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                  <text>Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

Wt~dnesday, Feb~ary

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
AD'/EII'ISIITEM JIOli:Y. Each Of these advertised Items Is reqlired to be readily al'ilable for sU In
each Kroger Store, except as spedflcally noted In this ad. If we do 1'\11 0111 Of an advertised Item, we
wmoffer )'OU your choice of a comparable Item, When available, refleCting the same savings or a
nlncheQ wtich wll entitle you to pUrchase th.ad'leftlsed Item at the advertised price within 50
days, Only one vendor coupon will be acct11t«1 per Item pli'Chased.

8,1895

COPYRIGHT 11M • 'THE KIIOGEII CO. ITEIIS AHO PRICU 0000 lUNDAY,
n . u M ' I I , - MTIIIIOAY, I'I!IIRUAIIYn, , . . II POIIIEIIOr.
WIIIEIEIME THE RIGHT TO LIIIIT OUANTmU. -SOLD TO DEAl IRS.

Ohio Lottery

OU
. rebounds
with victory
over Kent

..

•'
•

Pick 3:
383

Pick 4:
9661
Super LOtto:
1·6-9-36-37-45

Low tonlpt around 20.

Saow.llrhlay raiD or snow. Hlab
near 40.

Kicker:

PageS

481374

•
•

•

Always Good.
Always Fresh.
Always Kroger.

1

Vol. 45, NO. 199
Copyrlght1995

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, February 9,

stances - maril~~ cocaine, amphe!alllines, opiates or pbencyc · · e (PCP). Alcohol and drug tests
are required on covered employees under the following live circumstances: pre-employment, post-accident, reasonable suspicion, randomly and return-toduty/follow-up.
.
Buckley said the random tests will be unan·
nounced and spread throughout the cale~dar year.
The district may cooperate with nelgbbonng South·
em _and Eas~m districts to belp reduce lbe cost of
tesung, he said.
,
In personnel !llatters, the board accepted tbe resignation of Phillip Shaw as an aide for a vjsually bandicaoDed student due to other employment. The board

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel neWIIstaff
Tbe Meigs Local Board of Education Wednesday
night adopted a federally mandaled policy concerning drug and alcobol testing for employees who are
r uired to obtain a commercial drivers' license
(c::bL).
.
Tbe poUcy brings the distric_t in compli~ With:a
new federal regulation requiring such tesung, sa1d
Superintendent Bill Buckley.
.
·
According to federal ·regulauons, school boards
with Jess than 50 covered employees as of Marcb 17,
1994 must comply with the poUcy by Jan, 1, 1996.
Drlvers will be tested for five controlled sub·

see store For details:
.-

..

·

·

resh

FLAME

oRADeA

u.s.

TU .

11

Red

seedless Grapes
Pound

pound

APPLE OR

$
Boneless
Round Steak ••• Pound

49

$
Krager
Tortilla Chips ••• 24-0z.

79

Remember\

aentme'g

. SUPERSIZE

ASSORTED VARIETIES

•roger Chilled
Orange
Juice
1
12;t:allon

5BOflgtKDrInks....2•Pack
12-Gz.cans
ALLVARimB

Kroger
...............

t/2oCallon

Paperctn.

a•

Kroger Is Your Valentine's Day Headquarters!

99
19

Kroger ·
,IS.I!Ioez.
.. 3
vegetables ••••• cans
Heiner's .
area~ •••••••••••••• 2001.

Ii gilt agalnstlenorlsm...

FRESH CUT,

'

Red Velvet
Valentines
Cake
Each

gg

r

-

___..-Local briefs----.

umn.

VIsa Rase .
Bouquet

Tax deadline extended
Tbe deadline for paying. taxes for i first balf of 1994 bas been

extended from Feb. 10 to Feb. 15, Meigs. Coun1y Treasurer Howard
Frank announced today.
.
.
·
Tax payments pos~ on or before Feb. 15 will be accepted
. witbout·a penalty, Frank wd.

s·

·valentine
Message
·C ookie
Each
.

NEW YORK (AP) - After two
Authorities say Yousef bought
years on tbe run, the man accused aDd mixed the chemicals f9r the
of masterminding tbe World Trade bombs tbljt exploded Feb. 26, 1993,
Center bombing and slipping away in a van parked under the 110-story
before the smoke cleared bas been twin towers, the world's secondcaptured in Pakistan and returned tallest buildings.
.
·
to New York.
Tbe blast killed six people ,
.Ramzi Abmed Yousef was injured more lban 1,000, caused
soared Tuesday at a Holiday Inn in S500 million in damage and introIslamabad. Pakistan1 officials said. duced lbe fear of international ter·
The U.S. Justice Department said rorism Into mainstream America.
be was to be amligned this morning
Yousef. 27, escaped the night of
in federal court.
the bombing, using an alias to t1y
The most serious cbarges to Iraq via Pakistan. His finger·
against him are punishable by life prints were found on two bomb·
in prison without parole.
making manuals seized by aulbori·
President Clinton called the ties and on containers of bomb,
arrest "a major step foiWard in the making cbemic:J!s, authorities ~'I-

I.G SIZE

DECORATED 12-INCH COLOSSAL

JX)UBLE LAYER

RUTLAND LEGION BANQUET - Tbe Ell Dennison Rut·
land American Legion Post recently honored Mayor JoAnn Eads
and her husband, Bob, at a banquet this week. Standing Is Mark
: TIDis ol the posL In addllion to honoring the 11111yor ,a nd Joe Bolin;
the po~t also recognized long·standlng post members. Tbe post
gave another $500 to the Rutland Clvk Center, which raised funds
to $1,700 during the last year. (Sentinel phpto by George Abate)

Trade Center suspect caught

CORN, GREEIIEANS, OR PEAS

Open door session set

gg

. ..

·--

No mjiuies were reported following a deer/veliicli: collision on
Kingsbury Road Wednesday around 8 p.m.
.
Angela Brickles, Bearwallow Ridge, was e~tbound on Kingsbury Road wben sbe .struck a deer that jumped mto the path of bcr
1990 Ford, acco(ding to a Meigs County Shenff s Department

I'

rePTI!; vehicle sustained moderate damage to the left-front fender,
. door and running board, the report stated.

Valentine
Cupcakes
6-Ct.
.

Deputies probe one-car wreck .

~··

MILIC CHOCOLATI OR ALMCIIID

-·~'.J

$
21

5.

Henhey's .·
Hugs &amp; Kisses ... ,.,MI. .

Available Only in Stores With Delt,Pastry Shoppes. .

.

.

An icy roadway contributed to a one-car acc1dent on Leadmg
Creek Road just south of Rutland Wednesday around 9: I 0 p.m.
April Halley, 16, Route 33, was northbou~ in a 1994 Honda and
lost control of tbe car on the icy road, aq:ordmg to a Me1~s County
Sberiff s Department report. The car went off the left s1de of the
road, struck an embankment and !ben spun around and went off the
roadway backwards.
.
.
Moder.lte damage was listed to .the front~- Side of the ~e!Dcle.
·· No Injuries were reported.

I
•

1

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1

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well as in nonhero Georgia, wbere
By The Associated Preis ·
Qbioans will enjoy milder it already bas snowed twice ths
weather tonight and Friday, but an week.
Scattered areas of Ugbt rain and
Arctic cold front will usber in
another blast of frigid air for the bigber elevation snow was expect·
ed across the southern Rockies,
weekend, forecasters said.
. Following another m(XIIing with soulbern Plains and lower Missislows in the single digits, tempera· sippi River Valley. Some ligbt
tures early Friday should remain in snow also was expected from the
the 20s, the National Weather Ser- Tennessee River Valley to the
vice said. And readings,in the after- upper Ohio River Valley.
Snow showers were forecast
noon could break tbe freezing marie
across the Great Lakes and into the
for the firSt time In several days.
Ligbt snow and flurries are Northeast. Another blast of cold
expected across all ·of Ohio tonight air, gusty winds and snow showers
and friday. A mixture of rain and was expeeted in the northern Plains
snow is possible over the southern and Rockies:
Dry weather was expected from
third of the state on Friday.
The icy blast will move into California to 'the central Plains, and
Ohio Fri!lay night Highs both Sat· .across the Pacific Northwest. . ·
urday and Sunday will be mostly in
On Wednesday, as much as twothirds
of an incb of rain fell in
the teens.
· , , ,,
.
Tbe record·blgll ·lei!lpenuure for western Nevada. It aiso rained in
this dale at the Columbus weather central California, wilb scattered
staiion was 64 degrees in 1894 storms across the Rockies and
wbile the record low was -17 in · upper MidWest
1899. Sunset tonight will be at 6
A band of new snow produced
p.m. and sunrise Friday at 7:31 up to 6 inches in Oswego County,
a.m.
N.Y.
Across the nation
While it was freezing in the
It snowed in western New York East, record warm temperatures
this morning as some strong winds were being set in tbe West. It
swirled through areas of the Mid- reached 64 degrees in Portland and .
west.
62 degrees in Salem, bolh Ore., S4
More snow was expected in the degrees at Drigbam City, Utab, and
upstate New York region today as 53 degrees at Spokane, Wash .

Firefighters respond to 3 calls.
Local volunteer frrelighters responded to lbe scene of three f1tes
Wednesday and Thursday.
·
No injuries were reponed
Tbe firSt frre involved a bay inside a barn belonging to William'
Kennedy Horner Hill Road, in Scipio Township.
.
. The Sclpio Township Volunteer Fire Deparunent with assistance
from tbe Pomeroy and Rutland VFDs were summoned to lbe scene
at 11:52 a.m; Wednesday and remained on site for about 2 112
hours.
.
Tbe pole barn was not damaged although some bay in the barn
was consumed.
.
.
A one-story block bouse on Ball Run Road was destroyed in a
fire early Wednesday afternoon, according to Pomeroy Fire Chief
Danny Zirkle.
Firefighters were called at 6:48p.m. to the Br~d lobn~on resi dence and arrived on the scene at 7:08 p.m., Zirkle srud. They
returDed to station around. 10 p.m., he added.
·
"The roof was collapsing when we arrived ... it was totally
destroyed," be said.
, .
Seventeen firelighters from the ·Pomeroy VFD along with II
from Middlepon and Scipio VFDs responded to the scene. •
Tbe cause of the blaze wa.' undetermined, be said.
Pomeroy frrelighters also responded to a bay bale f1te on Bearwallow Ridge on Sbaron SwindeU property around 3:30 th1s mom·
in g. Zirkle said.
"Someone set a big round bale on f1te," be said.
Damage was limited to bay bales, be noted.

. . .

State Rejl. John Carey will bold an open_door.sessl&lt;ln m Me1gs ·
County Monday from 3 to 4 p.m. at Rac~ne VIllage ba!L Con;
stituents of the 94th District who would like t? meet With Rep.
Carey about concerns of state government arc mVJied to auend.

No one hur{in accident

approved biting Marcie Shaefer to replace Shaw on a
purchased services conuact for lbe remainder of the
school year.
.
Tbe board also hired Kelly Kinser as a substitute
teacher for remainder of the scbool year ·on an asneeded basis and approved the creation of a one·balf
time .cook al Harrisonville Elementary due to the
increased ~umber of students served.
A medical leave of absence was granted to Faye
Manley.
.. .
Members also agreed to renew the afflhat1on
agreement with Woodland Centers Inc. to
referrals for counseling and ren"•erwvedi.cea&lt;.
ment with Heallb Recovery '"

are paid through grants at no cost to lbe district
The board also hired In Touch Therapy Services
to provide occupational therapy services to a visually
handicapped student retroactive 1o Feb. 2 at a cost
not to exceed $500 .
The board changed the date of its next regular
meeting to Feb. 22 at Salisbury Elementary Scbool at
7 p.m.. .
.
~sent were Buckley, Treasurer J311e Fry, board
Pres1.dent Larry Rupe, V1ce -pres1dent Randy
Humphreys and board members Roger Abbott, John
Hood and Scou Wallon.

••

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COLD WEATIIER CONTINUES· Tim Gray shields his race :
while operating a soow·blower In Columbus Wednesday. The' cold
weather across Obio Is expected to continue through tbe· weekend
according to state rorecasten. (AP)

Racine Village Council
repairs equipment
Racine Village Council ordered
repairS to equipment and buildings
in the village during its regular
meeting Monday.
A building is leaning into an
alley, restricting the garbage
trucks' passage, said Glenn Rizer,
street commissioner. Council will
send a letter to tbe property pwner
requesting the problem be solved ,
witbin two weeks.
In Qlber village .e quipment
repair demands: ,
- I van Powell will cbeck out
w·iring in tbe squad buililing to
ensure adequate .voltage;
-estimates w'ill be received for
repair to the roof on the Star Mill
· Park building; and
- five fire department pagers
will be checked out and fixed.
The Racine Volunteer Fire ·
Department will also apply for a
Department of Natural Resources
grant to acquire a radio and a generator;

In other action. council will con·
tinue to work on village street numbering. The committee should fin.
ish tbe project once maps are gathered.
Luke Pickens will get billed for
lbe recently-sold police cruiser.
Acting Marshal Malt Richards
must locate tbe owners of dogs that
have 'been runnin' loose. Citizens
have been complaining about lhfo.se
dogs.
.
Council held a moment of
silence for Mae Cle.land - a for·
mer clerk - and Rutb Bradford,
wife of former councilman
Clarence Bradford.
Those atlending included: Bob
Beegle, Henry Bentz, Dale Hart,
Scott Hill, Henry Lyons, Larry
Wolfe, Glenn Rizer,·John Holman,'
Karen Lyons, Craton Wolfe and
Junior Johnson.
.
The next Racine Village Coun:
cil meeting will be held March 6.

Incentives offered to get jobs for welfare recipients
He said later that incentives now
are available for counties based on
lbe number of recipients enrolledJn .
cenain education or job ·training
pro~.
.
"We're going to change that,"
Tompkins said.
He said some counties have
used previous incentives to bclp
cover ;ldministrative costs.
"Some of them use it to provide
olber services. It's whatever they
choose to do with it," Tompkins
said.
.
He ponrayed the agency's Jimposed budget as an invesllllent in
self-sufficiency for recipients.
Tompkins said tbe agency wants
to increase from tbe current 37,000
to 63.000 a year tbe number of
AOC and Genetal Assistance recip·
ients who get jobs. .
·
ai-:f 60 percent
· Another
increase in · e n1lmber of ADC

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Counties lhat are able to place wei·
fare recipients in jobs could earn a
share of $15 million in state fmancial incentives under terms of Gov.
George Voinovich' s proposed bud·
get.
The Ohio Department of Human
Services told the House Finance
Committee about that proposal and
array of others Wednesday as bear·
ings opened on the agency's pro·
posed $18.2 billion, two-:year bud·
get.
.
Director Arnold Tompkins proposed fmancial incentives to counties for placing Aid to Dependent
Children recipients into jobs.
"We dnn't want to just focus on
measuring caseloads or participa·
lion rates. We want to measure job
placements, and rew
coun
governments acx: · y," Tcim
kins said.

'

'

and alcohol counseling. Buckley said lbe programs

Arctic blast to hit
Ohio over weekend .

·

j,

U.S.D.A. CHOICE GRAIN FED BEEF, WHOLE

A Multimedia Inc. Newspap8r
'
.

Meigs Locai .Board approves testing .policy

vour Total Value FoOd Store.

.

2 Sections, 12 Pagea 35 c•m•

19~5

''

recipients wbo work for their assislance, bringing lhe total' to 12,000
per,month. _
• "We are going to reach lbesc
goals b¥ taking some dramatic
steps to move people from *lfare
dependency to lasting self-suffi.
ciency," Tompkins sai\1.
One of tbe most visible cbanges:
the proposed abolishment July I of
General Assistance benefits for
able-bodied adults, and an end to
cash aid for able-bodied adults on
the Disability Assistance program
because of a medication dependen·
cy.
.
· ,
Those reforms woulll SIWe .._
state $200 million. About half the
inooey would go into other buman
services Jllllgrams, and the rest for
education.
·
· A special legislative commiltee
is working on Voinovicb's otber
major reform plan to tum adminis;

traifon of Medicaid, the federal State health care program for lbe
poour•.mr C!l.private agents. ·~
nder the proposal called Obio·
·care, Medicaid recipients would
enroll in priv.ate health mainteilance organizations.
Savings from such a managed
care sy_stem would help pay for
extendmg coverage to about
500,000 Ohioans with incomes
below lbe poveny level.
" ObioCare will enable us tO·
extend health care coverage to:
these individuals arid families wi~
out requiting new state dollars anO
· wtlt IPI ....... IIIi~ oC exist•
lnttftlefibl," 'fompkins said.
.
The program will use some of
• tbe money from the elimination of
General Assistance, federal match; ·
ing money, and revenue from ao .
existing tax on hospilals.
..
·

�Commentar
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street

Poqaeroy: Ohio

.MULTKOIA,NC
ROBERT L. WINGETT
PubliSher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General ~anager

MARGARET LEHEW
Con !roller

LE'ITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words Ions. All lellen ore oubjm to odilins IIDd must be signed with name,
lddrao IIDd lelepbone number. No unsigned letu.n will be published. L.etu.n
sbould be in good laste, addreuinc iuues. not penonllitieo.

Excerpts from other
_
O hio newspapers
By Tbe Associated Press
Excapts of Ohio editooals of national and scatewide interest
The Clnclnnatl Enquirer, Feb. 6
· Perhaps the Smithsonian InstitutioQ really bad po idea its planned
~xhibil in Washinglon, D.C., on th~ atomic banbing of Hiroshima would
whip up sucb a ftrestorm of prolest. More likely, the people wbo dreamed
up sucb a travesty were so smug lbey just didn't care.
· Eitber way, a .venerable institution bas turned wbat could bave been a ·
jxlignant tribute to the SOtb anniversaryofWald War Il's conclusion into
a dud lbat damaged its reputation and left veterans bitter aod betrayed.
· The original plan was 1o exhibit the fuselage of lbe Eoola Gay, the B~9 Superfortress that dropped the fust A-bomb on Japan in 1945, wit4 a
jlisplay and commentary.
· The Japanese were portrayed as victims defending their homeland never mind Pearl Harbor. ·
· Rather tbao admit its blatant bias aod offer a more balanced exhibit,
ibe museum wiU display the fuselage only, with no ~nmientary, nothing
about' sacrifices made. . .
. .
· The American Legion is rightly furious about Ibis further slap at U.S.
War veterans.
·
As our national museum, the Smithsonian should tell tlie truth about
·American history- not'some American-bashing version of wbal someone thinks it should bave been.
: The Chillicothe Gazette, Feb. Z
A ~o is presumed innocent until proven guilty. It is a constitutionally guaranteed right.
The Secret Service apparently disagrees. A Secret Service official said
the agency would ultimately like to see a nationwide system for fmger. printing applicants for all federal aid progranls. Sucb a system would·belp
catch criminals wbo rip off food slamps and other aid programs, accordIng to lbe agency.
·
·. To assume that all people wbo need aid are cbealers is demeaning. It
imacks of a different legal system for the poa.
· If we start surrendering rights for the poor, it won't be long before
those rights are suspended ~or all. ·
•

Thursday, February 9, 1995
Page 2-The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, February 9, 1995

Is American history being highjacked? To the delrimellt of Ameri·
can scboolcblldreo7 By a sappy
document denounced by the U.S.
Senate?
II would seem so. Here is the
sequence of even~:
.
Back in 1991, the National History Standards Project a1 the UCLA
Center for History in the Schools
won $2 million in federal grants ..
Pwpose of said grants was to prepare American and world llistory
standards. This was in accord with
a ·broad and wise eonseosus that
our scbools bad been "dumbed
down" and " voluntary standardl;"
could help fix that
Tbe UCLA draft standards,
handsomely printed and looking
quite official, were finished late .
last year and sent out to 10,000'
educators.
Thud! The standards were blasted by Lynne Cbeney, who bad partially funded the project while
chairman of the National Endowment for the Humanities. Moderate-to-conservatives in the punditocracy (t6is columnist included)

bombed the standards fa purveying a leftist, guilt-peddling, victimoriented view of America and
Western Civilizalion.

Ben Wattenberg
Sen. Slade Gorton, a moderate
Republican from Wasblnglon slate,
denounced the standards as an
" ideologically driven, anti-Westem monument to politically correct
caricature.''
Sen. Joseph Liebennan, a mod·
crate Democrat from Coqnecticut,
said during Senate debate that the
standards described the Cold War
as mere "swordplay of the Soviet
Union and the United States," a
characterization wbich be called
" msubng.
. I . " And ,,'urther, that "- ...
because America bas dramatically
and positively affected the course
of world history ... we ought not lei
that be disparaged. We ought ilot
let that ... be lost in a kind of
'everything is equal, let us reach
out and make up for past .exclusions' set of standards.''

