hold the leash too lightly
today . 11 m1ght snap ·

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) You r deler·
rTunation will be Impressive 11 you locus
on a specitic goal todaY . Put your enetgy
toward

a worthy purpose.

GEMINI (May .21·June 20) A valua ble
lesson can be learned today by observing
h ow someone y'Ou admtre conducts
him/herself in a development sim11ar to
one you might have to face later .

CANCER (June 21 · July 22) Today you

might be privy to some conFidential 1nfor·
repaid immediately . but when lhey are .
maHan about soinething t.hat w•ll occur
you'll receive more than you gave . Get a
soon . It could be prOfitable knowledge.
jump on l ite by understanding the Influbul use 11 w ith discretion .
ences that govern you in the year ahead.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) II you a re laced ·
Send for your Aslro-Graph predictions

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) II you
refu se to settle for second best today . an
tmportant deve lopment can be f1na11zed
10 your sat1stac110n . The secret is pers•s·

tence
SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 2J·Dec. 21) II you
put off doing someth1ng impor1ant today.
someone else tnvolved w1ll have to prod
you 1ntO act1on Do not wa11 to be pushed.

CAPRICORN (Oec. 22-Jan. 19) This 's a
good day to take stock of your' tmanc•al
s 1tua l!on Samel h• ng v~ry constructive
could result Hiat m•ghl help you make or
save mo ney

I I

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

STRIKE A BLOW IN THE WAR ON
. HIGH PRICES. SHOP THE CLASSIFIE.D$,
-· .

•

3:,Yol Plk:od· Tronomt..tono
• rwbul~. oil typoo, uri!
lng It Nli owner 114-3~2831.
Johneone Tnn111 h IOn And
~ And llobuln
Aloo, Cooh And
Tra,n••ontlrhloolila01n••• • ......,.

84

NWMVNW
NWVGXYLE .
,
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "An actor is someone who probably Slopped goowong.

I
WANT To c;o 1 WHO WAH1::0
TO HANG AROUND THE

...., 1gJI.

R F G l S

~-~i: ~~l~~ . but some are no
1---.,--,r::,i--T.I":-"1,-..,,..--1 G) Comple te !he chu ckle quoted

Boatsl Motors

Home
lmprovaments

XWHV
EM ,L GW

MK

X W H VI

I XW

I I.s

for Sale

81

KVWOFWEIOP

' L

•

. LOT$

614-HZ-7048.

WOOLENIME .

voice -over by

·· Now. I must establish dummy 's dia ·
mond suit ."
He pl3ys a diam ond ·to dummy's ace ,
ruffs a diamond in hand, ruffs a.club in

CFZW

· YMRHE . '

H

L G

CVFR

'H

Woody.!

'

ffil:) 15 A.
FOOR-I.Jlf£L

Celebnly C11Jh1t• cryplograms are crealed I rom QUO\aUOnB IJY famou.li peoPle, p811a.no pre:&gt;enl
Each le tter mlhe ctpher sla.nds lor another TodBy"s cltffl P equtt/5 Y

·

·IPan to Woody. who is sludyon g the thin

ZI£.L.ION I

1nc:

by Luis Campos

draws Wesr s las t L•·ump Idi scarding

1184 Mon1t C.rto ·2dr., PS, PB,
IIASEIIENT
AC, new Urn, new pelnt exc.WATERPROOFING
cond. 30H75-1238.
'
UncondKionol lllollmo g - .
18114 Tompo, t13.'~3llo runo t • I...D!QI n,..anc• lumllhed.
aood, body rougn,
, 3Q4. Coli t-100-217-01178 or 114-237Slt-2806,
04blea Watoopowllt•lb..

ml*,

Action~

Buzultl 210 ,_...,~r wllh
........ hi• r.c:U, llltetrlc
olort, SIOOO, I,...H2·7803.

Accessorlea

card a

19 voatage

obviou s: He

111110 Honda 200 - l o r , OIC.
cond., 12400. 304-875-3824.

Auto Parts&amp;

11 Give oullhe

have much fun . The rest of the

1H7 luzuld Lt 230S 4-wiiUIIf
good .. fl310 or,·trodo ..,;
liood pickup, :J04.475.3N4.

1 • Corvaa:• Canv., twa tope, 4
ap., • m11tch nMdl tactlreetoratlon 151100,114-247-4111.
11711 FCO'd Thundorblnl,. Oood
Condhlon Robul~ T •n, 302 Autamatlc, Rune Good
$1200, 614-441-4514 or 441-37113.
1180 BMW, high mllee, run• and

. f'tOyl

o· ,':l'l~Do,N("'

'113 Suzultl Kolono 100, rwd, :11200
mlloo, $3400, 114-11112-3011 bot·
-tlon&gt;-apm.
1H7 Hondl. 250A 4 "tlulw, .
..... motor, uc. concl., . . . ..
3041-112-33112.

lng, 12400 0110. :104-N:z.allt.

- · · SISOO
080; work,
1111 Chovy
Colobrhy,
noodo
· 1100

NOT SUit~ E~.ACTt.Y

•

r.,otorcycles

4dr.,
•81ty10Jft,
..,..._
1 -71,000tnl.· ·-

10 Small atovl

reason why

ca rds ..WOQ.dy apco~ th e bidding. When
Woody rebid s three he art s, North .

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

ten Fonl F-150, 4x4 1 1 Cyll.-, ·

75

paymenl

9 Mojlnol

Pass

that promises extra values and an ex.·
ct~ !!ent heart suit. '" Keaton proceeds to
drive the auction into six hearts.
West leads· a tru.mp 1\s she tables the
dummy. Ke aton say s. " Good luck_. ··

5 - · Air CondHoont~ ••,...

74

7 Mother ot
Castor and
Pollux

8 Insurance

Does this filmmaker
play bridge?

.

·~

39 Negative prellx
40 Odors
42 Eat
44 Pedal dlgll

Tony Roberts. inq,;ires. "We play t hat

'711 Chovy ~114 Pickup, nroo,l2200
114--1111.
1811 ~ F.. Slzll 4x4 Air,
AIIIFII Coo-, T-r, HKch,
1 Owow, I S - . tOOK lllloo,
VO!J WoH Corwd For, VO!J
lloi&gt;Ondoblo, $8,000, 114-4*-

:167-7755.

37 City In Italy

5 aatep
6 Ouro- - to

should take up bridge .
How wouldhe film himself playing?

RATS~

1
•

=~~~ ~ng: 14,100, ,,..

I

446-2342
992-2156
675-1333

"GUESS
WHO?"

DON'T DON 'T!
PLEASE . DON'T!