L-M-N·OJ,oops

THATS
DEAR ...
. COMMON MISTAKE •••

•,

Today in history

Slip-sliding on the hormone highway

Letters to the ed.itor

What about legal rights of unborn
.human beings?

a

mar

zz. ·

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•

Units of tbe Meigs County Clara Grueser, VMH.
Emergency Medical Service
RtrrLAND
recorded 10 calls for assistance
8:16a.m., Happy HoUow Road.
Wednesday. Units responding James Smith, HMC;
E. ·CucJder, 78, Athens, died Tuesday, Feb. 7, 1~5. at his included:
10:32 a.m., Mechanic Street,
Homer Baxter. HMC.
MIDDLEPORT
•
na!~ June 12, 1916, in Atbens, son of the lale Melvin E. and Bessie
8 p.m.• U.S. 33, Judy Martin.
nmg Cuckler, be was a retired self-employed businessman and was Veterans Memorial Hospital;
South-Central Ohio
f~er owner of Cucklers Insurance Agency and general manager of
10:30 p.m ., Union Avenue,
Increasing cloudiness Ibis after·
River Coal Company.
Orieo Colmer~ Pleasant Valley
noon
. Higb 30 to 35. Southwest
·
.
He was a member of the Richland United Methodist Church and Hospital.
winds
increasing 1o 10 to 20 mph.
POMEROY
attended the First Christian Cburcb of Athens. He was a member and Past
Tonight..Ooudy
with a 50 perExalted Ruler of Athens Elks Lodge 973, Past District Deputy Grand
11 :28 a.m. , Court ·Street,
.
cent
chance
of
snow.
Low in the
Exalted Ruler for the South Central District of lbe Benevolent and Protec- . Frances .Scholl, VMH; Middleport
upper 20s. Southwest winds I 0 to
b ve Order of Elks.
squad assisted;
15 mph.
In addition, be was a charter member and past president of lbe Hocking
3:31 p.m., Clark Road, Edna
Friday ... Rain or snow likely .
Valley Spatsman Club and was an active ouldoorsman, sportsman, bunler Clark, VMH;
High
near 40. Chance of precipilllandbowlrr.
6:48 p.m., VFD and squad to
tion
70
perc:enL .
He is survived by his wife, _E;Iizabeth Dt~nlevy Bolin Cuckler; three Ball Run Road, structure fire at
Extended
forecast
sons and daughters-m-law, Patricw and Paul White of Sbade, Deha and Brad Jobnson residence, Middle·
Saturday .. .A chance of snow.
Dr. Cbarles Keller of Logan and Randi and Ted Gillette of Sbade· a step- port and Scipio Township VFD Lows
15 to 20. Highs in the upper .
daughter, Pamela Bailey of Palm Bay, Aa; a stepdaughter and busbaod, assisled, no injuries reponed.
20s.
Kay and Terrance Hanl~y of Amesbury, Mass; 20 grandchildren; four
RACINE
stepgrandcbildren and 17 great-grandchildren.
12;42 p.m., Wells Run, Van
He was preceded in death by his fm;t wife, Mary Lou Truax Cuckler in .Barber, treated a1 the scene, Racine .
1971.
VFD assisted.
RUTLAND
Smiccs _will be Saturday, I p.m. at Jagers Funeral Home with the Rev.
7:32a.m.,
Meigs Mine 2, Robert
W. F':8Jik H1bbard officiating. Burial will follow in Alexander Cemetery.
Fnends may callloday frOm 7-9 p.m. and Friday from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Coon, O'Bieness Memorial Hospi·
tal;
at the funeral borne. Atbens Ellcs Lodge will bold special services a1 the
funeral bome Friday a1 7 p.m.
1:49 p.m. , New Lima Road,
Phillip A. Smith, HMC.
SCIPIO TWP VFD
11:52 am., Weaver Road, structure ftre on William Kennedy property,
Rutland and Pomeroy VFD
Kenneth Earl Darst, 76, of Middleport, died Wednesday, Feb. 8, 1995,
T" ' "'-''~ h... tu~• h, r,.,u,.
aod
Rutland
squad assisted.
al St. Mary's Hospital in Hunlin&amp;.ton, W.Va
.
lli l~ " ltlfllll'l'l'k 1•1 ..-lwl ' "il lw-lc
SYRACUSE
Born Jan. 13, 1919, hi Cheshire, the son of the late Ray and Irene
.iolamSonclk·r .
7:40p.m.,
Children 's Home
Daniels Darst, be w;ts a mechanic for Heiner's B~ry . He was also a disC) TARfC'
.
Road,
Neva
V
ansiclde,
VMH
.
abled American veteran wounded in action in Siapan during World War
JVIaoiSOnl
10MUHRUW
II. He was a lifelong member of the Meigs Chapter 53 of DAV and was a
Units of tbe Meigs County
~'
"',.,.~,
member Q( lbe American Legion 1'\&gt;SI 128 of Middlep&lt;in.
Emergency Medical Service
He is survived by his Wife, Helen Bolinger Darst of MiddlepOrt; son
recorded seven calls for assistance
, ..ooo awo."'•·
and daugbter-in·law, Roben and Linda Darst of Cheshire; daughters and
IU.TIOIIIM.ITiaa.
Tuesday. Units responding .ioclud• JtACU. I . . . . . . t . . . . . . .. I
sons-in-law, Alice and Stanley Lemley of Ravenna and Maureen and
~
MlllnHMG'I QOTT&amp; ..vii.
James Imes of Tucson, Ariz.; seven grandchildren; one great-grandchild; .
MIDDLEPORT
STARTS
1:46 a.m., Art Lewis Street,
brother, Hobart Darst of Middleport; sister, Kathleen Williams of Middleport; and several nieces and nephews.
·
Anabelle Ward, Holzer Medical · TOMORROW
He was preceded in death by bis brother, Delmar Darst; and sister, Ann
Center;
.
Biron.
8:59 a.m., squad and volunteer
Services wiU be beld at 11 am. Saturday at the Fisber Funeral Home in
fire department 1o Overbrook NursMiddleport, wilb the Rev. James Keesee qfficiating. Burial will follow at
ing Center; gas l!dor, no injuries
Gravel Hill Cemetery in Cliesbire.
reponed. Pomeroy VFD assisted;
Friends may call 3-5 and 7-9 p.m. Friday at the funeral home. Military
6:20 p.m., Beech Street. Kenny
services will be conducted by Post 128.
·.
.
Durst, Veterans Memorial Hospital.
'
POMEROY
4:08 p.m., squad and VFD, state
Route 7, motor-vehicle accident;
Etta "Dee" Payne, 79, Gallipolis, formerly of Middleport, died Amanda and Maura Clark treated
at the soene.
Wednesday, Feb. 8, 1995, at the Holzer Medical Center. ·
RACINE
Born on July 28, 1915 in Sparks, Kansas, sbe was the daughter of the
7:10am.,
Morning Star Road,
lale Mr. and Mrs. Edward Sparks. She was a bomemalc:er and a member of
the Evangeline Chapter 132, Order of the Eastern Star, Middleport.
Sbe is survived by a brother-in-law, Homer Payne, Laogsville; three
sisters-in-law, Louise Wilson, Gallipolis, with whom Mrs. Payne made
ber home, Ruth Foster, Rhonda, W. Va., and Phyllis Sparks, Burbank.
Calif., several nieces :!nd nephews.
Besides her parents, sbe was preceded in death ber husband, Lewis
McClure "Tom" Payne, Jr., three brot4ers, Johnny, Melvin and Marvin
Sparks.
.
.
.
Services wiD be beld at 2 p.m. Saturday at the Fisher Funeral Home in
Middleport. Dr. Jaines R. Acree, Sr. wiU officiate. 'Burial will follow in
. the Middlepon HiU Cemetery. Friends may call at lbe funeral home Friday from 5 to 7 p.m.

OHIO Weather

3

·

Friday, Feb. 10
Accu-wcamer- f01;ecast for
MICH.

·Weather

.. . . .
• •

leo

St.nny Pt Cloudy

V,. Assodstad Pru&amp; GraphlcsNet

Cloudy

C 1995Accu·Weath81', Inc.

Kenneth E. Darst

I•

Billy

I

Prices Good Through Monday 2113195

Bradley~

Birthstone Dolls
Reg.'19.95
OrJ,ly $13.95

;J:I

Amity Billfolds Complete Stock

12·Price

Etta Payne.

·

When trimming fat, r.emember Pressler

Meigs EMS records 10 calls

OO::.ymond

50 ON.

~~R

The Dally Sentinel--Page

Raymond E. Cuckler

The heisting of history _ ___,...._ _

: The (Toledo) Blade, Feb. 1
.
·
By lbe lime I lost count last try once again.
• on the vow be would acctipt no out- ·any intemal compass, any central
Gov. George Voinovich may know more tbao the reSt of us about the
week,
Prime
Minisler
Newt
GinTake public broadcasting. side income and give any extra core of beliefs at all.''
dynamics of the 1996 campaign for the Republican nomination. Or maybe
grich bad enunciated 2,204 new Pressler, the old bulldog, is deter- earnings to the South Dakota trea~ bas decided to go for broke.with his endorsement of Sen. Bob Dole of
- In 1977, the Wall Street
Kansas for the GOP nomination and his willingness to cbair the Dole ideas for fixing America. Some minedtodobisparttowipeoutthe sury. By 1989, according to the Journal described Pressler as a
were lousy, some were excellent
Washington Times, Pressler bad "show borse." In a 1989 arlicle
campaign in Obio.
.
pocketed more than $250,000 in entitled "Mr. Stupid Goes to
: More things can go wrong tbao rigbt in sucb a strategy, but if Sen. and one was fan-damn-taslic.
Joseph Spear
Newt said wbat America needs
spealc:ing fees. His promise bad .Washington," Spy magazine listed
Dole wins the prize, only good things can ensue fa Voinovicb - possibly a vice presidential.nomination or, more likely, Cabinet post
. is a monthly "Correction Day," federal deficit and .is thus chewing applied only to his House career, Pressler as tbe country's fifth
:. Dole's mordant wit and bis slashing altacks have not served him well during which "we talc:e the dumb- on tbe Corporalion for Public be said, not his time in the Senate.
"dopiest" lawmaker. In 1990, the
in at least two other presidential campaigns. Voinovicb has decided to est things the federal government is Broadcasting like a starving mon- A home-slate newspaper, the W~ingtonian magazine declared
. throw his support to l.be man many see as the front-runner aod one with . currenlly l)oing and just abolish grCI gnawing on a soup bone. He . Sioux Falls Argus Leader,bas Pressler 1o be "brain dead."
whom be shares a wide similarily of views. However, it's a very risky them."
wants to "privatize" public broad- often focused on Pressler's duplici- In 1986, as chairman of the
tbrow of Jbe dice.
1 totally agree. and I think we casting, be says, and thereby save ty - bis fondness for expensive Senate Subcommittee on European
should start with Larry Pressler's llle taxpayers $285.6 million a year suits and Lincoln Town cars while Affairs, Pressler put aside such
· Warren Tribune Chronicle, Feb. 1
salary. He is a dumb program per- - about019 percent of the budget
in Washington, his bias towards momentous matters as terrorism
: If lbe nintb-gradft proficiency lest exploded on Ohio's schools like a sonified.
Yes, he recently said on a Wasb- plaid shirts while stumping in his and Soviet-American relations and
As the new chairman of the Sen- ington talk show, some of the chil- borne state. He frequently junkeiS flew off to the -continent to get a
bombshell in 1991 , think of the new fourth -grade tests debuting Ibis year
ate
Commerce Committee, tbe . dren's programming on public tele- on !lie taxpayer's doUar. And while ftrst-band look at the problems of
aS an early-warning system.
Soutb
Dakota Republican is daily · vision is wonderful, but so arc be claims to a national audience "tbe mini-stales or Europe."
: . The fourtb'grade test should not cause students - or p;m:.nts - to .
demonstrating
the danger of elect- shows produced by the private see- that be is concerned about deficits, While in Monaco, be took lime oul
panic. No sJudent will be held back because be or she fails one of the four
ing a lightweight to Congress. All's lor. After all, kids of his generation · be brags to local voters about all from his arduous investigation to
parts. And nobody will have to repeat the test.
.
Olbese tests will give leacbers aod parents an early .indication of a stu- well as long as be' s just another learned a lot about responsibility lbe port be bas brought bome.
play tennis with Prince Albert.
blue suit, but if be survives long from "Lassie."
dent's strengths and a warning of shortcomings.
I hereby beseech South
- While working with columenough to assume a leadership
In truth, Pressler is a sad case. .nist Jack Anderson in 1976, I dis- Dakotans to do us all a favor .
· · Next year, a sixth-grade test will be added to the mix . Like the fourthPrivatize Pressler.
grade test, it will be given only once and be used to gauge a student's position, the doo-doo bits the oscil- His credentials include a Rhodes covered lliat Pressler bad plagiascholarship, a Harvard law degree rized a Washington Post article for
lating blades.
progress as be a she approached the ninth-grade test
Joseph Spear Is syndicated
Talc:e cable television operators. and a.stint in Viemam. Reconcile a piece that appeared in a South writer for Newspaper Enterprise
· Also next year, science will be ooded to the tests.
In 1992, Congress finally worked those bona fides wjth the wretched Dakota magazine under bis .own Association.
: The goal is lo keep raising expectations for Ohio's students and meaup enough courage to re-regulate record be bas racked up in public byline. An "intern" did it, Pressler
~uring bow the students are doing in meeting those goals. That is llle kind
(For Information on bow•to
these price-gouging robber barons. life and you'll bave solved one of told me.
of accountability taxpayers are looking for.
communicate electronically with
Now, wbile millions of cable cus- the most baffling conundrums of
- Tbe 1990 edition ·of the this coluOVIist and others, con·
tomers are still awaiting refunds modern times. Some.lowligbts:
Almanac of American Politics tact America Online by calling 1·
ordered by government regulators,
·- He campaigned for tbc asserted "what is not evident in 1100-827-6364, exL 8317.)
Pressler wants to unleash the indus- House of Represenlalives in 1974 Pressler's recad is whether be has
. By The Associated Press
: · Today is Friday, FeiJ. 10, llie 41St ooy of 1995. There are 324 days left
ill the year.
· Tnday's Highlight in History:
,
: On Feb. 10, 1949, Arthur Miller's play "Death of a Salesman"' opened
&lt;11 .Broadway's Morosco ·Theater with Lee J. Cobb in the role of WiUy
Loman aJI(I Mildred Dunnock as his wife, Linda.
I'm nothing if not the Queen of believed tbat men's and women's get their bearings but bave !rouble seemed 10 happen with predictable
Denial wben it comes to relation- brains were just alike except for reading maps, and that men read . regularily.
·
ships, but there's one true litmus cultural influences, and if we maps better but would rather drive
. If we do discover a male horlesl that never fails lo let me lrnow couldn't come to ao understanding the interstate loops aroun~ a city mona! cyc)e, however, crime vic-·
if a relatioosbip is doomed:
for five hours than exit an off-ramp lims are in trouble. A few years ago
If I'm standing in front of a rack
Sarah Overstreet . and ask directions at a 'gas station. a female physician wbo was
of "To the one I love ... " Cbrisllllas
Studies at the University of nabbed for drunk driving, and who
· . cards or a sea of Valenline cards with lover it must be our inability Rochester found that when blind- even kicked the shin of the s.tate
and I start lo cry, 1imow Ibis one's to communicate properly and "get folded men and women were led trooper wbo stopped ber, gol off
· Dear Editor
unborn infants. Concerning John a goner. Wben a team of Hall· in touch with our feelings." ·
around the caridors of a building, scot-free because sbe was suffering
: Recently I read an enlightening the Baptist while still in his moth- mark's top talent cao't even write a
Today things have eased up. men retained a better sense of from PMS.
·
article in The Daily Sentinel enti- er's womb, we read, "For lo, as sentiment I feel like giving, I lrnow Researchers betieve there are basic wbicb direction tbey bad come
tled. "Should Animals Have Legal soon as the voice of thy salutation · that what I'm really looking for is a biological differences in the way from. Unblindfolded women were
If the male hormonal cycle is
Rights" by Nat Hentoff. The writer sounded in mine ears, the babe card thai says:
men and women think. And lo, we better at memorizing objects in a documented - for the sake of
l(lentions the inhumane treatment leaped in my womb for joy", St.
"I RUN AROUND LIJCE A migbl even be bardwired ·in our room, however, tbao unblindfolded brevity, let's call it "NMS" for
of the· vast majority of the animals Lulce 1:44. ·
RAT ON A WHEEL TRYING TO ~quipmenl frQ.m back in tbe_days _men.~
.-~
~no menstrual syndrome" - · we
~--~-J)roduc·ed for-food.---- -~-MA-KE
MYSEtF
LOOK
GOOD
when
OOg
bad
lo$ubdue.and
domiTwo
decades
ago
women
dido'!
might as well write off justice.
· Also In Jerelifiali 1:·5 we ge t
. Also be refers to Sheba whose another glimpse of the sacrc;dness FOR YOU, AND YOU STOP nate or some bigger guy would get even want to talk about their men- "Your bonor, my client didn't
piJppies were buried alive and ber · of buman life ye.t unborn, "Before I SHAVING! FURTHERMORE. the maslodon to drag home and sttual cycles lesl we be seen as less mean lo kill his former wife and
heroic effort to recover bet young. formed thee in tbe belly I knew THAT STUPID BEARD LOOKS grill, and Ooga was prone to be than men because our hormones ber little friend from the restaurant.
!'am surely in sympathy with Mr. !bee; and before thou earnest fatb . LIKE YOU'RE EAT!NG A obsessively ~ossessive ~ecause wax and wane. Today we not only But wben be caught them sharing a
lienioffs concern for the humane out of lbe womb, I sanctified thee, MUSKRAT. WHY DON T YOU. Oog bad a babtl of wandering from devote en lire TV talk sbows 10 frozen yogun and driving bis white
· treallllenl of animals for we read in and I ordained thee a prophet unto BUY YOUR,SELF A 'TO THE cave to cave wanting to ensure sqr- women telling horror stories of Porscbe, be was suffering from
Proverbs 12":10 "A righteouS man the nations.
ONE I LOVE CARD AND SEND viva! of the species while sbe was their beads spinning around and NMS ... "
·
, regardetb the life of his beast: but
Be~lzebub's voice issuing forlb
Is our society becoming cal· IT TO THE 0r:'E YOU REALLY stuck lalc:ing care of little Oog.
tile tender mercies of the wicked loused to the awful slaughter of the LOVE, AND 1 LL JUST SPEND
Now we know we don't under- durmg PMS attacks; researchers
Sarah Overstreells Associate
are cruel."
unban? A mother can take the life THIS MONEY PIJITING A PER- stand eacb other because we don't now suspect that m~n S!Jffer from
Edilorlal Page Editor •• tbc
· It is not my purpose to refu~ of her unborn child lind is protected SONAL AP IN :J'HE NEWSPA- think alike, and it'.s oobody's fault. hormonal fluctuations and even go
Sprlngfteld (Mo.) News-Leader.
t.bis goqd essay, but it' set me to · by law in doing so, but if aile waits, PER?"
Every time you turned lbe TV on through a "male menopause."
1 (F or 1nsormatloo
•
.
on bow lo
I
not be gettin 8 muc b better last year Deborah Tannen, Pb.P..
MY fri.end Pam, an investigative
1
thinking . Wbat about IH leJal IIIII the child is born Dallll'lllly, and
commun cate elec:tronk:ally wllb
rights of unbom llumaa bcinJs? sbe kills her baby, she could be ~~ bear~ng tbe _death knell of ~~~ was talking ab9ut ber book, "You reporter and ~liiZer Prize-winner,
The writer said "animals care about executed for ber crime. Something •mpendmg endmg, but at least m Just Don'! Understand " which began to suspect Ibis herself 10 lbls 'coluRVIIst and others, con·
t!Jis era one d~sn't have to f~el documented bow our genders affect years ago wben sbe noticed her tact America Online by calling 1·
lbeir ypung; they can tbink, and is wrong.
certainly tbey can feel pain and
Let us treat animals humanely, . like such a failure. A .generauon the way we interpret conversations. male boss "going off like a ·rock- ~~=:t.~~-~ dlscon·
aal~ discomfon."
ago whe~ I "':as ~essmg up my
ReSearchers have found that it's et" every Jour or five weekS: and tlnuing the Sarah Overstreet col·
and respect our unlxln.
: This statement is certainly true,
l;loydD: Grimm, Jr .• fm;t relanon_sb!PS; 11 -was the dawn - no~ jus I our imaginations; tbat began. to note his blowups on her • umn. The nnal release will be
but the same trutb applies to our
Middlepon of lhe fem1n1sl movement. We women lend to use landmarks to calendar . . Sure enough, they dated Feb.

.

--Area Deaths--

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

A "Sense of the Senate" resolu- lisbment. wbicb, be noted, thought
.
tion :was introduced, stipulating the fm;t set was swell.
Of
course,
Nasb
said,
the
prothat further funding (if any) regarding bistory "sbould not be based jecl' s federal money bad run dry,
on standards developed primarily and private fundmg was now
by the National Center for History sougbL It bad not 1JCQll'l'Cd 1o him
in the Schools pri9r .to Feb. 1, thai all Ibis was against the grain of
1995," and that any " ... recipient the Senalc resolution, and be pointof sucb funds sbould bave a decent ed out tbat some educators bad
respect for the contributions of already condemned the Senate's
Western Civilization, and United action 8s a violation of academic
States history, ideas and institu- freedom. Moreover, the project bad
tions, to the increase of freedom regularly consulted with so many
academic organizations, none of .
and prqsperity around the world.''
which would participate in any new
The vote squeaked through. 99·
I. (Sen. Bennett Johnston voted .venture seen to be under federal
nay because the Senate was being pressure. The standards. be emphasized, represented the considered
too soft.)
. In short, said the Senate, the view of the profession.
And so, wbere do we end up?
UCLA standards are beyond reviApparently
with $2 million of taxsion. Start fresh. This lime don'l
payer
funds
spent to develop histotrash America.
ry
standards
that derogate tbe
1,be S,eoate's language did not
American
experience
and which
resonate in Los Angeles. The promay
well
seem
semi-official,
even
ject's co-director, hiStorian Gary
though
they're
not.
Says
Sen
.
Nasb, said his team was revising its
Lieberman:
''They
bave
every
right
standards (wbicb bad been developed prior to Feb. 1, 1995). The to publish, bul they Oy in the face
intent is to redistribute the ·revised of lbe sense of the Senate, and wbat
standards to the educational eslab- most Americaos believe. The $2
million was not just wasted, it .was
spent destructively."
Do lbe views in the UQ.A standards really represent tbose in the
.
educationlbi.story community? ll's
bad news either way. If they do
OK.
not, lben a grand hustle is afoot. If
they do, then there are bubblebeads
in the professorial, and they are
teaching our kids.
I still believe tough voluntary
standards. make sense. The professoriat is wbal it is. Tbey will influence these things at slate and local
levels in any event ·
But other altempts will be made
for more thoughtful bistory standards. An ongoing stand;lrds-driven
argument in the press , and in
Congress, will help shape the product and educale the educators about
America, by about 99 1o I.
Ben Wattenberg, a senior fellow at I he American .Enterprise
lmlltute, Is lbe hosl or the weekly
public television program,
"Think Tank."
(For information on bow to
communiCate elec:lronkally with
tbls columnist and others, con'
lhtir: ,......,..,.,.,.,. .,;,. m:: . tact ~merica Online by calling 1·
Ill' lnr;; Vlll"'OIY\1 1 rv.n m.-. · 800--817-6364, exL 8317 .)

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Clara Stover As.sorted Chocolates
Candy 1 pound
.

INVENTORY REDUCTION . ·

(

.I

Kathryn Wolfe

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Wednesday admissions - Della
Norton, Pomeroy
Wednesday discharges - Kenneth Darst, Middleport; Tommy
Simmons , Midiileport; Emma
McClintock, Racine

.

.Cover ·Girl Cosmetics

30o/O'.Qff

CONtiNUES •••

Kathryn C Kirby Wolfe, 70, of Alqon, died Jan. 24, 1995 in •a hospice
hospital there.
Sbe is surVived by ber husband of 48 years, ·Lloyd Wolfe, formerly of
Meigs Counly, two· sons, Howard of Hunterville, N. C. aod Dennis of
Akron, a daughter, Beverly Jindra, also of .Akron; and four grandchildren.
Local survivors include a sister-in law, Nara Hartman'of Chester. and a
brotber-in-law, Howard Wolfe of Beverly,
Funeral services were beld at the Goodrich Heights Methodist Church
in Akron. Bwial was at the Rose HiU Burial Park. ·
.

Hospital news

Only s2.89

Reg. '3.9.9

A mushroom refers specifically to
that part of a fungus that grows abo~e
the ground. The rest of the fungus ••
an underground mass of threads.

*Hurry in, Last Weekend for some SALE Items 20% OH Dexter, 40o/o Off Sale Room.
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Sunday i 0:00a.m. lo 4:00p.m.
PH . 992-2955
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week
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huldt l't1dp County

l! ::r. ;••••••••••·•••••• •• · •. ..•.·•····••E!~
Kale• Outsidt Mel!!:~ Count)'

~! ::~:::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::· :::::::::: ::::~

l2 Wceks .... .............. :.......... .................... S%.20

•

A NOET(.SON,$
DOWNTOWN POMEROY- 992-3671

9:30-8 MON.
9:30-5
TUES. -SAT:

~

•

�•

Thursday, February 9, 1995

Sports

The Daily Sentinel

..

.

30 the second half for 56.6% ), bit
2-5 three's and was 17-28 at the
line. Warren bad 55 rebQunds, led
by Alloway and Wagner with 12
each, 17 turnovers, I 0 steals and
eight assists and 18 fouls.
Eastern will host Trimble
tonight.
There was no reserve game
between the two schools. However,
Marieua' s freshman team defeated
Warren 40-38 in overtime prior to
the varsity game.

-·-·-·Eastern

·

(10-8-17-14=49)
Amy Redovian 1-0-3/4=6?, Jessica Radford 1-0-0=2, Jessica Karr
7-0-7/8=21, Nicole Nelson 2-00=4, Rebecca Evans 1,0-5/6=7,
Patsy Aeiker 3-0-2/5=8, Tracy
White 1-0-0/1=2 . Totals: 16·0·
17125=49

Warren Local
(19-16-19-26=81)
Becky Parks 0-0-2/4=2, Jaime

Tabler 1..()..3/5=5, Jessie Morris 21-112=8, Julie Wagner 8-l-2/2=21.
Lisa Sp~nce 3-0-2/2=8, Jodie

J

ByTIMPUET

· Associated Preis Writer

with Wabama that bas not been
rescheduled at this time. Tbat game .
bas been postponed twice because
of the weather.
The Marauder girls will travel to
McArthur tonight to play the Vinton County Vikings in a regularly
scheduled contest before playing a
make-up doubleheader at bpme
w1th Belpre on Saturday at I p.m.
The seniors will be honored on
Saturday between the reserve and

Jodi Hawk 5..()..Jf2=il. Totals: 5-

2-17118::S1

varsity . games . Seniors playing
their last home game in the 10a10011
and gold wiU be Amber Blackwell,
Vanessa Compston, Melissa Clif·
ford and Jaclyn Swart.t.
On Monday, Feb. 13, the Lady
Marauders will bit the tournament
trail against Waverly in Division D
. sectional tournament action on the
University of Rio Grande campus.
The tiiH&gt;ff will fie at 7 p.m.

The Meigs Marauder junior bigb Waylon McKinney poured 1n 17 the fi~t period _and coaslfd -~a 64·
basketball teams recently played points to lead Meigs to a 59-39 27 wm. Cottrill led the wmners
~~ Hoelting in a pair of j!ames win . Other Marauder in the scoring with IS, Quinn added 12 and Bond
m MICidleporL
. column were Hannon (seven), · bad II.
poured in 12 points to lead the Blue
In the r~t two games, the ~v- Humphreys and Bentley (six eacb),
Leach led Meigs with 10 points.
Streaks to a 24'-16 win. No other · en~ grade !'•eked up a 50-36 wm, VanMeter (five), Romuno and Murray, who addet! four, wasfolstatistics were available on the wh1le the e1ghtb grade defeated Ramsburg (four each) and !.owed by Meadows three and twogame.
Federal Hocking 59-39.
Williams and Hendricks (two point efforts by Abbou, Stanley
In the third game Salisbury
~n the seventh-grade game, each). Diles led Federal Hocking and Karr. .
• .
overcame a 17-10 halftime deficit ~e1gs outscored the~~ 34-16 with 16.
In the e1ghth-grade game, Me1gs
to post a 27-26 win. Wilson once m the second and third penod and
In the other two games -Federal opened up a 43-:l8 lead heading
again led the way with 13 points, went on top post a 50-36 victory. Hocking outscored Meias 21-5 in into the final period en route to a
Witherell added eight, Neece four Meigs was led by a bio of players
with II points each - Beba,
and Davis two.
Harrison was led by Stanley's Abbott and Roush. Leach added six
16 points. Older added six and points, while Murray bad four,
Meadows bad three and Van InwaWalker bad fQur points.
Salisbury is coached by Jared gen bad two. Cottrill led the
Lancers with eight points:
Stewart and Josh Witherell.
In the eighth-grade contest,

55-37 OW:!'~·
.
McKinley once agam paced the
way for Meigs with 20 points,
Bentley and Hannon added 10
points each, -. Davidson five,
Humphreys four and Williams,
Ramsburg and Carr two points
each. Diles led Federal Hocking
with 13.
The Marauder seventh-graders
are now 5-5 on the-season, while
the eighth-graders are 7-3.

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Mahaffey's own coach, Herb
Sendek, was a little more general in

By RONALD BLUM
Clinton, speaking in the RooWASHINGTON (AP)
sevelt Room where talks were held
Congress has little iriterest in Presi· the night before, said he bad no
dent Clinton's plan to solve the regrets about trying to end the
baseball strike. leaving players and strike.
• 'I'll send the legislation up.
owners at a standstill just a week
They'll bear from the American
before the start of spring training.
Both sides beaded home people and they'll make their own
Wednesday following a night of · decision," be said. "If we bad a
failed negotiations in the White baseball commissioner, maybe
House. President Clinton sent spe- none of us would have been in
cial legislation to Capitol Hill, a here."
Dole said ·Iiis office received
biD to create a three-member panel
aboQt 1,&lt;10() telephone calls about
of independent arbitrators.
But after meeting with mediator the strike by midaftemoon and that
W.J. Usery, House Speaker Newt they ran 5-to-1 against intervenGingrich and Senate Majority U.on.
Leader Bob Dole said they bad no · Other Republicans criticize~
intention of moving qulclcly to set- Clinton for attempting to personally mediale the dispute.
tle the six-month walkout
"I'm afraid the president bas
"I'm not sure that Congress bas
the wisdom, or should have tbe rat£beted up the issue in an almost
ability to inlervene In a single incredible fashion," said Sen. John
industry that's not a matter of McCain, R-Ariz.
"I think it's a dumb idea. We
national safety," Gingrich said.
Union bead Donald Febr also have much more important fish to
fry," said Rep. Steve Stockman, Rspoke with Usery, who the players
Texas.
"For a president who
may not want in the talks anymore.
claims
to
champiOn the middle
The union splits his $120,000-perclass, he certainly spends a lot of
month fee with management and is
time trying to settle disputes
angry his suggested terms of settlebetween millionaires."
ment agreed much more with the
OWI)ers than with them.
Even some Democrats disagreed
with the president.
No talks are scheduled, and it
· "I tl)ink we have a lot more
appears the sides won 'I meet again
important things to do than baseuntil next W¢nesday when they
are to testify before a Senate sub- ball," said Sen. Joseph Biden, DDel. "I'd like to organize a group
committee. The hearing will take
that if baseball comes back, we'd
place just one day before replaceboycou baseball. And I'm a basement players start reporting to
ball fan."
camps in Florida and Arizona
But Rep. Charles Schumer, D·
Acting commissioner Bud Selig
N.Y., backed the president during a
was beaded back to Washington
news conference with three other
today to speak with the De1110a111ic
caucus, a group that beard from
congressmen and Sen. Bob Grabam,
Schumer called Dole
Fehr last week.

WRANGLER
RTS BLACK

~

said.

his comments on the 6 -foot-6
senior's play. ''Jamie bas bad a
great senior year," be said. "His
play·on the floor Is overshadowed
only by his leadership off the
floor."
Landon Hackim added 16 points
as Miami rallied down the streiCb
.with a 13-4 run in the final three
minutes . Craig Thames scored.20
for the Rockets. .
Elsewhere in the MAC Wednesday nigbt, it was Eastern Michigan
over Western Michigan 67-57,
Ohio University defeated Kent 7564, Bowling Green drilled Cj:ntral
Michigan 75-57 and Ball State
edged Akron 72-68.

Miami with a 10-1 made holds a Donewald said Carpenler "demontwO.:garne lead over Ohio and East- sttates everything you e~er want in
em Michigan at 8-3, followed by a competitive athlete . As long as
Bowling Green at 74, Toledo and there are Kareem Carpenters play·
Ball State at 6-5, Western Michl· ing baskelball, it will be an enjoygan at 5-6, Akroil at3-8, Kent at 2- able game to watch."
9 and Central Michigan at 0-11.
Carpenter's 27 rebounds set a
Eastern Michigan's Kareem school record . Teammate Earl
Carpenter was on a quest against Boykins also scored 17 points,
Western Michigan and it showed in while Joel Bums bad 21 for 1be
his play, said the Eagles' coach, Broncos.
Ben Braun.
.
Gary Trent's 27 points ar!d 18
"Kareem Carpenter was 'really . rebounds led Ohio over Kent. lbe
on a mission," Braun said. "The Bobcats led the Golden Rashes by
last time be was on a mission, he four at balftime, then used a 13-1
got26 rebounds and tonight, he got .ruri early in the second half to go
27 (along with 17 points). That's up 50-33 . Nate Reinking had 22
pretty good focus .'
·
points to lead Kent.
Western Michigan coab Bob
Central Michigan's miseries

continued as they set a school
record wilh their 12th slraigbl ·
defeat in .Iosing to Bowling Green.
Shane Kline - Rumin ski had 26
points for the Falcons.
The Chippewas were without
leading scorer Thomas Kilgore .
because of a deep thigh bruise and
bad six bealthy players , including
Ryan Jansen, who scored 21 points.
Steve Payne scored 18 points as
Ball State held off a late charge to
defeat Akron . The Cardinals led ·.
60-43 with 9 :02 to play, but the .
Zips closed ' to within 70-68 with ·
eigh! seconds left. Bonzi Wells hit
two final free throws to give Ball
State its final four-poinl margin: ·
Tron Jenkins scored 20 for Akron . ..

Congress turns back on Clinton's plan to ·end baseball strike

31-1050-R15

..~~*~

Asked to single out the i!ame's
big plays, Gipson said, ' Kevin
Beard hila big shot (a three-pointer
with 2:47 left to give Miami the
lead for good) and Jamie Mahaffey
stepped up down the stretch and
got two rebounds and stuck them
back in."
·
When Gipson was asked about
Miami's front-line play, a familiar
name came up again.
"They cause problems.because
their big guys-can shoot. Mahaffey
bit some shots where we guarded
him the best we could," Gipson

With spring training one 'week away,

Junior high Marauders beat Federal Hocking·three times

Salisbury quintet boost record to 3-0
The Salisbury fifth-grade basketball team is off 10 a 3..0 record.
: :The Blue Streaks opened their
season with a 41-7 win over Salem
Center. Jonathon Wilson led the
'&gt;':ay with 18 points
. :Other Salisbury players In the
si:oring column were Chris ·Neece
(eight), John Witherell (six), Matt
Williamson, Marc Smith, Zach
Oavis and Caleb Ellis (two each)
and Zach Glaze (one),
::Napper led Salem Center with
tt!ree points, while Johnson and
l'bomas each bad two points.
: In the second game .. Wilson

Toledo hardly could stop Miami
of Ohio's Jamie Mahaffey during
the game, 1!00.Toledo coach Larry
Gipson hardly could stop talldng
about Mahaffey afterward.
Miami defeated the Rodrets 7064 10 remain solidly atop the MidAmerican Conference standings as
Mahaffey led the Redsk.ins with 18
points. He made 7-of-8 field goal
attempts and went 3-for-4 from
three-point range. •
·
''Tbis is the best performance
I've ever seen out of Jamie Mahaffey," Gipson said . "We didn't
have an answer to him all ni~bt"

Meigs varsity basketball make-up dates announced
Because of the recent bad Marauders wiil host Wellston in a
weather. the Meigs boys' basket· ·make-up contest. On Tuesday the
ball te~ will .!lave a busy week 14th, Wabama will travel across
coming up with five games in eight the river to play the Marauders in a
days.
regularly scheduled game, and on
On Friday the Marauders will Wednesday the 15th, Alexander
travel to Belpre to play the Gulden will in vade Meigs in a make-up
Eagles in a regularly scheduled ball contest.
.
. Meigs wiU close out the week at
game. Next week however is when
the fun begins with four borne home with a regularly scheduled
game with Vinton County.
games in five days.
On Monday, February 13th the
The Marauders still bas· a \lame

,.

Miami beats Toledo 70-64; OU hands ·Kent 75-64 loss

Page--4
Thursdaj, February 9,1995

McGraw '1-3/4=9, Stacey Clark
0-0-2/4=2, S1.:pbanie Elder 3-0·
0=6, Trisba Alloway 4-0-1/3=9,

The Dally sentinel-Page 5

In the MAC,

Warren Local girls record 81-49 non-league victory over Eastern
Warren Local emerged from a
35-18 halftime lead to defeat Eastern 81-49 Wednesday night at
Warren High School.
. I ulie Wagner led the winners
with 21 .points, while teammate
Jodi Hawk bad II.
. Eastern was led by Jessica
Karr's 21 points .and a good floor
game, bitting 7-15 from the field 7·
8 from the line.
· Eastern was outrebounded 3015 the fitS! half and lost the battle
of the boards 55· 36, a crucial factor
in the game.
Patsy Aeiker bad seven
rebQunds, Evans six and Karr five.
Easrem bit 16-62 from the field, 03 threes and was 17-24 at the line.
Eastern bad 26 turnovers, seven
steals, II assists (Nicole Nelson
tlln:e) and 26 fouls.
.warren bit 29-71 for 40.8% (17-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Ntt~CI

""'"'"
""''""
""''""
600Dj."i~Aa

••tn••r
. ,., " w.,.,,,

and Gingrich "the Sultans of Not."
' Dole responded by say1ng ,
• 'The most dangerous place is
betWeen him and a camera."
Clinton's bill, sponsored by Sen.
Edwar&lt;l M. Kennedy, D-Mass., and
Rep. Pat Williams, D-Mont., would
give the president authority to
appoint a three-person "national
baseball diSpute resolution panel."
It would accept proposals and argoments from bQth sides and formulate settlement Neither side could
go to court to overturn any decision.
· "If we want a 1995 baseball
season, this may be the last resort,"
LabQr Secretary Robert Reich said
during a news conference at the
Mayflower Hotel, site of the failed
talks. "When Bill Usery, the best
mediator in the country, is saying
that in his decades of dealing with
labor -management .disputes, he's
never seen anything like this. I
think that says it all."
According to a source wbo
spoke on the condition be not be
identified, Vice President AI Gore
raised two points at the While
House meeting: whether revoking
the owners' antitrust exemption
would allow teams to move to bel·
ter markets and create more money
for the industry; and whether players would accept a mechanism that
would restrain salaries to allow
small-market teams to be more
competitive.
Clinton, the source said, also
raised two issues: binding arbitra·
tion and a presidential-fact. fmding
panel. Players said they would
accept iubitr:Hion but owners
refused.
It was· the union that refused to

accept Usery's s4g~eslions for a
settlement. The mediator ·proposed
a 50 luxury tax on the portion of
payrolls abQve $40 !Dillion. about
$700,000 below the 1994 average .
The Detroit Tigers, who under the
owners' method of counting had

point for free agency dropped from .
six years to four. But salary arbltra·
lion would be eliminated by 1997 ·
and players with three to four years
of major league service would see
their salaries drop drastically.

the highest payroll last season·,
would have faid an $8.4 m'lllion
uix in 1994 i the plan bad been in
full effect. In all, 15 teams would
have paid tax.
Players would see the starting

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Basketball

Soosth

a.-a69,1'11rlnM63
FloridoAIIIalic6S,S.....,.63
F1orido St 69, Wob-67
Howwd79. Delwn 5I. 73

NBA standings

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

Jamu M.diloD 73, WUUam

.o~u

"6.5

61

n .s

.JIO

61

.370
,29:J

19.5
19.S
lJ,S

.24A

lS

~ . . . . . . . .Jr ~~ ~
New Ycrt .............. JO 16
BOilOa.. " ............... .t9 71

.6lJ

- - . ............ 19 31
Miami .................... 17 19
PtJilld•lphl• ... ""'"'l4 )4
W..talqtoa ........ " .. 11

341

c-... ......

Cbtrlotte ................ 31 • 17
. CLEVELAND .......JI 19

.646

.l96
lldlua o.................17 19 .SI7
Chlcofo ..................lJ 24 .419

2.l
l

19

9
12

Odrol1.................... 17 19

.370

13

26

~ .... .........19

Mk:hiPD St. II PIAo St.
Nonhwata'D a1 01-DO ST.

...

.B: L tsi.

IJ1oh ....................... 35

.719

ll

a
l.].l

Dollao ..................... ll
Mla...... .......,.... .. ll

16
l3.S

21
36

.391

.134

o.t.

PadlkDt.loloa

Phocai&amp; ...... .. :......... 31 10
Seoalo .......... .......... 31 11
L.A. !Mst............ 29 16

.792

.721
.644

Portlud .................l$

20 .lS6
....... :....15 10 .$S6

Oo""" s.............. 13 31
L.A. Qlppcn ...........7 40

.195
.149

•
7.5

11 .5
ll.l

13
30,,

lr:
. . . . .. . . . . . ~t
onJo ...... ,.................. l 3
Toledo .....................6
B~lSL .....................6

W. Michlpa...... ..... .S
........................
Kea1 .........................

Wedneoday'• ...res

BoiiDo 75, CLEVELAND 67
Orlcdo 110. DaliM 92

Miami Ill, Wllhlqloal07
A111111o Ill. New 1.,.y II
Ot.noae 106, Ddrotl 71
New YOlk 96, IDdiW 17
Mi-lOO, Mhi11_..93
PboeolzlOI, UIIh 104

Thorn~&amp;

4
6

.117 17

$
6
7
I
9
1 11

.

s
l

LA. UDia 115, s .. AD1&lt;oaio !19

E. Mlcllipn 67, W. Miclllpo
Miarr:d 70, Toledo 64
OW075, 1Cem64

Saamcuto 16

More 71. Wilminaton, Ohio

Toal&amp;hl'apmea

Ooldea State It [leav«,l p.m.
au..., .. s..aJo.IO p.m.
Hculloa II LA. CJippcn, 10:30 p.Dl.

All-Star Game II Pboa:UJ., 6 p.m.

Major men's
college scores

Cio. Wyomin&amp;74, Cia. Pioneytown ti6

Circleville 61, Waverly 57

Ium

Eut
lkolloa Collep 18, o.or..-.o 61
BucbleJI7S, Fonltwn S6
ColpiC 93, l.diilh 71
MIDbattaD 91 , Lo)'Ola. Md. I)

Michlpa St. ............1

2 .100 16

3'

Purdue .. ..................7

1 .771 16

S

MiDINOit ................ 7
Mlchlpll .. .... ........... 7
IUluoil .....................6

3 .700 17
3 r100 13

6
9

O.y. DuDbwl3, Cio. Withrow 60
Faitpon 59, Conlloal Si
.
Federal Hoctii!J .56, Trimble J.S
Gruel V~. 61, Pmy SO
,

·'

WiKODiiD........... .....4

S .444 10

I

IOWI ... ..................... J

6

8

Morthw•tern ........... l

I .111

333 13

OHIOST ..... ............O 10 .000

4 ' 16

DeuoL ........... 7 3 0 14 40
St. U&gt;uil ..... ...... 6 2 1 13 «

2l
21
21

34

33

IJollal ................ 3 4 1
Wial1ipeJ.......... 2 S 3

I 29
7 30

2l
36

Transactions

17
l6
41
40

U..baD

Toroato ............. 4 4 3

II

P•llk~.-Woa

Sulole ............ S 3 1
Coi1ary ....... ...... 4 4 1
Aolhetm ........... 4 6 o

Bdmoatoa ......... 3 !1i 2
U&gt;IAqel• ...... 2 ' 1
VIDCOU'Iif ........ 1 4 3

11
9
a
I

11

21
23

'X7
6 21
S 22

aulhori~.

. Thepolicetookthewom8Jl'sbaby
11110 custody, together with the diaper

-'"-~

SEA'ITLE ' MARINHi"S : Pllrchued
.
the c:ootnct of Scot Sealy, cak:ba-, mm
Mobllo of lba T...·Loulslau ~

33
31

hag.

'Ihis l?alentine's C/Jay ...
Go Straight for thejleart! ,

wh~h was filled with unpaid- $8~forunuStdtimeoll'.

tbe second birthday of tbeir son,
Jim. on Jan. 23.
A Power Ranger cake- was
served witb ice aeam 10 the guests
at the home of his . grandpareots,
Jim and Ann Rife. AUending were
big parents, grandparents •.Terry
Rife, Debby White, Ron White,
and Ronald James White.
Sending cards and gifts were his
great-grandmother, Mrs. Sears, and
Keith and Jennifer Eubaoks. Mr.
and Mrs. Rife also entenained witb
a family dinner honoring their

Toronto 53 , BridgtpOrt 52
.
Virw:eot Wwren 11 , Roednille BallaD
~

Walah 31, Oilmout 36
Wmaw River View 67. Maysville 60
Wellinetoa 49, Elyria W. 37
Wicillffe 70, Oranae 33
Wiudham61,Cmtwood $4
WOOfkidae 72, Sueeuboro 39

THlJRSDAY
POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter, Beta .Sigma Phi
Sorority, 6 p.m., Grace Episcopal
Cbiucb.
.
TUPPERS PLAINS -Veterans
of Foreign.Wars. Post 9053, Thursday, 7:30p.m. at post home.

:\ MIDDLEPORT Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughter
of tbe American Revolution. 1:30
p.m Saturday at Heath United
Metbo&lt;!isl church, Middleport.
Frank Vaughan. speaker.

Zlneaville R03ectana ~ l. Col. Ready

NHL standings
EASTERN CONFERENCE

ti~. cruise, leather,
cassette &amp; CD player,
Calypso green.

V8, auto .. air,

$34,695

1992 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE SSE, loaded ...:..............:................................................ $15,495
1992 DODGE RAN~ auto, air, stereo ............................................ ~ .................................. $11,995
1991 CHEVY CORSICA, auto., air, sterreo, runs good ..............:.................................... $6,995
1988 CADILLAC SEVILLE, leather, VB, loaded ................................................................$7,395
1990 GMC C1500 P/U, auto., air, stereo, cruise ..................................:......................... $10,995
1991 BUICK PARK AVENUE, loaded, leather ................................................................ $10,995
1994 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL, loaded, 20,000 miles; leather..:..................................$23,995
1988 FORD MUSTANG GT, 46,000 miles. Must Seel .......................................................
$7,495
.
1994 GMC C1500 PICKUP, loaded, 7,000 mlles .............................................................$15,995
1993 GMC KiSOO PICKUP 4X4, 40,000 milas ............................................:....:.......~.......$16,995
1990 FORD F150 XLT LARIAT PICKUP 4X4 ........................................................:............ $9,995
'
1991 GMC SONOMA PICKUP .......................................;••~ .............................................:•.. $6,995

1995 BUICK

~mav
ttintts
..
ierdiat.el
.

995 PONTIAC
LLE SE

ROADMASTER

'

1995

---

METRO
2 Door, convertible, black
licorice: stereo/cassette, PS, 5
speed, air, 15" wheels, 4X4.

$10,399

$14,499

DON TATE·MOTORS, .Inc.
IT'S WOFJTH YOUR DRIVE/

THIS SPACE
$8.00

992·2156

· THIS SPACE
$12.00

....
HouRs· I
Monday.Frid
9 Al.f.a PMay
Saturday
9 AM-4 Pl.f

'All pri&lt;eslnclud,
rebates 10 dealer.
Tlxn &amp; fees not
. Included.

l

FOR MORE INFORMATION

SIHiday
I PM.5 Pl.f

Call ·By 2:00 P.M. Friday for Sunday Edition
.'
I

•

mals. At nearby Ohm Umverstty,
students appear at the shelter ~· the
~nd of each quartc;r With anunals
my P.~ents won I let me ~nng
home. So much for. affectiOn~ucb . less love. And I m not blam·
1ng the parents. These days. when
JV . stauons ,warble .that tb~y
believe m us! when.people ~Ufy
publicly to ~nvate fmbles all m the
hope of bemg beard and underslood by ..someone wbe~ b.?~~s
offer us a penonal financier: It IS
clear tbat peop,le are not:, m the
media tberap•st.~ words, getung
tbelf needs mel A! though I have
great empathy for tb!S ..I can~~?,t for·
g•v,c; people who dec•de to lry a
pet lo see what tt c~ do foc them.
!Its not up to anunals, aoymore
tban people, to solve your emouon~ ~?ble~ . You. wouldn't (I hope)
try bavmg a child to. ~ how you

It. You make a .hlelong comm1tment !0 another uymg creal~.
If you thmk you can I, tben don t.
Maybe yo~ bave. a good ~on for
be.mg ~tl you U bolcb •t. Take a
.f~1end s puppy for a day and a
m.gbt (not a bad tdca 1f you are
thinking of bav.mg a .ch1ld, ettller).
ThiS can be enhgbtenmg.
.
That staggering dog 1 found 1111
tbe road (aod tbank you again 10
the kind man who helped me gel
her in tbe truck. His parting worils
10 me: "I can't bear 10 see a creltture.dumped like that!.) may have
been a child's responsibility lessan
or an unwanted gift. Worst of a) I,
that emaciated creature may have
· been dumped by someone wlio
"just loves dogs" but couldn.'t
endure tbe guilt occasioned by a
trip lo tbe pound. Well, someooc
else cleaned up tbe mess-again.

Tlmee. S~ndble and
CrMiort Syndicllle'

bim/berltbem. Think tbey care if
tlie new owners plan to ~bain tbe.
dog for life or let tbe kittens run
wild, never seeing tbe inside of a
vet's office?
Tbe most conservative figure for
the number of dogs and cats
deslroy.ed annually is 10 million.
Accordmg to Robert Armstrong, a
retired Houston veterinarian, and
author of 'The World Is Gomg to
tbe Dogs" (Newsweek, 28 ~arch
I 994), tbe bealtb department m one
Texas town destroys seven to ten
tons of animals weekly!
·
In tile past three months alone, I
have picked up three dogs - all
stai'Ving, one dying of beartworms
- on Route 681. I have seen, usually on Monday mommgs, dead
cats and dogs (last week even a
cow bit by a tar), all testament to
how much people care about an•-

l~e

WE WILL .NOT BE UNDERSOLD
OH AllY ITEM AT AHY TIME .