DON'T MELT M'{

73 vans &amp; 4 wo·s

6llto.

aound

tim e 1 don 't have any fun at aiL " The

Hay &amp;Grain

=.. .. -

~

Hing

po of dinner

Woodv Alle n said. " Most of lh~ lime I

~~....~~~~

Alpho And Mlxod orchonl Oraoo
~00 To P.21 A ~
11113, 114-3ll.zTI4,

4

Be gloomy

35 Mexlcan coin

:1 .

don "t

N.w 11 etatl hor11h1rn for IM•
.
wt_,ure, locotod on - l c k $37,000,
Rd. off Croll CrMk Rd., 11188 . Chovy lllvorodo Culton
S3001mo. 304-124-2773.
truck. excellent conclllon. muet
.... $8200,.......,.4111.

t•

-~--WI
. , Palnt!ng, nlng. A...., To -

GIT BACK TO

MISTAKE !I .

m-41, - •

==-c=::-::-c:::-:---==

COWl

By Phillip Alder .

:JOU75.

4 Holololn ~ Jloody To 18M Ford F-11101• .,.ry Cloonf
FNohon Colt Aftor 1:00 80,000 Olialnolll-, lluot Bolt
114-317-711t
E
- · · 114-211-1471.
11181 OIIC, 2 11;1 ton :11,000
Brwtl Umoueln c- . And G.v.w., 22' du"""'groln bod ·wlh
Croubrod c- For Solo, 114- 1-ock . rocto., ~.ooo - .

1011 Colobrlty Euro-Sporl olotlon .
wagon, .
nice,
arn/tmJcaautte._. ~~ oto. 1ir
new tlrft ifid Hml
family, $22SO, 114-~= or
114-M.. 2045,
•
1811 llon:ury Lynx, Autornotlc·
JI!,_PB, AIIIFM Slono, No Ruot'
Stou,I14-441-7D211. •
'

•·
:zbr. 12&gt;1~1.'."' -~.'!'!. llofg~ntown, wv. 304-IJDoMTL

I

Livestock

63

oole. Round 6 oquoN
boloo. 304.atl5-3173.
Llrgo round hoy boloo lor Alo,
$20 ooch, 114-1112·3064.
~~Chot llonao SIS; G.E.
~~Ill; llocllnor 111, Llrgo oquo,. boloo of good
mixed hlly, 11.75/bele ftrlt cut,
S2.001bolo cut, 1~
.
llo-k 01111, Mel· Auger IlK II 11437.
- . ..... wlln bul boriol, 1111;
IArcln 310 plolot 141• Jonnlngo lllxod hoy let ooo.. fl.liCtlbolo,
310 Dlolol, Sll; ~ :li Spoclot, colll&gt;l-1.._.
ezl~; 410 dou- borrwll, filii;
10 caliber ntUZZio lootlor, hi;
chomol ~romeblo -nner, $120; Dive 1 S•p Shop.
Rt. M3, Pomwor, 114-112.a80.
Transport at 1011
buying • ...ng vldoo
a•-· olotinoon'o Vldio, llld·
dlopott, 114-1182-3481.
. AlS Furntturo. wo buy, ... ond 71 Autos tor Sale
Couch, $55; · Slmmonl BOX
SDrtrt.. ll1ttre. S71i Fr~mee,
$ill; llillch $21Sj CoOorod Tolov~
elon Stand I"M •41 32.24-.
.

• K Q 9 7
•A J 9 5

Opening lead: • 8

g...t toolte•
""""'
·ewConclluon,
OBO;·
.q11

::::,...J=':N:;c,:n;:;-=x 1lOW
~•.,~eo=-=-"-.."'.,..-,.-....,..__,.:.la,..:..t~-opo-,
mlloo, t!Oplty wlnnor, 114-

'

lnlo On
Van!· 1
w0 . , _ COmo&lt;
1.01 Pon Lllno Oullon Cloonod Ught l:!!oullng
Courl. PhoM 114 441 IIIII, 114~.• '!~~. Rooldintloi, s 1...; 441•77Jl
~-1.
LIMITED OFFER! noW 141110 :Z. .
3br., $518 DOWN, Na P_,to
o~or llyra. FNo Doh'OIY &amp;
Solup. 304-7554511.
N- 18115 14x70, Inch- lll&lt;lrt·
lng. olopo; blocko, 1 ,.or
homeowner• lneurance, 1rid I
montho FREE lot ront. Onl'f
1820 - n ond fiM por mo.
CoU 1o800-837-3238.
NEW BANK AEPOSI 0n1v 4 lefll
•
Novor I~ ln. -781-71tl.

.•

lllxod Hoy -.
Th""""", OH ,,..__

LAYNE'S RJANITUAE
Complolo homo lumlohlngo.
Hours: Uon-Sit, ..5. 114-4411 and 2 bedroom aparlment-. 0322, 3 mlloo out Bulovlllo Rd.
fumllhed and untumlahed F... Dellvory.
MCurlty depoelt rwqulr.cl, nO
PICKENS FURNITURE
.,..., 814.992·2218.
Nowlllood
2bdrm. apt1., 1oCal electrtc, ap-- No •ppllanc., Hou8lhald furI.
plloncoo lumlohod, foundry !!loftlntl. 112 mi. Jonicho Rd. Pl. any
!II,
::CO'J WV. CJwnor•
room fKIIht• cloM to IChool PI-nt WV cal :J04.1711.14110, -lloclty Paoroon.
--77N341.
In l-n. Apptlcailono ovolloblo e1t ue lua.'
ol: Vlllogo Onon AOIIL ... or
SWAIN
coll814-l&amp;:z.37n. EOit.
AUCTION &amp; RJRNITUAE. 12 '11045.
:zbr., 2nd IIO«, ltlletwn fur- Olivo Ill., Oollpollo.- I lMod
nished, WISher/dryer haak-up. tumtture. ........ Weelern a Refrlgertllora, Stew-. w..twe
1yr. lelll, no pate. 304oi'JS..I357.
And ~rw. AI RtaaiMIIIDned
Wont - ·· 1,.._,111.
And OoUrontoodl fiOO And Up,
Apirlment for rent In PC»rMray,
VI'AA FURNITURE
. Will Dollvw. _ . . _ ,,
$175Jmo.; houM In New Keven
114-441h1111
. '
fl25/mo.; 614-tn-71111.
Oualhy HOI11hold Fa.wnMure S.m Somtt -u ..•• Army Surplu•,
At&gt;PU- Oraol 11oo1o On by Sondyvlllo - Olllco, - . .
BEAIITIFUL APARTIIEHTS A'r "'"'
C.oh And Corry! RENT·2.0WN 1:00pm "Ffi..Sun. Jr. ca~mflaua•~
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON And Layowoy' Aloe Avoll-. IIWtll lneulated cavenlt. Po.
ESTATE!, 536 Jocklon Plu F... Delivery WHhln Zllllloo.
blue blbbo fll. combo! - ·
frOm S2;u to 1285. Wolk to ohop
..... :104-21NISI.
:o~vtoo. ca11 .,_2588. Wo-,_pryor, Color T.V., CB
Radio, 11krowave1 Refrtterator. Blodu For A Bolton Tree·
114-251-1231.
lor, t200, 114 311 • •·
Clooo To Tho Library, Coottrol
Hoot, Porklng. Lady Ago 25-48.
Shore Apt. Wfth Cltrlollon 52 Sporting GOOds
School Toochor. Po~ 1/Z llont 9KS Rlfto WHh llocll Rom Uno
P2l •n&lt;l UlHIIIoo. I~ 411 4335 Stock
And ......., 118G·, , , . _
(I:OO.O:OOpm)
10M.