Our pr1ces [an' I hebcatt We Will n1atch any

In c~ I prtce

Prne1 no, bt •Pr11tJ

S!~

on conm~r~ble uems

m 1u~mg

1101 f tur crLllll

RDII

12!!,

llllltiXIII'IU ....
Price good with exchllnge

BINOI! PfRIORMAIIGI PROifG I ~N PIIN
~II ~ IIlii[ IO IIOII~ IIS:

lifETIME WARRA NTY

999

328..'t
399.t
....
1111111-

SZiff

llllltiX III'IU 1'1111
BfNIII~

PIRIORMAIIGI PROIICIION PIAN
Sf I iiOAI

tO~

Otl.lts

RDII

18!!,

-··

Pncn good w•lh ••change

liFETIME WARRANTY

..........

llllltiXI•II Mlllllc
BINOIX PIRfORMlNC f PROIIGIIIIIi PIAN
Sl/li !DRI IORDfr.WS

FIIOII

99°

R.O.LGIIUII
Everydly Low PriM

.
,
.
89c
$1 .14 sale priCe
·SO 25 mf['S rebate per gt

l ifJ\11 12

• Vour cost
alt~n

rebilte

Kendlll .
10W30,
10W40.111'
tiW30
MDIIII' Ill

Grange contes1 winners
-.selected-at meetir:1g --

THIS SPACE
$16.00

..

All Used Cars &amp; Trucks Mus.t Go.
Taxes and title fee not included.
All payments subject to credit approval

•

NOW

$24
Tropical gr"Jl• automatic,
rear defogger.

•

CALL

Dual air bags, anti-lock brakes,
3 .8 V6, cass., all power, rear
defog., 6 speaker sound system,
auto., air, rear spoiler,
medium red.

Door, V8 , P. seat, P windows &amp;
locks, keyless remote, dual air
bags, cassetle, auto., air, leather,
dark cherry.

4

Feb. 12-18 is Child Passenger
Gibson said parents should
Safety Awareness Week. the amiD· , understand which type of seat
a! observance tbat increases aware- (infant toddler/convertible or
ness about the need for children 10 booster seat) is appropriate fiX' tbcit
ride in cars buckled up, the State child's size and development.
Highway Patrol bas announced.
"Parents have a tendency lo
Lt. Dan Gibson, commander of move tbe child out of a safety seat
tbe patrol's Gallia-Meigs Post. said and into a lap/shoulder belt too
injuries from motor vehicle crashes soon," be said. In Ohio, children
are one of th~ leading killers of ull!ler tbe age of 4 and under 40
children.
pounds must be In a child safety
"More than 70 percent of chi!- resiJ'aint device. .
~.through the age of.;, who die
NHTSA operates a toll-free
as a result of riding unprotected in Auto Safety Hotline, 1-800-424a motor vehicle crash, could have 9393, to provide information on
been saved if they bad been child safety seats, including ·which
secured properly in safely seats,'~ seats have been recalled fll' safety
Gibson said. "It is essential tbat problems. In Ohio, residents can
p'!!'ents'buc1tle their children iTl!o call 1-800-575-'SEAT for more
safety seats every trip."
child safety seat information.
The National Highway Traffic
All 50 slates, the District of
Safety Admipistratlon estimates Columbia, Puerto Rico and the
that more than 52,000 s~rious U.S. territories have laws requiring
injuries and nearly 500 deaths tbe use of child safety seats. In
· could be prevented each year If Ohio, drivers cited for child safely
every child under age 5 was cor- seat violations can be fmed up to
·rectly buckled in a child safety $100, plus court costs, for first
seat.
offenses and $250 for subsequent
Child Passenger Safet~ Aware- offen~s.
ness Week is part of the Safe and
Child safety seat violations are
Sober Campaign," a nationwide . p~y offenses undel' Ohio law,
effort to reduce drunk driving and which means drivers · can be
inaease the use of safely belts and stopped for that reason alone. ·
child safety seats.
·
I

IN THE

.

MEIGS COUNTY HUMANE
SOCIETY
Years ago 1 saw a British movie.
"We Think tbe World of You" 1
tbink il was called. I know Alan
Bates was in i~ so it was wonderful, of course.
The premise was that Bates
ended up living with and taking
care of (for keeps, it was implied) a
neglected, unruly dog, despite the
fact that lbe dog's family "loved" it'
and "lbougbtthe world" of ber (she
was a she, 1recall).
Well, people will offer neglect
and even abuse in the name of love.
with people, oflen children and animals, bearing the worst of it. We
"love" our animals so mucb we are ·
killing tbcm by tbe thousands. Just
take a look at tbe ads in tbe local
media. "Free 10 good home." Right .
They just want to get rid of

·State to obs~rve child
passenger safety week

NOW
AVAILABLE

Grange contest winners were
announced when Hemlock Grange
met last week at the ball.
The grange bad seven calu:s in
the contest wilb first place going 10
Linda Schoeppner, second to Helen
Quivey, and third to Jessie White.
A second place ribbon went to Sara '
Cullums for the quill coat.eat. class
C. Certificat.ea were presented 10
new memben.
The meting opened witb group
singing of "It's a Good Thing to be
Granger". The Hag was presented
by Margare! Haoing. ·Reported Ill
were Bernice Hawk, Bob Reed,
and Vada Hazelton. It was noted
that former member Ruth Francis is
now in the Ptxneroy Rebabllltatlon
and Nursing Care Center.
The February birthday of Mrs .

I .

Haning was noted. At the nexl
meeting there will be a soup super
at6:30 p.m. to be prepared by Edna •
Clark and Nancy Wells.
·
Tbe~range banquet was
annou eil for April 28 . Jessie
White
the lecture hour using a
Valent• e's Day theme. Songs
were "Let Me Call You Sweetheart,'' and "When You Wore a
Tulip." The .legend or Valentine's
Day was given by Mrs . White.
Noami Reed read "Valentine Box";
Mrs. Haning, "Young Love" and
tbere was a skit by Wallace and
Muriel Bradford and Linda
'Schoeppner, "Forget tbe Middle- ·
man." Helen and HUber Quivey
also bad i: short skit Refreshment&amp;
were sctVed following the meeting.
I

L.ol...,....

not breathe the air.
I' Ianning a wedding? Wllat's riglll7
Whal's wroftg? 'The Ann Landers
G1&lt;itk for Brilks" willnlieW! yow
QfUiLty. Stnd a stif-addtesstd,lollg.
busi~~ess·sizt tnW!Iopt and a check.
or mo11ey order for $3.75 (tit is
includes postage alld Nutdling) 1o:
Brides, cfo AM l..anders, 1'.0. Box
11562,Chi':J~~~S606) ll-i)562 . (lft
Canada, se .,. ·

flllll

.,

PRE-OWNED £ARS &amp; TRU£KS

·4 Door, air, power steering,

9 21

JO
25

BULLETIN ·BOARD

DEVILLE

$23 949

v•v

9 26

•
1995
CADILLAC

4 Door, 4X4, apple red, locking
diff., aluminum wheels, auto., air,
power windows &amp; locks, cruise,
. tilt, SL decor, cassette.

l! .1. I l't: lA fl:l.

N.Y. lshmden. .. 4 4 1
· N.Y. Rlmoen .... 4 I 1

308 E. Main St., Pomeroy, Ohio
1-992-66411-800-8237-1094

JIMMY

Allulk Dl•llio•

.11195.

Is there any qency that can help
me get in contact with my father7
Please help, Ann. 1 really want to
meet him. •• OREGON
.
DEAR OREGON: At the risk o_r
souilding hard-heancd, I must say 11
IS _apparent that your fllher does 1101
w1sh 10 ~you. Pleasedoyourse~.
as ~ell as htm, a f•vor and f~et IL
Trymg 10 traCk h1m ~wn. wtll only
lead ~o more rejection and
unhappiness.
Gem of the Day : In .•n
underdeveloped001111try,donotdrink
the water. In a developed country, do

·Animal abuse, neglect in the nam,e .~f love?

SUNDAY
FRIDAY
POMEROY- Singing Sigrist
MIDDLEPORT - Boswortb. F,jllllily 10 perfonn at the Pomeroy
Council 46, work in the S.E.M . Cburcb of tbe Nazarene, 6 p.m.
Degree Friday, 7:30, Middleport ~unday. Public invited.
MasQnic Temple.
.
··~
MONDAY
LONG BOTI'OM - Valentine
· -POMEROY - - Big Bend Fiii'Dl
dinner at 5:30 p.m. followed by Alltiques Club, Monday, 7:30p.m.
hymn sing with the Clark family at a.t the Meigs High School library.
7 p.m. af the Faith Full Gospel
. .
Church, Long Bottom. Pastor Steve_ _ POMEROY- Women Alive,
Reed invires public.
!!looday, Kyger Creek club house,
1 .m.. devotional speaker. Salad
.
SATuRDA¥

Hockey

DARE TO CQ_M Pf\RE
995 GMC

POMEROY - The Rock
Springs Grange wiU meet Thursday
at 7:30p.m. at tbe ball

41

tom

old and have never met my real
father. When I was 18, I fou~ his
name and phone number m my
mom's (lesk. I called the number and
gotholdofhim on the fli'Stcall.l told
him my name, and he said he didn't
rei!ICmber me. I then told him who
my mother was. Suddenly, he
remembered.
We were on the phone for five
minutes, and il was very pleasantWe
had a ·real nice convenation. I told
him I would love to meet him, and
hesaidhefeltlhesamewayandthat

~~.

''• BURLINGHAM- Burlingham
Mpdern Woodmen, poduck at 6:30
Saturday nigbl at Woodmen's ball:
Everyone welcome. Door prizes to
be awarded.

Waterford 49, Frontier 44

Gee

rrom

Ann
L d
.
an 9 rS

so~e validity 10.May's requ~t to be ~ail immediat.t~ly. I WIS lhrilled.The
paid for unused urne oil', but I II leave ticllel. however, oever came.
that up to the legal eagles.
Two months lalcr, I lried calling
Dear Ann Landers: I am 20 yean him. His phone number was unlisted.

.Community palendar

W. Brancli 41, Carrollton &lt;M
W . Geaup69, 0Jawin Falb 42
W. Muai:.ingum :SS, Tri·Valley 49

·{!)
WE DAVE THEM ALI.!U · WI.·
Chevy - GMC - Pontiac Olds - Buick - Cadillac - GEO
f

JAMES HARRISON

grandson.

Tol. Scoo: S6, Tot Stitt 36

·. DON TATE MOTORS,.Inc.

Slory, David May, assiSiallt registtar

of vital statistics was caught on
videotape taking cash
fees paid
to his offiCe for birth certifle&amp;ICS and
childml along when you go to steal. ocher such things. When c:onfronted
Give them a break. Leave them at by police. he took them to his house
home. -· CAROL IN NEW PORT and handed over four suitcases
RICHEY, FLA.
loaded with $200,000 in cash.
DEAR CAROL: It is unlikely that .
City auditors think the amount
a woman who would take her baby stolen may be more than $400;000.
along while shoplifting would listen But thecily may still have to pay May
10 advlc:e, but here it is anyway.
for SO days of unused time oil'.
AncJ .now for another leuer with a According to the'city's labor relations
diffenmttwiston stealing:
director, "Those are his contractual
Dear Au Landen: How's this for . rights."
chutzpah? A cily official in Buffalo,
What do you think of this, Ann?-N.Y.• admitted stealing at least APPALLED IN SAN FRANCISCO
$200,000 in public funds . He
DEARSANFRANCISCO: Ithink
resigned -· and .then asked 10 be paid I am nol about to start practicing law

John and Penny Harrison entertaioed with a party in observance of

. Tol. St. Ur.ula 59, TOI. Roam 33

49

CCI' ~~se. The baby was given
to socialsctYtees,llld the molher was
escorted 9Ut the back doot
Please; mothen, do not take your

Second
• hd
blrt ay
. / bfta ted
Ce e

26

Loaan 73, Albeu 66
I.Daao Elm 84, Huutioat.au Ra" 66
Modi11a Hi&amp;hi&amp;Dd .57, Tallmadae .s.s
Pym.tuaina: VII . 4l, Ledsemont 39
Uaioto 71, AdeD.I 57
Wldlwonh 66. Nonon 46 ·

5 13

14 43

llor1foni•T-&amp;ay•.7:JOp.m.
·TorooiOatDdrok.7:3Qp.m. ·
Su.be ll EdRIODlOB. 9:30p.m

Tol. Notre Dame ACid. 61, Tol. Waite

. Hudlon 76, Revere 53
ICirtlabd .5 .. , Berbhite 36

&lt;4 .600 u . 7
PeaoSL ...................S S .SOD 13 6
ladiiU .....................5 S .SOD 13 9 .

lY L I l't: lA !II.

Stcu.beoville 81, E. Uverpool65
ToL. Catholic71, Tol. 80Wiher SJ
'l'ol. Libbey :57, Tol. Woodwlrd 4:5

Copley 73, GreeD 61

.l! L l&lt;t. lY L

• Frlday'•aa-

C..II-

Sprina. South 71, Xenia 24

Clc. Mu Haye~.S9 , Oc.'AviatiOn SO

o.....

Wiaaipea II VIIIC:OUYflf, tb:JO p.m.

Padua S4, Cle. Cllholic Sl
RavennaSoulhrMI49, RoolltOwu 43
Sanduaty 64, N. Ridaeville :50
Sheridan 66, Iohl Olean Sl
Solon61, Twhubll'l 4:5

Cia. Taylor .S7, Cio. Hilla Ctr. Acad.

Coot

- · c l l p r J, 9:JOp.m.

(0'1)

37

Big Ten men's
standings

Sunday'apme

Medina66, StrolljJViUe :58
Milford 44, Uma 29
Miueral Ridr. :51, Lowellville 41
Mopdcre 5 , GarretUville :51
Mooroe C~ntnJ 80, Caldwell61
MoraaD 46, Pbilo 34
N. Oll!llled 49, Ament 45,
N. Royalton SS, Mi~lft46
New Lexln&amp;toa &lt;18 , Croobville 35
Oberll• 53, Keyllo.. S1
Olnt1lcd Foils 62, Bay )I
Ottoville 66, Delphol Sl. IohD'I 60

Cia. ~nt 82, Clo. IDdie Hil\42
Cin. St Xavier 83, Kettetio11 Alter S1

omo 11 Bowll.ua Groen

or Saturday

McCllln6l, Welten l..lttwn43

"""*

Sunday'sc11111e

No pmea Friday

M.-lio~a50, Louisville 34

AmeliJ 64, Cio.
60
Brblol63, Newbury 58
Clo. Colcnia 6S, Cio. Northw~t 55
Cln. Deet Plrt Sl, ChL Readio&amp; .51
Cin. LDvelud 51, Cia. Madeira •9

Miami• Atro11

Qu-otBol10&amp;,7;);)p.m.
PiiiiiMI'ibll N.Y. lsJ.s-.; 7:JOp.m.
N.:r .JWtten at New Jcney, 7:30p.m.
Florida .. Phlladolpllla, 7:30p.m.
Cll~ .. 5I. Loula, 7:30p.m.

·SPECIALS

MaplfiC11.78, Parma 32

Ohio H.S. boys' scores

Ball SLaW. Micbi~Jd
E. Mlchipu II Cent MichiJID ·
ltelllll Toledo

Tonl&amp;hl'• &amp;lllll• ·

BlACK HIUS GOLD

Lamlu Squlhview ~o. Mldview 33
Modlloa!O, Edllft'ood 61

. C.c Watenl 64, DeniJon 32
Obio Wftleyaa 75, W001t~ .SJ
Wll1ellbal 86. Eorllwn 36

Sal!!nlay'• came~

34

l7
15
11
11
l4
11
J4

l..araiD 43, VemiliOD 42
Lorain Cath. :53, Elyria Cialh. 47

North Caul AlbleU. Conf.

n

4l

~aN CONFERENCE

Jettcnoo61, RiveRlde •1
Lakewood 73, CIDlon Cath. 41

Cent Mldlialll 60, Bowlin&amp; Green SB
OHIO 61, Kent 61
· .
Toledo Tl, Miami 70

16

S7

Day. PMtmOn 80, Dly. Belrooua ·3.S
Elyril 70, Lonla Adm. Xiq: 32
Fairmont 59, Spriaa. North 31
Fairview 51, Rocty Rl"' JO
Field 40, Wltelloo 26
FftlaDdl41 , Broobide T1
Fort Jenlllllil 53, Miller City 32
oarneld Hfl, Trinity 114, Chanel36
GeJ.eva '47, Alhlabula St. lobn &lt;4:5
Holy Name 63, Normandy 4S

Mld-Amerkan Conference
Ball S..e 75, AlaoD 72

14

Wiaalpes 3, Edmot110D) (tie)

White 39

Ohio women's
college scores ·

4 .636 13
S .su 11
S .345 11
6 ..S5 10

Bill SL 72, Akron 68
BowUaa Green 75, Cntn.l Michipn

57

COI.I-t.tl~y 63, Newark Cllb.

64

WedDOiday'sscorea

P«tlaDd 116, CJW:aao 103

Navy.71, Holy Crc.a Sl
SL Pet«'l64, fairfield 6l ·
S)DCUIC 100, Providemce 76

u

N.Y. Raila• S,,Walllillll0114

13 22
11 21
10 ~s
6 19
4 13

- · ............ .. 6 l 0

.

Col. Wattenoll ~3. Col. DeSMea 47
ConDPUl 72, Albtabula 41
Cory· RtwaoD 71 , Ada 41
Day. Dunbar 109. Day. Jcffcnoa 33
D•y. Me•dowdale 41, Day . Coloael

AU&lt;J&lt;Iatlon
of Mideast CoUeges

fsl..l!L

.213
2 9 .112
c.Ml&lt;hlpn .............o 11 .000
)

Cle. Colliuwood 49, Beachwood )9
Cle. Eut 35. Cle. Rbod• 21

Olllo AtbleUc Conferen&lt;e

E. Mlcllia.. ............. a 3 .117 14
BowllaaOreoo ........7

S2

Baldwia-Wallace 16, Mlllti_n_IUlTI74
Clpilll76, lloidclbcrt61 (UTJ
• lllrom Col. l4, Soh• Clnoll1l
OIUo Northa11 19. Moum Ut1ion 71
Ottabeia 59, Marietl.l '7

O.Woll

.909

Cia. Cotetain 68, Ciu. Wiatoll Woods

Wooller 70, Ohio WaleyiD 64

MAC men's standings

Butrolo.............. 6 3 I

Clli&lt;qo ............ 1 3 0

Chardo u MD· CL 61, Mentor Lai:e

Wil!eobc&lt;a 92, EorDwn62

N.....UIOO,Col&lt;ndol6

Mo-•.oa.w.J

--~~~-1716

J:i.

ClllOD s.29, Atr&lt;ID Spriq. 25
Certerville 64. Faibln 62 (OT)
Chardo n 35, Ke111toa 33 (0'1)

Calb. 50

Allqbeoy 10, Ob«lill60
CIH Watml. 90, DenlsoD II

For West

J.S
4.S

IJollal 3, ,....,. . 3 (lie)

Moolnol ........... 4 3 2
l!or1fonl ............ 1 S l
'Ouwa ........ ...... 1 1 l

Caaal Fulton Northwe&amp;t 36. Minerva

Norib Cout Athletic Con f.
.

I

BellMre St. John 's Sl, Couotlon V•l.
54, 8ftlll6
BucbyeTrall71, Hulllbal River 31

Ohio men's
college scores

K&amp;niM St. M

Que1oe&lt; 3, -onll

l'l1blotqb ......... I 0 I
Quollec............ .. I 1 0

Dear A•• ~I !'~l&lt;fll' ?'JC
oC the la!Jest retailen m Amenca.
W"ill you please print this message on
behalf of all SIIJI'C penonnel? If you
an goillg to shoplift men:haltdise,
letTt~e your_ cltil~11 at home.
A shoplifter took more than $200
. wo,lh of merchandise from my SI.Ore
last week. Of coune, the woman did
not ~ave any id~nti fication.
Shoplifters who do th1s for a living
do 1101 carry ti?..When the woman
&amp;•ve us a fi~uuous name and a
numberfll'adisconnectedphoneand
could not ~I henddress, we had
no al~!""al•ve except IO call the

Wtda ieJ'IICOI'II

1
1
1
1

Bru~~~ow ici:

19

DHaoil SL 73, Evaanille 72
M;,.,u,t 59, Iowa SL S6
Nolro llomO 77 . llwjueue 62

.............. J ' 6
3 6
Newlenoy ....... 1 •
Woshi .... o ...... l 6

Professiona\. shoplifti!]1L~S..!!£t.£~.~~l~~[~~~~El.Pusines·s

Avou 54, Clewview l9
Avon l...ab ..U, W.uate 34
BeaUnille 62, Shenudollh Sl
Belvtftt'fltlt 61, Huber H11. W1y11e )9

Brecb;,ue 19. Ooverleal &lt;47

Sunday's Glllll&lt;

SoulhCill Mctb. 65 , Baylor 59
Tuu 111. Te111 Ouilliu.99

S.. A111oalo ........... JO IS .667
~IDA .................29 16 .644
Ded.... ...................20 2S .444

46

Etuntu. Ill JDCliau

Soutbw011

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

~D 97,

MldUp.a ¥ WLic:otllla

1Dn 11 Dlloola

Mldw..t

WFSI'ERN CONFERENCE
1:..a

Saturday's gam01

Vud«t&gt;ill T7,Aut.n 59
Vo!Paii6S, N. Caroliu St. SS

Otlttlo m~ll,

morel9
Allnabuil- 60. lllmy S5

NorthwCIIllnllllowa

Old Domillklo 70, Rlcllmolld 60
.S...lb Carolioa 77, M - 1 1
S...lben 14. T.,. CoU. 6l .
Tu1M!IIIGe SL 17, TCIL-MirdD 74
1\alue. 79 , Va. Commoa...tth M

Houatoa13, Ric::e 67

Ain&gt;D Btld11el 56, ADoa Ellet 46
AlcroD CeoiAJowa- 63, Atroa Ken·

54

Tlllll&amp;ht's g•m•

a Mary

l'bl-..... . .
-

Mldllpa 71, 0100 ST. n
Miaae~CK~ '-' lDdiau

....... . s

~

lllJDo~

IWiucty 61, T,_41
Milliulppi 5I. 67, LSU 61
N .C . ~br;;tro 17, eo.ta1 c.roliu

7.5

.4:51
.)96

. Allaall ...................21

Wedn~y'sscores
61, PWo St.SI

•

The Dlllly Serittne,.:...Page 7

Pomeroy-Middlepor:t. Ohio

5~?
p....-

AIIIIIi'66U

WI ACCIPT
USO Ill

c7)
.... ·

OPEN
SEVEH
DAYS
A
lEEK!,.,
River Road ·
GALLIPOLIS Store Hours: 8 a.m. to 9 p.m.·Monday through Friday. 209 Upper
446-3807
&amp;.a.m. to 8 p.m. Saturday, end 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Sunday ·
""-'- gooctdwough Wed! I lillY. PellnMry 11, 1115.

special orders

�Page 8 The Dally Sentinel

Ohio

to tumor;

vere
BY PETER H. G01T, M.D.
DEAR OR. GO'IT: I"m a male
in my lale 30s and bave becD bolhered by severe headaches for several years . They've caused blurred
vision. An opblhalmologist indicated I look: as if I bave cboted discs
and referred me to a neurologist.
He sent me to an endocrinologist.
wbo said I bave acromegaly. I was
placed on medication and now face
tbe prospect of surgery to remove
the tum!.n , and the possibility of
radiation treatment. A CT scan
sbowed tbe tumor is invading bone
cells in my sk:uU. An MRI sbowed

that there 8te several tumm. Wbai
is acromegaly? WUJ tbe proposed
treatment of Sl!fgery and .radiation
work? Will !be ·IWDOf come back?
WiU tbe headaches stop?
DEAR READER: You bavc an
unusual and extremely serious condition. A tumor (adenoma) in ibc
pituitary gland is producing inappropriately large quantities of
growib hormone. Not only is ibe
tumor causing pressure on delicale
tissues in tbe brain, tbe growib hormone is dangerously stimulating
your whole body.
Wiibout treatment, your looks

Will treatment

will change: coarser features,
No one can predict if tbe rumor
prominent jaw, arthritis, enlarging will regrow but your headaches
bands and feet and skuU . In adtli- will, in all likelihood, disappear.
f.ion, you may develop diabetes and Wiibout doubt, you should follow
suffer nerve damage in your your specialist's recommendations.'
extremities. ·
DEAR DR. GOTT: I've sur· Acromegaly is ibe descriptive fered from hrpenension for a numname given to patients with excess ber of years and bave been treated
levels of growth hormone. In most with medication. I happened to
cases, ibc combination of surgery mention to a friend that I drink
and X-ray therapy will successfully between ibree to five cups of decaftreat ibe problem and curtail ibe feinated coffee a day. He indicated
COOiplications I mentioned. (If your ibat if I cut out the decaffeinated
features have been affected, ibey beverage, my blood pressure would
may not return to normal for years. . drop . I did and it did . Why? I .
however.)
always ibought tbat it was caffeine

!:. SATURDAY ONlY • SATURDAY ONlY

that elevated blood pressure .
Wbat' s in ibe decaffeinated kind
ibat also causes high blood pressure?
DEAR READER: I don't Jcnow.
Tbe traditional thinking bas been
tbal caffeine worsens brpertension
but decaffeinated beverages do not.
Your response is unusual and I can·
not explain it.
Nonetheless, if avoiding decaffeinated drinks bas brought your
blood pressure dqwn , stay the
course. There must be something in
tbe brew tbat was not bealiby for
you.