LOVELORN!!

runo

Flrot . Soconcl Culllna OrchonJ

starting

FERGIT YORE
ADVICE TO TH'

I TOLD ZELDY
SHE WAS MAKIN'
A TERRIBLE BAD

61 Fann· Equipment

~

To Tho Unlvo,.Ky, 614-388--.
Arnone Sldo ly ·Almond,
2 ' Bodroomo, 5 lllloo, Rl. 211, Ice I Wiler In lfoOr,_J:!k• Now, 1
Gallipolis,
$250/Mo.,
$50 YNr Worronty $"""; Amono
Security lnclud" W1ter, 1114- Side By Sltlo Block Dooro, - - llobllo ' Dol·&lt;·
1
, ..,
Wlrlllnty.
1211i ltomlat r.ra· We Carry A Com256~169, 814-258-1337.
Rotrtgorotor F - Froo fiiiO; plolo Stock Of lntorllwm
2br Uobl.. Home On Bob w..her Mltytag 1 v.., W.r~~~nty 128EER Hoot Pumpo And Fur.McCormick A01d For Rent, 114- $205; Wloltor o.e. Modol, ,_.. -And lloblle ·Home Fur446-1669.
fl50; Woohor Whl~. - EIICol- noco Po~• WKh Flnonclrlg
.Avolloblo C.II- Bon-'1 llcibloo
2br. trailer, Hendenonl moectv lont CondKion, fiM;_ . K Hootlng~'a:
lumlohod, wuhor/dryor. 30(. Rongo !10 Inch hi; ,... Ringo -441-11411
or f.
. 114Aott
30 Inch $115• lin« 773-5248 onytlmo.
Uo
About
Tho
EmP!,.
llobllo
$111; ~~b~,
Worronty,
Watt Fumooo Tltot Uooo
Nice 2 bodr-, forgo yord 21 mtl;
- ..... eon.
No lloolrlclly. wv 0111212.
SilO; Allin Ex-nt
P!on:h Sl, Konougo, OH ~~ .....
dKion. And With o.u...
11173.
~~ Vlno
3br. unlumlohod trollor, oil 91-, OiUI
114*7BI,
etectrlc, In counlry $275/mo. 1.801).4- .
piUII $200 aecurtty depoeft. 304-

Athena,

BARNEY

350, . . .
point job,

ro-::• ·:,-OJ ""lJ,.uoon

1 Non-profit org.
2 Believe -not
3 Ane~Uon·

Start
Ways
Snake

Vulnerable: East ·Wesl
Deale r : South
West North Eas t
South

2·2.

I'M ALL
EARS ! !

DOWN

slolhl

25
28
31
32
34

•2
•Q 7 6 2

GUESS WHO
'ULOY MAE
ELOPED OFF
WITH?

61 Berracuda

20 Broaldast food
22- Expel
24 Three·toed

84

solution to hi s problem is

=r. wrp, 131100.

Milley

18 Ruatian co-op 62 Gun grp.

'e A K Q J I 0 9

PEANUTS

Farm Suppltes
&amp; Ltvestock

13 River In France 57 Metal faatanera
·14 Repellth:;m
58 Purchase•
15 Typo ollenuce 59 Author
1&amp; Care for
~nalt 17 - St. VIncent 60 - lily '

SOUTH
• K J

11113 Chobv 1 ton duol'f 1ruc1t,
lntomotlonol 240 Troctor WKh fiiiOO. 111811 Chov\' von, good
Cu~lvotor And Corn Ptont~ oond., MOOO- 104-f75.7217.
PTO 111M llodgo e.to.- Cob,
S3 711· II~ 13,111! -~ , _ tino, $28150 080;
13S II~ Shorp $4,850 '114-ae! 11183 ono lon Chevy 4WD, """'

Goods

• A Q 2
• 5 ' 2
•AJI 08:i4
... 4
EAST
.. 9 8 5 4

• 8 7 6
06 3
•K 10 8 3

Bhophonl
Pupo,
IIOnoo, Wonnod,
Both Poranlo D!l' Proml- No 11178 Chovy 314 ton, 350, 4 borrwl, $1200. :104~7&amp;-8818.
,...,.... 171, 114 • • 1518.

lroyl111 110111, ·lcwMeat, chlllr,

CJ
~ ~po::ny:'::.=:I047'::~"'7"'&amp;-,C'Im=.
ol - ..'1':-;,.:'"ecm. -11M -141M, 2 -c=--c-,-- l _,.,, TOIII Eleotllo, U. ......

'

OISRJ6lDAY..

=.

Bitt

fullbrod,

1870 Co..-s'faood ........ 3pc

Household

1180 Edga•c :d 14x70, 3 a..
room, 1 1IZ both, , _ corpot,
centn~l air, pmtt, fum.......
porch and deck. exceltenll con.
dhton, S8500, colll14-94e.~tt.
18110 Cloyton 141160 1/Z Acre lolil
2 BR, 1 Both, CA, Colhodr
CoNing. 2 Doclto, Foncod Yonl,
Clou To GaHipolle, 128,000.
614 446 1833.
18 Wanted to Do
11113 Sunshine 14J:78 3 BedAc• y,... Service. ComN.te tree roams, 2 Bath•, Lliundry Room,

=··:.";:.:= :MH17L

(.Ur,

1117 Ford hNvy holt- 4WD1 4
kit, chromo
311, ·4 1111
BBL,
73,000 -~~.
orlglnol
mlloo, oloo hoo .I - , ¥ltY
condKion, t4000, 114-tltiZ-

Pets tor Sale

Oomton

Merchandise

~lerchandtse

51

56

54 Miscellaneous

-~
..,.-- r· E-Iont p_,,-g.~:~~~~::·~,"~""~,.::iiil~,~·=: :!~~ct-t.'::l'~~.~:ld~U
.
-blo P - AI - · Coli
878"
Toll F-, 1-100-417.atel, En.
:liS.

MJD 'TilEAJ

~ I.IJll-\0(~ .

1183 Ponlloc Grontl Arnc_4 door,
:M,OOO mlloo, ~ ...
Wlntod to buy· . 'II or , _ r
Coprico Cluolco . - bo
llrOughomo or LS, Vol, loodod, 4
door,l14-1112-3802.

In II._PCII't. From
1232-$355 • Coli lf4.8112.stl58.
EOH.
Nice 2 br lpta, In PoutMOJ •
Mlddlrpart,tM-112-1111.

2 Bedroom Trailer At AQ. C10M

MO.J:o

"X - ·'

tu-, llor .lv...,
chlno,
lumft"!!..
•
or
_.
loloo, &lt;lOlly IIOrlln, lf4.0ll:z.l1Mi.

MIDD.£ C&lt;.A55 iAX

· :JOU75.1231.

1HZ Pontile FJ.-, · OoN
CondHion, ~ Mltoogo. Aftor I
P.M. 114-441·7843,

Rtv...a.