PETER
GO'IT, M.D.
you more information, I
senoiling you a free copy of my
Health Repon "Hypertension."
Other readers wbo would like a
copy should send $.2 plus a long,
self-addressed, stamped envelope
to P.O. Box 2433, New York, NY
10163. Be sure to mention the tiUe.
Copyright 1995 NEWSP.A·
PER ENTERPRISE ASSN.
am

Your Message Can
Be Seen Here!

SATURDAY ONlY • SATURDAY

•

For As Little As
$6.00 Per Inch Per Day

CD

=
a

2

a; ·

=
r;
fn

CODY C. MA TIOX

PHARMACY

•

Public Notice
Februory·t0,1995'1o:
ContraC1 A $212,1100 .
ContraC1 B 61,1100
Contract C 33,0110
Contract D
AHornotlvo A $96,0110
Altornallvo B 140,0110
Allornatlvo C 73,0110
In addition to tho Contract

In Memory

HAULING

DAVE'S
SWAP SHOP

Umestone
. &amp; Gravel

One mile out
143from Rt 7
Tuea. • Wed. • Fri. - Sat.

Reasonable Ratts
Joe I. Sayre

SAYRE TRUCKING
614·742·2138
,........,.,
YOUJIG'S
CAIPENTEI SERVICE
• Room Additions
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing , .
• Roofing
• Interior &amp; Exterior ·
Painting ·
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

J J CLASSIC GIFT
BASKETS
Custom Desirn•d Gifl
8aJUts For AU Oeca.rioiU
H1sell Run Rd. Pomero1

992-2927

1-6
• Craftaman Tools
•.Toys
"•Guns
Loads of Mise.
Buy:Sen-Trade
992-2060

992-5914

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS
Specializing in Custom
· Frame Repair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS FOR
ALL MAKES &amp; MODELS
-992-7013 OR
992-5S530R
TOLL FREE 1-800·848-0070
DARWIN, OHIO

10Ntmo

DAN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

MAGGIE'S CROCKPOT
Clifton, W. Vo.
304-773-5612
VALENTINE SPECIAL
Dinner For 2
Baked Chicken $12.95
6 oz. Albeye $14.95

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS
•Custom Ma•e
•Soli• vinyl
teplaeement
KINGS'
win.ows
Home Improvements • Free Ettlmates
33151 Happy Hoilow Road
Middleport, Ohio 45760
•New Homes
•Additions •Siding
•Roofing •Painting
-Garages •Porches .
•Pole Barns
Free Eoflmarea
614-742-3(190
304·773-9545""' - ·

In Loving
7131191 TFN
For All Malor
Memory Of
. Brands
SMITH'S;
CLAIRE C. BOSO
Used Appliances
for Salt
CONSTRUOION
On His Birthday,
Custom
Building l Romodtl lng
Call
Feb. 9, 1928Documenta, proapectlve
'
• New Homes
Bidders ore roqulrod to·
614·992·5515
Feb.24,1990
• Additions
·examine the following
10111/tfn
Parts &amp; Service on Most
• New Garages
Loved and oupplementery meterlalo:
Mak.es Racine Mower
I. Suboldenco Study of
• Remodeling
missed, Leading
Clinic
Creek Conoervoncy
• Siding
Public
Notice
Public
Notice
Wife, Children &amp; Dlotrlct Wator Syetom by
• Rooling
Grandchildren Burg111 6 Nlplo, Limited, give tho oucceolfullllcldor •
·•
Painting
Auguoi1DM.
"In Stock"
Notice of Awerd by
FREE ESTIMATES
MEIGS COUNTY
2. Tenk Inspection Report Februery 17, 1995.
Oregon Chain Saw Bars
AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY
(614) 992-5535
by CT Sorvjceo, November (I) 26, (2) 2, 9; 3TC
PubliC Notice949-2804
AN:ANCIAL REPORT
19, 1994.
'
i&amp;14l 992-2753
FOR THE FISCAL
ApVERnSEMENT"
3.
250,000·Gallon
YEAR ENDING.
FOR BIDS
Elevated Weier Tank
Public Notice.
NOVEMBER
30, t 11M
Ludlng Creek
Original Drewlngo.
C11h
Atcetpti:
. Conservancy Dletrlct
Tho Contract Documents
Thomeo E. Forguaon
TREE TRIMMING
Total Admlulono ..............
34481 Corn Hollow Road
on.d
a up plomenta ry
Auditor of State
.. ........................ 131 ,272.07
Rutland, OH 45n5
materlola may be oxemlnod
-"'nenclel Report Of
AND REMOVAL
Privilege F-.... 21 ,2315.110
at:
Soparoto aoalod Bldo will
Townohlpa
Racing F-.........&amp;,800.110
be received by Leading
L 0 0 d 1n g
C r 11 k
For Flocol Yoor Ending
Light Hauling,
UUII1t.o..:................. 103.110
Crook Conoervancy Dlotrlct Canoorvoncy Dlotrlct, 34481
Dtcomber 31,1FHa
....................
11,etl2.110
et tho office of tho Gontrol Com Hollow Aoed, Autlond,
Bedford Townehlp,
Shrubs Shaped
. liont.................... 10,123.00
Menegor, 3448l Corn OH 4Sn5
County of Melgo
Stell
Support
....
35,tm.8o
Mobile Welding
and Removed
Hollow Road, Rutland, Ohio
Burgoll &amp; Nlpla; limited,
"Thlolo on unaudltod
Locel Gov't Funds ............
45775, until 12:00 p.m. 5085 AHd Road, Columbuo,
Financial Report"
Diesel
InJector
SVC
......................:....... 9,1110.00
43220
Misc. Jobs;
(local tlmo), February 10,
SUMMARY OF CASH
· Rootrtctod ·support ...........
Injector Pump svc
191115, and thlln at eold office
Coploo of tho Contract
BALANCES, RECEIPTS
.............................. 2,832.110
8111 Sla.ck
publicly opened and rood Document• may bo
AND EXPENDITURES
Tune· ups ·
Unreotrlctotl
Support ....... .
aloud. Aprobld conference purchooedlll:
Source Deecrlptlon,
............................. 11,014.54
985·3879
992·2269
will be hold at t :00 p.m.
B.urgoie 6 Nlplo, Umlted
Totole 6 Fund Belence
Loan
Procoeclo .... 1,800.110
• (local time) on Wednoodoy, 5085 Reed Road, .Columbuo,
RECEIPTS:
Poroonel Property Sold ....
Februory 1, 1995 II the O~p~2p'1 ment of ~O.OO,
Toxeo .................. t2,767.78
.................................150.110
• ·edlng Cro
. ok Conoervancy
PlYwhich will ba
ln~·govemmentel
Totai 'Aecolpto.257,105.31
~
None
of
Howard L. Writesel
DlllriC1 office.
d
Recelpto ...... ,.......... 88,634.05 Cuh Dioburoamento:
ICIN'IIPPLIANCI
edr
1n1ereot .................... 86493
Th e wor k covore db
· Y the relun
Proapecllvo
BIDDERS
·
Salary end wogeo ............. .
SERVICE
ROOFING
. Contrect Document• hoe may eddreee 'inqulrl .. to:
All Other Revenue .............
............................ 10,938.40
-Factory
Authorized
Porto
2 140 83
been eoperated Into . tho
Blneflto...............:3,160.84
NEW-REPAIR
llo Sefvlce
• followlng&lt;:ontrecta: _
Mr. Torry Breckenridge, . r~i;j'ji";;;jj;j~::'iG.t:407 : 38
AdmlnlotroUvo
Exptlnoe
...
•All
Makea
~2
Year•
Contract A • Wetor Main Burgooo &amp; "Niplo, Limited,
DISBURSEMENTS
Gutters
......................;....... 2,587.03
-Fall Rellabt. Service
Columbuo,
G
1
Govommo
t
A.p lacoment Along Red Hill 5085 And Road,
14) 45t-2050.
onero
n ........
A••• Exponu ........ n4.42
tWaahara • Dryers - Ranges
Downspouts
27 48117"
. Rood. Thlo Contract Ohio 43220. (6
Supplleo.........:.....e,47t .25
~efrlgeratora •Freezers
A alto vlaltotlon can be
···························· • · v
lncludoo lnotallollon of orrangod by contacting Mr.
Public Safoty(Firo Cello) ...
Ut11Hioo .................8,403.12
-Diohw1ahere Gutter Cleaning
• 1,200 foet of 18-lnch Brent Bolin, 34481 Corn
.............................. 1,800.110
Racing Exponoe47,404.35
•H.W. Heaters .
Painting
· dlemolor polyethylene pipe, Hollow Road, Autlend, Ohio
Public Worko ..... 50,050.110
Sorvlcoo Exponao ............ .
-Microwaves •Diapoula
............................74,181 .15
•Thankl Melga &amp;
FREE ESTIMATES
. ~i:!t.:~JY:~yte~~-~::. 45n_5. Telephone (614) 742~:r.1~~~~~;;;~~~~:~~ Property
ExponH ............ .
Sunoundlng Araaa
24
11
A• 220 15
• .matl quontlty of 8-lnch
Tho t.udlng · Creek.
..............................., ·
............................ 23,142.52
(614) 985-3561 or
949-2168
and 4-lnch polyolhyleno
Toto 1
A• co 1p a
. 5116/94 TFN
Advll11olng .......... 3,847.23
992-5335
12114/ltn
pipe, a oman quantity of Conoervancy Dlatrlct Over/(Under)·Diob.10,t87.24
Repllra
.....•••.•.•••••••.•
240.0t;t
: duC111elron pipe and flttlngo reoervoe tho right Ia reject
Fund Cooh Belence, . lnourenco ...........:.8,2l!1.00
ea well ao all other llama any end all .bldo or to . Jenuery 1, ............. 25,323.91
Aont/Ltlll Exponoo .........
· llotod In the Bid Schedule.
lncro111 or docreeoo or·
Fund Ceoh · Balance, . ..............................
8,257.110
ROBERT BISSELL
• ControctB·Inetellellonof omit any Item or ltemo Docomblr31,.........35,51t.t5
Capital
Outlayo
..
42,422.14
Preceutlonerv. M..eureo and/or· award to tho lowell Summary of lndebllclnuo...
CONSTRUCTION
lnterllt Exponu ...... 21.23
539 BRYAN PLACE
end Aopelr of 250,000· ond beat BIDDER. Ee~h
Outotandlng Jan. 1, 111M..
MIDDLEPORT
Senior
Fair
Exponoe
........
.
992-2772
Geii!)Jl EJJVetacl Water Tank. propooal mu.t conteln t •
....:....................... 17,351.48
- • New ttomes·
..............................
3,V81.95
Office
Hours:
Mon.-Fri
.
Controct' C ·Temporary fullnomeofl'ilerypMdralllllthor
Newllouee ........ 27,834.72
Cont••t
Expena•
..............
.
a:oo
a.rn.'3:3o
p.m.
1
Garages
•
Tenk.
Thlo
compeny
lntoroate
n
Aotlrod
4~42
Pr ••• ur.
...........;................ 18,813.110.
..................
·-··
VInyl &amp; Alum. Siding,
Contract
lncludu ·eome. Each Bid ohall bo
Outstanding
Dec. 31,1DM
• Complete
Junior
Fair
Expenoe
........
.
delivered
In
-'
aeeled
•A
Roofing, VInyl
I n 1 I • II • I I 0 n
an d enveloped marked "Bid for
............................ 23 '1••·""
.......·....................... 81502.05
Remodeling
.
Replacement,
C kC
Depooltory Belenco ..........
maintenance of a 12,500Mltcolleneoue Expenee ...
11 nk Leading roo
onoorvancy ·
1
11
1
Windows,
Blown
44
095
72
Ill on ~"" preuure
Dlotrlct Water Syotem
..........,................. ' ·
.............................. 4,072.110
Stop &amp; Compare
.
Depoolta Not cr~lt-A
•• Will a. Ill ath.r Item•
Insulation,
Storm
Tote I Dtoburaemonta ........... .
- 3 -······
llotod In the Bid Schedule. lmp rovomonto .. " The
51V 33
FREE
ESTIMATES
Doors,
Storm
........................
$281,2111.18
Leading Creek Conoorvancy
;·:,··,··· 0
···u··,··,·i~",;","jj~g-· c....;ko
Conlr••t D • Pointing
Windows, Garages.
Cuh Aocelpti
Dlotrlcl reserve• the right to
~
985-4473
250,000·Gellon Etovetod wilve any lnformalltleo or
............................ 12,103.110
Ovor ·
Cooh
Free Estimates
Tonk.
Blddl
Total Belonce ..... 35,5t1.15 Dloburoomonto ... (11 ,385.87)
11tWn
7122194
All Blddere may ,Bid on lrrogularltloo In the
ng. I certify the fallowing report C'ooh llolonco: (12/1/V3)
.
·
eny one, ony number of, or . Succeeeful Blddoro ohall Ia be correct end true, to
ell of the obovo Contracto. be required io comply with the beet of my knowledge: .
(Beginning 8etonco).........
The work will bo ewerdod all Iowa pertaining 10
Barbaro J. Grueoor, Clerk c~;i;·a;i·~·~·~;;·i1i·~;:,u•
bued on the toweot and mIn mum w• 8 • 1 n d
42n4 Helwig Ridge
Bllance) ... 248.5e
POMEROY, OHIO
bill Bldo rocolvod.
dlocrlmlnollon of peroono.
Shodo, Ohio 45nil 12)(Ending
I; 1TC
T h·e
11
m
h
d
If
tho
Contrecl
Ia
to
be
.
Tc
11
1
1219' 1
Septic tanks cleaned &amp; portable toilets rented.
co"atructlon coat 11 of .w.rd.d, the Owner will
Dally, weekly &amp; monthly rental rates.
Job sites • Camp Sites • Family Reunions &amp; Parties

Kerosene
Heater
Repair

,_

.
50% off

First birthday
celebrated
Cody Cbristopber Maitox celebrated his first birthday Jan . 26
with a party at his borne hosted by
bis parents, Keith and Heaiber Mattox.
A clown ibeme was carried out.
Those anending were Harold, Dotlie, J. R. Scarberry, Sharon and
Junior Mattox, Roberta, Mick,
Mich3ela. and Tyler Davis, Sandy
Carnahan, Mark Mattox, ~arb,
. James , Steve Hudson, Curtis,
Tammy, Amanda and Curt Peters,
Tim Wells, John Haggy, Billy
· Young, .and Doroiby Bryan.
Sending gifts were Christina
RusseU, Elsie Sutton, and Bob and
Wilovinne Bailey.
·

GRAY'S

J&amp;L INSULATION

REV. GREGORY KELLER

Rev. Keller to
•conduct revival
. · Tbe Rev. Gregory Lee Keller,
pastor of ibe First Cburcb of the
· Nazarene, Camden, S.C., wtU conduct revival services at the Rutland ·
Cburcb of the N~ene Saturday
tbrough wednesday.
Services will be 7 p.m. each
evening wiib the exception of on
Sunday when ibey will be held at
10:30 a.m. and 6:30 p.m. There
will be special music by The Sissons.
Rev . Mr. Keller prior to tbe
Souib Carolina pastorate traveled
wiib his wife as a commissioned
evangelisL His messages are IlibHcally based and down to carib with
. strong emphasis placed on holiness
. wiib application to ibe home and
church.
He holds a bachelor of science
in Behavioral Science fro111 Trevecca Nazarene College, Nashville,
Tenn., and a master of science in
family and child developmeni from
Winthrop College, Rock HiD, S.C.
He and his wife, :;ue, have three
children and two grandchildren.

YourChoiee

•

.

~

. . ---? . . ~ . . ~

c:

Valentines Balloon

Plush
Be.ar Or Dog
'Witli Love Message
:Heart

"VISIT OUR SHOWROOM"
110 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
"Look lor the Red and White Awning"

992-4119 AI Tromm, Owner 1·800·29 1-5600

Vacuum Cleaner Service Special
Special offer includes :

1. Clean motor
2. Grease Roller Bearings ·
3. Clean &amp; ·check agitator
4 . Clean all moving parts
5. Clean &amp; check filter system
6. Check Belts
7. Check electrical system
8. 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, Main St. Riply WV. 304-6144

Graded .Benefit Whole Life is now abailable. The
plan offers coverage ol up to $10,000 wilh no
physical exam and no health questions asked on
lhe application. Ages 40-80

ROCKY R. HUPP
American Geneml Life &amp; Accident Ins. Co.
P.O. Box 189
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45760

614·843-5264
Life • Med icaic ~ Can c ~r • Fire ..
1-tcillth • Accident • Annuity •IRA • Mortgage

One Stop Complete Auto Bodf Repair

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE
Chuck Stotts
614-992-6223
Free Estimates
Insurance Work Welcome
~

State Rt. 33
Darwin, Ohio

=
·=
=
a:
...=

Raindrop Silk Rose

Emerge-ncy Phone 985-3 418

Saturday Only Special! ' IIIII!

Saturday
·Only - While
· They Last!

llll311fn

Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614-992-7643
(No Sunday Calls)

21 12192/lln

!;
0
A Nice
Valentine
Gift- Big
Selection

-Hearl (hocolates
161121 Reg. $4.99

. $2''

Gift Photo Frames

~$1.29

\':"4

•

en

~

·30ro40%

c:

OFF
Of Retad
Ust Prices

1:1

•
=
•
• SATURDAY INlY!C .·

~For

CD

.

=ATURDAY ONLY •

8

Joadin1 dock area. No one was Injured. Th
building b - tbe Charleston DaUy MaU, Tbe
· Charleston Gazetie and the Associated Preas
West Vlrglnil Bureau. {AP)

l.

CHARLESTON, w :va. (AP) Wednesday's explosion was not was happening and ibe explosions
.just kept coming on, seven or eigbt
- ·A transformer exploded and · immediately known.
ofibem."
Black
smoke
billowed
out
of
the
catised a rue and heavy smoke in a
Power was restored to ibe build·building's
loading
dock
area
as
building housing the cit(s two
ing
by rrudafternoon and the work·
firefighterS
arrived.
•
daily' newspapers. knoctmg out
.
"It
shook
the
ground,"
said
ers
returned.
power·and fOrcing more than 100
. The building houses .tbe
Tom Heldreib, who runs a parking
worlrers out.
Char,
J eston ~ Daily Mail', The
lol
across
(he
·street.
"Then
·
l
:No
was fujured in tbe 9:45
walked
up
to
ibe
corner
to
see
wbat
Charleston
Gazette and The Asso·
a.m. incident at the Charleston
elated
Press'
Charleston bureau.
'
•
Newspapers Building. The cause of

,.

Furniture, Tools, Middletown Doll,
Royal Vienna Doll, Chain Saw,
· Too Many Items to List! ·
LIVE ·MUSIC &amp; FOOD-

one

I

1995

FOR
~USSEll HOLSINGER, .
. CHESTER, OHIO
COOLVILLE LIONS CLUB
6:00 P.M.·I.O:OO P.M•

Transformer bfows up; Charleston
neWspapers building evacuated

' I

I

1 ~1,

AUCTIONEER; JIM ALLOWAY

'

We Have Cars and Vqns!
Kenny's Aut~ Center

264 Upper River Rd .
Gallipolis, OH. 45631

1. 800 _486 _1590
Bus. (614) 446-9971
'""'"

Come Ta.n With
MeAt
Announcemen1s

Long·Bottom, OH. 457&amp;3~

BENEFIT AUCTION
SATURDAY, FEB.

Kenny's is the place to come
when you need a car rental.

34110 Sugar Run Rd.

.•

BATILE BLAZE • FlreOabten work to put
out a fire Wednesd8y atlbe Cbarleslon Newtpapen Building. A cnrufonner exploded, Igniting
tile fire and sending heavy smoke out of tlte

Kenny's Auto Rental :~~ .·

CALIFORNIA TANS

Public Sala
&amp;_Alftlon

z:

!&lt;

Your authorized
American Standard Dealer

1120195

_New Homes • Vinyl Siding New ·

$1 ~~Oz. i

Ientine

EPA and RSES Certified

Call992-7434 for more information.