46 Space for Rent

at 12•
300Jmo., cab• available, 614AI Irick Homo 3 Sod-. 'KT tH-2167.
OR, LV, 1 1/Z Bolho, Fun a-! Nice 2 Bedroom Mx70 S3501Mo.
montli2 Cor OoroGo.
tt ' + Electric &amp; Water, B•WMn 5 -8
P.ll. 114o441-2515.
Doon Drlvo Dr.lfl-'141
._uttful l4onw OJu' akJna Unturnllhod, v..., Nlco, Ma7D, 2
Olilo Alvor. UPIIOr , _ , 3 Bod' a.drooma, Bultt-ln Stereo.
1'0011111, 3 112" lath., F.mllr
Buill-In
Mlcrowl¥11
Welle
Room; Eot-ln KKcllon, WK~ .Around Stovo In KKchon, O.rDlohwo- And Trooh Compooo tlon Tub And BltGwor Stall,. Blttor. Fonnal Dining Room. 11ng On Privett Lot, 1 MIIM
Flnlohod Booomont WKh liltnll'f' From O.lllpotlo On SR 218,
Room, Roc. Aoom Laundry $300illo. · Hud Wolcomo, 114Room Wllh Drive 1
n Garege. 441·1600.
.
F,.. Gae, In-Ground Pool With ·
Extra• Laroe Deck. o.t.ched 4 ·
Cor Ga .. go WKh HaL Appn111.

-='

-1112::.7:1a.

32,0000nl., -

I

1182-3121.

Ac,.,,

' 11

tHO 2dr. Fonl Sodon - . _

1

lng ltnd
to mou
dollvorloo. OoN moth oklllaltnd
Ct.. n Latt Modtl C.r1 Or olflco oltlllo holplul. lluot bo
Trucks, 1987 f.'odtlt Or Newtr, lblll to ,....rch producta for
Smith BulcW · Pontiac 11!00 - - lnlormllllon.
Ex!lstam A~ttnut, Galllpolla.
porlonco • caohlor ond typing
helpful. Dul._ Include, bUt .,.
Decorated atonewt,., wall ttl• not limited to: waiting on cu.phOMS, old lampe 1 old thtr· lorno,., Olocldng - . . - .
momalen, old clocu, tnUque
toontna. light dollr..mttura. Alvarln1 Antlquea.
olopllonii - . . oild 20 Fruit TI"Mie. Blac:k Top Ottve,
lhla Moore, owner. 814-882ng. Poy nogotlablo B•utltul Li.ndac~plng, 5
2520. Wt buy ••••·
pon
Ia andl'or ••J*Ifnca. 61-7835.
Don1 Junk HI SoU Uo Your Non- S.nd ra.Ume Ia: Office &amp;.vice
112 Wool lloln
Worldng llojor Applloncoo, ltnd ·
·
l'oitioroy,
Oh 411118.
Color
T.V.'s,
Poolllon ovollablo lmmodloloiJ.
F---. VCR'o, - · -o,
Dry-. Elc.114-21f.1231.
-~~ ~ory Technician·
......_ Court!Y l!ranch Of Hoi.
J a D'e Auto Parta and W. 1
nr·cuntc. Plrt-nmo Ennlngoi
Solunloy llornlng. Soiid
lrucltl.-.
lor-- And
bU'ylrig
........_ To: Holz• Clnlc,
773-1343 ..
Human ANOurcea O.PirtrMnt
nmbor Wlntod, 5o1oc1 And 110 Jockoon Plu, Golllpollo, oil
A~ real estate advenlslng In
. Cloer Cutting Avolloblo. F- On 41131.
this newspaper Is subject to
SilO Eotlmot-. 20 Yooro Exthe Federal Fair Housing Act
YOUR DAYS AS A
_..I'IDI, 114-317-7088, Or ....... IIISSINO
IIEIIBEA OF THE MILITARY???
ol1968 which makes it illegal
!!87·7054.
CHECK OUI Tho Port·nmo Jobo
old
lll&lt;llloio,
Old tlghton
butt- Iron
--...,.
·

Largo 3 bedroom lonn houoo,
porlly lumlohod, 1400 pluo
HCurtty, 11~92·5783. .
New home under con.tructlon
complate con.Uucllon In lalu o"f
rent, located on HorN Crnk
Rd. off Crob CrNk Rd. 304-&amp;24'

Du",y:; _,;_•- - - - -

Lldy
Noodod
To
W«&lt;l :z.K, Young School Alii
Wookondo Bln&gt;-apm To Core For
=~ -~~..
Elderly Lady Coli 1-1540.
Locol buolno• now hlrtng
quollllod olllgnmont
Fmanc1al

·tNOliCEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.

8

/·

F,.ur, Sfove, • Retrlgerlllor
lncludod, Pluo T-h Plcii-Up,
P5a... ._. Deoaoll. No Palo
In - . 11UM «1112..
.

OoN Homo, 114-379·2552.
Holt Blue _.., And HoH

7

1NSI Fonl At•t, Good Condl-Uon, Sl,l50, 114-44f.2101.

3 Bedroom Home In Country,
VInton, Largolol, Woohor Dryor,

2147·•venlng..
Booutllul Colo To Glvo-, To

Rutl1nd

1111 Covollor, Sood., ~lgh mHoo,
run• good. ~~-M.

72 Trucks for Sale

4 pupplel. 2 m1t., 2 f.ma.., to
~ good homo only. 304-87&amp;-

Loet.fn

Apo~monlo

and

Auto for Sale

71

Doae, Excel-

- Wotch Dogo 114-3-7 or
114-379-2435.

6

Minor

•

KIT 'N' CARLYLU by Larry Wright

8
12

Crocklo
Turn to atone
Force
Mixture
Horoldlc
beorlng
Enlortalnor Sumac

Bestow- Flute- Madam - Forger- FAST FOOD
"Newlyweds have it easy these days," the older woman
told her friend. "All they have .to do is eat at Moms or go out
lor FAST FOOD "

..

�•

Page-1G-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middlepon, Ohio

Step-mother feels like cheap .babysitter
Ann
Landers
· Dear Ann Landers: Here's a new
one for you. First, let me say I am
·divorced and the father of three
: wonderful children. I love them very
: much,and I LIY to spend as much time
· with them as possible. At present, I
am with them about three days a

.wCelc.