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

. Milky Way, &lt;
•
Or .M&amp;M's en
Fun S1ze Candy II!!

~~~

MORRISON'S ·
HEA,.ING 8 COOLING .

992-3954

=
z

$6''

HV211M'tfn

Low Rate Financing Available

Limestone, Sand, Gravel and Coal
WE HAVE A- 1 TOP SOIL FOR SALE
Llceneed 6 Bonded 20 earo ox • rlence

!;

.Elmer'~
1 Lb. Red foil
For Your
Valenime ·Or
To Decorate
Your Valentine
Gift!

NOW OFFERING GENERAL HAULING

1:1

With Chester Jester
Plush and .Stick Balloon

12~"

r--------..----------.
MODERN SANrfATION

:a

Ceramic Valentine Mug

==
z

.

!;

With Mylar
Saturday Only!

Saturday Only Special!

•

en

ush Animals

•

DEAN'S LIST
Aaron Sheets, a senior at Tobn
Carroll University, Cleveland,
made the dean's list for ibe 1994
fall" seinester. SheeL~ .is the son of
Jim and Jennifer Shee!f . .

•

Large

TOPS
Celia McCoy was the weekly
best lt&gt;ser for the second week in a
row when TOPS OH 1895 met
Thursday at ibe Syracuse Nazarene
Church. The runner-upl was Iletsy
·· Jones. The club bad 15 members
· weighing in Linda Grimm gav;:,c, ".""''--!!::OOii
secretary's report followed by
bie Lowery giving the weight
report.
Debbie Hill, leader, discussed
tbe"Ilring a friend night" to be held
Thursday at 6 p.m. at the church.
Kathy McDaniel will ~e guest
•spealcer. Cbarms were presented to
Grimm, Dreama Pickens, anti
· SltarQn Stewart for six consecutive
weeks or weight loss.
·
Information on tbe club may be
obtained from Debbie Hill, leader,

949-2763.

'200 Installed

!'••••

Society
scrapbook

•

•Starting At

1SSessions s1500
All Lotion~ Y, OH
949·2823
· 1/31f1

me.

H.8J.AU'I'O

PAINYING
.. You Cro•l• II - IJI" l 'i.rr II "

32361 Dewhto Run Road
Long eonom, OH. 45743
Portable Welding
Aluminum &amp; Steel
up to 'I• Inch.
Cell Anytime
John Krider
614-843-5192
Harold Person
614-843-5285
1121W5'

3 Announcer.1ents

e...y

Romance, Cllll nawltl 1~
to0-t56-3000 ,
en · 3111•
S:Z.itlmlnut., mutt be 11 yrw.
Procall Co.! 602~954~7420,

c-

Gontt.,.,on

SMiling
panlonU.Ip From NIQ Fem~le

For Taru, Wtru 1 FJ1jlndohlp.
Roplloo To: .CLA 331, c/o.
Goltlpotlo Dtolly T~bunO, 826

Sond

Thlnl Avon..,
451131.

llllltlpolll,

OH

THE PAMP£RED CHE,
''Th• Khchen Slore That COMM
To Vour Door... Local Coneultant
" Available AI :

614-446-'ln4

le.ve Mesug1.

C.ll For lnformstk&gt;n On On:lw-

lng

html;.~artlll Or

ne..

For ,QusJ.

upportunllle1.

Brochure AYallt~e.

,4

Fr. .

G,lveaway ·
Olv..way, COli A~
tot 6 P.M. 614-441-8210.
10 Gorlllta To

�'

Thu.,.day, February 9, 1995

•

ALLEYOOP

•

The

Pomeroy-Middleport , Ohio

Dally

NEA Crossword

BRIDGE

Sentlnei-Page-11
Puzzlt~

~ Of 1 motn

ortery

ACROSS

PHILLIP

__

· :4

___,._:......,.._

Giveaway

BEA TilE BL VO.® by Bruce Beattie

Merchandtse

Rentals

• . 10 WMk IIIIo -~
• . /Chlhuolluo 1111 P~. To ....,.,
• · Homo Only, Dog.IIH!f'

--------151
41 Houses for Rent

: tm, 1'1'1419-ma.

KIT·' N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

11 Autos tor Slle

Household

Goods

~~=· 3~~.you

:· iJmiUdbiMd,_.__
' '1 - . old, 114-lll2·283e.

Pt. Ploaaant,

Cottoilo f« ront In
114-lf;l-5858.

: 8old """ BMalo. lomolo,
. : loVI"'I pup, 8&gt;1.fl2· 3l23.
•• Ado&lt;lblo put ~ puppiM to
• : ~good- only. 3CM-11752547 ovoni"'II.

FumlthMI 1 Bedroom HouM
Rotor- &amp; Security Dopoolt
Roqul,.d. 114-+10-1751.

O.poah, Conttct Mayor Pape AI
114-992-3420.
~- to good homo molo puPPJ
• to 10 old, *"'!1-ot-..,.

flom:o,_- """

Ill. .........
114--3441oftor 8:00.

New home ·unftr con81rucUon
eomplllt con•tnctlon In telu Of
rent, locatld on Horu Creek
Rd. oH Cnb CrMk Rd. 304-11247773.

Froo To Good Homo 2 - •
P u - . Port -rian Huoky,
l&gt;ob; I~ Aft0t I P.M.
'Whitt kHttnt, edutt cata. 3IJ4..
175-8122.

6

Lost

llpollo, 114-797-1345.

21

Small bto&lt;:k tomaoa dog, 304175-2151.

11

Losl· female Welmaran• dog,
Cherry RkiQII aNI, It tCMJncl cali
114-lft-1151.

Ellporiollco Outoldo Soloo P.,.
Full !Port llma, ..
114 441 43B:J.

Help Wanted

Small 2 bedroom, baumenl,
tiOVI &amp; ,.,, tlec1rlc hHI pumpJ
210 lrd St, Ntw Haven, WV.
$260. mo. plua deposit 304·7739171.

Business
OpportunHy

INOTICEI
·
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHINQ CO. 42 Mobile Homes
Lo.t· In AUCIInd II'H lnlle
r.comm.nda lhat you do busf..
for Rent
111
neee whh ~you know •ncl
!:l:rtp;:'lon
..
NOT l o - -lhrough tho
.Frtdll wenlng"e~llageln eolllcl 1twn. Lledl ptovfd 1, No ~ mall until rou hllwi ln,..lgal:ed ·1872 mobile home wl2ic.,
$250/mo., $300/dopoall. 3CJ4.
:30.
,.~, - - th•offwlng.
524-2773.
For oolo .,. • - Ohio Rlvar 2 Bedraam Tl'lller On SIJte
C.mparoundl on lhe liver, 23
1104, - h SIJ Mlddlopoll • - ....... For lho of lho, full haaii·'PI, ~building hU Route 35, IM-4:41-5582: Or After
614·992-2508,
·
otory, can
5COII114'245--.
....- .. lOOIIIO,
lmmedlllte
For Full 3roam
1lor more, SISO,OOO, will 2br lloblll Homo On Bob
Loot : lody'a ayo glas-. pink ·Tlma Dey And E
Shift, RN flnano., 11WMI-:IUI.
McCormJck Road For Rent, ~~
and
~UI
caH,
nNr •
._.
eam~n n WIIQII,
7 With Expettence, E·
446-1119.
Secondlecxu1 St., Pomeroy, Olfl••ltlal
Real
Estate
3 BHroomt 1 112 B1the $200
reward, 11&lt;-192·3231.
~ct~~or~=·
DopooH" 5254Wo. 814 44. 1075
Lat : Male Whtte American e.. 8etorl F*ulry
11t5
After 4 .,,M.
klmo Dog In The Marcarvlne Pl.~ car. Center; 170
..... Rowordl 114-25H808.
Pt...- Drlvo, QaHioot(a, OH
Mobil• homn In th• counlry·
garbao- 1nd MWer ln.
· Loot: Smoll, Black Lab. Vonco W31.114-14&amp;-7t1;1.
•
JUit 10 mlnut.. from
Rood, R._,ly BHn !lpo~~ ~ - - ,_ hlri"'l
111n1na
••
1240Aed Collar, Anewen "'Angel
--~~tn•__. _,,.__,. lllchnlciM'i
c•bl• n•llllble, 1~
Poll Glboon, 114-3'1!1·2510.
- • .......,..
:=-·1

~..:td ~~ :0't...l':=

,~~~

attar

:., ::ac\!..;,":1".:; ..~ ::' :::r:lr::..::..........~

s

-·'1303.
e.

'l'l

N- . . . ..-

:..:::;.::;:::=;.;..;;==;_-1 - -

Boll ~'- o/o Pt.
PI-nt Rogltot"!r.'!'!':! Main Sl.,
Pl. Piolllonl.'W't .....,,

Ya rd sal 8

7

.

,.

ALL Yard Sltea Uu.t Be Paid In
Advance. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
the day btlfore the 11d 11 to run.

Sunday

edition • 2:00 p,m.
Frida~. Monday .dillon • 2;00

. p.m. aturdly.

8

Public Sale

&amp; Auction
Atck ,._,_ Aucllon Compony,
lui time euc:tioftMr, oom..-•
auction
..me.. Uc 111
1118,Dhlo &amp; .Vlrglnlo, 304-

m-me.

.

Auction ~~~~·pto, Sotur.
t\ Ustdar, 7:00 P.ll.
Rl- Road .
Burtllo

lir[

- - Cal. Oocor E. Click,
LlcenM • 711-14
304-1116-3430.

a

llciiMMd,

Frlday,
-.
-7pm,- Ill. AltoThurodarRio 24i -c.
Ran
I

••

:=r.,.::....~
9

Wanted to Buy

Cloon . Lalo -

••,;a

Con Or

Trucilo, •lilt Or
Smllh- Panlloc.

Eaotom Awnuo. Oolllpot!o.

Docontodoi.,._N.MIIphonM, old lompo old thor-·
momo1..., old a~acL.:-·;; ......
fumlwe. RlvOtlno ·-Aftjtq,..,
R- -buy
·........
OWnOt. ...114-11122521.

w.

Don, Junk II loll U. Your NonWCHkl"'l 1111« Appllanceo,
~
T.V.'o,
IIMiiloroton,

,,..,..,Elc. IW~i 1238.w-.
.
Dry-

J&amp;D'oAuto-OndSoiY9,

~burfng
~
-- •
trudui. Aieo
... - . 11U343rrr

.

Tlmbor W.Nod,- And
Cloor CUiti"!!Avoiloblo. Froo On
Slto Eotlmaloo. 20 Yoaro Ex·
- ·• .114-317-'1018, Or 114-'
317-'11)54

-umo

Old butlono,
lowolry,
old lftl!!tOt01.)ron aklliola, dtlct..,.., Star ".,.1 ata•, chN;
fumtlure, toola or complat• ....
J!!_~ llortln, 114-112·?141.c
lhNod To Buy: Junk Autoo
"'h Or Without llolon. Coil
~ Uvlly. IM 3M 'W 1 •
l'laNod To low: lllandlng Tfm.
• • 11447t-2711.

Colno,---Colno.

TCIP -

PoW: AI Cl1d U.l .

Colno. ·II.T.l. Coin Shop,
111 - . . l A - Clolllpolo.

Employment Serv1ces

11

All real estate aDvertising In
th is newspaper Is subject to
the Federal Fair Housing 'Act
ol 1968 which makes It 111eQa1
to adv8f1ise "any preference,
11m1at1on or discrimination
based on race, color, religion,
· seJIIIamiUal slatus or national
origin, or any intention to
make any such preference.
limitation or discrimination."

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Help Wanted

AVON I All Arua I .Shlnor
Spoon, 104-1'11-1429.
·AVON to buy rti Hll, llorllyn, ln-

-~""'--Of

'14ooo1121JII.
d

Port~lma -'tlon for AN, LPN,
MED TECH or U.B TECH lor
Muon Co. wtC to anlt1 In ~r­
tlficltiona Proc-• of . par·
tk:IJMinl.. For turthlr lntonnallon, contoct lho llaaon County
WIC Office,~ ~ or
wrlta WIC D.-or, Mid-Ohio
Valley Hullh Doportmant, 211
tllh s.- Parbnlburg. WV
281111, ortOiO.-- 304-151.",3111.

Ronnowood CON
Woohlnglon

This newspaper will not
knowlingly accept
advertisements for real estale
which is in violation ollhelaw.
Our readers·are.hereby
informed that all dwellings
adver11sed in tl"'is newspapor
are available on an equal
opportunity basis.

Contar;,,•:3,

Aev.MWoocf, WY il ourrwntlv
occopllng -lcotlono fo&lt; !IUN1!19

Aoiloianta (Win tNin).
B~~n•flt• lncludll: hl•hh lnaul'lnce, tt.xlble IChedullna,
pakl dltter.nUat, · tr. rt1HI•,
canOt
loddor
gpporiuniiY,
bonu- lo&lt; CNA'a, PAID
VACATIONS and · eompotlllvo
wageo. Apply within dolly.
- - roqulrod.
SECURrTY GUARDS- muat bo
o1&gt;1o t o - any ohlft Including
moM WMklndl. Mull have
cloan pollco .-.!, good work
hltotory, _.,.. tnnaporiotlon,
drivor'a """'- ond homo
- · Par otll10 ot $4.25 por
hour, 32-10 houro por ....... Coil
1~28'Jit.
llot*y.frld•y,
= ·m-I:OOpm. fo&lt; appoint·

31

Homes

fOr S81e

Houu And · ~,a~ t - Down
Poymonl, Eooy i'arme, 3 roorno. 1 Bath, ..-od - r
Vinton /8_11_ cont.aao.

1-.

4411-1101 Aok F o r - - ·
1 Bed.- 2
Hool
Pump, OM \:uinoco, 1 Aero,
Go-. Addloon "'""· $12,000,
114-317·7217:

~-~E'IIYLal'fo:. 4

CCUHTRY FURNITURE
Codw Bod- Suh, 1'1119.
IIIH- lol 1 181 up. :lpo. c&amp;E
Tobloo, Itt up. 2pC. Uvfl!a
Room lulto, $211 up. Toblo, · ~.
ChoiN, 1141 up. CUJio. 4 &amp; 5
Dnlwlr Chooi"_Ml.ltl up. emt.
AI. 2 Nolth, PL PI t r1t. »f.

1181 llarcury ~r. v...
..,.OIM:!:iu:lr, laob R rw.
good,
od to 12450, ,,...

lima

&lt;• ,_}

- - f« o job

tlon
In lho

Room, Eal~n Kllchon, With
Dlohw- And Truh Compoctor. Form~l Dining Room.
Flnlahed Bu • ..,.,. Wlltr fllmlly
Room, Roc. "-". LaundrY
RoomJ._~h 11&lt;1 .. In Garogo.
Froo lr&gt;Oraund Pool Wllh
Larpo Doclt. Dolaehod 4
Cor Ooloai With IJoot. .lpproL
20 Frull T'rooo. Block Top ·Orivo,
BMutlful Land
p'FIQ, 5 Acree.
114-+10-11:11.
·

Pulnl _ , . · Thll 'PM!tlon Will ... "!""""'"iblo lor
jWO·id~'ll-- IMJ_.Ior
_,ro with lliobllhlll. Ell·
,...,.. wtth dlllibiiU• pr•fer·
rod. Sond roouma to IISCIL, 8:!1
Fourlh Avenue, Huntington, WY
no lot• lhon Fobnlory 1T, 1tll5.
:::"-~~~~ 3
VENIIINO: Won' Got Rich roomo, 1 Batll, Locatod Noor
Quieti. Will Got I !IlNdy, Cooh e-n CHr A.... Coll1-..t48o
lncomo. Prlco To Sollt4o0-120- HOI Aok For - - ·
·
4353.
~go • - nlco 2 badroom
18 Wanted to DO
nnclior on largo lol, sn,ooo.
~...,-,.-,--====.,-1304·733-2173 or lilovo mMNga.
A...TIM 9erYI... COiiijilitt tfoo
cora, 20y... up. ' lnourod, rroo· 32 Mobile Homes
oatlmotM. l-·11tl or t.aao.
for Slle
50HI87.

0:::

-.:.;..-------1
tho IPI1"11 Ruohl Qol yow
trtmmere l mower~ IIIINlcld
-

, _ • - . . Eorutpmont c-

;:.""'::.m::.f·..:30::.4:.4::.'~~.:.:.1'12l.=...,.,,.......,.,..,..ltea - · Homo, 14&lt;72 3 BadDtck'o Cor -h- 111 Eool llaln
Sire«, Pom«oy. Hind wHh
and ctrv. se.o o ; - and'""··
lltO.oo. W. pick up..,., cotllt4lltl!-1040.
Exportoncod
eoupoa
Wllh
Rotor..,.. SMka Apartment
COmple1 to Manege Within
- 1• rodlatM of Ootnpolla. l14245-1555

unfumlahed,
no

rt~qulred,

I

clou to

In town. Appllcetlona • .,.•.,..
ot: Vlltogo ·oroon A'"a. 141 .,.
coll114.ft:l-371 1. EOH.
n..nect, Wllherldryer hook-up,
1yr. ...... no pilt. 304-875-GI7.

3
aonil

~L

apt, -lrto . $275. mo. W/UIIIhiM
dapo&gt;o!t._No polo. 304-

Apartm.nt for r1nt In Pomeray,

$11Simo.; houoa In-~~~-.
.$125/mo.; 814-1182·7St1.

- . 2 BOtho, W - And
Dryw, Co .... , .Totollr
-..anlnoldlo,814-311"7!141.
1110 Clorlon 141110 112 Aero Lot
2 BR, 1 Sotli, CA. Cothadral
Colllng, 2 - . Fonood Y•rd,
CtoM To Oolllpotk. 128,000,

llooullful lhroo bodrvom H.U.D.
opproood oponmonto, PomaJ'OI',
·c~a. to I~ ,2 -.:hoota, 1331
mo., 114-112-5333.
Elltclo...r, .. tor..... • dopoolt,
no polo, 304-175-5112.

Nlc.ly Fuml•hed Apartment,
1br, nell to Ubrary, perking,
central helt, air, reterwncee ,.
quw.d. 1-C14 486 8804.
Fumlahotl Aport,_, 1 nom, 1011eoond A~ ewllpollo, 1211111o. Utllllloo Pold,
114 Ul U11After7P.M.
FumlElllcloncy
Apt.
t21o.oo month.Utllnioo ""· 120
Fowth A,.. Golllpoll.: 814-14114416- a.ner 7:ooPM
O...louo living. 1 ond 2 bod-

room •panmenta et Vlll8ae
Manor
'and
RlvorotN
.Aportment• In llkWieport. FrDm
m24355 . COM 814-1112-5851.
EOH.

Largo 2br. ..... portlllly furnlofiod, dopoolt roqulrod. 304875-7783.
Nice Z br apt•, In Pomeroy a
Mlddllport, 114-t!l2.a858.
COmploliy Fumlohod home, 1 mitt bllow town,

ovw·

71,ooo lltioo, • ..,.
12,ttltl,l14...........

1181 Sundance 1Wo Door,
Aut-lc. Air, 12,000, 114-446-

1325, 114-446-'11)01.

1181 Chovrolot Conolco, 4 "'·

2.8 !Uollnl- I cy-r. 5 op,
$3,1500, Oli 814-lU~IJ&amp;.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Complolo 11omo tumlohl..
Houro: _,.., N . 114-4460322, S miiM OLO Bulovlllo Rd.
Fno Dollvwry.
lllrtog Aulomotlo w..._ 1
Y11r Wornntr 1205; Wlllrtpool
Aulomotic -hor Almond Uilo
1 Yaar W..,.niJ', 1201; GE
Aulomotic
Uko
-· 1
Y- Wornnly
1205;
WlllriPool
Aulomotlo -hor Exoollont
Condlllon,
tiSO; Wlllrtpoot
Automotic _ , Advaotodo
EllcoiloiN
Condlllon
$110;
Whirlpool Automotlc: .-her

CZl

.... llarcury
10.000,
- . AC, till
.......
power Ink-. emlfm ca ••·

54

Miscellaneous

-od -.

For Your -lllinol IMioo 112

11•o;;::JriofrPrlco
1800, lor
304-17W485

1281;
Cut To iltfltl• Konmono Eloclrlo
Range h&amp;; ~Appll•a•,
71 Vlno stNO.-;"Iliitllpotlo, 1144411·73tltl, . - . .. .34111.

Kl

-

Wotorbod

high
bo!Gw
agtar
R

H
3Pado, 1z':o':
I1
•
,:.,c...:c.:.;co.:.::____~--Now burl-. a ~J~_,vkiH
C·
~ ·• Yoaoo, Mldo
' - " · 114-1112-3481.

lllrtoLoohor &amp; Drvw Larp

capac , Elceltent CondtUon,

s-.

$150;
hi Sewing Machlno,
O..Ck
114-387-'1'101 A~
.... 5 P.ll.
-

72

h
•• ,
I"'''UUO n
urn '""
And ApptlaMM. Gnat Dooio On
COoh And Coroyl RENT-2-0WN
And Lonway Aloo Avollol&gt;lo.
FrM Dolfnry Wlhln 21 Mlloo.
...._ ~-~ T.u ca
Redio, M~i~~tor,
114-216-1231.

Rotrtpoton, SlovM, Wuhoro
And oryon, All Roeondltlonod
And Gaur~~nleedl $100 And Up,
Will Dollvor. 1114-411H441.

Rornlnaton llodol 1100 New
Rlbbod' BarNI, With 3 Chokol,
No Prlcoo OVor Phono. 114-25111413, 1111 •n 8 A.M .... P.M.
Sino- &lt;!llo'o Army Surplua,
bJ Sondwlllo - otflca, nooo53
Antiques
1:00pm l'ri-Sun. Jr. -liaugo,
,_lolod $30,
puy or 1111. RlvOtlno Antlqun, bluo blbbo 1111. · combot - ·
1124 E. llaln •Net, on Rt. 124, $10. 304-m-5111.
1
S.tellha
Ft. Dl•h •

~~~~JJi, ~;:

to 1:00 p.m. e

·2521.

~tem:.'10

Recetver, lbke llllrnor.x Alo-

JIIC!It -

11,200, IM - 0415
Anrr-.
Setauno TlioYiolon Syotom- ra·
dloh, Unldan UST 4300L. oiK
11
ft A ,... uprt ht -.lho old, oaootloN cononlon.
cu
SUbeCrlatioh pekl until n1lt
good cond,
5-1 10•
July. H80, Clnemu:, Shawllme,
32 Bulb Tomlng Bod, $1,500, Tho ,Jiovlo Chonnol and mony
114 Ut 1982
·
ntote, $1100, 114-Mt-2203 or
114-Mt-2871.
AUentkln lloblle &amp; Doul:llnrlde
ltomeom•ra We Cany A Com- Sen ~ued ftNwood. 304-e75~
llloclt Of lntonhorm 11321.
12SEER Hoot Pumpo And Fur- STORAGE TA!IKS 3 000 Gillon
-noco ·Pol10
And llollllo
Fur· Upolght, Ron E - "•nto]prfaoa,
With Homo
Financing
Avolioblo Coil Bonnotl'o llolllli Joclloon, Ohio, 1.-a31"0528.
Homo llootl'll Coolllllt AI 114- Uood A.,... Nfrt=tor lhet
4411-11411
-..?2-5M7.
Aok - 1 1 0 ' ···~·
Uo A -OrTho
Emplro llollllo
~•
Building
Homo W.ll Fumoco That UMo 55
No Eloctrtclly. wv tn0212.

54

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

"'::.e'1s-1l

.,,

. Br Rod Wl"'l C h i -10
To
-4141 DogNOa,li.H.
a....
Guaranteed,
IAwlllt Prlc•,
The
••-- ~-~ IM ••• '222
~- -~.
~~ •
Collor ID bolr, lllllnd . - ,
543 :... l14-112-ltll.
!Motion- Cloll)."lc llolum
CB rodlo, Nlghl Eaglo D- 04 mic,
PDC tiiJO watl motor, Tolol Hom
IV ro1or 10' of lowor, 11ygo1n
otock lhrM iloom, COOK ond
·""or wiN, -&lt;Yihi"'l , _
In .t.uguot, 1171. 114-IMt-2203 or
114'Me:-28'1i: - ·
.
Concrolo A Ptootic Septic
TonbL 300 Thru 2,000 Ooilona
Ron ....,.. E - - . Joel!-

l

SUpplieS
Bloc"
........
wln.., ... - , - ·c~-·
~dowel, lnllela, .tc:.
udll Wintoro, Ale - · Oil COli 814-

-t
56

Pets for sare

Groom ~- Grooming.
Footurlng
"' lath. Julio
Cil
-141-0231.

w-.

2 lllnlatuno -nlono, AKC
Rog~-. 814-3174110.
AKC - H
lo
11100 I ~; F.A.
um,
1114-87-311111.
AKC Roglol- mo1o Bour

Jlll-\h::!

go,

-~·;~~~~~~37oft28~~·~~~ Igo,-·.,...
011 1

bom

--Ind.
-I

Avon -&amp;m II -114 Mr. Full Or
Port Time, No Door To Door. 1·
/Rop.
lllbplllw In My Homo. Aft.,.
noon 114-146-'1172, . Colt
ill. &amp; 2 P.ll.

..,..... rw·- ..,......

Coii1114-44H711.

T""""Y'W
~
Friday, 7.~tl.u~,..
:OOpm,
1Wo

4411·7m.

And Eorulpm..rt.

63 ·

of P~. lolo of

LIMITED OFFER! .now 14170 2·
3br., 1581 DOWN, No Parmonto
· - · - lolo
of tunliyooll,
and 1tter 5yra. FrM O.IIYery &amp;
Tom..,.
Sotup. 304-785-68M. .
mlloo -

=1:"

Will .....,... In my In lho Now till 14K~ncludao aid,_
Q, 1 yee.r
Rullond - . coitlflod, tiQblo lng,, ltepe,
homeouunert l,turan~. arid I
hoLn, 114-1112-2111.
montloo FREE lol ront. Only
1120 - n ond $1M P" mo.
F111anct al
Coil 1.aao.&amp;3'1-32311.

·
- ·Broke
·
Good

LEARN TO BE
MORE OUTGOING

MA'iBE IF I'M MORE
OUT601N6, I WON'T
BE SO LONELY'.

ACTUALL'(
BEING LONWt'
ISN'T ALL
TI1AT BAD.