: Recently, my ex-wife asked that
: my present wife, "Babette," waleh ~e
· Children every day after school while
: she wllrks. This means until 6:30 in
~ the evening. It seemed like a great
·· idea to me since the children get
. along very well with Babeue, and o~~
: home is a pleasant and familiar place
· to them.
· : The problem is that Babette
: believes that she should be paid lhe
: sameasanyotherchild-care provide~
since she is performing a service for
which my former wife has paid others
in lhe past.
·. .My Conner wife feels that Babeue

is obligated to watch the children for Bahcuc?
free since they are, after all, my
Dear Ann Landers: I had never
children and she is now my wife.
heard of rubb ing an onion on a
Babetle says it's not so much the mosquito bite to take the itch out until
money butlhe idea that my ex·wife I read it in your column. I have had
· isjuSllrying to lake advantage ofhcc some expcflcncc, however, with
I love my children and am in the other lrentrncnt s that have been
middle of a batlle between these two highly effective . Perhaps you
women who are not crazy about each would lik.c to share them with your
olher to begin with. Do you have a readers.
solution? -- BETWEN A ROCK
Meat tenderi zer work s if you
AND A BOULDER IN COLO- moisten th e w'c lt and rub the
RADO
,
tenderizer in firmly and let it dry.
DEAR ROCK OR BOULDER, Ordinary whl c salt will work the
WHICHEVER SEEMS MORE same way, although it is not quite as
COMFORTABLE: I can understand effective. The styptic pencil used _to
Babette's resentment because she stop bleeding from .small shaving
feels your ex-wife is taking advantage nicks is the best of all . Of course,
of her. Howeycr, in my opinio~. she when you bathe, you will have to
should be willing to lllke care of the . repeat the treatment. And·,
children without being paid.After aU, incidentally, this trcaunent works for
they are your kids, and she is their Oea bites as weU as mDSquito bites.
s1epmother, not just a person sent by
I hope that you will print my leuer
an employment agency.
and that silme of your readers w111
I suspect this may be Babette's way find my suggestions helpful. -of sticking it to you~ ftrst wife. Not JASPER IN DENVER
only is her behavior ungenerous, but
DEAR JASPER: Thank you and
if she loves you, such mean- hundreds of others who wrote tc
spiritedness will not do much to
enhance the relationship. Is there an
unbiased third party who can talk to
·'

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

1994 CHEVROLET
BERE~

I cylinder, auto.,.~lr corid.,
AM/FM cUHite, tllt., CNIH,
PS, PB, PW, pow~~r door
locke, more.

$11,9~9

sec:-

-Community calendar--

SALE+SALE+SALE

;•. 20_%_flFF_ALLDEXTER SHOES ~·
!*.30% ·oFF Nr~&amp;REEBOK HIKE;s
~·
40%
OFF
ALLCONNIES
.
.~· 40% OFF REG.PruCEINOURSAIEROOM
.

.

.~ ONE GROUP CONNIES Now 10.00!

219 N. SECOND

Rick Boone, Ph.D.
Psychologist

Department ·o f Psychology
90 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, Ohio
446-5379

·suoE PLACE
992-5627

v-e, auto., elr cond., AM/FM
call., ttl!, cruln, PS, PB,
PW, power door locka,
power aeet, more •.,

a1

.

1 cylinder, auto., air cond.,
AM/FM CIIHitl, tllt, erutN,
PS, PB, PW, power door
locka, power 1eat, more.

$12,949

Vol. 45, NO. 195
Copyright 1995

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, February 3, 1995

By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Staff
Meigs County authorities bave closed tbe investigation into allegations
• that a Racine fwmer buried infant children on his property, said Chris
Teooglia, assistant Meigs prosecutor.
Slate and local crime officials announced Thursday that the autopsy
results of a two-montb..old baby girl's remains were.inconclusive.
Lisa Faye Rose, daughter of Harold Sr. and Mary Rose, apparen(ly
died from crib death on Oct. 5, 1984, Meigs Sberiff James M. Soulsby
said.
.
She was exhumed from the Gilmore Cemetery outside Syracuse last.
December as part of an ongoing investigation of her father. Her body was
not embalmed, which speeded decomposition, Tenoglia said.
"It's probably always going to be between them as to what really bap·
pened," Tenoglia said of the family, that had at least .t6 children. "Unless,

-

1993 MERCURY
SABLE

v-e, auto., air cond., AM/FM
can., tilt, cruiN, PS, PB,
PW, power door locka, •
power aeat, more.

$12,949. $12 949
1993 F($D
T·BIRD

4 cyl., auto., elr cond.,
AM/FM atereo, tllt, crUIN,
PS, PB, r•r defogger,
more. ·

$12,949

$9,349

1994 CHEVROLET
ASTRO VAN

1994 FORD
AEROSTAR

Extended length, v-e,
auto., elr cond., ttl!, crulN,
AM/FM can., P$, PB, PW,
PDL, more.

Extended length XLT, V-6,
auto., front 6 rear elr,
AM/FM call., tllt, erulll,
PS, PB, PW, PDL, more.

$15,949

$16,449

1994 FORD
F1S0 .4X2
Long Best. 300 e cyl., auto.,
air cond., tilt, crulal,
AM/FM CUI., Ps; PB, Pwr.
lumber ~t. 7,000 mllea.

$15,949

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
Building an action plan ID create
a basis for growth and development
was the empbasis of Middleport's
strategic planning session Thursday
nigbt.
ViUage officials and ccmmunity
leaders met at Overbrook Cenler to
review a list of priorities established a.t last week's meeting and
discuss ways to implement prosrJ!DIS leading to those goals.
. The emphasis of the meeting
wlis on the viUage's capacity- or
ability io achieve - bow to get ·
momentum from the community.
the timetable for goal achievement.
and in what order the nine priorities
should be addressed in order to
PLANNING FOR PROGRESS -Middledleport.Cindy Oliveri, abon, led the group in a
show early success.
port ol'ftdals and community leaders.met Thurs- · discussion on bow to achieve the priorities
Ohio Slate University Extension
day night for another strategic planning sesoion
defined hy the group. (Sentinel photo)
Agent Dave Boothe was joined by
geared to the growth and development or MldCindy Oliveri, Meigs OSU agent,
to facilitate the discussion. As a
part of the process, the dozen or so
• providing for growth develop- that "together we can do bigger and . ning and then the expenise of the
auending - inclUding Elizabetli
Schaad ol the Governor's Office of ment for small businesses and ser- better things."
citizens and groups must be put to
Appalachia - divided into groups, vice businesses,
He stressed the importance of work.
each. taking a specific priority to .- • addressing quality of life selecting a priority rot first coilsidDwelling 'On m'Oney- rtom tHe
discuss who needs to be involved, Issues such as cfitne, education, eratipn wbere the goal can be onset is a mistake, according to
wbat needs to be done, bow it can recreation and basic needs.
achieved early in the process of Boothe, who said that if it's a good
• developing a "small town" putting the strategic plan in action . idea and people want it, there will
be accomplished, and when it
business strategy, giving support to · That, be said, contributes to the somehow be a way to finance it.
needs to be completed.
As for the priorities defined as local business expansion plans,
"band wagon concept."
Having successful projects early in
• developing sites for new busilast week's meetill1!, the group
Boothe discussed the "common the process is important bec~use
applied those priorities to capacity, ness, including the Hobson indue- . vision" and referred to the people need to sec results, having
ranking them in order of early goal trial site,
"Empowering the Vision" project little tolerance for long-tenn pro· • developing the Marina Park of the Rock Hill, N.C., community jects with lag time.
attainment as follows:
• defining types of induslry that area and establishing a Middleport and the lessons learned from that
Boothe also stressed lhat any
Community Center.
the community wants and needs,
planning process that could be plan needs to be nexiblc, visual,
Content, choice, and collabora- applied to Middleport's develop- and publicized ..
• educating and assisting
witb incentives to local start-up . tion were listed by Boothe as nec- ment program.
Another session will he held to
essary to excite resources and
businesses,
He stressed that it is crucial to finalize the strategic plan on Feb.
• gc;tting citizel) involvement involvement. He said that the com- get the community involved right 16 al 7 p.m. in council chambers at
munity must Jirst have a vision; duri.ng the planning process Middleport Village Hall. Purpose
and pride in·the community,
tlr.lt !bey must be involved in the . because it is a way of educating of that will be to take the Middleplanning process, and that the gaals and empowering the public . He port Strategic Task Force and tum
must be supported by concerns. He said that the leadersbip must pro· it into a steering committee to
said Ihat the community must know vide the direction from the begin- move forward oo an action plan.