TO TOl&gt;AY'S
C.,Of'SyiOJU&gt; PUZZt.E! . wHAT'S AN
,.
.... tiG~T • LtTT~, wO,I&gt; FOil
'&gt; '
'' ~UGE, l&gt;tN!~ FOG"t_

Autos for Sale

tm Buick Lollo ...a Cuotom,
110,000 1111•, Good CondMion,
V"Y Dopondoblo, l14-446-13'11)·
tHI eo......, 301 E"f:.i 210

Turbo TranemiiJion,
I.DMo Good, Runa

lUI,

Good,
12,000,080,.14-1411-3141.

mern be rm g the adage or takin g th e
honor from the short side fi rst, called
for dummy's club queen. She unblocked
her spade honors before playin g the
heart queen. wh ich Sharif correctl y
ducked. Thinking the dummy was dead.
South played her· second heart immedi·
ately. Sharif won wifh his ace and exitell with a club, puttin g South into he r
h a~ own . Yet if South ha d

•

l

'

'

I

'

'

BORN LOSER

would' have been all nghl. Sharif would
have had .to return a major, res uscita ting the dummy.
.
As you play through the tricks in your
mind . check the e nt ries.

wlh -

M L Z J

XKNM

ML 0 C R

YSCKM

K T .'

&amp;

"-"*''oHoatl!'ll And~.
lnotallotlon And - . EM '
certtftecl. Alii~ 14'-11 Cu::cuu*"'
clol. 114-2111-1111.

BJ

S K N L .
PREV IO US SOLUTION' "Wagne r iS the P ucci ni ol music .· - J .B. Mo ~o n.
'Wagner , tha t old poisoner. ' - Claude Debussy.

Will
lAIII

I

WOCBBE

l~,...rT"I- - ~If

f-1,.N_o..c
.....

L I R GL

I

4

1
.

j5 j

.

.

I
.

Myyoungersisterhad her first
argumentwithhernewhusband.
She soon discovered that the

harde~.twords inany!~nguageto
...,.M.....;U,_.;..G"TN.....;E,_.;..T,..4. say ts . was · .....

r
, l- - -- - -- - - - . ,

·1
•

Ai.!oO , VOU'RE

ALI"ll~T

OUT OF GOlf llALLS .

'TilEY KE EP
5 NO\oJ GoLF

0

A NEW GAr\E
INVENT Et&gt;'

DISAPPfA~ ·

lNG IN TH E SNOW.

1 t&lt;NOW'.
'1'0U NEED
TO ~E -Ut&lt;IP
YOVR
S· IRON .

0

e

NEJ(T TIM E,
BUY T~OSE
OR AN GE
ONES .

•

.

•

16
•

O

Complete the chuckle q uoted

b v l ./l1ng tn th e m•ss tng w tw ds
vov dttvelol) f rom step No . J below.

P&gt;INT NUMBERED l ETT ERS IN
THESE SQU ARES
UNSCRAMBl E l ETTERS TO
.

I

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

•
0

I I I

Gf l ANSWER

•

0
"

.

0

Ledger - Dimly - Olden · Pursue · YOUNGER

Two old timers were reminiscing and keptrefeiTing to the
'good ole days'. I th1nk they long for the days gone by
because they were YOUNGER then . ·

Home

Plum'blng

F

SYOSVOY

=·

Healing

)

M· Z A A

One (CCI

82

You'll Come Up Aces:· Witb ·.
·r
The.Classifieds

M L Y M ,

PLFAUOZV

BY V

f

WFNNZU . , RLZV

ll::r:.
,:;:o:r~ !.:;;:
lng .. Ml;-814-3'1!1-2nf.

.

•

zo z o

HFONM

_..,

Ron'o TV llorvloo. -"'llllna
In Zlnlth .... --~~~ IIIOiill
Olhor lllll-. ~~ ,_
-~wv

~ Wanted to Rent

M LZ

BYOOFZU

•M-fltl2o71141.

Chet~ ·~-1323.

In-·

' F

l·4ro,ara P221117111t5

... _ C&amp;C
and
Homo
Aopolr. Ft!r floo •lmila ...

llobllo - gortoigo,
In
oountrr- tar - ond
wotwlnoliidod,Ooblonolloblo,
llflhno., M1 10 min- -

Campos

..---

,..._nc•

46 Space for Rent

by Luis

Celebnty Clf)her cryp!ogra ms &amp;recreated trom quotations by !a~ people. past and preaenl
Etch lel1er lflll'le cophe• stands lot anothe• Tooar 's clue 11 equ111s F

1-·

IIASEIIEIIT

whh eooldng.
on rtwr• .0
hook-upe. · eau •.._ 2:00 p.m.,
304-'7'na51, M•won WV.

CELEBRITY CIPHER

.

Improvement•

8piiCe

- -+-+--1

Auto Pans II
I ::-;:::d:A/;~C~I~I~I~O~rle~a~::--~
76

81

Roome for rent • WHk or month,
!Martina ot $120/mo. G • Holoi.
114 UI·OIIO

"'

cashed he r club a nd diamond winne rs
be for e leading a second hea rt , s he

Servtces

Rooms

.,+-+--1

Phillip AIJ er

.the quCen. givi ng access to the majo rsuit winners. And a d iamond e ntry re main s in hand to reach the othe r club
wi nners .
Howeve r , the decla re r. pe rha ps re·

29

Part ol TGIF
Mld· EIII otg,
Yellow fever
moaqullo
Anclenl
Aclor
Mecl.echton
Arablon
commander
Spider
Cattle
encloaure .
Muolc holl l
Salling vo-oel

31
32
35 Beaol of
burden
38 Peer Grnl'o
mother
40 Bovine aound
.-+-~+-:--! . 43 JFK Into
45 Chock
r-f--4- -t 47 Not lall
"
48 - Ono
49 Aulhor
Hunter
51 - up
•
(abiorba) .
53 Acllon word
54 Jacob'a
brother
55 River lri
Belgium
57 Melee
59 Leal letter
60 Doclrlne

decla rer's e rror in today's deal were

A ''BIGAMIST''/

.

AKC
RioglolCookat
llponlola For . Sell Aduno &amp;
Floowood 130 Lood Plolo(Jp· $40 Puppllo,IM-37fl.27a
Lood Dolhr-v, 114-3'1!1-2711.'
, . , . - . , Rote. l.oYoblrda.
F - 1ar un.,._... Cadriiiiia. •c. R., T-* &amp; Pt4
doO,.rod. 304-m:iif3t.~.-. Shop, 241S Ia 1•"1 Ato. Polnl

Pl-.--·

Wf,t NEXT

LOOt:, EllNit,

tot &amp; 2nd Cut Orchard Gnoa, 1W ·CIIC Po_,_ Von, PS,
Square Beln, Never w.t, 114- PI, •Uio, 1.2L d._., 71.000m1.,
4411-1053.
-~porta w/Neolpta. '
Alpho And MIKod On:hard GnH 87512.00 To 12.25 A Bolo 304-175- 1111 Chevy 112 lon 4•~...~.
11'13, 814-3111-2714.
•uto, cru•. alrL. Ill, AM!t'.•
Oood· lltxod Hor Round Baloo, · - 16800. 104-1,.5332.
Noor Thurmon, OH 814,286- 1110 Bronco, full41a, Ed&lt;lo
2314.
l•uer, e1c. cond., $11,500. 304175-3371.
G~nd •r com, 183 • l:,.:h
111111 ........_ 414, ohrHI ~~
~..
_,..
$tl8, rour Mcluo, Long -om.
-$10,000.
· 4 304-671-2M7.
- · 29,000 - .
114-1115-3581.
'
Squoro boioo $1.25 to $2.00, por .,A
Motorcycles
bolo. Allollo, Clover, Orchord ,•·,
...,......,.,.,...,.;..:.:.,:_:..:...,..,.=
Gnu. 304-4175-3t60.
'13 Suzokl Kalona 100, rod, 3280
mlloo, 13400, 114-1!12·3011 bot·
llm-5pm.
11171 S-'-'-, 114-211-41117.

-::::=-::-.-.--:--::-c:--:--,.-

T"r+-1-+-1

I :..,.-1~+-1--

Omar Sharif. a bri dge player who acts
occasionally. and Bor is Sc ha piro. a
world bridge champion in 1955.
Two clubs was strong, arti ficial and
forcin g.
Playing in six no·trump. South a pparently has 12 tricks : lour spades, two
· hearts. two diamo nd s and lour cl ubs.
: The only problem is un raveling those
tricks afte r the cl ub lead,
The guaranteed play is to wi n the'
fi rst Irick in hand, eve n though it lem·
porarily blocks the cl ubs. South cashes
the A·K of spade s and leads the heart
l'oue&lt;•n After ·drivi ng out the heart ace,
enters th e dummy with a club to

:'=.t:.·

Furnished

W...od: llobllo Homo lol For
Alnl, R,.ol Aroo Or In A Smol
lloblo Homo Pork. 1_,-GII'II).

1

1MTAKING DANCE
LESSONS 50 I CAN

a
Unor,_llow

ArM, 114 3M tuDD.

Tnllior- .........
114-JIN11)5,

Wf\AT ARE
'(OU DOIN6
II&lt;ERE.KID?
r--,-__,.-1

21

n--1--+-~~ 30

don 't have an .ent ry wi th wh ich to ge t
on lead.
The defende rs who be nefited from

PEANUTS

11 ""'"loc.tlld
horoabom
lor loooo 1113 ~ Full llu
w/pnlurw,
on ....,_.lck
Serf•
Rd. ott Cnb Cnok Rd., 4&lt;4, 350, 4 Spood, Soon
•~•
304 ·~ Whoolo, Bod
Tlrwo,
.;.
..,...
_ _mo_
. ----·~~·:..._"•;;.·_ ........_ ExootioN CondHron, 11.000
750• l14-141-:mn Evo,
64
Hay &amp;·Grain
.

pupo, faWo( wMh block maak,

,..._,.=..,....,.,.....

Ma ny players fail to keep carefu l

1184 Ford 4K4. 304-41~12.

Selo,IIOO, 114-245.aoe7.

tr8velet'
10 Faohlon ·
11 Sly look
16 Plant d l aaeae

track of en lrie~. It's no use having a se ~
lecti'on of winners in your hand if you

2388.
1ea . Chev. ConvRon V~~n.

O..rt1r HorN For

Cleo~• A Truh 'Pold1 No

A-114-112-2117.

YOU OWE
ME!!

'5 e r - Cowo Wllh CoiYoo, '81 PiYmoulh Trail - · 414,
$4,000. 614-388-8352 LNve tun -~ v... •uto. trane., W,
- . condlllon, &amp;2MO, 114-tMfl.

lflddlw:;:.

SIMPI"'I Aleo trlilter

$2.00

9 Conallnl

II h-,-+- +--

J

20
23
24
.
28
27

7 Bargain event

8 Gotfyl

- -- -Keo:lL· your eye&gt;s
ar.d entries open

COLLECT
CALLS!!

'7t Chevy 310, 414 Ptcllup, 11100, $2200 oao 8,..._1t11t

Livestock

One bedraam t..nlehed ·~rt·
rnent In
cell 114-1125304orl14-146- 1• ·

45

TELL T: &lt;JARMINT J
l DON'T TAKe .-"'

430 lntornotlonal Wlratlo hoy
1N7 Chlwollll Blazer, ..........
bolar. 304-1175-3246.
ond oun =~ 2.8 Y-41 onglno,
kdwnMional 240 Tnctor wtth excellent
HhJn, MOOG, 114CUhlvotor And Corn Plonl!', Mt-3045.
12,816; llaoooy Fortuoon :oo
Powtr SIMrlng, Uve PTO,
~.?'\!!i. 65 IIF ~. $3,nll;
... ... '"""' $4,150, 114-28fl.
1122.

M'I!I.

Coull. Phone 11~-noe. 814-

SNUFFY !I
1 COME TO
COLLECT THAT

New.11r.., I Tool-Bo1, 114-3712211.

Unturnlohod 3 Room, Bath. V.,.,

tic Dlocountal Sell AI Work
. - Tonttory 0o11-. Indip. Rop. t.a1Jo.lll2-1'738.

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South
South
West North East
2 ..
Pass 2 w
Pass
Pass 3 NT
Pass
2 NT
6NT
. Pass Pass
Pass
0 pe nin g lead: • 5

for Sale

Joe Au.. Fann Eaulpment And
Ferllllz1r, Loeetell 8 MIIM SafAh
Of Jacbon, On State Roul• 131,
1112 Chev. Dlokup et•pekle,
114-288-27~! 1 2115 MF Cob &amp; Air;
V-IJ. ti,OOOmt., loodod.
2tltiO JO •wA Cob &amp; Air, 2350 llspd.t
' '
304-4 5-37...
John Dooro, FWAI C~b 6 Atr1
2705 IIF .COb &amp; A r, 1100 Fora
Olhor Now And Uood Troctoro 73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

cu"ency

• A K J 3

'

• l)IM! of dream
2 - oul: mode
do wllh
3 Prell• lor
dynamlco
4 Lito otory, lor
ahort
5 Vaolage
6 Headliner•

39 Tool
41 Unuoed
42 111 tpeo rne
board

• A K J 53

1V78 Ford F-100· Aulomotlc, AC,

Chrlot":is-~ rooc~r to 11

.

Trucks

Coli ·
-w·oaa
AOCIIN
....,..aOrc-••·
u.
llblloholltm.
.

AVOIIIII SALES

38 School
modern art
37 Unit of lillia n

&amp;A K

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

SWAIN
.
AUCTION 6 FURNITURE. 12
Olivo II., Oolllpotlo. &amp; Uood Roclng - . n , 5.5 HP onglno,
tumnuro, - . . . . Woat"" &amp; 1821, lfi-M1-211711 or 114-14tWorll-o. 114-141-31H.
204I.

looking rivar. Dopooft. No Poto,
CA. 114 481 1104.

Peel,

34 Aroma

Sumac

• Q3

JILtomplltlor 100Wta, 4 lllllnd
,_ f125. 304-li?S-1713.

Twin Rivera Toww now -.:cept1"11 opplicollono b ,..,, HUO
eubiKIIUd apt tor eklertr and
ha,_ppod._ EOH JOW?S-

- · Toto! Eloctrtc, UndOtP!too
nlng. lloidy To llovo Into On
eom.r lol Pori! Lano llolllio

t 74

"' 974

Hy

S~d
Pupo, 1118 lluotonG, t - "''""· Good
Fulltnd, Big - . . Wonnod, Condition, 8 -.
!loCh Paronta On Pr.ml-. No 11189 llan:ury Seblo Ull Runo I
PopoN .71, t14-388-8541.
I.DMo Good, High 1111oo, p,100,
114-14HI147.
Large laU1111 W/caH &amp; ICCMo
· !04-871-1713.
1100 2dr. Ford Sidon Foell••·
32,000ml., $33110. 304-4175·1238.
57
Musical
1192 lonnovlllo SE, looclod,
30,000ml., hletory warr•niJ'· Instruments
875-3153.
118:2 Fender Te11c11ter1 exc.
concL,
vlnt•g•
olonde 10~ CofWice, 48,000ml., NC.
wlroelwood necK, $475. 304- oond., 18100. :104-175-7341 .....
I'JI..q4SI ewnlng•, 304-175- 4prn.
4121doyo. '
.

PICKENS FURNITURE
NawiUood
No •ppll--, HeM n1hokl furnlohmg, V2 mi. olonlcho Rd. Pt.
Pl_.... nt, WV, call ~MSG.
114 Ul 1141.

151
~ ..,... ~hoold
F

llu

114-446--t.

11W Aodmon 14114, 2 -

tQ I082

• St086&gt;

DOWN

33 Enllrtalner -

SOUTH

Ill Edition,
,ori14-M1H171.

WATERPIIOOFINO
Uncandlllanal ......,. ...,....
1-. Loc.l
~

-

.t....ogo II ofiiiHr Ptuo Font . .

E .......,;:::0.....

Pets for sere

.
Gom!on

Merchandise

='= o?h:=.And.

=•Kc::"oor~o;:
By Slda Ad¥
-

56

•lectrlc,
114-112·3065,
S t o n - Aplo., lllddllport,
Ohio. EOII.

coll~1tl7:

30 - was here

G-

Genaral Malnten.nc., Pelnt!ng1 8120 Dedi, 1112 Bulkfi~~· ~~
Yard Work Windon Woonoc Rontod lol $11,100, I 41
Oulloro Cioonod Light HoUII"'I, _t785
.=·-,---..,.....,...,....,.Qaargea Portable Slwmllll don,
l]ful Voir . - to tho Jl!!.H 1!'!11

N'f'P.FiJ.W '-t£T ..

&amp;10754
• At042

&amp;932
" 98

11117 Cent.. 4 DI!J PB, PS, ACf

Stonewood ApMmente are now
1~1~4~4~41~8~13~3-~-=:"-~_,: -opting
appllcltlono and ..,..
1813 Sunohlno 14171 3 Sad- lng aperfment• tor elderly •nd
JOOmo, 2 Batha, Loundry Room, dlublhw, OM bedroom, au

~!!J RMidtiNiol, I ' -: ::-

!lEIIJG

1-r.l "'[() EARLY

10 1ELJ. .. !A£ 00.'1'
HPO'M:J ~s

14Hm or 114 141 2041.

117M120.

VI'RA FURNITURE

•Pinmenta,

cg:

:::~:'"':'.
~r.::!· ~~~ ~::~...~·Batho,
F='!'=.
Rtoumo To SCCS P.O. BoK 538, roomo, 3 1
Fomlly

The Mount•ln SIN Cent«W tor
lncM.pendent LMna~• rt-

No

2br., 2nd floor, kitchen fur·

2 Bathe, . . _ . Noor
Small Local Firm Saokilllt Full Rullond ,.,_,_ '?'II HIOD-441111mo /On COil Cioonl"!! 1'och· 11011, Aok For ...,ho.,.
niclano. lluot a. DopOndablo,

Keir, OH 411843.

3Z2

dlvldor
47 Wild p lum
ALDER
48 Sill!
50 Type of !loy
12~
52 Ac treo•
13 Greek ten..
Judith 14 .Pieln o Indian
56 Egg coil
, - - - - - ;=.;;;;;;;---::--::"::;--. , 15 Private
58 snmtne••·
NORTH
2-9·95
17 Broed
81 Type o t
• Q J 8 6
1 Euu'a country
cabbage
" KJ 7 6 5
19 Ump'o rolallva 62 VP'o s u perior
• 9 6
21 Fiber cluoter
63 Normo 22 Anow poloon 64 - - even koe l
• Q 2
25 C.\rlar s ource 6 5 Slo lk
27 Waler pot
EAST
66 Prlcktr aoed
WEST

+tf.-3m Eve, wura.

One 2 Bedroom Home; One 2
Beclroam MDbl.. Home, In Gllf..

&amp; Found

w;.

Ma!'H~ AAs filA:'[
fi'EL ~ 6Jil'TY !OR. f,.XJT

MY.

1 - Butck Conlury C C.UIH, 111t, AI~ ........
Slruto, Shoeko, uootloN Cord'
lion, ~000 lllioo, $2,850, 114-

Hoi.IM On lrldgtllllln Str... ,
Owntd By Vllltoe Of SyracUM
At Munlclpil Park Property.
$300/Mo. Pluo Utllllln &amp; $300

F.F.K &amp;MEEK

· Cooabrfty Euro-Sport ot•
tlon
-·
. ' .....
•mnmtcnaette,
Y-1, •ulo.,
81r,
nrew UrN and Nttery, aport or
tomlly, $2210, 114-~ or
'14-Mt-2045.

poy

I Pod conltnl
4 Mrs. Trum an
8 Unlmprsulvo

a

11114 llonto Cillo 2dt., PI, PI,
AC, new tlrll, new paint, .u c.
cond. 304-475·12311.

2br., Uadlaon Av. .• N~ •

4&amp; Tennla court

•
ASTRO-GRAPH
mottvations are stronges l. success ts
str englhen you as a team Get a JUmp on
mosl likely
li fe by u n de rst andm g the inf lue n ces
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) Be op ltmostlc
wh tc h eire gove rntn g yo u in the yea r
about Impor tan t tssues today . If your
ahead. Send lor your Aslro·Graph predic·
BE-RNICE
have a good att1lude . you 'll more eas•ly
!tons loday by mailing $2 to As tr o·Graph.
dreams tnto realittes.
BEDE OSOL do this newspaper, P.O. Box 4465. New transform
VIRGO '(Aug . 23· Sepl . 22 ) Today you
Yo rk . NY 10 163 . Be s ur e to state your
will have .lhe ability to get othe rs tnleresl·
zodiac stgn.
•.
ed and wil ltrig to asstsl you 1n thtngs th.a t
PISCES (Feb. 20· March 20) Th is is a
are more beneficial lor you than for them
good day to do hUie repai rs arou nd th e
LIBRA (Sept 23-0cl. 23) Losle~ carefull y
house. Wh al you can"llx now mig ht sa ve
today 1f you gel involved 1n conve rsatLon s
you from big bills late r,
wtl h p ersons espousin g prog ress1ve
ARIES (March 21·Aprll 19) Seek soc1al
ideas. Something sa id m1gh t put you on
activ ilies tod ay th a t a ren 't of a sedentary
an imponanttrack.
.
na ture . Ins t e ad o f sla ring at the b oob
SCORPIO (Ocl. 24·Nov. 22) Do nol be
tu be . do physical things witt\ ene rget tc
fear1 ul of s hiflin g cond tllan? today. even tf ·
compan to ns .
they are eKtremely challenging . You per·
TAURUS jAprll ZD-Miy 20) You could
form best wh en the heal goes up in lhe
be fortunate in yo ur fina ncial affa irs today
press ure coo ker.
Friday. Feb. 10 , 1 ~95
tl you don'tl et the m drag on for 1oo long.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23 · Dec . 21) Put
Take actio n while lhe lrends a re in your
· Ta ke advantage of any opportu ntl!es to
yo ur fa ttti m the evalu a lton s you make
favo
r.
meet a nd ming le with new 9.roups tn t~~
loday ralher than tn lhe jud gments of oth ·
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Your fr ie nds
year ahead. You are now tn a cycle factl t·
e rs . Your assessmen ls a re apt lo be
may be deceived by a ppea rances today.
t aHng ma king val u a bl e co n•acls an d
much more on ta rgel.
.
awakening new . mteres ts lhrough new bul you should be abl e Ia s hatte r th e
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan . 19) You
facades . Yo u will see people for who they
mustn'l watt lor things to happen today.
sets of friends.
. a re a nd act accordingly.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Today •f
· Use your tn tt tative to chang e things you
CANCER (June 21 -~uly 22) Ac t upo n
your partner has b etter tdeas tha .n you
do n"l lt ke . Cont rol you r .dest iny rather
do. play a s upporting ro le and 1~1 him/he r yOur ambitio~ s today if there Is some thing
th an leiJing it co nlrol you .,
you
're
an
xious
lo
acquire.
Where
you
r
take the ' te ad . Th e ad ju s tm en t Will

..
J

�•
Page 12-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Home schoolers hold 1994-95· science fair ·
· Appalachian Home Scboolers
. held their 1994·95 science fair oa
Jan. 26 and several families and
. friends came 10 sec the experiments
: and exhibits on display . Mite
Boelte emceed as lhc students were
intr~uce~ to . demonstrate or
explain !heir projeCtS.
Travis, Amanda and Eric Cadle
shared !heir 1994 summer vacatioa
10 Virginia. A reading from Gene·
sis 1 about the creation of the
ocean was Collowed by a scenic
video of the Atlantic Ocean. Travis
then used a drawing to explain
waves and how tliey change the
earth's surface. Amanda showed
.her collection of Virginia Beach
sea shells and Eric showed pictures
and discussed various ocean animals.
Andrea Tate demonstrated her
project on air pressure by showing
how a baiioo~ in a jar~ ~ ioflat.
~ by removm~ the_~ ms1~ the
J&amp;r.ller poster dtawmg depicted
·tbe relationship between altitude
and atmospheric pressure.
Aiissa Bametle' s experiment on
separatm~ colors showed that colors cons1st of other colors. She
placed colored marker dots on a
coffee filter and dropped it into a
glass of water. The colors began to
separate o~ each of the dots. to
:show the different colors matins

up a particular color. Justin Bu·
·
nette read from Job 40:19 then
gave an informative taUt on his
dinosaur models and fossils which
were oo display.
Adam lftwoi• entered a picture
display of snakes and reptiles.
Kay Ia Loomis read from Genesis
1:1, 16 and 17 about creatioa and
pointed out and described each of
the planets on her poster drawing
of the Solar System.
Ryan Jodoo used a 60-in-one
Science Fair Kit cootainlna 60
electronic projects. He chose the
electronic police light for his display. Kari Sue Jodon dcmoastraiCd
temperature cbanges with her piastic bottle, play dough colored
water and straw tbennOOt~. Cllad ·
Jodo'n made a barometer from a
glass jar and straw to demonstrate
air pressure. The barometer showed
~hen air ~sure inside and out·
Side the Jar became hijber and
lower and bow weather changes
affected it.
'SCmNCE FAIR PARTICIPANTS- The following students
Brandon Boelte presented a rep. attended the Appalachian Home Scbool 1994-95 Science Fair on
tile poster display and spate briefly
Jan. 26. Attending were, from left: .f ront - Eric Cadle, Cbad
about turtles, snates and lizards
J odon, Adam Loomis, Alissa Barnette, Brandon Boelte and Karl
while Abagail Boelte displayed
Sue Joclon; middle - Amanda Cadle, Travis Cadle, Ryan Joclon
horse plctnres.
and Justin Barnette; rear- Gabe Oldaker, Ryan Grady, Amanda
. Ryan and Amanda Grady comGrady, Kayla Loomis and Andrea Tale.
bined wits to create animated figures and then captured their move- animation works.
social time were held following the
ments on videotape to show how
A covered dish dinner and presemations.