.

+

1993 FORD
.. RANGER SUPERCAB

Officials eye
cause of area
man's death

4.0L v-e, auto., elr cond.,
AM/FM cea1ette, tilt, erul11,
PS, PB, PW, power door
lock•, more.

$13,449
1990 FORD
AEROSTAR

y. Ton, Y-11, auto., air cond.,
. Extended Length, 4.0L v-e,
PS, PB, power door Iock1, f ifJ. •WIOII,, air co0 d ,,_PS , PB 0 Ult,
tilt, cruiH, A~ ce...tte,
crulae,_ .AM/F~
more.
·.: more.

$8,949·

0

I

A Long Bottom man may have
died of a heart attack before the car
be was driving crasbed Tbursday
on Stare ·Route 124, tbe Meigs
County coroner bas rold the Gallia·
Meigs Post of the State Higbwa¥
Patrol.
·
'Dr. Douglas Hunter told the
patrol a preliminary aulopsy would
be performed as early as this afler·
noon on· Charles M. McGrath, 55,
5.1154 Bald Knob Roadr
-~~c.Grath was the_driver.of a car
, · that was eastbound in Lebanon
Township at 2:15 p.m. ~ben it
went off the right side of the road,
striking an embankrn(nt and a tnce.
The car was slightly damaged,
acrording ro the report.
. Hunter told the patrol that
McGrath possibly ba.d a heart
attack prior to the accident. LL Dan
Gibson, commander of the GalliaMeigs Post, said the patrol is not
listing the incident as a traffic fatal~ ity until it receives a final report
from Hunter on ibe cause of death,
possibly within a week.
Tbe Racine Volunteer Fire
oi:panment responded to the scene,
sending tWo trucks, its EMS squad
and 17 firefighters . The victim was
removed to the Ewing Funeral
Home.

A Multimedia tnc. Newspaper

foster care when authorities began the searcb. The children, ranging from
9 to 15 years old, are still in foster care.
In October, Rose's 53-year-old wife was admitted at the Southeast •
Psychiatric Hospital in Athens, Tenoglia said. Her health has since
improved, he added.
,
This case may always remain a mystery, Tenoglia said. It hinges on
wbetber Mrs. Rose's condition improves.
"If ev.er there's sufficient information to prove there was a crime, we'D
press charges," he said, adding the severity of the ·allegations forced the
department to investigate.
_Local authorities based the investigatign on interviews. with the older
children, be added.
"Especially ·wben we get allegations about infant children, you have to
do your level best to investigate them," Tenoglia said. "This is always
going to be· an active ftle. As far as a search for physical evidence there
would bave to be something new and never discussed before."

By KATHRYN CROW
Sentinel Correspondent
,
,
Syracuse Village Council Thursday approved its ·annual appropriation
ordinance in the amount of $241,450.
The breakdown is a' follows: general, $82,358; street construction,
$32,000; state highway, $9,900; fire, $25,500; water, $55 ,298; pool,
$33,300; guaranty meter, $3 ,000; cemetery, $94.
In addition, council approved by a 4-1 vote increasing council members' salary from $15 a meeting to $25 a meeting,
The increase will affect only those council members running for reelection this year. Council members' salaries cannot increase while in
office except only prior ID election.
• ·
Councilman BiU Roush voted agaii•st the increase.
Councilwoman Kathryn Crow discssed cemetery upkeep, noting that
the cemeteries are neglected and stone·s are ovenumed.
The cemetery sbould be better kept than it is, sbe said.
Council said the village does not have rmances to correct \he problems
and suggested Crow contact the Meigs County Historical Society about
preserving veterans' grave sites.
Meeting with council was ·Frank Zuspan of Modem Sanitation,
Pomeroy, on placing portable toilets at the ball park 'this summer. Council
will place at least two units at the park and increase the number as the
need arises.
Mayor James Pape reported Greg Bailey and Jim Clifford informed
. him tbcy will put in a road for the new bomes they intend 1e build, beginning at the pump bouse, ID be named Grueser Drive.
.
Pape said also Ihat he, along with Councilman Dennis Wolfe, used the
new pickup truck to saape snow. Scraping snow was no problem, but the
{wo encountered problems in spreading cinders by hand, he noted .
'
Pape suggested Ihat council consider investing in a used spreader box
for the truck.
Council discussed several potholq!l that need fixed. Roush is in charge
of seeing gravel placed in an alley behind the Bruce Cottrill residence
across from Asbury United Methodist Church. and also on Union Alley.
- Clerk-Treasurer Janet Zwilling reported that a new ·U.S . nag, donate&lt;! ·
by the Racine Posl of the American Legion, is now Oying in front of the
municipal building.
·
·
Pape appointed Councilman Larry Lavender ID represent the village in
the Rural Enterprise Zooe program.
·
It was incorrecUy reported last meeting that Wolfe was cbairmail of the
. livestock conuniuee. Councilman Eber Pickens is chairman of that com'
mitlec. Council beard several complaints about livestock which Pickens
wiD investigate.
•
Pape gave the mayor's report of $1,297.
Police Chief Tim GiUilan reported tbat he issued 34 citations, investigated two 'complaints and ooe accid~nt, assisled the Meigs County Sheriffs Office on two run~ and served ooe warrant.
Council also received word from Cablevi sion that rates will be
increased effective April! from $8.95 to $9.21 (basic) and from $10.44 to
$12.22 (tier), .
Tbe clerk reported the following balances: gcnernl, $20,693.08; street
construction, $13,275.13; highway, $8,602 .92; fire : $2,962.12; water,
$2,082.63; pool, $3,054.33; guaranty meter, $2,867.05; cemetery, $89.21 ;
total, $~3,626. 57 .
..
·Present were Pape, Zwilling, Gillilan and council members Lavender,
Wolfe, Roush, Pickens and Crow.

Curses, cries ring in jurors' ears
after Simpson 911 call is played

...