Kneen. spea.ks. o~

~erennials

Hal Kaeen ..Me1gs County Agn- ration of plantmg ~ suggesting
cultural Extens1on Agent, ~as that the soU .be built up above the
guest speak~ at lbe recent meung £!0U.nd to allow I!~ ~ge . ~e
• !&gt;f lbe RiverYlew Ganlen Club held discussed tbe addi.u~ C?f SOli nuU'I·
at the home of Frances Reed in ~nls tbrough fert1bzat!oo and the
Reedsv1Ue.
1ml?ortance of ~electing a. w1de .
. Kneen, wh~ bas degrees in hl,ll'· vanc:ty ofpereonial.plaots to IDS~ ·
hcultur.e, a!!ncultural eco~om•cs conunuous bloom m the £!OWer s
:Wd agnbu~me~, spoke on · ~w- garden tbrougbout the ~~mg sea- ·
mg ~erennials . . ~e showed sii~s son. Many of these vaneues. w~re
of different vaneues of perenmals shown an~ theu charactensucs
g~wn in local gardens including were ~bed by Kne:en.
his own;
.
A gift of appreclllUOD w~ preD unng t~e prescntallon the sealed to. the speaker followmg biS
speater·expiamed the proper prepa- presentalion by Maxme Whitehead.

Maxwell to
appeal his
suspension

Roll call was answered with a
recipe exchange. Christy Young
read "A Winter's Wallc": for devotioos. Refreshments w~;re served by
the hostesses, Mrs. Reed, Grace
Weber and Gladys Thomas 10 tbose
named and Beuy .Boggs, Mary
Alice Bise, Margaret Grossnickle,
Marlene Putman, Nola Young, and
Ruth Anne Balderson. Each mem·
hers was given a ceramic snow
flake. The door prize was won by
Mrs. Connolly, Next meeting will
be with Mrs, Whitehead. An auc·
tioo will be held a1 tbe meeting.

Dad to get paddled in exchange for
dropping charges
.
The prosecutor suggested the
punishment. Kessler did not object,
but did not order tbe paddling be·
carried out
According to court documents,
the man told police be probably
spanked the boy for "having a bad
altitude.'' ·

Empire furniture's ~weetheart Of A ~ale

1994 OLDS
CIERA

$15,949

Vol. 45, NO. 200
Copyright 1995

~1!~
1994 CHEV. SUBURBAN 3/4 TON 4x4
350 V-8, auto, ·a ir cond., PS, PB, tilt, cruise, AM/FM
stereo. MORE ·

1993 FORD ··I,,.
T·BIRD ..

1993 FORD
TAURUS

Auto, A/C, AM/FM
Caas, PS, PB, PW, POL,
Pwr Seat, Tilt &amp; Cruise.
MUCH MOREl

V-6,

V-6, AUio, Air Cond., AM/FM

cass, Tilt, Cruise, Pwr. seat,
PS, PB, PW, POL, LQAOEDI

.
.,··
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$12,449

$11,949

1992
GRAND MARQUIS

1993 FORD
.TAURUS WGN LX

V-6, Auto, A/C, PS, PB, PW,
POL, Pwr. aellt,
Tilt &amp;

V-8, Auto, Air Cand., AM/FM

Caaa, Tilt, Cruise, Pwr Seat,
PS, PB, PW, POL, LOADED

Cruise, Leather · lntericir.
ONLY 26,000 mllea

$12,449

$14 949

Cruise, Cassette, MORE.

1991 FORD .
l
T·BIRD

Seth Donald Guthrie, son of
Troy and Laura Guthrie of Chester,
celebrated his second birthday on
Jan. 20 with a party 81 the home of
his parents.
Following a dinner, a Ieddy bear
cake, made by his aunt Alice
Hawthorne, was served. Attending
were his paternal great-grandpar·
ents, Gerald and Juanita Guthrie;
matemal grandparents, Darrell and .
Nonna Hawthorne, Jim and Alice ·
Hawthorne, Kimberly, Tim and
Betsy Hawth001e, Ryan and Dyana
David Hawthorne, Dorothy Hawk
all of Chester: Bub and Betty
· Stivers, Pomeroy; Joy Swan of
ReedsvUie; and Seth's sisler, Mallory, three.
.
Others calling or sending gifts
and cards were . paternal grand-·
mot.ll~r. Cookie Cassady, Paul
Guthrie, South ·Bethel, New Testament Church.

V-6, Auto, Air Cond., AM!FM

r&gt;-?ll'o"ed
oed\\

6

Months.
Free

PROTEGE 4 DR

•.

::':'
:~· :

1990 CHEV
LUMINA 4 D

C111, PS, PB, PW, ··
'·
Pwr Seat, Tilt, Crulae, Jlore, , '
CLEAN CAR
·
:;,

1990 FORD
PROBE GT

4 Cyl, Turbo, 5 apd, ·
CDnd, PS, PB, PW,
PWR Seal, Till, •·CI'Uiael
LOADED

" $7,949

""

Free Set-up
Free .removal old Items
_ _ free. Financing .
Open Monday - Friday 8 am - 8 pm

4 cyl, Auto, Air Cond.,

PB, PW, POL, Tilt,
AM/FM Cass, Sunroof,

:-,,

V-6, Auto, Air Cond, AMJFM

In an effort to provide our read-.
ership wi'lh current news, the Gal. llpollS Da.ly Tribune and The Daily
' . Sentinel will not acccpl weddings
.after 60 days from the date of the
event
Ail club meetings and other
news articles in tbe society section
must be submitted within 30 days
of occurrence. Ali birthdays must
be suhmlued within 42 days of the
occurence:
AJI material submitled for publicallon Is subject to edilting.

r"·

1991 MAZDA

~

\j\1\l.n

News policy

REEDSVO.LE PERSONALS
: . Rev. and Mrs. George Pickens
~ sons, London, England, were
ltoliday guests of bis mother, Mrs
Delores Fraot.
·
. Mrs :.Kathryn Dietz, Belpre '
Mrs. Hazel Balderson, Vienna :
W.Va. and Mrs; tillian Pickens
were dinner guests of Mr. and
Lyle Baldenon.
. . .

C81a; PS, PB, PW, POL,
Pwr Seal, Tilt, Cruiae, PWR
Sunroof. NICE CAR

$6,949
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PREMIER ES LTD

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PB, PW, POL, Tilt, Crulae,
AM!FM Caas, Sunroof,
MORE

1990 PLYMOUTH
LASER RS

4 Cyl, 5 apd, Air Cond,

AM/FM Casa, PS, PB, PW,
POL, Tilt, c·rulae, Sunroof,
MORE

.$6,949

eyes 'dramatic' 'change for hospitals
with another hospital or combine services to reduce cost.
''And other mergers and reductions are "under way in vinu:~ly ever .
H.ogan offered thai proJection as the House Finance Committee opened hospital," Hogan said.
l
hearings on Gov. George Voinovich's proposed $1.5 billion l)udget for
Piaone~ to rem.ain a• free-standing, fuU-service hospitals: Central Ohio
the ag~ncy;
.
· Psych1atr1c Hospital, Columbus; Dayton Mental Health Center· Lewis
V01nov1ch 's spendmg pian for tbe next two budget yean starting July Center, Cincinnati; and Massillon Psychiatric Center
'
I would giVe the departinent a 12.5 percent increase in the first year and a
AI Cambridge Ps~chiatric Hospital and soiDC oth~r institutions, clinical
1.7perce!ll boost tbe S!!!:On~. · - _ _ .
_
programs w1ll remam in place but administrative services combined to
Oyerall, the.d~partinent s budget bas continued to grow despite the reduce costs. .
.
•
hospital downs1zmg. Hogan said savings were .u~d to belp community
Hogan said the Cambridge institution w6uld work with the SouUlC'L'I
mental health boar~ fmance i?Cal care.
,
Psychiatric Hospital in Athens.
'
. He srud the Millcreek Children's Psychiatric Hospital in Cincinnati
·'The two of them wiU be running in partnership, but the beds will slay·
w'?uld be phased out over the next few months as the last state hospital for there and most of the staff. will stay there," Hogan:said in an interview
children.
.
. Hogan said .thai from July 1989 'to January 1995 the number of s'rnn
The state negouated an agreement f~ .tbe Lawrence County Medical working in state mental hospitais declined from 5,952 to 3,7 12 .. A ~p to
Center to take over the Portsmouth ReceiVIn~ Hospital.
·
about2,750 was forecast through budget year 1998. ·

Energy

Keno bridge reopens
to local traffic usage .
The bridge's closing led to some
i
By JIM FREEMAN
unavoidable
and inconvenient
Sentinel News Staff ,
The Meigs County Highway detours.
Bashan Road serves as a conDepartment opened a new Bashan
Road bridge over tbe Shade River nector between Stale Route 7 and
at Keno Thursday, allowing U.S. 33 and carries a lot of traffic,
motorists to travel the entire length said Dave Spencer, highway .
of lhe road for the fii'St time since department office manager. In
addition, tbe road connects Racine
.Sept 23.
The bridge replaces a one-lane, and surrounding areas to Belpre,
·
16-by-110 foot span closed after Marietta and Parkersburg, W.Va.
County
Engineer
Robert
Eason
inspectors discovered a defective
cross member underneath the said the road was a1 the time travbridge deck. A gap also appeared eled by about I ,200 vehicles per
between the cross member (a large day, an estimate be labeled as
1-heam) and the span's upper .. conservative."
On a scale from one to 10, high·
superstructure.
way
officials labeled traffic flow
Meigs highway officials first
on
the
road between eight and I 0
hoped the Ohio Public Works
when
compared
to other county
Commission would approve emerroads.
.
... -gency funding to. replace the
Motorists
were
forced
to
use
SR
bridge, which could have allowed it
248,
SR
7
and
Eagle
Ridge
Road
as
to be replaced last fall .
a
detour.
The OPWC denied emergency
The new, $218,000 bridge is
funding, but officials were able ·w
obtain advance State Capital currently surfaced with limestone,
'Improvement Program (SCIP) . which. will be replaced with new
·
funds, formerly Issue II, to build asphalt later this year.
(Continued on Page 3)
the replacement span.

price hike
fuels rise
.in inflation

BRIDGE OPENED - Tbe Meigs County
Highway Department opened the new Bashan
Road br~dge over the Shade Ri ·~r_l,"_ t~•ff~t·-,.
.around :Z.4S p.m. Thursday. In the aoove photo,
County Engineer Robert Eason and supervisor

Quayle
GOP PROSPECTS
withdraws
from race

1994 FORD AEROSTAR EXTENDED LENGTH ILT

..

•.
'

,,,,

2 Sections, 12 Pages 35 cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, February 10, 1995

Associated Press Writer
. ,·
COLUMBUS - Sta.te hospitals tbat used to prQ~ide most mental
~!h care now have become the in~sive care units of the system, a leg1slative panel was told. And the hospnals face more changes.
The Ohio Department of Mental Health said Thursday reductions over
the next two years were expecled to save $70 million in hospital,operauons tba~ would go to local alcobol, drog and mental healtb boards for
commumty care.
.
"This will require dramatic clianges in management of our hospitals,''
said Michael Hogan, agency director.
·
Hogan said the n~ber of free-standing .hospitals would drop to four in
1998. There were 16m 1988.
"Yet we will maintain local access to care by providing services at
seven additi~ sileS under consolidated administratioo," he said.
Some hospitals have or wiU close, convert to commumty care, merge

V-6, Auto, Front &amp; Rear AJC, PS, .PB, PW, POL, Tilt,

Guthrie marks
birthday

Rain changing to snow
tonight. Lows I! to 25. Saturday,
~~Uy cloudy. High low to mid

1-16-21-26-31

Sports, Page 4

4 Days Friday, Saturday, Monday, Tuesday

SETH GUTHRm

6-4-3
Pick 4:
2-2-8-8
Buckeye 5:

.

TROY, Ohio (AP)- Turnabout the ·father's 1!-incb-JOng paddle · · ·,.,This type of disposition is
was a fair way to avoid a felony bearing the words "Board of Edu- highly unusual,. but we are not
charge for a man accused of pad- .cation:•
.·
adverse to unique solutions to cerdling his IO..year-old son to hard it
As part of the agreement, the tain cases," said Common Pleas
left bruises.
33;year-old man's identity was Judge William Kessler. "lbis was
The father agreed io get paddled concealed and the paddle was handled the· way we handle an
by a police orru:er· in exchanae for destroyed, the Dayton Daily News awful lot of these cases - very
a11thorities dropping a domestic reported today.
informally.'~
violence char~e: ~e. officer used

Pick 3:

0

at garden club meeting

Kneen in tum presented the hostess
with a potted perennial plant.
During the business meeting
conducted by Mrs. Reed, the presi den~ a discussion was held on the
community tree lighting in which
members participated. Thank you.
notes were to be sent out by the
secretary, Janet Connolly to those
who belped mate it a success.
Plans were made lo deliver fruit
trays in February to the sick and
shutins. A thank you was read from
Tom Boggs for being remembered
dwing tbe holidays,.

Ohio Lottery

By RITA BEAMISH
Associ•ted Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Former
Vice President Dan Quayle's deci·
sion to forgo a 1996 presidential
race was logical even to admirers,
who said his politics were right but
his truubied image kept him from
getting financial and organizational
support for a viable race.
Quayle's announcemenl Thursday left a quick! y nan owed field,
after similar decisions in recent
weeks by former Ho.us.ing Secretary Jack Kemp and former
Defense Secretary Dick Cheney.
The GOP contest still could
expand with the entry of governors
wb_o have been eyeing the race,
including Calif001ia's Pete Wilson,
Massachusetts' William Weld and
Wisconsin's Tommy Thompspn.
•Quayle's fellow Indiana Republican, Sen. Richard Lugar, also is
voicing presidential aspirations alid
is hoping to win Quayle's constituency.
·
But the daunting prospect of
competing witb Sen. Phil Gramm,
R-Te-xas, and Senate Majority
Leader Bob Dole, R-Kan., in the
money contest may give potential
candidates pause.
.
Quayle in a statement said he
could have raised the money needed and simply decided to "forgo
the disruption in our lives."
• But political associates and
. acquaintancts said Quayle bad virtually no success toward raising
even part of the $20 million that
Gramm, Dole and former Education Secretary Lamar Alexander
b;~ve sel as their fund-raisil)g goals
for the year.
''The financial aspect of it !brew
a bucket of cold water on his
enthusiasm," said ~ark Goodin,
an adviser to Quayle. He also bad
trouble attracting party organizational strength.
Reality set in when Quayle was
rejected by people. be thought
would support biro, associates said.
, "Dan Quayle is a smart guy and·
I think he ~01 out there and studied
the siluallon and be knew bow

BUCHANAN

DOLE

Manning Roush, rear, spoke witb Mr. and Mrs.
Glenn Stout of Long BOttom, •1110111 the first to ·
cross the ~'1¥ bridge. The span replaces the old
brldae closed In September 1994. (Sentinel
photo)
·
·

Rutland man dead
.from wreck injuries
A, Rutl!!D&lt;l mao !lied Thursday
in Gtant Medical Cenler, Columbus, from injuries received in a
Meigs County traffic accident last
week.
Ronald E. Searles, 48, 35324
Loop Road, was pronounced dead
at 7:35 a.m. of internal injuries, a
Grant spokesperson informed Sgt.
Rod Cook of the Galiia-Meigs Post
of th~ State Highway Patrol, who
inVIlStigaled the Feb. I accident on
State Roule 124.
Cook said Searles was east. bound in Salisbury Township when
·his car rounded a curve, went off
the left side of the road and struck
an embankment on a private 'drive.

Tbe car was severely damaged,
Cook said.
Searles was talcen to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by tlie Middleport EMS, where he was later
transferred to Grant via Lifeflight.
Searles' injuries were initially listed by the patrol as minor, according to the repon.
Cook said he was notified of
Searles' death over the phone by a
Grant spokesperson and was awaiting an official report from the hospitaiiOday.
Fisher Funeral Home in Middleport is handling Searles' arrangements.

O.J. 's defense ·takes risk

on showing victim photos
LUGAR

SPECTER

GRAMM

CONTENDERS - GOP c:andidates ronsiderlng an entry Into
the 1!196 presidential nu:e Include, from left, top to botlom, Patrick .
Buchanan, Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole, former Tennes.oee
Gov. Lamllr Alexander, lndi•IIB Sen. Richard Lugar, Pennsylva·
oia Sen. Arlen Specter, and Texas Sen. Phil G'""mm. Former Vice
President Dan Quayle witbdrew from the r•ce Thursday. (AP)
much money it would take," said
GOP strate~ist Charles Black, a
Gramm adv1ser. "A lot of people
like Dan Quayle bul very few tbat
have been active in the party .
·
thought he could win ."
Although some believed he
could engender grassroots support,
Quayle was seen as cartying too
much political baggage from bis
days as vice president: Despite substantive achievements, be never
managed to shake off the perception that he was a joke.
"He saw the handwriting on the
wall," said John Neiger. an Arling- .
ton, Va., conservative attending
' this week's Conservative P.Jiitical
Action Conference in Washington.
He said he agreed &lt;vith Quayle's
positions bu~ "I don't think that be
thought he would be able to win.''

On Thursday the conference
participants were wooed by
Alexan~ and "Gramm, both claiming the ~ht to carry the conserva·
tive standard against Presidenl
· Clinton.
Quayle was especially popular
with religious conservatives and it
was not immediately clear where
their supJ)ort would go. Several
strategists said Quayle's backers
might end up dividing proportionately among Qole. Gramm and
Alexander.
Two other potential candidates,
commentator Pat Buchanan and
~ep. Robert Dornan, R-Calif.,
enjoy strong support among religious conservatives and the most
conservative wing of !he party, but
arc co"sldered long-s hots for tbe
notninatioo.

By MICHAEL FLEEMAN
photographs of Ms. Simpson and
Associated Press Writer
Ronald Goldman . Many were so
LOS ANGELES - It was one graphic that the judge ordered TV
of 'the goriest photos of the trial: and still photographers not to sbow
Nicole Brown Simpson lying in a them and prosecutor Marcia Clark
pool or blood, bcr blond hair warned the victims' relatives,
soaked to a blackish-red.
"You don't want to look ."
And it was shown to the jury
Ms. Simpson's mother left as
Thursday not by .the prosecution, soon as the display began: her
but by lawyers for the mao accused father stayed briefly, then left with
of causing the hideous scene.
·
tears in his eyes. Goldman's stepIt was a risky move for OJ . mother and sister stayed, sobbing
Simpson's defense team, which is quietly.
·
trying to create reasonable doubt
Simpson took notes, conferred
by arguing that police - through with lawyer Robert Shapiro and
incompetence, malice or a little of occasionally clutched the edge of
both - mishandled evidence and the table, looked up and sighed.
rendered it useless.
Under the defense theory, .the
In one case, trying 10 show tbat most incriminating evidence
a gate had'not been dusted for fin- against Simpson - genetic tesls
gerprinls, defense attorneys pro- that show traces of his blood at tbe
jected a color photo of Ms. SIDlp· murder scene and his ex-wife's
son's bloody, crumpled body onto · blood in bis .house - c&amp;nnot be
a·7-foot screen. ·
trusted because it was containinat"'f1Jat'bas to be a calculated risk cd or poorly stored by incompetent
that underscores their belief that cops and badly trained lechnicians.
they can creale sufficienl reasonDefense attorney Johnnie
able doubt that it wasn't OJ. Simp-. Cochran Jr. had mixed results when
son, and so that they don't have · be attempted to usc Thursday's
fear of the jurors seeing what really only wimess, Officer Robcn Riske,
happened there," said law profes- to lay tbe groundwork for this argusor Robert Pugsley of Southwest· ment.
em University.
Riske, the first officer ttl reach
No court actJvities were sched· the murder ~ene, described finding
uled today . The trial was to resume bloody footprints, a knit cap and a
Tuesday. ·
single bloody glove ncar a bush.
· (Continued on p11~0 3)
Prosecutors also used gruesome .
....
'1

I

i

'

'

'

By JAMES H. RiJBIN
Associated Press W riler
WASHINGTON - inflation at ',
!he wholesale level rose 0.3 percent
m January, led by the biggest jump
m energy pnces m fl ve months.
But lie increase in the Producer
Price Index reported today ,by the
Labor Dcpartincnt was smaller than ·
analysts predicted. And the core
inflation rate rose a mere 0.2 percent.
Despite the strengui of the ccon~my •. anal~sts arc predicting thjlt
mflauon will remain under contrul
in 1995 . ~
The latest figures arc rea-.uring
on the surface, economists said.
They stressed that higher prices at
earlier stages of productJon below
the wholesale level are warning
signs to the Federal Reserve.
"These statistics clearly keep the
Fed on guard," said Marilyn Schaja
of Donaldson, Lufkin &amp; Jcnrelte
Securities Corp. "The threat of
inf1ation would still cxisl'' ' even
without further increases for raw
ma1crials and intermediate· goods,
she said.
The stock market rallied, with
the Dow Jones industrial average
up by about 10 points in early lmd·
mg. n·ond rices ro se initially, but
then fell.
The Labnr Department today
revised the PPI for December to
show a 0.4 percent ri·sc instead of
the previous estimate of 0.2 per- •
cent. The index remained
unchanged at up L 7 percent for all
of 1994.
Today's report showed that
energy cosls jumped 2.3 percent
last month, the largest advance
~ mce they rose by the same
mcrea.o;c m 1,\ugust. Gasoline prices
so8[ed 7.9 percent, but that was
partly offset by. a 5.2 percent drop fnr healmg 01! - the biggest
decline in tbrcc months.
A 0.6 percent decline in food
prices, the best showing since an
identical dcq-case last May, helped
hold down the overall rise in
wholesale prices.
. Car price~ rose just 0. I percent
10 Jaouary, and tollacco products
were unchanged.
With the cconpmic recovery
now four years old, analysts say
SOIIJC increase in inflation' is lilccly.
"The inflation cycle, which
only rcccnUy has begun to intensify , should not peak utllil 1996"
said economist Donald Ratajcz~
of Georg1a State University in ·
advance of today' s report. '"On the
other hand, the surge in prices .is
not expected to be dramatic.' • .
Michael Evans. an economic ·
consultant in B~a Ralon, Fla , said
commodny prsce s arc likely to
~cad lower as the economy slows
10 the. aftermath of recent interest
l'ate. mcrcases by the Federal
Reserve.
~
''Whcrc.as higher lah.or costs
locked 10 b1gher price levels even
as real growth declined in previous
cycles, that si mply has not hap~~ at all this timc,". Evaos said.
. It s one of the major reasons why
mflat10n will remain stable 1·0
1995 .'"
lnOatioo bas been mOderate for
fo~r years, with the &lt;;o nsumer
Pncc Index around 3, percent or
lower each year . Cl'l figures for
January will be announced
Wednesday .

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