SCENE OF ACCIDENT- Charles M. McGnth, 55, Long Bot·
tom, may have died or a be~~rt .attack prior to his ar crashing into
an embankment and tree ThDnday on Slate Route 124, omclals
said. The Radne Volunteer"Fire Depamnen!(elponded to the ~:15
p.m. accident. (Photo courte1y of the Racine Voluntee.LF!re
Department)

MIDDLEPORT

I•

'

•

1 Settlon, 10 Pageo 35 cents

Village appropriation
legislation gets nod

Middleport moves
to prioritize plans
for village future .

1993 FORD
ESCORT WAGON

v-e, auto., elr cond., AM/FM
ct111atte, tilt, CI'!IIH, PS,
PB, power wlndoWa, power
door locka, pow~~r Hat,

and until, anotller family member brings something more specific I don't
anticipate disturbing Mr. Rose or his property again."
Law enforcement from Meigs and the state Bureau of Criminal Crimi·
nal ldentilication and Investigation exhausted all leads from this case including using highly-trained dogs, Tenoglia said.
"Wben you're looking for bodies in solid concrete it' s one thing," he
said. The area searched bebind the Racine farm bad been moved numerous times since it was used as a dump for old parts and paint.
"If you miss by an incb it's as good as a·mile," Tenoglia added.
Wbile criminal charges may never be forced, Tenaglia would not speculate wbetber civil charges are pending.
.
Neighbors bad questioned the search from the beginning last November. They .described the 16 children as quiet, well-behaved and busy with
farm chores.
Tbe five youngest children were removed from the bouse and placed in

Building
strategy

-

$10,949

HOLZER CLINIC

· UM

1993 FORD
·TAURUS

1990 DODGE
CONVERSION VAN
'

''

14-21-22-24-29

Occasional snow , possibly

heavy lonlghl. Lows In tbelOo.
Saturday, snow ending. Highs Ia
lhelO..

•

1994 OLDSMOBILE
CIERA .

'TaxBreak' offered to
taxpayers by IRS . .

FREE PSYCHOLOGICAL CONSULTATION IS
AVAILABLE TO DETERMINE IF GROUP THERAPY IS
FOR YOU

Buckeye 5:

Meigs officials close book on Rose.probe

The Internal Revenue Service tax return, bo'Y t? g~t a qu1cker
offers a break to taxpayers 3 p.m. refund, altemauve fihng me~ods.
Sunday, Feb. 5.
the Earned Income :rax ~t. and
"TAXBREAK " the one hour where free tax help IS available.
annual IRS Public Television proSince.~ing times. someduction, will be hosted by "Today time vary, those mterested m
Sbow" weatherman WiUard Scott. ing the program should check theu
A tax expert from ihe IRS wiD be local TV listiogs. .
,
as
well
as
two
profession·
,
A
report
was
giVen
by
Darst
on
present
John C Wolf, D.O.
als ooe from the National Associa- food and gifts for families at
Associate Professor
tio~ of Tax Practitioners and !be Chrisunas time.
.
.
of Family Medicine
other from the National AssociaAt the next meeung Cliff
lion of Enrolled Agents.
.
Kennedy will speak on scbo~l ·.
:"1'00 MUCH BATHING OFTEN Coilege of Osteopathic MedicmeQViewers will be able to phone m preparations for helpmg the bandi:CONTRIBUTES TO WINTER to open a branch in the Florida tax questioQs @ring and for one capped. There will ·be a brown bag
·
·
Keys. A .more-realistic approach· boor afler the sbow. :ITCH
'auctioo.
: Question: Every winter 1 bave a invlilves measures designed to belp
Subjects to be covered will
The traveling prize was woo by
)qrible tinie with dry, itching skiD, retain the natural skin oils and to include: new tax law clianges, the Misti Zirkle. A dessert course was
reduce tbe amount of skin drying.
1 and
118flicularly on my e~s
arms.
One of the most imnnrt•ni parts. importance of bavilig and using a · served by hostesse~ Helen Black:My doctor said I bave 'winter itdl"
,...._.
correct social security number on a ston and Peggy Hams.
)iDd told me to use lotion on my dry of trealment is to avoid unneces-skin. Would you explain what sary bathing of the parts with dry
:causes winter itch?
skin. Our society encourages daily
· Answer: Winter itdl, also called bathing, but this is ofu:n not necesTHURSDAY
TUPPERs PLAINS - Tuppen
:"xerOderma" in uointeUigible doc- sary 1D be clean. Wasb YQitr "slinky
SYRACUSE - TOPS OH Plains VFW Post 9053 Ladies
:tor language, is a common winter parts (face, underarms, crotch) 1895, "Bring a Friend'' night, Syra1lflliclion or many wbo live in the daily, but bathe the rest of your cuse Nazarene Cburcb, Thursday, 6 Auxiliary will meet Thursday, 7:30
:aortbeastem part of our country. It body less frequently. Use tepid p.m. Additional information call p.m. at the ball.
Js particularly common in people water instead of bot. Use a 111ild . Debbie Hill, 949-2763.
.
FRIDAY
-who have "atopy''Qa type of sensi- moisturizing soap or emolument
ROCK
SPRING
- Salisbury
:Uve and easily initated skin. About cleanser and follow this by p11tting
POMEROY - Meigs High Township Trustees meeting Friday,
.:1 percent of die general population dry inslead of vigorously rubbing School financial aid worll:sbop
bas this condition.
with a towel because the robbing Thursday, 7 p.m. at MHS cafeteria. 6 p.m. at .Rock Spring Fairground.
In winter itch the skiD becomes stimulates the itch sensation.
·
Open to all Meigs County seniors
SATURDAY
excessively dry and rather rough II / ~edialely after bathing, apj)IY and. their parents.
POMEROY- I 75th Anniverscaly This drying causes itching / a lotion to help smooth and sooibe
sary
of Meigs County program Satand the resultant scratching pro- the skin while retaining moisture.
POMEROY - Meigs Chapter urday, II a.m. Meigs County court·
duces a rash. It's the opp&lt;isite of Petroleum jeUy is probably one or 74, Public ~ployee Retirees, Inc.
many conditions, such as poison the most eff~ve products ~or th~ Thursday, Senior Citizens Center, room; noon, burial of tbe time capivy, where the rash is w~ causer ' purpose, bu_t Its greasy res1due 1s Pomeroy; lunch at 12:15 p.m., sule near the monument on the
the itching. Winter ilcb IS more often objectiOnable. I often recom- business meeting, I p.m. Sheriff courthouse lawn.
common in the Northeast because mend Aveeno lotion for this pur- James Soulsby to speak on home
POMEROY -. Quiet Day at
of tbe climale and cenual beating pose. It is a bit more expensive safety and prolection. Donation for
Grace
Episcopal Church, Pomeroy,
lliat takes the moisture out of the · than the many brands of band and lunch.
Saturday,
9 a.rn. until noon, Angliindoor air. The tow butnidity in the body lotion, but my patients bave
can
Mystic
and renowned author ,
ioiloor air· then promotes the drying found it significanlly more effec·
RUTLAND-· Rutland' Town' Maggie Ross will lead the obserofskin.
live.
ship Trustees, Thursday, 6:30 pm. vance.
• Winter itch is made worse by
Raising the butnidity within tbe at the Rulland Fire Station.
bathing particularly with bOt water borne is also beneficial in reducing
HARRISONVILLE - Harand ~pie amounts of soap. This the amount of skin drying. A
RACINE - American Legion
l.ICauoent removes dirt, but it also vapOOz.er or humidifier in the bed- Post 602, Thursday, dinner, 6:30 risonville Lodge 411, 7:30p.m Satremoves the natural skin oils that-~ room is a good method for accom-- p:m:- followeil liy meeting at 7:30 urday, at the Masonic Lodge ..WorL
in the E. A. degree. Refreshments.
lielp smooth-the. skin and control plis~ing .this. It !s also helpful to p.m.
'!'ater loss tbrougb the top layer of avmd wool_cl!'tbmg ~t scratches
cells. The skin on the lower por- tbe already untated skin. There ~
tloos of the arms and legs produce many other natural ~nd syntbeuc
Have you ever found yourself.,.
less of the natural skin oils and, fibers that are atttacuve and com·
therefore, are more susceptible to for1able without being ~ICby. In
-wondering why you have problems in a
these drying problems. This is why my experience; however, u seems
relationship?
you bave troubles with your arms . that cotton is often the best fabric
and legs, but others with this condi- to use until the xeroderma •s uoder
lion can bave the same itcbing and fair cqntrol.
-feeling misunderstood or unap~reciated?
rash on olher areas of their bodies.
And one additional reminder:
. Question: The lotion my doctors Even thougb the "winter itch" itch·
-having trouble making or sustaining
recommended doesn't seem to es, don't scratch. ScraiCbing will ·
friendships?
work very well. Can you suggest only make it worse. Rub on another
sometbin~ that would work better?
dab Qf lotion instead.
. Answer: There are SC!veral steps
"Family Medldne" Is a weekly
-not caring for the person you've becOme?
you can take to avoid or minimize colum.n. To submit. questions,
winter itdl. One option would tie to wtlte to Jobn C. Wolf, Q.O.,
YOU ARE NOT ALONE!
go south ID wwm weather for the Oblo Unlvenity College or&lt;&gt;steowinter months. I'd like to lry tbis patblt Medidne, Grosvenor. Hall,
The help you need in addressing these very real
myself. but I haven't convinced my Athens, Ohio 45701.
eQlployerQ the Ohio University
problems may be found in a special, relationship-based
therapy group now being staned by Holzer Clinic
psychologist Richard Boone, Ph.D. He is available for
. - CLEARANCE SALE STIU IN PROGRESS consultation about his group. Membership will. be
limited, so don't delay calling to schedule a free,
personal consultation. All inquiries are treated wilh
the utmost .dignity and confidentiality of the individual.

.

o-s-8-5

Page4

An alcohol problem? How CQ/1 )'911
help yourself or so~ou you love?
"Alcoholism: How to Recogrliu It,
How to Deal With It, How to Conq~~er
It" will givt~ you the answers. Send a
self-addressed, long) businus-sire
envelope and a cN.ck or money older
for $3.75 (this includes postage and
handling) to : Alcohol, c/o Ann
Landers, P.O. Box JJS62, Chicago,
Ill. 60611-0562 . (In Canada, send
$4.55.)

Medicine

Pick 3:
7-8-5
Pick 4:

to Blue Devils

shan: their home remedies to stop the
ilehing causod by mDSqui!Qbitcs.
The most unusual suggestion came
from a reader in Grand Island. Neb..
who wrote: • A drop of bot candle
wax will stop the ilehing, but it will
cause a small blister that is ,less
annoying than the itching."! do NOT
recommend this.
.
.
Gem of the Day (Credit Johnny
Carson, who is still missed by
millions): If it weren't for Philo T.
Farnsworlh, inventor·or television,
we would still be eating frozen radio
dinners .

F~mily

Ohio Lottery

N.C. hands
102-lOlloss

--

~

I·

By M·ICHAEL JCLEEMAN
· Simpson's curses and Ms. Simpson "l·le' s going to beat the s-- out of
Associated Press Writer
pleas for help ringing in their cars.
me." Ms . Simpson was not hit dur. LOS ANGELES - On the l3pC
When testimony resumes today, ing the confroniation.
"My e•·busband has just brarecording, .bis voice is only in the wilnesscs are ·expcctcd ID include a
background. But OJ . Simpson's police oflicer who responded to the ken into my house and he's ranting
presence is powerful as be spews emergency caU . Ms. Simpson's sis- and raving outside· in the front
profanity in an angry, ranting dia- ler, Denise Brown! also wa_LJ ard," Ms. Simp.sooJnW_the ope:ra --~­
tiibeand stonns m and oufof bi~ cxpectoo to testify abOut the· Simp- tor. "lie' s crnzy."
. eXowlfe's 110use. ' ~sonsLoften-stonny rellltil:ffisbip.
At times, Ms. SimpSon sounded
It's tbe private face of Simpson
'!be attempt to demolish Simp- franlic and her voice trembled ,
that the prosecution wants the jury sons good-guy •mage IS part of the such as when she blurted oul,
to.envision. Not the sports hero and prosecution's effort lo prove a "lie's O.J. Simpson .... lie's going
genial .actor sitting in court in crisp, . motive. Prosecutors want to con- nuL,."
.
conservative suits, but a man capa· vmcc the Jury that aflcr years of
At other times, she was relative5le Of llliiHI rage·, of violence. A abusing and degrading his wife, ly calm. even resigned. It's Simpman capable ofmunlcr.
Simpson killed her in a jealous son who appears most out of conIt's that face, the prosecution rage.
•
trol, allhou~h most of his words Parts of the 911 tape have been except for the profanities - arc
wants the jury to believe, that
Nii:ole Brown Simpson and Ronald broadcast nuiJli&amp;&lt;JUs times since unintelligitile.
Goldman saw the night they were police rclcascd'.il1ast summer, and
"The tone was moo; important
kiUed.
·
jurors .said during jury selection than the content," Deputy District
On Thursday, jurors beard the that they had heard at least portions Altorney Christopher Darden told
911 call Ms. Simpson made in of it. But it was nonetheless the reporters.
Oclober 1993 after Simpson broke most dramatic part of the day when
Jurors gazed at the ceiling or
down the door to her borne. Less jurors'tlcard it for the .ftrst time in closed their eyes. Some took notes.
than a year later, Ms. Simpson ljild- the trial.
All were e•ptessionless except a
Superior Court Judge Lance liD woman who appe;tred to wince as
Goldman were stabbed and slasbed
to death outside her coodo.
allowed·the tape to be played in its Ms. Simpson's voice became more
- The.- tape was played at lhe end entirety, except for wben Ms . and more hysterical.
(Continued on Page 3)
of tbe coun session . Jurors left with Simpson tells th~ 9 U ..operator: .

.I
-

I

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="371">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9743">
                <text>02. February</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="30345">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="30344">
              <text>February 2, 1995</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1415">
      <name>goodnite</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1557">
      <name>love</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="6209">
      <name>vogeler</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
